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                  <text>Thursday
Sports

July 15, 181111

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Wea ther

Meigs Legionnaires beat Athens, Page 4
Threat of AIDS from cheating spouse, Page 7
ValuJet mechanic reinstated, Page 6

Today: P. Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 80s
Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 90s; Low: 60s

The West takes the
first ever WNBA AllStar game

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Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50. Nu mber 28

Single Copy • 35 Cents

Republicans ready $864 billion tax cut bill for House floor
~

By CURT ANDERSON
AP Tax Writer.
WASHINGTON (AP)- Democrats couldn't stop
Republicans from sending ap $864 billion tax bill to
the House OCK?r, but they did take every opponunity to
press their claims, that the , tax cut threatens Social
Security and Medicare.
Through h hours &lt;if House Ways and Means Com·
mittee debate We.dnesday, Democrats repeatedly
forced votes o·n amendments intended to divert some
of tht money for tax cuts into the two h"ge retirement
programs or into paying down public debt.
And the Democrats also accused the GOP of drafting a huge tax cut designed to appeal to their political
base, contending it has no i:hance of becoming law
because President Ointon is promising a veto.
·"This whole thing is a house of cards," said Rep.
Sander Levin, D-Micll. "At some point, you're going
to have to ·sit down and talk reality, instead of farce
and,politics.;"
·
But after fighting off the Democratic amendments,
the GOP majority on. the Ways and Means Committee
cleared the bill on a 23-13 vote. It moves next to the
full House, possibly as early as next week, and a competing $792 billion Senate versi6n is also in the works.
The House bill would cut income taxes by 10 per-

cent across the board, reduce capital
cover for Republicans who fear-being Me ans Repub lican s turned back a Democratic effo rt
gains taxes, eventually abolish e~tate
outOanked on' Medicare as they push to delay the ent ire tax cut until a long- term solutio n ·
and alternative minimum· taxes and
their huge tax cut.
, to Social Security is in place and an amendm ent to
give people new breaks for education
They attempted to shave roughly use SO percent of the m o n~y iopay down public debt.
and long-term health care. :
$270 billiori off the taii cut fdl a more
··1 .belie ':,e t ~ Ametican .peuple can sec through
Republicans insisted that the $2.9
dir~ct Medicare prescription dr~g ben- this and l.t all boils down to one thing: Who tlo you
trillion in projected budget surj&gt;Juses
efit, but that· was defeated on a party- . trust'" said Rep. J.D. Hayworth, ·R-Ariz.
over 10 years would easily provide
line 23-11 vote as important for its
Moderate Republ icans on the comm ittee were able ·
enough money for the tax cuts and to
political symbolism as anything else .
to divert some money intended -to cut capit al gains
ensure Medicare and Social Security
"Before we give tax breaks to the taxes for cor)X!tations into two programs supported
are ready for the baby boom generarichest 10 percent of Americans, we by Democrats _'Both mdv'es were opposed by Arch ~ r.
lion.
·
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should be willing •... to give senior
-Rep. Nancy Johnson , R-Conn ., won appro~ a) .o f
"W~ . have plenty of money to do
'citizens 'help with some of .these ~n amendmenr that would graduall y rai se th e 'per
everything we want to do; U we do it
bills," said Rep . . Foriney "Pete" · capita cap on low-income housing ta x credits from
sman," said Rep..Jim McCrery, R, La.
Stark, D-Calif.
·
$1.25 to $1.75 at a cost of $3 .8 billion over 10 years .
One major change approved by the
In Baltimore on Wednesday, Clinton
A similar provisiCin· is expe cted in a Senate GOP
panel. was a proposed lax deduction for
~aid the House GOP tax bill . "could . tax measure .
·
insurance costs paid tsy some senior
wreck oLtreconomy·•t.and woul(l c'on-Rep. Amo Houghton, R-N. Y., amended the bill
citizens, to cover prescription drugs. It
PRESIQENT CUNTON sume almoSt. all of the non-Sdcial to ex:tend welfare-to-.work tax credits for six months
was the GOP's first official teaction to promiH.e. to v~ the pro- Security surplus over the ne~t longer than th~ . measure originally in tended, at a cost
Clinton's popula,;. proposal 1o add a poHd tax cut leglall_!.lon. dec.ade.
.
of $277 million over I 0 years.
drug benefit to Medicare. '
"It would require, as our economy grows, real
In addition, the panel approved an amendment by
But the Republican plan is contingent upon a pas- cuts in education, defense, · the environment; Reps. Wes· Watkins, R-Ok la. , and William Jefferson,
sage later this year of an overall reform of Medicare, research, technology - th~ kinds of things we have D-La., for $389 million in tax breaks to benefit inde including a direci drug subsidy fo( the poor.
invested mCire in," Clinton said: ·
pendent domestic oil producers suffering from ecoDemocrats said the measure was simply political
On two other symbolic party-line votes, Ways and nomic distress .

.---....,......,_-----.-------, Pomeroy merchants discuss effect of new Wai-Mart
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Page Twelve - The Pelly Sentlnel1 0119 Baby Edition
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.Educators stress summer rea.d.ing·for children

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What'$ most exCiting about our
single room maternity care units is
that you'll get an attract·ive,.home-Hke
atmosphere .where you'll stay for your.
·entire maternity visit. F~r nearly 10
years, PVH has offered mothers one
room for labo·r, delivery, recovery and
postpartum.
But it's not just the room that
.
makes single r~om maternity care so
desirable, it's who · - your own skilled
maternity nurse, who's responsible for
both you and your baby during your
,entire stay.
...
Loved
ones·are
'
welcome and
encouraged
to share
in the
birthing .
experience
at PVH!
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Mark W. ·Nolan, MD
·Michael W. Corbin1 MD
PVH Me~icaf

office Bui(~in9

Suite 214
·Complete Women's Healtbcare

(304) 675-3400

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BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
the commercial buildings. .
Sentlflel News Sta11
An newspaper adveftising program was also dis- ·
A discussion on how the new. Wai-Mart Supercenter in .cussed and it was voted to begin with group ad in the
cOLUMBUS (AP)- It proba·
. Mason County will affect b..liness in Pomeroy high- Rutland Bicentennial commemorative editiao.
: -. .· bly will be next year befme the
lighted Wednesday's meeting of the Pomeroy Merchants
Also discussed was the effectwhich Saturday closingi; Ohio Supreme . CCiurt&gt; , rul~s. on
Association.
·• .
of the Meigs County Courthouse have had on the busi- whether the st,ate has complied w,ith ·
Meeting in the Farmers Bank conference r00111, sever- ness communi!~ . over the years. Several members its· Q{der to create an ·accep.(able
. al merchants, along witK George Wljght, Pomeroy coun- expressed the. op1nto~ _that of~ces should be open :"n Sat· method of funding public education.
'cilman, expressed concern fm small businesses in town urdays, not only to ~nng more . ~ustomers mto town, but · Unde/ a briefing schedule
and· proJlOSCI'Ithat the Association adopt some plan of als~ to make 1t easter for Metg;; -9&gt;un1tans to transact . announced bx the court on Wednesaction to deal ,with the new competition for local dollars. busmess. -Memb.ers of !he Assoctal1on voted to send let- day, state attorneys must file briefs
Wright said that the Pomeroy village clerk indicatcll le:-' to all elected offict~ls asking that the courthouse be defending the new funding arrangeto Council that the amount in sales tax revenue coula be openon.Saturday morntn!!'·
.
ment by Aug. *"'
reduced by as much as $5,000 a month, This, he said,
D1splayed at the meetmg was a sample brochure f!"r
The coalitiCin' of school .districts
Queen wee e mejeetlc eight ·indicates. a tremendous loss of revenue to local business- ~om~roy listing poi~ts of inierest, restaurants and Jodg- that successfully sued the state 'to .
and other river com- es,
mg. A map on,one stde Will show. locattons..
.
overturn the school financing sysHe_.note~ that a seminar on how to cope wit~ a WalIt was announced th~t !he (ounsm office tS plannmg a teni will have until Sept. 1 10 argue
Man 1s betng planned by P~rry Varnadoe, Me1gs Eco- 20-hour hosp1taltty tratmng workshop, The wprkshop why he !ate plan is unacceptable
nomic Development dirmor, with the time and ~Jiice to,,. will be geared to those entering employ~ent as· well as and l~e s~te ·will have until Sept. 21
be announ~.
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' those ~ready. employed .
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to file rebuitals.
Markettng and. advemsmg t~chntques .1'fhtch m.tght . A sltde ~resentat!on on. the htslory of Metg:; County
The court typically schedules
promote local busmesses -:vere dtscusse&lt;!· It was. dectded made as a gtft to f\'letg:; County :bY the Farmers Bank w:" oral ar uments two to three months
to have a booth ~I the Metg:; County Fatr tn whtch mer- presented by"-Paul Reed. precedtng the meetmg. Made tn
ft { f
1 t d And .t
chandi'se from various stores could be displayed. Annie 1979, it is entitled "A Retrospective: Reflection of Our a ker "'eks ared c~tmp e e -th r' 1
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ta es wee s an Ol· en mon s or a
Chapm!'n. prestdent, w1ll make a contact wtth the Frur Hent~ge . "
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ALUANCE (AP)- Two Portage County inen are accused of partici·
BOard to check OJ.(t. the availability of a booth' in one of · Refreshments were provided by the host bank.
decision to be issued.
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paling in the death of a 26-year-&lt;~ld woman whose throat -was slash,ed.
Joseph L. Wilkes, 19, of Ravenna, was charged with aggravated murder in the April I slaying of Yvonne Layne of Alliance.
By Bf!!AN J. REED
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mentary School. When 'discussing Eastern's sum· vocabulary, helJ&gt;i to develqp their imaginations, !o
· Wilkes was apparently hired by Layne's fort;ner boyfriend, David
sentinel
News
Staff
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mer intervention program fast month, Jewett said learn about the world, to understand and appreciate
Thorne, said Alliance police Chief Lawrence Dordea. Thome, 26;
State
school
officials
are
"encouraging
jlarents
that
parents must encolirage students ICI read, not moral concepts and to understand their own feel·
Atwater, was charged with complicity to murder.
and children to use the summer months construe- only to prac~ce reading skills, butto develop a habit ing:; about the world, reading expens say.
The men were being held on $I million bonds each in the Stark Co)Jnly
lively,
through leisure reading, summer school pro- of &lt;eading - to reaiize 'that reading is enjoyable
Amy Miller, the children's librarian for the
Jail after their arrests Wednesday.
,
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grams
and
other
educational
opportUnities'
in
the
and
rewarding.
Meigs
County District Public Ubrary, ,said that
l,ayne was nearly decapitated when her throat was slashed during the
communitY.
~
"Reading,
like
any
other
skill,
requires
practice,"
between
50 and I I 8 children have panicipated in
early morning as four of her SO!Il! slept. The eldest of her sons, who range in
The
Ohio
Department
of
Education
recently
Jewett
said.
"It's
importanl
'lo
get
kids
away
from
various
activities
associated with the library's sum·
age from 1 to 10, was being raised'by her parents. Thome is the father of the
started a campaign to. encourage parental and com- . the television, and away from video games, and mer reading program, called "The Incredible
2-year-old boy, police said.
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munity involvement· in the learning process. encourage them.to read, because the ability to read Library Time Mai:hine.''
"He (Thome) acted so nice and everything. I just can) believe it," said
Young Readers'' is a summer program will determine .how successful a student is in every ,
The summer reading program, which ends later
"Growing
Layne's father, Sherman Layne.
.,
which
stresses
the
importance
of
summer
Jearriing,
subject."
·
.
this
mont~. offers prif"S and incentives to children .
Wilkes led police Wednesday to whai is believed t.o be the murder
in
literacy.
In
addition
to
encouljlging
young
learners
to
who
read a given number of haurs.
especially
weapon, a large knife hidden in a sewer· near the ,icene
· . ~I three schopl districts in Meir.County are in read, " parents shoul~ read
~-::----..,
Dordea declined to disclose how much Wilkes was paid to kill Layne.
the
midst
of
summer
,intervention
pr&lt;Ygrams
for
ele·
aloud
to
children,
even
after
Dordealllso said police know the motive, bul he wouldn't reveal it.
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mentary school · students, and the -Meigs County they 'have acquired their own
Policeman: p~ dei?led because of ssxusllty Public
Ubrary has offered a suijlmer reading pro- reading skills. Studies show
CINCINNATI (AP) -A Cincinnati police officer who says his prom&lt;i: gram to encourage ~liildren to read for enjoyment. · that the most important factor
lion was denied because he is bisexual has filed &lt;;omplaints against the
The state has tied the program in with summer in predicting a child's future
department.
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intervention programs,-which all schools in the state success in school is whether
Philip Barnes, 39,.was promoted to sergeant in .January, but failed to pass are required to offer,young learners through Senate or not they have been read
a probationary period: ..
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Bill ss: That legislation includes the "fourth grade aloud to regularly in their
·'The I 8-yellf ·police veteran, whQ says he has been teased for his mannerguarantee," whii:h will , prohibit schOOl distiicts early yean\, a.;:cording to lhe
isms, long nails and arched eyebrows, has taken his complaint to the Frater·
from promoting a student to the fifth grade unless Ohio Department of Educanal Order of Polia:, the Sentinel Police Association and tlie Equal Employ·
the student has passed the .reading component of the tiori.
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ment Opponunity Coin mission.
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fourth grade proficiency test.
Reading aloud to children
lbe three or~anizations ~ investigating.
· Senate Bill 55 also intensifies reading -assesS- · heiJ&gt;i them; not only to 'learn
"My career is basically over," said Barnes, who Was forced to step down
men! in the primary grades, requires intervention to read, but to acquire other
last week from sergeant to patrol officer.
t ·
for sluden~ identified with reading problems, and language skills, such . as
".I've got a reputation of being incompetent. yet I walk' a beat and carry
involves the parent arid ,teacher
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gun. I intend to fight this. But' the police division can be very cruel."
,
in the development ofah inter- . SUMMER PROGRAM - The summer
Capt. Vincent Demasi, the commander who' recomm.ended Hames fail
v,ention strategy. . . : .
· reeding program for children at the Melga
probation as a S.rgeant. said the decision was solely based on perfClfmance.
The development of reading County .f ubllc Ubrary has Included many
The department says Barnes can't write routine reports, has poor judgment skills is vital to ill aspects ,of special activities, lncludl.ng this preaemain street situations, Jacks time-management skills, is untruthful and has no
Jeaming, according to Molly tlon on Wednesday by Rachel Chadwick~
--command presence."
·
Jewel~ principal at Eastern Ele- a professional storyteller .f rom Centerville.
"l 'rri not even aware of his sexual orientation/' Demasi said "I don't judge
people by sex or color, race 'Or r:o:lfgion.l judge people by performance."
The reen actment will be held thro ughout
The Ohio Depanment Sons of Union Veterans land. /."• public is invited to attend. This ceremo·
Panel sentences
of the Civil War is sponsoring commemorative ny is being held in conjunction with the annual weekend at Buffington Island Park in Ponland off
man to life in prison ceremonies at Ponland in honor of the I 36th reenactment of the battle sponsored by the Meigs state Route 124 with Ci vil War military camps
~eJ1Urleii XENIA(AP)-Athree-judge panel anniversary of the Battleof Buffington Island. As County Pioneer and Historical Society and the open to the public both days. A tent city contain- ·'
Ohio's only Civil War battle, 101000 combatants 91st Ohio Volunteer Infantry reenactors. Patriotic ing period merchants, a blacksmith , a bakery and
l Sedlons - 12 Pages'
senten&lt;:ed a homeless man to life in engaged in several hours of heaving
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fighting ·and veterans.· groups have been invited to lay a gunsf!lilh will also be on site.
prison without .parole for the June
Satu rda y highli gh ts incl ude a noon memorial
involving Confederate forces Jed by Gen. John ~reaths at' the ceremonies .1o honor those C ivil
I 998 slaying of a Beavercreek retiree
War ·soldiers. Groups fro~hia, Kentucky, and service and . pe riod music and dance in the
Hunt Morgan.
who was found.!Jiudgeoned to death
Brooks-Grant Camp No. 7 Sons of Union Vet- West Virginia will be participating. Any group evening. A living histo ry trail fe aturing a skirmish,
in his basement
di scussio n of the original battle and o~her activierans is acting as host for the Ohio ~partment. wishing to present a wreath is invited to .a"uend .
Ronald E. Bozarth Jr., 36, showed
Special recognition is planned for Sanford ties of the era will take place fro m 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Myron JoneS, commander of the camp, will be the
no · emotion as he was sentenced emcee. There are two featured speakers for the Brumfield, 91, of Crown City. He is the only with tours leaving every half hour- There will be a
ceremonies. The Adjutant General of Ohio will be known Jiving real son of a Uni on soldier living in $2 charge for the tour.
Wednesday
in Greene County Com- sending a rep~ntative of his office to speak. the area. His father, Sloan Brumfield, fought in
Reenactors will compete in a tactical competimon Pleas Coun.
As part of a plea agreemen~ Bozarth
Also, featured will be Brig General David V. Company F, Jst Regiment of the Ohio Heavy tio~ Saturday at 9 a.m. with a ladies tea at noon.
At 7 p.m. Army drill will be held .
pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery Medert of Chillicothe, Ohio. General Meden is Anillery. ·
After
the
ceremonies,
the
ladies
auxiliary
of
On Sunday, a periOO church service will be
the highest ranking officer of the Sons of Veterans
and aggravated murder in connection
Brooks-Grant
Camp
will
be
providing
light
held
at 10 a.m.. military drill at I I a.m.•and the
Reserve (SVR), the military arm of the Sons of
with the death of Gifford Via, 76.
1
reenactment of the Battle of Buffington Island
Beavercreek police detective DeMis the Union Veterans of the Civil War. The SVR is refreshments to partieipants.of the event .
Pick 3: 1-3.0; Pick 4: 3-6-2-9
Plans
have
been
made
for
an
information
tab
le
will
stan at I p.ni. The battle reenactment site will
the
only
federally
recognized
militia
in
the
U.S.
Evers testified Bozarth confessed that
Super Lotto: 6-8-22-25-33-40
at
the
event
for
those
interested
in
locating
in
forbe
about
one 111ile south of 'the park on the west
and
was
the
forerunner
of
today
's
National
Guard.
he struck V)a in the head with a pipe
m.ation
on
I
heir
Uni
on
ancestors
o
f
the
C
ivil
Wa
r.
side
side
of
state Route 124.
,
General
Medert
is
also
the
current
commanUer
of
Kicker: 2-3-7-1 -3-0
several times after going to the home
Info
rmatio
n
o
n
all
Un
ion
sold\e
rs
b
uried
in
Meigs
The
reenactmenl
weekend
is
sponso
red by lhe
the
Ohio
Department
Sons
of
Union
Veterans
of
WJ'A,
to steal money from Via, for whom he
Coun
ty
will
be
available.
Membe,.hip
informaMeigs
County,
Historical
Society
and
Harris
the
Civil
War.
Dally 3: 6-8-8; Daily 4: 9-S-8·5
had done tree trimm.ing and other odd
The
ceremonies
will
be
held
Saturday
at
I
1
tion
fo
r
the
Sons
of
Uni
on
Veterans
will
also
be
Farms,
and
is
hosted
by
the
9Jst
Ohio
Volunteer
C 1999 Otlio Y1llc:y Publishi ng Co.
jobs in the past.
Infantry Civil War reenactment group.
a.m. at the battle monument in the park at Port· avail able.

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Supreme Court Isn't
likely to rule On .SChOOl .!funding before next year

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Ceremonies ·planrted for wee .......

Good Afternoon

Today's

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Commentary

Death Notices

The
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word:
More
and
more
talk
about
a
stock
market
bubble
The Daily Sentinel

By JOHN CUNNIFF
supply growth, fallins private sector savinp, viously out-of-favor .Cctots to perform well, u
AP BualnMS Analyst
financial innovation and "PARADIGM SHIFT." the market continues to move toward equilibri11m
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NEW YORK (AP) - A subtle shading, a
' "The U.S. bubble" be says. "is likely to burst between IUJC-QP and SIJiall-cap stocks."
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter advises clients to
mere nuance, has begun to emerge in ihe com- through a combination of risina interest rates and
mentary
of
securities
analysts:
They
are
losing
a
falling
dollar,"
suggesting
a
significant
risk
of
"consider
shifrina into cyclical and smaller-cap
111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
their
aversion
to
the
use
of
the
word
"
bubble"
in
a
sharp
and
sustained
fall
in
asset
prices
toward
stocks,"
that
is, "those sensitive to the ups and
740 118:2-215e • Fu: 11112-2157
describing the investment scene.
year end.
downs of the economy, such as autos, paper and
That avetsion is understandable, given the
Though not as rare as they were a few months chemieals."
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
tende~cy of bubbles to burst, bu\ some analysts ago, bubble references such as these are still far
Somewhere between hope and deep concern
now use the word easily, as if to concede the from commonplace.
lies another comment from Yardeni, as published
ROBERT L WINGETT
word's relevance to the spectacular current marMost economists and market forecasters con· in his global economic analysis of July 6.
·
Publl•her
ket.
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.tinue an old tradition of not calling for major
Because of its "bare minimum policy
· ·, Still, it is rare to find an economic or financial changes.
response"to c:c;onomic conditions, the outspoken
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANE HILL
forecaster willing to stake his or her reputation
Joseph McAiinden, chief investment oflioer · Yardeni .declares, the Federal Reserve's open
Controllw
on a flat out bubble burst.
for the Morgan Stanley Dean WiuCr Family or market committee has sent a clear message to
Inslead, they pose the possibility, just in case Funds, suggests that investors "rotate" into stock investors: "Have fun."
'
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the worst case scenario unfolds.
unde!'Valued stocks, such as those often found in
How could he justify that ·,conclusion?
n..S.ndnel ' ... ,.,....,,_...,llwn,_.,.an•lllrDH,.,..ot,...
·
Because, he says, "if the market is a bubble now,
"Could we get to 15,000 on the Dow before mature industries.
loa.
- _- _ poo -&lt;If'~
ot ~&gt;oint~ P'
the end of the year?" asks Deutsche Bank econoSalomon Smith. Bam~y says "we expect pre- the bubble will get bigger."
J)pod
mist Edward Yardeni?
r--------.,----...::_....::._-'-_.:__.:.__ ___,_ _ _..:._...:...::_________-,
..., dt)'ftme phoM INMirbw: !Jpeolty. diM , ,.,.. ••• ·-~ to • ., .
. . _ M'tlc* or,.,. .._., tD: Ull.rw ID 11M editor, n.. Sentinel, 111 Caurf II..
He answers: "I said it before, I'll
~oc:MUJ, Cfllo ..,.,; or, FAX lro 7....,..,f67.
say it again: In a speculative bubble,
anything is possible,.' l '
David Wyss of Standard&amp;. Poor's
DRI puts it similarly.
··
'
"DRI model equations suggest
that this· is indeed a market bubble,
·ByTOMRAUM
.
·
but we have never had one persist this
· AMocl8t.d P..- Writer
long in the past," he wrote recently.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Co~gressiooal Republicans still have a lot of
But Wyss, too, avoids any suggesloaJc: ends on foreign policy and defense they wan1 to tie as election season tion that the bubble is about to be
intcnsifies, many of them perennial causes, some of them probably lost caus- pricked.
es.
"The possibility that something
The perennials range from demanding that the U.S. Embassy in Israel be fundamental has changed in the stock
mo~ to Jerusalem- something that a would-be New York senaior, Hillary · market should not be ruled out," he
Rodham Ointon, now is also espousing- to scaling back U.S. support for the says.
. United Nations, denouncing-Cuba's Fidel Castro and decrying human&gt;rights in
Economist Stephen King. based in
Otina.
'
London for HSBC 5C!'urities, is an
'' .
Debates over these issues - and many more - ai-e looming in the days exception.
ahead as the House and Senate move tow"ard completion of.a variety of spendHe is unusually explicit. Not only
. ing and authorization bills, and ;15 the annual renewal of China's trade status does a bubble exist, but "the burst
heeds toward a floor vOte.
may come at the beginning of 200o."
Presidential "hopeful Rep. Bob Smith of New Hamp;hire Scolded his now Even sooner, he says.
fonner fellow Republicans for not being true to their ideals or the party platIn a 52-page analysis, King sug: fonn i.n announcing Tuesday that he was changing political stripes and becom- gests that almost all the symptoms
.ing an independent
.
associated with earlier bubbles in
"It's put out there so suckers like me and maybe suckers like you can read other nations, as in Japan and the
it," be said of the party platform in a Door speech.
United Kingdom during 1986-1989,
But, GOP lawmakers have still been managing to slip bits and splinters of are factors in today's U.S. economy.
GOP dogma into a variety of amendments and resolutions.
Am'ong them: above trend growth,
The House later this week, for instance, is due to debate a State Department below trend inflation, global com.bill that would, among other things. pay roughly $1 billion in U.S. debt to the .. moclity price collapse, faster money
,
.United NaJions.
The House is expected to follow the Senate's lead in including a cutback in
the U.S. contribution to the U.N.'s regular operating budget of 25 percent to
By PHIL GALEWITZ
"Making these broad generalizations makes us Eye exams are a a:ucial to measuring how well
20 percent. Such a reduction has not been approved by other U.N. members.
A8$0CI&amp;Jad.
Pr888
Writer
uncomfortable,"
said Margaret O'Kane, president diabetics are managing their disease.
At ~me point, either on thel'loisse iloor or later in a conference with SenNEW
YQRK
(AP) ·- Not-for-profit HMOs oftheNationalCommitteeforQuality •.O.SSurance,
Not-f&lt;Jr-profit HMOs, which have recently
ate negotiators on the State Department bill, Rep. Christopber Smith, R-N.J., 1
are more likely. than for-profit ones to make sure a Washington-based HMO accrediting group. She tried to draw a distinction between themselves
is expected to push once more for an anti-abortion amendment His measure
patients get early prehat~l care, timely shots and said health plan perfonnance varies significantly and investor-owned plans, could get a lift from
would .deny U.S. support for international family j,Ianning programs thai supother
preventive treatment, researchers reported even within the same region and among plans the report.
,
. port abortion rights.
·
'
today.
· ': ·
owned by the same company.
But one executive with a not-for-profit HMO
Two years in a row, such a provision has dra:wn a veto from President Oinstudy
in
today's.Joumal
of
the
American
Industry
officials
criticized
researchers
for
faulted
the study's methods.
The
ton, and likely would again.
·
Medical Association·. concluded that for-profit saying the results justify the need for a national
"I don't buy it," said Dr. James Moffat, senior
· The State Department bill, which goes before the House Thursday, also
conUtins nonbinding lanauage advocaling moving the U.S. Embassy from Tel HMOs' moneymaking mission compromises health insurance system controlled by the govern- vice president for medical affairs at Miami-based
patient care.
~
ment ·
·
• '
Av·Med Health Plans. Moffat and other critics
Aviv 10 Jerusalem. ·
That's another .perennial favorite, not only of Republicans but of many · "Our study suggests that tliese plans art asso- . "Even if I accept· tileir flawed an~ysis, man, argued that comparing not-for-profit and for-profdated with reduced quality 6f care," said aged care still does twice -as'well as the fee-for- .. it HMOs is unfair becau5e in most cases, they
.Democrats as well.
:
Mrs. Qinton joined the move-the-embassy bandwagon as she tested the researchers from Harvard Medieal School and the service health plans," said Susan Pisano, .spokes- operate differently.
Public Citizen Health Research Group, a con- woman for the American Association of Health
Not-for-profit plans such as Kaiser Perma·
waters of New York for a possible Senate bid; even though Qinton administration policy continues I&lt;&gt; say the city's future must be determined by Israelis sumer group that favors a government-controlled . Plans, a trade group that represents both for prof- nente usually have their own staff of doctOIS who
health insurance system.
it and not-for-profit plans.
exclusively treat the HMO's members. That gives
,and Palestinians in negotiations.
,
'.
The
findings
come
as
Congress
debates
legisUsing
1996
patient
care
data,
the
researchers
the HM"O greater control of the doetor and, ulti·
The House on Monday approved a nonbinding resolution urging the Unitlation
this
week
to
enhance
HMO
consumer
analy~ed 329 HMOs according to how well they
mately, patient care. ·
ed States to boycott this week's U.N. meeting in Geneva to look into whether
rights.
performed
in
14
areas,
such
as
prenatal
care,
For-profit HMOs, such as AetnafU.S. HealthIsrael violated international law in building settlements on Arab-claimed land.
The
findings
have
long
been
suspected
·
infant
immunization
and
breast
cancer
screening.
care,
contract largely with the same doctors~
Similjll' resolutions - which do not carry 'the force of law - have been
passed to reaffinn U.S. policy ·toward Taiwan, to denounce China's human . because not-for-profit health plans generally In ev~ry category, ·the not-for-profits "had higher by other HMOs.
spend a higher proportion of the money they · rates than the for-profits.
'
That gives patients a greater choiCe: of doctors
rights'record and to voice support for U.S. troop;.
receive
in
premiums
on
patient
care
compared
Not
for-profit
HMOs
screened
an
average
of
but
reduces the effect an HMO can have on a
Congress keep;·trying to pare support for a pr0gram that provides fuel oil
with
for-profits.
That's
because
for-profits
have
to
·75.1
·percen(
of
women
·
for
breast
cancer
comphysician's
practice:
to North Korea, - in hopes of dissuading that communist regime frOm
satisfy
investors
and
pay
higher
wages
to
top
.pared
with
"
6
9.4
percent
for
investoro&lt;Jwned
plans.
The
researchers
said they took into account the
expandi.nJ! it;&lt; nuclear progr~. And the Senate has voted to ban all -foreign aid
As
a
result,
the
study
estimated
that
nearly
6,000
HMOs'
structure
and
still found that not-for-prof·
,
executives.
to Russta tf tt doesn't Gbcy NATO commanders in Kosovo.
·
·· Republicans also keep trying to fan dying embers of inquiries into Demo- ·· More than two-thirds of the nation's ;roo:plus additional breast cancer deaths would occur in the its perfonned better than for-profits in all of the
HMOs are for-profit, about three times the level United States if all women between ages of 50 areas measured.
cratic fund raising and Cltinese nuclear espionage. . . ·
in
1985.
and 69 were enrolled in investor-owned rather
"Given how consistent the findings are, it's
When Attorney General Janet Reno appeared at a Hou.'IC hearing on TuesThe
findings
.were
disputed
by
HMOs
-both
that
not-for-profit
plans.
hard
to come up with any other explanation," said
day to talk about technology export controls, Rep. Steven Buyer, R·IJ1d., went
as
·
well
as
the
About
48
percent
of
diabetics
in
not-for-profit
Dr.
Sidney
Wolfe, one of the investigators who
for-profit
and
not-for
profit
out of his way to praise FBI Director Louis Frech - as he sat next to Reno.
He praised Frteh for good judgment in recOmmending an independent HMO accrediting organization w.hose data were HMOs were given an annual eye exam compared also heads the Public Citizen Health Research
with 35 percent of diabetics in for-profit plans. Group.
counsel on campaigh fund raising. .a course of action she rejected. Looking used in the study.
straight at Reno, Buyer apologized that he couldn't.spread the praise "around.
the table."
.
And Rep. Curt Weldon, R-Pa., hinted the .House might revive a dormant
threat to hold Reno in contempt if she continued to Witl)hold parts of a Juslice By Rad Graan . .
If you passed each other on the street Inquiry Into Meaning .and .Truth," argues
Department memo Weldon suggested was relevant to the inquiry·into whether
I was.~own at the barber shop the other today, you'd both think, "Boy, some peo- quite forcefully for the Cadillac Coupe De
leChnology transfers to Cltina were influenced by"Chin~;se campaign contri- day, v:atttng to place a b'el, and I started pie really let themselves go." So Wyou're · Ville, while· Descartes, had he lived in this
~utions to Qinton's re-election campaign. '
,
brows~ng throug.~. Star magazine's "100 ~eeling !ike you,r !ife is over an~ you blew century, would have driven a simple Ford
Reno, iti a tight voice, told Weldon the department had provided Congress Beauttful People tssue.
. .
,.
tl. .remember -- 11 s only ha·l f-over, and .y'?u station wagon. Jean Paul Sartre was clo"s esl
"with everything we could under the law." Holding her in contempt, she noted
One hundred famous, po.pular stars ' - ,only half-blew it.
.
in the existentialist vi.ew: Sartre drove one
dryly, "wouldn't ch!l"ge the law."
·
and I'd nev.er hea~d of any. of 'em. Never
So get out there and finish the job.
of those litt!e Renaults that come in a kit
seen a movte they ve been tn, never heard
KEEP BUYING THOSE LOTTERY that you butld yourself, in an attempt to
of a drug rehab they went through .
. TICKETS
know the unknowable.
I think middle-aged guys have the best · But the instructions that came with the ·
. And they call it "Star" magazine.
"Stran_ger~ · is more like it. These new hot- chance of winning t.he lottery. I know skep- car involved a tautological logic"loop a~d
Dear Editor:
,
shots JUSt don't see.m to have as much tics say the od~s of winning are 14 million he never finished the rear suspension: But
. Eve_ry_ American celebrates the 4th of July, the day of our independence, charact~r or personality as the stars of our to one.
,
eventually Sartre figured out that essence
our rehgtous freedom. That is w.hy our ancestors came to this land. To wor- generatton. I'll ma!ch a Duke Wayne or a
But stop and think·- how many millions precedes existence, so "best" is a subjec·
ship God freely and fn their own way. Today, the laws and privileges God Burt Lancas,ter a~atnst a Skeet Ulnch or a of t~ckets have you bought? ~athematical- live measurement, based on the observer's
gave us arc being forgotten or taken away. That is why the ~utland Church Leonardo DtCapno any day.
.
ly, tt stands to reason that tt's got to be ·frame of reference .
of 'he Nazarene. would like to thank the Rutland Fire Oeplflment for hold. In .rac.t, !f it had be~n ~urt on board the y?ur turn soon. Take a loo~ at all "those
We can only speculate on what kind of
ing their celebration of tHe 4th on Saturday. This allowed all "of us to enjoy T1tamc, he d have d.o ne hts own stunts and Rlctures of the people that w·tn.
car Plato would have driven. I'm leaning
the celebration and honor God on His day, al59. We appreciate your efforts gotten everybody safely to shore. ·And as 1 They're 'lill middle-aged, like us. I fig- towards a Buick LeSabre
..
·
. ·
·
and thoughtfulness.
for the women; ~kinny little wisps of 4re if we all keep buying, eventually we'll
Quote 11f the Day:~'Honk ;j you hat•
lhtngs called Jenmfer or Neve or some - ' all get a turn. And as for being too old to noise pollution." •• Red Green
·
Sll.lldy HyS.U
thing can ' t stack up to actresses like Ann- enjoy it, well, you'll just have less time to
Rutland
Margret, Tina Louise or the woman on the blow it all, so you'll have to spend it twice
Red Grttn is the star of "Th Red
cover of The Tijua~a Brass ,"Whip.ped as fast.
Green Show," a tel.vislon 11ri1s 111n in
Maybe you'll be too old to go oit a the U.S . on PBS and in Canada on tho
Cream and Other Dellghts" albuiJl .
I
guess
what
it
means
is
that
looks
aren't
World
Cruise, but on the bright side, you'll CBC Network, and · th• author of "Th•
By Tha Auoclated Preis
• Today is Thursday, July )5, the !96th day of 1999. Ther~ are 169 days important anymore. And maybe that's a have enough money to hire somebody to go R•d Grun Book" and "Red Grun Talks
good thing. Especially for guys like us. \ for you . I'm available.
Cars: A Love Sroty."
.
left in the year.
FIFTY NOT SO NIFTY?
THE BEST CAR EVER
Today's High)ight in History:
I wan_t to talk to you ~uys who are just
The _cable wa~ out the other day, so I got
On July 15, 1971, President Nixon announced he would visit the Peo- celebratmg your 50th b~rthday -- or .are some 11me to thtnk about things.
'
ple's Republic of China to seek a normalization of relations.
.
just recovering from the hangover. You'll
I started reflecting on what, in my opinOn this date:
know what I'm talking about when they ion, was the best car ever made. It's a trick
In 1606, the Dutch painter Rembrandt was born in Leiden, Netherlands. bring you your birthday cake and tell you question, of course, because a person's
In 1870, Georgia became the last of the Confederate states to be read- that each candle represents a decade. choice of car is like a window to the soul.
mitted to the Union·.
· Wh·en you reach mid-life, you review
The Scapdinavian philosopher Soren ·
means
In 1916, the Boeing Co., originally known as Pacific Aero Products, your accomplishments and you take stock- Keirkegaard claimed that free
•
of
your
position
in
the
community,
your
man
can
pass
from
the
material
to
the
ethiwas founded in Seallle.
career, your family situation -· and you cal. And I believe he drove a Volvo.
In 1918, the Second Battle of the Marne began during World War I.
But after opposing Hegel on the issue of
In 1948, President Truman was nominated for another term of office at conclude: I really blew it .
Maybe
you
regret
not
marrying
your
determinism,
he traded it in for a Saab . On
"the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia. ·
.
•'
first
sweetheart,
when
you
were
both
sweet
the
other
hand,
Heidegger, the German
; In 1964, Senator Barry M. Goldwater of Arizona was nominated for
16.
philosopher, argued that self-awareness
•• Bette Davis, American
•president at the Republican National Convention in San Francisco.
Well don't forget, at this point you're was intertwined with our sense of our own
In 1979, President Carter delivered his "malaise" speech in. which he not sweet 16, and neither is she.
· death, so he drove a Ferrari Testerossa.
actress (1908·1989) . .
:lamented what he called a "crisis of confidence" in America.
Bertrand Russell, in his work "An

-,.--

¢
Hl.

{)

0:

-

-

o
0

'

w.w...

Letter to the Editor

.Church says thanks

.

Today In History

Thought for Today:

"Love Is not enough. It ·
must be the foundation,
the cornerstone - but
not the complete structure. It Is much too pliable, too ·yleldfng.''

will

.'

•

!

•

-Obituaries-~

.'

--In . .

Inc:.

ObltuatiM ,. . pllld aMDDUOC.itaitli WIW!Utd by local funerW halMa.~
are publllltMd MNq......... to ICCQIJI)tQd&amp;l thoee ........ IIION .lfoiliWtlaii than:
Ia
ICCO IIPIIilybog DIII!JI.
...

3.~ --- ~··~~~ Esta Martha Roberts
-·'J'
...

-

Pt. CloUoy

Clou!fy

Showers

T-l510m'IS

Ran

FU'I'!u

toe

Sr\01111

~- ~armer,

more humid air
filtering into Ohio Valley

.d..

ne

.~ORTH .OF FORTY: Goodbye, Norma Jean

l

•

0

I

.'

@Oium.,;,o jee"/113•

()

WASHINGTON TODA~
Republi~ns press pet causes

.Study: Not-for-profit HMOs are better at preventive m

Esta Martha (Roberts) Roberts, 96, Long Hollow Rd ., Pomeroy, died on
Wednesday, July 14, 1999, at the extended care unit of Veterans Memoiial
Hospital.
She was born on August 30, 1902 in Grantsville, W.Va .. daughter of the
late George and Rosa Riggs Roberts. She was a homemaker, a Baptist by
fatth and a member of the Meigs Count y Senior Citizens.
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law. Dell and Doris Roberts,
Mason, W.Va. ; a daughter. Eula Hensler, Middleport; a grandson; three sisters-in-law: Virginia, Marie and Dorothy Roberts; a great grandson and a
great granddaughter; six step grandchildren; 13 st ~p great grandchildren and
three step great-great grandchildren; and several ricces and nephews.
Bes1des her parents, she was preceded in death, by her hqsband, Maston,
Roberts; two sons, Donald a~d Walden Roberts; an infant grandson; a so nin-law, Glen Hensler; four sisters: Mollie Knopp, lovenia Starcher, Lula
Sandy, and Faye Powell; and seven brothers: Harlan, Russell, Pearl.. George,
Sherman, Hubert, and Victor Roberts"
·• '
Funeral services will be held on Friday, July 16, 1999 at 3 p.m. at Birj:hfield 1\omeral Home in Rutland, with Rev. Leslie Hayman officiating. Burial
will follow at Rocksprings Cemetery in Pomeroy.
·
Fnends may call at the funeral home on Friday fiom 1 to 3 p.m., prior to
•
the semce.

Friday, July 1 S

,.,.,..,wd_ .. ,_,._---·...,_,..,
IF

Esta Martha Roberts

Ohio weather

a.,_....._...

By Tha Associated Pr•n
'
SOutherly' winds will bring warmer and more humid air" into Ohio the
next few days•. according to for~casttrs.
,
It wm-m: cle~r tonight with lows of 65 to 70. Friday will be mostly
sunny with high(in the 90s.
·
. There could be showers and thunderstorms this weekend. High teml)eratures will be in the 80s and 90s.
.. The record high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather statton was HXJ'set in 1988. The record low was 49 set in 1930.
. Sunset tonight will be at 9. Sunrise Friday will be at 6:16.
,
•
Weatber forecast:
.Tonight...Mostly clear. Lows in the lower and mid 60s. Light and variable wind.
"'
Friday... Partly cloudy and hot. Highs from the upper 80s to the' lower

?Qs.

.

Friday night. .. Mostly clear. Lows 65 !0' 70.
•.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Highs from the upper 80s to the lower 90s.
Sunday...Wann and humid. Lows 65 to 70 and highs 90 to. 95. ,.
Monday...Partly cloudy. Lo!Vs from the upper 60s to the lower 70s and
highs 90 to 95.

roup claims deregulation
has resulted in dirty air
By MIKE WENDUNG
A1aoclated Press Writer
CLEVELAND (AP)- Deregulation of the nation's wholesale power
industry has caused an increase in air
pollution because companies are
burning more coal, an Ohio environ- ·
l)lental group said.
.,, "While most American industries
ire moving forward toward modem
• · technologies, the electric industry is
moving backward to the use of ·old,
dirty plants," said Kate Strouse,
spokeswoman for the Ohio Public
Information Research Group.
· Ohio PIRG rele&lt;!5ed a report
Wednesday outlining the impact of
coal burning on air quality. T.he
report claims that an increase in coal
·;, bUI;ning in Ohio since 1992 .!JjiS been
~·. equivalent to the annual pollution of
· 1.4 million cars, when measured in
·•· tenns of the release of gases that
cause global warming.
Statewide, the overall increase in
coal-generated electric power since

.•.

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Frida~, lll Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, ·by 'the

Ohio \\lley Publishing Company. Second c:l»s
postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
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A.uociate~ Press and 1he Ohio

Nev!lplper Association.

'

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Our m'a ln concern In all stories I! to bt
ecc:unlt. If you know of 1'-.,trror In 1
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The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 15, 1999

I

1992 was 8 percent, lower than the
national figure of 15.8. percent,
Strouse said.
Ralph DiNicola, ,.a spokesman for
Akron-based FilljtE11ergy Corp., said
coal burning is necessary to meet
.increasing demand.
.. .
"llifse plant_
s are not _ ~ luxury,"
DiNicola said. "They're essential to
keep electricity flowing "to our customers."
.
.
He not¢ ' that the industry' has
spent billions of dollars on programs
tq improve the environment since the
imposition of the federal Clean Air
Act nearly 30 years ~go.
Power companies are able to operate older coal plants without having
to comply with federal pollution standards for newer plants. A provision in
the Clean Air Act lets states determine environmental standards for
plants built befdre 1971, said Dave
Ryan, a spokesman for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Ohio PIRG warns that deregulation of the consumer electricity •market "will result-in pollution increases.
Gov. Bob Taft signed a deregujation
. law for Ohio last week .. Companies
thrust into competitive markets are
tempted to use the cheaper coal
plants, Ohio PIRG said. ·
"'

IF~""',.,'="""'""'""'"""""'""'""'""i'

StOCk S

•

.

"

.

5

.Am Ele Power :.... .:... ............. 36'1•
Akzo ................................ ........ 45
AmrTech ..•,\.. .......... :..............72'1.
Ash Oil ....... :......... ,................ 43'1,
fi! T&amp;T""' ~..................... ,........ 56"1.
Bank One ................................59
Bob Evans ....................... ..... 20'1•
Borg-Warner ........................55'1•
Champion .................................7
Charm Shps ............................6'lo
City Holding ............ ......... ....... 28
Federal Mogul ..................... 54"1•
Gannett ............... .... ..... .... .....74Y.
Kmart ............. ....................... 16'/,.
Kroger ............................. ...... 30Y,
Lands End ............................ 48'1•
Ltd .................................... .... .46'/o
Oak Hill Finl ............ .........".... 16'1•
OVB .... :.......:........ ..:.................32
One Valtey.:.... ......:.. .............. 38'1o
Peoples .. ...................... ........ 28 '1.
Prem Finl ............................... 14Y.
Rockwell ........ .... .... ........ ..... .61 "1.
AD/Shell ................. ......... ..... 64 ~.
Sears ............................ ......... 46 '1.
Shoney's ............. ................. .. 2'1.
FlrstStar .... ........ .......... .........27"1•
Wendy's ....................... ,........ 29'1.
Worthington ..................... ..... 1s ),

Stock reports are today's
10:30 a.m. quotes provided by
Advesl of Gallipolis.

Local briefs:
Correction
In the June 23 Meigs County Court report 11 was incorrectly reported
that Daniel 1. Otto, Pomeroy, was fined for failure 10 wear a seat belt and
speeding. He was fi ned for speed ing o nly.

Announcements:
Name omitted
The name of Meigs County Co mm1 ssioner Janet Howard was omitted
from a list of those who spoke Sunday at a reception in honor-of Professo r Hugh Davis at the Meigs County Publ ic Library.

Flag raising time changed
The time for the nag raising ceremony .at Sawrday's Chester/Shade
Day has been changed.from II a.m. umil tO a.m. II wi ll be conducted by
the VFW of Tuppe rs Plains.

Racine \lil(age Council to meet
Racme Village Counci l will mee t Monday. 7 pm. at the municipal
building.

VFW sets dance

. The Tuppers Plams VFW 9053 will have a ro ~nd and square dance Saturpay, 8 to 11 p.m. The band Wil l be Tru e Country. Jim Brown will be the
•called. The dance is open 10 Ihe. publi&lt;;:

Parkef reunion plann.e d

. ~e Parker famil y reun ion Wi lt he held Au g
Elementary Cafetonum. Carry-in dmn er.
·

I p.m: at the Eastern

.

·

'·

Lupus group to meet
The Lupus/Fibromyalgia support group will meet Tuesday from ·6:30
to 8 p.m. i.1 the board room at the Holier Hospilai/VMH in Pomeroy.
Those w1th lupus and fi bro mya tg1 a are in vHtd to anend For more information residents may call 740-S93 ·2.5 t 8.

Esta Martha (Roberts) Roberts, 96, Long Hollow Rd., Pomeroy, died ori
Wednesday, July 14, 1999, at the extended care unit of Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.
.
.
Skin testing offered
She was bom·on August 30, 1902 in Grantsville, w:va., daughter of the
A free skin testing clinic will be conducled by Connie Karschnik, R.N.,
late George and Rosa R1ggs Roberts. She was a homeJ!laker, a Baptist by
Meigs Cou_nty Tuberculosis nu rse all he Tuppers Plains Fire Station, Monfa1th and a member of the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
·
day, 4:30 to 6:3U P:m. All indi viduals who arc in food service are required
· She is surviv~d by a son and daughter-in-law, Delt and Doris Roberts,
to.obtaJR yearly skm tests. Res1den1s are encouraged to .atiend the evening
. Mason .. W.Va.; a daughter, Eula Hensler, Middleport; a grandson and his
·
chnics 1n the vanous areas of lh~ countv.
Wife, Bill and Sherry Hensler, Racine; three sisters-in-law: Virginia, Marie
VBS begins Monday ·
and Dorothy Roberts; a gteat grandson and a great granddaughter: six step
Vacation B1ble" School , the Uhimatc Advcnlure with Jesus, will be held
grandchildren; 13 step great grandchildren and three step great-great grand:
Monday
through July 23, 6:30-8:30 p.m. al St. Paul"s United Methodist
children; agd several nieces and nephews. '
'
Tuppers
Pl ains.
Church,
Besides her parents, ·she was preceded in death by her husband, Maston
Roberts; two sons,-Donald and Walden Roberts; an infant grandson, Robert
Hensler; a son-in-law, Glen Hensler; four ·sisters: Mollie Knopp, Lovenia
Starclfer, Lula Sandy, and Faye Powell ; and seven brothers: Harlan, Russell ,
Pearl, George, Sherman, tJubert, and Victor Roberts.&gt;· ·'
•
Funeral services will ,bl: held on Friday, July lli, 1999 at 3 p.m. at BirchSIDNEY (AP) - A man who
Leiss said. Hensley didn't talk
field Funeral Home in Rutland, with Rev. Leslie Hayman officiating. Burial authorities say was 1aken hostage by a , about the deaths or where he had been
Will follow at Rocksprmgs Cemetery in Pomeroy.,
SUStx:Ct in four slayings is lhan ~fu)I O - Since then. Oth er than to say he Was .
' Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday from I to 3 p.m., prior to
be ahve.
·
·
opt" of the state and. stayed at different
·
'. ·
the service.
"The ne1ghbor ff!Ude the comm cm, places.
·
.
' You ought 10 play the lou~ry 1his
·' He said he just got ba!:k in town,"
week.' I felt preny··lucky," William· said Le iss. "'He said 'I had some
Leiss said Wednesday.
.
untl nished business to do."'
. The 44-ycar-&lt;Jid Maplewood man
Leiss said Hensley didn't indicate
By ROOD AUBREY
1990s, he said.
was among three hostages authorit i~ wha11he unfinished business was.
Associated Preas Wrlt•r
David Cashell, supervisor of the say were taken by Lawrenc_e Mi chael
Pdhce sa1d Hensley is a suspect in
COLUMBUS (AP) - Akhough water inventory unit at the Division Hensley at a filling stalion carl"y Tues- 1hc wounding of a motorist and the firforecasts predict near-normal precip- of Water, said the state is approaching day. The hostages eventu ally wer . - irig pf a gunshot at the home of one of
itation for the next month, it won't be · the "severe" drought classification. released unharmed and Hensley stir- Hensley's B1 ble teacher,;. Both shootenough to recover from a drought The "extreme" classification is the rendered to police.
ings occurred just before police coraffecting crops and livestock, offi- next step. _
" Hensley, 30, has been charged with nered Hensley at the filling station.
·
'
·
"It has been worse but it's not four counts of aggravated murder and
Lc1ss said he had stopped at the stacials said.
.: '11 doesn•t look like anything i~ exceptionally good. " he said.
is being held on $1 million bond. The lion tu ge t a sandwich when -Hensley
going to be significantly better," said
The Department of Agriculture ·· charges are related to the Ju ly 8.slay- arrived. '
Rich Roman. chief of operations at said it has activated an infonmil com- infls of Sherry Kimbler, 16, a neighbor
'" He had his gun up in the air and
the· Ohio Emergency Management mittee to monitor the drought Ths: of Hensley's; Tosha Barrett. 16, Kim - was holleri"Rg when he carne in tlie
Agency.
commiuee was·activated last in 199H' bier's cousin· Amy Mikesell 14 a door " Leiss said
.
"We don't se.e any total relief
Some farmers are reporting trou- friend of the dther girls;.and Br~tt
L: iss said he ducked behind a shelf
from the drought in sight," ~e added. bled crops, but the extent of damage dermuth, 37, . a Bible-stud y teacher ond tlied to escape out a, door, but it
· Roman spoke on Wednesday at • will not be known until harvest, said who had helped minister to Hensley.
was locked. He sa1d that when Hensthe first meeting this year of the Assistant Director Larry Adams.
Shelby County Prosecul or Jim Icy spoiled him, he made Leiss and the
Droug~t Executive Committee,
Com and soybeans will be of particu- Stevenson met with p61ice invcstiga- other male customer gct down on their
wh1ch agreed to keep an eye on the lar concern if the drought continues. tor,; Wednesday to review evidence. knees.
situa~ion and scheduled another
Because of dry pastures, some He said he ex peel~ tq present th e ca&lt;;e
·· He sa id 'The copS are on to me,"' .
meeung for Aug. 3.
fanners have, started feeding hay to to a grand jury today..
·
Le1ss sa id. " He.was preny tense."
The Legislature created the com- livestock, which could cause a shonmittee after a 1988 drought as a way age in the fall , he said.
for state agencies, scientists and othSome livestock deaths have been
·
·
..
er.; to share information and make blamed on temperature~ in the 90s
Uti its of the Meigs County Emcr- cusc, Peggy T1ppie, Hol.zer Medical
re&lt;o&lt;&gt;mmendations to the governor. and a lack of moisture, said Mark !l.ency Medical S&lt;;,rVi ce recorded six Center:
'
The group can recommend particular Byers of the Ohio State University calls for assistanc e Wednesday. ·
3:21 p. m.', Mount Olive Road,
help to affected areas and drought extension "office.
Units respon"ding included:
·
Long Boll om, Dora Pierce, Pleasant
emergency declarations.
.
A few small farmers have sold
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Valley Hospital, Reedsville squad
No recommendations were made _their livestock because they don 't
'12:05 a.m., Middl epon "Police · assJSicd .' ·
on Wednesday. ·
have enough feed or water, he said.
Depanmenl. Dale Hoffm an. VetcrRACINE
Julie Dian-Reed, a hydrologist for
"This could get real ugly, real ans J11emoriaf Hospital :
·
7:30 p.m.. volunteer fire departthe National Weather Scmce, told soon," he said.
4:12a.m., Chlldrcns Home Road, ment and syuad to state Route 338,
bru'h fire.
the group that forecasts through midThe drought alSQ is causing small ·· Pomeroy, Belva Will ard, VMH:
RUTLAND
August predict nonnal to near-nor- . fires in dry fields at a time of year
12:25 p.m., Dusky•Strect. Syra6 : t R p.m .. Maplewood Drive,
mal precipitation, which would not ~¥hen there typically are non e, the
Wayne Chase. Irca ted at the scene,
be enough to recover from shortfalls. Department of Forestry said.
Ce nt ral Dispalch Sf!Uad assisted.
The drought is most severe in the
The drought is caused by a high
central,•~ southern and southeastern
pres..·~mre ridge over the eastern Unit - ·
pans of the state, where aoo.ut 5 inch- ed States, which allow§ heating, but
es of rain is needed to returit condi- little rain. The drought is worse east
tions to normal, state Climatologist of Ohio.
·
•
Jeff Rogers told tl).e group.
· The conditions also are caused by
520 W. Main St. The nQrthwest is in the best shape, La Nina, unusual cold 1emperatures
Pomeroy, OH
about 1.~ inches behind normal, he in the Pacific Ocean which influence
said.
·
weather around the world. GovernPhone 992-2588
The situation is not as bad as ment researcher,; predict f..a Nina will
VJnton - 388-8603
1988, but worse than in the early last through the winter.
Gallipolis - 446-0852

Hostage of shooting-spree
suspect feels t.ucky to be alive

Droug~t

·hurting agricu,lture,
water·levels around the state

Wil-

Me 1•g s EMS 1og s 6 ca II s

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions- J;Jin a
Dixson, Pomeroy.
·.
Wednesday discharges ~ none .
Holzer Medical Cel)ter
Dischargu July 13 - Mrs.
Charles Carpenter and daughter,
James Ramey , Marlene Fields,
Etta Altizer, Betty Whaley,

Edward Conley.
Births .- Mr. and .Mrs . Clinton
Bailey, daughter, Long Bottom :
Mr. and Mrs: Frank Heath, daugh ter, Jackson.
Discharges July 14 - Ernest
Cornwell , Mrs. Frank Heath and
daughter, Mary Bolton ;
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Wicker, son , South Webster.
(Published with permission)

SPRIIJG VAllEY WIEMA

•
44 6 45 24

OLO ROUT[ lS Wl

&lt;a

7

I '84 JACI(SO N f'II&lt;E

(WED 7114 • THURS 7115199)
BOX OffiCE Will OPEN AT 6:30 PM

FOR !VINING SHOWS,
17:30 PM FOR SAT&amp; SUN MATINIIS .
WiLD, WILD , WEST (PGt3)
7;t 5 &amp; 9.40 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:15 &amp; 3.40
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHT

WEEKEHD SPECifiL

MUPPETS FROM SPACE (G)
7:00 &amp; 9.00 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SU N 1:00 &amp; 3 ;00

All Ladies ·'.(ops

AMERICAN PIE (R)
7! 20 &amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEE S SATJSUN U O&amp; 3:20

20•/a Off
Friday &amp; Saturday Only

BIG DADDY (PGt 3)
. 7:00 &amp; 9:,0 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN t .OO &amp; 3:10
TtJE GENERAL"S DAUGHTER tR)
7 .00 &amp; 9: 3Q~OAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN I :00 &amp; 3 30
· NO PASSES. NO BARGAIN NIGHT
TARZAN (G)
7"10 &amp; 9.00 DAILY
. MATI NEES SAT 'sUN t :10 &amp; 3:00

Gener11l M•aager. ..... .. ................ .Eit.liOl
N&lt;W'······································· ....~. F.". 1102
or ExJ. ll06

SOUTHPARK (R)
.7:10 &amp; ~ · 10 DAILY
MATINE ES SAT SU~ 1:10 &amp; 3:10

Other Services
Ad¥ertlslng. ................. ,.... ...........Elt. 1104

Clmolotion ................................. .E... 1103
Clusllled Ad•·························"-··.E•t 1100

.

·f.

290 N. Second

NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHT

•

�)

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Thursday, July 15, 1998

Page4

Williams' clutch HR helps Meigs pos~ 12-11 win over Athens·
By DAVE HARRIS

Adam Williams slammed two home runs. including a
two-run shot in the last inning to win the b;lll game a5
Meigs defeated Athens 12-11 in American Legion Eigbth
Dislrict baseball action Wednesday evening at Meigs
High School. The game was called after six innings due
to darlmess.
,
Williams was four for five at the plate with a double

"

.

and a single to go with his two round tnppers. The two ference. Athens went into the game with a half game lead
home run game was the forst of his career. and gave him m the hallie for first place over Pickerington who owned
thr10e home runs in the last two games . He hll a grand a 10-4 record . Pockerington hosted Logan las( noght.
slam in the tounh onnong of Sundays second game to · Athens jumped oollo a quockJ -0 lead in the top of the
first mning. Brooks Purdy led off the game wtth a walk,
help Meigs to a I0-8 win over Cof.umbus Wesiland.
The loss avenges a 13-2 loss to Athens on June 29 at and SCOred tWO OUts later when Devin Chapman homered
Athens. Meigs is no"' 5-7-1 in the Eighth Dislrict con- 10 left-center. Dan Jewell made it back-to-back homers
ference standings. and 8-8-1 overall. Athens drops to 23- as he hit one to about the same place two pitches Jater. .
~eigs. however came back_in their half of the inning .
10, with their founh loss in a row, ~nd 10-4 m the con-

.,

.

.

'

Michele Timms trier! to steal it and size on your bench," said East coach
By HAL BOCK
-.·
. NEW YORK (AP) In the the ball just hit me dead on. on the Linda Hill -MacDonald of Cleveland.
" The tallest player on our team was
inrmups. when everybody was top of my finger."
Holdsdaw said she was in pain 6-foot-3. Next tallest after that was
watching the celebrities arriving at
Madison Square Garden for the first- after the game. but thought she 6-2. We had 'three post players; they
ever. WNBA All-.S tar.. game. Lisa would be able to play whe.n had fi've. There's not .much you can
.
·•
, .
· Washington visits Charlotte on 'do."
Leslie dunked.
· That left Leslie , ~t 6-foot-5. free
She took off. went ~p over the top Saturd~y . She will lle-re-evaluated by
· to roam,
.
(
.
of. the rim and s lammed the\ ball learn do~tors on Friday.
· It was an unfortunate incident in
The gaine includorl a full ~ supply
through the basket.
an otherwise sho~piece e\'ening _for of lay ups and bre:;tkaways. lhree'And noljodv ~eemed to noti..:c: ·
Dunks are· hu-hum stuff fnr the the WNBA. which sold out Madison pointers and om-look passe&gt;.
But sorrv. still no dunks.
guys. Bur in lhe&lt; three years the Square Garden for the event. The
The We;I led from the start. openWNBA has hccn in business. no Gardeg was jammed with celebrjties.
The c:rowd included S(X..'ccr stars mg the rnargir'i to a£.. much as 20
woman has converted .One. This
seemed ro ht:: the perfeq setting for Mia Hamm and Brand1 Chastain: points and seeing if shrink to a few a,s
courts ide regular Spike Lee; Q.regory {\\. o. hut ne\'er yielding t.\? the East
the first. and Leslie knew it .
So when she did it. nobody \\a.-. Hines . ··dunctng with youngSters in stars.
!he halftime sho" ; Joan Jeu ; Li ~fi
Leslie and Sheryl Swoopes led -a
watching.
•
10-0 spurt at the shirt of the gamo .
"I was pretty su rprised,"' Lc~llc Monell &gt;; ;uiJ R~~on Leach.
Thcv saw ari All -S tar . Qame vJit-h Afu:r a baskCt by. Hbldsdaw intcrsaid. ''No one noticed because .Yflcv
'
. ruptcd that run. the . West upped its .
were·n•'t paying atrcntion. It was :. ,r,mothing original ~ defense .
,.
good one. wasn't it'.)•'
"Our defense was about JOO per- lead to 17-2 .
'
.
· So was · the game · for hi"· She cent bette~ than ! 'ever dreamed it · With 4' : minutes left in the half.
scored 13 points and was the MVP i9 would be in an All-S tar game:" West the lead was down to J l -2l! . Then the
•,
the Western Conference 's 79-61 v.ic- co~ch Van Chancellor said. "We West took off again. as Yolanda
\\Crc' swi(ching on"'."scrc Cns . \Vc Gritl'ith and Leslie led a 12-0 spurt
lory over the East.
looked
like we llad been W&lt;Jrk.in" on that included a .breakaway by
It was a cost ly first All -Star game
defense
,
for a long time."
'
Swoopcs with 17 seconds left in the
PLAYING KEEP·AWAY is whal Eastern Conference AU,Siar
for Chamique .Holdsclaw of the
Playing
with
purpose.
the
West
half.
Shannon
Johnson of lhe Orlando Miracle is trying to accomplish
Washington Mystics . She suffered a
.
fomit
cd
the
·East
tn
35.1
percent
After
a
steal
by
two~time
league
while
weathering
the defense offered by lhe Sacramento Monarchs'
chip fracture of her left -index finger
shuotm
g.
MVP
Cynthia
Cooper.
the
West
Yolanda
Griffith
during
the third WNBA All-Star Game Wednesday .
in the first half and. played just II
The
West
had
a
siLc
advantage
called
a
timeout
with
0
.9
seeon1i•
left
night
al
Madison
Square
Garden, where the Western Conference
'mlllUICs .
· I , '
•
,
stars won 79--61. (AP)
;
" J think it was ·Within the , first inside and made the ·!'l'ost of it. outr'C - on the clock.
three minutes." Holdsclaw said. " It bounding the ' Easl 48 -36 .
. " ltho~gh,t we'd get a phiy..set up · maybe,sh~ could get a dunk ." ·.
But the• pass went awry and Leslie
was the first time I went i)l. Theresa , "There wasri't .much we could do lor L.osa·. Chancello~ -sao,d. If we .
Timms tiied-a length -uf~t hc~cnurl ,. had· no.chancc for that biFOf history.
•. "
· ' ·
Weatherspoon passed me the ball and · to combat that wlicn yoi.r don :!.have llad more 11n1e, maybe I,' second s. _pass with' Leslie poised underneath .

'

'

..

Baseball'-s second half st~rt$ wi~h su~prises in· Nl _
'

By RONALD SLUM ,
BOSTON (AP) - Larry Dierker
is back with the flouston Astros, and
the Seattle Mariners are in Safcco
Field.
Los Angeles, Baltimore and
AnaHeim are looking to make up for
dismal firSt halves .
Still; with the second half of the
season starting" {onighl. many are
focuSing on the New York Yankees,·
the defending World Series champi-

National League . While Atlanta has a . ~nd no other team in the AL Central ·
" I think everyone knows the fi ve-ganie lead iO:.the East and seems · is over .500.
The Yimkees (52:34), while not
Yankees can be beat." the Rangers' on track to its eighth straight division
Rafael Palmeiro said, ''bur everyone title, surprisi ng Cincinnati.is one per- the invincible machir1e that won an
sti II kn·ows they're the team to beat." cemage point ahead of Houston in AL record 114 games last year, hold
. Heading into tonighfs games. the the Central, San Francisco is 2';, a four-game lead in the East over
AL looks the .same as it did at the end games up on Arizona in the West , Boston (49-39). with Toronto (47of last . seas\m. with the Yankees, · and the Astros and New York Mets 43) three games behind. the Red Sox,
spunered
when
Nomar
Cleveland :ind Texas ·Jeading the are bunched up in ' the wild-card who
Garciaparra missed the final nine
divisions , and Boston heading the standings.
Cleveland had baseball's best ~ames of the first half with a groin
wi IU ~c ard race .
~
, 'SurpriSes. huwcvCr, abou nd in the record on the first half, gomg 56-31. InJUry.

ons.

Major league umpires plan · .
to _.w alk off fi~ld_s in September
. By GENARO·C. AR.MAS
··· · PHILADELPHI A (AP)- Major

expected to announce their resign~- ' \'luring pr~vious work stoppages.
tiuns in thc·nextlel" days.
.
• None of the umpires would com-

:. league :umpires voted to resign Sept.

What se t the umpire? off this time mcnt f(•ll?wing tho IOLlr-hour mcct-

· In the West, Texas (48-39) is five
games ahead of Oakland (43-44), six
in front of Seallle (42-45) and 6': in
front of Anaheim (41-45) ..
Baseball's focus will be on Seanle
on tonight when the Mariners niovc
tn(o Safeco Field, at $517 million the
most expensive ballpark ~X~P.
· "lt'.s an awesome place," said
Jamie Moyer, scheduled to start
Y.Wight's _g ame . agairtst San. Diego . .
(See SECOND HALF on Page 5) ,

Meigs football
meeting 'Monday
'
The 10-day , instructional period
f&lt;ir Meigs High School football will
get under way on Monday July 19 at
6 p.m .. • aceording to varsity head
coach Mike Chancey.
Any Meigs High School athlete
interested in playing football are
asked to repon to the varsitr locker
mom at the high school.

'

' Anyone interested in playiflg
football at Southern Junior High are
asked to be at the. high.schoo!,'s f~ll­
ball building on Monday,July 19 at6
p.m. for helmet fi)lin,g.

'

Ronda (Sprmger 3-!0) al Toronto fHemgen 66). 7:05 p.m
.
, Atlanta IMaddu11 10-5) a\ NY. Yankees (0.
Hcm11ndez 10·6), 7.· 35 p m
Moutftal fD. Smllh 1-Jl at Balumo rt (MusSi nn
1 11 ·4) , 7:J5 p.m.
Tonight's gilmes
Kansas Ctt)' ( Reichert 0-0) at ~dwaulu~e
(AL vs. NL unless otherwise noted)
(WO&lt;:Jdard 10-5), 8.0-11 p.m.
Philmldphia (Uyrd 11 -.'i) al Boston (Ro~e 4-2).
. l)ttroit tThnmr~nn R-RI nt Houston (Banon S7.05 p.m.
3), 8:05 IJ.m.
,
'
• ' .
'
N.Y Mets ( l~ik'r 8-6) at Tampa Bay (Arrojo 2C~ .... tC) Whttc Sol (Navarro .6-M.t at' St Lo(J uls
5). 7 : 0~ p.m
·,
.
(Acevedo 4-31. 8:10p.m
Flo uda &lt;L Hernandez 5-6) :11 Toronto
Ariwna (Rey nosO 5·1) at Texas {Sde 7-6 1. M . ~5

•
Major league slate

(Carpenter 6-.h 7:~ p.m
Cleveland (Burba 7-5) m Pimborgh (S,hmJdtS6), 7:0j p.m
Atlama (Giavine 7-81 at NY Yankl.'cs (Clemens

8-3), 7:35 pm.
Mnnu·eal (Till.lmmn J-5) at l:lalhnWlTC: (l'onson
7-6), 7:35 p.m.
,
Minnes01a (Radke 6-7) at Chtcago Cubs (Lu:ber
8 :05 p rn
Kansas City ( R ~1chcn 0-,0&gt; at M1h~oauh:~
{Woodard 10-S). jlpd , acddent
Ot=troit (Miiclu 4-81 nt H1,1us ton (M1IIr:' o. l ),

s-n

lt0!5 p.m

Chicago White~~ {S1ro1ka 1 ·8)

ill

St L oui~

'(Jimenez 5-91.8:10 p.m.
Arizonr~ (Andc,on

2- 1) at Tua5 (Helhng 6-71.

8:35p.m.
·
, Sa.11 Die&amp;n (Athby K-4\ at s~aule (Moyer 8-j),
1~: 05 p.m.
Los Angeles (Urnwn 9-6) a1 Anaheim (Finley 5·
9), 10:05. p.m.
:
Slln Frnncl~~.:oll.s~s 6-5) at Oakland (Ru)!.crs 410 . 0~ p.m

n

NL Colora;Jo ( rloha nnn '1-7) at Clni.'IIHlil!t
IPm~s ~ - 1

), 7 0~ p 111

Friday's games
(At vs. NL unless otherwise no led )
~ - ftl

Mtnlll'sot:l I Hawkms

nt Chkat"
.

1

.&amp; I 7 0-11

· . · I' m
l'htladclphHl ! Ptr"''"
l 1-1) 7 O'i
11

Ny.' p.~Cl~ !

?O,'i tJm

2·-' J nl Bt'M"'') 1Sabt'rhagcn
..
K t.l 6 ~ 1',11 ~
I
W111 ~ 'i
l'C

.

'

,unpll l.1yl

-. I '

..hsablc,J ltst.

·

N11otional Lragut

,

ATLANTA BRAVES . Prumolcd Dic k Ba!der5on
dn1~ctor of pla)·er developme nt Announced Dcric
Lj;~dOtl:f, director of mino r league opera uons, will
w'l;rk a5 a OlllJOr league sc~tt

Hl

lo!

Ang~les

(Valdes 7-7) at

An:~lt'ltll

!OhV1m:s

8-6). l 0·05 p m

5-5). IO.J.5 p m
NL. Colorad o tAstact o 8-8t at Cincmtmlt
(Harrtuch 9-6). 7 05 p m

...

NatKtnal Bask~tball Assocl111tkm
F-C Cnl Bowdlcr

•

Basketball
WNBA slate

Football
National football J.ragur
MIAMI DOLPHINS · S1gneJ DT Wahr1 5&lt;:('111
Wa1ved WR S1~lha Burley. DE Enc D[lvls an . l ·s
):Jdl te Mttchdl

Wednesday's score

Hockey

Wr:&gt;!CIIl Conferenc~ 79 , Eastern Ctmf~·rt·n o:t! 61

Friday's games
Dt•trolt Jl W;1§hmgton. 7 p m
t'harloue :u Orlando. 7 J O p m
Snm1n1~nh1 011 CLEVLLAND. 8 pIll
Houston at,Utah, ~ p m

Transactions
Baseball

Amrrlran Lngut
CH/('A(JO WHII:E SOX Rc~·alkJ Ul Br1.1n
. 1
,
"ill nmon ~ IHllll ( harlouc t•l tht lmern.1H!ln ~ ll..t', II!!UC
OpHI'III.' tl 01 Jdll wkr to Chark•ll~

IJI.IRIIIfTIGEH S,..AI.'mmcJCRnniC:~sanm3

·

Natio-nal Hockry

t

tragu~

.(\TLANTA THRASH [RS · Nameo-t'Curl Frnser

,
l'Oach
NEW YORK Ri\NGERS ·

Hl:~v;~e

S1~ned

I.W hn

PHILA ELPHIA rtYERS · Stgned C Chm
All'lerllfll l
-year con1ract
ST L UIS !:I LUES Re · ~ • r:oed C l'1 cm~.
Turgeon 10 n two )ear contrncl
.tAMPA HAY LIGHTNING· Fired Ja o: quc~
IJen1ers. coach and Don Murdm:h . dtrel:tvr of pla~­
l"r . .h:n:lopnlt'nl Nanll'J Ste-ve Ludt1l: ro.t..:h
i\nnoun~·ed Rll.'k Dudley wtll handle the geru.-ral
0101na~er du 11o:S .
TORONTO MAPlE LEA I·S Annnun . . et.l p,,,
Qu•nn n 'ildl ~lilt as ~ume 11~ dmn·~ " t the .~t'lk1 . d

~'5 STAR SAFETY" ,
·Auto, Air, V6, A_
M/FM Cass, . - 7flasseriger Seating, .Rear -Defrost,
Power Windows, Power Locks
.

Saturday's semifinal loser

.

c

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KygerCree~ - Little League

·, To~:~rnament Hall of Champions
Xw:

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· Ctja\noj(m
1959 ........ :........................ ...... .... ....... ... ... i ......................................... :...................................., .Doc's Fine Foods'
1960·............ :..................... ...................... :....... ., ................... .'...................... Sommerville Motors-Point Pleasant

l~~t.::_~:- _: : _ ,: _:_:_:_ : ::: : :.. ::_ _: _ ::: : _:_ :_:_:_:_:__:_:_:_ :_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:;::_:_:_:_::_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:;_::_:_ : ::_: : : : _: :,:,: _: :·_~: -p~~i~~;:;;;~

1964 ......... .......................................... ..... .................................... ...................... :.................... .-Gallipolis Red Sox
1965 .. ,.......:.: ....... :...... , ....... ... ,...... :.•.. .... ..... :.: ......................... ,......... .'............... :.. :·................... Middleport Yankees
1966 ............ :............................................................................................. :., ..... -..........., ........ Middleport Senators
1967 ........................................................... .... ................................................ :....... People's Bank-Point Pleasant
1968 ......... .... .............................................................................................................. . ........ McArthur Merchants
1969 .............. _. ........................ .. .......... .............. :............. ,.......... ........................ Fruth's Pharmacy-Point Pleasant
1970 ............. , ............................................................................. ,........................ City lee &amp; Fuel-Point Pleasant
1971 ...... ::................................................................................................................................. New Haven Cubs
i 97.2 ..........................,...... :..............................................................................Daniel Boone Hotel-Riplev, W.Va.
' 1973 .......................................... ... .................... ........ ,................................... ,.............. ........... .-..... Green Senators
1974 : ................................... :....................... :........ .... :................................................................... City Ice &amp; Fuel
1975 ...... , .............. .-.-................................ ... ,,..................................................................... Johnson's Supermarket
1976 .................................. , ....................... ::.... .-................. ..... ................................................. Middleport Braves
19 77 :....... .'............... .-........ .'......... ..... ........ .........."~: ..................... ................................. :............. Pomeroy Yankees
1978-85: no tournament
1986 ........... ............ ......... :... ........................... :.......,:: .......... :............................ :............ ...... .Tuppers 'Piains Tigers
1987 ;....... .'..... .'......................................................................... :................................ Mason Co. Bar Association
1988 ................... ....... ........... .... .... ...... ... ............................................................................ .Middleport Cardinals
1989 ........ ...... ........................................... ..... ,........... ..................................... ... Hubbard's Greenhouse-Syracuse
'1990 ................... ................. ........ ... ..... .... ..... ..-................................................................. Hailnan Trace Wildcats
199l ............................. ......................................................... ......................... ........ ............... ... ............... Coolville
1992 ............................... ,........... .... ................... ....... :......................... ... ........................ ..... Middleport Cardinals
1993 ..................................................................... .- .............................................................................. Bidwell #I
1994 ....................................................................................................................................... Gallipolis Yankees
1995 .. , ........................................ ,.................. .... ................... ......................... ... Fruth's Pharmacy-Point Pleasant
1996 ................ .... .... .......................... ......... .... ......... .............................. Quality Furniture Plus-Little Hocking '
1997 ....... , ...................................................................................................................... Harrisonville DK Fackler
1998 ........................................................... .................. ................... ............. :Mead's Body Shop-Point Pleasant

Once A'gain, The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
Special Meigs County Fa.ir Preview Editio.n. This Year's
Edition Premises To Be One Of The biggest And Best Everl . l
-Look For This Special Editi.on In You .
Friday, August 13th Paper!
·.

Basketball

ATLANTA I-IAWKS· S!!ned G b son Terry and

1999 WINDSTAR WAGON

J i25 (Sun.), I P M t - - - - - ' - - - 1

San Ptegu (Hiu:hcOC"k 8-6&gt;at Seanle fFassero 4-

9), 1005 r in
Snn Fmnmco (Ontz 11 ·51 at Oakl;md (Herecha

Cuh~

' llltpmu6-~). \10pm
Cle\cl:tnd (Nagy I I ~~at 1-'m ~ burgh !CurJ'' ' ll

1

p.m

from the 60/day difrabled list and .assigned him to
Toledo of 11\C- lnternattonallxague.
KANSAS CITY ROYAtS : Extended the conInK\ ofTuny Muset', manager. through the 2()(X) seasun
1&amp;.'
JJ!iJ·
SEAITLE MARINlRS : Placed UF Brian
Hunter and OF-INF (~aries Gtpwn on , the 15-day
dtsabled hst. • retooctivc tq , Jul~ 11 Recal,k d OF
Ozzte TinunPns from TU~:oma n( the Padlic Cuil~l
Leagt~ Ac tivated OF Jay Buhner from the 15-day

~

&lt;
7/24 (Sat), 6PM 1-----,---,
Fri.\ay's se&lt;:ond-game

Scoreboard
Baseball

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Friday's first-game loser

t\lJGliST 16- 21 S'T
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(Continued from Page 4)

Final-four first-to~ bracket

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

2. and basehall seems happ y wit h was NL' president len Colem an's ing, the day after the All-Star game _
,
•
t~ree-day suspension of umpire Tom at B.~sto n' s Fenv.:ay Park. Game,s ,
their decision.· ·
Umpires have been :it odds with Hallion o n July 2 for bumping a resume toni ght.
.
()w.ners and players si nce Roberto player. It was the first such action "
The umpires have a contract that
· Alomar spat at ;m ump three Yl'•" that baseball officials cou ld remcm- · cu ns through this season and pays
ago, claiming they don't gel' enough . her.'
• 'them $75.000-to-$225.000 annually,
respect.
'
"The purpose of this mecting _was" depending on seniority: Th~ deal
Owners. tired of.rcpcatcd hickcr- to address quarrels with ba~ch;ill:· bars strike s. so the rcsiunation.s arc
mg and convinced the umpireS arc umrircs· union head Ri~hic Phillips an attempt to ~ct a~ound that.
rc'placcable, sounded almost pleased. ~a,Ld . "The tcmion is much ~realer 'Phillips saiil
" This is ei ther a threat to he than it's ever hccn . Baschall is in, a
Phillip~ sa'id the contra({ ca ll s for
ignored, or an offer to be an:cptcd." slate' of ~.: haos ."
rtsigning .umpires to collect a total
said Sandy Alderson. executive vice
He said umpires will form a new of $ 15 million in severance pay.
president of baseball opco ations. cc&gt;rporation on ,:iept. ,3 and the AL Most senior umpires would get
speaking for commissioner Bud and NL would have to contract for $400.000' severance. and baseball
Selig.
,
. services wjth the new body. Umpires wou ld have until early January to
There are . 68 major le ague · wou ld -supervise . themselve s and pay.
'
"It might ·he our cheapest sdluumpires , and 57 of them allended t!1e nlllk,e their own schedul es, he said.
.. meeting in Philadelphia, kaying they
Owners , however. could hire ·· tion ." Alderson said, meaning .that~
wouldn't work the last 4 :2 weeks of umpires from rnino~ leagues. high w(JUid be prelerablc ·to costly liti gathe season. The other II were si:houls anct colleges. as lhey have
·
(See .UMPIRES on Page 5) ·

Second half...

Meigs wins ...

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The Middleport Yellowjackets
picked up a win last Saturday when
the Ohio Swarm forfelled to the
Jackets. The Yellowj·ackets are playing at this p&lt;iint an independent
schedule. and a lot of times the teams
don't stick to their schedule for ooe
reason or another.
The Jackets are scheduled to play
this Saturday at home against the
Dayton Drive, the Washington·
(D.C.) Stars on July 24th. Also a
game later in the season with the
Belpre Panthers.
The Ycllowjackets will then begin
their first season in the Central Ohi&lt;1
Football League (COFL) on August
29th. The Jackets will play a ten
game schedule with five of those.
games coOli ng at home .
\Season tickets are still available
for the COFL games. 10 .games for
$20. tv purchase a season ticket call
740-9Y2' 0717. The tickets are avail - .
able on a first .come first serve basi s.
A schedule for the COFL will be
annQunced fater. Kick-off for this
weeks ~arne with Dayton is 7 pm. at
the Meigs Junior High School's field
in Middleport.

SHS helmet
fitting slated
for Monday

'\'\,I,

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Yellowjackets
win by forfeit

West uses height to· beat Ea~t
79-61 in WNBA All-Star Game ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

" What an amazing place to be a part
of. It'&gt; phenomenal. '·
After .that. attention on· the AL
With 23 teams pledging 10 play, the laJgest tourna- with losing rums from Friday, July 23 playing in that
West shifts to the Angels. who have
ment of ots kmd m southeastern Ohio will swt Friday Saturday's first game. The win.ner of Saturday's first
gone 11-7 since the return of shortat the Kyger Creek Employees Club field, located game wilt face the loser of Saturday's second ganie in
stop Gary DoSarcina and will try to
between Addison and Cheshire on Ohio S .R. 7, across the finals on Sunday, July 25.
"make
up for a dasmal !tlaf1. caused
from the Ohio Valley Electric Company's Kyger
The 3 p .m. home run derby will precede the champanly
by IOJUnes .
Creek plant
.
.
• .onship game, which will feature the winner of
"You
can say we miss th1s guy o r
Because of the number of teams panicipating, a Saturday's secoild game and the winner of the finalthat
guy.
that doesn't go on here."
double-ehmmatton format will be in effect at the con- four first-loss brackeJmanager
Terry
Collins said. "There
clusi_on of quarterfi~al play on Thursday, July 22.
IS more being made of our first half
Fmal-four action will begin on Saturday, July 23
PPWV -Team is frofll Point Pleasant , W.Va.
becaU:se e:tpectations ~mng mto
) spnng lrammg v.ere high ...
llidwell U
Baseball's boggest underachoe,ers
are
the Los Angeles Dodgers . Wul) a
7116 (Fri.), 6PM
$7~ 2 moll ion opening-day payrolL
bog thongs were expected of them
IPM
Pomeroy lndlaus
1-----:--.
But Ke&gt;·m Brown . baseball 's first
SIOO mollion man . os just 9-6. and
• Lo; Angeles islast in the NL West at
Gallipolis
39-~7 . 10 games behind the Goants .
7121 (Wed.), 6PM 1-----.
HOME DELIVER - Meigs pitcher Jeremi!lh Bentley delivers a
.. , u ·ant to completely forget
pitc~ to the plate ~uring Wednesday's Eighth District home game
7/16 (Fri.), 7:30PM
abour
the first half. 10 tell ) OU the
agatnst AtJ:tens, whtch the ho~ts won 12·11. Bentley fanned nine and
catcher Todd Hundley sai&lt;l
trmh.'
'
walked 10 1n a complete--game effort (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
Mason Twins
Ar least the Dodger&gt; have ho pe$'
the' c3n makr a run . Not , () fb r
Baltimore (36-51 ). 1'6 , game&gt; ouJ
(Conunued from Page 4)
despite the third-highest payroll o n ·
New Haven Reds
single by Jeremiah Bentley. Heath finding the plate at tomes , but kpt openong day ($785 million 1. A dozen
Rothgeb then followed with any ball bauling back to pitch out of trouble . of baseball's l ow-pa~ roll francho;c
7/17 (Sat), lOAM
to
deep center field for a 1acrifice. He scalle~ed I0 hus. walked I0 and also ha"e liule hope.
11i3 (Fri .). 6PM 1-----,
whoch the center fielder dropped for struck out nme .
PPWV Nationwide lnsunmc:e
"Once the game :-.I arts. pa} roll:7118 (Sun.), 4PM t - - - - - ,
an error. Williams and Cumings lhen
Williams '\'as ~-for 5 at the plate are out the ~ indO\t. ... Mmn e~otl Allfollowed with singles to give Meigs a with hi~ lwo home runs. a doubk and Stat Ron Coomer. saod . "If the balh
6-3 lead,
a single. Cummgs was a perfect three o&gt;er the plate. if ) ou put good "ood
Green Irvin's Glass
Athens sc\)red two in the third for three with hiS home run and t\' O o n iL it docsn · t ma~lcr if you· rc mal- .
7/21 tWed.), 7:3(JPI\'tt----.....J
inning to cut the Meigs lead to 6-5. singles lo go along v/i1h. a Wa'lk. ing the rtlimmum or S50 million :··
7/17 (Sat!. I UOAM
Dan Jewell and Jon Sechkar both Mollohan added a triple and a single .,
At ·533.2 million . Cincinnati ha~
walked and . Jason Sparhawk and Baker had two sin2les. while the sma llest ope non,g-da) · p~yroll
MasonVFW
, 7/18 (Sun.)) , ;:,~~~~----.J
Kiln.Conkey had singles.
·
Smi'ddie had a double "and Bentley among the co.ntende~s .
.
, ·
Home Care Medkal II
Athens scored three runs ·in the and Rothgeb each added a sing1e.· ·
: ·_Wintunt£ teiiins ·~arc team~ that
fourth inning to take an 8-6 lead . Pat
Brandon Buckley p iCked up the '~ork tOgether.' ' Scou William son
Point Pleasant Hardware .
Looney and Chapman both reached loss in relief of Derick Hewitt. The said. ·~ .You do n't have to h~.l\'e the big
7/24 (S~t.), 7:30PM
on Meigs errors. three walks and a two combuied to strike .put five, walk money to "'in ...
7/17(Sat),IPM
single by Conkey plated the runs .
seven and give up 14 hits . Chapman
In Hous!on. Doerker returns 10 the
~eigs cut the lead to 8-7 in the . and Jewell each had a home run and
Kyger Creek
Astros .for tonight' :-, game again~t
bonom of the founJ;t. when Cumings a single to lead Athens . Conkey Detroit. The manager collar.sed 10
Middleport Reds
hit his founh home run of the year to added a single. while Hewill and the dugout on June 13 from a se1zure .
lead off the · inning .
Sechkar each had a double . Purdy then had surgery to repair •hnonnal
OVCS Defenders
Meigs then scored three runs in and Sparhawk each had a single.
blood vessel s in hi s braon .
the. fifth inning to take a 10-8 advan- . Meigs will travel to Wellston · ·-r11 be delighted. but I haven't
7117 (Sat. l. 2:30PM
tage . Williams got things staned tonight and will end the regular ~ea­ been antsy to get bac~ . " Dierker
when he doubled down the third ·base son at home Sat urday .w ith two said. :·J. don't feel an) thong but norBarlow-Vincent
lme with one out. Cumipgs followed games against Lancaster's "B" mal. I'd say ar no point did I worry
with a single, a walk to Mike squad.
.
· · about my rccol'ery. 1 had contidence
Southwestern
Mollohan -~d a Jamie Baker single Inning 'll!ll!h
.
that I would recover.
to go af'ong' with an Athens error gave . Athens .... .... .': .. .302,303='11 - it-~ .
Federal H""king
7/23 (Fri.), 7:30PMf-,---~...J
Milwaukee' s
game
againSt
Meigs the lead .
··
·
Meigs
........... 330-132= 12-14-3
Kan.sas City \\35 ·Postponed after a
7117 (Sat.), 4PM
· But Athens came right back in the
crane being used to huild Miller
...
.,
top of the sixth inning to plate three
Balteries
Park. the Bre~·er&gt; ' 11ew home. colDeal Funeral Home (PPWV)
runs for ,a ll-10 le.ad. Bentley hi•. a
Athens :, Deric.~ Hewill. Brandon lapsed Wednesday. killing three peo Eastern EaRles
wild streak, and walked three iii a Buckley (L~6) and Jason Sparliawk
ple
row. A single by Pur.d y and a Meigs
Meigs: Jeremiah Bentley (W) and
IWbert -Trunzo: .chainnan of the
error gave Athens the one run lead.
Adam Cumings
bOard overseei'ng construction of the .
71'1,2 (Thu.), 7:JOPMI__;_-,-~:J
With darkne ss coming fas,t ,
Home runs
, $400 million .stadium. said conttac. ' ..
, Bentley led off the bouom of the
Devin Chapman-first inning, one tors were cooperating with the pohce
sixth with a walk. One o ut later o n
'
and sheri ff's i~\iestigation into lhe
Williams hit the first :pitch over th~
·Dan Jewell-first inning. none on · accident.
360 sign and give Meig s the 12-11
Adam Williams (2)- first "inning.
· ··Any . time we haye,, a death or
wm.
one on. sixth inning. one on l ·
serious injury. we treat rt as .a c.: nmtBentley wcp_t the: route •,9 pick up
Adam C uming~-fo ur1h mmng, nal investigalion. .. Pollee Ch1ef ·
the wm for Merg 1s. He had problems , none on
Arthur Jone.s said .

to lie the game at 3-all. Heath Rothgeb singled with one
oot. and Williams followed wi th his first 'home run to
left-center.
,
.
Adl!lll Cumings followed with a walk_. and Mokc
Mollohan and Jamie Baker both followed woth smgles to
tie the game Bllhree.
'. .
· Meigs then took a 6-3 lead in the S&lt;cond mnmg. Kyle
Smiddie doubled to right field, and- went to thord oo a
(See LEGIONNAIRES on Page 5)

I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1999 Kyger reek ttle
League Tournament

Thursday, July 15, 1999

...,.,,.. ConeipOndenl

•

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

;\\l\'t&lt;.lf\'\~\~G \)\', ,\ H\J\\E ...

Umpires ...

fRlllAY, Al}GtlS'f 6, Call
1999
DAVEor KATHY
at 992-2155
1
FOR MORE INFORMATION

The Dai

m:mal!-er

•

Sentinel

..

~

$

00
....

(Continued from Page 4)

tion or a work stoppage. " Unless
I' m mistaken , I don 'tthink these tac tics have convinced a single person
to be supportive. That would include .
1he fans . the media and baseball
use! f."
Phillips said umpires originally
voted to strike immediately, then
changed their votes and decided to
resign .
·
In 1995, umpire s were locked out

-----,-

MSRP $22,095

and missed the tirsl 86 games of the during the postseaSon, owners
regular season. They also struck and obtained an court injunction in fedmissed the first seven weeks of the eral court .
Alderson said lhe umpires '
1979 season and the first seven
actions made him wonder if this
games of the 1984 playoffs.
' Tension has been high since would "escalate this silualion to the
September 1996, whe~ Alomar was point were II might be irretrievable ."
suspended for five games for spitting Several management officials sai d
in umpire John Hirsch beck's face- fans ~on't pay to sec umpires. and
a penalty deemed too lenient by the players have never hesitated to play
umps . When they attempted to strike with replacement umps .

-----------,--~-'-------~ ------ --·--

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MONDAY-FRIDAY

177 EXIT 132
RIP~EY, WV

9:00AM- 7:00 PM

SATURDAY
9:00 AM • 5:00 PM

(304) 372-3673
(800) 964-3673

______

- ----- --· ---- ....._ .

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�Page 6 • The Daily 56; 1tinel

'

Thi.II'Sday, July 15, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ByTheBend

Armstrong·still reclusive as moon landing .anniversary nears
By MARCIA DUNN
AP Aerospace Writer
CAPE CANAVERAL, Aa. Neil Am"trong was slallding a1 the
pad where he blasted off on July 16.
1969. watching the tower roll away
from the soon-to-be-latinched space·
shut~e Columbia. when a technician
approache&lt;! htm .
Would he kindly sign a photo~ ·
After all. the shuttle worker
explained. we·re all follo101ng your
dream . 1lie first man on the moon
replied he didn •t sign autographs. The
worker. imtated. walked away.
Ten ·'?" 15 minutes later. Arm strong went over. asked 10 see the
photo and scrawled his name on it.
lliC· technician thanked him . But
more than two ye~ later - the
encounter was in. April 1997- it still
irks him .
·
··1 can understand i( if )OU were
· outside with a big crowd. and everybody was bomharding you: · the
worker. who did nol want to be identified. ~aid in recalling the storv last
week . "' But 1 doni kn ow why hes

got so many hostilities when he ·s
aroond the launch pad.··
Just days away from lhr 30th
anniverslll) of hts first step on the•
moon when he proclaimed.
··That·s one small step for n13n. one
~iant leap for manktnd" Armstrong 1s as reclu)i\'C and rcticenl 33

e'er.
. \\1ule the 68-)ear-old commander
of Apollo )I - has agreed to attend a
han&lt;juet at ken ned) Space Center on
Fnday. he "ill take part in no inter·
' 'iews or ne\\s conferences. and ga\e
no autogr.:tphs.
.
He·ll be joined b)' Ijuu Aldnn.
who follo .. ed him down the ladder
onto the Sea of Tranquillity . Aldnn.
69. IS pushing space tourism -these
days as president or a couple of Los
Angeles companies.
. . ·
Michael Collins. 68. who circled
the moon in the Apollo I I command
module, is skipping the banquet.
He s retired in Marco ISland, Aa.
As usual, Aldrin is me only one of
the three publicly reminiscing on this
3~0th -.nniversal) of man ·s first moon

landing.
"nh reque-t.' tor htm. e&gt;ery thing
"As ume has p•ssod;· Aldrin told from ·Will )OU "J!n thiS for me?" to
lhr National Pless Club in Washing- ·v.ill l"" come to my son's Boy
ton last month. ·-r.-e come to undtr- Scout. Ea,le Scout f"'Opam?" "saKI
slalld that the true value of Apollo mu.eum manager John
wasn ·t the rocks. "asn 'tthe data that
ZV\e/ "'IShes Armstrong. who has
,.e brought back. It was the ,.orld· ·an office In Lebanon. Ohto, would
w""' Sense or paroctpauun. of people drop hy no.. and then and mingle
every....,here .recalling ·"'here the)
"'"h \ISIIors. Armstrong has no ties
were at that moment . and how the)
to the 27-&gt;&lt;ar-old museum and has
'
.
.
shared m a human achenrure rhat heen the:re only fi\'e o/ SIX u~s .
brought out the rest in aiEf'I!S. ··
··on the other ha:nd.··
noted.
Fellow ostronauts -.;sh
&gt;ifung~, ··the fact that Neil Armstrons is quialso would speak ouL but } respect . Jet and reserved about the whole
his decades of silence.
/ thing perhaps is the better approach
··!think theresa re&lt;L&lt;on 10 tell ttk than going 0111 men, and selling this
510&lt;) . Neil has the capabilit} o f doi~g
and selling that, pro"'O!ing this and
that 'el). ,\ 'el')' wel_l He choose~ nol
promoting that-~
to."' said Apollo I 2"s Dick Gordon.
Armstrong surprised many when
··You can imagine ·what would haphe threw out the ceremonial lUst pitch
pen if he 'tarted something like that . at the Houston Astrodome in April.. ·
I mean. the poor guv would never Two months earlier, he introduced a
hav~ any peace of mind:· ·
singer at Italy"s San Remomusic festivaL Aldrin was at the songfcst_ too.
lnstead. that burden is horne b)
the Neil Armstronr Atr &amp; Space
In response to the common ques1\·t useum . In hts hometown .of tion of whether he would have made
Wapakoneta. Ohio.
a better first man on the moon from
··we JU't are bombarded "cekly a PR perspective, Apollo 1'2's bois-

z,.ez.

~

z,.-.:,

teroos commander Pete Conrad
refused to COIIUIIetiL
-Come on. I me., Neil's entitled
to do Ius tlung." Conrad. lhr Jhird
man on ._ moon. said in a recent
interview. Coni-ad was' fatally injured
in a IIIOIO«Cycle accident last week.
Armstrong's ion« stalus goes way
bacl. Conrad noted that during Armstrong' s test-pilot days at Edwards
Air l'ot-tt Base in California. he lh·ed
miles away in the mountains.
His piloting skills. though. were
unmatched. So was his cool.
As a fighter piiOI in Korea. Arm·
strong lost part of a wing over cne-

my terntOC) but sull managed to
return t&lt;\. safecy. H&lt; struggled to
regatn control of his tumbling Gemmi 8 spacecraft m 1966 and brought
it do..-n early . He eJC&lt;ted from a
lunar-lander trainer in 1968 moments
before it crashed in flames. And he
was dOwn to ahout 15 seconds of
fuel. after dodging boulders 011 the
moon. "hen the Eagle landed 011 July
20. 1969.

S~EIO

a

White House talks toda) and Monda}
and over tVIo dmners in bet10·een.
• ··1 hoP., that we can begin to energize the peace process m the Middle
Ea5t on terms that are JUst and fmr
and "ill guarante~ genuine sccUmy
for lsra&lt;l and a way of li• ing for the
Palesttntans: · Clinton said.
Also. Clinton intends to sound out
Barak on prospects for reopening
stalled negotiations \\'ilh ' Syria . in
whtch · Pr~sident HafeL AsSad had
been ,..Sstifed by the last U.bor-led
government he could get back the
strategic Golan Heights epclave for
the right peace terms.
While fonnal talks ha\e been in
suspensio.rr.Jpr three years. former
Prime Minister Bcinjamln Netanyahu
disclosed Wednesday that while he
was in office 'Syria secretly apeed to
a long-term Israeli -staffed e\lfly
warning stat ion on the heights In the
event of a nego'tiated Israeli withdrawal.
Chnton administration officials
pnvately have blamed Netanyahu for
causing the Arabs to di"strust Israel
and the pe~ce process· - a~d are
crediting his successor,f!arak, with a
\;r

kee~

cautious but
commitment in
making peace.
And yet. before flying here. Barak
said -he preferred. the United States
stale-back its role as ··policeman and
judge" and ,let Israel and rhe Arabs
work out U.eir problems directly.
Agreeably.
White
House'
spokesman Joe Lockhart said. ·The
{J.S. government has alwavs behoved
that OUI role should be not one that
tnes to impose plans on the,partie.s. .•
And State Department.spokesman
James P. Rubin said the United States
intervened in the talks between Israel
and the Palestinians in October a1 the
Wye Ri•·er resort in Maryland on I}
when"they " 'ere ncar collapse .
··clearly. the more the partie&lt; can
do themse lves. the li"s we will need
to he involved. '· Rubin said.
,Barak also saiil that,, "hilc he
would resume an lsraeJi trnop pullback in the West Bank. he would not
stick IO the tighttimdabk stipulated
by the Wye !.an,\1-for-sccuqly 'lgrec,
ment..
· ,. ·
', The Palesti nian s disagreed wuh
him on. both points. suggesting that
difficulties Ii.e ahead. Ahmed Abdel-

be told if her husband is cheating. It
can be a matter of life ur death.
Dear Ann Landers: "Outraged
in Lexington. Va.• said he could not
fathom how the state of California
1997, Los Anaeles , Ti•es Syndicate and
Cre.d'tors Syf!ll·l ca~e.
could automatically renew the dri·
ver's license of his 89- year-old
Dear Ann Landers: Please can stay healthy. If a woman cannot father. It seems his fatl}er is partially
rethink your advice to ·'Last to trust her husband to he faithful, she
blind and deaf, and suffers ·from
Know in New York.· Her husband certainly cannot trust him to take
dementia. He recently had a hcan
was cheating, and e'•erybody knew precautions to protect her. Please
· attack. a stroke and pneumonia.
it but her. Even after her letter. you agree with me. Ann.-- DAYffiN.
In 1993. our 21 year old ·son was
said you still didn ' t recommend OHIO
killed by a 'JI-year-old driver dtag ·
telling the wife.
DEAR DAYTON: I do . TO\Iay. nosed with dementia. Recently, my .
I always assumed. as .you did, extramarital sex can be more than wife and I successfully ended a fourthat if a man was unfaithful to his just cheating. It can mean bringing a year crusade to get a driving law
wife, she probably knew about hiS deadly disease to the_marriage bed. passed in Missouri . The new
philandering, and it was wrong to which is a pretty big price to pay for impaired drivers law a)lows those ·
taitle. Since the advent · of AIDS: rooting around.
closest to the situat ion · ; family
however. I've changed my mind . I
Times have changed. and you
mCmhcrs. phys1 iciaf!S~ thera'Pist~ and
flOW believe if you know a husband
should change with them. My mail law enforc·oment officials-- to report
is cheating. -you .have the ·moral • has convinced me 10 reverse rhe impaired drivers. The report is sent
obligationto·inform the wife so she adncc rve been givi.ng for the last

· · ·1 tan't offhand think of a·beuer
choice 10 be first man on the moon.··
CoHins wrotein his 1974 book ·-carrying lhr Fire:·

Rahma~.

Eastern· Elementary students visit
Eighth graders from Eastern Ele- Center (AHEC ). ··Every year we
mentary School visited the Ohio · take all or the sixth through eighth
. University College of Osteopathic 'g raders. ,to higher education facili Medicine (OU,COM) before the end ties. and' I think they really enjoyed
, the tour this year:· she said.
or the school year.
First-yeftr medical ' students · ··11 was very well-organized, ·and
1-jeather Columber. Ashu· Goyle. it was nice for the kids to get to talk
Matt Harris , Katheri~e Kropf, Amy to the OU-COM students. They
Odom and Laura ·S~uemaker dis- talked about what kinds of grades
cussed ihe philosophy of. osteopath· you need to get into med school and
ic medicine and shared personal what it's~ like to be a medical stuexperie nces concerning lire in med- dent. That"s the kind of information
ical school.
·
·
we wanted our students to hear: ·
Although the children who par- Faulk said.
The OU-COM students particiticipated are at least eig ht years
,away from this ,kind of educati on, pated ih the tour as a pan ot: their
the student tour guides focused on service learning· for the Early Clini· the · preparation ·necessary for med cal Contact Program: According to
school, ex plaining the grades that Margie; Skidl)lore. director of the •
they would have to earn in high AHEC, the tours are successful with
school in o rder to attend •~Ad how . the c visitin~ students as well as the
much money it would cost. The stu: -med students. ·
. " Many medical students don' t
dent dociors also . discussed what
pO!ential siudents could expeet qnce have the opportunity to talk. to chilthey are actually enrolled.
· dren," Skidmore said. ' 'This teache.l
"I remember bi:irig in junior high ·t hem how to he lp develop a generaand being very interested in medi- tion, how to talk to children and
cine ," said Goyle, a native of Mari- relate on a level that kids can underen~. ··out we never had the oppoFtustand. Most of our students thornity to do anything like this when l oughly enjoy it."
"'
·
was growing up. We didn •., even tour
·'It felt really good to reach out to '
a hospital. I think this program is a the comm unity. especially to the
great idea, it's -an effective way to young kids," said'Goyle. "I definite·
ly got a sen ~~ of ful.fillment out of
expose kids to this field.''
Linda Faulk. an intervention • this: When you reall y love some.
teacher from Eastern Elementary thing, _it ;s great to talk about it.'•
School. coordinated the rour through ·
OU-&lt;;oM ·s Area Health Educatio.n

a

'

Mechanic indicted in ValuJet crash reinstated

'·

.,
\

withholding rele va nt information
~rom the ·commiuees."
Instead. the committees, and later
the National Se,curity Council, 'were
given " infonnation ofunkn o'+'n reli abi lity rather than wai tmg until that

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medical ~ in a comforrable,

and wek:ominsmvitonnlent.

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Offering lhe latest in outpatient

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G_btziks E. Hpknj Jr., M.D. Surgery Cmur and_ i":.rnte you tt&gt;_tour . ,
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Staffed by the ma'i ~eading"

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balances reported

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Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
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nr

would like In see this law imple mented in other states . . We lost a
wonderful son wilh a promisin"g

Medical School

that rons1dcra11on for n rhers and
their possessions is a '"'' art aroong
today·s
male
communtl )
BELLI.NGHAM . WASH.'. BRIDE
DEAR BELl.: Your anal on .
though strongly anli·male . "a; niceI) . ·phrased .. Thanks for putting a
practical spin on ·a &gt;tory that man y
readers found hilanous.
· Ann Landers' booklet , ·· Nuggets •
and Doozies:· has everythmg froiJI
the o utrageously ftmny to 1hc
-po ig nanll) , in ~ ightful. Serid a SCif
addressed . long . business- si1e cnVelope and i check or money order for
· $5 .25 (thiS inc lude&gt; pp stage and
handling ) tu: ~ugge_ts . r:Jo Ann Lan;
dcr&lt;. P.O. Box 11562. Chi cago. IlL
606 11 -0562'. (In Canada. send
~6 . 25 • Tu find out more about Ann
Landers and read her ·pasl column s..
\' l·~ it the &lt;;:rcawrs Syndicate wch
page_at ww•v.creators .com.

I

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The , Rev . Jeffrey Holter,· was ' Un ited Brethren Church. took part in
REFLEX CHECK - First-year student Katherine Kropf_demon·
..
ordained
into the mini stry of the the ordination sen' ice ·
strates how and why a physician checks reflexes. to Tim Hill, an
A lso allenJing 'were Jeffrey 's
Uni
ted
.Brethren
in Christ Church.
eighth grade studeni from Eastern Elementary School in Reedsville.
parents.
Mr. and Mr ... Da,·Jd Holler.
July
12
at
the
annual
conference
Hill was onll of several students visiting the OU School· of OsteoMrs.
Robert
Sanders. and Mr. and
held at Huntington. Ind.
pathic Medicine ..
·.
Hi s former pa sto r. the Rc1·. Mrs. Adrian Lathcy.
'"
Rotiert Sanders of the Mt. Hermon

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lbc law contains pro·visions for
c o ntidentialiry and 1mmunity from
prosecution fur those who repon. A
rraudulcnt rcpon can result in a six month jail sentence or a $500 fine .
This ha&gt; been called the fairest and
strongest driving-law passed lO date .
It was. supported by American
Association of Retirod Per!ons. the
Alzheimer'"s ,.\sso,.: iation . 1he Automobile Club
MISsouri .) Kansas.
the Missouri Medical ·Society · and
the Missouri Highwa} Patrol. We

future and do nOl want othe.r parents
to expenen&lt;e thiS same tra~ed) .··
SHELDON
AND
KAREN
SUROFF. CONCERNED AMERICANS FOR RESPONSIBLE DRIYING INC.·. ST. (D UIS . MO .
DEAR
SHELDON
AND
KAREN SUROFF: You have writ·
ten · an extremely important letter.
• and I thank you for it. It sh ould be a.
comfort to know that your &gt;On did
not die in vain . Yo ur loss has
enahled you to educate millions and
save co"unllcss lives. Bless you bo1h.
Dear Ann Landers: The man
who used his wife'; silver tongs to ·
dispose of a dcotd &gt;squirrel couldn't
understand why she made a big deal
out of it. l " onder how he would fee l
if .his "ife used ht , pciwer tools tu
mix calc batlcr. Or 1f she let the k1d.,
use his new ~crew~r~ver whtn they
played with the modeling clay. I fear

Jeffery Holter.ordained into. ministry

•

a brOad N"'l" of rurgical and

•

•OHIO &amp;- WU MEDICAID
•FEDERAL EMPLOYEES •COMPENSATION .
•BD I LERMAKERS
•CLAIMS PRO
•AETNA •EHPRESS SCRIPS •P .C.S.•
•UNITED M.INE WORKERS • ·
•UNITES HEALTH CARE
•BLACK L.UNG •PAID •WU. PEIR
-.
. •URLUE AH
'
•DIUERSIFIEO •BLUE
CROSS • AND OTHERS

•

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M.D. SuJ&amp;ety Center provides

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, 1hc...,. CJ.orla E. Hol:rcr, Jr.:

information co uld be corroborated ,"
Bromwich wrote.'l"The department
al so departed fr om its bright-line
standard ofrcsistin g requests to share
information about pe'nding criminal
inv
estigations
."
g
.

-WE WILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO THE
BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING: .

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tion .

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ou

to a medical advisof) hoard. which
has 30 days to respond. 1lie board
can recommend re .. oL.mg or suspending the license ·or leave it in
place. It can also request _a drh·ing
test or a ph}s1ral or menial examina -

SCHOLARSHIP AWARDED ~ Thf 1999 E~~tstern High School
Alumni Association scholarship has been awarded to Jessica Elran·
non, right, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pawl Brannon , and a ,1999 graduate of Eastern High School. The $250 scholarship was presented
by the committee chairman, Shelia Taylor, _a t thEI Alumni banquet
held at Eastern High School on June 12. Brannon will be attending
the University of Rio Grapde this fai t

..

FBI, ,J ustice handling of probe earns criticisrrBy MICHAEt J. SNIFFEN
data related 1o. whether a California
Associated Press -Writer
,businessman from Indonesia. Ted
WASH!NQTON
Justice Siocng. acted on behalf of China in
Department officials are criticized in donating $250,000 to the Democrat- .
an iilspeclor·general report for show- IC National Commid'ee .and $50,000
ing Congress raw. uncorroborated to a Republican think tank. Sioeng's
intellige nce on C hina, and FBI coun- attm:ney demed China or its officials
tcrspies are taken to task for keeping directed or funded the conuibutions.
the same ~at a from campaign finance
These two items and most of ~ight
mvesttgal&lt;Jrs.
·"
'other items of Chinese intelligence
· Releas ing a brief· summary believed wi\hheld by the FBrs
Wednesday of a 569-page top secret ~ National Security Division actually
repqrt, Justice Department Inspector had reached Freeh and ~eno , but
Genera l Michael Bromwich fou nd. there was oral briefing to emphasize
that at lirst raw data on'j&gt;ossible Chi- ' the data's importance. lt was hapnese allempts ICJ in fluence. U.S. poli- hazardly buried in other reports so
tics was held .too c-losely by the FBI ''senior officials were unaware that
hut later was &lt;lirculated too widely to they had ever received it."
~y late· l997, ~of it was _given
;WOtd congressional .t riticism. · :
By rushing to meet demands from to four congresSional commlllees,
tftc Republican-controlled Congress · campaign finance investigators and
l or informat ion about campaign the National Security Council.
,linance abuses, Justice officials abanBromwich ·said the department
J uned long-held standards and pro- abandoned longslandin-g polici'es on
\ idcd raw intelli gence "i nfonnation briefing Congress because it "was
&lt;1 f dubious quality,·· Bromwich con - concerned about being accused of
clu(ted. He said thi s could endatiger
the investigation and the rights o f
those under investigation.
He found " no improper intenl to
conL'cal information or prevent it
The followi ng fund balances were
from being d1scloscd to parties in the reported by Middleport Clerk Bryan
Jcpartmcnt , Congress or the Nution~ Swann on Monday: General,
td Security Council.' '
$114,827.78; Street, $51.880.80;
The FB I we lcomed many of the Mini Golf Course, $0; Law Enforce•wggc~tion~ nnd said it already has
ment, $2.246.90; fire equipment
hcgun more r\!gular meetings wilh ($492.69); fire truck, $29,084.52;
nthcr agencies and stepped up pro- COPS FAST, ($255.98); Economic
.. duction or " finished' : analyses of raw Development, $27,825.72; Public
mlcll1gcm:c data .
Transportation, $0; U.w Block Grant,.
Attorney General Janet Ren o $11 ,548.07; Refuse, $36,72 1.77; Disordcr.cd Bromwich's investigatio n aster Relief Grant, $107; Water Debt
after an embarrassing 1997 incident Service, $71,145.39; Sewer Debt
before th e Senate Governmental Service, $1.10.176.06; Water Tank,
Affairs Commillce.
$37,286.37;
\Vater
System,
On Sept. II , 1997, the C IA told $130,2·82.14.;
Sewer
System,
the committee ..ahout two pieces of $44,123.96; Recreation, $6,157.33;
Chinese intelligence from the FBI. Cemetery,
($1,056.88);
Meter
'
PB! Director
Louis Freen himself Deposits, · $37.429.25; Cemetery
told the panel he had not heard it until Endowment, $81,062.77. Figures in
the qA testitied.
parentheses represent negative fund
Officials have said some of that balances.

44 years. I now say a woman should

Ann Landers

secretary-general of the
Palestinian Cabinet. said Wednesday
the Wye accord must be implement·
e.d before Israel and the P~l~_sti~ians
could open negotiations oi\ ~ final
peace aJ!reemenl.
But the administration again took
a conciliatory stance toward Barak.
Rubin said · ••there is nothing
inconsistent" between ·implementing
'the Wye accords while also proceed. ing with negotiations on ii final settlement. "Those two can happen at
the same time,': he said.
And. the State Department
spokesman said. " modest adjustment"· in the timetable or in various
pro\'isions of the ·wye accords were
acceptable to the United States if the
parties agreed on them .
· .
Clinton was planning on a threehour meeting with Barak in the
White House· residence. After Barak
sees Vice President AI Gore, Clinton,
Barak and their wiv~~ will go to
Camp David, Md ., by helicopter for
dinner there and bre,akfast together
the next morning.
· 'lt1s rare show of good will to the
new prime minister,

By CATHERINE WILSON
crash .
The indictment charges Aorence
He said he did not know whethet
AP Business Writer
The workers could be sentenceil Florence is sti ll employed in the air- falsified crucial work cards on the
MIA.Ml - The two mechanics up to 55 years in prison •and fined line industry. Fldrence's attorney did oxygen generators .
indic ted in the deadly. crash of Valu- $2.7 million if conv.icted. This . is nol return call s for comment WednesSabreTech is oo longer in busiJct Fl ight592 lost their federal licens- believed to be the first time that crim- day.
ness. Its parent. St. Louis-based
es afterward. bqt one got his back a inal charges have been filed overa
Jones said there was no record to Sahre liner. sold · the subsidiary's
. year lare ~ while a crim inal investiga- plane crash .
indicate Valenzuela had applied lG assets after SabreTech lost two maintion Was St'lll going, authorities say.
'Florence and Valenzuela lost their ha\'e his license' reinstated .
tenance base licen,$es and its business
The mechanics, Eugene Rorence mechanic certificates' March 26,
Sharon Jarvis Moss of Gastoma. d¥~indled .
,
\
and Mauro Valenzuela. and Daniel 1997. as a result of the FAA's r;:view N.C., who lost her brother and sisterValuJet. which changed its name
Gonzalez. ,vice president of mainte- of the May II , 1996 crash that kill ed in-law in the crash, called the rein - to AirTran after the ·crash-, reponed
nance con trm:: tor . SabreTech, were II 0 p&lt;;op lc.
statement o~ Florences cenitlcate Wednesday that " second-quarter
indicted Tuesday on federal charges
Mech·anics are allowed to seek
"frightening and distress.ing."
income rose almost 75 percent from
u f conspiracy and making false state- reinslaten'l.ent of re\~oked licenses
Florence's mechani c's certificate the previous year. 'Airl'ran reported
. ments.
afler- a year. i=loren,e's nCw certifialiow~ .him to ~'ign work..cards .second·qJ.Iarter profits of $15 million
Companion state charges accusl' cate was issued May 9, 199~ . whi le required at every step of a mainte - on $140 million of revenue.
SabreTech of murder .and mansla~gh­ the dimi nal investigation was still ,. nance project Without a ccnificate,
That marks a strong impro:....e.ment
tcr for illegally packaging oxyge n under way, Federal Aviation Adminfor
an airline that ~ost nearly $41 milFlorence can hold lower level aviacanisters blamed for•sparking a fire isr rali o n. spokesm-an Fraser Jones tion jobs but cannot sign of( that an lion last year. blaming predatory
I hal caused the Val uJet DC&gt;9 to I oa id' Wednesday.
pricing by competitors.
assignmenJ has ·been completed.

Page7
Thursday, July 15, 1999

Threat of AIDS meat:ls spouse should be told about cheating mate

Clinton looks to reopen Middle East peace talk~
By BARRY
.
.
AP Diplomatic Wri1er
WASHINGTON President
Clinton.todav is launching anew U.S . .
drive for Mideast peacemaking. looking to Israeli Pr-iJne Mi01s1er Ehud
Barak for a formula to reopen negotiations with the Palestinians and to
affirm he will gi•c up West Bank land
to them:
Clinton is holding 'l'otlie tdea th~t
lsraers securllv depends on land-forpeace accords ;, ith all the ArabS. And
from Barak the president hopes to.
hear that ,the stalled apeement to
yteld a~ additional 13.1 percent of the
territory will be impleme nted soon -'
The president and his advisers are
openly exuberant that Barak is apt to
tell them what he is prepared to concede to the Pale.stinians and.Svna and·
'what will .remiin for hard bargaining.
Momentum is what the .administration seek&gt;. an -ording to key strate·
.:· gists. and in Barak they believe they
have found an Israeli leader who.
while cautiou• .. will also takehsks for
peace wi'th the Arabs.
·
'T m eager
a kid with a new
toy: · Clinton said. anticipating their

The Daily 'Sentinel

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Peele 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport,' Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thuraday, July 15, 1999

Thursday, July 1

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11e r And Gold Co•nl, Proofsels,
D1amonds , Ant1qut Jawelry, Gotd ,
R1ngs. Pra-1930 US. Currency,
Srerhng Etc ~klfts ..lMwli'Y·
· M T S Coin Shop., 151 Second
Avel'l!.e, GaD1polls, 7-40-446-2&amp;&amp;2.
AntiQues . top prices paid, RWtr·
;ne Anllques , Pom eroy , Ohio ..
Russ Moore owntf, 740·992.·
2526
8uy1ng Sland•ng C herry Hard
Wood Timber. 740-256-61 72 .
Clea n late Model Car' Or
Trucif:s Low ~hies, 1995 Modell
Or Newer Smrth BuiCk Pontiac,
1900 Eastern AventM!I , Gallipolis.
wanted To Buy : Used Mobile
Homes . Call 740-446·0175, Of 1·
304-615' 5965.

Star t Datmg Ton1ghtl H av e ft.Jn
ptaymg the O h10 O;;~llng Game 1·

EMPLOYM ENT
SERVICES

SOO·AOMANCE. extens•on 9681

ATTENTION
ADVERTISERS!

•

Take the pain out
of painting, and let
. me do it for you.

Advertise on this
page

·
AHT-Ear.m
• BIIHb
Myrtle Beech 250

s.-.
p.m. •

9

•

'

QulllyiRJI R-* Tim
Fedewa, 98.816 mph, July
comr, up: Myrtle Beach 11, 1998
250
R~ .record: Larry
Where: Myrtle Beach (S.C.) Pearson, 79.599 mph, June
Speedway (.538&lt;1]11&amp; track),
10. 1995
250 laps/ 134.5 miles
!olot•ble: Jimmy Spencer Is
When: Saturday, July 17
the ooly driver ever to win this
De*ldlnl ch11111p(on: ·-· ---·,ace twlce,. (1989, 19921.

Saturday • TNN

HAM ....c..
200 1:30 p.m. • Sunday • CBS

- ... ·- - ·
1999 POINT\ I TANO INGI

'

·-

..

a.
a.

'

SIJHJ.;
.....dlaluu.COl'D

'

Jt/lf . . . . 2 .

.... ...... 2.470

Mill! Mtrtln, 2.590

Jlff Green. 2,324

.. - -. 2.5111

_ _ ,...,

I. Jeff Gordon, 2.•50

. . . . . . . . . . 2.405

Elan S..,.., 2 ,1151
.............;r.qiO

7. 0.. EarTIIWI:I:, 2,324

Jeff Purwll, 2.018

..

Wiid "illlnoft.~JA1

t.

TOITY .Libonl:e, 2 ,QH

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248
985·3308
Chester
.•

·"

Gtti811111.2.Da5
St.cy CclfnPon. 2.008
. ...
Milt HOI,IMon, l.v!n

_2.000

.,.,.. ....... ~ -;
J.,- s.u.•. 1,130 '

" _, .._..,. • • •Uft ......... s.t:M
0... Bllnly.1.832
xevtn Hlntell, l .B&amp;i

'*"~

... - - 2 , 0 1 1 1

See us for Your Stihl•
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Randy LaJoie

s.n.ue, :Z.liO '

D* E8mlw« Jr., 2.&amp;09 JacR

1.. OM .la'iftt 2.839

--'"""

.,,
,.

.

TOP TEN

• Weekty rankln&amp;s by NASCAR This Week :wrtter Monte Dutton.

Ticked off at Gordon
Earned 5 points the hard way
What If he could qualify?
Took a big hit
Just that one victory
The tiger growled
Not fast enou&amp;h
Ditto with Jarren
Finished 15th .
Ran out of gas

2. ( 21 ,_, Gonion
3. (4) Jeff Burton

4. (S) - . . , Ll~on18
~·

(S)

Mao1cMartln

6. (6) TanJ Stewllft
7. 171 D•le hmh•dt
8. (I) RUetJ·W•IIt. (t) .W•nll!urton
10. (-) Jolin Andrettl

1999 WINSTON CUP SCHEDULE

July

--

25

I

-·-·

lftd~ Motor~
~ Glen lntemM~

._}. "'&amp; ~~

.......
""'e - At.c. 28

Brblol Motor

~..,

~lflcl.

w.tkln1 Glltl, N.Y.

,

Stcl. 11 RIChmond lniematXINI Racew1y
SIP:- 11 . ~ HMipehft ............ ~
Sept. 2fl OIMJ Dowftt II'QmMIDNI $ptel;lw-r
0Cl3
......... ......,.
Od. 10

Ctlarkllte Moi:Df Speed.ll!l

Qd.17

Malp$1;

o

I 4

Mi~ ~eacl

Mllrlll

,

...,

9tistol, TtrWI.
-.~e.

__

Linin- 0.111 ..111

t have been involved in auto rac-

~~
"--"'
..,.,_ ind 'rneu~,

.Ody- 11om the- of

Please teach them another \Wrd
to express cnthusiasin besides

. - -.. - - o f

AWESOME!P The public is about
to lhrow up!
'

Kovln '-is IIIASCAA~

David Rldlng'o -

--·'-_,
hia ftrst
lt.lkwn
:1,
II'T

!'ICe

.... .

. M1Wtlrie•.•·
Concord, N.C.

Fle_.ln 1VII7, ~compel·
edlnhlllhi-Cup ..... driving
, owned by Joe Folic.
AI Miehlgln In 1888,
,, Lopago movedlo Roush
Racing, reploclng 1lod
Mulgno"' ln.the No. 10..

•

- I n llhobmi, 1/1., ~~yeo
· fn Moq:aJilla, N.C. •
·
Wlli!: Donna ·
CHLOREN: RoxiMO.

(none),

WHAT'S IT UKITO

Pepsi Fl.._er 400 at Doytona In 1988, also ~om ·:lalh
startin&amp; pasitlom Only Johnny Montz. who won the 1950

Southern 500 after Starlin&amp; 43rd in a field of 75, &lt;;arne

' ,CRAFTSMAN TRUCIC SERIES
.
Dennis Setzer became the first Dodge driver ever to win twtee
in a season, wiMing at Nas~Ue Speedway USA In a 'raindelayed Satun:tay-nl&amp;ht race. Kevin Harvtck finis'*' second for
the third Ume this year. .

an affordable price

........ -,.a to ... 10111148 ~·

-

of the loc:oltrackaln Vermont, IIXIIho ll.fl·

pori I'Ve gol1on flam--~~
dous ~forme."

pho!""""'-'. When ll!"hoonlllo Vermont lor .
Cllrtstrnas, just WllklnQIIoiMJQIIIt)O milia or
.- · fino wll """"' up ond juat Ilk how
JOU'rt doing' K'o a groot, greet fooling. I'm .
ptOUd 1D bo ~to-~­
I'Ve ...... l'm o -dlsoppaiuted In CUP«·

.....

~----but----~·
"""'"'..,.•
·~· -:• · - wou• ~·-

Uloo =lNG THE-comelho

bolng.-

111!1 of Milne o r - ' * '
and bl •~: mf\JIIn lit~ lllci .Wilenl
. lilY bo •• cc IIJ 1..Cup ~ lt'ro • big-- 'tioeh, we 1111 went
to win ilcel, llut bo pelt of., -group
ond bl .,. of~ - I D 1111rt e..y raoo,
that'll piWtty- group, To bo 1 port of K
lit;ld.ropo-ollt'l) 'f04ll¥&gt;mo alole Is just
.

.

.,

.

ooriV '801111 ..,..,.

to

I

.

'·

FIIQM·~t ..,., . . .
AI'IMT?
uofn&gt;m lho Nol1h. Vou hevo
RICky (Craven) and myMII. - u Ia 11om
COmoctlc:ut ond·lho Bod- (Goof! ond·
llr.a) .,. 11om - - (lo 1o
Porto~.
oo lhot'a lve (l!cluolly olx) of ualhol . . up
from this
w
·
W&amp;J. you look thtough the~

IIASf.
are II

s-

lineup lllcllool&lt; llwhn 1 1 1 1 - - n

11om, YOf'{ low . . 11om t h e - "

. sMer. eligibility (Ilia tluu category)
iJ open 10 "driwn ond ctu OK-'ft'tiT
who' have won rue~ in tltr ~ttl·
ing 4!uJ cwrt!lll.yegn:." Spenttr :r
mos1 m:em ViclOI')'
1994.

was'"

· Sltep/rtnf!.ifl 1993, Sclmukr :tIn

co,_s ;,

1991 and
1990. "71tefltld
mw' r:onsist of 10 ~an. aNi
tlfONgll driven tO fill the fle/d mt
· added bafed on thtlr most ~nt
vktori~. a provision tlwl tiiU YtJU'
tw.sllt in Entle /n.oan (1997). ·
Srerlini Mrvlin (1996), Kyle Petty
(J99i) 11tul Hiud 81U'ton (199J).
Bill Elliott and Darrdl ff&amp;ltrlp
made il becoii.Se tlwy were- u
WiMion Cup c/tQmpitHIS, llitd
Miclultl .HU/It'/p ami Geoff Bodine ·
lflllli~ tlte rau btcmue they ~re

••••••••••••

,. ••••• 'IH...

VJIIo'laHot- ,

1. Who said. "Gentlemen,. start your
qlnes. • before the firSt Las Yeps 400?

YJhdaNot
now tied

for most .victories with four.

2. When Joe Gibbs debuted his Winston Cup team In
1992. what company s~moored his car and who was
thedmo:?

• NOI': Ted Musarave, one top-

'l&amp;JOJI\940 S8tJa»e8 8\8lSJ9l'JI etU
CMOJP l18JJer 9fBC ·z: ~UO\M8N MeM Jalurs "l

10 finish all year.

SIIJMSNY .

••••••••••••
·

travel needs

£eo s Cruist
1

&amp;tiram
740.992-4233
800-795-1110 '
202 W. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

By Monle Dutton
NA~CAR This

Week

'
LOUDON.
N.H.-·
Should lhe race at New
Hampahirc International

Speedway actually be called
the Jeffy Lube 300?
Jeff Gordon has won
three times on the 1.058·
mile lrack. He started on
the pole. The only driver to
'rival his dominance, Jeff
Burton, drove from 38th to
first to win this particul.ar

.

'

Cowttm 199'9 The ~UM'1 (N.C.! Garene •

J.M. ROWE TRUCKING

Hoof Hollow ·farm

Dlll!p Tll!ck Service

Horae• &amp; Tack
New &amp; Used Saddles

• Gravei • Limestone
• Fill Dirt • Etc.

Also riding.lessons

740-247-4292

740·69i·3290

'

of The W.nstoll.

Public Notice

into the year 2000 season
with continued momentum,"
said Tom Beard, co-owner

slipped into third.

of MB2 Moto;sports. '
''Ernie is our guy, and with

-

COI)tract

option

with

driver

Ernie lrvan and will remain
align·c d with lrvan for
the team's lhird year of

the team we have now I feel
· confidenl we can achieve
our goal of finishing in lhe
lop I0 in points."

PUBUC NOTICE

.

EXCAVATING CO.

' 'n 7ptotwae
P''
Hanlin ,
B,Ilduzer &amp; Backhoe
SenJices

&amp; Truiler Sites
Land.Clearing &amp;

Hofi se

·

e/ HI/99 1 mo. pd

TRI·SIATE MOBILE
POWER WASH
Trucks· tractor
Trailers - decks - driveways
Equipment Cleaned &amp; Degreased

JEFF STETHEM

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

,. .FREE ESnMATES

• Mofpn McClure MoiOI'tC)Ortt ftM
sct'l8dUed ., QPef1 hOuse on J'h 17
from 10 a.m. to !5 p.m. at the teiWn'S
state-ot'.m..t fiKle shop tn
Abi'9JM, '.'8. Team atvet Bobby
Hamilton will be slinlrc autggraghS
from 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. A ree of
$1 per pe110n at the illl.e wHI be
donated to local pollee IWld flre, end ·
ChlltJron \l'ldlf 12 are free. Take exit
22 Off tnterttate 81 to the snop..

' X

was fined S50,000 for

affected. but Eggleston was

•

STIFF FINES: Scott

on probation by

the governing body through '
Oct: 20. The season's final
re5trictor-plate race will 1
be held at Talladega on
Ocl. 17.

Call 992-2155
Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext. 105
For more information

'

9f you. Have "Che Need for Speed...
we've got ltfll

. . _..., 1M first in our IINIIfl! .

Call Now And Sign·Upl
675·3398 or' 1·800·766·0553

tt&amp;&lt;-~~~ 24

Hr. Taxi

38782 Sumner Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

_.turd Delivery Service
We deliver ALMOST anything

. Call for details
740-9.92-0038 ' ' .

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hilalld Rd.
P?mer,oy, Ohio

740-992-52!2
6/12!99 1 mo. Old

High Speed Internet
Access With Cable
Modems!

CABLEVI·SION
COMMUNICA1'10NS

3 Grey T1ger Stt lpe d Kmens 2
months old. (7'40)·25&amp;1 336
B eaut1ful bl ack and wh1t e iong
· haired le ma l e k11te.n s and cat ,
740·843--5445
Free Male P up~ . 112 Beagle &amp; t i

2 Colha. Raccoon Roao. 740·441 -

0417.
Free mi'Kect lntten s, ? 40·9~2 5597r

Free to good home 1ndoor::. 3 mo.
old gray &amp; cream coloreo. female
k1tten . Worm ed &amp; l1 tte r 11a1ned
(304)458·2216
Redwood P1cket Fe nce Mu5t re·
move. (304)675·33D7.

60

Lo111 and Found

Found ! Ma~· s T 1mex Yv at~;h 1 M1d
. June, At Park Fr on t, ?4 J·3 79 ·
2883.

985-4422

Fourtct! Small i 0 • 15 POtJ I'\0 Dog
Very Fnen dly. Brown1sh . Com e TJ
Middleton Estates Or 740- 44 6· .
4814. ~
Found Fema le Bee gl e Dog 1n
Flatror:~ Area . (304 )€75-7414 ·

SAYRE
TRUCKING

70

Yard Sale

JONES'

·Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable.Rates
Jo~ N. Sayre

Gallipolis · '.
&amp; Vicinity

TREE SERVICE

2216 Eastern Aven ue . Lo l 2&lt; .
Fflday. Sa!urctay. 7 · 5 Some thmg
For Everyone!

4 Family 's 15fh and t6lh . 4 r t 0
mile oil 218 on Krine r Ad Roo m
air cond ,. Weea eater. Doon 8uggJe, 'Guns . Bows . T1res . L ot o f
Good . St uff! Phone ( 74.0 )·446-

740·742·2138
. '

4419

3!11/99 TFN

.

HARTWELL
STORAGE
ST. AT. 7
10 X 10$40.
10 X 20$60.

DEPOYSAG
PARft

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

All Mak~s Traclor &amp;

Pasture Management
Cattle Equipment
Open House
July 17th ..
. ,
· 9am - 2 pm .

Equipment Parts
Factory Authoriz.ed
Case· IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South

992-1717

SHADE RIVER

.C all 98S·31!13I

AG SEIIVICE"

ai2t

Happy Ad

Public Notice
• LEGAL NOTICE
ATr. CONTRACTORS
Salitbury Townahlp will be
taking. aealad bldo on
Hazard Mitigation Grant
Project work to bo ·done In
Sallobury Township, Work

be

opened

at

1mo.

CREDIT

No Credll • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment. ..
You're Treated with Respectl

the day before the ad
Is to run. Sunday'
edition-2:00p.m.
Friday. Monday edition
. 10:00 a .m. Saturday.

"D'you realize we've bien married three
wholi -ks, and nelttler of us has ,.
even mentioned the word 'divorce'?"
.•

in the

CLASSIFIEDS!
.

KIT

~N'

Carport Sale : Fr1day. Saturd ay .
July 16h . 17th 9-6 . 135 Ki neOt;l
Dr1ve . Galllpalis
July 15th , 16 th . 18 5 Amb les.je
Or. Ker r. Wo man bovs. g rls
cloth€1-s . Coll ec tibles. diShes . Lots
of g1rls toy:..•much more!!
-Ju ly t6th · 1811'\. 8 A.M.' To 1 4 14
East Cpll ege Street. R10 Gr and e.
Oh10
.

Porch Sa le . Fnday 7 30-1 2 30
133 Second Avenue.

Yard Sale 601 Pol ecat Rd . 15th.·
16th·17fh.

:;:::.:,:..:::::.._ _ _....,._ _ "

Pomeroy;
Middlepo"

Big yard sAte dt tile R utfanct
Amencan LB QIOn , last th1S year 1
Friday-&amp; 'Saturday

WICKS
HAULinG Inc.

•

We Deliver
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Ag ricul t ural Lime ,
Mulch , Top Soil
(Low Rates)

Call 992-2155
Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext. 105
For more information

·..

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS
Siding &amp;Sr~llil
1-800-311·3391
Free Estimates
Contractors Welcome
Albcrny, 0/rio

740-992-3470

"··
,;

Advertise on this page

"

~8 Jo ngmgs of Ear f Lee ;, en OP·
ccased 1 751 S ~carno r e S tre~t
MiddlePort D1sMs too~s me n·s
clothing , &amp; hOu seMid turn • sh :~.gs
Thursday. Friday and Satur~~ -

Let it be told
Craig V~_noy
is 40 years old

.
CARL Y.LE ® by Larry Wright

Workers Needed
843-5280 or 949-2439

-. coml~ . com

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
•Replacemenl Windows
•Room Add11oons
•R oof1ng
COMMERCIAlond RISIDENTIAt
FREE ESTIMATES

6,111 Moools paugh Auction ee ring.
Co nt'~ l et e AUCIIOneenng S ~~ VI C·
es C ons1gn men1 auc t 1on - M1H
Str eet . 'Mrddl e port, T hursda ys
OhiO license H 6 93 7 4 0·9892623

3

(

Auction
and Flea Markel

29670 Bashan

STO~AGE

4577i .
740·949-2271
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30 '
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

740·247·4334

Ya rd Sa te We d . Thurs . Fr
2221 Jelrerson Ave . Housenmd
and Ba by Items. Furnrture , Bed·
d1ng, Rugs.

Au ction ! New Load O f Tar get
-MerchandiSe. Friday July 16th At
6:00P111 241 Tl'wd Ave . Gathpolis .

Road

·Thornton Greenhouses
$5.15 per hour
Ages 15 &amp; up

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC• .

Racine , Ohio

Tomaloe pickers needed

Yard ~ a le , Tnursday Fr1rtay S&lt;~t·
ur day. lot s ol. good Hem~ Beech
Grove . Ru~ and, 5th otatt:&gt;

HILL'S

SElF

Portland/Reedsville

Cheste r, t i2 m11 e on 246. many
small 'app l1a nces. lromoone. sax ·
ophOne , trea dmill. July 15· 16 .
9 QOam·4:00pm

80

nager

ns Proauce

S2.. 000 WEEKLY! Mai,l lng &lt;~00
Brc.churesl Sat!Sfar:;!JOn GUlf ·
ar.1eedl Po stag e &amp; Supplies Pro·
'd:le-ol Ru sh Self·Addreued ·
S!amped En11elopel GICO. DEPT :
5 B ~n 1438 . ANTIOCH , TN .
37011· '438
.
$.800 WE EKLY ' POTENTI.~l
Complet e Simple Go'llernmtnl
Fo:. ms At 'Hom e . No E,rperlence
Ne ces sa'ry C ALL TOLL FREE •
1·800-966·3599 Ext. 2601 .

.'

Act1 v1ty Assistant position avail· ;
able at Rocksprings Rehab Cen·
te r. tMn11C! ual needed 10 assist
ac t111 1ty r:l irector m plann ing and
carry ing out the scheduled lndl·
v10ua l and group act iv i~ies . Per·
so n .must possess special lnttr·
e st .n and a posit ive attltuda
about 'NOrk1ng w1t11 short and long •
ter m c are res idents and tht tl·
derty, oro'llid e a chetr1ul .outlook !
an d. pos1tr\l e perspective for the
res iden ts Preferred education/
' exper ience state tested nursing
ass1Sta nt .. preVious experience or
tram1ng 1n- a ,health Care setting.
Part lime positio'h. evenings and- ·
weeke(lds Send resu me to Rock·
sp r1 ngs Re hab . Center, 36759.
R oc ksp t~n gs Ad . .' Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 , Attn Dena warren, ActiY·
111es D1rector or apply In person.
EOE
AVQN I Att Areas! To Buy or Setl.
Sh1rley Soears, 304-675-- 1429.
AVON has a ptac9 for ~our Join
th e • 1 Deauty company! Enjoy , .
your own bus1ness. Buy your own
p ro d uct s at cost . Call 1·800·4· ·
AVON or 74Cr594·4354.

Avon Proctur:tS: Sta rt your OWJ'! In·
Ho me Busmess . Wor~ Flexible
Hou rs, EntOY Unlimited Earnings ..
1-666· j61 ·2806
B11l1ng cterlo: needed tor busy fl'l8d.
JCa l ofllce Applicants required to
hav e e~penence in:dC 0 · 9 cod1ng~ msurance b 1 lh~g . and Medl·
• c:a+e- g ul det 1nes , kn owledge of
'1cspita l and nursing hOme coding
ore le rreel Computer skills re ·
q~.;1ro d
Wages co mpe t1tl 11e,
bas ed on exper1enc e Send rt ·
su me to PO Box 207 , Ath ens .
OhiO 45701

.\

'

,
.
·
·

COmpute r, Users Needed. Work
Ow n. !:irs '$25K · $80~ Yr. 1·800- •
~ 476· BG53)(?777 , www. tcwp. com
:
Cos me tOlO gi st Needed, Full &amp; :
Part T1me Paid Vacations, Free ,
C E U. Hours , 740..446·7267

DATA ENTRY : National Sjlllng •
Seeif:s A Full /Part Time Medici I ·
B1iler Salary At $46K Per ·Year. '

740·992· 7 643
(No Sunday Calls)

CONTINENTAL EXPRESS
CDL Class ,f', "W1th 6 Months
Exoer. Drivi ng SchOol Grads
COMSIOered NO NYC · Home
,.
Most Weekends
Regional &amp; Long HauJ

EOE
800-293--0700 Or 800-695--4413
Dri vers/ COL ts A Must . Be :
Home Every Night. We Guarran·
tee At Lea st 40 Hours / Week . ·
· Furl Bene f itS "AVailaDie In 3 ·
Mo nT hs Stop 8~ Our Qfflce BtU· .
'l\ een 9 :-30 AM To 5:30PM And
Ao pjy In Person . No Phone Calls
Ple.:isel General Refuse Service,
97 H ubbard Ave .. GlpS ., On .
4563 1 .
.r.

Dr iv eri · Free -g ·-Week COL
Trammg Earn ·!26 -$32,000 / I st
Yr W !Full BenefitS . ~o Exp:
Needed PA M 1 Tr ansport Spe·

~

. era• Calj' To ll Fr ee 1: 877 · 230·
· 6(1C2 SUr~ ~ Fn . 7 A.M. · 7 P.M.
vwn Qamnansport.com

E ~oer1 e nc ed cake d8corators
nee d ed P1ck up \:lppllcatlon
Oojwy Queen m Middleport. Sen·
10rs ar,e welco,(ll9

at

Alt Y1rd Sales Must Be Paid In
Ad'llance . Dead line : 1:OOgiT1 the
day" bel or e t he ad Is.' to run ,
Su n day &amp; Monday , e~ l tlo n ·
t :OOpm Friday.

Limeslone, Gravel,

ADVERTISERS!! ••-·•
•

~

Baked Goods. Pr Q.d uCe. Bunnres,
Gun. Bassh u nte r~ Boa!. Rod s.
Bo"ws. New Tapeslry .. Food 1Pop .Fnelay. SatUrday. 9-? Hannpn
Tra ce f1oad. Off · 775 . Ne•t To '
Bethesda.

• •

regular

Buy, Sell or Trade

Help Wanted

PC Aeq u1red . NO Exper i ence ,
Needed . Wi ll Train . Call 1·888·
251 -7475 .

QEAQLINE: 2:00p.m.

. &amp; V191nity

Townahlp niHtlng held at
Saliabury Townohlp hall In
.Rocksprings on Auguat3rd
at 6:30pm.
(7) 15 HC

..

110

1

. AL..t Yard Sales Must

rolocallon of homes above
flood level,· For scope of
.work:call 982-6839. Bids Will
• ·Morethan
anyone else, Jimmy
Elledge played It
right .Sunday at
Loudon, N.H. By
bringing his driver,
Kenny Wallace, In
for fuel during the
&lt;
final caution period,
Elledge paved the
way for Wallace to
earn a career-best,
second·place finish .

Giveaway

Free to gocid c ount r Y- nom e . 1
'-----------------.
, - - - - ' . year old mate Gol de n Re tn eve' .
shOts. good -.1k1d s. 14Q· 99 i ·
0 155

10/25/96 tfn

Now Renting

New To YoU Thntt 6hoppe.
9 West St1mson. AthM S
740-592·164·2' ' .
Oual1ty cloth 1ng and l:louseh of c
items . $1 odl ba g. sal e' . every
Thursday. Mo nday tnrJ Satufbay
9 Q0. 5:30

40

Chester, Ohio .

.
'

ADVANCED DRAINAGE SYSTEMS. INC.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE .
Agricultural Lime,
" limestone • Gravel·
Dirt· Sand

AITENTION

to·tal·web

TOLLFREE1 -8n-489-4911 ··

TRUCKING

DISCr'CiutiO I»' IJniYerul Preas SVfld!C:MI (800) 25~134 • for rellue WMh Of July 12, 1999 • Des~: Cl!lft.O..tphU Inc .. Sarasobll, fl8 .

ATTENTION
Advertise 'on this page

a·

R. L. HOLLON

.• I

ADVERTISERS!!
•

, EMERGENCY 911
Refledrve Address Srgrs.
Aluminum 6 ' ..: 1
Shipped Comp~te $2C 00 ,, ...

Mon.- Fri. 9:00 to 4:30
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

Urilitie• .

(740) 992-3131

752 1

8' Grovelless leo&lt;h
100' -1 000' Rolls! ' &amp; 3/4' 200#Water Line
full line of Gas Pipe &amp;Regulators Woter Storoge.Tonks

·
(:trading
·
Sept;c SY•tem• &amp; · ,

2rooni minimum
378-6438 992·0077
1·877-626·3693

..
Pomeroy,' Ohjo 45769, dur- .

lng regular bualnosa houno
The· . annual f8port Form
9110 PF for the 'Kibble lor a period · of 180 da~
Foundation, Bernafd v. subaequent io publication
Fultz, TrultH, Is avoll•bte ol this noUca.
for public Inspection at . (7) 9, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16,
' • !*m'rd V. Fultz Law Office, 18,19, 20, 21,22 12TC
111 112 West Second .Street,

• •••••••••••
Fann~·

engine violations detected
before last week's Pepsi 400
at Daytona .
Because the violations
were detected before the
race and corrected. Marlin's
J2ih-place finish was not
also placed

Eggleston, crew chtef of
·~e are ready to finish
' Sterhng Marlm's Sabco
.diif'ihc year slrong and head Racing No. 40 Chevrolet,,
competition.

HOWARD

A PILL TO LOSE WEIGHT? In·
pease Ern!fgy One Free Sample
W1ll Pro ... e 111 Call t - 8 00·44~-

Culverts: 4" • 48' in stock

will consist of elevation &amp;

race for the third year in a
row. Gordon was third. A
non-Jeff, Kenny Wallace,

BACK IN ZOOO: MB2
Motorspons e,;ercised iu

V.C. YOUNG Ill
22 yro. lAr.n / '.

Sat~ladion GUaranlaed

Pub!lc Notice

AROUND IHI GARAGE

X

Fm Esllmotes

740-985-3813

Announcemenls

30

Be Pa!.d In Advance .

.

Should we call it the Jeffy Lube 300 instead?
.Call us for all your

AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomaroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall.
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive top line.
Uc. II 00-50 nno111n

7122/TFN

4

jormer.)VInun

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

985-4473

fEUD OF IHE WIEK

• 11011 Jeff Burton.

JamtsletsH 11 ·
PH: (7401 992·2772

• New Homes
• Garages ·
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

lfcrorrli11g to tlie·~t!focr

I-ntE--.'1110--

. storied my'"""' In the

.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Marpn Sho:phenl ..eluded?
.....,. Dkk
Synnoala, ~·

t-· ~ ,~fran piiiCOII

from

Banlf')' ' MIJ:ZOOf

With put race .win hen eligible
f'or the re«nt running oflbe
Wirwon. why were Ken Schrader,
Derrikc Cope. Jinuny Spencer 'and

.LOYAl. TO 1HIII LOCAL DRr.-1 , .

farther back.

Professional work at

•New Garageo
•Eieclrlcal 6 fl~mblng
•Roofing 6 Gullera
•VInyl Sldll)ll &amp; falnjlng
•Patio &amp; Porch Decks

Dear NASCAR This Week,

.
"A lotloflons -nlzeomeflom when I.

..

the

Vinyl Siding &amp; Sofil

· .Free estimates

win (none)

RACI! IN HEW 'ENGLAIID1

Roofs

Tuppers Plains, OH

St. R.t. 7

992-6215

Spring Oeon .Special
2areas S4S,OO
3areas 55~)95
4areas S69.9S
5areas S84.95 · ·

412 TFN

Shingled

•Room tlddnlons &amp; Remodeling

Ponieroy, Ohio

CHEVALIER'S
CARPET CLEANING

•·. 949-2168

CONSTRUCTION

CARPENTER SERVICE

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

Free Estimate•

FREE.EST/MATES

J &amp; LInsulation
&amp; Sldlne
•Vin~ Siding
•Roofing 8. Seamless Gutter
•Repjocenient Windows
eConcrete
•Room A~di~ons eGoroges
•Docks 8. 80(11 Docks

YOUNG'S

· (toll free)

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting .

REYNOLDS
,,

740-742·8015
877·353·7022

NEW~REPAIR

Reel't!J

740-339;.4160

- . 2 icp.1Dil, $1.7mlllktn
ln-,eornlngo
.
FJRSr8&lt; Stilt (Oct. 5, .
1997"11 Chlilotte), pole

\NhenJ:rQn~ Srewar~ ran out of gas with three laps to go, Jeff
Burton sro.e a rather improbable victor~ in the Jiffy l.ube 3oo,
his fourth of ~ season and thtrd in a row In this event. Burton
neoded an owner's Pf'OIJi~onal to make the1.field, becOming the!
first drl\&lt;er to win fJom sti'-deep In the field Since Bill Elliott won

.

ROOFING

Fre, Eolimolea
Swalt

AOE::rT

. RECORD: 48 11111B. D

WINSTON CU, SERIES

;.. "

25 yrs exper.

.1 mo. pd.

Howard L Writesel

740-742-3411
&gt;
· Bcyon Reeves

. -IOWN:Bcmlnd .

palos, Dwins. D101&gt;-lve ftn..

fROM lA~T WEEK

0

c

Carroltoa. Ga.

4

Mot!QQOrtl COI11Piel ·Hotnnteacl, Fla.

'

:z:

bonus points to 1hc wiMin&amp; driver
if he ctn come up with a new 'II'Onl
to express how thrilling the car
wu. anoehcr five bonus points if
he can express how e1f'lcicm his
crew wu and another five bonus
poirits if he can UIC' a word that
has not been used to express how
arunnine.the (rrophy airl isj.

Clrand

',

Ntw Conllnlellon 6
Romodtllftt'I(Kelltn Coblnota
VInyl Sldlng.RooiHlecka·
Gl. . . .

'

CoiUleetion

1·740-985-3949

lunaat Rome
Construction

Supcstion: How lbout five

-!lrlvlnll for

_
-_
ow.. Del.

740•985·4180
Free Estimates ·

Dear NASCAR This Week.,
ing since before (World Wtr II). I
am totally aware race-car drivers
are npl too briKhl at lim~ but .. . ·

RODNEY KELLER
Owrler/Operator

.,.,.,.SumetRome, com

Your1Urn·

•

Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer
Services
Site Preparation
Septic Systems

INTERIOR
Before'S pm leave
message. After 6 pm

••••••••••••

"

NASCNI Thll-

In 1111111,

Call992·2155
Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext~ 105
For more
' information

~.

FCn!Tawul~

f

qu~~~r~nc reconJ: Mike
Bliss, 128.315 mph, July 11,
1998
·. R_,_d:Ron
,
Homada,, 92.402 mph, July
12,1998 . ·N - : Jacli Spraeue won
the flrst two editions of this

Comllll up: NAPA
AutoCare 200 ·
. -re: Nazaleth (Pa.)
Speedwa, (Hnlle track), 200
laps/miles
WMn: Sunday, Ju~ 18
evi·n~ before Hornaday ...
De*ldl"' cllampkln: Ron BUss has twiCe won ttte pole.
Hornaday

Amocloo
·,
CAll: No. 18 1V a.ilde
Fordliula,ownedby.- .

RlcfVI\ond, 'AI.
I.OudDft, N.H.

R~. N . C .

Molar~

.

·~

.......,

Oct. 2• , NOI'tn C.ollnl ~
PtiOink tl ......... ~

; N(p,., 7

No¥. 1--4
No¥. 21

'-,

l..otW PDnd, ·Pa.

f'Oco(aO R8clwey

"4 l

,.,

PROFILE

SERIES

Vllnj1onl ilrid il !IIIIT1I&gt;er of

last week's ranking is In parentheses.

1. (1) Dele Jonett

CiiAFTSMAN TRUCK

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

C.MrUIIAI Tlul:* s-t.,

•

ON THE SCHEDULE

Your
KCB
EXCAVATING , Concrete

Linda's Painting

Rrck Pearson Aucuon Company.
full t&lt;me a~oc!10n e er complete
auct 10n
serJ1ce
L1cen~ed
• 66 Oruo &amp; West V~rg 1 m a -304773 5785 Or 304 · 773-54 47
Wed e meyer 's Auction Se rv1ce
Gali1pot1s, Ot11o 740·379-2720

Ex pe r1enc ed Cashi er. La rr,y's
LoCke r 1304)895·3603.
•
FIL M 'TV IND USTRY, L0CALLV
H!RlNG No El pene nce Neees -,
sary Worlc BehmQ Sc enes . Pro·
. Juctlon A s~1stant. Sel Construe·
tl0'1 323·857-0954
.

Ho.&gt;:J S!k!eplng! Uundry Aid•.
Part·t1me Var 1at1 le shifts . Point
Peasant Cen te1 Genesis Elder·
care Stat e RoUte 62 , Route 1.
ec~ 325, POIM I Pleasa nt , W\/
2S550 EOE

fi

Lo.:a1 kJckmg Co mpany Seeking
Oua111 1ed Tru ck Dn vers , Go o cl
Pay And Benefits Sena Reaume
·ro · D nver. P 0 Box 109 Jack·
son . Ohm 45640 . Or Call 1· 740·
286-14 63 To ScMdule An Inter·
v1ew
lookmg for Link Provider In the
leon . Pt Pleas a'lt area to care
tor 1 yr .old when school starts,
Mon Fr1 304-937· 3348
"v1ed c at ASSISt an t Dr. Westmor.
&lt;&gt; land!' Oll1ce Monday thru Friday· .l304)773-6000

Neea F ve Cable TV Ssles Per·
s,-:,,s lm 'Tied!atBiy Excellent
Pay. Lucal Work Ca ll Charlie: I ·
877.- 830-65 83 . Leave Name &amp;
Call Back Number.
OTA Dnver Needed , l,ate Model
Conve nt io nal. Com petnlva Pay,
P hon e 740 -441 · 0607,
Arter
6 .00Pm 740-441·0558
OVfHbroo k Center. 333 Page
Street Middleport. Ms part ume
po~111ons for LPNs available ·ror all
sh .fls an d weekends. Anyone 11'1 · ,
tereste~ p lease stop by and fill
out an application EOE

Po~tCII Jobs to S18 .35/Hr. Inc .
Benefits. No E11perience. For
App and Exam Info. Call 1·800·
813-3585. Ert8826, 8AM·9Pt.t 7
Days fds.1nc

•

�P~~ge

Thursday, July 15, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

10 •The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, July 15, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

POSTAL JOBS To SIS 35 IHR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPEAI
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM

INFO CALL I 800·813-3585
EKT 1~210 8 AM
DAYS !do Inc

9 PM

7

Scenk Hills Has STNA Post10ns
Avlllable For 2 ·10 PM &amp; 10
~M -a A.M Please Apply In Por
.....
)11 lluclvtdge - · Bidwell
Oil
SINQI;RSI GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY can Now Toll Free 1
800-331H204 Or 1 615 367 6153

For Appomtment To Come To
Naahvllle, TN And Audttton For
...... Recortl Producers VISit 0

www-.ac

Tomato pk:Urs ages 15 &amp; older
minimum waoe. Cummms Farm
1~2102

or 740-247 3655

Transport driver for 100 bed
skilled nursing lacdlly Prov1de
tranaportatlon tor _,hysic•an ap
polntments, consults etc Must
have good dnving record enJOY
working wilh reSidents and ra
mlllea PositiOn 1s part ume and
on·call Is requued Pos•t•on "
te~ry at this tim~ Interested
applcams shOuld apply 1n person
to Rocksprings Rehab Center
367&amp;8 Rocl&lt;•pnngs Ad """"'""
01110 45769 7o40-992 6606 EQual
Cl!&gt;l&gt;or1unity Employer
Wanted Rellatlle Person To
Watch 3 Children Prelerably 4n
My HOme Dayt•me Senous 1\p
plcants Only 7ol0o441-0493
Wildlife Jobs to/$21 60/Hr Inc
Benelils GameWardens Secun
ly Maintenance Park Rangers
No Exp Needed For App and
Exam Info Call 1 800 813 ~35 85
Ext 8827 8AM 9PM 7 Days Ids

In:

' Inc
Wildlife Jobs to $21 60JHr
Benefits Game Wardens Secur
lty Maintenance ParkAangers
No exp needed For A.pp and
Exam/mlo
Call
1 800 8t3
3585 EJit 8827 8AM 9PM 7Days
k!sor.::
WILDLIFE JOBS To $2t 60 I "R
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY
MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL 1 BOO Bl3
3585 EXT t421t 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS Ids, 1nc

120

Situations
Wanted

Wanted SOmeone to tear dOwn &amp;
remo-ve )lhed lor lumber &amp; roof
lng (li04)895-3390

140

Business
Training

Gtlllpolll COrM&lt; College
(Careers Ck&gt;se To Home)
Cai1Todayl7-..o367
I-8Q0..214-0452
Reg f90.%.12748

150

-·

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GAEE QUICKLY, Bachelors
Masters Doctorate By Corre·
spondence Based Upon Pnor Ed
ucatlon And Short Study Course
For FREE lnlormallon Boo~let
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 a00-964:"&amp;316

180 Wanted To Do
8 J • Remodeling Pamhng In &amp;
OuJ Carpentry Cement Yard
Work Dec~s Cktamng Free Es
t!mates 1•0 256 ~827 Don t

FUS&amp; CaiUsl

CNA looking to care lor eldrerly in
tnelr home or mine Experien ced
7oi0-1185·3780
E 4 S Lawn Serv•ce Design lm
plementatlon
and Servtce
Available for Spring Clean up
terrmztng and planting Free estl
mates saustacUon guaranteed
Grag Milhoan 3CM/67!H628

EARN $1 000 WEEKLY WORK
lNG FROM HOUEt!l No Exj:len
ence Required' Bonuses PAIOI
GUARANTEED PROGRAM! I
31 o-a69-4952 E•t C
EARN $90 000 YEARLY Aepatr
tng, NOT Replactng Long Cracks
In Wlndshaelds Free Vleleo 1
800 826 8523 US /Canada
www glassmechalllx com
EARN UP TO S!&lt;O AN HOUR
Send Us A One Page Form We
Do The Rest No Otrect Selhng
Free lntormahOn Package 1 800
31o-8745 Ext 27 24 Hrs
Es tablished lawn mower shOp
complete ln~entory beaut1lul
home and rental all on one prop.
erty Of w•ll sell everything except
1nvtnl0ry; 740-949-2606
FAITO LAY /PEPS I fCO KE
VE~DING ROUTE
$1 000+
WEEKLY
POT'ENTIAL
ALL
CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO
CAL SITES ON GOING SUP
PORT SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS 1 800·
731 7233 EXT 2803
Need A l.oanl Try Debt Consoli
dation $5 ooo $200 ooo Bad
Cred•t 0 K Fee 1 800-770 0092
Exl 215
PREPAiD INTERNET
Access Cards Hot lteml 'No
Compet1110n 'Real SIS Maker •
D•stdbutorship Star Up $499
111J0.829o2371 OEPT 97

220 Money to Loan
$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remain ing Payments
On Properly Soldt Mortgages•
Annu1 11est Settlements' lmme
d1ate Quoteslll 'Nobody Beats
Our Pnces • NatiOnal Contract
Buyers 600 490 0731 Ext 101
www natKJnak:oruraclbuyers com
SSS OVERDUE BILLS•• t Consoli
date Oebtsl Same Day Appro'llal
NO APPLICATION FEE S!! 1 800
663 9006 E•t 936 www help pay
bills com
SFREE CASH NOW$ From
W4tallhy Families Unloading Mil
hans 01 Dollars To Help M1n1m1ze
The1r Taxes Wnte Immediately
Wondlalls 847 A SEG9ND AVE
SUITE t350 NEW YORK NEW
YORK tOOt7
••cred•t Card DEBT" Debt Con
soltdallon Stop Collection Calls
Reduce Payments &amp; F inance
Charges Avoid Bankruptcy I
800-270 9894
BANKRUPTCY $79-+- Stops Gar
mshmentst D1vor ce $99+ Also
Foreclosure A.votdance Program
Homeowner Loans FreshStart 1
688 395 8030 www freshstarlu

sa com
CREDIT PROBLEMS ? VISA
CAFIO Guaranteed Approval
No Credit Check 0%AP A Ae
qUirements 18+ US C•ltzen Ha~e
Checking Accou nt Phone Appro
~al 1 800 737 0073 Issued By
Merr•ck Bank SLC UT
NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
Olth:;e Visit Necessary Up To
$500 Instantly Call Toll Free 1
(877) EARLY PAY
151
AD
VANCE FREE! Ucl cc70036
RECEIVING PAYMENTS ? In
~eslor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Fin anced Mortgage
Real Estate Contract tnsuJance
Annu•ty Highest Puces Free
Quotes Why Watt? Call R1 ch 1
800-8118-6450

230

Medk:atd And Waiver lndepend
en! Provider Program Nurse For
In Home Care , VIsits And
Dressing Changes In Local Area
Ucsensed Practical N-urse 740·
388·0622 To L...., Message
Shru~• Trimmed,

Mulphlng,
Palnllng, etc. Call Bill. 'Leeve
Me-1304)175-7112.
Slale cerUiied daycare provider
will watch children any ages Five
Points &amp;1'98 caN 740-992-0131
Will do House Cleamng Have
Releu1nces and Expenence•
(740) 386·6421 or (740) 446
2646 Le....., Message
Wt/1 sit w1th elderly mal e person
8PM-8AM (304)675-2617

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

"F RE~ 3 DAY TRAIL PACK"

Lose Weight Boost Energy
Make A Fortune From Home I

888 229 85o42
INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus1
ness with peoJMe you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have mvest•galed

the-lng
ASSEMBLY AT HOMEn Crafts
Toys Jewelry Wood Se'!'V!ng
Typing ... Great Pay! CALL 1 BOO
795-0360 E_, 1201 (24 Hrs)
AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 20 Locations S4K ·$101&lt;
000 +IMo Income
All
CASH! 100% Finance A~a•lable
1 80().38().2615 24 Hr&amp;

s•

CATALOG SALES
FULLER
BRUSH CO Looking For People
Who Would L1ke To Start The1r
Own 8us tn ess NO INVEST
MENT Gen Bonus Oppty Limited
Ttme
800 417 3855
Then
www fuller com1Jnddlstlrb1 0003htm
Or 1100-683-2002

Professional
Services

Aoproved Master L•censed Elec
tncian WVP25956 Estimates
for
Res iden tial
Serv•ces
(30.)675-7927
TUR~ED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W1nl
1 888-582 33&lt;5

Georges Portable Saw trull don t
haul your logG to the mpt 1ust call
30.HS75· 1957
Jtms Drywall &amp; Construction
New Construclion &amp; Remodel/
Drywall. Siding Roofs Addl
lions, Painting, etc (304)674
4623 or (304)67...01 ~

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Business
Opportunity

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
1995 4br 3tlalh w t!replaca
16x20 deck 9x20 front porch secluded on 7 72 acr must sell
$65 000 00 74()-379 2643
3 Beelroqm House With 3 Acres
land Few Frun Trees 2 Bed
rooms &amp; Bath Upstairs t 8ed
room Froi1t Room DtnlllQ Room
Ullllty Room Kltc.Mn Bath Down·
statrs Sits On Storys Run Road
On Route 1 For More Information
Call 740 367 7576 After Noon
Prr&lt;e ~9 500

3 Bedroom 2 Bath Ranch W•th 2
Car Garage And Sl'1op 11 Miles
Hom Gantpohs WUI Sell With 2 3
Acres For $75 000 Or Wtth 16 1/
2 Acres For $95 000 Call 740
379-2635
3BA Home Large Room Eat In
KitChen N1 ce 'I..Porcl'1 AC 3/4
Basement Lot Size 50X~O
$32 000 1~)882 377?
4 Rooms &amp; Bath On Cor'ner Lot
With Extra Big Yard Crown Ctly
OhiO Owner Wtll Carry W•th Rea·
sonable Down Payment 740 4469878
5 Bedrooms 2 Baths 10 Acres
R1o Grande Area S t59 000 740
245-12t7
5 room 1 1/2 bath lauMry 300
nver frontage Syracuse full
basement 740 992 3860
7 Year Old 3 Bedroom Ra\lch
Home 2 Ba ths 28x30 Attached
Garage 69 112 Acres Wilt Sell
All Or House And Lot Meigs
County $150 000 For hiformalmn
Call 740.992 3537
Beauttful brick 3 br home on
lovely acreage musl see to aJJ
pr&amp;elate 304·273 9485
Beautiful older hOtnfl fenced yard
large butldmg to run your own
business or take over estab
UshM lawn mower busmess a(ld
complete mventory Rental hOme
on tl'1e property room tor expan
slon Good area Racine Ohto
t 40 000 740-949 2606

s

Buy Homes From $10 000
1 5 Bedroom Local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Financing
Possible For Listings Call 800
319-3323 E~ct 1709

Buikhng lots For Sal• New Ha
"""Araa (304)1182 ~se
Pr1me Butldmg S1te 1 Acre
{144x302J Mason wv No Re
stnctlons $15 000 (304)882

3n2

All real estate advettiSif'IQ '"
this newspaper •s subject to
the F~ral Fair Housmg Acl

R1ver Lot For Sale West Coluf'n·
bla Area Point Pleasanl Side ol
Sp11man Church Can 1304)675·
1&lt;37

ol 1968 -M..ch makes it Illegal
to advertiSe ·any preference
limitatiOn or dtscnmmabon

LAND
In Galha Jackson Ross Me•gs
A.nd A.thens Count1es 5 To 75
Acre Tracts For Resident ial Or
Recreation lahd Conlracl Avail
able FREE Maps Anthony lan6
Co Ltd 1-800-213-8365

based on race color religion
sex famttial status or natiOnal
ongtn Of any inter.lt100 10
make any such preference
l!mftatl()n or discnmn'\atK&gt;n -

Th•s newspaper w111 not

360

knoWingly accept
adir'enasemencs ror real estate
,..ntch 1s m viOiatiOO or the
law Our readen are hereby
mformed that all dwelh\'IQS
adven1sed 10 th1s newspaper
" are ava1labkt on an equal
opportunity baSIS

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 500 AcreS
We Pay Cash t 800 213 8365
Anthony Land Co ,,

•

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent

310 Homes for Sale
Completely remodeled house 4
bedroom famify room Nv!f'lg room
kitchen ut•htv room &amp; bath base
ment With bath new carpet
throughout central a1r beaut1lul
~•ew of nver call 7-40· 992 9012
appointment only
For Sa le By Owner 1 63 Acre
more or less lots 7 8 9 A1ver
bank Flight of way 2/3 SR Full
Master Bath t 12 Bath &amp; Space
for WasherJOryer also Large
kitchen &amp; hvtngreom 2 Auto Ga
rage Gas heated Brick bldg on
Lot 7 Pumphouse with New Sun
ken Well 75ft deep C1ty water
also Sewage &amp; trash p1ck up
Apple Trees Grapes Pear &amp; Nut
Trees Lot 9 large garden space
Lots 7 8 9 very pnvate property
lined 1n w1th Pine Trees &amp; Hem
lock Trees Seen by appt only
Pu ce set $65 000 Ms Yonker
(304)882 3451
HOMES FROM 15,000 Fore·
closed And Repossessed No Or
Low Down Payment Cred1t Trou
ble 0 K Fl;)r Current L1shng Catt
1·800-31 1·5048 Ext 3372

3 Bedroom House full basement
Central
Alf
Mason
$375 OOmonth (304)882 3652
3BR House for Rent 2219 Lin·
coin Avenue Pt Pleasanl $350
Rent + S350 Depos1t upon rent·
mg Stove/Aetngerator Included
Call
between
9AM 5PM
(740)592 2678
4 Bedrooms All Electric A/C ,
$500/Mo, Plus Depos•t 7AQ.367~
Clean nice 2 br basement/ga·
rage ref /dep no pets 304 675·
5162
•
Houst lor Rent In Country Partly
Furrnshed (304)882 3970

NICe two bedroom home bath Bnd
1/ 2 large yard located 1n Syra
cuse 740·992·2638 or 740·992·
...
7014

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
1 Bedroom Mobile Home All uhl
1t1es Pa•d Cattle TV Paid $275
montl1 (304)695-3603
Between Athens and 'Pomeroy, 2
conditioned, $260·$300 sewer,
water and lrash Included 740·
992 2167
2 Bedrooms $325JMo , + Utilities
No Pets Central Alr 7,.0 446·
4313

Tn lev'el t hree bedroom two
bathS living room tamlty room
dining room two garages base
ment btg porch askmg $65 000
74(). 742 3039

2 Bedrooms &amp; 4 Bedrooms $2751
Mo Or $350/Mo Plus Deposit
On McCorkle Road Gallipolis

7o10o44Ha«

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths CA Stove
Relrtgerator Water Trash Fur
nlshad Very NlceJ $350/Mo
Oepo•' 740 386 9686

1980 14x65 Buddy bV Skyline 2
bedroom stove retrlgerator un
derpmnlng new Btr candlllone r
$9 500 74().949 2452

Two bedroom. one batl'1 total
electnc outside Rutland area
$250 month $150 deposit cal!
740 992;l..7788 after 5pm

1981 tra1ler, 2 bedrooms ba ln
electric a c/heatpump app/lanc
es 2 porches dlnene set S5 500
304 773-5319 304 882 3..198

440

1988 Clayton Clairborne 2 Bed
room~ 2 Baths All Electric Ex

tras• 740.256-6938

~

1996 Clayton 16x80 A C 3BR
N1ce Take Over Payments
$292 (304)675-8165
1997 Fleetwood Mobile Home
14x70 Heat Pump 740 367 0565
Or 740-820 3907
4BA 2BA $499 Down Assume
Payments of S239 mo (304)755
5560
11-L·O.W O.U· T
S499 Down All Smgles S999
Do~n Doubles Super Low Pay
ments, Llmltecl Time Oakwood
Homes BarbOursvi lle WV 304·
736-3409
Clearance Sale All Displays
Must Go OownPayments as low
as $4H Interest as low as I 91
Ltm1ted t•me only at Oakwood
Homes , Nitro WV (304)1'55·
5885
Good selectio n of used homes
wtlh 2 or 3 bedrooms Slartmg at
$3995 Quick deltvery Call 740
385 9621
New Bank Repo s Only 3 Lett t ,
BQ0.383 6862
New 3BR 1499 down, 1189
Month Only 01kwood Homea
Nino, wv, (304)755-5885
New Bank repos only 2 tell we
11nance can 304 722·7148
Smgle Parents Program $499
Down Ltmlled Ol!er Call tor de
tmls (304)755 7191
To Everyone Galha Mason
Me1gs Area Stop 6y See Pete
P~k -VIew Our Beaut1tul Homes
Beside Auto Zone Gallipolis 740
446 3093
Two bedroom trailer lor sale or
rent m Middleport deposit re
qu1red 740 742 2006
Double W1de On Lot S250 De·
posn 1 80().383-8862

330 Farms for Sala
Small self sull1c1ent 52 acre !arm
with tow working nalural gas wells
and two good water springs one
developed plus TPW 20 minutes
from Athens 10 minutes from Po
mercy two nice building s!tes 1n
eluding 14x70 w1th 7•20 t1p out
house tra1ler $68 500 740 992

3564
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
40ACRES
Orily S45 000 Great For Recrea
Uon Or Hunting Mostly Wooded
Ott SA 1Al &amp; SA 233 Can Be 01vleled Road Bu111 To Land Then
On Into Wayne Nahonal Forrest
5% Down land Contract W1th Approved Credit Free Maps I 800
213 8365
BUILDING LOTS
FOR SALE
Water and Electric Re•dy For
HoOk·Up. Nice Loti i8 000 00
3Q4.773-5Jtl8

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments lur
nlshed and unfurniShed secunty
deposit required no pets 740·
992 22t8
t Etflc•ency Ap8rtment Fur
mshed Ut1hlles Included $250/
Mo Air Cond1t10n1ng, 740·3tH0611
1 BR AIC Near Holzer 1st
Month Free Wtlh t Yr Lease ':tl
Ou1et Location No Pets $279/
Mo Plus Utlllti8S, 740 446-2957
2 Bdrms, Relngerator Stove Fur
nlshed 34 112 Smithers $250 00
' MOnth Rent $150 00 Oepostl
740 446-3870 -

2 BR W/0 Hook·up AelerencesJ
DepoSi1 No pets (3Q4)675-5162

2 Rooms &amp; Bath $225/Mo

In
eludes Ultltttes No K l~cl'1e n 1
~room &amp; Bath Includes Ulihtl8s
No Ki1cljen. 740-446-2477
2bdr"l apts total electric ap
pltances furnished laundry room
fac•ht1es close to school 1n town
Apphcat•ons available at Village
Green Apts U9 or call 740·992·
j71 1 EOH
3 Room Upstairs Furnished
Wmdow Air Utllllles Paid $285/
Mo Plus Depos1t, 740..446-1340
Apartment tor rent 1n Middleport
740 992 5856

no pets

App lications Bemg Accepted For
Very NICe 2 Bedroom Apartment
In Country Setting 'Washer /Dry·
er • Fng Stove Dishwasher Wa
ter And Gart&gt;age Paid Total Elec
tnc W lAC No Pets Non
Smokers Only, S400 Depos it,
$450fMo 740 446 9585 740·
446 2205 Ask For V1rgnla
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drl~e
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; mo~les Call 740 446 2568
Equal Housing Opportunity
Ptlot Program Renters Needed 1...
800-383-6862
N1ce 1 br apt k1t lurn WI D
hOokup $300 + damage dep
304-675-3100 or 304 675-5509
Christy s Fam1ty U~mg apart
ments home &amp; trailer rental s
740 992 4514 apartments a~au
able lumlshed &amp; unturmshed
Country' se1t1ng eftlency apart
menl co mplelely furnished all
utilitie s paid please call 740 992

2292
2 Bedroom Apartments Unfur
ntshed Security Deposit Refer
ences Aeqwred 304 638 453 t
Or Evenmgs 740..886-4531
Furnished Upstairs Second
Avenue No Pets Utilities Pa1e1
740 446 9523
GraCIOUS h~tng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Rtverslde Apartments ln Middle
port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing Dppor
tun4118S
Large 2BR Unfurnished Near
PVH $350 mo + S3SO deposit
(~)675 5786

540 MIIICtlllaneous
Merchandise

Apartments
lor Rent

N1ce 2 Bedroom Aparlmlnt AP
phances and ali Ullllt1es Fur
nlshed $375 00 per montl'1
(30&lt;)675-&lt;302

NIC8 2 bedroom apartment 10 Syr•
acuse $275 per month $200 de
poSit. 740-667 3516
Now Takmg Apphcattons- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townl'1ouse
Apartments. Includes Water
Sewage Trash $315/ Mo 740
446-0008
One &amp; Two Bedroom Apartments,
Also House FOf Rent In Town No
Pets Oepos1t &amp; Refrences Re
qultKI 740-446 9342
One bedroom turmshed apart
ment 1n Mlddfeport call 740 992
9191
•
Tw in Rivers Tower naw acceptmg
appiJcattons lor 1BR HUD sub
sidiz'ed apt lor eldetty and hand
EOH 304·675-6679

460 SP!Ice for Rent
Moblle" Home Lot For Rtnt Refer
ences Requhd 740.256-1922
MobHe hOme lot ln Middleport
$100 per month 740-992 3194
~ob1ie home s1te available bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy call
740-385-4367

MERCHANDISE

51 0

7802

&amp; 3 bedroom mob1le homes air
Three bedroom house tor sale
one and l f2 baths tully furnished
n1ce yard close to park 477 Sy
camore Street Mtddlepor t call
74().367 7000

440

INTERESTED IN WAITING PO
ETRY? POETRY CONTEST
$48 000 In Pnzes Po&amp;H&gt;Ie Publi
catiOn Send One Orrg•nal Poem
20 Llnes Or Less To lnternat•on
al Library 01 Poetry I Poetry Pia
za Suite 11835 Owings Mills. MD
21117 Or Enter Onhne At
www poetry tom
Jersey Oevll A.ltens Brgtoot And
More See Them AI www amber
mgs com Your Own Bus•ness At
www mcredibleprodiJCtsmall conV
catal0g2 st.~tet900642

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New I Retx.nH In StOCk
Can Ron Evans 1-800-537 9528
Kenmore Washer $60 00 Ken ·
more Dryer $50 00 G E washer
$60 00 Kenmore Portable Dryer
$50 00 Cal Arter 5 30PM
Maktta Concrete Saw Gas Pow
ered Y,sed one timet $300 00
Llncoln/225 Amp Arc Welder
$150 00 (7401245 9856
Movmg 740 441·0182 Bedroom
Set $600 , Queen prass Head
board Mirrored Tr1ple Dresser
Bedside Table Nearly New Mat
tress And Boxsprmgs Sectional
$1 00 ltghted Chma Cabinet
S200 Crushed Valver Sola And
Loveseat $tOO Stripe Velvet
Chan $40 Wooden Table, 2
Leaves 6 Chairs $200

Prlmtltlr- frM DlrecTV Summer
Promouon Call now 1 888 265

See The New J.ol\n Deere 200
Senes Skid Steer Loaders 7 5"4
JOC Ftnancing Carm•chael's
Farm &amp; Lawn Inc 1·800·59C·
1111 Gallipojs OH we De1Mif1

620 Wanted to Buy
Old MotOfcycles. Motorscoolers
Motorscooter Parts (Cushman
preferred) Contact D Mitchell
5568 80th PI No Ptnellas Park
FL 337BI 727-&lt;64 7408

Livestock
5 Year Old ReQ'Islered Llmoustne
Bul (304)882 3239
AQHA &amp; APHA Filly s For Sale
E~cellent Bred lines 740 3889130
For sale- 4 year old hereford bull
740 !M9 2~9
Freezer Beef Butchering Hogs
Roasting Hogs 7 40 388 9033 At
t8f9 OOPM

App li ances
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers Ranges Refrt
grators 90 Day Guarantee!
French C1ty Maytag 740 446
7795
GOOO USEO APPLIANCES
washers dryers refr~gerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vme Street Call 740 446 7398
t 688-818.0128
L1ke New Craflmahc Adjustable

Bed Caii(304)67S.2800
Mollohan Carpet Room Size Car
pels Drive a l.iltle Save a Loti
202 Clark C1'1apel Road Porter
(740) 388-()173 (740)-446 7444 1
Used Furniture JAppllances QH
Bulav11te P1ile On Kee ler Road
740 446 4039. 740·446 1004
Call Any Tim!J Johnson s Used
Furniture
•

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Claim Denied? We Specialize tn
Appeals And Hearings FREE
CONSULTATION Benefit Team
Serv1ces Inc Toll Free 1·888
BJ6..4052

I' .:::.:...~=----------c---Top Soil For Sale (304)453 6196

Ut11ity Tratler 5 Ft xtO Ft Till Bed
3 Years Old Brand New 2x6
Treated FlOoring $650 080 740446 7252 Alter 4 PM
WANT A VISA CARD? $12 000
+ Unsecured Bad !No Cred1t OK
Everyone Welcome 1 800·285·
3588
Walerhne Special 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per tOO, All Brass Com·
pressiOn Ftmngs In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
JackS&lt;lrt Oh10 1 8()()-537 9528

550

Building
Supplies.

Washer Dryer Electric Range
(304)675-6693

Block brick sewer pipes wind
ows lintels etc Claude W1nters
Rio Grande OH Call 1AO 245
5121

WASHERIDRYERISOFAI FLOOR
MODEL TV CALl- 304·675-7552

560

t

Buy or sell R•venne Anhques
1124 E Main Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours MTW 1000
am to600pm Sunday .100to
6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Ru55
Moore owner

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
'HOST FAMILIES NEEDEDIII'
Exchange Students From Germa
ny Japan England France Flus·
sla SrazU Students Arrtve tn Au·
gust To Attend Local High
Schools For Further Information,
1 800-765 4963
1 mad s1ze Blfd Cage on Pedal
Stool $40 Breed1ng Box $10
(304)675 729B
10 Speed Bike Curta1ns Bedd1ng
Otsl'1es Wooden Cham:~ Rocker
Toys Mise 91 Garfield Avenue
GallipoliS 741).446-0639

18" DlrecTV Satelllle System•
S69 00 one month free mov1e
channels Limited ttme oller call
1 8()()-779 6194

3 Pc Sectional Matching Chair

Pets lor Sale

3 AKC Yellow Lab Pups, Has
had Shols $200 00 each• (740)
446 0080
AKC Reg1stered Boston Tamers
Now Accepting Depostts 740
388 9325
AKC Registered Silk Yorkshire
Terriers
Shots &amp; Wormed
Weighs
31bs
fully
grown
(304 )675·33611675-4009
AI&lt;C Regtstered Yellow Lab Pups
Shots &amp; Wormed Ready 4th Of
July 740.256-6336
Beagle Basset Mix, Pups $20
OB&lt;h (304)695-3390
Fish Birds Pond Supplies
Sun 1 4PM Mon Sat 11AM
6PM F1sh Tank/ Pet Shop 2413
Jackson Avenue/Pomt Pleasant
(304)675·2063
For sale Jack Russell terrjers
740 742 2050
Full Blooded Rail Terrier Pups
$100 Each 7AO 245 5597
Aeglstered mini pinscher female
t-lack and rust $250 740 949 1
3026

3J4 HP: Disposal 2 12 to'n Rheem
Heat Pump w/Atr Handler Bassi
"'t/CI8dl9 (740)-446-7711

male $l50each 740 992 2721

ATTENTION We'll Pay You To
Lose Up To 29 Lbs (Or More)
87 People Needecl Immediately!
Oller E~tplres 7128 Call 740-441·
1982

What s So DUferent About The
HAPPY JACK 3X FLEA COL·
LAA'l IT WORKS! Against
Elnl Ill:M. ! M.lW W[1bout
Systemic Po1sonmg JD NORTH
PRODUCE
740 446 1933
(www happyj.l:tcklnc com)

1986 Beanie Babies Mostly Re
tired 2 Sets Of 1998 Teanle
Beanies Take All $300 740 2566909
'

St Bernard pups 6 mal&amp; 3 re

580

Fruits &amp; /
Vegetables

BIG SCREEN TV Take over
small monthly payments Good
credit required ~! 800 718-t65J.

Black Barnes S12 00 Gallon Also
Hay $ l '50 Bale Friendly R1dge
Ad 740-256 1145

Blu~nal couch good con·
d tlo $80 floor model TV $50
74 78 9806 b$tore 9pm

Cannh1g tomatoes already pick~
740.247·2063

COOL DOWN
Central Air Cond1t1omng Added
To Your Furnece Complete Duct
Systmes &amp; Furnaces Heat
Pumps Certified Installer If You
Don1 Call Us We Both l:.osel 740-446 6308 1 800 291 0098
Day Bed Comes W1th 2 Mat·
tresses Pop-Up a,M Frame As~·
lng $200 740 44G 4397
D1scount Mobile Home
Parts &amp; SUPI&gt;~
Huge Inventory
VInyl Skirting Ktts $299 95 5 Gal
ion Alu mmum F1bered RoOf Patnt
$25 2t 5 Gal Wh1te Roof Pam!
$57 69 Ancnors 55 Doors &amp;
Windows Gas &amp; ElectriC Water
Healers Plumbmg &amp; Electrical
Parts tntertherm M1ller &amp; Cole
man A1r Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennetts Mobile Home
Supply 740 446 9416 Gallipolis
Ohto
Four 175 85R 14 Tttes, Exerc1se
B1ke 2 Interior Doors 30'•24"
One set bl fold doors 5ft
(304)862 2796
FULLY
LOAD~D
PENTIUM
COMPU TERS Poor Credit 0 Kl
t 800-520-6364
GOT A CAMPGROUND MEM
BERSHIP OR TIMESHARE? Well
Take tt• Amenca s Most Sue·
cesstul Campground And Time·
snare Resale Clearinghouse can
Resort Sales lnternattonal t 800
423&lt;-5967 24 Hours
Grubbs Plano tumng &amp; repatrs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plan' Dr 740-446-4525

For Sale Home Grown Melons
Tomatoes at Troyer s Wood
Crafts 9 miles west of Gaihpohs
state AI 141 Lakin Rd

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
7 Ft locust Fence Post $2 25
each 500 or more $2 oo each
(304)882 32451(304)B62 2077

FAIR SPECIALS
JULY 5 THRU AUGUST 30
Lawn Tractors S150 Off On LTs
$200 Off LX 5 And GT s $250 Oil
300 s $300 Oil 400 s And Z
Trak s Financing As Low As
5 9% For 36 Months Or $250 Off
On Compact Utility Tractors
5210s 53 10 s And Gators Free
Delivery Carmichael Farm &amp;
Lawn 'r"our Local John Deere
Dealer GallipOliS OhiO 740·446
24120rt B00594t111
For Sate Shopsmlth Mark V with
100 bl of Walnut Lumber
$1 000 (304)695 3390
For Sale Sta tesman Rk11ng lawn
Mower 12HP 38" Cut (304)675
9795 $700 00 Firm
Ford Super Oexlra Diesel 3 Cy
Iinder Th ree Point Hitc h Live
Power Htgh and Low Range
$3 000 (3041675 3824

hitch and electric brake rebuttf
tngtnt QOOd clean rructt S5200.
cal 74().949-28n at 9am
r

1970 Pon11ac L.emans W1th 350
Rocket Motor $600 Call Aller 5
304-675 5612
1970 Volkswagon Beetle Newly
Restored Mus! Sell l 740·3677117
.R
1980,·1990 CARS FROM $500
Poll,Ce Impounds
AM Tax
Repb s For Ustmgs Call 1 800
319-3323 E•t 4420
1981 Chttvy Truck Short Wheel
Base 6 Cyl $1800 19 8&amp; Cut
tass 2nd OwnAr Must See
$2 000 (304)576 2753 Altbr ,
630PM
1983 Renault Alhance BOdy In
EXCfi!:llanl Condition will run
need~':!, some work lois of new
parts $500 OBO (304)9 37 3348
1986 Old s Cala1a 4 cyl 40A 5
Speed Low Mileage Mint Condl
t1on New Battery Muffler Brakes
~ 999 (304)6B2 3894

v

1994 Geo Prizm Auto Air Sun
Roof 72 000 miles Excellent
Condttmn (304)675 2039 $5495
080 Murt Sell Great Student
Car
1995 Dodge Neon 4 Or 4 Cylln
der Au 1om 49 000 Miles Very
Good Condtlton $5 000 00 740
441,03371995 Forel EsCort LJC sedan 4
door auto 69 95 1 miles amlfm
stereo ate leal wfgray Interior
1
asklng S2 650 740 992 1506
~.,~da:.:Yc;';_7_40.;...:94~9-:...:.2644:.....c;IMI:_::5:....._~
r
1995 Sebring 58 000 Miles , Pow
er Windows &amp; Locks Moon Roof
$12 500 080 740-446 2109
1997 thevy Cava her 2 Doors 5
Speed C/D Tilt Cruise Power
Sunroof 43 000 Miles $8 500
740 992 7102
1997 Ford Aspire 14,t.OOO Miles
$4 900 740 256·1417 1' .. 0 256
6226
1998 Ford Mustang $100 /080
Se1zed And Sell•ng locally 1
BOO 409 751 t, Ext 7704
1998 Pont tac Trans · Am, Fully
Loaded! Price Red uced to
S22 500 00 Great Graduation
Gtftll(740) 446-4~
1999 Pontiac Grand Am SE 2
Doors Silver Automatic Loaded
like New And Under Warra l1ty
Bougl'11 New In MaDch 01 98
$16 300 Or Best Offer 740 992
7102
HONDAS FROM $500 I ' POLICE
IMPOUNDS '
ALL
MAKES
AVAILABLE
FOR
LISTING
CALL 1-600,3193323 EXT A
471
JULY 18 1999 Porsche Swap
Meet 8 AM 4 P:M Twaetts An
nuar Event Has Moved To Naw
FaCilities In Elflngham tL Call
888 4TWEEK S (489 3357) For
Complete InformatiOn

l Buckel V 8 Power SB 500 740
HD6 Dozer Recently Rebuilt ~~44_6__14_2_5_________ __
$8 500 Firm 400 Gallon Tanks
On Rubber S500 Each 740 446
Well mamtained 91 Olds 88
2359
94 ooo miles $5 200 Great tam1
ly ca• 304 875 3909

I

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
NO C.OIItlt,SATI0/'1,
"PL.fAft •• T ..~
L.ffT Sll&gt;t OF MY
rRAIN r&gt;OfSI'I'T
~IGIC 11'1 UNTIL

MY

$~CONl&gt;

CVP Of

C..Off~t.

THE BORN LOSER

1995 Ford Ranger 4X4 5 Speed
A.IC AM!FM Stereo ~ 58 000
Mies S9 000 00 740.379 9270

2

.

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01\, '1t.N\7 Wf\fu'_:,
OOto\f.\'(7

1998 Jeep Wrangler Sport 746742·3062

)

Motorcycles

1998 300 EX 4 whee'&amp;r extended
warranty lflCiuded 7-40-742 2780

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groups

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____________ ,

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GfT ANSWER

A man paymg hts dtnner check told the glum
propnetor 'If you don I know .how to smtle ypu shouldn t
OPEN a SHOP"

!THURSDAY

JULY 15l

Home
Improvements

•

can draw

•

upon your valuable

past

AQUARIUS

(Jan 20

Fch 19) A

experiences today and 1um somclhrng

sOurce

Fnday, July 16 1999
There ts a strong probabtltty you

others deem arduous nnd dtfficult mto

up m•ght prove tis rchab•hty today

C&amp;C General Home Maln
tenence Pa1nttng vinyl sldln"
carpentry doors windows baths
mobile home repa1r and more For
free esttmate call Chet 7•0.992
6323

rnay learn up m the commg year wnh
two persons who have successful
track records for a common purpose
II 'II prove to be a dynam 1c trio

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) You
tend to "get lucktcr 10tlay as the gomg

sary posumn of havmg

get~ rout!!h Don t dchhcralcly put
~ourscll.n an awkward pnsllton. hut

1f you

Uvmgstor;~ s Basement Water

to spend some
w1th your more

don t dodsc any or get ('hlntc.:: ky
shuuld you encounter a tough snua

prove your word can be counted on
Everyone with whom you have deal ·
mgs wtll be aware of that faCt today

441..0t93

Rainbow Bulldet'l
Bu1ld new or repair old no job
too small or large Major credil
cards
IIWV029582
Call
(304)458 1049 BP t528 8092

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or commerc1al wlr!ng
new se r ~tce or repairs Master Ltcensed electrlc•an Ridenour
Ele clncal WV000306 304 675
1786

quo••d

NUMBERED lfTTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

,

M&amp;R General Contracting 3i
Electnc Carpentry PotchoJ
Trailer Set Ups And Air ( ondl
/lomng Also M.alntenan&lt;' 1 Nr

chuckle

P~INT

1979 Shasta Camper 22Ft Self :
Contamed $2500 Very Good
Cond,tOn (304)675-1879

Proollng all basement repairs
done lree estimates lllelime
guarantee 12yrs on job expflri
ence (304)895 3887

1he

f1ll•no •n the mtsse~ words
you develop from Jtep No 3 below

by

SCftAM.LETS ANSWIRS
Stup1d • Moody • Nymph • Helper· OPEN a SHOP

1995 Terry Travel Camper 2l
Foot With Expando Complete't1
Loaded! Call Alter 6 00 PM 740· ...
446 6123
l
,

Apphance Parts And Serwlce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
penence All Work Guaranteed
French City Maytag 740·446·
7795

::::

--..;._~~~~-

_ _ _ _ _..;.__:; ldlood

e

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

E•·

HV R

Y V 0 L

1--ril~r-i-TI. ;.H:.,. IN;;..·..;.II....:·c:.,l-1., 0. ~ompl•••

Aoplacemeht Gas Tanks D
&amp; R Auto, RIP,Iey WV (304)372•
3933 or 1 8{)0-273-9329

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
,
Unconditional lllettme guarantee •
Local references lurnlshed
tabl1shed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740) ~
446·0B70 1 8001!87 0576 Ro9 •
ers Waterproofing
~

y

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "When truth 1s ' discovered by someone else 1t loses

some of

1L-.J.l--1.--..,.L.-.J.l--L.-..1.

ssn

Z Y L

PXWLSUVKS

somet1mes t.:alled a con

Budget Prtced Transmis.stons
and Engines All Types Access
To Over l 0 000 Transmissions,
Jotnts 740 245

Ciolotered

Cij)her cryptograms are created !rom quolahons by !amous people pa51 and p eseol
Each letter to the Cipher stands tor anolhe.- Toctay's due A equals N

' H l K.,.:

WT

hoth OP,ponents wm the last tnck
West w;th a Wtnntn£ dtamond find
-East With a top trump

•
LL~~~~!~~~

53

by Luis Campos
Celetlnty

L:ertma or compressiOn pl ay because
j

WIM!dlng·
page word

CELEBRITY CIPHER

moment

..b--li

r.fo~

52

one

er and score another trump tnek m a
ts

Ruoolon ruiM

30 lolend of exile
(2 Wdl)

5 speed transmiSsion for Ford
Probe 89 91 6 cylinder $200
OBO, 740-992·2956

$10

Umberto-

9 Lair
10 Mou gloomy
11 Self-centerod
peraotl
12 Acto
19 War zone, for

3 Hardly ever
7 Us1ng two
hand a
4 "The a-teat •

Pass

By Phillip Alder
Agesdaus was a bnlliant sold1er
who h ved from 444· 360 B C and
was Kmg of Sparta from 399 B C In
Plutarch's "L1ves AgeSIIaus" you
can lind " It IS ctrcumstance and
o%proper ummg that g1ves an ac110n 1ts
character and makes tt enher good or
bad"
Bndge contracts somettmes
requ1re proper ltmmg If your
sequence of plays ts accurate, you get •
home, 1f your order 1s mexact, you
fa1l That apphes m today's deal You
reach four hearts West leads the dtamond king You wm wnh the ace and
cash your two top hearts, getting the
bad news when West diScards a d1a
mond What now &gt;
Yes, maybe South should have set·
lied for three no-trump
You have mne tncks two spades,
three hearts one d1amond and three
clubs But where " number I Q&gt;
Well , there IS a chance to sec ure 1t
before the opponents can take thetr

Tht s

Auto Parts &amp;
'Accessories

' SERVICES

8 Author

6 Renown

ahort

has two htgh trumps a dtamond and
a club Lcadmg dummy 's last spade
elfects a perfeel coup en passant If
East dtscards, you rulllor tnck 10, tf
Ea~t ruffs you diScard a d1amond los·

. HIS Nl'&gt;t1E5 NATf'
WRIGHT 1 I .JUST
WATCt&lt;ED t&lt;IM &amp;EI'T
THE COt1POTEfl. SIX
t'l.A.TCHES. IN flo. RPW 1
HE5 rHENOI'IEN/&amp;.L'

750 Boats &amp; Motors
•
for Sale

~~.::_

23 Hosiery
·z•
Actor Porker

maacullne nor

22 Golf score•
24 Pin
26 River nymph

two trumps and two dtamonds East

Ong1nal Harley Davidson horn 6
volt system 0000 cond1t on $150
741}-992 5006

790

55-r

32111umtn.ted

Cash the ace·ktng o f spades, ruff
a spade m hand then collect thre~
club tncks endmg tn the dummy
When thai passes off safely, you have
won nme tncks two s pades, two
heans one dtamond. three clubs and
one spade ruff In hand you have le rt

1996 Suzuki Katana 600 608
mtles. black/purple qUtck fast 4
chaapl S3 400 oo oeo. 740 992·
1506 days, 74D-949-26448't'8S

eve

~

11Anecdote
collection
20 Child
21 Ill- In Egypt

29 Auto fuel
31 Beallol
burden

f0ur red sutt wmners

1987 FXSTC. low miles lots of
chrome &amp; extras, $15 ,000, 740992·31 12 after 5pm or 740 992·
0078

760

17 DoiiM IIIII

,It's all in the timing

I

~

25 Ft House Boat With Trsller;'"
$5 500 304·638-.4531 Or E~en·
tngs 740-886-4531

1994 Ca~afler 2 Doors $3 295
1994 Corsica 4 Doors
6 Au·
tomallc Loaded 86K $3 650
Cook Motors 740-446-Qt 03

1
•

MONEY, PAW

O~mng

Conversion (Houslon Texas) .~
gray velour Interior front and rqr
air all extras $5300 OBO 74€h
992 1506 days or 740 948 264-t

1990 Geo Storm $1 ooo 1"9 a7
Mercury Marqu•s $600 1986
F1flh Avenue $500 Ford Tempo
(Wrecked) $2001 740.388 0840

1992 Shadow looks and runs like
new 70K cold air automatic
sunroof 4 cy lmder spoiler red
~ 74().9&lt;9 20451M!nlngs

4•

1987 Ford fufl alze conversion;

1987 27tl Southwlnds Motor
Home 454 eng1ne 39 000 miles
AJC Self Contained! Generator
$18 000 (740~38B B047

359~

WHAI

YOU'LL FIND ENNY
CARD PLAYlN'

1

Wetl
Pass
Pass
Pass

South
1•
I N'I1

~an 302 automatic Ivory Coas&amp;i

1989 Ford Probe ~ speed
ttres new clutch some damage to
nght front lender S1500 OBO
740 992 2956
""'

1991 Mercury Grand Mar(luls LS
4 door V 8 aU power options
non smokers like new 740 985

BARNEY
l DON'T

•

J 5Ft !'n Haul w/85 H P Seats 6
Real Rteel!oat tlli.OO (304)675
5091

Lluaome
trolto
Nolamooth

Vulnerable. Netther
Dealer South

4 3 V 6 PWIPUCr"lse AMIFM,
Cassette Cold Au Very Goocf,t

740

• J 10 6 3
• 5 2
•AK863
• A 7 4
• Q72

----~--~~---------·
t 987 A.stro Van 8 Passenger ,

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

51

27T-Ninjl Turtles

• 9 5

Soulh

Steeflng~ ~ Automatic .

t994 Astra Ext Conversion • Altopl•ons L•ke New Condition ;
sasoo 1304)675-3641

47 Bite

4eCourage

zs s - ollllue

• Q 10 9 2

• 8 5 4

Cl•antst Best Kept 89 You Ito
Ever S•ef 1989 Che~y Ptck Up,;
S1lver Grey 6 Cylinder 5 Speed_.~
A!C PS AM/HI Cassette Bed·
liner a Matcfting Topper High
Mileage S4 800 OBO 740 4463383

1987 Chrysler LeBaron Station
Wagon 56 000 Miles 4 Cylinder
AutomatiC Loaded Sl tOO OBO
740-256 1233

1991 Dodge Daytona Shelby N•ce
Condition High Miles $2 300
740 44f 0176

• J
o K Q J 10 8

72 Ford J/2 ton Truck v 8 Aulo
67 000 miles Good Condition,
s2:roo oq 1740) 38a 8934 Leave.
MeS&amp;age•

t 985 Ford Econollne Van Power
Air, Wilt,
Seal12 (304)675-1!169

1er .~ S3 soo oo 080

45 Frinchfriencl
4e O&lt;dlnence

loVI1

East
• Q 10 9

• J 8 6 4

1992 S·10 4 Cylinder 5 Speed,
E111ende,d Cab ~ 115K Miles, :
S3 500 OBO 7o40-256-1 ol27
•

EMII'III'IgS

-

A K 9

Weot

A1ter 6PM

COnd!lOn i304)67S.5909

41 Uncle
~PIInlot-

16 01118gglo'a

1111

• s3a

•

1986 EICamlno SS 43 000 actu- •
al mtles 305 VB (304)675·3521,

TRANSPORTATION

07 ,.

9 7 5 I

1976 Chevy 'Wheel Drl.., 350
~ough Shape $750 00 080 7o40- ,
446-6962.

94 Jeep Grand Cherokee Lare•
do 4x4 slx cylinder 751&lt; loaded,
excellent conclltlon 7,.1)..992-6617~
day5 0&lt; 7o40-36Hl119 ...,rings

19&amp;5 Plymouth Valtant Race Car
340. Engine 7 80 In 8Th Mile
R&amp;ady To Race Or Could Be Put
On Soeet For More ln1o Call 7o40449·331 0 Till 5 30PM Monday
Tht~ Friday Or 740 367 0466 Af

Norib
• A 11: 7 3

1950 Dodge 1/2 ton. 318 PS diOC
brakes
excellent condition
needs some work 1947 Dodge •
heavy 112 ton all original runs.
greal condiUon 19ot7 Dodge 3/4
ton dually !lad bod rOtJgl1 conditiOn, $3 000 ror all, OBO or sell ~
sepera1&amp;tf 7 o!G-992-449&lt;

Ri'gl stered miniature horses
g0pc:1 blood lines 5 mares 3 stal
lions 2 mares are bred back
7'4a- 7'2·2050

CARS $100 $500 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUNDS Honda s Toyota &amp;
Chevys Jeeps And Sport Ut1ll
tles b Call Now! 800·772·7470
EXT 7832

40-plpon

1se:=!..

lral~

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

710 Autos for Sale

7 Pao•1dl c1 ,nth
... ping
0
1 3 = type
1. Cold period

'92 Ford F 150 XLT 2WD I bod,

6 cylinder 5 speed air

Mtmature Male Donkey 35 Inch·
es HIQh 740-245-5.2-'9

I

0047

Antiques

Hydrohc Hou Mach1ne Paris
washer Large A.ssortment Bobs
&amp; Bends herythtng Must Go
Call Sonny Today (304)675
4123

2123

Household
Goods

Air Conditioners Used Dlrrerent
S1zes Guaranteed! 740 886

530

430 Cllt Tr•ctor, Triple Range
on.. $2500 (30&lt;)f82 2538

-

MPiump
37T_o_

~~

ALDER

110

331i1111p-.

ACROSS

PHILLIP

CANCER (June 2J.July 22) Try
lime soctally today
amb1tmus fnends as
opposed to your more frrvolous ones
Although each set offers you so me

thmg. ns the fonner that II please you
now Get a Jump on hfe by under·
standtng 1he mfluences that'll govern
you_ m the year ahead Send the
requ1red refund fonn and for your

As1ro·Graph predtcltons by ma1lmg
$2 to As1ro-Graph c/o thts newspa·
per PO Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta·
• hon New York, NY 10156 Be sure
to state your

Zoch'Mb..stgn

LEO (July 23·AOt 22) You pos
sess the wonderful attrrbute today to
see :mmcthmg of value m whal olh·
ers mtght commJcr meager rack.mgs
YClu II know how to make a lull loaf
ou t of the crumb s other$ 1gnore

VIRGO (Aug 21 Sept 22) You

lonkmg easy and stmple

tton

SCORPIO(&lt;kt 24 Nov 22) Even
lh11ugh your evaluations JX:rtatnln~ tel
the haste mt•nvatlons nf tncnds t:ould
he remmkahly accumtc 10duy tf s
hcst to keep your assessments to
yourself They won t want to hear tt

SAGITIARIUS (Nov 21·Dcc
21) Trends ond cond1tums pcrtammg
to stgmfkunt 1ssues conlmuc to tavm
you today Devote your energtcs and

dlorts solely nn the
WOnhy objeUtVeS

1

achievement nf

you thmk of as only

a back·

when you find yourself m the ncccs·

PISCES (feb

20

lO turn to 11

March 20) Ev~n

have to suffer some mconve·

ntence m fulfillmg a pledge. you II

ARIES (March 21·AP.rtl 19) Once
agam, the fortunes arc smll1ng on you
today where your resources are con ·
cemed Somethmg very d1fTtcult to

obtatn m1ghi become avatlablc
Snatch 1t ur whtle you ~ave the
chance

TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20) The
types of acttv1t1cs that mtght nppeal
to you today arc the scnous krnds thut
1
toned down a bu rather 1han
those wh1ch are phys1cally ucrtmg

arc

CAPRICORN (Dec 22·lan 19)
Conduct yourscll wtlh wmplcte 1ol·

and h01stcmus

erance and t:onstdcrauon '" any
arrangement you have today where
you possess outhonly over others
It 'll urge !hem to be more helpful and
effectiVe

comhmau on that spe ll" success lm
yo u wday 1s likely to he purroselul
pruccdurn ~otnhlncd Wllh )OUt ~Oil
st: tcnUnusncss .1hout ycJUI .l!'i!'il1_!n
Oli.:RI'i .md JutiCS

GEMINI (May 2J.Junc 20) The

League Baseball Atlanta Braves at New Yorlc Yankees (Uve) (CC)

�'.

Pag, 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Kelly Grueser earns degree

Tick-borne illness
known to infect dogs now found in humans
•
By BRIGITTE GREENBERG in Missouri, between 1996 and
Associated Press Writer ·
1998, and four more cases durResearchers have for the first ing this tick season in Missouri.
time detected in humans a tick- Tennessee and Oklahoma .
borne bacterial infection that
The study examined a littlewas thought to sicken only known disease called ehrlichiodogs, accordi ng to a study in sis, which is similar to Lyme
today 's New England Journal of d1 sease . Both diseases are transMedicine.
milled by ticks and exist priThe study gives no evidence marily in New England and the
to suggest that man's best friend upper Midwest.
.
IS spreadi ng the potentially
Two forms of ehrli chiosi s
deadly diSease to people direct· have previously be ~ n - docu ly, through a bite or a li ck. mented in people since 1986,
Instead, the researchers said when the disease was first
ticks are biting both humans found in the United States .
and dogs. and may be jumping ·Since then , approximately
from dog to masler in some I .200 cases have been reported ,
cases.
according to the Centers for
Th e doctors found four Disease Contro l and Prev ention .
1
human
case s o f the infe...:tion
'
'
, all '

But this was the first tim e

researchers found cases of the
type of ehrlichwsis that prev1 ously had been identified only
in doll•No matter which form of
bacteria causes the infection, an
antibiotic can essentially cure
it, both in humans and dogs. In
the study, all four patients from
1996-98 were created success·
fully.
Ehrlic hiosis and Lyme di sease have so me symptoms ,in
common - head~che , nause a.
chills, fever. · malai se and
fatigue - but typically, ehrlic hiosi s doesn't usually come
with a rash and can be fatal if
left untreated . Up to 5 pcrceni
of cases resull in death .
" Thi s is a much more acute

and rapidly progressing disease
that can be much more serious
because it can be fatal in the
most se\~re cases,'' sa1d sludy
co-author Dr. Gregory Storch of
the StLouiS Children's Hospi taL " Lyme di sease is not fatal.
It can befo me r hronic and can
produt..:e some significant and
annoy ing ma.nifestations . ''
Dr. Christopher Paddock of '
the CDC stressed that e hrli chiosis can be prevented.
" Be aware that if yo u ' r~ ou t
in areas where there arC ticks,
and· thi s can be hunting, hiking,
fishing.' .camping. you should
always check you rse lf and
rem ove any craw ling . or
attached ticks as quick ly 'as possi ble." he said .
KELLEY JEAN GRUESEA

Communi1y Calendar:....-.____,____~~~ .

.v

•

. The C o n1mu nity Cak ndar is p' ub ~
hshcd 01s "·' fn:~ sen i\..·c to non-profit

groups w ishing 'to a nn o Un c; ~ · m eet~
ings and s p~c i~1l ~' c:nls. ·me· calen ~
dm i ~ no t J~:~i g n~LI to prOmote sales

or fund rai sers nf an y type . Items 3rc
priiltcd onl y as -spaee permits ·and
canno t be g uarantc".- d to be pr inted a
specific numhcr of days.

THURSDAY
. ALFR ED -

- ·.
Oran ge Township

lrustcc s. s pc~:J.ll . m ee t J ng to· d iscuss
pe rsonnel. 7:30 p.m•. ho me of Osie

Follrod . c lerk .

· ' ·,-.•
•

·

.

,

.;',- , f

p.m.' Sarurday. o utdoor si ng. varit)US
POMEROY - Vacation Bible Pomeroy. July 19 to 23 . 6:30 to 9
groups. Co ncess ion!~ avai'lable . Takc- School. First Southern Baptist ' . p.m Call 99,2-6779 or 9~2 -6328 for
l a~m ch'ain~. ~n the .~vent ofrJin . sing · Church. 41 872 . Pomeroy Pike Road. transportation-and reg istrati on.
will 'he held '" Ihe church.

MIDDLEPORT ·'Areawide
intcrdenominat_ional Women 's Min·
istry meeting. Saturday. 10 a.m. Ash
Street Free Will Baptist Church. 398
Ash St reet. Middleport.
·

a nniv ers~ry

Kelley Jean 'Grueser, a 1995
graduate of Meigs High School,
recently graduated from Ohio University receiving a bachelor of
music in music education, choral
emphasis. She graduated magna
· cum laude with a 3.87 GPA.
While · at Ohio University she
was a member of Sigma Alpha
Iota, a professional women's musip
fraternity and Pi Kappa Lambda, a
national music honor socie ty. She
was also a member of Mu sic Educators National Conference and the
American Choral Directors Association. She received an award for
havi ng the highest GPA of graduating sen iors of Sigma Alpha Iota
and also received an Outstanding
Student of Music Education award
give by the faculty.
She is now li ving in Lemesos, ·
Cyprus with her husband, Anastasios Polis.

·.

Dean's tist
·Courtney Bailes, daughter of Jack and Mary Bailes, !las been named to
the dean's lin at Marshall University with a 4.0 average. She is a .1998 graduate of Gal ita Academy H1gh School and is majoring in broadcast Jo urnalISm. She IS employed at Captain D's in Gallipoli s
'"
,

DO

am

SALEM CENTE R Star
Grange 778. fun nig ht and first
degree practice, Saturday. 6:30 p.m.
Snacks and fi'rial plans for 125th
ce lebrati on.

Friday

Thursday, July 15, 1999

RUTLAND - Ru thnd Bicen- ,
,WE'ST COLUMBIA
Salem
teh ni ol Co mmiuee. 7:.10 p 111 . Civic
Community C hurch Sassafras Road.
Center.
·
;
,
,
Wes t Columbia. homecoming. secROCKSPRINGS
Rock VICe to begin at 7 p.m. Saturday with
Spnn g' Be ller Hea lth Clu b. an nual ' ' Rev_Charles Curry, speaker. Special
p1c~1 c. n ~l tm . h o m.~.· o t Frances Goe- · si ngers from Cleveland. Sunday
g lcm. Bn ng C&lt;l\e red d~;h , 111b le ser- school, -9:30 a. m. Sunday. dinner at
VII.:C .
' ' and preaching at
, II :30 a.m.: smgmg
12: 15 p.m. No SundaFJight service.
FRIDAY
POME_ROY - Meigs County SUNDAY
AnhntiS Supp.on Group, Fnday. 10
TUPPERS PLAINS - Hymn
J m.· to I ! :30 a.m. in the co riference -sing, South Bethel Church, Sunday,
fllOill uf the Meigs County seniof
7 p.m. Guest will be The AmbasCitizen's Center. ·Becky Grueser, sadors for Christ and Jodie Rife .
'· DTR. from Veterans Memorial Hos- Public 'inviti:d. Refreshments.
pital in Pomeroy. will speak on diet · Church 'is located two miles -out on
.md how it affec ts arthriti s. The pre- Silver Ridge · Road which is across
'c ntati on will focus on weight loss .from Eastern High School.
.md mai ntenance. Those with arthritis or fam ily members with arthritis ' MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The OhKan
1nvited to attend. New participants
\\ Ckome.
·' ·
. Coin Club, ·Moilday, 7:40p.m. at the
R1verbend Arts Council building.
SATURDAY ,., •..
• Aucu'?n· refreshments, operi to publ'O MEROY - Hillside Baptist he. " ·.
·
Churd1. State Rciutc 143, 4 to 10

rJuly 1&amp;, 18M

Weather

Reds, Indians post wins, Page 4
Who gets engagement ring in split-up? Page 8
Meigs County Fair premium list, Inside

Today:Sunr,y
High: SIOs; Low: 80s

Tomorrow: P. Sunny
High: SIOs;·Low: 60s

'
•

Meigs County's

Now
"

Catholics P[Ftn convocation as ,Jubilee nears
The Ohi o Commission of African
Am encan Cat hol\es will hold its
1999 , conv oca11_on at St. Elizabeth
Ann Seton Par ish in ~ickerington on_
Sept. 25.
l;los ted by the
[)'ll""'c oCoCo lumtius. thi s year's
: h~ m ~ IS " Ke ys to Open Wide the
), or · There Will be a spec1al perlorrnuncc b~ the Oh10Catholic Mass
Cho1r "' St. Domm1c Church in .l ol umbus on Friday Sept. 24.
f hc l~t~ n t of t l~i s convocation 1s
to. prc\cnt you With keys to ope n
\'Id e the door~ of yo ur heart. your
111 111
0 . an d your snu l so tha t. not only
you hut you r famil y, CQmmumty,
and ~o.: hurch will move closer to the

divinity o'f Jesus Christ..
The eve nt is -being held in preparation for the Jubilee. It will be a~ all
day event to include guest speakers,
break out sessions throughout the
day, performances by the Ohio
Catholic Mass Choir, a liturgical
dance presentation , and a spec ial
ceremony to honor yo uth. The day
wi ll conc lud e wuh Celebration of
the Mass.
T he p u,blic is invited to auend,the
convocation as well as to assist the
committee or sing in the choir. For

more infonnati on, ·res idents may call
(6 14) 475 -6787.

Card shower planned for wedding anniversary
M1 and Mrs. Don Eynon ol Reedsville wi ll observe thCif 65th annivcr·
'·" y on Saturday. July 17.
.'rl~cy arc th ~: rarcms &lt;;~f~ two daU ghters and one son, and have 14 grand -

LIHI?J en. J~ g r~o.·a t -gra n.J c hddr.c n , and 15 g rcm · great-g randchilJren .
1 hr Eynon' have li ved on Sil ve r Ridge for the pa't 56 years and will
;' pend then '" "11vcr'a ry there. Cards may be sent to the couple at 40058
. l hm ty Rrw l. Sil ve r R1dge . Reedsv ille, Ohi o

4T

Single Copy · 35 Ce n ts

Candidate fil.i ng deadline for local offices approaching
The riling deadline for candidates and issues t6 . Kenneth Wiggins, Sutton trustee and clerk.
· dlepor.t Village Board of .PubliC' Affairs, unexpired Thomas, members of the board of the Athens/Meigs
appear on the general election ballot in November is
As of Wednesday, the -following candidates had term.
_
Educational Service Center, will also expire.
Aug. 19. according to Rita Smith, director of the filed peiitions for to,wnship offices: Elmer C. Newell,
The following positions will be up for re-election
- Positions on the ESC board will be elected differ·
, Meigs County Board-of Elections.
for Chester Township trustee; Mary M. Brady, for " in Meigs Gounty's other incorporated villages: in Rut- ently this year. The board will be made up of three
'At least one township .trustee . anq clerk will be Columbi~ Town~hip clerk; John Krider, for Lebanon land, Mayor JoAnn Eads, Clerk Rosemary Snowden· . members representing each of the thr_ee local school
-_ elected in each of Meigs County's 12 townships.
Township trustee, Dorothy Roseberry ll!ld Annette R.' Eskew, ai\d Council members Richard Fetty and districts in Meigs County: a four-year term from
.
According to the board of elections, .positions now Vance, both fo r Lebanon Township clerk; Bernard · Vern,;t Martin; in Syracuse, Mayor Ge_orge Connolly, ~eigs Local, a fo~r-year term from Easte,r~ Local and
held by · the foflowing persons are up for reelection . :Gilkey and Richard Bailey, for Salisbury Tow.nship c;Jerk Janice Zwilling,. Counc.il members Edward a two-year term from Southern Local;-rhree members
!his year: Elmer Bailey and Barbara J. Grueser, Bed-·· 'trustee and 'Clerk, respectively; Randy Butcher, -for Wood and Bill Roush, and Board of Put?lic Affairs .. from Athens County: a four-year term from Federal
ford tru~tee and clerk; Elmer C. Newell and Janet R. Scipio Township trustee; and Larry Ebersbach, Suttoli member Laurance l':bersbach; in Racine, Mayor Hocking Local and a four-term' from Alexander Local,
Life, Chester trustee and clerk, and Roy Alan Holte-r, Township trustee.
Juiian Scott Hill, Clerk 'Karen Lyons, Council mem- both in Athens County, and a two-year term from
Chester trustee, 'unexpired term ; Marco Jeffers and
Candidates nominal!'d in party primaries in May bers Henry Btntz and John Dudding, and Board of Trimble Local in Athens Cou nty, and an at-large
Gloria Hutton, Columbia trustee and clerk; Garry for positions on village councils in Middleport and Public AffairS members. Douglas Rees and .Douglas member, to be elected by bo)h counties, who may be
Smith and Dorothy Roseberry, Lebanon trustee and . Pomeroy were John W. Blaettnar, Republican, Johnson. ·
from eithe_r county.
clerk, and Lawrence Johnston, unexpired term , Pomeroy Village Mayor; Kathy Hysell, Republican,
EaStern 4&gt;cal School Board members John Rice,
Petitions for those positions can be picked up a!
Lebanon Township; Christopher Todd Wolfe and Pomeroy Village Clerk· Treasurer; Scott M. Dillon, Mike Martin and M. Rick Sanders will be up for re- either the Meigs or Athens County Board of Elec- .
Joyce White, Letart trustee and clerk; Randall Boston Geri Walton, Bryan Shank and Victor c;. Young Ill, ·.election, as will Southern Local Board members tions, and must be filed by 4cp.m. on Aug. 19, a! the
and Martha Durst, Olive trustee and clerk; James Wat- Republicans, Pomeroy Village Council; Jean Craig, David Kucsma and Robert Collins and Meigs Local Athens County Board of Elections office, located on
son . and ·Osie Foil rod, O~ange tru~tee and ,clerk; Joe Republican, Middlep'?rt Village ll,fayor; · Bryan BOa•d members Roger Abbott, John Hood and Randy Co~rt ~tree! in ~hens. The petilions,•rnust contain 50 ·
Boltn and Opal Dyer, Rutland trustee and clerk; Jack Swann, Republican, Mtddleport Village Clerk-Trea- Humphreys.
..
vahd Signatures.
,
L. Ervin and' Bonnie Scott, Salem trustee and Clerk, surer; Stephen Houchins, Republican, and Bob
Penny Burge, a candidate for the Meigs 'Local .
Petitions for candidacy for 'township, village and
and Harold Dannie La111bert, unexpired term, Salem Robinson, Democrat; Middleport Village ·Council; School Board, .is the only school board candidate- to local -school district positions must' ill so. be . filed no
later than 4 p.m.·on Aug. 19. Petitions must cont~in
Township; Larry Thomas and Richard Bailey, ·Salis- Donald L. ·Stivers, Republican, and Myron J.B. have filed a petition as of ~ednesday , ·.
bury trustee and clerk; Randy Butcher and Connie Duffield, Democrat, Middleport Village ·Board of
The terms of Jdffrey Charles Harris, 1.0: McCoy, 25 valid signatures'
'
The filing fee is $30.
ChJpman, Scipio trustee and clerk; Delbert Smith and Public Affairs; Btrnard D. Gilkey, Republican, Mid- Howard Caldwell, Robert Barton and Jeanette

. . WAS!:'INGTON TRIP DO~nON - Melga

$1

2 Door, special Edrtion, V6, auto,
air, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cass, ·
WAS $13,900 .

'

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Oh io

Volume 50, Numb e r 29

SIDNEY (AP) -A man accused
of killing four people htis been
indicted on four aggravated murder
counts, each of which carries a pos·
sible death sentence.
Lawrence Michael Hensley, 30,
also was indicted by a grand jury
· Thursday on three counts of
' 1 attempted aggravated murder and ·
three counts of kidnapping, Shelby
County Prosecutor Jim Stevenson
said.
Hensley 's .bond was revoked,
and he was being held in the coun·
ty jaiL
c;harges are related 10 the
July 8 slayings of Sherry Kimbler,
16, a neighbor of Hensley's; Tosha
Barrett, 16, Kimbler's cousin; Amy
Mikesell, 14, a friend of the other
girls; 'RIKI Breit ~ildermuth;'37, a
· Bible-study teacher who had helped
minister to Hensley.
Hensley also is charg~ with taking hostages at _gunpoint at a filing
. station before he sulrenderlld to
. police on Tuesday, and allegedly
shooting a motorjst on 1-75 and fir:
ing shots at the home of one of his
· Bible-study teachers earlier Tuesday.
Veronica Eagy, 22, whom Hensley is aecused of attempting to kill

The

Now
::-t-

'

-PageS

Man charged in four deaths could receive death penalty

V6, auto, air, AM!FM cass,
tih,cruise,
WAS$15,999

'

British Open play
opens Thursday, winds
make scores.soar

•

Team
Ell Deonlaon Poet 4e7 for Ita Waahlngtoo, D.C. trip. Shown •re, from left:
Legion Polll: 487 Commander Gene Fink, MMS pareot Pam Colwell, OESG ~pre. .ntatlve Ellie Myers, Legloo repra. .nt•tlve
Oennla McKinney.

. e r-Ived $500 from the Rutlal)~ Amerlc8n Legion

GIVING FOR OTHERS - The Whiz Kidz 4-H Club recently prese~ted two tallons of ~verage can pull tabs to. Pomeroy McDon_ald s, the proceeds {rom redemption Ill&gt; go toward operating
expens"s at a Ronald McDonal.d House. Tl'ie money !flill be used to
purcl:lase linens, food, and,cleaoing supplies-and to create a home) Ike atmosphere for families of hospitalized children. In .the group
presenting th~ tabs to Roscoe Mills, owner/operator of the lOcal
McDonald's, pictured top left; were left to right, seated front Jessi"ca Taylor,_ Ashley Boyles, Carrie Wiggins. and Samantha 'Bailey;
standtng f~rst row, Laura Bailey, Amanda Eason, Cassie Hauber and·
. Ertn Taylor, and back, Shelia Taylor, Whiz Kidz advisor, Derek Tay- lor, J_o e McCall, Brittany Hauber, Chrissie Gregory, Autumn Hauber,
Jesstca Boyles, Becky Taylor and Mike Taylor.

Sports

97 .-c»NTIAC GRAND
GTP Package, Black, loaded,
Sharp, WAS $16,995

AM/FM CD extra cle11n, Only

::; $15,550

Now

~~~~~~~::.~s;::~~~t:~:;Ys::~;~i:~~:-~;;:·~-

$1

5

26,000 miles WAS $1

Now

$15

LT pkg, loaded, Red
WAS$29,,

Now

27

:.$. $199,520000
98 CHEVY MONTE CARLO vs. auto, air.' tin, cruise AMJFM ~~ . ~~-;~~-;;;;~...:...............................,:.................... ,.......; ........:..;·--......... $ ,_
.,.'900

::

.:.. . ........ . .:.. :: .................. :...

... . . .... ·:.................. .... .

95 CAD' SEVILLE SLS loaded, leather int .. , WAS $24,900 ·
'
.'
................. ~ ........:·'"":;"·';"""""'"""'""""""'"""'""""'"' $11'~8-.,900
89 PONTIAC GRAND PRII V6, auto, air Nice w~ $5~.... ' ...... ,.............. ......... ,. '"' ...... ,., ..... .. ' " ..... """"" .. ... ·: -- --· ' $4,400
96.CADILLAC SEVILLE sis loaded, lealh~r Int. WAS
................... ' -~: -- ----· ;""" """""':";"""""' "" ' :"" --:.·--:""''"":;'"' ...... ,.
,

cr~ise. AM::~.~~ ~;-~:~·: ' : ': · ::: :::

aM

===

4 WD, VS, auto, air, tin. cruise,

4 Dr, V6, auto, air, AM/FM cass,
WAS$11,900

SJ1,8

~:: : :

~:::::

98 PONTIAC GRAND
ve, auto. air. tm.
:::::::::: : : :::: : ::::: .. - ::::·:::
. ::::::: :
96 LINCOLN TO~N CAR V8, auto, Ieath"' Int. , White. only 40,000 mileo, WAS $19,900 .... ..... .... .... ,., _ ..... ... . .................. .... :.... ...... .. $17,450
91 CHEVROLET CAVALIER 2 DR Coupe 4 eyl, auto, air,AM/FM cass., lin, cruise, wA@$11,999 ................... .. .............. ......... ..,. $9,850
97 HONDA ACCORD 114 eyl, auto, air, AM/FM cass., lin, cruise. WAS $17,800 ... .......... ... .. .. ........... .... .....".. _
$15 7-50
98 OLDSMOIILE DELTA
88
loaded WAS
.
·
.
. .. .... .... ...... .. ........
.
,
$19.995 ... ...................... ... ................................. ..
$151 995 ·

94 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM 4 eyt, auto, a~r, AMiFM cass,li~. cruise, WAS $3,995 ....... .... ... .. .:::: :::. :: :.. .... ::::::. :::::::::: : :::: ... ::::.::::. .. $2:850
96 PONTIAC FIREIIRD V6. auro: air, till, cruise. T-tops, cd player, VVAS $12,995 .. .... .. ...... .... .. ,: .. .. .... ........ ...• ............. .. .... .. .. .......~ ..... $11,860
98 CAMARO (OUPE V6, auto, air, tilt, cru(se, WAS $18,900 ........... :...... ..........: .... .. ,;
·
$14: 950
95 CHEVROLET S·l 0 PICKUP
·
.
.. ........ . ...:.. .
. ....... r ........ ....
.,. · ·'

$6,250
96 CADILLAC SEVILLE SLS. loaded. leather int., LT Gamet Red, only 15,500 Milea, one owner, Hke new, WAS $27,995 .. :::~ .. :::::::.: '] 24 850
. 99 GRAND AM 4 DR auto. a&lt;r, lilt, cruise: alum wheels, AMII'M caBS., WAS $15,999 """ "" """""' '""" ......................... ........ ................ '$ IY,880
92 CHEVY 1/2 TON SWB V6, 5 Sp , tilt, cruise, air, MI/FM cass.. Sport pkg., red, WAS $11.900,. .. .. ..... ........... ......... .. ........ : .......... .. . $9,450
~::;,~~::=~~~o~:!!l!~~~o~:· ~:ito, only 15,000 mi~s. WAS $32,900 .. . . . .... . . : . ......... ............ $29,850
93 ASTRO liT CONY VAN toade~. wAs sa 999 .. .. ................. .... . .. . .... . . ....................
.... .. .......: ·
· • $11,900
.
$ ,999 " ' "" " "
" . " "" " "" " " ' . .. "
$7 450
94 CHEV C·l 0 LWB two tone pa1n1, Red/Black. V8. auto, air, tin, cruise, AMIFM casa , WAS 411 ,995. ::::: . ·::: : .:::.... . ::::::: ·:::::: :$9:450
94 CHEVROLET 1/21 4 WD LWI V6, aulo, air, AM/FM, WAS $10,900 ..... .. ................ .. ....... : . . .. . ............................. ..... $7,990
V6, 5 Sp, a&lt;r, Black, "'!AS $1,900 .. ............ .. ..... ....................... .. .. ............... :.. .......... .. .. .. .

POMEROY, OHI~ 308 EAST MAIN (704) 992·6614 • (800) 837·1094

MEDINA (AP) - A van towing a IS-foot camP,Cr collided with a
semi-tractor trailer on Interstate 71 in Medina County, killing a 7-year-old
girl, th~ State: Highway Patrol said.
"
Heathet Madrid, of Thornton, Colo., was killed an!l four others injured
Thursday in an accident that closed an 11-mil~ stretch of 1-71 between
.
Medina and Lodi south of Cleveland for three hours.
The patrol said the victims are believed lei be a family of Colorado res·
idents.
_
·
Those injured were Elizabeth Irwin, 29; Delbert Madrid, 34; Matthew
Madrid, 4; and Delbert Madrid Jr., 9, all:of Thornton.
Delbert Madrid Jr. was tlown to MetroHealth Medical Center in
Cleveland,'where he was in ~rious condition before going into surgery
Thursday night.
•
'
The othe~ three were treated for minor injuries at Medina General Hos·
pita!. '
.
'
•
Irwin was driving the van when she attempted to pasS a semi-tractor
l't•• a •• driven by Charles Martin, 57, of Carth,age, Mo., _
the patrol said.
The camper being towed started swaying and hit the semj 's cab.
The trailer then overturned and became disconnected from the van.
van flipped over a guardrail, slid down an embankment and caught
fire.
Four of the five passengers in the van were removed by motorists who
stopP.d to help.
·
Martin, who was driving the truck owned by CHM Transport of Joplin,
Mo., was not injured.
His passenger, Richard Keirn, 26, also was not injured. Both men are
from Carthage, Mo.
The patrol said no charges have been filed yet.

CHEVROLET.

w
PON,IAC.

~ (~.a

BUICK•

r-lGea

~

By ALAN FRAM ·
P r - Wrlt.r
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
House voted overwhelmingly'
Thursday to give. member5 of Congress a $4,600 pay raise in January
and to double the next president's
salary to $400,000.
Lawmakers voted 276-14·7 to
increase their owtt pay, rolling ·cp
nearly 2·1 margins among Republi•
cans and Democrats alike. They tl!en
voted 334-82 to .eject an effort by
conservatives trying to prevent the
presidential 1"-Y boost.
The vote on .legislators' salaries
underlined the favorable political
climate for the first ~aise since Janu·
ary 1998 and the second since 1993.
Not only do polls)ihow Congress
rated favorably· by more than half
the public, but its members serve
during economic plenty and grow·
·ing budget surpluses. While in past
years the congressional pay question
has often provoked heated battles,
Thursday the issue came and went
with. scarcely a mention and as an
~lll:ed

obscure parliamentary vhte.
The scant debate opened with
Rep. Jim Kolbe, R·Ariz., saying he
hoped lawmakers would support a
procedural motion - on a Treasury
Department spending bill- thai in
effect allowed the congro;ssional pay
raise. It ended moments later when
Reps. Ken Lucas, D-Ky., and Ernie
Fletcher,. R-Ky., said they would
oppose it. ·
.
·
•
"It-looked like there was so much
bipartisall support for the ·COLA, I
didn't '.lhink anybody wanted to
make it a ·major, controversial
issue," Fletcher said in an i.nterview
' later. COLA is shorthand for cost-of·
living adjustment, the official name
for the raise. ,
The $28 billion Treasury bill
squeaked to passage by 21 Q-209.
Most Democrats opp&lt;)sed it because
of spending cuts in the Internal Rev·
.enue Service and other ~gencies.
GOP opposition was largely .due to
language requiring most federal
employees' · health plans to cover
prescription contraceptives.

Stepfather arraigned on murder charge Clinton ·enlists students for gun-control c.ampaign
AKRON (AP) - A man has plead·

Good Afternoon

Today's Sentinel
3 Sections • 68 Pages

Calendar
qasslneds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Soorts
· Weather

Mon.·~rl. 9 am·8 pm! Sat. 9 ....,;4 pin; Sun. 1 pm·5 pm
~

COLUMBUS
(AP) -· Gov. Bob
Taft said he supportS pending legislation !hat would
· increase ~gulation
of Ohio's largescale
livestock.operations.
. '"I knoVr' you
sh;rre my' belief ._G&lt;i;:.~~-'
· that we need to
protect, , and hopefully, enhance
Ohio's agriculruraJ ba.c;e~ ,; Taft wrote
Thursday .. in a letter to Sen. 'Larry
Mumper. "At the same time we need
to -ensure that large' livestock and
pouitry farms operate in an environ·
mentally r~ponsible manner and do
eveljthing possible to minimize or
eliminate adverse impacts on nearby
residents and communities."
Murhper, R-Marion, is sponsoring
a bill that would tighten rules for air
and water quality, manure handling
and pes! oontrol at megafarms .
The legislation would cover farms
with more than 1,000 animal units,
which translates to 2,500 hogs or
100,000 chick1ms. Some sections, of
the proposal would be even stricter
for the handful of livestock opera1ions
in the state~ all raising chickenswith more than 10,000 animlll units.
The legislation itself has been fair- ·
" Even so, the potential v9latility ·
ly we'll-received. Livestock and farm
of the issue was reflected by the groups are backing the changes, while
votes of the House's most vulnera- environmental groups say they won ' I
ble .blocks of members. The 42 ann,ounce support or opposition until
freshmen voted 26-15 against the
they can study the changes.
raise, and one did not vote. Aod the .
The trouble lies with the question ·
44 lawmakers elected by margins of
of who will enforce the legislalion.
10 percent or less last November
M~ wper's bill, whic)l is pending
. voted "no" by 30-13,andonedidn't in a Senate subcommittee, would
vote.
transfer the power to grant permits for
Most members or-Congress earn new poultry, hog, egg and dairy
$136,700 annually but leaders get megafarms - or exp~sio~ to existmore, with House Speaker Denqis· ing ones - from the Ohio EnvironHastert, ~ ,Ill ., earning a ·top · of mental Protecti9n Agency to the Ohio.·
$175,400. The increase will be 3.4 Depanment of Agriculture.
· percent - by law rounded to the . .The· EPA would retain only the
nearest $100 - pushing most law· re8ulatory authority granted it by the
makers to $141 ,300 and Hastert to federal government in the .Clean
$181,400.
Water Act.
Under a 19891aw, lawmakers get
Livestock groups have urged the·
.;m annual raise automatically unless change for years. They said the EPA
they -vote to deny it, a mechanism takes too long to process permits and
that, has at times let them avoid tak: inconsistently applies its own rules.
ing politically risky votes. A formu-.
Environmental activists say the
Ia in the law lioks the increase to the "transfer would be a disaster, noting
boost federal workers will receive, that only.. in the past year or so ha5 the
which President Clinton has pro· EPA ti&lt;:gun to crack down on the
pOsed to be 4.4 percent.
operations they describe as "factory

House OKs Congress pay hike, doubling presidential salary

,

::

,-?

.

at his home the day of the slayings, office said Wednesday !hat Hensley
testified before the grand jury for ' tried in 1998 to pin the murder of a
several hours Thursday. She was jogger on a satanic cult.
brought 10 the coutthouse in an
Lynn Topp, 19, distppeared in
ambulance.
February 1998 while jogging.
Stevenson said· Eagy was a wit- Police found-her body .buried on a
ne511,to at least o~te of the killings. farm 15 miles from her home,
She was wounded by shotgun blasts
Shortly after Topp disappeared,
but escaped by breaking out a base· Hensley phoned the sheriff's office
ment window at Hensley's home with the tip that a cult had kid''
and crawling across a yard.
.
napped Topp. Two weeks after that,
After her testimony, Eagy was .the body of the farm's owner, Tim·
taken back 10 Miami Valley Hospi· othy . Rodeh~ffer, was found in a·
tal, where she was in fair condition barn. ·Police believe , h~ ·killed Topp
with multiple gunshot wounds.
and then shot himself after' her body
Stevenson would not comment JIVBS found .
_
on a motive for the slayings.
Hensley told sheriff's 'detectives
"The law enforcement is contin· that he)lelonged to a satanic cult
uing ill! investigation~ Other than that he. was trying 10 leave, detecthat L'm not';gQiog to .discusa..any. live Bill Grice .said.
eviden~ tltefii'iftight be," he said.
"It appeared to '_l.s he was delu·
Hensley has . told' authorities in sional and. had a hard time deter 'the past that he 'was involved with a mining what was real or .not," said.
satanic cult. .
' ,.
Grice.
He reported to police in May that
Members .of the First Church of
he was attacked by members or' a ·God also said they doubt Hensley's
" devil-worshiping cult" for leaving assertion he had gone to the church
the group, but investigators ques· seeking refuge from a cult.
tioned Hensley's statement when
"We don't know. That's _what
they noted he wa5n't injured and we're waiting to discover," said
that 'there were other inconsisten· Tom South, an associate pastor at
cies in his story.
the church. "We initiaUy believed
The .Darke County sheriff's it. Now w~ don 'I know."

1l
11

2'
'3
4&amp;5

3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick J: 5-8-0; Pick 4: 6-2-0-7

BuckeyeS: 19:21-25·27-34
W.VA.

Dally 3: 7-1-6; Dally 4: 8-8-9-1
0 19W Ohio V.llry Publis.hing Co.

By SONYA ROSS
ed. innocent to murder in the death
Aaloc:latld ' " ' - wrttw
of his 3-year-old stepdaughter
WASI-llNGTON (AP) - Ulging .
showed .evidence of beatings.
Congress to beed "the lobbyists who
Jeffery Smathers, 23, · was
truly matter, our children," President
arraig~ed Thursday by Municipal
Clinton today challenged lawmakers to
Court Judge Carla Moore by video
pass gun control legislation before the
hookup from jail, where he was
nalion's students rerum to classes in
held in lieu of bond.
September.
His case was referred to the SumThe president, joined by Treasury
mit County grand jury.
Secretary Lawrence Summers and
Smathers was charged with murAttorney General Janet Reno, met with
der and child endangering in Tuesmore than 80 students from Colorndo
day night's death of Bethanie Lynn
- induding some from~lumbine
Gardner.
High School - to hear
concerns for mandarory background checks on
Smathers said she fell out of bed . about the prospects o passage of all buyeiS at gun shows, and to require
and he accidentally stepped on her,
tougher gun control laws. .
child safety locks on handguns. He critbut authorities said there was evi"They are plainly impatient with iciled lawnnakeiS for delaying gun legdence . of black eyes, in ner-ear
the lack of action on the important leg· islatioo, noting that three months have
bleeding, a handprint on the back
islation before Congress," Clinton said passed since the tragedy at Columbine
and a stick mar~ on the buttocks.
of the students. "For the past thn:c: .High School in LitUeton, Colo.
Her mother, Megan Smathers, 23,
months the gun lobby has called the
"Don't allow the victims of
was arraigned Wednesday on a
shots on Capitol Hill. NOw it's time for Columbine to have died in vain," Clincharge of ch ild endangering.
Congressto listentothelobbyistswho ton said. "We must no! ' lcise the
She told police she was not home
truly matter, our children."
urgency of our mission.
Tuesday when her husband dialed
The president invited the st~ts to
"There are less than rwo months
911 to report an · injury to the girl.
the White House to help his campaign now before the start of a new school

Taft backs pending
megafarm legislation

·year. Let's show all our children tha~ .
when it comes to making their dassrooms andoommunities safe from gun
violence, America did not take a summer vacation."
.
.
The srudents were m Washington
courtesy of .a trip organized by Handgun Cootrol Inc. and SAFE (Sane
Altematives.to the Firearms Epidemic~
a political action group fanned in the
aftermath of the Colurilbine trngedy.
They also were lobbying Congress.
"We want action, not excusCs, and
we call o~ the rest of America to join
with us," said David Winkler, a reoent
graduate _of Gemge Washing!Qn High
School in Denver and a leader in
SAFE. He said tougher- gun oon!rol
measures are needed now, noting that
on a typical day, 13 children are slain in
gun violence.
· "That's a Columbine every day,"
Winkler said "The problem is that the
wrong people have easy access to _
firearms. ·w. do 'not call for the~tion of guns. We call for reasonabl
n
legislalion."

'·

•

I

.

'

Jarms."
They blame laxity in enforcing
rules for attracting latge-scale operations such as Buckeye Egg Farm 'to
the s~te'.
Buckeye Egg, one of the world's
largest egg producers, has been a
lightning rod for complaints about
unbearable odors, tly and beetle infes·
lations and water pollution around its
football field-sized layer houseS in
several central and northwest Ohio
~unties.

Taft supports the transfer of power,
said Scott Milburn, his spokesman.
Milburn said Taft has_some suggestions to strengthen the bill .
Among them are:
· - More specific penalties for violations to give the state the .power to
move swiftly against ".recalcitrant
operators."
- More public input into the permining process.
- ~tinued state oversight of
existing farms.
- More state funding for the regulators.

f

•

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <elementText elementTextId="26504">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>July 15, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
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  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="775">
      <name>roberts</name>
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  </tagContainer>
</item>
