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•
I

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

~uly

Mondtty,

Pomeroy • M'ddleport, Ohio

19, 1999

Tuesday
July 20, 1999

Sports

Detroit downs Reds for second straight day, Page 4
Male technicians &amp; mammograms, Page 7
Time out for tips, Page 7

Kyger Creek Little
League tourney
continues
-Page4

Weather

Chester Alumni Association presents scholarships

•

Canine-Humane
Communication 101

Nearly 200 members and gue&gt;ts
attended the annual Chester Alumn1
Ass(X;ral!on reumon held al the Ea~l ­

em Grade School Cafetonum
A blue and wh ite color scheme
was earn ed out wtth balloons. can-

By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane Society

dles and Streamers used m Uccor.tt

mg the table&gt; The &lt;:;hester Garden
Clu b proVided flower arrangements

Wolfe Van Meier, Larry Carnahan,
Marvt&gt;clle Cowdery Warner, Martlyn ·Orr Newman. Donna Wh1te
Ohlmger. Jeraldtne Wood Hawk,
Kathryn Dtll Meredtth.
1954 Carole Connolly Barber,
K.1thlee11 Haym.m B1ssell Set.:kman,
Ann.t Jean Rose Phtpkers, NJra
Wolfe Hartman. Frana B~&gt; se ll Rt[tk.
OthC'r :.tlumm atrend mg were
1925. Howard Kntght, 1928,
Clara Freckcr Bacr. 1930, Thelma
Hayes. 1931 , John Batley. Nellie
Mtch.tcl P:.trkcr, and Ire ne Parker,
1933, Lula Ctrcle; 1935, Harry Lee
Batley. Sam M1ehael, Marte Hauck,
Llovd Dean, Mtldred ' Caldwell,
Ro~ald Osborne 1936, Esther
Frnlo..a Thelma B.tysmger. Kathryn
Dellt , R1chard Coleman , Mary
Kaull. 1937. Les Sponagel. ' and
Allred Wolle' 1938, Vtctor Bahr,
Arthur R 0~e
,
1940. Jake Gaul. Ltla Bah! Wtnh:Js 'hladys Mercc~tt'h . Gerttudc
Tracy Helen Marcmko Hen ry, and
Wilma White ~&lt;1 1l ard, 1941, Paul
B.tet R1chard F1ck. Sn Dorothy
H a" k Homer P.u ker. Howard Parkl'r HarphJ Oshorne. John LodWICk ,
anJ Bill Mcred1th . 1942, Lloyd
Wolk and Vt\lan Humphrey: 1943,
Norm.tu McCa tn and Chatl es
Humrhtcy . 1945, Frances Reed , ,
Maxmc Whitehead. Marlene Wolle
and , ~ack Etsc lste m, 1946, Horace
Korr Gle n Stout Betty Chevalier,
Ei lee n R11Liuc Kuhn
'947, Wilham Sordcn, Delores
Holt er Doroth y' Karr. Ruth Ann
Balde&gt;son . Robert Wood, Mary K
Ro se. Robert Mered ith , Dayton
Spe ncer, Cleo Smith and Woodrow
Mora 1948, Grace Ptckens Weber.
Howard Wol [e. Kathleen Moms,
1951 : Jean Dutst Howard Newell.
Howard Larktns. Kathryn Karr
Mor.t. and Buck Rhtxles
'

Certamly, communtcau on problems among people, whether
Robert \\'nod. pn:sldt!nt. extendcaused by differences m gender, ethmc and cultural customs, or JUSt
ed
a, welcome. and Max.ml' Whttc ~
platn lack of inlerest, can be annoymg enough-and can result m
head
led the group 111 smgmg "God
everythmg [rom a mild faux pas to d1vorce and all-out war. But when
Amenca accompanted by
Bless"
we attempt commumcauon across sPectes, we (huma ns and an1mals)
Dorothy Karr Jack E1selstem gave
are at a major diSadvantage. We talk, and they don ' t-at least not tn
the blessmg The steak dmner was
the way we understand
prepared by the school cooks and
What follows are some baste rules about communtcating wtth
served
by members or the P10neer 4dogs, the one speCies that seems most Interested tn ligunng out what
H
Ciub
we are auempung. m our coarse way to convey to them Dogs are
MKhclle Buckley. daughter ol
very social creatures and. on thetr own. m the world, don ' t work
Kevm
and Dwn~t Buckley .•md
alone but tmmed\ately bond tn soc tal packs The fam1ly dog constdgr!'nddaugh1er of Darlene Buckley
ers the human tamtly her pack'- even tf we are talking about one
and
the 1,\te Rog&lt;r Buckle) and Starperson and one dog. The human ts the top dog and does the lead mg.
hnl!
and Sandra Masser, v.as aw.mlthe dog foll ows - usuall y qutte happt ly
~
ed (he Chester Alumm Si.:h0l.trs lup
"
Vocalt zatlons are crucmlthem 1or the famtly ~qg As fa r as a dog
The Dale K.tu tt Schol.~rs l11r w.ts
1s conce rn ed a lov. -puched and g utteral sou nd emanm tng trom the ' '
,\warde d lO lt!H.'nl\ C.1sto son ol
pack leader IS a warnm g That sound means ''Watch 11. there be ~.; ri rc·
Mar~.;d]a C.t:-; to Wctkr ,l!ld gr.m&lt;.hon
fu l. You ' re pushmg It " Make thiS come out ol your mouth deep and
of
Nara Wolle H.trtnun an d the l.lh.Jt
s tac~.;a lo. don t let th1s sound ltke a whtne
Henry
H,utman anJ gH.:.lt-g: l ~l nJ son
A ha gh-pliL: hed lOne md1cates th.ll C\c rythm g ts OK fell the dog
o l the late Goldtc \Vnlk
he's a jewel a wonderfu l creature. smah ng e nthu s a ~tsllcallv as she
Ofl IO.:CTS' TCp Ci rl S WL'fL' gl\ l'll ,mJ
docs JUSt what you v.ant The hcttcr your t'mmg the LlcarL'r the
rcumon
dasses \'~re rccog ntlcd
(.::ommumLallon So 1f you see the dog 1s about do ~o me dreadful
Alumnt
.tllendtng
ll\llll th.:tr rr spL'(.&gt;
thmg , w:.trn he1 I hat 1s nm lmc with )OU You watch her approach the
tl\c rcunum classes \\elc
g.trbage l.'an sniff around s(Jc k her nose m. and then rumm-age
1929: Che&lt;te1 Kn 1~ h t .tnrl Syhtl
around . 1111 she comes up wnh a pnzc a discarded apple core She
Smtth
DoiS t B.ur
then chonip&gt; down on 1t. shakes tt . and fmally drops tt on the ground
Btl! Motl.tck. Josepht ne
1934:
You then s.1v 'NO'· m vour deepest. clipped lOne She tmmcdJ ately
R11l.:
h1e
L1111an
Williams P~ekcn~
bac ks oil · '
Elste Woode Hmes
But th~ _dog may return Why 1 B ccaus~ her 'vtew IS I am not su p1939: Elotse Ferrell Smtth Jack
posed to do that But why? Was I m the garbage too long ? Was the
Sorde
n · W1lm a M. M11ler. and Bob
wm mn g he~.:.t1Jse I lmgered? Maybe 11 was bec~use the human' wa ntDean
ed 1he aprk core h1msel1 '1 Who knows maybe. ne&gt;t t11ne I'll JUSt
1944: Maxtne Hawk Hunne ll
grab the dm ned thmg and run
Harry Holter. Wtllt, Parker. Gold.t
So 111 th 1~ lase the commumcati on (I rom you) was unclear If you
Btggs Frede1tck, Betty Lou Dean
don t w.ml her nosmg :.tround near or m the garhage iJt all. then tel l
George Holter. and Odic K.ull;
her the mome nt you s~e her domg thts Now thts may take a couple
1949: Jeanette Clark Lawrence
of t11ne&gt;. but eve ntually she Will understand
Jea
n Pooler Sexton . Lots SpL: n ~.x r
The key 10 a ll of th1s 1s cons1stency You must prm11de feed hack
I;Obersbach Phyllis Glasco , Donna
to the dog each and eveey time you sec her '" the garbage Never ,
'
.tlluw the'behav10r to conunue tust because you don't feel like barktn~ out the command " No1"
' '
- You wtll do the same thm g tf a love ly raggy- toy &lt;hewmg sessiOns
gets ,a little uut of hand and the ch3ir becomes the love object' Let
your dog know •mmed~ately thai chatr legs are not for chcwmg, but
Manlyn E. Ktbble of Tuppers her scmor rccnal at the Umvcrsuy of
raggy toys are JUSt fine.
,
Plams,
a ptamst, recentl y pre~entcd Rto Grande
By the same tQken 11 1s useless to dtsc1phne a dog when you have
She has studt cd muStc at the Umreturned home and found that she has chewed on the chatr leg It IS
ICrst
ty 'tor the past live years wuh
too late to get any teachmg done And pumshment does not teach. If
_Ednh
RoS&gt;, ptano, and Dr. Chnstoyou drag the unhappy dog over to the chatr and pomt to tt and ye ll , ·
phcr Ke nney. Jazz p1ano, an~ has
she may thmk that you· ~e angry because she dtdn 't chew all tbe chair
been
active wtth the Grande Chorale
legs or that she was not dmng her JOb properly and should have taken
Masterworks
Chorale under the
and
the legs clea n off! The dog's response - cowerm g wtth ears tucked
dtrcct10n
of
Dr
Merv
Murdock and
back-mdtcates not that she realizes that what she dtd twenty mmutes
the
Umversny
Jau
Ensemble.
ago was wrong She 1s tndtcaung only that she knows that what ts
by
Dr.
Kenney
dtrccted
gomg on nght now IS very !lltlm'claung ·
Her acuvmes have mcluded serv·
I! would be far better to create a sull-chewmg dog or place her
mg
as accompaniSt and mustc dtrec somew here wtth her raggy tog and nothtng else to chew. That way
tor
tor
the "Ltttle Buckeye Theater"
the ttwdung se ss10ns happen )Nhen there are the two of you m the
as
we
ll
as playmg pwno [or such
room
events as weddmgs, luncheons, and
dmncr banquets.

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 90s; Low: 60s

,on were Mr and Mrs Allan Gth son
.tnd son of Columbus and Mr and
Mts John Gih&gt;o n of Athe ns
Mr and Mrs Robert Alkire spen t
the weeke nd with Ray 'A lkire m
Columbus
Mr and Mrs ·George Lowery
were dmner guests Sunday mght of
Mr and Mrs Tom Lowery of Syra-

Debh1e

Carefoot ,

MARILYN KIBBLE '

News

Debbtc hosted a barbecue and fire-

Mr and Mrs T1m Stanph tll of

works d1 spl ay in the evenmg Others
attendmg were Gen and Jack Eller.
Do nnte and John Care foot , •Ken

ll llnms were weekend g uests of Mr

Shcm ,' and Donovan Dolos, Nanna

' MICHELLE BUCKLEY

JEREMY CASTO
l.

••

•

1952, Donald Mark s, Wilma 1927, .md Chester Kntght and Sybtl
Spencer Marks. Starling Mussar Joe Dorst Barr. class ol 1 ~?9 Hangt ng
R1tchtc , Martha Orr Lee Betty , baskets wen t to William Henry.
Smalley R,etd. Betty Newell : 1953, M.uvm l1.tcy. Ralrh Ball ard,
V1rgm1a Wtndon Tyler. Emm~ Jusc rhmc Oshorne Pauhne Parker.
Ritchie Rhodes Vtrgll Wmdon John Els1c Hmcs. Howard Knt ght MarGmther, 1955, Roger !(eller, Ralph lcnc Thompson Jean Durst . Phyll iS
Trussell, Janet Orr Mara: 1956. Jo hn Glasgo, I, loyd Wolle. Janet Orr
Rt ebel, Rose mary Keller. .Gene M.tra. Betty Smalley Reed Harry
R1 ggs and 1957 George Mornson
Ballcy, a nd Homer Parker
Lela Kmg Wtndon, Helen Hollman
It was 1 otcJ to JUSt ha ve mustc m
Wilson. and Kathryn Smtth Wmdon
the commg year rather than mustc
A discuss iOn was held conce rn - and do. n c1 n~ Offu..:ers elected for the
mg the trophieS and ptctuies that,. ycat 2000 wcte lt&lt;Hatold Newe ll. '
were 111 the Chester Grade School prestdcnt , Roger .Kellet v~ee preSIbu!ldtng whtch has been sold . It was dent. Qcorgc , Holter, second vtce
de ctdcd to have the ptctures lam11tat- prestdent. Maxme Whttehcad. sccre·
ed and cop1ed w1th cop1es to be d1s - tary, Frances Reed, ass&amp;
stant secreplayed m the Eastern Branch of the tary, Grace Weber. treasurer, JeraiMelgs County Dtstnct Library and · dme Haw k, ·assistan t treas urer;
at the Chester Courthouse
Ralph Trussel l. Starl mg Massar. B11l
G1ven specia l recogntuo n and Matlack V~rgtl Wmdon , and Je~ n
presented n owe rs were Howard ~exton. decorating committee.
Kmgltt , the oldest graduate , cla.-s of
Next )Car' s reumon was set for
1925. Clara Frecker Baer, class of June 3

Dunng her college career she was Hold s" Steve S1sson of Galhpolis
the rectptent or the ,Atwood Mustc on "It 1s Well Wtth My Soul". and .
sc hol ~rs h1p ,
the
UmverSity Beth Woolum of Jackson on "The
Women's Club scholarship, and var- Wtnd Beneath My Wm gs" .
She was Jomed by a UmverSity of
tous pnvate donor sc holarshtps She
graduated wtth a bachelor of sctence Rt o Grande Jazz En5emble. com-,
. .· ~gree m mus1c education and pl ans posed of Chns \Vyscarver, drum s,
a•teaching career.
Adam Bush. percussiOn. Steve StsManlyn recttal selections mclud- , son, bass; J P Lyon&gt;. trumpet. Dr
ed ''Norweg1an Concerto'·, "Ptano • Ke nn ey, trumpet, All tson Sword.
Concerto m A mm or", "Farewell to trombone. Morfica Zurcher, tramthe Plano", "Amber Waves". "Swmg bone, and Davtd Burroway, alto saxLow Sweet Chanot:· and a gospel ophone
Ktbblc "the daughter of B11l and
ptano medl ~y wtth Lmden Kelly and
Steve Stsson, vocalists
Mary Kth hl c of ·1upper» Pl ams
She accompamed Ltnden Kell y
of M1ddleport on "The Anchor

.tnd Mrs Virgil Ktng '
Recent vtsttors of Mr and Mrs
~nh Mahr were their grandchildre n
' M.1rty Foley and tamtly of Texas
.md Sandra Foley. Greg. Mt ckey and

Museum of Aviation at Seattl e and
VJ Jted Nel11e 's cous m . Eleanor
Avery, Wes t Seattle Eleanor IS
recove n ng lto,m tl~f fl u and near

Cheyenne o f Milwaukee

Alfred news
Nel li e Parker returned recently
I rom a plane tnp to the West Coast,
June 21- Jul y 9 She VISited her son

policy

1 In an cffott to Jli OVJdc nu1 tead c rshtp w11b ~.: un cnt ne'"'" th e Sun' day Tmtcs-Sentmcl wi ll ndt accept
wedd ings after 60 days from the
d ate o f the event

~ l

~

,.,w ."

\

'*

and C l= On July S they toured the I

pneumonta

Edward ts bUildmg a new house
on ht s land near Arhngton An electncmn. he IS workmg long hours on
a rush Jo b,at Everett, Wash

Weddtngs submitted alter the
•60-day deadline wtll appear dunng
1the week m The Datl y Se ntmel ,nnd
the Gallipoli s D311y T11bune
All club meeun gs and other
news arttcles 11'1 the soc tet; section
must be &gt;ubmttted wnhm 60 days
ol occ urrence All bmhdays must
be subl)litted wilhtn 60 days of the
Q(;currcnce

med Enc and Jan u n a tnp down the

Cal1 fqrma B1g Sur coast to Morro
Rock and through the v1neyards and
vegetable ftelds 1n central CaliforJIIa

She then flew to Seattle-Tacoma
Airport &lt;1nd VISited her son. Edward
Parker. Ius daughter. Tam mt , and ht s
Runntng record quite long
By The Associated Press
JANESVlLL.E, Wts (AP) John Evans' love nf Joggmg could
he constdered a long-runmng hobby
/1. \Cry long-run nmg hobby
Over three decades, Evans has
1oggcd ~orne 41,000 1T11Ies
How Ones he know 1 He's record·

cd rv~ry amlc he's run on ca lendars
.md "' notebooks stncc he started
Jnggmg on April t 9, 1970
"I Wilntcd tu ln sc ~ome wc1ght

Sn I ..,tartcd runnmg ," satd Evans.

.,

'- He Jo,t 20 pound; 11ght away and
h ~ ., Ol'\l'l

I \311\oi

gcuncd any uf 11 bm.:k
tuns about 40 1111lcs each

\\ 1,.' \!k

When he tsn t runn1ng . Evans
\pecw.l cducauon at Parker

tl'a&lt;.:hc~

Htgh School. works with st udents 111
hwlogy anp coaches freshmen boys
haskctb,\11

ATTENTION
·V ETERANS

]une25,1950~an.31,1955

Aug. 24, 1982-July 31, 1984
Dec. 7, 1941-Dec. 31, 1946
Any person who was on active duty with
the National Guard or Reserves during
these time periods and have a DD-Form214 is also eligible.
Please contact New Hav~n Post 140 or
phone 882-3101 after 5:00 , PM
Weekdays or I :00 PM on Weekends.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Single Copy • 35 Cents

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
Special' Meigs County Fair Pr~view E4ition. This Year's
Edition Premises To Be One Of The biggest And Best Ever!
Look For This Special Edition In You
Friday, August 13th Paper!
BE SURE YOU_R BUSINESS
IS A PART OF THIS
YEAR'S FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!

charged In connection
with acid attack on potential witness
CLEVELAND (AP)- Two men were charged Monday tn connection
Wtth an actd attack on a wmnan who is a potenttal wttness m a [ederal
drug case
.
.Mann L Levy, 20, of Bedford, and, Buster B Young Ill , 20, of Cleveland, were charged wtth Witness retahatton, a felony that cam es a ma~lmum penalty of 20 years in pnson
~
They surrendered dun'ng the we,ekend
The. two are s'uspected m an attack on Raycme Smtth, 29 She was
worl(mg at a hatr salon m . nearby East Cleveland when the suspeciS
allegedly threw ·acta mto her face: .
Smtth IS a potential Witness tn a federal drug mvesttgatmn. FBI Spec~al Agent Robert Hawk satd Monday, and offictals are sull trymg to
detenmne •f that was the mot1ve behmd the at(ack
Authonttes are also conttnumg thetr mvesttgatton or the two suspect s
The two turned themselves 111 after an 11 -day 111vesugat1on that
became a · very htgh pnorny case" for FBI and local pollee offictals.
Hawk satd.
Bond for the two suspects wtll be set at a heanng 111 federal court on
Wednesday.

Appea~s

court reinstates family's lawsuit

CINCINNATI (AP)- A Columbus famtly has won remstatement of
tts lawsutt agamst the ctty and several pohce officers who chased a drug
suspect mto thetr home wtthout knockmg
The 6th U.S. Ctrcutt Court of. Appeals on Monday remstated the lawsun accusmg officers of unreasonabl e entry. arrest wnhout probable .cause.
unlaWful se1zure, excessave force and emottonal d1stress
Monday 's rulmg ts based on a 1994 chase m Whteh officers, mclud111g
some who were not tn umform. enterea the farmly 's home through an
unlocked door without knockmg or td entifymg themselves, court records
satd.
Pohce"'sm d they were wtthm thetr nghts ~ecaus e they were 111 'pursuit
As members of the farmly objected, officers handcuffed famtly member Ray Womack before realiztng he was not the suspect.
Followmg another search of the ~orne , they round the suspect
Fatmly members Betty Ingram and Patncta Colhns, who questiOned
pohee about what they were domg, were charged with obstructing offictal
bus mess The.charges were dropped after they gave up a $100 bond each.
The two sued 111 1995 , accustng officers of htttmg them A lower co11rt
ruled' agatnst the famtly 10 1997

Former school official found guilty
shooting into van~ could get 37 years
CINCINNATI (AP) - A retired school admtntstrator found gu11ty of
lelomous assault for tinng a handgun mto a mmtvan occupted by a fam·
1ly of four could be sentenced to a
maxtmum 37 years tn pnson.
Ebb1e Gadd , 58, of Fmrlield, was
found gutity Monday on four
counts of retomous assault m the
Feb 3 shooung.
Today's
He had pleaded no contest to the
2 Sections - 12 Pages
charge of tinng a handgun mto the
van occupted by Dame! and Pamela
7
Calendar
Devhn and thetr two children while
tt was stopped at an mt ersec t10n m
9&amp;10
Classifieds
suburban Spnngtield Townslup
11
Comics
Th e bullet shattered the glass on
Editorials
2
the passenger Sldc ,..and Mrs. Devlm
suffered cuts on her face.
3
Local

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

Gadd was arrested a few hours

3

Weather

•

Call
'
DAVE or KATHY
at 992·2155
F.OR MORE INFORMATION

The Dail Sentinel
·,

.
August 2 to Au gust 20. fro m 9 a m unul 5 p 111
She al so satd that 'apphcatlons wtll be tak ~n at dates to be annou nced
ror the latest round of the Communuy Housmg I m provet~ent Program's
how;mg rehabtlitauon and down payment assiStance program
-T~ussell said that her oft1ce ts currently m the process nt contac lln g
applicants ott the program's watttng IIsl. but that lundm g for the program
will provtde rehablluatton work for at least 3U households
Meeting With County Engmeer Robert Eason anU adm1n1strauvc assts- 1
~~~ Dav1d SPencer, the cOJmmsslllners drscussed proposed purktng lot
rmprovements at the annex bualthng , the tonner county home. adJacent to
Veterans Memonal Hospital
' The commtss10ners plan to pave the parkmg lot behmd the bu tldutg
where lhe grants and hous1ng office. litter control office veteran s serv~ees
orfice and county ex tenston office are nQw located
• departm ent can perform the work
Eason satd that the county highway
once the commtsstoners allocate the funds necessary.-- e&lt;tunated at $'1.000
-- [or the work.
Eason reported that the county wtll pave County Ro.td 75 Htland Road
would be paved thi S year to complement wmk bemg planned by the Vtl lage of Pomeroy. whtch will pave Mulberry Avenue and other stree ts

Eason also satd that the county was 111 the process ot ohtamtng loan
funds from the state to replace o bndge on County Road i. Lead111g Creek

Road

t

1

The commt sSIOners met \\t th Roge1 Stewart ofExu· l TeleGiohc. a lol:al
long distance prov1der Stewarl sa1d that hts l1rm otleJs a r1..11e of 7 .5 ceuts
pe r mmute for all m-state long dtlitance
The co mm issioners met last wc~k wllh a represenr:.lltve ot ftrst Com murm:atton s of Akron. whtch o tt er~ a ne go tia ted pnce of 7 9 cents per
tmnute through the Count) Cu l! lllllS~Ioners Ao.;soctallon of Oh10 The
board wil l ltkdy change long dtstance uuners . accordtng to Prestdent
Janel Howard hecau..,e the county now pays as much as 25 cents per
mtnute tor long dt stance 111 some offices
The hoard al &gt;o
-- Appruv,cd transft.:rli of tuntls lor the l:ornmun1ty corrections program
1u vem le youth subs1dy grant progr,un and aud itor s office .
-- Authnnzed the expenditure of $i,'i00 for the Department ol Hum an
SetvJces In make personnel packets Y2K-comphant,
-- Approved payment of bills '" the amount of $37o.85U 94
Present tn add 1t10n to Howard and Lentes were Count; Comrmss aon ~
ers Je[frey Th ornton. and Mtck Davenport . and Clerk Ulona Kloes

·Meigs .C ounty preparing for
another lean budgetary process

CLEVELAND (AP) - A ruhng ts expected m about two _weeks on
whether a JUry wtll detenmne t[ Dr Sam Sheppard was Innocent 111 the
1954 murder O[ htS Wife.
. Prosecutor, want a JUry tnal tn the wrong[ul tmpn sonm,ent lawsutt
Sheppard's son tiled agatnst the state
. The Sheppard famtly attorney wants Cuyahoga Cmntn&lt;Jn Pleas Court
"dge Ron Suster tc&gt; hear the evtdencc
Suster met pnvatc!y wtth •the attorneys Monday to di scuss arrangements [or the Oct 18 trial. The JUdge he will rule on the Jury ISSUe Aug 2
In a case that helped msptre TV's "The Fug1ttve," Dr ShepP,ard
conv icted or k1lling hts wtfe, Manlyn, a! thetr home in suburban Bay Vtl·
!age. He spent 10 years m pnson before bemg acquuted at a retnal
He dted four years later, m 1970
Sheppard 's son, Sam Reese Sheppard or Oakland. Cahf.. could col lect
an esumated $2 tmiiion 1f he can prove hts father tnnocent of the beattng
death

•

A change in eligibility dates may make
you eligible to join The American Legion.
The change is Dec. 22, 1961 is now
Feb. 28, 1961-May 7, 1975.
Other eligibilities are listed below:
Aug. 2, 1990-Cessation of hostilities as
determined by the U.S. Government.
Dec.20, 1989~an. 31,1990

BY BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A b1d 111 excess of a half-m illton dollars was awarded to Rose's Excavating of Racane for the eXtension ofwnter serv1ce H1 the De xter a,rea
Bids· for the project. funded through the Commumty Development
Block Grant [ormula program, Appalachtan Regtonal Comm1sston :·and
water :Wd sewer 1mprovernent programs, were received from se veral
firms, and were opened by the Me1gs County Commtsstoners last week
On Monday, the commtsStoners approved the bid of Rose's Exc~vaung.
the low b1dd er on the prOJeCt, upon the recommendatiOn of proJect engineer Eugene Tnplett and Prosecutmg Ahorney John Lentes.
The Leadmg Creek Conservancy Distnct wtll extend water servtce to
so me 60 households through the project
· In addtt1on to Rose's Excavatmg's btd of $540,406 O'i , the commi ~s t e n­
ers rece1ved btds rangmg from $550.186 26 to $812.374 10 [rom oth er
contractors. The engmeer's cost estimate for the proJect was $565.000
Dunng the commtsswne rs' regular meetmg on Monday, Grants admmtstrato r Jean Trusse ll announced that applicatu,ms for a new grant program
through the Oh1o EPA, whtch Will provtde septic tank replacements and
upgrades, wtll be accepted at her o[[tce, tn the county annex buildmg . from

Judge in Sheppard case will rule Aug. 2

.md w1fe, Enc and Jan Parker, at

1.1\·ermorc. 'Calif Whtle there she
"sited Cleo B1ont a. Ltvermore. and
.tttended a birthd ay party for Lmda
Ott She and Jan shopped 111 Ltvermore and Pleasanton. She accompa-

,

Hometown-Newspaper

Meigs County C_o mmi$sioners award bid contracts

nea1

Scouts and ve te rans groups Old
Bags of Arlington. antique tractors
and fa1 m mach1nery Edward and

Meigs County's

Volume 50, Number 31

Arlmgton , Was h They attended a
Fourth of Jul y parade at Arli ngton
wh1ch featured a hag-ptpe band the
Arling toh School Band (Eagle&gt; )
commercia l tloo.ts, churc hes, Boy

a1
,•,

Area news notes
fnend ,

•

•

,Marilyn Kibble presents senior p·iano recital at UR~

Harrisonville happening._~
Sunday V I Si tors of V1rg:Jma G1b-

Today: P. Cloudy
High: 90s; Low: 70s

Lotteries
OHIO .
Pick. 3: 9-1-0. Pi ck 4 : 2-9-6-4
BuckeyeS: 1-7,9- 14-29
W,YA.
Daily 3: 9-9-5 Daily 4: 7-0-6-2
{)

l~lt\ (lh ul

v .. Jil:y l'uhlt~lunl! C'l 1

'

after the shootmg when he wrecked
h1s car m Independence, Ky
He smd he was drunk and doesn 't
remember what happened
Hamilton County Common Pleas
Judge Thomas Nu1Te will se ntence
Gadd on Aug 19
Gadd spent 13 years "' education
as a teacher. prtnCipal and admuustrator 1n Oh10's Lakota. New
Mtalllt , Km gs and Spnng[teld
school dJstncts

By BRIAN J. REED
the county will continue to face a
Times-Sentinel Steff ·
tenuous ftnanctal conditiOn as tt
Me1gs County's linanctal sltua- enters the n~w yea r and the new
lion may see a shght unprovement decade. due to a lack of grow th on
next year, but a t1ght fiscal belt wtll new con&lt;tructmn and the loss of ta x
' sttll be ttl order. accordmg lo Coun- revenue from perso nal prop~rty at
ty Treasurer Howard Frank
the Sou1hern Ohto Coal Company's
Frark. along wtth [ellow budget •· Me1gs Mutes. among othet losses
commtss1on membe~s Aud1tnr Frank sa1d that the county 's growth
Nancy Parker Campbell and Prose- on new construction Will be limited
cut)ng 'Attorn ey Jbhn Lentes, recent- to only about $9,000 next year. a
ly cert1fied proJected general fund low growth rate wmlar to that of
revenue of $J,222,98S [or 2000.
must 1ecent yeaiS
• That figure represents the mcome
Furthet compltca ung the county's
anttc1pated for the operation of the fi scal condttHln are new reg ulations
county government next year. pn- wh1ch w1ll re4uire Camrbell to
manly from the collectton of neal change the met hod "' which trailers
estate taxes and personal property and other manufac tured honles are
tax , as well as the one percent Itt taxed , and the method by whtch
those home• are assessed [or taxes
sales tax collected by the county.
The county commisstoners ,.,.. Appratsals--will-loe"""'eljUired t.n all
now 111 the process of examuung the newly-purchased homes. and homes
budgetary requests or orticeholders sold wtll · no Ionge• be subject to
and other department heaps, and are sales tax when tttles are tran s[erred,
charged wtth the respons1btlity of resultmg m the loss of sales tax to
balanctng those requests wtth anttct - the oounty wfters
pated r~venue befone the budg~t 1~
The •ommtsslllners have dt&lt;·
finally approved tn January.
cuss~d plactng an addttHlt\al sal~s
Several county deparuneilts have yeJ tax oi' at least a h.tlt pet cent o11 the •
to submtt the1r requests, ~htch were ballot lor voter +tPpH.wal Ill Novem·
sohctted m June
ber. bu t have not taken action to so
Accordmg to Frank. the county yet. The dects1un to pl.1ce that ta&gt; 011
,wtll lie about $200.000 ahead or last the ballot would have to be made
year. havmg benefited from last before Augu st 19 although the comyear's tax reapprmsals, . as well as miSSioners can levy such .1 sales tax·
access to $100,000 'whi ch wtll b• wtthout voter approv.il
freed from debt servtce.
"' Ac~.;ordlllg
to ComllliSSlllller
Last year, the Me1gs County Janet How ard , any tcvt!nue general·
Comm•ss•oners took oul a bank loan ed from an addnwnill sales tux
1!&gt; pay the cost or housmg pu soners would be used· to1 the co11structmn
10 out-of~county Jails and other
and operatw11 of a co unty 1ad, 1ather
expenses relat1ng to the operatwn ol than [or general cou nt y operating
the shenft's department Accordmg expenses.
to Frank. that loan wtll lie patd off
State law requ~res th.Jt the comafter the second-half rtal eslatt tax mtssmners ha ve voter approval
settlement later th1s month
before a sales tax exceedtn g 1/2 perFrank satd Fnday, however, that cent ts levted. •

FAMILY TREASURES .. Among the family treasures of. Bruce
Morris of Langsville a~e certificates relating to the military service of his grandfather, Nelson Ward. An 18-year•old Rutland .
township farmer, Ward enlisted for a hundred days in the Ohio
National Guard Volu~eers on May 2, 1864, at;~d served in Cpl.
Amos 0. Mauck's Co. D, 141st Regiment, until his term expired
in September. He · then joined the Ohio Infantry and served a
year. Among Morris' possessions is a certificate of thanks for
the honorable service of Pvt. Ward in the Ohio National Guard. 11
was signed by Pres. Abraham Lincoln and Secretary of Wa r
•
,
Edwin Stanton.

Pomeroy _
o fficials report on activitie$
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel NewS Staff
Vtllage supervisors teported the1r
departments' rec~nt and pendtng
acuvittes to members of Pomeroy
'V11lage Counctl Moriday evenrng
Meetmg With counctl were Jack
Krautter, street supervi sor. John
Anderson, VIllage admtmstr.ator and
water department supervisor, and
Tax Admm1strator Jean Durst.
KrauHer and Anderson both
spoke on preparauens [or pavtng
work on Mulberry Avenue. Unwn
Avenue. and Butternut and . Lasley
streets The street department IS
worktng on lowenng drams on the
streets wh1le the water department ts
installing new water hne on the porlions to be paved Anderson smd

curbs and gutters shou ld be 11\S!all ed
before street pav1ng wod~ be gms
Amler son 'atd work~rs h.IVe
completed tepa~rs to a lift stati on 011
upper East Ma1il Street that was
caus1ng a sewage stnell 111 that
nei ghborhood Two resTdents uf th at
area storped 111 to thank the vill.tge
for havmg the work done Also a
waler problem r~Put t eJ 111 ttic Mm .:
ersvtlle area wa." 1esolved when It,
was d1s~.:oVt:1ec.l that .1 plugged p1pe
was tound leadutg thmugh the wall
of a restJence Th e ptpe was
replaced hy th e p1ope11y ow ner he
sat d.
Anderson .tlsn smd the w.Jter
department was puttmg ,, tr.tcklltg
sys tem 111 pl a(,::e In !lack watc1 ~.:om·
ptamts

Krautter sa1d the street departmtml has bee11 ~ busy cuttm g brush
, cle.tnng ditches and clea mn g drams
Anc\crson &lt;a id 1h e vtll age 1s
almost ready to award a contract lot
the samtary sewer' from Lcg10n Ter·
r&lt;~l:C to the MuJd leport Corporation
L111e That proJect wil l take almost a
. year to complete and should remedy
tllC problem \\ it h tht: sewer sme ll
flear Lcgwn Tenw.:e Also. pa11111ng
on the water storage t.Ulk on Breezy
Hetghts IS underway.
He sa1d the well fte lds aqutfer ts
holdmg up well and" checked on a
regular basts No wa1er tl!stnctton~
ate 'an!lctpated
Durst bnefly rerort ed on,, rccen!
tax adnun1strators' scmtn ar sh~
attended and s.ud she ts Clll;stdcnng

I

w.tys to tJIL rease cnmrltance wtth
th~ yJi luge s mcomc tax
Dlmng open discussion. councal
P1estdent John Mu sse r sa1d the
Me1g s Count) T"unsm Offttc
would ltke to bnng 111 a boat for .1
folt age LfU!se Counc1l OK'd the u s~
ot the k1 y lor the hoat The cmt of
tile tour will be dtvtded bctwem
MeTt!S Galila .md M.t~on counttes
c'"krkrtre.lsurcf Kathy Hys~ll
repoth:tl the tollow1ng ba!J.n~cs hlr
June ~ general lund $116 ~08 ~9 .
safely $'i; 1967(,, &gt;lreet ~1614 ~I.
state h1ghw.ty, $, X7i 01, lt~c.
$49.0-' I 1(&gt;, t.::cmctcry. $ ~ 012 58:
"ater
$X6.0D 711.
sewer
$36.69S 26.
guaranty
tHeter
Continued in

"Pomeroy Officials " on page 3

SUV considers Buffington Island ceremony •huge - ~uccess•
The ceremony to com memora te the I 16th
an ntversary of the Batt le of Bullington Island nt
Portland was held at II am, Saturd.ty unde1
sponsorship of the Oh10 Department So ns ol
Un 10n Veterans ' of the C1vtl War and tts I&lt;IL.tl
affili ate. Brooks-Grant Camp No 7 of Middleport.
Ke1th Ashley, Civil War S.tte s Cluunn.llt nl
the Ohio Department Sons of Unwn Vctcrnn!&gt;i of
the C1v1l War, was the emcee for the event
atte nded by more than I •o people
As hl ey opened With C0\1\Illents on the fatlu tc
of the Oh10 govetnment offtc1als .111d the U S
Army Corps of Engmeers to save Bull ington
Island Battlefield from the ravages of tnll\lltg
and termed the efforts .to save 1t as " ' JUSt anJ
nghteous cnuse·-one .JS JUst nnd nghteOU!S ,ts the
the one for wh1ch m~ n Iought 111 the CiVIl W.tr'
A sa lute to the flag was followed by an Ill Vocation by the Rev WTII1am MuJLIIeswarth ot th e
Me1gs County Pioneer and H1 stoncnl SocJt:ty,
Ttiere were two fc:uurcd S.["CHkero.; for the l'l'l·

emun 1 e~ Th e AdJul.tn l General nf Oh1n--the
tntended spe.lkcr--w.ls fotn~d to &lt;:a n n~ I and sent
M.11 Mtkc B1sh of McCo nne lsvil le a" the spcakt:l M&lt;ll Bt sh rcv1cwcd the LILtS of tht: ban It: and
t:mph.to.;lzet.l the unpoltam.:c of tht: battle 111 endIll g. llut ha Stl.ll t:g) hy the Confederacy to
111 V.1de the Nm th
Th e seumt.l spc.1kcr w.ts Bng.tdaer G~neral
Davttl V Mcde1t nt til e Snns nl Vett."rans
Rest!IVl' th e on ly ledc1n ll y approved nutton,J!
lllllHI.l 111 the Uuttctl St.ltes .wd the mdllaty
h l .tnch nl the Som ot Un1un Veterans ol the
C1vJI W.u Gen Mede11 -;ll~.:s:-~cd the s.H:nhl' L:S ot
the s~lldit!l:&gt;i 'lll hoth stdcs ol thL: wnr Ht:: dipc u.llly took 1:-.suc w1th thnse who see th ose\\ 1sh
111~ hl p!CM!IVC th1 " nnport.ull Amcnc1n hallie ·
lzcld a~ "1!vt 11g 1i1 !he p.1s1 " He also empht~slz~d
the l.ulurc ul 1he State ol Oh1n to loc ateJ the
gi.Ivc:-. nl the \lllknown dcml on the halllcheld
s1 nce the m1ht:uy te.lchcs th ,lt the ~ra,es ot all
sold 1t."rs Ollt' 'i :ILI t:d
A wrL'.Ith-l:lyulg Lllt:mnn~ h\ :22 lustuJa: .ll

and vcrernns' groups was &lt;-'onductcd Ead1 prcsente.l made hnef remnrks J:tartl t'lp.lltng. waL:
Edna Mason prcstdcnt &lt;lf the Kcntul'ky DIVI sam Unued Daughte-rs of the Confcder;~cy of
Owcnshoro, Kentucky nccomp~n1cLI hy Sue

Berry of tho Molly Morehe.td Charter United
Daughters of the Cnnfeder.1cy nf C .dhoun Kcntm:kv

R.oheh Croye. prestdem nf the O h10 DIVISons of Con fcdcrntl! VcLCrans of Worthang&gt;
ton, Oh1o. Mrs Gad Robinson 1st vrcc plt'SI d~nt ol the Oh10 D1v1ston Un1~cd Daughters ol
the ConfcJcrcay of Akron ,Jn:omp.uned hy )(.'\'
Dingman. 2nd 'I U: ptesJLicnt trom Akron . and
He len I{ Olen pn:su..lenl uf thl' Ohul DIVIS!Oil
nt Cuyahogn Falls MaY Frost. rtcs1dcnt of chc
Oh10 Department Auxtltary to the Som ol
Unao11 Veterans of the CIVI l W&lt;tr of Coolvtlle .
Mrs Betty Coen. rrestJent of the John S
Sion

Continued in
•
"Buffington Island " on page 3

�•

'

Tuesday, July 20, 1999

Commentary

,... 2
•

..

Ohio weather

111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-Dt2·215CI• Fu:: Dtl!-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

'
CHARLENE
HOEFLICH
Genenll M•n~~ger

I )

DIANE HILL.
Control..,

lhll--.,

n. Sentinel • ..,_.. ..,..,. to 1M .nor from ,...,. on • lltoMI ~ of,..
,.._ /3110- 01' -1 ,...
bmg , . , , _
l)pild ,.,_...,. PN~ lind •• m.tY IN ~ EliCh ehould Jnclu(M a _,gtMiutTJ.
1 ' ,
p/toM ......... Sp«::ly. IMN
1 J . . . IIINM to 1,...
1
rioue.,..,. tw l«tw. IMII to. ~ to fhtl editor, Trt. Sentinel, 111 Coutt St.,
Po~Mn~y, 0Nct _.,.., or, FAX to 1.0..24157.

.... -

Mfl.,.

If,,.,...•

State process for awarding
contracts up for debate
4

•

In pocketbook terms, accordmg to Archer,
cans propose to cut the top tax rate on capital
thts
means that a sentor with $30,000 tn taxable
gams to- 15 percent from 20 percent after reductncome would save $510 tn taxes A smgle pering 11 from 28 percent a mere two yean ago.
Now, tf the average middle class famtly son with $25,000 m taxable tncome would save
stood to dtrectly benefit from the further reduc- $380 A famtly with $55,700 m taxable tncorne
tton tn the capital gams tax rate, tt would be would save $1,000
The beauty of the across-the -board tax-rate
easy to defend.
cut,
beside the fact that tt ts the best kind of tax
But DemocratiC foes of the capital -gatos cut
argue th at tt wtll d1sproporttonately benefit the c;ut to promote overall economtc growth, ts that
top 20 percent of Amencans -- the Affluent all taxpayers. benefit, rather than a certain class
Ftfth
-· who own 90 percent ot the country's or selected category of taxpayers.
woman
Indeed, all classes and categories of taxpayfmanctal holdings.
These percephons
ers
are paying the htghest level of taxes stnce
And Democrats oppose phase-out of estate
have colored more than
World
War II, and all have contnbuted to the
a few electtons. often to the dtsadvantage of the and g1ft taJ&lt;es on the same grounds. They note
that the tax applies only to the nchest 2 percent federal government's growmg budget surplus
party of Haste ~t and Archer
Whtch bnngs me to the House Republican of estates, and moreover, that the Republican So all deserve a reduction of their tax burden.
Republicans have lost the political advantax btll I~ proposes $864 btlllon 10 vanous and Congress revised federal tax law a few years
tage
they once enJoyed on the tax issue,
ago 4o gradually ratse the mhentance tax
sundry tax cuts over 10 years
because
Democrats have persuaded mtddle
Republican leaders argue, nghtl y so, that exemplton to more than $1 mtlllon
Amenca
that
the GOP favors tax cuts only so
So, then, that leaves the House Republicans'
after 18 years wtthout a substantial tax cut,
after two masstve tax hikes (io 1990 and 1993), proposal of a 10 percent across-the-board much as they benefit the affluent.
By Jelttsonmg thetr proposed cuts in capttal
and wtlh a proJected budget surplus of roughly reductton in personal income tax rates as the
$3 tnlhon over the next decade , tt ts hardly most pollttcally salable plank in their tax cut gains and tnhentance taxes tn favor of lhetr
proposed across-the-board rate cut, House
unreasonable for Uncle Sam to cut hardwork- plan
Republicans
can argue that, yes, the GOP is the
As
wntten
by
Bill
Archer,
the
House
Ways
mg, tax pay tng Amencans a break
party
of
the
well
-to-do, but it ts also the party
Thts message ought to have resonance wtth and Means Committee chatr, it would reduce
the masses of Amencans , most of whom have the top rate from 39.6 percent to 35 6 percent, of middle-class taxpayers yearnmg to take
only recently seen thetr mnatton-adJusted after- the mtddle rate from 28 percent to 25 percent, home more of thetr hard-earned wages
Jos•plt P•rkins is rz columniq for Tit• Still
tax mcome return to where tt was 10 years ago. and the lowest rate from 15 percent to 13 5 perDitgo
Union-Tribunt.
But, alas, House Republicans have left them- cent
selves vulnerable to class warfare , - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - -- - - - - - - - ,
at the hands of Democrats
That 's because two of the
mo~t promtnent features of the
' ''
House Republican tax plan are a '
cut m capttal gatns taxes and a
phase-out of mhentance taxes
Yes, there are persuasive argu ments for reduet ng, tf not altogether ell mmatmg, both taxes.
S~K
The U S capttal gams tax
INVESTMENT~
rates are among the world's highest As such, Amencan investors
are dtscouraged from shtftmg
thetr assets to the most economtcally producttve enterpnses,
because the sale of one asset to
mvest tn another tnggers the capttal gams tax
As for the inhentance tax, it
borders on conftscatory, what
wtth the government clatmtng as
much as 55 percent of some
estates And tt's not just heirs to
Forbes 400 fortunes who are htt
by the "death tax " It also ravages hem to famtly farms and
small bustnesses
Nonetheless,
Democrats
attack the proposed CUtS IR capttal gams and inhentance taxes as
sops lo the nch
They note that House Republi- ' - - - . , . . - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . , - - - - - - . . . . _ .

Wednes_d&amp;y, July 21
'
AccuWeathet"
fore cast for dayltme condtttons, lowlhtgh temperatures, ~~- UICH
,r
,,..~ '.)
~ ... ,.

By Joeeph Perkins
For as long as thts
Baby Boomer can
remember. the Republicans have been caricatured as the party of the
nch, whtlc the Democrats have been portrayed as the party of
the workmg man and

T.stiJ6(u/id ut 1948

By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS
Assoclllted P r - Writer
COLUMBUS (AP) - The state looks for t~e lowest pnces when buymg
paperclips. Shouldn't it do the same for a large computer or telecommumcalions system?
Some state lawmakers thmk so, behevmg that taxpayers aren't bemg served
when multimtlhon dollar contracts are sought through what .are known as
scaled competitive proposals mstead of sealed competlbve btds
Whtle contracts awarded by sealed btds often come down to the lowest
pncc, sealed proposals mvolvc a vanety of factors, mcludmg the JUdgment that
a particular vendor 's proposal would best serve the needs of the state '" a particular sttuation
"The state has losttts focus when 11 comes down to havtng compebbve btdding." said Sen. Rhine McUn of Dayton, the third ranking Democrat in the
Senate. More and more agenctes are ~king the state to approve contracts wtth
only one vendor, she satd
,
McLin recently cnttcized a $327 9 million proJect to hnk law enforcement
and state agencies throll$fl a system of radto towers
The project, ongtAally estimated to cost $175 million, was awarded through
the proposal pmcess to a partnershtp Of Schaumburg, Ill -based Motorola Inc
and TRW Inc of suburban Oeveland
Scott Johnson, director of the Admmistrahve Servtces Departmen~ satd it ts
not accurate to call scaled proposals noncompetitive
"In many ways the proposal process ts more fiercely compelttive than the
scaled bid process," Johnson said "The contracts are generally larger with a
higher dollar value IIJ1d they typtcally involve national ()( intemationaJ,.compames constantly m competition wtth each other "
In fiscal year 1998, there were 1,043 competitive sealed btds compared wtth
24 competitive sealed proposals, Johnson satd In 1999, there were 916 of the
btds and 32 of the proposals He dtd not have the dollar value of the dtfferent
typeS of contracts
'
'
Comphcated projects are better sutted for proposals beca~ they often don't
adhere to rigid specifications, Johnson satd
If the speetfications are too ngtd, one or more competttors mtght cry foul,
clainung the requtrements are btased toward a particular vendor, he satd '•
The spectficabons aren 't spelled out as much m complicated proJects
because the state assull)es that " industry has more creauve tdeas on haw to
solve our parttcular problems than we can do ourselves," Johnson ~d.
In 1998, the state approved a $16 million contract wtth Fatrfax. ~Va.-based
Amencan Management Systems to prov1de an automated processmg system
allowing 11\e Bureau of Motor Vehtcles to tssue car and boll! It ties
That proposal, which called for a van ~ty of hardware tnstallatton and computer matntenance, was the type of complicated contract that the sealed proposal process IS meant for, satd Gretchen "Hull; an admtmstrative servtces
spokeswoman
Forty-four other states, the federal government and many large ctties' use
· both proc csses, Johlll!On sat d. • .
·
Debate over the compcbtive btdding of state contracts tsn't new In hts first
campaign for Ohio governor, George \btnovich promised to require compebtivc bidding for as many state products and services as possible.
But the process proved hard to Change, ahd by 1995 a law allowed agenetes
to someltmes propose a conti1!CI wtthout geltmg multiple btds
Oiticism of the process arose agatn reCently over the radio tower prOJCCL
And at last week's meeting of the state Controlling !joard - whtch must
aJllli9Ve state purchases- Sen Gregory DtDonato of New Phtladelphta and
Rep Sylvester Pabon of Youngstown, both Democmts, complamed that state
·
agencies may be overusmg the 1995 law
, At present, the 1ssue IS bnght on some Democrats' radar but dtm on that of
most Republicans One excephon ts Rep Robert Netzley, R-Laura, who served
on the Controlling Board for several years m the 1960s and from 1978 to 1994
Proposals instead of btds aren 't good " for taxpayers in Ohto as far as L'm
coneemed," Netzley satd "All those thmgs should be btd It's the responsibility of the Controlling Board to make sure thmgs are btd, or there are sweetheart
deals "
t
~

The future might be better
than we thought in the past
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Buslnea Analylt
NEW YORK (AP)- Every day we can vtew stattsttcs showmg the dramatic and positive impact of high-technology on bus mess profits, butm more
subtle and profound ways 11 is changmg human atlttudes too.
Such as your attitude toward work It ts dt~cult to realize that JUSt a few
years ago mass layoffs were the chtef concern of mtddle managers Today,
some of the same workers choose hfeslyle over JOb
The anecdotal evtdence ts parttcularly evtdent among recently graduated
MBAs, a large and growmg number of whom tum down offers from bluechip corporations to test themselves in risky, high-tech startups.
You can see ttm the democrattzation of the stock marke~ where the masstve availabthty of online mformahon shnnks the once-lofty role of brokers
and allows new investors to make thetr oy;n dectstons
. Decades ago, the New York Stock Exchange sought to encourage stock
ownership wtth a campatgn built around the "Own a ptece of Amenca"
theme. It succeeded to a degree, but tt took htgh tech to show the way.
It dtd so by helpmg to butld an economtc boom that provtded lots of JObs
and nsmg real wages, provtdmg computer and software tools for accessmg
the market; and creating fast-growth compantes that attracted young
mvestors who otherwtse mtght not have constdered stocks
There are now between 80 mtlhon and 100 mtllion shareholders, and most
of them are winners, some substanttally so As much as any other one factor,
their new nches have created the so-called wealth effect
In tum, the wealth effect, or the new sense of financtal confidence, has
added a potent thrust to the consumer marketplace Cars, houses, crutses,
theme parks and vartous retatl outlets have benefited enormously
Contrast th1s attitude wtth a decade ago, when many of the same consumers were concerned month by month wtth making ends meet, and when
borrowing was less a stgn of confidence than an mabthty to pay bills.
Contrast the current fearless spcndmg and borrowmg bmge wtth the
prospect so often expressed JUSt two or three years ago that the future was
gra&gt;: and that poverty in retirement was a real and ominous prospect
Htgh-tech engineers dtdn 't do 11 by themselves, of course, but they provtded the can-do sptnt that helped change fear to hope. Realtsttcally or not,
the future ts now antt ctpated mther than feared
A new report from the Nattonal C,nter for Pohcy Analysts - wntten by
W. Mtchael COx of the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank and Richard Aim of The
Dall~ Morning News - provides ammumtton for that antictpation
The new worlil, some of whtch ts already upon us, ts marked by mass customtzattoo. No longer wtll customers have to settle for mass-produced sameness, Mass customization - made to order - wtll personalize items

PEOPLE
WITHOUT
NEXTIJ4

SPRIN6ER

WASHINGTON YESTERDAY: When words were harsh, bullets often followed
By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
Associated Pree1 Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
lead ball from the former Treasury
secretary's English-made ptstol
bored through the branches and
snapped a twig over the vice prestdent's head
Vice Prest dent Aaron Burr watt·
ed for the smoke to clear, then put a
bullet tnto Alexander Hamtlton's
stomach Accordmg to some
accounts, 11 severed hts spinal cord
"Thts ts a mortal wound, doctor," Hamt)ton satd, lookmg up
from the ground 10 the cleanng
above the Hudson Rtver at Weehawken, N J
.
It was July 11, 1804 The code of
the duel had clatmed tts most celebrated Amencan vtctim
From the age of chtvalry to the
era of democratic mslltuttons, the
duel, a ntualized dance of death,
took hves wtth sltlted prectston
" It was a tu'le mfatuated wtth
clockwork toys turnmg upon ptvots,
and tiS duehsts were hke automata
of chtvalry," wntes htstonan Roger
Kennedy '" hts detatled and fasctnatmg "Burr, Hamilton and Jefferson, A Study 10 Character." The
book, wtth tts self-explanatory tttle
wtll be pubhshed thts fall by Oxford
Um ve rsi ty Press.

Duels and threatened duels were
"demonstrations of manner . "mincate games of dare and counterdare," wntes Joanne B Freeman tn
"Dueling as Politics," 10 the
Wtlllarn and Mary Quarterly "Each
man's response to the threat of gunplay bore far more meanmg thsn the
exchange of fire ttsclf."
Kennedy, retired as dtrector of
both the Naltonal Museum of Amertcan Htstory at the Smtthsontan
lnstttutton and the National Park
Servtce, wntes that 1-lanulton had
been mvolved 111 a dozen bloodless
duels before his encounter wtth
Burr
, Although the Hamilton-Burr
duel was notonous, and although
Burr was accused for a time of murdenng hts nval, the encounter at
Weehawken by no means put an end
to duehng
The ntual of the duel moved to
the Potomac wtth the new federal
government. A dueling ground was
soon established in a ravme at
Bladensburg m Maryland, a short
nde from Washmgton The first of
more than 50 duels was fought there
m 1808, and the place soon became
known as "the dark and bloody
graunds "
Commodore Stephen Decatur, an
Amencan Naval hero, was shot and

fatally wounded in a duel on March escape the iron dtctates of the duel,
22, 1820, by Commodore James though the encounter so embarBarron.
rassed htm he refused for the rest of
In 1826, Secretary of State hts life to talk about tt
Henry Clay, complwnmg of 10sults,
Lincoln had penned a senes of
challenged Virgtma Sen. John Ran- anonymous letters to the editor calldolph In an mitial exchange of shots mg 'James Shtelds, another fledgling
tn a cleanng on the Virginta stde of
llhnms pohttetan, "a fool as well as
the Potomac both men mtssed. A a liar."
second round was arranged The
When Lincoln admitted hts
eccentnc Randolph, dressed tn a authmship Shjelds, known as an
large and enveloptng white wrapper expert shot, s:hallenged htm to
or rol/e whispered to an associate duel As the challenged party Linthat he-&lt;hd not mtend to pull the trtg- . coin chose broadswords, reasonmg
ger.
that h1s long arms would gtve htm an
Qay's shot mtssed Randolph but advantage.
dnlled hts coat.
The two eventually withdrew
"You owe me a coat, Mr Clay," thetr vanous offenstve remarks,
Randolph said, holding out hts hand. shook hands and parted ways. Lin"1 am glad that the debt ts no coin's road took him to the Whtte
greater," Clay replied
House, Shtelds' to the U S Senate"
Out tn Tennessee, Gen Andrew were he represented, in succeS!jton,
Jackson, in a quarrel that began over Illinois, Minnesota and Mtssouri.
Dueling was outlawed tn the capa horse race, carne to believe that a
thtrd party, Olarles Dtckinson, had ttaltn 1839 and gradually faded as a
questtoned the ctrcumstances of political and soctal custom
Jackson 's m"arriage.
Insults and slurs on pnvate charDtckmson was killed and Jack- acter still thread public dtscoursc
son wounded in the chest when the
But the duelts no longer th ~ ulti two fought on May 30, 1806, mate settler of accounts
Altho~gh Jackson had a bullet m hts
arm removed whtle tn the Whtte
EDITOR'S NOTE: Lawrence L.
House, he camed Dtckinson 's bullet Knutson luu reported on Cortgnss,
near his heart for the rest of his life
lite Whit• House rznd Wrzsh111gton 's
Even Abraham Uncoln failed to history f'!r mort than 30 yetUS.

a

·Keeping hope alive in 'HIV-stricken Kenya
By Chris M1tthews
WASHINGTON":.- Three of four babtes born
HIV-posittve convert to negative by thetr ftrst
btrthday.
"That's m our hands," explams Father
Angelo D' Agostino, S J , who runs the Nyumbant Orphanage tn Natrobt, Kenya " We get the
chtldren because they are abandoned at btrth
Thal abandonment ts really a fortunate state
of affatrs for the chtld If they're breast fed, then
the percentage drops from 75 percent tg 50 percent"
"Father Dag," as he ts called,• opened
Nyurn.bapt 10 1981 when he saw so many HIVpostttve children bemg turned away by other
orphanages Today, he ts housmg and car10g for
70 such orphans, whtle gett10g datly medtcation, clothmg and food to hundreds more who
live 10 surroundmg areas.
In treatmg, feedmg, rat stng and cheenng
these kids, who range m age from newborn to
16, this Jesuit priest from Amen ca knows that
he swtms m a rothng sea of need
"Sub Sahara Afn ca has I he htghest dens1ty
of AIDS cases on the world In Kenya, there
wtll be 150,000 HIV postttve orphans by next
year. There mtght be anothel 200,000 who are
not born HIV-postttve, but smce th etr mothers
dted of AIDS there's a stigm a They are dtscarded by thetr relatt ves There ts no faclitty to
care for them ·•
Father D'Agostmo reports that thts deadly
Afncan eptdemtc, whtch ts transmttted largely
by heterose xual relatiOns, shows no stgn of

Death Notices

1\MediY, July 20, , . _

The Daily Sentinel GOP tax cuts are not just for rich

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

abatmg
wtll place the U.S drug-makers in a moral pose
"The malnutrition and the general lifestyle, that will be hard to defend. "They 're gomg to
the prevalence of malaria and other dtseases really look like mtsers "
really cuts down on the life expectancy once a
In the meanltme, thts kmdly, thoughtful
person gets HIV TB ts another killer."
pnest, who was an Air Force surgeon, a psycht·
Thts explams why so many mothers die so atnst and refugee worker in past lives, ratses
soon after chtldbtrth
the money he can for Nyumbant and gtves hts
Father Dag, 73, believes that a small orphan- scores of k1ds the best, happtest of hves posstage hke hts, whtch has a concentrated medtcal ble
facility, oxygen equtpment and an intensive
When one of his ktds dies, he also does h1s
care
best
umt, ts best for helpmg the chtldren these
"We always have a funeral servtce and
mothers leave behmd, etther by extendmg the everyone partictpates They have a strong relicare ttself or through Nyumbani 's community- gtous foundatton, and they know that when
based program, whtch trains extended famtly they die they are gomg to be at peace and not
members to provtde tt
suffenng anymore
The latest testament to hts success is a perWe keep them very healthy and happy
sonalmvttation he JUst recetved from the pres"You would never know, to vtstt the place,
ident of ne•ghbonng Tanzama to set up a they were stck It's not until the final weeks,
Nyumbam there
when the vtrus gets the'upper hand, that they
Wtth all the love and commitment they crash "
rece tve, however, the prognosts for such
Unhl the last, Father D' Agostino tr 1es to
orphans is brutally predtctable
keep the chtldren's hopes up
Nyumbant has no way to afford the htgh"Our philosophy ts, tf they ask the questton,
pnced drug cockta1ls ava1iable to those who are we answer them honestly But we are not telling
HIV-posittve Father Dag esttmates such treat- them the brutal facts about what they are going
ment would run up to $1,200 per month per to go through "
chtld
Note Those wantmg to contact Nyumbam
"Some chemtsts tn Afnca arc thrcatenmg to can do so by mat I (Box 21399, Natrobt, Kenya)
synth es tze the drugs," he speculates. "What or at 1ts Web site (www.Nyumbant com)
would happen tf such compames dtd manufacture and dt stnbute them at an affordable pnce?
(Chris Mrztthews, cit••I of tlte $an FrqncisWould the Amencan compames sue them?"
co E1tllminer:s Wrzslt111gton Burerzu, 1s ltost of
" It 's gomg to happen, " he predtcts, wht ch "Htmlbrzll" on CNBC crzble chrznne/s.)

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INO

Local Briefs
Accident investigated
~ehtcle wa~

One

moderately damaged m an au1dc n1 on \ c tda n...

Ralph S. •Gravy• Graves

Memonal Ho;p ual s rear parkmg lot Monda)

Ralph S Gravy Gra-es. 88 Pomeroy dted Monday July 19 t999. at
Holze r Medtcal Center
Born Nov 28. i910, m Mtddle)l&lt;lrt. son of the late Pearl and Maud Bar

c. as backtng a truck owned by the Me1gs Count) Emergency Medical Scr

\ 1ce from the lot when a car dnven by Vera BuchanJn &lt;&gt;I Pom&lt;ri&gt;) pullcJ
mto us path She was ctted for fat lure 10 y1cld

ne u Grave~ .. he was a reured auto pans store manager of 58 years He was a

There was no damage w the truc k and moder.ne damat"~ 10 th~:

Accordmg to a report from Pomeroy Pollee Jt:~me~ Co un~.: ll RJuni. "

member of the Tnnlly Congregational Ch urch tn Pome roy. Pomeroy Ltons
Buchanan ve htcle
Club. Amencan Legwn Pomeroy l.:odge 164 F&amp;AM. Boswonh Counctl.
Chapter and Command ry Km ghts of York Cross of Honor and Pomeroy
Robe rt Ray. slate Route 124. Rutla od rerc•rted Mor.dal e\c nme Ill the
Order of the Eastern Star He was a World War II veteran
Metg
s County Shenffs Depanment that h" restdencc "a' ent ered "l"lc
He ts surwtved by ht s wtfc Nell Proctor Graves a daughter and son m
he
wa~ at work and several hundred dolbr'i worth 1)1 L han~e 'l1Jkn \ ho
law. Carolyn and Donald Thomas of Pomeroy, four grandchtldren . mne
reponed stole n were gold cham s, a couc h and a t: har r
great-grandchildren several meces and nephews
He was preceded m death by tw o brothers Harold and Paul Gmves and
by two stslers Mabel Walburn and Audrey Frost
•
Ron me M Ptcken s 42 33751 Long Run Road R,,c,ne \1 " ' Jli lcd
Servtces wtll be held Fnday I p m at Ewtng Fune ral Home Pomeroy
Monda; e\enmg b) Metgs Counl} Shenff ~., dcrut1es nn ~.:har~v. 11t dn
wtth the Rev Wtlltam Middlcswarth offictatmg Bunal wil l follow m Beech, ' 'lng under the mfluence speed dnvmg under .., u ~ rL n .., llm opu1 Ul/ltun
Grm c Cemetery
er a,nJ un.1uthort1ed u~e o t a motor \Chic le
Fncnds m.1y call Thursday 7 9 p m at the funeral home where Ma.sonH.:
scrv tces wtll be held at 7 30 p m In hcu of nowcrs. memo nal conm but wn '
rna) he made to the Tnmty Church Ch01r

Burglary probed

Man jailed on traffic charges

i D•yt,on j69"188&lt;&gt; 1
•

e:~

.. -,

-"'~Ail·

Announcements

Ohio's Berry bill exceeded $1 million
Forest Run VBS
for both prosecution and defense
One d.!) Vat:atwn B1hk Sl.:hool

W VA

KY

10 1999 Accu w eathe r Inc

~~~
I

Sunriy P1

Clo ua~

,_
c"'"'

·6:..~¥
ShOwers

T storms

V" Anoc ilrta" Press

""

/

""'·~-

Flu r1es

~':t~,«

'
&amp;t:.:ik

-Ice

Snow

High heat, humidity wili
linger in southern Ohio
By The Associated Press
W.1rm .md hum1d wc.uher w1ll conttnuc m 0 1110 for the re st tlf the week
lu recaslcrs s.ll d
S howers .md lhundcrstonno;; arc poss1bl c tonaght mc1 the snu thcrn thud
of the state wnll a chance nf ram spreadmg over the ffitu e st:.n e Wednes
day
•
L(l\\~ toru ght \VIII hem the 60s m the IHHthern pall oj the swtc 10 near

I) 70 m the southern part H1 ghs Wedne sda y will be m the MUs 111 the north
and tn the l)()s ttl the so uth

Rcl:Old tugh te mperature lur Lh1 s d ate w.L~ 101 s~t tn IY34 The reL onl
low was 49 set 10 1947
" '!'11
S un set to n1 g ht \\Ill be at 8 57 Sunnsc Wednesda y wlll he at 6 20
\Vcathc r fotet:ast
Tom g ht Partl y cloudy wnh a dmncc nl shov.c1s and thunderstor ms
Lm" s near 70 Ltght and van able ""md C han ce ol ra m 30 percent
Wedne sday Partl y cloudy wnh a ch ance of ~ howcrs ami thunder
stornls Ht ghs m the lower and m1d 90s Ch&lt;tncc of ra m 30 percent

Wednesday n1ght Partly cloud y wnh a chance of showers
derstonns Lows nc ar 70

an~

thun

"~

Extended forecast

Thursday Partly cloudy A chance ot thunderstorm s 1n the afternoon
H1ghs tn the lo" er 90s
Fnday Partly cloudy Lows m the upper 60s and h1 ghs tn the lower
90s

Pomeroy Officials ...
Continued from page 1
$19 978 54 uti Illy $8 128 52. overtunc grant $4.436 20, perpetua l
c.Jre ce metery $7, 147 16, cemetery
endowment $38.446 59, pol tee pen
ston. $5 BOO 59, butldmg fund
$5 896 12. rec reati on $ 1 678 80
pcrmtss1ve tax $ 14 368 32 Ia"'

enforcement , $8 425 69, CO PS
FAST grant, no balan ce, FEMA Ill
$33.9'i I totals, $450 33"1 62
Also present were Mayor Fran k
Vaughan counc tl members Scott
D1ll on
Da ve Ball ard. Larry
Wehrung Gcn Walt on and Ge01 ge
Wnght .md F~rc Ch1el Chns Shank

Ohio students participate in
space shuttle experiment
HUDSON (A P) - Can ladybu gs
be used as bwlogtcal pest control for
growmg crops tn space ' Some Oh10
h1 gh s~ h oo l students \\ ant to kno w

bu1

11

docsn t look ltke they "til lind

Scan Cusac k 17 of Munroe
• F.11is and Matt McCauley 15 ot
Bath Town sh1p are among a group

of students from hvc US sc hoo ls
and a sc hool tn Chtlc who ha ve col
labor.1tcd tn an cxpcnmcnt that v.~l~
to be sent tn to orbu today on board
the space shuttl e Columbta

nf h yd rogen
,.
NASA SdH.l th e m1 sswn \\Ill ht:
~e \ (:r.\1

weeks

The ~t udcn b wc1c ~.: h o~c n ti om .a
group ot Western Reser:\ c s wp sC1

cnce stud ent s smd Patnc;k Sm tth
head 61 the ~ L1 C ncl: dcpallmcnt at the
pnvatc sc hool nmth nt Akron
We· rc hopmg w do more pro-

JCcts ltkc thts tn the luturc Smtih
Cusm.: k a nd McCaulev were at 1 satd Monday "Out students dtd a
C.1pe Canaveral Fla. lor the sched
reall) good JOb on thts one
The lirst expen ment for the student program Space Technology and
Se~tinel Research for Students. or STARS
(USPS 213·960)
w11J mvcs ugatc \\hcth"cr microgravlCommunity Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ty has any effec t on the natural
'predator prey relat iO nship of lady
P'U bhshcd every aficmoo n, Monday throu gh
ffl day I l l Coort St Pom ero~ Oh10 by the
bugs and aphtds both small msec ts
Oh1o Valley Pubhshmg Company Second class
Etght cameras arc mon uon ng 1hc
postage pa1d at Pomeroy Ohto

The Daily

Member· The AJsoc1ated Press and the Oh1C1
Newspaper Associat iOn

PDAtmasler: Send address corrections to The
Da1l~

Setltmcl, Ill Cou rt St Pomeroy Oh1o

45769
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Correction Polley
Oar main concern In all storks Is to bt
attu,..te. If you know of an error In a
sto.,-, call lhe newsroom 1:1 (740) 992·
11!! We will check. your inforntation
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f

B~.:rl)

Jr ~1 I1 \C agamsl h1~ Wishe s m the
year:~ lcadmg up to has cxccut run 1n
February .lL:c&lt;1rdmg to a n~.: wspapcr s
report toJ.1y
The O hto altomcy general s office
l1.1s est imated It spent at least $ 1 m1l
1)

Student ~

The IOth Dtstnct Coun of Appeals
Columhus 6rdered tho release of the
ml onnatton July 8 at the conclusJOn&lt;&gt;f

111

Continued from page 1
Tnwnsh1p AuXIliary to the Sons of
Un tu n Vete rans ot th e C 1vll War of

Coolvtllc . Mtkc Bash. commander
of Go ' Wt lll am Denmson Camp
No 12 5 Sons of Unto n Veterans
ofthe C tvl l War of Lancaster
accompan1ed by Wayne McElfresh,
'p.l sl

ca mp

co mm a nder

of

McCan ne'lsv tllc
Ralph Wtd owsky ftrst lteutenant of Co mpany H Ftrst Kentucky Conf ederate Infantry of
Brunsw tck Oh10. acc ompanted b)

B ~:rry

was sc ntcm.:ed to d1e ror the

He was executed bYlethal mJeCUon
Feb 19 at the Southern Ohto Corrcc
t10nal Facthty tn Luc..vtlle

Delaware. Oh10 Presenttng colors
were Robert S Garnen Camp No
1470 Sons of Confederate Veterans
of Huntmgton We st Vtrgm ta. and
Ewmgs Chapter Sons of the Amer
1can Rev olutiOn ot Pomeroy

est Run U.ru ted MethoJ1.~1 Chun.:h

R.u.: l1c l Ash ley JU il lQ I \ 1ce pres
1tlen t o l t h ~ Oh1 o Department
D .~t~g ht c • sol Umun Vetera ns of th e

Gencttloglt: ~tl

Sm.:1ety ut Pom eroy,

News
News
News
News
News

Hotline
Hotline
Hotline
Hotline
Hotline

992-21-56

520 W. Main St. •
Pomeroy, OH
Phone 992·2588
Vtnton • 388·8603
Gallipolis ·446--0852

d\

1m

J11

l1

call \}'!9 1401

Teen program Friday

.

Area teens .1rc tn\ ned to attend GoJ , !\ &lt;.: tg.h h 11 h ,, d l ...... w~.. I 11
for Fnda\ . , Fun Fnod and f-\:lh.m ... h1r r n'JCll :\ ut11tlt n d I 1d . .
,..,.J!J be ;l\a d.thl c l r~.: c nf lharg~ lor ..,ndL I..In !! \du le t~.:~..n . . 1rL n tiL
cente r 1cc n.., t.:a n pl .t\ nn n \JOlc nt game -. t:n mpu tcr J'l• .!1 tllh md
card s frc~ ol l h.1rg c 1n t h~.: t: cn tcr s g,m) ~o: ron m '' hi Lh t' I l: ltLd n
M.u n Street ~r Ponh.:H1) Ppol tab les ar ~ a,.ulthk f111 1LLI1' t1 LI"L !j.~,
~.:en t e r opcm at 6 p rn and Lloses at I0 10 p Ill orl F t td 1\ J 11J :... 1t u1 J 1'
t ee n ~

nt ghts

TPRSD meeting
Th e Tupper~ Pl .ttn ~ Reg 1onal Sc\\Cr DP·.tr ttl ho.trd '' Ill tnLL t
26 q( 7 fl m rath er than JU! ) Jl} at the ~C\H r J1:&lt;.l!tll of f 1u:

Pll

luh

Stone to present program
Bru ce Stone of Pt C ha1 lottc fla will p1c sull tht.:
sen tee at Trtntty C hu n: h Second and L) nn SHee t"

nw rn1 n~ \\llJ"lJP
P o mtfll\

Su nd

I\

"'" be talco

The se n1ce wtll begm at 10 25 am and a lo1c olfcnng
The publtc mvlt ed to atl end

VBS to begin ,
Strecls , Po meroy ~ Jul y 26 to 10 6 to 8 p rn ead1 e\en1n g Rt:\!1.., 11 llllln

will be held from 5 30 to 6 p m on Mond.l) 1 he B1hlc "h"'''" 'I"'''
to all chtld re n ot the area between th e ages \&gt;f '" " ,1nd 12 I ,~111
refre shm ents w11l be se rved each C\C ntn g
~)

Nc x.t, was a Cn 11 War

Wa rs

""
I•
Obltuarlel are paid aMouncemanta arranged by local funeral homes Obltuanes 1
are publiShed as requested to accommodatelllose desiring more mtormat1on than ,
Is provided ln the accompanying Death Notices.

to h1m later

Tommy Lee Miller '

Taps wa s bugled by Ketth
Ashley ThiS Ct vii War
, song ong1-

m en t

nat ed f10m lsfmon Gen e ral Dan
Bullertt e ld BencdH.:tmn was gw en

by the Re c Mtddles wartli
Ashle y stmsscd th e need of al l
tu contmu e v.ntn1 g to Gov R oh~ rt
Ta ft and all ot her stat e sc n a to1~ ami

rcprcsentatl\ cs to all ot momes• to

purchase the banlclteld On! ) by
bombardm g ou1 government wtll
we s u ~,;cced. he satd

S tates co nd w..: ted a presey1tat10n on
lhc facts co ncernmg th e eft o n s to

save the battlcftcld

dlepon Bcss1c Kuhn Pleasant Valley
Hospttal

1 33 p m Pome1oy Parkmg l...cit Vera
Buchan&lt;Pl tre.d:ed a11he scene
1 55 p m Chlldren!t Homr.: Road
Pp mcroy Slcph'C n Titus V.M H
9 22 p m Lmcoln Heaghts. Pon1cro;
Sonya Powell !reared a t the St:cnc
Pumcwy squad J!&gt;iSistl:t.l
9 44 p m Vlllage Green Apanmcnl s
Pomeroy Fred Nccu: PVH Pomeroy

squad as....fistcd

~

MIDDLEI'ORT
3 04 p m Mtddlcpon Pool ll sa
Klem VMH
RE EDSVILLE
9 05ta 111 state Route 68 1 Dwayne
Durst Camden -C lmk Memonal Hosp1
Ia!
"
RUTLAN D
6 14 p rn Becd1 Grove Road Ben;
Sw1ck PVH Central D tspatc h squads
nss1sted

l

Obituaries

Tomm y Lee M!ll cr 50 ~ Tema Ghana m West Atnc.1 ll ll m . . rh 1 t h~
Cheshtrc .1re.1 dJCd unex pected!) I hu rsda) .lui\ 15 l l}'-)1} U lw, ~ 11!~11\!\
~

K~go r

Born Februa•y"25 1949.11

tn Gai ha Cou nt\ 01"'' he""' tl

oflh~

lat e Leon and D e l ore~ Lntl e Miller Ht: '' h t.:Tllph1\~o d I' 1 n l n~Pl~o~.;l
M amtcnan ce M,mage r \\ll h Ka1se1 Alum mum V ~\I C 0 Pl1111 1n \\t,!
A fnca
1
He ts· sun1 vc d hv ht ~ w1 fe Lmda At k 1n~on \1il lc l l ~ m n Ch trll \\ l~l
A Inca dnughtcts Tm.l Maller ot Sa, agc M&lt;ir) land ,md Ch md1 1 \lrt
d
S!.!~Helc Washmgton one granddaughte r 1\nanna Ktd\\Ci l lll ~ 1\,r_l.. \l.n'
land a saste1 and ht o ther m Ia\" S uste and Robert Si~!H.m c.l! B1d\\1..!l tlu~..l
brothers and :-il~lc r s m Ia\\ Lan\ and Loup.;,e Fark) a t Lnn,; RPittrln OhJt

Phil and

Dc n ~&lt;c

Mdk1 ol RutlanJ Oh 1o Cilns and Cbcl\ I \ 1dk 1 1 I' &gt;I

llpohs O h1o sC\!.!r~l l .l u nt s u n~.:lc~ 11 1~-:~t.:S n~:ph1.."" 111d u llhll\\
He WdS preceded m de.H h bv h 1~ JMn:nts
ScnKc:.; vo~ll be at 11 a 111 Th ut..,dU\ Jul ) 2'1 1'-JiJLJ 11 llh d 1\. l
F1ecwlll Baptist Chut c h \\llh RC\ Don Ptt ~.;t.: uiiK i l tiiH! Bu11 I \\tll
\\
m McH!S Memm v G.trd cn!'l Ill Pomctm F11 ~n d s lll:1\ \.. Il l lu~,,_j \ ~~
p m an~d W!.!dnesd.t) 2 1n -1. an d 7 tn l) p m .11 thr.: F1shL1 I Ulld II ll tll 111

Pomeroy
SPRING VAllEY CIIIEMA
11 f J\J I I ' I'll c,1
446•4524 1 'fll J/oC!&lt;.',(J',I'1K(
(lt

7

(FRI7/16 • THURS 7122199)

lOX OFFICi WIU OPEN AT UO PM
FOR MNING SHOWS,
12.30 PM FOR SAT' SUN MATINEES
WILD, WILD, WEST (PGt3)

Track the progress
of your favorite .
team through the

Sentinel
Sports pages !

71 5 &amp; 9 40 DAILY
MATINEES SAT~UN 1 15 &amp; 3 40
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHT

MUPPETS FROM SPACE (G)
• 7 00 &amp;9 00 DAILY
MATINEES SAT~UN 1 00 &amp; 3 00
AMERICAN PIE (R)
720&amp;920CAILY
MATINEES SAT~UN 1 20 &amp;, 3 20

BIG DADDY

tPG13)
7 00 &amp; 9 10 DAILY
MATINEES SAT~UN 1 00 &amp; 3 10

July
Doors open At 12;30 PM

TARZAN • 1:00, 3:05, 5:115, 7:20, 9:20

(FIIIII~/Inllllledl St&gt;mg "' vocew·~~ G,..\. 11 -

EYES WIDE SHUT (R)
6 45 &amp; 9 40 CAlLY
MATINEES SAT~ UN 12 4S &amp; 3 40
NO PASSES NO BARGAIN NIGHT

Dm•lllcoeOllM!I G&lt;m 1m Wlf! K•r•l". ,,
IIU'PETS '
1:00,~:05, 5:10,

TARZAN (G)
710&amp; 9000AILY
MATINEES SAT~UN 1 10 &amp; 3 00
LAKE PLACID (R)
o
710&amp; 910CAILY
MATINEES SAT~UN 1 10 &amp; 310
NO PASSES NO BARGAIN NIGHT

]FIIIIilyJ IJaloj Alql.&lt;llo IIJIII&lt;qanRa 1l&lt;', 3,' I&lt; "&gt;"

fROM SPACE

BIB DAIIIY '"''1 1:00,

7:15, 9:20

530, 745, 10 115

I

Give Your Child A Solid Foundation
Mid-Valley Christian School
Middleport, Ohio\
Is Now Accepting Applications
For Grades K-6
For Free Information Call:
740-992-6249

30'~

)

War so ld1ers was a group of Con

fe derate re-e nactors fmng a salute
followed by a stmtlar salute provtded by members of the Am encan
Leg10n and the Veterans of Fore1gn

Meigs EMS logs 11 Monday calls

cd at the scene
I0 I0 am South Th1rd Avenue M1d

S .Hur J~n

The Pomeroy Commumty Vacation Btbl e S€hool The Gre 11 B1 hk
la nd D1 g " 'll lle held at Tnmty Church of Pomero) Scco nJ .1nd I ' nn

Three 1mlllary gun salutes were

Ctvll Wm ol Roc kspr mgs Mark
Eck ley comm ander ot the Ohto , Robell Cro) c Oh10 Dl\ IS!D n
Co mm .mdc r) M1itt.Jry Otder of the Sons a t Cont ed c r atc Vet eran~
Loy al Lcg1on of the Un1ted State s asked the ct owd to .1ppi.1Ud the
ot' Stow. Oh10 Whllney Ashley of work of Ash ! ~} to cootdtnatc the
Roc kspnn gs tor the LadJC &gt; ot the ceremo ny Th e lad1e s ot Brn oksGrant C,unp prov 1ded re l reshrncnbl
Grand &lt;\.tmy of the Republi c
Emm.1 Ashl ey of Roc kspnn gs tor those who paruup.ltcd '"
tor 1he Woman s Reli ef ,Corps. s peakers presenters a nd mlltt ar)
Margaret Parker prcs td ent of the squad s for the ce remony
Foll owmg the soctal pe11(Jd the
,Me1gs County Pt Oneer &amp; Hlston cal
Ohto
Co mm and er) Mlinary Order
• Soctet) of Pomeroy Patn cta Cook
pres1d c n1 u l the Me tgs County of the Loyal Legwn of the Un tt ed
Judge Henry Shaw counselor of
the Son s ot Veterans Re serve of

R.1~..m..:

conducted Representmg the C1vil

arullery sal me by the members of
ot Cleve land Ohw James Bmley, th e Etrst Oh10 Lt ght Arullcry ot the
adJUtanl of Tuppers Platns Pos1 Ohto Cap1tol usmg on gmal Ctvll
#9053 of Long Bonom. Roscoe War cannons from the stateh ouse
F1fc, co mm ander of Feeney-Ben
Ashley menuoned the mablitty
nell Post # 128 Amen can Leg10n of of Sanford Brumft cld , 91 of
Middleport
Crow n Cll y. to attend the event He
Gene Roy Lawence, comman- IS the real son of a Union so ld10r A
der of Raetn e Pos t #602 Amen can spec tal cc rt1f1cate wtll be presented
LegiO n of Ra c me~ Dan Hmton
&lt;.:o mm.md cr of Gen Be nJ amm D
r~dnn g Ca mp No 2 of W&lt;~terford
Da\l d V Medert past commander

f tca., urc Hu n1 \\til h held

4 ~rJ
rIll Lu n ~..h wil l he -.cn c.d .md &lt;lll C\~.:nrng " '-~llnm mg: )"'lll\\ \~Ill r.l])\ .~
tor aHcnUtng child re n :tnd l llllll~dl,\h. r.nnt h Ftlr llllll"t.: tlltl Ill II n

John W1dnowsk1 , second li euten ant

.. 2'1,
27'1•

Stock reports are today 's
10.30 a.m quotes prov1ded by
Advest of Galhpohs

on the case

Buffington·Island ...

Sears • . •• .... ••• ••. •••. .. .. 45 1"

15'1•

dclem.lcr s otl u.:e m I ~NS .tiler 11
dcmed a request to prm 1dc mf unnauon about the umc and rnoncv 1l S!XIll

efforts to wmvc h1s appeal s

Stocks

Shoney's .
FlrstStar .. .. ...... ..
Wendy's
Worthington ... ... .. . ...

defender h1 the Akron Beacon Jour
nal 1l1c ncwspapc t sued the, puhilc

mllhon

ca n vte"

Akzo . . . . •.. . . . .44'1
AmrTech .... .... ., . ................ 74
Ash Otl ... . . .. ... ... . 41 '1.
AT&amp;T ... ......•..... ,...........55'1
Bank One . . .. .. . ... 59"1.
Bob Evans ... ... .. .. .. . 20%
Champion . . .
.. .. .. 7~
Charm Shps .......... ...... '.. 6''o
City Holding . .. . .. ..... 26~.
Federal Mogul. .. . .. . .54Y.
Gannett .
.
. . .76'/,
Kmart ... .............. . .. .. .15"1.
.30'~
Kroger .. .. . .
Lands End.. .. . . .. .
.47~
Ltd
......45'1,
Oak Hill Fin! ... .. ... .. .
18
OVB , . .
....32'1,
. . 38'1.
One Valley •. .. . . .
Peoples. . .. ........... ... 2BY.
Prem Fin!. . . ..
.. 13'~.
Rockwell .. . . ... ................59Y,.
R 0/Shell ..
63't.
1

publ ~e

1989 murder ol Cleveland haker
Charles Mttroff Jr and became kn o"n
as the Volunteer because of hts

Umts of ihe Me1gs County Emergenl:y
Mcd1cal Serv1cc recorded I I ~.::alls for
the un.1gcs on l~e lnternet
McCaul ey estimates the patr has ass•Siancc Monday Umt s rcspondmg
mdullcll
worked about I00 hours on th e
CENTRAL DISPATCH
cx penm ent smce th e bcgmnmg of
2 39 a m Pomeroy Pollee Depar1menl Larry G tlmore Veterans Memon al
June
Hospital Polnemy squad assisted
9 24 am . Second S1rcc1 Pom eroy
Randy Fnend VMH
•
9 52 a m state Route 7 Mtddlepon
motm vehtdc m:~o: tdcnt Andrea Wnght.
Am Ele Power ............... ... .36~. f. 'S han on E nnghl Dav1d Kc-twoc:xJ 1rcm

expenm ent and

a la\&lt; sUII f1icd agamst the

!ton tn IL' tight to have Ben) s death
se nltn~.:c ~,;am cd out 111.11 bnngs the
total cost to laxpaycrs of about $1 2

•n -c h1ef of the Sons of of Un10n
Veterans of the Civ tl War of Chillico th e Myton E Jones Jr co1,11r
ulcd i:JUn ch !rom the Kennedy Space nandcr ot Brooks-Grant Carnp No
Genter but lhc m1ssl1?n was aborted 7 Sons ot Un ton Veterans of the
because o! mdtca ttOns ol h1 gh leve ls. Cl\1 ! Wc~1 ol Oak Hill
rescheduled. hut p1obahly not tor

out soon

AKRON (AP) - Ohto spent
~ h11 ost $200 000 to keep Wtlt ord Lee

Excellent Phonetic Reading Program
Teaching The Morals That Our
Country Was Founded On.

Will

7:15, 9:45

(ComodyJWit Sm:h K111n ~ ne Kemetll Sarog~ Sa "'
Ha)&lt;l UEIIJI!l Wa~ Ted l"" &amp;' '""""' Va' De V,a

11MB II SAM

•

2:30

(llmrl M~ 5\1-.m lllll!\Wa"' !J&lt;r B•'"'
Antti)1y l.al'i}a. Pa~ "-"" Belle IIE..1!1 ~'"' 'soo

EYfl WilE 8IIUT • 2:45, 6:05, 9:ZD

(\ilna]lllllCna liD!~ ~t!c "'1M 'll"!\ ',_;.

GlfiUI.'I DAUIIITBI

6:30, 9.05

(OIIIIIIJJcill 110\dta !.ta&lt;le~ne &amp;,., Ja""s ;,,,.,.,

Malinns SbOU'H Er;eryday
TIMES 54.00

•

�•

•

SpOrts

The Daily Sentinel:

•

.

·1

·

TUMd8y, July 20, 1999

Page4
Tuesday, July 20, 1999

By DENNIS WASZ(&lt;K Jr.
Associated Press Writer
Not even the best team in baseball
t:an stop thl' Houston Astros .
1
The Astro&gt; " on . their eigh1h
straight ganic. 3-:1 in II inning s O\'Cr
the ' Cleveland lndi fi ns on Monday
night .' when l;•m Candiotti's wild
pitt.'h all owt.:d the winning run to '
s.:Drc.
,
TI1c A~tros. wllo had on ly fo ur
hits. scOred th~ wi nnin~ run wilhout

twice a nd smgled as MQnlrca l. viL··
'tuni zed by David ConL"''s perfect
game a Jay earlier. e nded their s i x~
1
game losing st rc ak hy winning:'' at

Major league
baseball

a hil . Candioni (~- 6) ' walked Bill

Yankee.Siadium. •

Spiors and hit Bogar with a pitch 10
~tart the innmu .
Houston lt~adcd tht: base~ wllt:n
pi n~.: h ~ h i tlc r Car1 0s Hc rnandc:i.. laid
'C lown
hunt ~lll d was safe ·whe n
Candi &lt;:&gt;lti fJ ih.:J to g.:t Spkrs at third .
With Cra ig Bigg111 at the pl:~t c.
Cand iotti tim.:\\ a ,~jiJ pitr.: h on a 1-0
..:ount. allow1ng Spt.:rs to score.
··on that tl""tunl) play. I ba\'c ID
rclv on the (.: atc.hcr.-- Candi otti said
af1 C.r th..: Ind ians J o,~o;t th.:ir sca~(&gt;ll ·
hi gh fr)u rth stri.ligllt . " It 's my job 10
gd lhc ball ~m&lt;.ll th nught I h..:~1rd hint ·
say ·go t6 third ." bul I was goi ng to
go ·that Wi.l)' anywa y. It" s a tJ ~,._,.o r- dic

a

~

CELEBqATE HOMER - The Middleport Reds' Matt Holley (left)
celebrates his fourth-inning two-run homer.. with two of' his teammates during Monday night's Kyger Creek little League
Tournament contest against Kyger Creek. The bla~;t helped cement
the Reds ' 14-0 victory. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Middleport Reds,
Barlow-Vincent
record victories

_PHOENIX (AP). Jennifer
Gtllom had 18 pornls and Edna
Campbell added 12 as the Phoenix
Mercury defeated the two-time
defending
WNBA
champion
Houston Comets 60-48 Monday
,
night.
Houston l~st tw'! games in a row
. for the first trme srnce the close of
the 1997 season and. at 14-4, has
more l'!sses than alllasr season. ·
. All -Stars Sheryl ·swoopes and
Trna Thompson of the Comets were
held ·toiOpomlsandmissedacomhrned 23 of 26 shots. Swoopes was
hmrted to eight poinrs. hitting only 3of-.14 from the noor. Thompson, 0for-12 from the noor, was limited to
two free throws.

.I

~------~---------1

.

Eighth District tournament. begins

Sechkar's clutch
HR get~ Athens
pa.st Meigs .1.2-11

rm
rl nntb

7 · ~~

Baseball

American Legion
baseball

J ()~ pIll

will move on

10

the loser 's hracl-.cl.

Monday. evening , blit it was a big was ca lled because of ri.lin with
o ne. Scc hkar slam med a lwo our. two · Lancaster leading II ~ 7 in . the 1'-ft'lt

•run hpmc run in the eighth inning
that proved to be the difference as
Athens d,efcated Mergs I ~- II m the
first round of .the Eighth Di strict
Amen can Leg1on l ournamenl al
Athens HighSchoo l.
. A1hcns .w1H now advance lo second round actam agam st 6ak H1ll al
Pickerington a( 5:30 lnday. Meigs

inning.
•
Since thai game has to be fini shcJ
the.. two games we re moved h\
Lancaster, because t~e ·Pickerington
field dqes·n•t have li ghts. Thai ,game
will be finished at 5 p.m. with Meigs .
playing the Ieser in the scconJ conlest.
'
(See LEGIONNAIRES on Pase 5)

Pelfrey

t :a,lr ru

ll'

k

u,... t•·n

r•. , I &gt;Ill &lt;'

~

l .u11pa Ba}

•

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l:l:'nlrallhd~oun
'17 ~~
J .i

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1!(55

M1nn c~o l :1

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K .m~.ts• CH~·

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to
1~

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Eustern

5-t

50
14

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Pll! ~ tmrgh

t'tntnl l)j,•lsion
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.17
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Chu·ug(' ..

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Colurado

(,.J \f!i l ( I.F\' EL,\ ND tllorba

,

1\n aho.~lm t iJII\J.I CS ~

46

-t7

46
H

Wednesday's NL games

.

-t-t

~

.

•
•'·

16

462
4'il

'

7 1. 11)'1.'1

6. N \' Yan kl-e~ J
N Y Mcts 4, B.l iU mO¥c I
. rlonda 10. ll p!ihlll 7
Kansas Ct t)' 10. ctu ~: ·~~~ C uh~ l
S• Luu• s It, M11mc~••lo&amp; J
~lou~un J. Cl EVIJ.,\NIJ 2 (I I I

fum

Easlern Conferenct
ll' J.. rn.

Todt~y 's ~anws
(AL v~ . NL uiJIC"i:'i nthe.-Wis.~ nuh•tl)
l'lulalll'lrlu.i l ll l 11rl I '•I at l.t llll'•' B.t) tr\n n111 ~
5). 12\"p m
'
l .t'\ •\nge k \ l llJ•W.n u •·• ,11 l' lll~ hlllgh r~ tmuol t

·

6(1()

1!1

500

[Jctrr'OI I,

s s soo ·

I'

Od:.nd o.1

8

1!1

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W;l ~ lun )!l•m

~

('II ·. VI:I.i\1\{)

&lt;l

12
IJ

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29.t
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.1

Sherts to EJmonttln of thl' PC"L
ciiOSrUN RlU.SU X Plnc ~·d f.I.HI' Juhn W.,~tlm

on thl' 15 ·d:w dt s~ blcd lt st Re ~a ll c J Jan llu Ch11 nnJ
Mannn S;wlanJ lro m Pi!wtuc J.. t' t ut th~· lntcl'll.llll&gt;l!al
LeaF.Ui! Opti oned IN F. Wt iiOn Ver.ts rl\ ·11\'lllon of th~·
~aslt'rn League Slg11cd LHI' Ca ~ C) FoHU III. LHP
Rtchttrd Rundles. RHP M n n lln\mp~tm . RIIP Brpn
Leach, RHP Ja son B oltt! nli ~: 1d . RHI' D:mrcl G • ~sll,
OFAntr·nl' Sc1hcr. OF Rnan ~~.·~· Or Jon Ford . OF
Perry Miley; OF Ben Marbut). INF Mtdme l Dw~er.
INF Jon~than Anderson LNI· l!r;1dV W1lhams. INF
Joseph Kerr igan. C Kregg Jm viu s anJ r Je!T
Woldron
CHICAGO WHITE SOX OJ1110ned I.IW To'&gt;jfd
f.l.tzzo 10 Lllarloue of the lntt"l n:.twna1 l..e;~guc
TEX t\ S RAN(iE,RS · Rc,: nl!ed RHI' R)a n Glym1
from Okla hvm&lt;~ of th e PCL Opti C1 nl!d OF
Scnrhorough Grel'n lu Okl~hnma..

NaUunat l.ugut ,
AR IZONA OIAMONDBACK S Pl.o~' t;"J RHP
Dnrr~n Holmes on the l.'i ·da\ th$a tlled list. rl't ro~e ·
llH' to July IH Rec;~lled RHP VJn~lllt' B~dill~ fr um
Tuscon of the PCL
.
, MILWAUKEE B~EWERS : J')es•~tnal rd RHP
Jun Pm~ l e) fu r I&amp;S~ 1gnment Rel·al led RHP Kyle
Peterson from LoUi sv il le oft he InternatiOnal Lea~ue ..
MO NTREAL EXPOS . Pl 3ced RHP Mig uel
Rilf iSTll un the I'i·d.1y dl~f\bktt li st
NEW YO RK METS. Recalled RH"P Or la\rn
Dotcllrom 'Norlo1 k of the lut ernnliunal Lcllg:ue.
Opu oned J U Mtkr;- l&lt;.mk adc to Norfolk
St\N DllGO P.t,. DRES . Acu vatl:d OF Tony
Gwynn fro.mthc 15·da)' di~abl~d ~~~~ Opt1 oned LHP
Ht.'at1• Mun&lt;ty to La s Vegas of the PCL

..
1"
'2
,,
" ',,

I"' ,\111•ek'
\I IIIII\'~~····

I

\'h&lt;"'JU\

1&lt;67
1&gt;17

l

600

'7

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'
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scurl' "
II

. Mnnda) ·~

1

'

ATLANTA HlRA SHERS S•gncd C Per
Swtrt••aUe t :md F Vlndmur Vlljtrk
BOSTON BR UINS S1g11ed RW Laudon Wtlson

I

BUFFALO SA BR ES S!J!.ncd (j ,\lrkn NorLII'.en.
I 1Ja1 ltll\lo'r:'l\ cr i!nd 1- J.uo~ Ia\ Kn ~'tt·k ' '' IIlli III }Colr
l't•ntraL·n
FLORID ,\ Vt\ N IHI R~ ~'!!n.:d LW c,,,,
StCI\Jrl RW Paul ~ t :n 1 cv ~nU RW l:m JalO bS

·

Call
DAV:E or KATHY
at 992·2155
FOR MORE INFORMATION

. , OS ANGI-LLS t•JNGS N.n11cJ R J~ Uennen

,,.~,~ra nt lll&lt;~ dl

r-.t-\\' 'ORI\ R.\NliLRS
1c h• ,, r,,m ) t'ar lll ntr ,H, r

\ t,\!n~·d

H S\h,rm

~·kll1

1'1111 ·\IJI I.I' III A I U lit \
J,mcs Ito a thrl'l..'·~t;u o•ntr.M.t

~ t l!lll'd

!Afo.!Pt\ RAY I IGH I NIN (i

l f l•ll\1"1 1 ~-~

f\llOAY~ AUG\JS'f 6~ 1999
t\\lVEHT\S\NG nE,\0\JNE···

n two-vl'a r COnl rtil: l D Yitllls lav Ct.: h IO a lilll::l"·
ye:u ('anti :ttL :~nJ LW J11c .Hulbt g 1011 o n ~·ye:1r con-.-

I

I Jil.lllilot 77 \~.o' l11 11l.:IH I I C,.l
t h.nl.,Ht" ?l U1.1h r;J:,
""l•n 11''"'' ·' 16 o;n,r:Jill&lt;'llll• f1 1'
to()

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

National Hoekr'v Ltagut

" ' "-'

11,

1]\

!lt,lh

Pho&lt;" lll\

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have ·A
Special r.1eigs County Fak Preview Edition. This Year's
Edition Premises To Be One Of The biggest And Best Ever!
Look For This .Special Edition In You
Friday, August 13th Paper!

!(1

\\"estern Cunference
l l t&gt;~t\l&lt;m
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C htLagoWh 11 e Sox 10. M•lw:IUI..&lt;·c x \ Ill
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Seattle 7. Arimna 'i
Oak i.111J 10. CuloJ~;t d" ~ .

·

Nalional Fooll!,all Ltlllgut
DENVER BRONCOS .' \V.at_.,·~·dOL Dan Ftnn
PllTSBU RG II STEELC!lS St~n.-d TE Jemme
Tunmn .
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Basketball

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WNHA standings

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The Dail Sentinel

C.uurl'\..:11 pt.:'Sitknt oll til.:' tcnm and thl' j ,~· l'.ol.llc

111 tNt INN\ II I I'u••''' II

·-··· ··-·

·~-

-· ..

•

'

__ ....__ ___

'-- .

.

from Reed .
SliDe 73, Stanz 66
At Charlotte, N.C., Andrea
Stinson scored 16 pornts and Dawn
Staley and Vicky Bulleu each added
IS for the Sting, who convened scoring runs in each half into a victory
over Utah .
Bull&lt;ll hit a jumper. and Stinson
followed with a running jumper .to
stan 15-4 run in the first half that
put Charlolte ahead fqr good.
'
.

a

Herman Knapp of New Haven has pen in the close points race. Tbe team of Jack Maloney of Gallipol)s.
Tile closest to the prn winners this
taken a three point lead over defend- average number ·of players per week Dana Winebrenner of Syracuse. week were Bub Anderson on number
ing champion and former leader is now over 47, which will allow 12 Dayton .Durst of Cottageville. and seven and Earl John,on on· number
Keith Woods in the Riverside Seni·&gt;r poinls each week to go to the lowest CJlet Thomas of Patriot Two· teams 14.
Meq's Golf League.
scoring team. This would ·leave a tied for second place at nine under
The senior league officers and
Knapp has amassed 131.5 poinls possible 132 points to be scored. a par.
players in vile all male golfers 50
to \&gt;est Woods' total of 128.5. In third one half point higher than the current
Dewey Smith, Middleport : Bob years old or aider ro come out and
.Hyse ll , Pomeroy; Bob Anderson. join the league for 1he rest of the
place and still in close contention is leader at the prese nt time.
Claude Proffitt of Patriot, Ohio.
A total of 53 players were on hand Ripley ; and Jim Proffitt, Mason1were year. The senior di&gt;count fur the
Proffitt weighs· in with 121.5 points on
Tuesday
with
Lawrence on one team and Bilr Yoho, N,ew league is about 25 percent ofT the
the heats.
.
. . .
after leading the first few weeks of · Scarberry's first' day .mak:ing a total f:!aven ; Hill Howard. New Haven; . regular rate. The weekly lee ·for non,,Jtoy Roush of Reedsvrlle clarmed - the season.
·
-·
of 79 different golfers in the series. Don Roush. Raci.rie ; and Pan Fields. m~nbers is $15 walkmg ami $22 to
~he AMRA modified "feature. over. · There are still II weeks lo play in .,The \!'inning score wa' 11 -under-par · Hl'flford were on the other. second ride. This ·amount ini:l udes rhe $3
Cun
Rod Sayre,
the&lt;Series
meaning
a_
lo(coutd
from
the_ winning
. __________
weekly
prize
Rick Nolan,
Trace well,
Roger Tedd
StoneWebb,
and - -·_
_...;;...
_ _ _hap..;,_·w.
_ _That.
_ _came
___
__
_ _..;....;.place
_ _team
__
_.,:..:,_
_ fee
_ ._ _ _ _ _ __

Major league

baseball.~.

Marlins lO, Red So• , .Preston Wilson went 4-for-5 with his club
rookie-record 18th homer -as Fl orida won at
Boston.
.
A day after pounding 14 hits in an 11-'J lo~ s. the
Marlins had 16 10 improve to 31-17 since interleague play began three years ago.
,.
Brian Meadows (7- 10) wqn for the second t11ne
in seven starts after being spotted a 7 ~0 lead
through t~ innings.
.
..

s'tarter

Ryan

&lt;Continued from

Pag~ 4)

Kenl Mt•r..:ker(3A J Y.on fur 1lu: first time si~e
three-hit ball . and Edgardo Alfonw and Rubin
Ventura homered al Baltimore.
Apnl 20 ~ a span uf 17 appcaranc·cs. Mikb
Dote! (2-1 ), called up from Triple-A Norfolk Lmcoln (3- 10) too ~ the l o..,~
.,.
earlier in the day: a ll owed o ne run to earn hi ~ ~cl: ­
•·
, Rangers 14, GianiS 7
ond v1c10ry for New York in four major leaEUC
Ruhen Mateo we nl 4-for-s· and Mark
McLemore had three hit' and three RBi s fpr host

~tart s.

Royals 10, Cubs 2

Texas.

Blue.Jays 8, Bmves 7
Tony Batista led off the bouom Of the lOth to 16 games for Kansas City.
inning with a home run , compleling Toronto 's.
Witasick (4-6) allowed one unearned run. four

hits. struck out two and Walked two in 5 1 ~ innings
Shawn Green hit , a grand slam and Carlos to win for the first lime since June 23 agaihst

comeback from a four-run deficit.

Detroit.
S.tcve Trachse l (3-13), ·after winning a careerhigh 15 last season, tied his caree_r-high for losses.
set in 1995.
'"
White Sox 10, Brewers 8
Ray Durham and Chris Singleton hit back-to-'"
back homers for Chicago ofT Rocky Coppinger (0I) with two outs in the 12th at Milwaukee.
Singleton matched his career-high with five
·hits in the game, including i! 400-foot homer.three ·
pitches after Durham 's .blast thai made ·the score
10-7. Bill Simas (3-2) got the win.
Cardinals 8, 'I)oins 4
In St. Louis, Fernando Tatis hit a pair of tworun homers to lead the Cardinals over Minnesota.
It was the second two-homer game of the season for Tali ~. who hit two grana slams in one
inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers on· April
23.

Ippjpg llllab

~ - ~~

- •Here is the schedule for later this
week.
.
Tonight: Federal Hocking vs.
Eastern Eagles at 6 p.m.; Rut.land
Reds vs. Paint Pleasant State Farm at·
7:30p.m .
Wednesday's
quarterfinals:
Pomeroy Indians vs. Gallipolis at 6
p.m.; New Haven Reds vs. Green
Irvin's Glass at 7:30p.m.
Thursday's
quarterfinals:
Middlepon Reds VS. Barlow-vi ncent
at 6 p.m.; tonight's victors al 7:30

-- .

~m

~

Meigs Legionnaires._
..

•

Mei gs JUmped oul to an early big Sechkar then hit a one-one count out
lead in Monday 's contest. In the first to left field , and Athens was on top
inning. Jeremiah Bentley ritied the 12- 10.
game's first pitch .inlo the gap in
In ·the top of lhe ninth, the first
right-ce nter field for a double. Heath · two Meigs batters were retired, but
Rothgeb walked, and one o.ut later pinch hitter J.P. Hannon grounded a
Adam . Cumings singled to left to single into left field. With Nick
score Bentley.
Dettwiller running for Harmon,
Me1 gs looked to have the game Bentley doubled to right to put rununder contnil in the second by send- ners at ·second •and third. Rothgeb
ing II batters 10 the plate and scoring then beat out im infield single allowsix runs for a 7-0 lead. Kyle Norris ing Deuwiller to score to make it a
reached on ap Athens error and stole 12- 11 game. But Champlin bounced
second . Kyle Smiddic doubled , and .back and struck out the next Meigs
Bentley followed with · a triple. bauer to end the game.
Rothgeb walked and Adam Williams - After a rocky stan, Champlin setfollowed with a single. A walk to tied down to pick up the win. He
Cumings, and singles off the bats of gave up 14 hits, struck out 10 and
Mike Mollohan and ·Jamie Baker walked five . Coble. had a triple and
gave Meigs the 7-0 lead. .
three singles to lead the winners.
But Athens exploded for nine' runs ·Looney had a home run and a single.
in the third to take a ~-7 lead. Pat Purdy added a single and a double.
L&lt;&gt;oney had the big hit in the inning Conkey had two singles. Champlin
for the host team, a two run home and Chapman each had a double.
run . ,Brooks Purdy, Devin Chapman
Bentley, who picked up the loss,
and Les Champlin all chipped in scauered 13 hils, struck out II and
with doubles in the inning. Andrew · walked Jive . Cumings led Meigs
Coble add two singles. and Kun with his home-run and two singles.
Con key and Purdy had singles for · Bentley added three doubles.
Athens.
Mollohan had a double and two sinAthens increased the lead to 10-7 gles: Williams had singles, while
in the sixth inning. Coble singled and Smiddie had a double. Rothgeb and
went to third on a Meigs error. Baker each added a sing le .
Loon.ey followed wi th a single to lnninc ~
score Col)le.
. Meigs ... .. ....... 160-000-031 =1 1-14-4
Meigs came storm in g back in the Athens ........... 009-002-02x= 12-13 -2
top of the eighth ·inning. Bentley
Balleries
walked with one out. One o ut later,
Meig s: Jeremi ah Bentley (LP)
Wi lliams sin gled to left . Cum·ings, on
the rirsl pitt:h, slammed a three ~run and Adam Cumings
Athens: Lcs Champlin (WP ) and
home run to tic lhe game at 10. The
home run fnr Cumings. h i!&lt;~ third in · Dan) ewe ll
Home runs
the last rh ree games. was his sc~·e nth
Pat
Looney. one on-third
Athens:
of the year.
In thl; bottom of the c1ghth innin g. inning : Jon Sechkar. one on-eighth
Bentley re tired the ftrst two halters . inning
Mei gs: Adam Cumings. two onA Meigs crf(lr kept Dan Jewell alive
e
ighth
inning
a t the rlatc and he drew a walk .

·

• -

.,

In Chicago , Mike Sw~eney had a ca,reer· htgh ~
Juan Gon.!alet . Ru sty Greer. Lee Sleve.n s a nd
four hrts and drove in three runs . and Jay WitasH:k Malcu all drpve m twu runs api ece for the
won for the first time in nearl y a n;rOnth .
Range'rs ... Estcbatl Loaiza ( 1- 1·) picked up hi s first
Joe Randa homered to exlend his hilling slreak '\' ictory smce beati.n g 'Detroit on Aug. 31 last year.

(Continued from Page 4)
'

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Wednesday's AI. games

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NL standings
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Ut;th at Dl'lll.ltL 12 rim ~
1\l mncsnln nt l"harl nll e 7 lQ p 111

launched

After a scoreless second frame ,
Barlow-Vincen.t staged a third -inning
riot thai produced nine runs.
Among :the 15 batters the Cats
sent to the plate, cleanup hitter Matt
, Adams singled twice and scored as
manv run s.' His second hit . a single to
· righi field. sc'n t two more run s home.
All told. Barlow-Vincent had five
hils and capitalized on five errors
und three wild pitches.
A fie f
Pelfrey's
homer,
Southwestern was held 10 two hilsBreu jOnes· second-inning single to
left center and Pelfrey's lhirj-inning

Tonight's game

,

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&lt;11

Mt.er Sacramento ued it at 48,
' Edwards scored n•nt points in a 13-2
run to give Minntsot.a a 61 -50 lead
wnh 12 minutes remaining.
Tbe Lynx. who had been held
below 60 points in fiv&lt; of their pre·
vious six games, took a 43-3.5 halftime lead behind Reed 's 16 points.
Minnesota, which fe ll to the
Monarchs by 14 and 17 points in
their previous meetings, jumped oul
to a 21-7 lead thanks t(l stven points

Smith's 0-1 pjtch beyond the center Bad Cats ............. ,..... 309-3=15-12-0
field fence with two out. That Highlanders.. .... ............ I00-0=1 -3-7
tri'mmcd Barlow-Vincent's lead to 3"
WP - Smith

AlJGlJST 16- 21S1., ·

N ~ \Ill' ri L' Il L'I t'· 6l,ll ll.ii1111 H&gt;n·&lt;l 1ull"''l )\ . (11 ,
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A L standings
fuuu .

~ l ~rn: tnJ~·l i - ~1

c&lt;nt of ots shots from the field and
had IS turnovers.
Lynx 76, Moaarchs 69
At Minneapolis, Brandy Reed
scored 12 points :md had stveral
spectacular assists and Tony a
Edwards added 21 points as
Minnesota held off Sacramtnto.
Tbe Lynx led by as many as 14
and never trailed, but had to fight off
a rally by the Monarchs, who were
led by Yolanda Griffjth's 22 points.

Knapp Iead S .R.tverst·de-se·n·tor Men.'S G
. 0 If League

Kyger Creek
L.L"' Tournament...

and will play the ·loser of the
Lancaster "B"-Somcrsct game 1'.x.lay
at· 6 p.m . at Beavers Field in
Lancaster. ·
By DAVE HARRIS
" That ganl'~· was supposed to he
Sentinel Correspondent
played at Pickerington, but lhe game
Jon Sechkar has only one hit between Somerset and Lancaster "B"

-

•

n

It was the largest margin of vtctory in franchise history for the
Miracle, who shot a team-record 10of-15 from three-point range. Sam
was "-of-7.
Washington, in its lowest scoring
output of the season, lost for the third
straight game. ChaJ1!ique Holdsclaw,
playing despite a fractured index fin, ger on her left hand, had 19 points
, and nine rebounds for the Mystics.
Washington made just 28.J per,
.

Delgado hit two solo homers for the Blue Jays.
who have won three straight. Delgado's 24th
homer tied the game at 7 in the eighth inning .
Batista hit- the second pitch from John Hudek
(0·2 ) in the I Oth to give Toronto its eighth last- atbat win since June 29.
Tigers 7, Reds 6
(C'Ontinued from Page 4)
In Cincinnati, Jeff Weaver hit the first double
J&lt;yger Cr~ek.. .... ,... ...000-000=0-2-5 double to right - and one baserun-· by a Detroit pitcher in 27 years and .Damion
WP - Davis · ' .
ner making it to third base. Zach Easley hil a liebreaking homer.
·
LP - Reese ·
Haislop, who walked in the third,
One day after the Tigers blew a siK-run lead
Bad Cats 12, Highlanders 1
moved to third on Pelfrey's double. . before rallying to win; they wasted a three-run
Barlow-Vincent
joined
\he
Smith pitched two innings before lead before Easley rallied theni with a solo homer
Pomeroy Indians, the crew the Bad giving way to Josh Long in the third. in the seventh off Scott Sullivan (3-1 ). Dei vi Cruz
Cilts defeated in last week 's Bill Mark Moses finished the founh as added an RBI double later in the inning.
Hubbard Memorial · Linle League the Cats' closer. The rel'l}' team,
C.J. Nitkowsk.i (2-3) allowed one hit in · I ~.
Tournament title game, in being one which pitched a three-hluer, cpm- innings for the "'in.
·
Of the two teams in this tournament bir.ed to strike out nine and walk
Mets 4, Orioles l
'
to claim double-digit victories en two.
Rookie Octavio Dote! pitched seven innings of
route to earning quanerfinal benhs. ' Pelfrey struck out three and
·
, The Washington County nine cap- walked three.
ilalized on four wild pitches and an
Barlow-Vincent's hitters were
error while getting two hits and a Adams, Greg Gillilan (both went 2·
run-scoring sacri·fice ny to generate . 3), LOng, Cody Welch (both went 2. three first-inning runs. '
·
4), Smith (1-3). Adam Canaday and
In the bottom of the flrst, Steve Greg Johnson (both went 1-4).

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

Scoreboard

Houston, leading 28-27 at hlllftime. opened with a bucket by l'olina
Tzekova but then mi&gt;Oed its next IS
shots. The Comets led 34-31 with
16:43 left when Phoenix went on a
12-0 run,
'
Phoenix led 49-48 with 4:n
remaining, but closed the game with
an 11 -0 run that began with Gillom's
fade-away 15-footer followed by her
three-pornter.
Cooper finished with 19 points,
her 83rd strllight.double-figure game.
Minc:le71,Mystics52
At Washington, Sheri Sam scored
20 points and -Shannon Johnson
added 18 as Orlando .ended a threegame losing streak with a victory
over the Mystics.

Blaine Aber of Wooster broke
Andy Bond's four-race win streak
Saturday night and picked up the
$2.000 lo win paycheck for claiming
the super late model portion of the
"Tucker's 2002" invitational race.
Wade Benjamin: Roush also won the
Early leaders were
Kenny dash.:
Johnson and Andy Bond, two iocal
George Adkins of Middleport
favorites : who s--:apped the top spot wGn the . Dash and the feature after
until .lap 2 1 -when Aber, the flying cousin Grumpy Adkins won the BWayne Countian, slipped past to take main. George Adkins powered the
the lead for good with Bond right on Raymond Adkins Thunderbird to the
hi s taiL
top spot and never looked back after
Pomeroy' s Todd Smith in the , defeating a tough field of ov£r thiny
,
,
.
Gene · Johnsonrraz's Marathon T-7 cars.
fiJli shed another good race after finRouodtng out the top I 0 were
ishing third last week to pos_t a fifth Adkins, Ted Dille, Pal Gillilan Brian
. in the 40-lap event. Rounding out the Whiteman, Frank Roush, Jay Rutter.
top W ~.ere - Abet, llond, Greg Jim Ashcraft. Joe Memel, Jeremy
Mitchell , Mike Benedum, Todd Blake, Paul McDaniels, Tony Roush,
Smith. Norman Aaronholt, Charlie · Mike Foggin. Tom Dille. Larry Clark
'
· Duncan, Nolan Dalton, J~ff Burdelte and Grumpy Adkins. '
Rob ,Casto claimed the Pro-Street
and Aaron Fleming.
Kenny Johnson won the dash and victory over Lester Bowes and Rusty
Todd Smith and Nolan Dalton won Nutter.

.

Kyger Creek
l.l. Tournament

D811y Sentinel • Page 5

Smith, Roush, Adkins
_get wins in Skyline races

Fu llmer went 4-fur-4 and duubb.J
111 set up Shane Andrews ' two-run ·
,. '
~ in g_lc that hrokc a 4 ~ 4 tic' with l\\o
ou ls 1n lhe eig hth inhing . The Expn~
~lit 12 hits. drew two walks and were
not retired tn order untll the mnth .
PhillieS 16, De,·il Rays 3
Scott Rolen hotn~ rcd t\'J !cT fltr thc
UTILE SWINGS '_ Meigs ' Jesse Little takes a swing du.ring.
::-cnmd slraight day and Philallelpllla
ttnproved lO mne games over .500 Monday night's Eighth District tournament opener against Athens at
fu r the firs! time in '"nearl y fo uf years Athens High School's Rannow Field, where Athens nillied to beat
'Meigs 12-11. (Sentinel pboto by Dave Harris) ·
'Yll h a '\'it:IUry m Trop1cana Field .
Rolen . who ho mered in hi s l a~t at ·hat Sunday to g ive the PhiHi cs a 3'-2
\ ti.' tnry 111 the series ope ner. hu a
two-run homer in the firs1 and a so lo
shot m the third oil Bryan f?,ckar (6-

play in that situati on and it's a gamblc you have to lake.-·
~ ).
The Astros improved to 12-2 in
The power Surge g i\·cs Ro kn ri\'C
1111crlcague play after winning th e hum,·rs since the All -Star break and
first two games between · the AL 10 in Jul y. the most ~n a m.on th by a
Ce nlral leaders.
Phi llic s hitler since Mike Sc hmidt
Jose Cabrera (3-0i struck out 1he had 12, in July" 1982. Rolen. has 24
s1de in· the II th for the win .
thi s sca~o n .
The Reds padded the 7-0 . lead
··1 caught a break when he hit
~
they wok into .the fourth when me." said Bo'gar. who had two
(See BASEBALL on Page 5)
Holley cracked a two -run homer to unsU&lt;;ccss ful bunt attempts. " You
'
center field.
know things are going your way Eastern football
Dav is. who struck o ut five . and
w he~ you load the b~scs lvithout a ,camps scheduled
By G, SPENCfiR OSBORNE
wa lked three. allowed only . one h1.1
and score the w1nnmg r,un Without .
.
• ·:,
OVP Staff Writer
cxtq ; ba~c hit Jonathan Gaus' ' first :
gelling
.a
ball
oul
of
the
infield
..
"
Eas
tern
f~u tball coacH Scull
The continuation o f sccoml-round · 1 nnin ~ llou'ble ~ef! l CDiby Reese .
In
other
tnterlcague
games;
It
wa~
Christman
has
anoounced the ~ date
play in th~ Kyger C' rcck Little hiS single wa s KC's tlrsl hil - lo
~,~~c~guc·Toulnamcnt Monday night at third. where he was stranded by Montreal 6 . the: New York ,Yankees 4: . for his upcoming Eastern Eagle footthe Kyger c;:reek Empl oyee&lt; Cluh Scma ki Corfins' in.ning-ending Philadelphia 16t. Tampa Bay 3, bal.l camps for both the junior high
Flonda I 0. Bds o n 7: Toronto 8. ' and high school learns. The Eagle
F1dd saw the MiJJicporl RcJs shu I' ground out to third.
oul Kyger Cree~ 14-U in a fi veGaus ilnd Corfias made it w set:· Atlanta 7 1n 10 1nnmgs; Detroll 7. Junior High Call)p for in coming
grades 7-8 is' underway and will coninning mercy-ruk d~ cb ion hcfurc ond base· in the fourth . In the fifth,
the Barlow - Vmccnl Bad ,. Cats · teammate Jesse Russe ll made it to
, linue through Thursday from 6-8
EHS sports
p.m. al the high school.
t:lairned a 12- 1 mercy -rule Win over second. None of· them made it to
packets available
the Southwestern Hig hlanders.
The Eagle hi gh school camp -for
third.
Reds 14, Kyger-Creek II
mcoming 9-12 graders will be July
KC 's pit c her s ~ Chris Roush and
Midddleport's offense opened the .Eii a.s Elli ull - combincJ 10 strike
All fall sports packets for players 26-30 from 5:30-8 p.m.
affair ·· with a ftvc -run. f.irst i 1~ n i n g out fivl! . Ne ither walked a batter.
For . further information pl aye rs
cn~ering fall sports at Eastern Hi ~ h
. fueled by four bits - this incl\tded
Middleport 's hittl!r s wl!rt! Hdlley, School may be pi cked up in the main ca.n contact Christman nt camp head·
two-run doubb hy Mall Holley and Clwt W1gal (~olh wenI 1-4 ). '.',lise office of the hr gh school Monday- quancrs at 985-.34 15.
' Adam Wise- and twu KC errors.
12-3). Brand on Bell , Donnie Whan ;rtrursday between 9, a.m. and 2 p.m.
\Vhilc the Red:.;' l)ffensc was on (bol h went 2-.41. Jamie Ellis ( I- I)
All player~ en tering grades 7-12
t..:ru isc control. Ch uck D &lt;tvi~ h1sscd &lt;l and Dayis ( 1-.4).
must have a packet and the necessary
two-hitler
ot
Kyg er
&lt;;:reck. lnnin~: totals • .
.
fon ns completed in order'" parti ciMiJdlcport'.s defen se helped him R&lt;ds ......... ............ .520-25=14- 14-2 pate.
· .:· For further informati on, q ll 985ho ld the hos t to o n~;: ba~crunn~.:r mak ~
ing il lo third base.
(See TOU_RNAMENT on Page 5) 3329 ·

T'he

Merc.ury, Miracle, Lynx &amp; Sting win latest WNBA contests

Astros beat Indians
3-2 in 11 innings,
extend win streakCi ncinnati 6: the New York Mcts ~ ­
Balli more I; Kansas City I0. the
Chicago Cubs 2: -the Chicago White
Sox 10, Milwaukee 8 in 12 inni ng!:
St. Louis 8. Minnesota 4; Texas 14.
Sap Francisco 7: Seattle 7. Arizona
5; San Diego 4, Anaheim I in 10
innings and Oakland I0. Color;~do 5.
In the only · Nati on al League
game. Los Angcld- beat Pitlsburgh
12-7.
Yankees 6, E•pos 4
Brad Fu ll:ner homered. doubled

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mariners 7, Diamondbacks 5
Alex Rodriguez hii a grand slam in the siKth
inning and Jay Bulmer also homered as Seattle
won its third straight at new Safel'o Field.
Kelly Stinnett had his llrst career multihomer

game for the Diamondbacks.
Rookie Gil Meche ( 1-01 got his first maJ or
league victory.
_P ;tdrH 4, Angels I .
Ruben Rivera. who entered the game . after
Reggie Sanders was ejected in the eighth inning.
hit a two-out , three-run homer off Shigeloshi
Hasegawa in the top of the I Oth '''"'n g:
'
San Diego's Tony . Gw ynn played for the first
time since June 19 and went hitless in four at -bats.
Athletics 10, Rockies 5
At Oakland. Ben Grieve hit a two-run homer
off Robeno Ramirez (1 -1) and Ryan Christens6n
added a solo shot as the A's withstood homers by
Larry Walker and Dante Bichette and improved lo
an AL-besl 11-6 in interleague play.

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Bush will
use funds
for site
payment
By MIKE GLOVER
Associated Press Writer
DES MOINES Iowa - Texas
Gov George W Bush by far the
leader m GOP campa1gn cash wnh
S30 molhon m the bank, has
reversed field and says he II use
some of that to pay the $43 500
cost to lease a sue to coun backers
.n next month s pres1dentoal straw
poll
&gt; Bush changed hos mond after an
opponent pubhsher S1e' e Forbes
challenged the way he had planned
to pay for the SJle
Campaogn aodes saod Bush had
soiH.::lled

s•x

checks

totaling

$50 000 to pay for the $4' 500 cost

of leasong the sote and to buv lick
ds to the event

Though the "'c w1ll be used to
hoost Bush s hopes of gaonong the

Rcpuhltcan pres1de nttal no mma
lion the tnonev for the lease ~.:amc
Irom so L:alled sn fl mone) and not
ln"~m

Bush !'&lt; campmgn

llftU..:Ja].;

acknm•lcdecd
After m~1all} ms1sllng th~: praL:
lie~.:

was legal Bu~h ~ ~~ ut:d a st ltc
ment later Monda-, rc\ ersml! field
Governor G~.:or~r.: W Bush

todav d~rected hos pre;odcntoal cam

patgn to send a campa1gn ~.:hel:k to

the Repuhhcan Partv of Iowa lo
t'O\er

the t:OStS'ot rcnnng 'Pace and

purchasmg lickets for the Iowa
1\trav, poll spokeswmnan Karen
Hughes sa1d 1n a s tatement
He

.-ked the pam to refund mdo\ld
ual checks from st&gt; donors thai had
heen sent for that pu'l"'se
Federal Elecuon Commtsston
officta!s sa1d usmg soft money to
pay for the straw poll expenses fell
mto a legal gmy area wh1le Bush s
nvals charged 11 woul&amp;break cam
paogn spendong laws
Th1s rmses senous questions

abpul how ethtcal a Bush admonts
Arallon would be pan1cularly sonce
thC) ve raosed a gaz1lhon dollars
from Washtngton lobbytsts Ket
thAppel a spokesman for Forbes
saod before Bush reversed hos deco
SIOn

Its good to see GO\ ern or
Bush clearly noted the error of hos
v. ays and has chosen to follow the
letter and mtent of the law satd
Forbes a1de B1ll Dal Col
• Bush s campa1gn was among
man; obtammg leases for s1tes near

the basketball arena where next
month s straw poll wtll be held
The campaogns got the leases as a
s1ll!nt aucuon earlier th1s month
Dee Stewart executive dtrector

of the stale pany saod all of the
campa1gns obtammg the Teases

were se nt a b1ll asking for payment
of what they had b1d
J
There are few hmlls on so.ft
money whtch IS cash g1ve n d1rect

ly to the two pohtocal partoes and
no1 to a candidate
The key test ts whether a con
lnhul\On JS deSJgned to help a can
dodale or help a poht1cal party FEC
spokfswoman Sharon Snyder smd
Its an aoea thai has not been
add1esscd hdorc not with the:-.c

, spCCJ! Jcs

Ms Snyder smd

14,•s

a question o f whether the actJvltv

" benefilong a specific campatgn
01

w~ether

1t

1~

a party hu1ld1ng

H.:liVIIY

Ms Snyder acknow[r-dged shr..
h ts gotten mqu1nes on the 1ssue

There may be a complamt

she sa1d
The commosston ts
,;omg to have to answe r th1s tf 11 s
brought to the1r attenuon
In her statement Hughes.onstst
ed 1hat 'md1v1dual contnbuuons to
the party are allowed under the
law
!

The followtng land transfers were
recently m the office of
Meogs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton
Deed Dav1d Wayne and Glona
Darlene W1lkes to V1llagc pfRulland,
Rutland
Deed Bruce Sr and V1cl&lt;y L
Caldwell to Wilham H and Bonme
L Caldwell Columbta
Deed Mel1ssa G Roush and Ran
dall T Roush Syracuse/Suuon
Deed MarJorie H Drake and
Hope Drake to Paul Curtos and Shetla
Curtos Ohve
Deed MarJOrie H Drake and
Hope Drake lo John W Adams and
Dclons Adams Ohve
Deed PaulL Flora Paul Flora to
Jnnmy Lee Flora Pomeroy
Easement Davod and Karen R
Cund1ff to Oh1o Power Company
Suuon
Deed Harold L and Garc1a L
Adams to Angela M and Harold J
Denney Chester
Deed Mtchacl D and Debra L
H.1cndoges 10 Clarence J l'[cwtun
Clarence Joseph Newlun Meogs
Deed Billy J Podr to Roben R
Lut:,ls Salem
Deed Frede11C W Webb to Car
klon R Jo .lnd Ellen G Thomas
011\e

By The Bend

July 20, 1969: when mankind too·k its biggest leap
By HARRY F ROSENTHAL
Auocialed Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Ncar lbe
equator of lhe moon - for all cter
nlly oruntol a pass1ng poece of space
JUnk scores a bull s-cye - stands a
strange platform swaddled on gold
fotl a monument to the most daring
of the 20th century's sc1enufic expe
dmons
Around 11 footpnnts are etched m
the talcumhke dust also as perma
nent as anythmg on the vto!ent
changmg untverse can be permanent
The pnnts are the unmostakable "' 1
dence that two men from Eanh
walked there the first humans to step
on a plane! other than their own
It has been 30 years smce Ne1l
Armstrong a nauve of Wapakoneta
m western Ohoo and Edwm A Aldnn
chmbed gmgerly from thelf Apollo
II moon lander 10 the rock stre" n
surface of the Sea of Tranquohty
That s one small step for a man
a goantleap for mankmd saod Arm
strong the first man on the moon Butl
the first a d1dn I make 1t to a btl
hon people watchtng on 1elcv1slon
back on Earth Punsts have argued
ahout the d1fterem:~.: m meamng C\er

smce
Beaut1ful heaut1ful saod Aldnn
when he fotlo"ed Armstwn• 18
mmu1es later Magmficent de~"'ola
lion

What made rhat t1rst Jandm g on

July 20 1969 'uch a h•g e\ent~&gt;nt: of those momenrs that no one
then ahve v..ould ever forget' For
Amencans 11 provode'd uplift and
respite from lhe V1etnam War from

stnfe m the M1ddle East from the
stanhng nows JUSt two days earher
that a ypung woman had drowned m

a car dn,en ofT a wooden bndge on
Chappaqu•dd,,k Island b) Sen
Ed" ard M Kennedy
The rest of the world celebrated
along wuh Amenca, More than I00
world leaders sent thetr congratula
tJOns
It also marked Amenca s voctorv
m the Cold War space race that
began Oct 4 195 7 wnh the launch
of the Sovoet Umon 's Sputn1k I a
184-pound ball whose msostent beeps
senl shock waves around the world
An embarrass&lt;:d Uno ted States dodn l

around the t&gt;leal. &gt;urface uuhll\@ on
the hghtness of tl1&lt;1r one·SJxth grav
ltV Tile) p1cked up rocks the booty
1hey had come for and planted an
Amencao1 flag sufrened onto wavtng
postllon because there IS no au or
wood on the moon to ruflle 11

They spoke from lhe moon to lheor
presodent R1chard M Noxon Th1s
certamly has to he the moo~ htstonc
telephone call ever made " he saJI!:
They stopped by one of the four
legs of lbetr lander and read from the
small metal plaque auached to 11
launch Its firsl S'atelllle unt1l four ' Here men from the planet Earth first
months later and remaoned beh1nd m set fool upon lhe moon July 1969
tbe spectaculars that followed Forst A D We came on peace for all
human space floght first human to mankind '
orbot the Earth first spacewal k
A third astronaut Mtchatl Colhns.
But be yond that was th1s
mel ij the moon on the mother shop
Throughout recorded host Of)' humans
Columboa 60 moles overhead as
had "ondered about alton worlds Armstrong anc Aldrin landed HIS
espec1all) the one b1ggest and near
back seat to h1story was confirmed
est wuh the unchang&lt;ng face 111e then and there
moon was celebrated 1n poetry and
When Houston sent word that
song m folklore and love stones m Mtsston Control was full of smthng
mystenes and nurserv rhymes E\ en faces Armstrong responded wuh
the amt1ents knew that n controls the
there are two of them up here
ocean s udes as 11 makes ots 27 3 day Coil ms chomed on wuh ' and don t
etrcuot around Earth and they made forget one on the command module '
11 the bas1s for man s calendars It 1s
Colhns wrote later about seemg
reflected m language wuh words such their target up close • The moon I
as lunauc and mOQnshme •Now ru o have ,known all my hfe that twomen cadi wHh an Amencan flag on d•mensoonal small diSk m the sky
h1s left sleeve "ere standmg on t1
has gone away somewhere to be
It l.'r drffi.:uh toda\ alter a gcncr
replaced by the most awesome sphere
atuJn of une\cntful H'ntures m spat.:c
I have e&gt;er seen To begm wllh, 11 ,.
manned and unmanned to re create huge completely filhng our wmdow
the ex..: llcment that a~.:~ompa01ed rhe Second 111s three dtmeostOnal '
fltght of Apollo II
The 1ntncate plan for the f11gh1
Arm~trong released a TV. camera
worked nearly flawlessly although
as he stepped out ot 1he sh1p and the they had only I~ seconds of fuel left
world "atc~cd as two men dressed after dodgmg su rface boulders on
hke Pollsbury doughboys loped arroval The spmdly legged LM -

astronaut speak lor lunar land~r was plucked from lhc1r spent Saturn
5 rocket on the th= day 24 t 000
mole tnp to lhe moon Ntcknamed
Eaj!le 'u was a two pt&lt;:ce contmptlon lumpy wuh no need for stream
hnmg woth a descent stage at the bot
tom and an ascent stage on top The
bottom stage served twm purposes It
lowered the astronauts gently to the
surface and became lhe launch plat
form when 11 was lime to go
Awllo II was set m motoon on
May 25 1961. when John F
Kennedy asked a JOint sessoon , of
Congress to approve S I 8 !nlhon on
spendmg for space lhe moluary and
ciVIl defense and to buold up the I
country s omage Remarkabl) the
Umted States at thai lime had only
one manned 01ght expenence -the
15·mmute subortntal hop by Alan
Shepard JUSt 20 days before And on
those early days more rockets were
blowmg up than making u mto space
"I behove th1s nallon should
comm ot olself to achievmg the goal
before the decade IS out of landmg a
man on the moon and retummg htm
safely to Eanh Kennedy saod No
smgle space prOJ&lt;Cl m lhos penoo woll
be more 1mpress1ve to mankmd or
more omponant for the long range
exploratiOn of space and none woll
be so d1fficult or expens1ve 10 accom
phsh"
And Indeed u was By the ume
Apollo II ltfted off from Cape
Canaveral Fla on July 16 l%9,the
Unued States had spent $24 b1lhon
on space and lost three astronau1s m
a fire dunng a rehearsal on the
launch pad There were s1x more

moon Ooghts to follow foncludmg th&lt;
oil fated Apollo 13 wh1ch d1dn t

lam.h hut ttln the Ia\ I tn 197:! then:

gin" of th&lt;

'!~h

l:dchr.uon
Apollo II annl\er

Prr,tckm G~orgc Bu~.;h pro
posed a"' nmnutmrnl to go had. to 1he

'\.3f\

wholesale car auCIIons and Auto
mauc Data Pr essmg Inc Manheom
JS a umt of
lama based med1a con

Group The merger gtves them the pnvate party he saod For that rea
No I poSJtoon m terms of total ads
son 1t s cnttcal for onl me class1hcd
Deno'e satd lhat each stte also Web sues to find ways to aurae! more
glom
ox Entcrpnses Inc Most bnngs strengths the other lacks
pnvate party sellers
of AutoConnect s li sti ngs come from AutoConneet has several stgmficant
Whole new car buymg on the
dealers
on It ne pannersh1ps wuh Amenca Internet has auracted more aucnuon
Auto Tmder Onhne 1s the Internet Onhne and Internet 'portals " such from the news medta some analysts
subsodmry of Trader PubiJShong Co as 1Lycos apd Yahoo whoch provtde say the purchase of used cars os bet
of Nortolk Va a JOint venture of a home base for Web surfers to lind ler sutted to the new medmm It s tlso
Cox and l.andmark Communocauons what they want
a larger market last year used cars
under the name AutoTrader &lt;:om m Inc that s best known tor ots reg10n
Auto Trader meanwhole has been outsold new cars' by a margm of four
what IS one of the fastest growmg al classoficd 'eh1cle ad guo des dos m the busmess much longer and has to one For dealers profit margms
segments of commerce on Ihe World lnbuted na11onr 1de Its Web sue was an estabhshed brand name among generally are h1gher on used cars 1han
staned m Apnl 1996 and carnes more consumers The fact that Auto Trad
Wide Web
new 1:ars
These onlt ne classtfied sues are of a balance of dealer and pmatc par er draws m more pnvale pany hsungs
Wh1le new cars are a 'ommodJI)
soon gomg to be the dommant way ty ads vtrtually all tram the gu1des
that s easy to fmd the buyer lookmg
IS •mponant because those tend to be
Analysts sa1d the merger was for slightly older and less expenstve for a spemfic make and model of used
people search or locate used vehocles
notable
for the new sote s potenual vehocles, whoch g1ves lhe Site a car wuh cenatn equtpmem has to
for sale satd Chns Denove, duec
tor of consultmg operauons for J D scope Together the two sties now broader, more balanced 1nventory, search through a maze of classofted
Power and Associates Th1s merger carry about I 47 mllhon vehocle hst Denove sa1d •
~"
clearly creates a new le~der m the mgs w1t~ connections to about
Our research shows that the type ads and dealer lots The Internet can
SO 000 dealers
field
of person who goes onhne lo try to s1mphfy and speed the process
AutoConnect com w~s staned m
'These two prol"'&lt;noes are rela locate used veh1cles for sale IS also
• There ts absolutely nothtng hke
May 1998 by Manhe1m Aucuons uvely &lt;tgntficant ' satd Rob Ender· the type of (l&lt;:rson who feels most the Internet m tls abtltly to put a
Inc • the world s largest oJlerator e&gt;f le an analyst With Gtga lnformatoon comfortable purchasmg through a

moon -

thiS ume to stJ) - and

By JOLYN OKIMOTO
Associated Press Wnter :
PHOENIX - Chns Mueller says
she's been concerned about the envt·
roumental1mpact of her own energy
consumptiOn for years butn was the
so called mtllennJUm bug that
prom pled her to do somethmg about

who have a grand scale v1soon of sys
Power compames say they have
terns gQmg do'wn and people who ve the slluatton under control Utthttes
been concerned about thiS for a long say a nauonwtde test ofthetr systems
ume and thmk the ume s nght satd on Apnl 9 revealed no senous probRon Kenedt vtce presodenl of Gold lems But only backup commumea
en Genem Co a manufacturer and uon systems were tested. not generdostnbutor of solar elcctnc systems ators or 1ransmtss1on hnes
based on Scottsdale
The next maJor dnllts planned for
11
The Y2K problem or. mollennoum Sept 9 a day that expens say could
Mueller ts onstalhng a solar ener· hug may occur m co mputer~ and foul up computer systems early
gy s)stem m her home to reduce her mJcroch1ps programmed to recogmze •because they may read the date · 9
only the last two d1gtts of a year they 9 99' as an error message
rehance on power generated by bum
mg coal- and as a backup to make may malfuncllon of they mosread th-e
Some authonues expect any Y2K
sure a Y2K related power faolure year 2000 as 1900
~
electncal problems to be momma!
won t dampen her New Year s cheer
Some belteve the bug wtll cause comparable to the bnef outages folA gear kmd of cl•cked satd • the nat tOn s power gnds to crash lowmg storms Wallace Reynolds. a
Mueller, a soctal serv1ces worker who when docks stnke m1dmgh1 on Jan spokesman for Anzona's Sa11 R1ver
hves 2S moles nonh of Harnsburg, I leadmg to blackouts
ProJeCt the natiOns thtrd largest ulll•
Pa
I thonk the East Coasl (power oty company sa1d customers wtll
Others nauonw1de apparenlly are gnd) IS more susceptible than the need nothmg more than a flashlight
of a hke mmd Solar electnc compa West Coast because 11 s older We and a candle
noes around the country are reponmg don l know wh1ch syslem wtll have
Some aren't reas~ured and that s
spokes m sales allnbuted partly to problems Hopefully 11 s no system
where the alternatives come m
people feehng Y2K Jitters
But whatever happens, I'll sllll be
Kened. saod sales at Golden Gen'It s a combmallon of people runnmg on my system, Mueller sa1d eSJS were up 40 percenl last year, as

Deed Marjonc H and Hope
Drake to Steven R and Brnnda K
Hand Olive
Deed Ruth and Howard F
Th1vener to Debora C Kennedy
Pomeroy

Deed H L Sr and Phylhs Who
brey to LandiS K and Agnes Wan
dhng Sahsbury
Deed Alexander May to Larry E
and Phylhs N May Rutland
Deed Janel M Duffy to R1chard
and Janella Whole Pomeroy
Deed Dou~las G and Sh~rley M
Lambert to Patty L Harmon Rut·
land
Deed MehssaA Keffer 10 Davtd
Hanley, Sc1pto,
Deed Dav1d Hanley to Meltssa A
Keffer, Sctpto,
Deed G!ona I M1chael to Brenda K Hockel, Gary E Mtchael Car
ol L Theoss Denms E Mochael
Debra L M1chael Roger A M1chael
Syracuse,
Deed Lawrence K and Stella
Fyffe 10 Dante M and Cynthoa S
Ohven Bruce S and Pnma I Sable
Bedford
Deed Carne R and Jeremy C
Stone 10 Roger K and Rosemary
Keller Chester
Deed Frances L Carleton to
James and HaiT)I Carleton Mary

Sheets Sandra Needs and Sally
Ervon, Salts bury,
Deed Dorothy McCloud to
Harley McDonald Mtddlepon
Deed Donna Rae Spencer W1lson
Donna Rae Spencer Donna Rae W1l
son to Allen C Wood, Pomeroy,
Easement Dolphus Jr and Wanda
C Burke to Texas Eastern Transmos
s1on, Columb1a
Deed, M1d Stale Trust IV to J1m
Waller Homes Inc Rutland
Deed M1d Stale TrusliV and J1m
Walter Homes Inc to Mary J Hawk
Rutland
Deed Rochard E and Mary F
Whole K•mherly D Holhday to
Dnv1d Gnm and Robyn Rofe Salem
Deed Denver L Warner to
Jeaneue L Robmson Columboa
Deed Bobby Joe Adams Jr to
Me lam e Adam s Sutton

Deed Martha Julta Martha
Esther and Amv Esther Graham to
W1lham A Young Pomeroy
Deed Vmton County Nauonal
Bank to Donald L Waldren Colum
boa

sales are on track to mcrease by 70
percent he saod
Golden Genesos advenoses solar
systems that range from $1,599 fo1 a
1100 walt system - enough power
for hghts a refngerator ~ntertam
m!nl systems and a computer dunng
short power outages - to $8 199 for
a Y2K Survovor System a cum
plete power system that mcludcs a
propane powered refngerator freezer
Other compames also see Y2K as
an opportumty to promote products
they have long beheved m
'Whether 11 s Y2K or 1cc storms
we now have the technology to solve
backup power pro~lems that we dod
n I have m the 70s Y2K has conve
mently put us on lhe radar screen for
backup power sa1d B1ll Roush the
owner of Solar Electnc Systems of
Kansl" Coty, who has sold solar sys
terns for 20 years
'
Warren Lauzon of Nonhern An
zona Wond &amp; Sun m Phoenox called

so..:veral thousand more custome(s

the recent nse m mterest unprece

purchased solar systems Thos year

dented tn two decades ofbusmess In

I

300 choldn:n between lhe ages of I

Ann Landers·

on to Mars bv 2019 1be uJea \\COt
nn\\ here A bud_god ex.pcrt :otald 11

1\0Uid '"'' s~oo I&gt;Jihon The Nev.
York limo c 1IJeJ a moon relurn a
f.ulurc o l IIHtgmatwn and frc.sh

thought ' Bush seldom menuoncd 11
agam and NASA quockl} forgot 11
Tosealtheendof the~rnvalry 1he
SoHet' and the Un11cd States staged
a JOint m1 sswn Apollo Soyuz m
1975 and shook hands hogh above
the Eanh And 30 years after the first
moon landmg - 42 year&gt; after Spul
ntk- th\; two countncs arc the mam
stays of an mternau onal partnershap
buoldong a spa10e stnuon The Un11ed
States fl1cs Russoans on ots space
shuttle and the Russtans ha;c been
hosts to a ~w.;cc.ssw n of long ~tay
astronaut \ 1s1tors on tlwu M1r spat.:e
station

Apollo II was the last mossoon for

Dear Ann Landen The male
technocoan who satd women who
ObJeCt to a male teehmcoan govmg
them a breast exammauon are 1gno
rant made me mad
What does he know about 11
anyway' Does he have to go to a
female techmcoan every year to have
hos lesucles msened onto a vtce and
squeeze() unul they are as flat as
pancakes'
The fear of breast cancer ts dev
astatmg Every woman I know
forces herself to have an annual
mammogram because she 1s terr1fied

of ihts awful koller

•

Female technocoans lend to be
more sympathetic and gentler No
woman would have a mammogram
1f she knew some man hke Every
where USA would be pulling her
through 11 E L IN WEST HAMP
TON BEACH NY
DEAR E.L • I ve had several
mammograms. and wht!e ttos no day
at the beach ot os not the mghtmare
you descnbe If you find female
techmc1ans more sympathetic
request one and Ill her your request
w1ll be granted
DearA:nn Landers 'Between the

months of May and August

O\ er

Colhns saod once he had few
regrets on h1s lifeguard role \\allmg
for Annstrong and Aldnn lO return to
Clc~rlv 11

the mother sh1p

wa s not

m oOD\\ alkers

ns

BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family
and
Consumer
Sctences/Commumty
Development

ventured

no farther lhan
vards from thCJr
spacesh1p and 'pent onI) 2 hours IS
mmutes walktn e on tht..: llll)llh ~ttd
21 hours 36 mmutes on rhc lun u sur

face the asce nt st1ge blasted otl
lc a\lng on!) th~.: tnal \\ 1app~..:d struL
IJnd~c:r

It s that ttme of the year for p1cmcs cook outs fam1ly
reuntons and ouldoor get togethers W11h all of the pleasure that
they bnng, you don l want to spool the fun Wllh an unwelcomed
vJSotor food potson1ng' What can you do to keep food safe when
attendtng such events'
The matn lhmg you need lo reahze ls that bactena multophes
treme~dously at room temperature (40 degrees to 140 degrees
Fahrenhen) The food borne Illness that results can cause symp
toms of abdommal pam, dtarrhea, headaches and possobly death
The culpnts that usually cause these problems are meats eggs
poultry, fiSh, cream ptes custards potalo salad and other foods
made wnh mayonnaise eggs or mtlk
The first step on preventmg party goers from gettmg SICk ts to
make sure lhat anythmg touchtng the food IS clean all equipment. utenstls and your hands
Wash your hands for 20 seconds or more woth soap and warm
water gettmg between the fingers on the backs of the hands and
under the najls Wash your hands often dunng the food prepara
lton and after usmg the bathroom changmg a doaper, blowmg

Gl\erse group nf hu)crs together
wllh a d1verse group of sellers Den
ove slud From the perspccln e of
the consumer you re probabl) gomg
to see more 1mpac1 from these used
veh1cle

:-.~tes

•

The used car buyer however sllll
Will usually want tn exam me the car
m person before the purchase whoch
hmus the aboluy of Web sues to

become

d~rectly

mvolved on com

plelmg the lransactwn ts some nev..

car sues have smd M1chacl May d•g
11al commerce analyst wllh Jup11er
CommunicatiOns
That leaves most used car snes

your nose, coughmg sneezmg and touchmg r¥our ha1r

Make sure you wash the u1ens1ls and your hands after workmg
wuh raw foods Never cross contamtnate foods by usmg the
same utens1ls and cuttong board for botlr raw and cooked foods
unless they have been thoroughly scrubbed 10 warm soapy water
1h the
Foods need to be cooked completely 1hen kept hot (140
degrees Fahrenheu or more) or cold (40 degrees Fahrenhe11 or
less) Don I lei the food sol out even whole coohng for later
refngeratton In that case place cooked foods tn shallow pans
before ch1lhng so the mternal area w1ll cool as qu1ckly as the
outs•de of the food
Foods should never be left out at ooom temperature for more

trymg to generate revenue by sell mg
adverttsmg to husmesses that want to
reach buyers such

a~

msurJIH.:c lnd

financmg compames Thm s the nmd
el that the Auto Trader and Auto
Connect com s1tes are usmg Neither
charges lor 1ts classified ads

th m two hours Th1s mcludes travel time from the grocery store
to your home and the transporttng of the food 10 th e p1Cntc It the

the past year sales have swell ed to
about $4 m1lhon from about $3 mil
han , Lauzon :-.:'ild He s also mcreascd
hos stalf to 12 people from e1ght
I kno-. that a large part of the

weather or room lemperalure JS 90 degrees Fahrenheu or above
do not leave the food uut for more than one hour
When tra\ elmg to your ptcntc pack cold food 10 msulated
chests wllh cold packs 1ce 1n leak proof contamers or dry ""
(read d1recuons carefully)
If you are gomg a short dostance tJtlmcd•ately take cooked

bus mess IS Y2K 1clated and some

people .Ire usmg hype and scare tac
ucs, ltr) 10 cmphastze that Y~K or
not 11 s always a good 1dca

said

food as 1t comes from the oven or sto \c cover the d1sh wrap

,, Lauzon

Even Alan Bunnell a spllkesman
for Tucson E!eclnc agreed cllmg
envuonmcnlal

co m:crn~

assuc1ated

w11h fossol fuels
Its good that people arc 1nter
ested m allernall\e energy We hope
that w1ll rontlnUl: even he; nnd the
Y2K 1ssuc bee mse altcrnatl\t cncr

gy holds a lot of promiSe Bunnell
sa1d
""He sa1d so l,u has a long \\ay to go
not1ng th 11 onlj I SO me \! twaus wo11h
ol solar pan els 1rc m,mula~..:tulcd
woddw1dc cad1Vf..:d l By tomp m ~o n
Tucson E]~.;r.;tn\: h 1:-. th..: ~.:apahll 1t ) to
p10duLc I 700 meg 1w ltts throu~h
~.:cinvcnllun II
m~.: tn s
lor \hout
125 ()(){) hOUSdH1Id :o; mJ bUSIIlt,;SSI.:S

PUBLIC NOTICE

Me1gs County wtll be provtdtng grant/loan funds to qualtf1ed households m Me1gs County for lhe
replacement and/or upgrade for fathng on-lot septic systems Theses funds are bemg made avat l
able through the EPA Oh10 Rural Hardship Grant/Loan program funded through the Oh10 Water
Pollution Control Loan Fund, wlitch IS Ohto's Clean Water Act SRF Program
The Metgs County Grants Office wtll bemg provtdtng apphcahons for par1tc1pants m lhe EPA Rural
Hardshtp Septtc On-Lot InstallatiOn Program on Augusl 2nd, lhrough August 20th 1999 from 9 00
A M to 5 00 PM , Monday thru Fnday You may s1gn m, PICK UP AN APPLICATION AND
MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TO BRING THE COMPLETES APPLICATION BACK FOR
REVIEW at the Metgs Granls Offtce at 117 East Memonal Dnve, Pomeroy, Ohto
The Rural Hardshtp On-Lot Sepuc Program w11l prov1de full grants lo very low mcome households
and 50% grant-50% low tnterest loan to low mcome households m Me1gs County whose current
sept1c system needs replaced and/or upgraded
For more mfonnatton or should you JUSt have any questions please call Jean Trussell at 740
7908
•

992

1n

•n su laung matenal place m tn su lated chest and use hot .rocks or
bncks to keep the food hot If you are travehn g a long dJslijnee
qu1ckly cool the hot food and transport 11 as you would cold food
You can reheat the food when you arrove at the dmner
Another precautton IS 10 never carry your food m garbage
bags The bags have been treated w11h msectocodes so the chem
• 1cals could be transferred lo the food
A thermometer can be used to help ensure thai the foods woll
be at the proper temperature for servmg Electnc food warmmg
trays slow coo kers and electnc roasters set at 325 degrees
Fahrenhell wtll keep already cooked foods hoi When senmg
cold foods keep them tn the oce chest a bowl of 1c!e or set out
only small amountS and replemsh frequently
After everyone has been served leftovers should be ch1lled
Immediately of they are to be served agam If the food has he~n
SJttmg out for tWo hours thnJW' 11 out 1 Also throw out small
amo unts of leftovers They should not be mtxed With food thai
was not served
Don I become a staiJSUc thos summer by gelli ng food p01son
tng at your next p1cmc You shouldn 1 1f you remember and fol
low ~stmple slogan ' Keep hot foods hot cold foods cold

The Commumty Calendar IS
published as a free servtce to
non profit groups woshmg to
anno un ce mecungs and ~pectal
events The calendar ts not
deSJgned to promote sales or fund
rmsers of any type Items are
pnnted only as space permots and
cannot be guaran teed to be prmt
ed 1 spcc of1c number of days
TUESDAY
POMEROY
Lupu s/F 1b1 omyalg •a
support
group Tuesda) 6 30 to 8 p m on
the

ho 'rd

room

at

Veteran s

must
be
accompanoed
by
parent/guardoan
and present
1mmumzauon record

WEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Local Board of EducatiOn regu
lar meeting
6 30 p m on
Wednesday .11 the Eastern Ete
mentary Cafctorlum
EAST MEIGS - Eastern H1gh
School
AthkiJC
Boosters
Wednesday 7 p m at Eastern
H1gh School 10 prepare fo1 the
Metg s County Fau

117 E Memorial Dnve
Pomeroy, OH 45769-9615
740-992-7908

Deed Ronald Leon and Teresa A
Jordan to Stanley L and Dtana R
Htggmbotham Racme
Deed Roy L and Patnma Holter
to Alan and Edward Holter Chester

•

CHES I ER - Shade R1v er
Lodge 4S1 F&amp;AM spec1al meet
11\ g 7

r

ll'l lut.: sda)

POM EROY
C IJOJC Mc lg&gt;
Dep ~rtm&lt;nl 1n
pose Ccn ler

-

lmmunJZaiJon
County Health
Me1gs Mulupur
Pomeroy Chold

THURSDAY
POMEROY -

Health video ava1lable at Metgs
L1brary

M~•gs County D1stnct Pubhc
Lobrary
Ebhn chatr of the bu1ldong com

The alternauve health vtdeo
Some Apothecary' ts now avaol
able at area ltbranes oncludmg the
Wood and Mason County Pubhc
Ltbranes tn West V1rg1nta and the
Metgs and Athens County Public
Lobranes tn Ohoo
Cop1es
are also ava1lable at the Ohto Unt
'erstty and Hockmg College
L1branes
The vtdeo produced by Heahng
V151on Ftlms and Thorn Bell. ts a
documentary of the ptoneenng
research bemg conducted by a local
company Sound Health Resources
of Albany
Sound Health Resources os an
mternattonally known non profit
research msutute that studtes the
effects of sound on the human body
and the polenllal of souitd m the
proviSion of heallh care Sound
Health has been developmg pro
grams for preventove medtcme,
sports IDJUfY physocal therapy and
anhnus To date, 11 offers the only
recogn1zed cert1fica1c course on the
use of sound as a polenllal for heal
ong
F.or further tnformauon call
Sound Health Resources at 69891
19

mlltee recommended to the Board

OVAL approves affihate membershtps
Affiliate membershtps wtth lhe
Southeastern Oh1o Correctoonal
Facolny and Cholhcothe Correcllon
al lns!Jiute were approved by the
Ohoo Valley Area Ltbrartes Board of
Trustees at a meetmg held recently
at the Wellston headquarters
Approval to the membershtp
addJUon came on reeommendauon
of Wanda Ebhn who represents the

senous on e~ I rece1ved tckta) so I m
pnntmg It T hank \ ou

What s the truth about pot
cocaone LSD PCP crack speed and
downers' The Lowdown on Dope

place
If you are reltg•ous you belte\e
everythong God created has a pur
pose whether 11 s a banana peel
whit h makes :good compost or c1g
arcne ashes the) can clean slams
off wood A fruit cake can be a
doorstop or a weapon safer than a
gun Or when you
to put your
old car on blocks four fruitcakes
do the JOb Had the Eg•pllans
built the pyram1ds with lrullcake&gt;

has up to the mmu1e mfmmauon on

drugs Send a self addressed long
bu smcs s saze ell\ elope a nd a check
or mone y order for $3 75 (th\ ,
oncludes postage and handlmg l "
Lo-. down c/o Ann Landels PO
Box 11562. Choc 1go Ill 60611
0562 (In Canad a send $4 '5 ) l "
find 0ut more ahout Ann Lander-

"""I

and read her p&lt;t SI LOi umn ~ '1s1t 'th~.:
Crc llOr s S\ ndi LJIC Y.Cb
pogc.: 11
wy.. were uor-. tom

"'II

accepung the quote from the Floor
Show pf Wellston to re carpet the
headquarters butldmg The Board
approved that recommendaiwn and
also accepted the q uotauon of New
man Pauhng of McAnhur to seal
lhe OVAL parktng lot
'
Mark Oakley, Chair of the ad
hoc bylaws commmee and repre
senttng the Nelsonvolle Publtc
Ltbrary, reported to the Board lhat
members have scheduled a 6 30
p m meetmg for August 5 to begm
work on revJStng the OVAL bylaws
The comm111ee will cons1der
recommendatiOns made by OVAL
Counsel Joseph Oths and the
Ltbranans adviSory commlllee
The Board also approved a con
tract with Chrts Hopktns ot
Gnadenhunen Ohto to fac1htate the
contmumg educatiOn progmm tn the
comong year Dtrector Ertc S
Anderson mformed the Board that
OVAL was mtervtewmg three
excellent candoda{l's the followmg
day for the Contmumg Education
AsSistant postuon and the field of
candtdates for the Technology
Assistant pos1t10n was also very
strong

OVAL ts a cooperative reg10nal
ltbrary system chartered by the
State of Ohoo on 1973 II s m1ssoon os
to" provtde contonuong educauon
resource shanng and mnovatJ\e ser
vtces to an~ fosler cooperative
efforts among hbranes m the south

ern Ohto count1es of Al)lens Jack
son Lawrence Me•gs P1ke Ross
Sc1oto and Vmton
' ,
UMW hold annual ptcn1c
The Rock Spnngs Uo•ted
Methedost Women held theor annual

p1cmc on the lawn of the Frann.:s

nJLed lor the man) rule:-. the) pia\
m their chtldrcn ~ 11\C!-. S&lt;t ld Jul 11..

Goegleon home
The

piCniC

was followed hv an

Wandling program &gt;peCJahst Par
are k a~hcrs coo ks chaufkur-.

afte rnoon of feHowsh1p In addnoon
to the hostess other members
allendong were Ann Werty, V~rgm•a
Wears M1ldrcd Hudson Ha1el Ball
Rn~ Radford Ins Collms and Pan
dora Colltns Guests were Jean
LeJtwetler Carolyn Collins and
N1cole McDamel

Tram show slated at library
The erghth annual tram show
"oil be held at llle Metgs County
L1brary 216 West Maon Street
Pomeroy from July 26 to Aug I
The free even( Will feature stx
operaui\g layouts tncludmg L1onel
and Amencan Flyer along wnh a
d1splay of raolroad memorab1ha
The diSplay Will be avatlable for
vtewmg dunng the regular hbrary
houts 9 am to 9 pI]) Monday
through Frtday Saturday from 9
am to 5 p m and Sunday I p m 10
5 p m The dosplay room os wheel
chaJr access1ble and atr condmoned
For more tnformatlon res1dents
may call 992 7541 or 992 340 I
NatiOnal Pa'rents
observed

Day to be

National ParenLo;; Da; has b~;:en

celebrated on the fourth "'cck ol
July SIOCe 1994
,
I~ obse rvance of the occasoon
1h1~ year Health Recovery Services
Inc and the Absuncnce Education

Program of the Me1gs County Pros
ccullng Auorney s Offoce w11l ho&gt;l
an open house The even t w1ll take

place at the Health Recover) Ser
VICes ofhce 1n Moddlcport at 138
North Second A'e on Sunday Jul)
25 from noon to 3 p m
Too often parents 1rc unr c~..ol!"

cnt~

pr-o\lders mentors and fnend s JU ~l
to name a lew There 1s no one nghL
Y..3) to be an e tfe (.; li\C pgrc nl
be cau~c all parents have thctr em n
style of part.:nlm g she t:ontu1Ued

AI the open house there wJII he
brochures on parenung drug anJ
alcohol education mformallon
abstinence awan:ne~:-. and educa
llonal mform atlon t along wuh
refreshments and parentmg act1' 1
ties wath pnz e~ for the \.\mner ...
Anyone w1th quesuons may cn nt Kt

Wand long at 992 S277
!25th anmversary to 'b• cel•hrat
•d
The 125th annJhrs.lr\ of Sta1
Grange 778 will be observed Satur
day and Sunday at the grange hall
Salem Center
ActiVIties \\Ill get unden;a\ at
II am wolh a chJCken beef 3nd
pork barbecue dmner and contlnut:
through late Sunday afternoon
Entertamment will be at noon un
Saturday v.nh lo~.:al c ntert amc rs l:.U
Coen Carl Wnokle Rachel Pnde
, more and Da\ld St1fner Jr A.t '
p m the Galha County G1 angc&lt;&gt;
w1ll present a h1~to m:al skll fDI
lowed at· 3 30 p m by the Alb.mv
.Grangers doong Bury the Grouch
1 he degree of laborer "Ill be
presented bv Star Granger~ at 4 r I 1
foll nwt:d by membership av.. ard ...
and the h1 stor,)l of Star Gr::m_c )\ d
the past 12S )cars At 5 p m the
M1dn1gh1 Cloggers wdl P" fo11n
Sunda\ s cntcrl:-~mmcnt \\all
1ndudc the degree C"~f lah tH~o:r :11 ~
p m a &gt;kll Hlllbdl ) Wodchn. I 1
th e Alban; Grangors at l p m 1nJ

.

~.:ntcltalnllH.:nt

h) NanLV Stu.:k 11

~

prn

Curried Lentil and Orzo Salad with Roasted Root Vegetables
By The Associated Press

Vegetarians are not likely to
need to co nvmctng that any day ts
A Good Day for Salad'
The book of thai totle (Chrom
cle Books $17 95 paperback) by
Loutse F1szer and Jeannette Fer
rary, offers enough salad rec1pes
to satisfy most tastes ' Salad can
be the so!ut10n to almost any meal

d1ced
to a boll Add orw and wok for I 0
Jfld s 1lt Spr~.:ad 'r.: Qe tabl e-~ 111 t nc
1
I large sweet potato peeled and lljtnUtes Dram and add to lentils
laver on a sodcd bak10g shcct
d1ced
Toss w11h I 1ablespoon 011 and let Roast for 1bou120 mmute ; or unlll
3 tablespoons monced shallots
coo l Sur m parsley and cola nlrb
lender and &gt;hghtly bro" ned Lei
I' tea spoon ground cumm
Preheat oven to 4SO F In a ~.:uol md H,ld to lentil mixture
112 teasp oon salt
large bowl toss carrots parsn1ps
Wh1-.k all dressmi! m~redlt.: n t-.
Dress1ng
celery rool and sweet potato wolh tog dhr.:r and pour O\~r ~~.:7tuJ 11 n
I teaspoon curry powder or to shallots and rema1mng 2 table
tun.:
taste
sooons of ml Soronkle wnh cumm
I tablespoon .c hutney
,.;.;;.;.;..;.;....;.;....;.;...;.;..;.;...;.;..;.;...;.;.;;;.;;.;;.;...;.;.~------------.,

occas,on, they Wrtle
' Currted Lentil and Orzo
Salad W1tb Roasted Root Vegetables
I cup red lenttls
3 cups water
I cup orzo pasta
3 tablespoons ohve ool
112 cup chopped fresh parsley
114 cup chopped fresh ctlantro
3 carrots peeled and dtced
2 parsmps peeled and d1ced
1/2 celery root peeled and

I tablespoon DIJOn mustard
114 cup rtce vmegar
1/4 cup olive otl
Sah and freshly ground pepper
to taste
In a mediUm saucepan bnng
len11ls and water to a bot! Reduce
heat to a stmmer and cook unu I
lenttls are tender about 15 m1n
utes Dram and place lentil s 10 a
1
large bowl
Wh1le the l~n tll s are cook1ng
brtng a mcd1um saucepan of water

women all churches tnvtled On
July 29 7 p m a prayer ser~oce
at the Ash Street Free W1ll Bap
list Church 1n Middleport by the
Lad1es for the Lord For more
1nformauon call Debboe Johnson
44 t 1415 or Jan Swogger 992
6667
\
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tup
pers Pla1n s VFW Post 9053
ThuJSday 7 30 p m at the hall

SATURDAY
RACINE - Corcle reun10n
Saturday noon dtnner Star Moll
Park Racme Table serv1ce pro
v1ded
POMEROY - Meog s County
G1rl Scout falf judgmg Saturday
Me1gs County Fa~rgro unds All
proJects to be 1n place b) tO am
For more 1nfnrmat10n co ntaL:t
Debb1e Cooke 992 1771

If the 992 Exchange Is a Free Part of Your
•
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Gallipolis
Toll Freel

Lad1cs for the

DIAL

Lord
a n ant crdt.: nOnllnau onal
women s m1m s try praye r walk

Thuosday 7 p m 111 Middl eport on
lro nt o( the MJddf epurl Dep art
mcnl Store Moll Street on
Pomeroy on tho IIVCJiront All

they would s1111 be on mont cond1t1on
TOM IN SAN JOSE CALIF
DEAR TOM Pyramods ou t of
fruitcakes' You sound hke a hll of J
fruotcake yourself but your lellcr
was a refrc,hJRg change from all the

the fruitcak e who sent It m the first

r

The Sentm'el .rews
Botii'ne
l1

'
.
)
2156
99r. •

992•7834

-

-.-..,

-

I'

-

To offer sto~ suggest1ons report late

breaking news and offer news t1ps
::.=========================~

Protect the imggrtant·
pOOple in your life.

't9j

Memon 1f Ho sp1t.1l Pomeroy

:Melgs County 9rants Office

more ltkely to d1e on a swommmg
pool than m a car acctdent 1s a
shocker Bless you for all the ch1l
dren you sa\ed today
Dear Ann Lanllers I hope the
woman m Mmnesota learned a les
son about recycled g1fts when she
got her 3 year old fnntcake back
Any person who rece1ves a frUitcake
(rom another fruncake os as nuuy as

Society Scrapbook

. TIME OUT FOR TtPS

the best seat he sa~d But there
were three seat, for l b1lhon people
l was luck) to occ upy one ofthme
I he two

the vast majonty of pedtatnc drown
and 4 liltll die, and another 2,500 mgs
w11l be tnjured 11lcse tragcdtes woll
Learn CPR InsiSt that all care
not be the result of shoollngs or traf
gtvers ltnow CPR
fie accodents These k1ds wtl! be
If your chtld IS m1ssmg look •n
IDJUred m sw1mmmg pools A swtm
the pool first Every second counls
mmg pool ts 14 umes more hkely Keep a ponable phone near the pool
1han a motor vehtcle to be onvolved for emergencoes
'
m the death of a chold under 5 years
G1ve your ch1ldren swtmmlng
of age
lessons Wh1le thos' woll not make
For every chtld who drowns your choldren drown proof 11 w1ll
many others are InJUred, often help The bottom hne 1s there os no
severely All those accodents are pre
subsmute for adult supemsoon
vemable
Thanks, Ann for the hves you
If you have a pool remember that Will save thts summer
DENNIS
adult superviSion IS essential Never BURR, R N POOl:. SAFE PRO
leave a ch1ld alone near the pool for • GRAM, BAPTIST HOSPITAL
a second In most drownmg cases
PENSACOLA A..A
lhe chold was mossmg for less than
DEAR DENNIS The thanks
five mmutes
should go to you for helpmg save
Use a barroer a fence alleast S those choldren All the precaullons
feet htgh enclosed on all four sodes you suggested are easy 10 foi!Qw and
Proper pool fencmg could prevent the stallsloc that a ch•ld os 14 limes
•

the three astron.IUts

Fear of V2K ·spawns ,new interest in solar power
•'

Page7
Tuesday, July 20, 1999

Reader asks what male technicians really know about mamrnagrams?

Online used car traders announce merger
By BRIAN S AKRE
AP Auto Writer
DETROIT - Two of the largest
used vehocle -buymg soles on the
Internet announced plans Monday to
merge a move that could provtde
access to nearly I 5 molhon used car
and trucks ltsungs
AutoConnect com and Auto Trad
er Onhne woll JOin forces '" the fall

The Daily Sentinel

lo\3'!- no mHrc Llff1ual app.;llh.: for
mann~d c'rl~..-alhm'
Tell' }t.:ar~ agv m th~.:

ture of tht.:lr

Recorder posts Meigs land transfers
rt~orded

Tuesday, July 20, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

"-J

o~ now have the option of pn&gt;t&lt;'COilg \&lt;1tlr t.unii) mcmlxrs
or a busmess parmer "W1th lo" cost

10- or 20 year level term l~e
msurance from Auto O.vnet&gt;
lnsur.mce 0Jmf&gt;&lt;Ul\ Call tiS for more

details an,l

1u

&gt;mpcnm e pn'f&lt;&amp;JI

'

.Auto-Oumers ln6unurce
L le Home Ca Bus ness

74 ;1;, RoM,.., IO,t•

214 East Mam
Pomero)
992-6687

Holzer Clinic ... Keeping the Promtse!
I

•

�Tuesday, July 20, 1999
Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel ·

.The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, July 20, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

60

Authorities hope to make bad boaters observe the rules
By JOHN SEEWER ·
AsiOCiated PreM Writer
Skimming
SANDUSKY
across Lake Erie in a patrol boat with
the moon's rays reflecting on the
water, Joe Yingling looked through
the darkness and spotted an anchored
boat with its lights off.
A man was spread flat·Out near the
boat's bow, his le ~ ·dangling over the
side.
''I didn't know if he had a heart
attack or what," Yingling said.
"I poked at him for a few minutes
and then finally he woke ·up. He.
rolled over and growled at us." the

state watercraft officer said .

The drunk man had decided to
drop anchor and sleep off the alc ohol
in the middle of Lake Erie. " If he
would ha' e fallen overboard.there's
no doubt he would have drowned,"
Yin gling &lt;aid.
With lakes and· rivers in Ohio
more crow9ed than eve r, Division of

Watercraft officers never know what

they will come across:
. There were a re...:ord number of
registered lmats tast year -

almost

W~ .OOO

Accidents have risen three
out of·thc last four yea rs although the
number· of

d~a th ~ ha~

hcc n Bc lm\

while dnvmg a car:
• l'ishennen not watching where
their boat is going as they untangle a
~1au ~t1 n. the cau:ioe \)I al!nl)"tl "C\t'O
o·r C\'cry 10 an: 1dcn t..., 1:-. ~omc l.. 1nd of fishing line .
• A boater standing on the roof of
had boating - inc\pcriem:c. Gm~··
his
cabin. pretending he's surfing.
lessness. unpro~r loaJ•ng . "P'-'L"dlng
•
A Jet Ski operator doing a back·
and other ~1 pes of ruh.&gt; hrcalmg .
·
Th at • ~n · t a :-.urpri~c: t\) Ymgling ward hand- stand - while driving.·
Forgeuing " the rules of the road"
and partner Jeff Nt:hk "' ho " l1rJ.. the
late shi ft on th&lt; lake. The'.'"· h&lt;rn is the biggest problem on th~ water.
together fi\ e years. ' ratfol lng fllr·· watercrafl officers sav.
Driving a boat is .-much different
drunks: speeders and as~o ucJ " Jt~r
because on the
scofflaws. During 1he ir mghts lln thl! than driving a
watcr a boat can come up from ~ny
lak e. lhey·,c see n boaters do thanp
that most ,\,ould nc ve:·r think •Jf tl) mg d~rcction .
"There are constant decisions to
make while you're driving a boat."
said watercraft officer John Johnson.
" In a boat, it's thinking process."
Mechanical problems account for
just 14 percent of all accidents while
m&lt;nts. and the Akzo Nohcl Si~kcns weather is to blame in about 16 perCch1l BL DEK toned topc&lt;Jal treat- "cnl, Coast Guard statistics show.
ment sti ll passed muster with us. (The
Alcohol as an accident cause is.
Ak lu i; J t\\'o-L·oat system. dt: signe,J
hard to measure because boaters ,c an
sO that th~ base coat weathers !'or up report acci,dents hours after they hap. tu a yearbcli&gt;r&lt; the topcoat is applied. pen . But it's definitely a fa~tor, the
The tup&lt;:u:n-we tested had weathered
t'or onlv sevt:n ' months when we
nonnal.
Acc0rdin g tn U.S . Coa::.t Guard

car

1

Finish treats your deck better

Man y of the boards from the tests
By THE EDITORS
begun
,in 1996 were ~ad specimens
OF CONSUMER REPORTS
·
indeed.
A !of of the airborne dirt that
Even if you have the wherewith·
·
liad
colle&lt;lcd
on them couldn 't easialto build a deck ·of red. wood. cedar
lY'
be
brushed
ur hosed off. Most
or some other durable but expensive
wood, you'll need to protect it with s~ mitransparcnt and toned products
a finish. OtherWise, the wood will had failed badly: some had shed
eventually crack. It will also turn almost all their color. The clear deck
gray, which you may or may not like. treatriu~nt~ had aiiHwcJ the w ood 10 assessed u' in fall llJ98. The base coal
The way you want the wood to turn grf.ly and . often . to accumulate was in excellent Shape before we
look will affect how often you need lots of dirt . S~1all cracks were pl en- applied the .topcoat.)
' to tre.at it. As a rule, the longest-last· tiful on many boards.
The . outlook for deck 'owners is
After 32 lllUnth s·. onl y Cabot
ing deck treatments are the mo st
opaque; they can last for two to three Dec king Stain 1S".J per gall on) and r'nuch imprmted. however. by the nine
treatments we began testing i.n 199 8.
years . .Jf you want the wood's natur- Glidden Endurance Deck and Siding
Oil
Stain
($
11
}
S(' mitran ~parcnl tre at·
al color to show, you can use a clear
water-repellent product. But if you •
do, you can almost certainly 1ex.pecl
to be applying a fresh coat·of water
ROBERT TRENT JO.NES
repellent every year.
GOLF TRAIL
Whichever type of deck treatment
you prefer, you don't hav,e many
good choices. Of the 36 products ~e •
began testing in 1996. on ly three had
held up well enough by fall 1998 for
us to continue testing them . The rest
allowed the wood to darken from
ingrained soil, fade or gray from sun·
light, crack from alternating between
damp ana dry, and blacken from
L

officers say.
"We 've arrested guys for DUI
"'ho I know would have never even
gotten behind the wheel of a car in
their condition." Yingling said. He
remembers a close call when his boat
was nearly hit by a drinking l&gt;oatcr.
"I bet you couldn 't have put your
hand between our two boats," he
said.
,
.
In the last fi ve years. the number
of registered hnats has risen primarily because of the growing populari - ·
ty of j:&gt;crsonal watercraft - known
by their brand names of Jet Ski. Wave
Runner and Sea. Doo.
But with the greater numbers..
comes more accidents .
"Most of the trouble is with the
greenhorns. the one s who just rented
or borrowed them," Johnson said. '
State lawmakers have recognized
the r.rowing concern abour Ohio's
crowded waterways a0d young
boaters. The Legislature last year
enacted a law ,requiring· that any
boater born after Jan. I, 1.982. nius.t

CHECK THE
WANT ADS FIRST!

WANTED:
own home as a

Full·time employment in your
Home Services Worker with
Buckeye Community Services. We provide salary
plus benefits an·d a daily room and board rate. You
provide a home, guidance and friendship In a family
~tmosphere . Requires ability to teach personal
hv1ng skill and a commitment to lhe growth and
development of an . individual with mental
relardation. Home must be in Meigs County. Send
letter of' interest or resume to : P.O. Box 604.
Jackson, OH 45640-0604, ATTN: Christy, no later
than 7/.27/99.
·
Equal Opportunity Employer

111ildew.
'
Fortunately, product s see m to be
improving. We began t~sting n.inc
new deck l rj!alment ~ m 199R . After
seven mont hs of weathermg. all

looked much beuer than rnost of their
predecessors did ~ft e r the sa me
amount of e" posure
We 're testing three types of deck
treatmenls:
• Semitransparent products supply
color essentially by . maskmg the
wood grain. They're large ly opaque.
• "Toned " products are lightly
tinted and enhan ce the wood color.
• Clear products show the natural
··
·
color of the wood.
We coated,400 3-foot-long panels
of pressure-treated Southern yellow
~ine with the treatments. according to
the manufacturers' instruction , then
positioned thern on ~ 55 -by 21·foot
fJ:Rme test deck in a sunny spot on the
grounds of our Yonkers, N.Y.. headquartetS. This iS a severe test because •
the boards are close to the ground,
hastening the effects of humidity.
To gauge the effects of mildew, we
coated two se~s of plain pine boards
with the treatments. One set stayed in
a wooded area at our Yonkers testing
center; the other was shipped to
Florida for te,sting in Miami 's heat .
and humidity. "

complete a safety course.
The law doesn't go into effect
until ne.t year. giving young boaters
time to meet the requirement.
Already, boating instructors say
classes are filling up.
Bill Hall, who teaches a safety
course with the U.S. Power Squadron·
in Onawa County,, said there were
nine high school students in his last
class.
" Eight dido ' t pass ," he said.
"They thought it was a joke:"
Boating education is expected to
be mandatory for freshman students
at Port Clinton High Sc~ool iri the
upcoming year. Police and school .
officials in the Lake Erie shoreline
town dec'ided that too many young
students are riding personal watercraft without knowing what they are
duing .1
"h' s,not unusual for kid s to come
. in to schoo l with broken limbs," said.
Michael Schifer. the high school's
principaL "Going out o~ the lake is
just taken l';&gt;r granted."
•'

Foun d K 1nens . to give away 10

A &amp; DAuto Upholstery • us, Inc
Rutland , Ohio

Truck seats, car seats . .headliners,
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. motor~ycle se(ilts:
boat covers, carpets, etc.
.
·

HOWDD
EICIYinll CO..,

...... can .......

.....

., ••• •ra . ,.......
·M•Ichtwl
• bl•latng wall I lrlclc

Bulbloser &amp; BaclrJ.oe
Se"'ice•
Bouse &amp; Trailer Sites

'-1111 Coaltnu:tlan

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Mon • Fri 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

.Septi&lt; Syolem• &amp;
Urilirie•

(740 742-8888

(7401 992·3131

SHADE RIVER ·AG
SERVICE

SHADE IUVER
· AG SEIMCE"

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

Call 98S•383I
6/21 1mo.

St. At. 7

Tuppers Plains, OH

7 40-985·3813

a~ ... ~ ..

111111

A.

ADVANCED DANNAGE SYSTEMS INC.

• -rr\11'

.

• sw"'~

Grll\6\1\9

4.. .0!

public golfon earth."
-Paula DiPerna, Tbe New York Times

Opening in Middleport
Taking Applications .
Friday 3 pm • 6 pm
Sat.10am-1pm

..

Various shllb available ·
.Full-time and part·time employment.
Competitive wages _and benefits. ·
Please apply or send [esumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
C!O Personnel
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleaeant, WV 25550
• Fax: (304) 875-6975
EOE

IN

ALABAMA

WWW.Al' J GO · LF.COM

.ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning .
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
4fl TFN

REYNOLDS
CONSTRUCTION
Shingled Roofs
Vinyl Siding &amp; Sofil
Professional work at
an affordable price

7 40-339-4160
I.

Take the pain out
of painting, and let
, me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6.pm leavj!l
message. After 6 pm

740·985·4180
Free Estimates
urww.SuntelHorns.com

Sunset Boma
CoaatrucUon
Now Conttructlon I
Romodtll119'Kh- Clblnttl
Vinyl Slclng.Rooi..OocQ.
Ga111gea ,

Free E:tttimates

·740-742-3411
Bryan Reeve~ . ,, .

Help Ua Celebrate The %GOth
Aluaivenary 01 Rutland.

A Special Souvenir Edition Will Be Included In The
Sentinel In Mid-July. /
:Many stories and pfiotograpfis of significant events relating to tlie
fiistory and development of 'Rutland will be featured irr tfie publication .
If you prefer an alterrrative to regular adr;ertising copy, perfiaps you
mig/it consider an fiistoric account cmd pfiotograpfis of your business.
We will be fiappy to assist you ill designing arr ad.

Call
992·2155 and Speak With
Dave Karris-Ext. 104
or Kathy Williamson-Ext. 105.

Susan Reevel

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
•ReplacerT)enl Windows
•Room Additions
•Roofing
COMMERCIAl aod _RISIDINIIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7643

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS
Sitli~tg &amp; St~flil

Colonial Financial

'

1·100·311·3391
Free Estimates
Contractors Welcome
Albany, Ohio

Business Services
Your

Concrete
CoDD.eetlon
25 yrs exper.
740·742·8015
877~353·7022

(toll fr~e)
Free Estimates

WICKS
HfiOLinG InC.
We Deilver Limes.tone, Gravel,
Sand, FiU Dirt,
Agricu~turrd

Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil

SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
· Dirt • Sand
9115-4422
Cheater,' Ohio

I
$59.
Lowest price everl
This week onlyl
1·800·459-7357 nat·L

J &amp; LInsulation
&amp; Siding
'"Vin~ Siding

.STORAGE
ST. AT. 7
10 X 10$40.
1O.;)( 20 $60,

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

DRIVEWAY STONE

Wells, ~islerns, pools,
lrees, lawn &amp;gardens

45771
740-9"49-2271

The-Water-Man
.
740-742-2080

Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

992·5455 .

AIJ, Yerd Salet Mutt
. Bt Paid In Advance.
QEAQLINE: 2:0(1 p.m.
the day befOre the ad
It to run . SuncS.y

711&amp;99 1 mo pa

Road
Racl ne, Ohio

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
.

I

J.M. ROWE TRUCKING
Dump Trudt Service
• Gravel • Limesrone
• Fill Dirt • EIG .

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

740-247-4292

' HONEY BEAR FJSTIVAL
August 14th
Middleport 12·6 pm
Featuring

Live Bee Beard Demonstrations

$500.00 CASH
LOANS BY PHONE
FAST AND SIMPLE
· NO CREDIT CHECKS(
$1200 Monthly Income, Active
Checking Account, Direct Deposited
Paycheck Required.
Caii1-888,891·MONY
NO UPFBONT FEES!

DEPOYSAG
PARTS
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipm•nt Part s
Factory .Au1hori1,ed
Ca~e.-IH Parts

o ;·alers .
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

740 817o0313

/

.:'!..

"

O nv e rs Free 3 · Week CDL
Tra 1nmg Earn ~?€ ,· $32 000 .1 ~1
Yr W / Full B enefits NO E:..p ·
Needed P A M TransporT Sp ecial · Call Toll Fr ee '·871 ?30·
6002 Sun · Ff 1 7 AM i PM
www pamuan!&gt;port C:.IT

• 10:00 afm. ~turdly .
Garage Sille: Route 160 'To White
Road . tst Lane To A1gh t. Tue~:
day, Through? to-5.
·

Easy WOI'k ' Ex ce ll ent Pay 1 Assemble P·oaucts a1 Home Ca ll
Toll Free 1· 80 0·467·556 6 E~t
121·70

Garage Sale: T hurselay. Fri'day.
Saturday, 136 First Avenue , 9-4.
lad1es Larg8 Size C!otl'}mg, Other
Items.

E .. per1e nc ed CaSI'l •e r
LOCker ·[304)695· 3603

'

·' All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
.Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the

' .

day before the ad Ia to run ,
Sunday &amp; Monday .edl11on-

• New Homes
• Gar,ges
• Complete .
Remodeling
Stop &amp;Compare
FREE.
'
ESTIMATES •

9854473
7122/TFN

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room addltlo~s &amp; Romodellng
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbl~g
•Rooflng &amp; Gutters
•Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
•Pallo &amp; Porch Decks

Free Estimates
· V.C. YOUNG Ill
. 992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yro. Loeal

Poml!roy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St., .
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top' line.
Uc. # 00,50 U/19/lfo

Mauling ·
Limestone &amp; Gravel

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138
3/11 /99 TFN

005

Personals

Gentleman Seeking Companio.n·
ship From Nice Female Fo r Talks,

Walks &amp; Frie ndship. Send Re ·
p lie s To: 553 Se cond Ave n ue .
Apartment ~J403. GallipoliS.
STA AT

DATING

TONIGHT !

Hay e Fun Meeting Eligible Sm ·
gles In Your Area . Call For M ore
l nlormatlon . 1-860-AOMAN CE ,
E.1Ct : 9735.
SJart Dating To n1g hf! Ha ve flm
· playing the OhillJ Dating Game. 1·
tiOO·AOMANC E. e.ICiension 9681 .

New To You Thnll ShOppe
9 west St1ms on . Athens
740-592-HM2
QUa lity clo th mg and household
items . $ 1.00 bag sale e very
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday
9:00·5:30-

40

Giveaway

2 Kittens : 1 Wh-ite, 1 Tiger. 740 ·
388·8595.
5 Ad oraDie Kitten s. S weeks old,
Various colors. (304)882-2012 .
Free K111e'ns to goo~ home 2
Grey Males , 1 Striped Female .
(304)675·6799
Fnendly, nme month old ,male kil len, neutered. declawed . all shots ,
supplies mcluded. 740·992· 7727
or 740·592·4789
Pan t1me S1ber1an Husky puppies
740·7 o42·3174
To Good Home . 2 Free Mm1ature
K1t1ens . F 111:ed &amp; Has Had A ll
ShOts. 740·44 6·2201

Thurs./Fri.!S al . BAM· ? Leon·BSO ·
en Road . ,Appro x . 1 mi le from
Rt .62 em Righi. BunkBeds .
Homeln.ter10r, Clothing &amp;More .

80

local Truck.mg Company See~ 1119 ·
O u a11l1ed Truck Onvers Good
P.ay·And Be nefits Send Resu'T1e
To · Dn11er , P.O Box 109 Jack.·
son . Ohio 4564 0. Or Call 1·740·
.286·1463 To Schedule An , Inter·
~ •w

day· l;l04 Jn3-6000

&amp; VIcinity
1

Auction
and Flea Market

·

Medical Process or. FP PT No
E•pe n ence Necess ary. 4 0K PC
ReqUited , Call 1-80Q.-f63-744 0

Need Frve Cat:Jie TV Sa lEs Pe r·
sons lmlneo'1a/eJy Ell cell ent
Pay. loca l Work. Ca ll Charl•e 1·
877 · 830·6583 Leave Name &amp;
·call Bade Number

Bi ll MoOOis paugh Aucti onee ring
Complete Auctio neering Servic·
es , Cons 1g nm'e nt auctio n - M ill
Street, Middleport . T hurs days .
Oh10 License H693 , 740-989·
',2623.
Ric K Pears on Auction Com pany.
lull t1me auct ioneer. complete
au ction
serv1ce .
li cens ed
•66 .0hio &amp; West V1rg inia. 304·

ii

Need to h1re !&gt;Omeone 18 or older
\n pnvate group home. iorr,)o9am
sMt, 740-992·.5023
NbWHtAING

5170.00 PER WEEK/PT
(GUARRANTEED SALARY,
Men And Women Needed Tc De
Te~phOne Operator 'w or k Fot
LOCAL RADIO

. sTATION PROMOTIONS

773-5785 Or 304·773·5447

' Day And Eventn_g
Shilts Ava11ao1e
• Full And Part T1me Open1ng
• No EJ1.per1enced Needed·
We Tra 1n
Students Welcome

Wedeme ye r' s Auct ion Serv ic e.
Gallipolis, Ohio 740·379·2720.

90

s

Larry

Mechca! AsS IStant Or W~stmor­
eland 's 0111ce Monaay thr u Fn·

Pt. Pleasant

30 Announcements

CREDrr PROBLEMS???

DRI V ERS · t«.,MEb tAT.f OPENINGS . REG IONAL OTR 513'1 .i\t
29 CPM rAil M1 · Unl?a::rng Pay ·
Pe rsonah1ed D ISDatch . Hem e
blten · t-t ollday !Vacal!On PaJ• "
401 K fMetl uo,a l P•es , Oenta : As
s1gnea 99 T2 0CO s R·ae· P"O·
gram . 98"'~ No ·Toli'C h F r e tr;~~l;lt
Call Butc h At Su1'!1tn11 Tra~sporta
. bon 800-87Hl680 EOE

edition· 2;00 p.m.
Frtday. Mond•y edition

ANNOUNCEMENTS

·. Got an 18" Mini-dish?
. Want 320 channels? Call Direct
Wholesale. (A Canadian Company)
1

Cosmet o1091S1 NeeOed Fu 1: &amp;
Pa n T 1me Pa 1d Vacahon s . F r ~e
C-E.U Hours. 74!).446·7267 ·

4 Fam1ty July 22nd. ·&amp; 23rd , 9·5.
1/ 2 Mrle Oul C entervill e, 19193
State ROute 279, Clothes . Bat:&gt;y

SAYRE
HARTWELL TRUCKI.NG

WATER HAULING

Landscape Material,
Thpsoil &amp; Mushroom

Cornpurer Users Needec Work.
Own Hrs $2 5K ·~BOK&lt; Yr 1·800·
47 &amp;~53X 7777 . www 1cwp.CO'T't

2 Fam1hes 1 Yard Sale. 7/21,22, 4
MileS Out 8 \Aav1lle P1ke On RIQI'lf

PH: (740)992-2772
GENERATORS
1-15 kw (7.5
Call 1-509-276-7832 or
Diesels 28115 N. Short
Park, WA

EOE

Pomeroy,
Mlddlep&lt;irt
&amp; Vicinity ...

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

10/25196 tfn

Don '1 Need A Big One
Call A Uule 011e

up to 81on

. Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

992-1717

740-992-3470

Bee and Bear Costume Contest, Honey Bear
Raffle, Crafts, Demonstrators, Sidewalk Sales,
Farm Market, Window Displays; Calliope Music,
Model, Railroad Display, Food, Live Entertainment
and More. Information Call 740-992-4197
•

DUMP TRUCK

(Low Rates)

WORRYING!!!

(No Sunday Calls)

Z'i

STRUGGLING WITH BILLS?
WEEKLY SALARY
CONSOLIDATE INTO .ONE; LOW
PAY,MENTII
'
mail from home. · No.
ln&amp;ces11&amp;ry. FT/PT. Genuine
Reduce or Waive lnleresl
Free supplies. Rush
.
Stop lale Fees
3013 South Wolf Road, Stop Collector Calls Avoid Bankruptcy
1200, Wastchesler, IL 60154
CONTINENTAL CREDIT
COUNSELING
I
Sales Brochures! Free
I
Auto Loans, Personal loans, D&amp;bt
Start
Opportunity!
Credit Problems OK.
GSECO, 11220
Financial 1(800)247-5125
PMB 108, Florissant,

R. L. .HOLLON
.
.
TRUCKING

29670 Bashan

Compost
Ligld Hauling

70

1:OOpm Frldoy.

•Roofing &amp;Seamless Guner
•Re~ocement Windows
· •Concrete ,
•Room AddiHons -tioniges
eDecks &amp;Boot.Docks
James KeesH II

• Land -Note Portfolios

Linda's Painting

Free estimates

•.•·

$$
WE BUY
$$
.., Seller Financed Notes
• Insurance Settlements

1 - U00 - 96 9 - I .Z OO F ac t

..
Howard L Writesel

SITES

YOUR CREDIT DOESN'T MAnER!
-oEBT CONSOLIDATION_.
IMPOUND. Honda's,
THERE IS NO CREDIT CHECK!
ONE simpla low monthly payment
Toyota's, Chevys, Jeeps,
Reduce/Eliminate interest
*GUARANTEED lPPROV&amp;U
Sport Ulil~ies . Fee Required.
Save thousands while becomii)Q debl · All You Need is avalid cfiec*ing accounff
Call Nowl
Programs for renters, homeown· aoo-m-7470, ext. 7833
ers and even people wnh credit diffi- ·
PRE·APPROVAL BY PHONE!
culties. Specializing in credit cards,
The Toi~Free Number Belowl
colleclion acc:ounls, medical bills and
' unsecured loans. Call1·800-897medk:ail
2200."ext. 340. A 501(c)(3)
Noi-Foi-Profil Organizalion.
www.cambridgecredit.org

CERIIFIED NURSING ISSISIANIS

l DAY...l NtGHT GOIRHCJTI!L

Sl"

FREE ESTIMATES
Sumner Road.

38782

• 6/22/99 1 mo pd

MJ IJP'frrHlt em ~required!

. Lorig-Term Care Opvorttinities

t -800·949·4444
I'ACII.AGES STAI'IT AT

STETIIEM@EUREKANET.COU

7 40-992-0038

740~992-5232

IT'S AN UNSECURED VISA CARD!

GUDUIIE NURSES
NURSING ISSISIIIIIS

~::::::mc::il

Lost Girls .prescnpt1on glasses
May have lost in Meado wbrook
AOclilton. (»4 t6 75-344 7.

Call for details

33795 Hiland Rd.
. Pomeroy, Ohi.o

Help Wanted

ISIGII.OII IOIIUS INCLUDED)

~Ills Med iCal Denta l V1s•on
Compa ny Pcud Ret1reme nt Plan
PLUS ' 01 K Attar 90 Oa~s (W1th
M~ tcnmg 1 Company Pa1d Vaca·
lion A nd Pa1d Ho lidays ~s·. No
Touch Fre1ght Satellite com•ru;nl
cat1on Cred'1t Un1on O ~r e ct De PQ,S II Ass H~n M Convent 1ona1s
Company Pa 1d Umforms Stocl
Purc h ase Call 800·555-C WTS
cwt JObsOc on· •ay com Con Way
Trucklb M Serv •ces CWT Is An

773-5969.

PHONE: (740) 98S4218
EMAIL:

750 East State Street Phone (740)·593-6671
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better Wa , Eve
6/29,mo

High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage

· REGISIERED NURSES

'~ .. some ofthe best

JEFF STETIIEII

Pomeroy, OhiO 45769

Now Renting

CIASSIFIEDSI

CLASS A COL DRIVERS O&lt;td•·
caled . Aeg 1onal &amp;. OTR Solos
S 30/MI Teams $ 34 Ml Sphl
1~ Company Paid Hea 11~· Ben·

lost Fr1day. sma ll black key
case . l wO valuable coms tns1de ,
Fabnc Shoe:! \IICIMy, reward , 304--

Equipmenl C~nea &amp; Oegreased

20Yrs . Exp. • Ins .. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Acute Care Opportynitiet!

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

2852

Fre• Estimat••

In the

~

Found Male SoMtr. near Route 2
..... 13041675-7755

We deliver. ALMOST anything

TREE SERVICE

·Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting application/resumes for the
following positions.

Tomatoe pickers needed

Trucks - lractor
Trailers - ded&lt;s - driveways

· t'e-t"'~"!~ 24 Hr. ·Taxi
a,l De:livery Service

Buy, Sell or Trade

110

ute 1 Must Have A Onvers L1·
cense. Ba Oependable 740· 7 '2~

. f '"

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

._

5poyod ~ . -. (304jt73-!1626

Thmg s. Anti ques . Wha t Nors .
AM Mucn More l
·

8' Gravelless Leach
100' ·1000' Rolk 1' &amp; 3/4' 200#Wa1er line
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp;Regulators Water Sloroge Tanks
,

JOIE$'

18, 18, 20, 21, 22 12 TC

l

POWEIWISH

Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock

....,.,rt

(7) 9, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 1~.

Tll·niTI MOilLE

Help Wanted

A Person· To Help Qn' Paper Ro·

Lost Br own , Ma le , OachshuM
Neuteted Answers to •t.ta• ~ Lnlle gray on chtn losr tn Mas on
Coumy An •mal Shelter \/u:1mty
Fam 11 y Pet
Re'fifa rd
Call:
{30C)675-6119

Stop In An_d See
Steve Riffle
Sales Represenlative
Larry Sc-hey

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply '

PUBLIC NOTICE
annual
Form
fiO PF lor tho Kibble
Foundation, Bernard V.
Fultz, TrUet•, •• aVIIllable
lor public lnapectlon at
llernllrd v. FultZ .._ 0111.,.,
111 112 Weal Second Street.
Pomeroy, Ohio 457e8, durIng regular buatne.. houra
lor a period or 180 daya
oubHquent to publication
ol tliltl notlca.
The

110

gOOd nome WiU help wll:n be1ng

Happy Ad.

Public Notice

Lost and Found

Wanttld to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. S1l·

•

ver And Gold Coins . Proo fsets .
Diamonds . Anllctue Jewelry. -Gold
Rings , Pre-1930 U.S. Curren cy,
Sterling, Etc . Acqu isitions Jewelry
· M.T.S. Coin Shop , 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis. 740448·2842
Ant 1ques. top Prices paid. RiVeri ne 'A.·ntique s, Pomeroy. Oh1o.
Russ Moor e owner .} 740·:.H2 --

2526.
Buying Sta n din g Cher r y Hard
WOOd Timber, 740·256·6 172
Clean Late Mod l1 1 Cars Or
Trucks . Low..M il es. 1995 Model s
Or Newer. Sm ith Bu ick Pontiac,
1900 Ea stern Avenue . Gallipolis
Wanted To Buy : Used M·o'bil e
Home s.. Call 740·41G-0175. Or 1·

304-675·59e5.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

·

Help Wanted

$2-,000 WEEKLY! Ma iling 400
'Br ochur es! Sat 1sfac110 n G uar·
· anleed! Postage &amp; Supplies Provrd ed! Rush Se ll -Addressed
Stam ped Envelope ! GIGO . OEPJ
5. Box 1438 . ANT IOC H . TN-:•
3701 1·1 438 . Star.t.fm mediately. •

1800

Apply In Person .~I
•7 P1ne Street
Galhpohs. OH
Monday Jul~ 19th
TueMay July 2,Clth
Wedne sday. July 21 ~t
3 00 P.M 11116 00 PM. 011 '~
Ask Fer· Ms. Hammer
Now Tail in g App l•cat OI"'S Fa·
Drivers For Gall1p0I1S &amp; p. ;, rTle'Ol
Only. Dom1no 's P1zza
OTA Onver Neede d late M l.l d~
Convent ional . Corrpet.t 1ye Pay
PhOne 740·441 .;:~cA'·=·
6:00 Pm 740-441·0558
PO STAL JOBS To ~' o 35 "fA
IN C BE/'JEFIITS , "-1 0, E.XPEP J
EN C E FOR APP AND EXO.rv'
IN FO CALL 1-8U.C· 8' 3 35~.5
E &gt;:: T 11421 0 8 AM g P" P
bAYS ras. ll'lt
Scen ic H111 s H a5 ST"J&lt;\ P c ~l 'J'lt;
Ava 1taole For 2 ·IC PM i'i 1 ·:
P.M ·6 AM ·P lease 4. pD1\ !r P~r·
son . 311 su'ckr1dqe R;.-':1-J 6 ci .\ ~:.

oH' .

.

SlNGERSI GOSPEl C~ C.,E.A\
COUNTRY Ca ll 'llov. T( heQ 1·
800-33,9·4204 Or 1·61~·3 6i 61!:.3
Par App ou,tmen· To C ··~""P Tc
Nash\iill e. Tenne sseP A.n'! .O u '1
tiO'n For Ma1or Rerora Pi:&gt;JlJCers
lnt€rnet www wcm ac

WEEKLY • POTENTIAL

Transpo rt dl,~e: fJr 'CO tee
sk ill ed nu•s1ng f~C iil l } Pr:"l.- de. .
transpona tton tor fh-yslc•·,r ap .
Pomtmenls con sults et c· ~lust
have good dr 1vlrw reco&lt;1. en1o•
work1ng w1th ·estdents &lt;l d ta
Activi ty Ass1s tan l pos1t1 0 n ava i l·
f711l1es Po~r1 1 an rs part tl '1" f'
1
abiEt at R oc~sprmgs RettaD ten·
01"1-ca l l IS requ 1re d PJs .l or. ~~
ter l rid1 v1dua1 needed 'to assrS I
temporary at \hiS 1fTl,r lnt ert&gt;SIE'~·
activ1 1y direclor m plannmg a1:1d
aopiJca·nts shoulo apply 1n r~rs :;~
carry ing oul the schedul~d iMI·
to ; Roc ksprmgs Rehab Crf'ltf!~
vidual an'd group actiV\Iies.. Pe r36759 Roc1csp r1ngs Ad PomPI O~·
son must posse ss special mter·
Ohio 45769 . 740·992-6606 Equu,
est m and a poS111ve att1tude .
Opportumty Employf'r
-about work1ng w1th short and long
term care res1dents and the et·
Vacancv lor Mu:t .. Ha'1 d :-ar0ed
derty, prov1oe a cheerful outlook
Teacher Subm:t 1e:!e1 o t ·f':ee s1.
and positive perspect1ve !of the
res ume , referen cP.s a'1i:J C01W o ~
residentS Prefe rred ed ucation/'
current cert1f1cate tO JC"'"'.C··s-'
expe rience state tested nursrn g
tan zo, Supermtende l"'t Athe nsass 1stant . prev1ous expe r1ence or
Mergs Educat tona! Sen·ru• Cen-:
1ra m1ng In a Maltl1 care se111ng
ter . 50 7 Rrchlanc A\ enu l&gt;'. !::c~llfl
Part lim e poS1\10n . evenrngs and
108 . Athens . Ohro 4570, C:tidd·
weekends. Send res ume to Rock- · line 1s July 30. 1999
spr i ngs Rehab Center. 36759
Aocksprmgs R&lt;'l . Pomeroy. Oh1o
wanted Bea u tiCidn,Must H·i'lve
45769, Attn: Dena Warren , ,A ctiv·
Manag ers Lice rise 1 Dv,y Per
ities Director or apply 1n per.SOfl.
Week . $10 A n ~i our. A'o'oiy In
.Person ,AI Scen 1c Hil t "Jurs,ng
EOE
Center. 311 BucklldQe. Rc.a(') B:d· ....
AVON! ·All Area s I To ~uy or Se!L
w-ell
Shirley Spears. 304·675·1 429.
Wildl if e Jobs t o ' ~ :?1 60 H1 ' i'1c
Avon Prodl.lCIS Sta rt your own InBenefitS . GameWardens. se. ur 1·0
H ome 'B us1ness Work Fle~o: i ble
ty, Mamte nance Part., ·Ra 'igers :
Hours. Enjoy Unlimited Earnings.
No E•p Need ed For App a110~
1·888·561·2866 .
E~o:am Info Ca H 1-SOC ·81 3 3S5'i •
Ell. I 8827 8AM·9P M 7 DJv· 'J~:
B1ll1ng clerk neeoed for busy med·
real of11C8 App licants required 10
have expe ri ence m tCD · 9 cod·
WILD LIFE JOBS To $21 oG 'h'R.
ing . Insur ance b1llmg . and Medl·
tNC . BENEF ITS GA ME ',\AR
ca1e gu1dehnes . kn o wledge ot
DENS ,
SECLP !'!"
\~ -"' \
hqsp1ta t ana nursmg home coa1ng - TENANCE , PAR K RA~&gt;;GER S ....;o
prete rred . Computer sk11ls re·
EXP NEEDED FOR APF' A'JO
q u~red
Wages compet1 t 1ve ,
EXAM INFO. CALL 1·800-813·
based an e:.penence Send re·
3585 EXT t4 211 8 AM ·9 PM
sume to P 0 , Box 207 . Athen s.
7 DAYS Ids. inc.
Oh'IO. 45701
Co mplet&lt;3 S1mple Government
Forms At Home No Experience
Necessary. CAL L TOLL FREE·
1·800·966·3599 Ext. 2601

""G

""

Overbrook Cente r. 333 Page
Street , Middleport . has part t1 me
pOSIIIOns tor LPN.s, ava1l8tlle tor all
sh ills and weekends Anyone in terested please sloP' by and f1l l
out an appliCatiOn EOE
Part-T1me E•penenced Ot11ce As·
s1stant Needed Appro~~: 4 To 28
Hours A Week . Commumcat1on '
Sk1lls &amp; Compu te ' E~o:pe nence A
Plus! Send Resume To CLA 479
c,o GatllpOh s Da 11y Tntlune , 825
Th ird Avenue . Ga lli pOliS , OH

45631

120

Situations
Wanted

Wapl9d , Someone tc tear down &amp;
remove slie d lo r tumbe• 8 rco f·•
it\g (304)8!15·3390

140

Business .
Train ing

GalllpoUs CarNr College
(Careers Close To Home\
Ca11Today174Q-446·4367 .
1·800-214 -0452 ..
R&amp;g, •90·05·1 2748

•'

�•
Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oh1o

Tueeday, July 20,1989
•

The Qally ~ntlnel • P~~ge 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

All.EYOOP

NBA Cro11word Puzzle
ACROSS

PHn.LIP

1 Klnclol7 Type of fir t3 Cald period

(2_,

ALDER
150

Schools
lnlflruclton

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE

GAEE QUICKLY Bachelol5
Masters Oocl ofate By Carre
spondence Based Upon PtiOf Ed
ucation And Shot t Sludy Course
For FREE lnloJm atwn Booklet

Phone CAMBRIDGE ST ...TE
UNIVERSIT't' t 800-964 8316

180 Wanted To Do
8 J RemOdeling Pa1ntmg In &amp;
Out Carpentry Cement Va1d
Work Decks Clearung F1ee Es
l tma te s 740 256 6827 Do n 1
Fuss Cal us•
County Cefttfteel Oaycare F'rovtd
er W1U Take Care Of Yqur Ch ld
ren With TUf l Good References
Tratned In CPR •&amp; F st A d
Please Catl 740 368 9711
E &amp; S lawn Servrce OesJgn tm
plemenlatron
and Serv ce
Avatlabte lor Sp11ng Clea n up
lerhl ztng and planttng Free esf
males Sal sfa ct on guaranteed
Greg Milhoan 3041675 4628 1

•

Georges Portable Sawmill don 1
haul your log~ to the m 11 JUS! call
304 675 1957
Jrm s Drywall &amp; Constr uc tron
New ConslfuciiOtl &amp; Re mode l!
Drywall S1dmg Ro o ts Add1
!tons Pamt!ng etc (304 )67"
4623 or (304)674 0155
) l'•vaRock $13 0 00 1/2 To n De
11\lered and also lrgh t Hau!mg

(304)882 3323
~edlcald And .,Wal\ler lndepertd
enr Provider Program Nurse For
In Home Care
V s t s 1\,nd
Dressrng Chang es l n local Area
L cse nsed P1actrcal Nurse 740
386 002a To Leave Message

FREE MONE Y' II s True Ne\ler
Repay Guarantee o $500
150 000 For Oebt Consohdart on.
Per sonal Nee ds Bus tn ess 1

8()()..511 264.0
CA SH NOW' We Pur c hase
Str uctu re s ,•uement Lot,enes
Annu hes Mortgage Notes Call
Mon tclan Frn anctal Gfoup 1 800
422 731'/
CONSOLIDATE DEB T A&amp;du ced
Mon1hly Pi!'f'menls 20 50°• Save
Thousands Of Dollars In Interest
Non Ptoht TCC 800 758 3844
CREDIT PR O BLEMS '
VISA
CARO Gu ;'l rante ed Approval
No Cre d1t Chec k oo..,APR Re
q ~; 1u~ment s 18 + US Ctttzen Have
Check ng Account Phone AppfO
11a1 1 600 737 00 73 Issued By
Menick Bank SLC UT
RE CE IVING PAYMENTS ? In
11e_s1o r Pa ys CA SH NOW For
Your Selle r F•nanced Morlgage
Real Estate Contract Insurance
Ann u l y H•g"e SI Pr1ce s Free
Quotes Why '('Ia t1 Call A1ch 1
800 888 6450

230

Professional
Serv1ces

Appr o11ed Masre1 Licensed Elec
trr c a n WV0 2595 6 Esttmate:s
Ser\l tces
101
Resrden1 111
{304 )675 7927
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY IS$1?
No Fee Unless We w n'
l 868 582 3345
WANT A VISA C A~O? $'2
• Unsecured Bad JNo Credtt OK
Every on e Wetoom4!1 1 600 285
3588

Shrubs Trimmed Mulching
Pelnllng etc Cell Bill leave
Message (304)675--7112

FINANCIAL
210

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE'
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO
recom me nds that yo u do bu st
ness wtth people yo u know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have nveshgated
the ofterlng
ARE U lAZY ? I Arn Ant:! Earn
$1 000 A Day No Sellrng Nor
MLM Free Info Paclc:age 1 600
786 8649 :24 Hrs XT 27
Area Coke (F.r to Lays /Lipton
Great Income Proven Machines
Local Routes Ava table
Call 1 800 627 9519
ASSEMBL\' AT HOME!! Crafts
Toys Jewe ry Wood Sew Jng
Typtng Great Pay 1.:CALL 1 800
795 0380 Ext •201 (24 Hrs )

•

Av•ll VENDING Rout~
10 20 l ocations $4K $1 Ok
$4 000 • fMc Income
All CASH I 100% F nance Avail
1 888 53B 950B 24 Hrs
Be st Home Based Busrnesst Own
An Internet Casrno 13ecome And
Internet Junket Rep Mm Invest
menl $3 750 516 578 1405
BUSINESS SPACE RENTAl 01
!tee Space Or Sales Rootfls For
lease On 2nd Ave Gall oohs
Close Td' Courthouse &amp; Clly
BUIIdtng 1 2 3 4 Rooms All ]\11
cely Oecmalad A C Wale• Sew
er B1ll s Are Pard Make Your
C hoice Now You Must See
These Spaces Phone Fo• Show
lng 740 446 9539
EARN $1 OpO WEEKL¥ WORK
lNG FROM HOME II' No Exp ert
ence Requu edl Bonuse s PAID
GUARANTEED PROGPiAMI 1
:no 669 49 52 Ex! c

'

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Repa"
lng NOT Re plac ng l ong Cracks
In Wtnd sh elds Fre.e Vtdeo 1
800 8 26 8523 US /Canada
www gla ssmecham~~: coni

FAIT O LI\Y t PEF&gt;SI ICOKE
VENDING ROUTE
11 000•
WEEKLY'
POTEN TI AL
All
CAS H BUSINESS PRIME LO
CA L S ITES ON GOIN G SUP
PORT SM Al l INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS I 800
731 7233 E~T 2903
MEDIC"L BILLIN(i Unltmtl ed In
co me Potenl!al No E-.penence
Necessary Fr~e l ntor matton &amp;
CD ROM Invest m ent $4 995
S8 995 FmanctnQ Avatlable Is
land Automated Medrca Serv1c
es Inc 800 322 1139 E•t 050
Need A loan• Try Debt Consolr
da tro n $5 000 $200 000 Bad
Credit 0 K Fee I 800 770 0092
Ext 2 15
PREPAID INTERNET
Access Ca rds Hot llern 1 No
Compet rllon Real $$$ Maker
D•stritdorship Start Up $4[}9
81l0-829-2371 DEPT 97

220 Money to Loan
$$$ N EED C ASH? ? WE Pay
Cas h For Aem a nrng Payments
On Proper!~ Sold' Mortgages!
Annuities• Sett lement s l m me
dl ate Quotes Ill Nobody BP.a\ s
Our P~lces Natrona! Conlra ct
Buyers 800 490 0731 Er l tot
www natlonalconlractbuyf!JS com

US OVERDUE BillS"' $$$ Con
solidale Debtsl Same Day Appro
val NO APPLICATION FEE SII 1
800 863 9006 Exl 936 www help
pay b~l s com
SFREE CASH NOWS Fr om
Weallhy Famlhas Unload ng M I
lions 01 Dollars To He p M nlmlle
The ir Taxes Wrrla lmmad talely
Wtndfalls 847 A SECOND AVE
SUITE lf350 NE.W YORK NEW
VORl&lt; 10017
Cred it Ca~d DEBT Debt Con
so hd atron Stop Co llection Calls
Reduce Paym ent s &amp; F man c ~
Charges A110 d 8 anl(rup tc y 1
800 270 9894
FREE MONI:Y It s 1 ue Ne11er
Repay Guaranteed SS OO
$50 000 For Debt Con solidati on
Per sonal Nee ds Medt cal B tlls
Education &amp; Bu sme ss Call Toll
Free 1 600 724 6047 (24 Hrs)

All real e.,state actvent s~ng rn
th s newspaper IS subject to
the Federal Fatr Houstng Act
ol t968 which ma~es 1t1ttegal
to attverttse any preference
I m tatiOtl or d scttmtnahon
based on race oolor rehgton
sex fam Hal status (l r natrona!
ongrn or any rntent on to
make any such preference
It nrtat on or tt scnnunal on
Thts newspaper wrll not
knowrngly accept
ac.JvertrsC'rnents ror real estate
whictlrs 111 v1olatton (JI the
law Our readers are hereby
tnlotmed that all 11wellmgs
adver1JSed rn l~•s newspapr:&gt;r
are available on an equal
opportuntty basts

REAL ESTATE
310 Homes lor Sate
1995 4br 3bath w luaplace
16120 deck 9x20 I ont porch secluded on 7 72 ac musl sell
$65 000 00 740 379 2643
3 Be~ro om House Wt !h 3 Acres
Land Few F uti Trees 2 Se d
roo ms &amp; Balh Upstchrs 1 Bed
room Front Room Omlng Room
Ullllty Room K11Chen Bath Down
stars S ts On Sl o r~g Run Roao
0 11 Route 7 For More Information
Call 740 367 7571i., Alter Noon
Pn ce $49 500
3 Bedroom , Balh Ranch W th 2
Car Ga1age And ShOp 11 Mile s
From Gall polrs Wrll Sell Wl1h 2 13
Acres. For $75 000 Or W!lh 16 1{
2 Acre s Fo r $95 000 Ca ll 740
,370 2835
3BR Hume large Room Eal n
Kll chen Nr ce Po rch AC 3/4
Ba se me1 1 Lot S ze 50X90

$32 000 (304)882 3772
4 Room s &amp; Bath On Corner Lot
Wtlh Extr a 8 g Ya d Crown C1ty
Oh o Owner W II C ar~ y Wtlh Ava
sonahle Down Payment 740 446
96 78
5 Bedroom s 2 6aths 10 Acres
Rto Gmnde Are-a S159 000 740
245- 1211
HOMES FROM SS 000 Fore
clo sed And Repos sessed No Or
Low b olo' f' Payment Cred t Trou
Ol e 0 t\ or C ment L1stmg Ca ll
1 800 31 I ~ 48 Ext 3875
Beau t lui br ck 3 Or home on
lo vely acreage must see to ap
precrate 304 273 9485
BuY Home s F10n1$10 000
1 5 Bedroom Local l:i ovarnmen l
&amp; 6ank Fore e osures Financrng
Possr ble Fo r Lts trngs CallliOO
319 3323 Ext 1709

By Cwne•

Sandhrlf Road /Point
Pleasan t Brt ck/ Ra nc h 3Bad
roomsf 2Ba 1hs BasePlent T.wo
2C ar
Garages
Ac re l ot
(740)44 1 0618
Commer c ia l Bu ld tng 5 roo ms
(fu rntshectJPius Kitchen) &amp; Dining
(lurntshed) Heat Pump Only
$19 900
(304)1375 30301675

310 Homes for Sale

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

.. HOMES FROM S10 000! .. 1
5 Bedt oom l ocal Aep o$ &amp; Fore
closures F111anctng Poss tble Fot
l iSIInQS 1-800 719 ):)01 11 185

LANO
In Ga lha Jackson Ros s Metg s
And Athen s CQunt te s 5 To 75
Act e Tra c: 1S f&lt;H Res tdenl!a l O r

320 Mobtle Homes
lot Sale
t 2x65 2 bedroom total elecll c
on Cremeans Ad Rl1 AUIIand Oh
Ho- 742 280a
1980 14165 Ele ctri C tw o bed
roo m tw o bath underp nnmg
srove retr getator nelfl a1r condt
IIQr'ltl"lg i9500 740 949--2452
1994 Sunshtne 16180 3 Bed
rooms 2 BathS 740 245- 1302
1995 Dutch Mobrte Home 1411.70
1J ny Sldrng Shrngle Roof Steel
Doo rs ~ 11. 6 Walls Therm opay ne
Wtndows De ck $18 800 74 0
256 6980
1996 Clayton 16x80 A C JBR
Nr ce Take Ov er Payments
$292 1304)67 5 Vt65
1997 Redman brand new central
a r lwo bedrCi o m one bath 52
tong 13 112 w de hved 10 tess
tha n two yea r s reason lor setii'IQ
Uness $16 500 See at Brown s
Tra ler Court M nersv111e or call
Betty Lowe 740-992 6045
48R 2elA $499 Down t'ossume
Payments of $239 mO (3041755

5560

Il-L Q-W ().IJ. T
$499 Down All S n;Jies S999
Down Doubles Super low Pay
ments lrmrted' "Tlme Oak wood
Homes Barboursville WV 304
73&amp;3409
Clearance Sale All Displays
Must Go DownPayments as low
as $499 Interest as low as I 99
lim ted 1 me only at Oakwood
Homea Hl1ro WV (304)755
5885
Cross Lanes Home Center Free
Set up Delivery IVC Underpin
mng &amp; $500 WaiMart Shoppmg
Spre~ wtth each home pu r
chased Stop &amp; ~ee your )lome
town housrng spaetahst Woody
Willard (304)776 7699 or 1 800
922 9976 Crosslanes Exrt of

164
Good select on of used ho me s
w th 2 or 3 bedrooms. Start1ng al
$3995 au ck dehvery Call 740
1
385 962 1

.

New Bank Repo s Only 3 Left
800 J83 6862
New 16x71f 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths
Must Sellt $560 Oown &amp; $223/
Mo Only 0 Oakw(X)(j Gallipolis
740 446 3093
New 3BR $499 down $189
~onth Ornly Oal!wood Homes
Nitro WV. (3CM)755-5885
New Bank repos qnty 2 left we
finance call 304 722 48

7,

New Oteam Home 3 Bedrooms •2
Baths l oa ded $314 /Mo Free
Delrvery &amp; Sal Only 0 Oakwood
Galhpohs 7 40 446 3093
S ngle Pa rents Program $499
Down Umrted Ofler Ca ll for de
tails (304)755 7191
To Everyone Gallla Mason
Meigs Area Stop By Sea Pe te
Peck -VIew Our Beautllul Homes
Bes de Auto Zone GallipoliS 740
446 3093
Double Wtde On l ot $250 De
posit 1 BOO 383-6862

330 Farms for Sale

HOMES FROM $5 000 Fore
closed And Repossessed No Or
l ow Down Payment Credrt Trou
ble 0 K For Current listing Call
I 800 3 11 5048 Ext 33 72
Restored Vtctortan hOme Situated
on 12 acres VIllage M ddlaport
se cluded and prr vate appoint
ment ca l1740.-992 5696
Smal l 2 Bedro om House lor
sa le between locksi Shell Plant
Apf)le Grove Needs so ma re
palfs (304)576 2642
Thomas A dge A Cond11ton 4
Bedrooms Fam1ty Room I 1/2
B&lt;(Ths half acr~ lot Need Proper
ty Close( to Town {304)975 30:3b/

{304)675 343 1
Three bedroom house for sa le
one and 112 baths fully furnished
mce ya1d close to p ark 477 Sy
camore Street Mrdd!ep ort ca ll
740 367 7000

able FREE Maps AnrhOny land
CQ ltd 1 800-213-836 5

360

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanted IQ Buy lookmg to boY. a
HofT!e Puce Range $30 s $40 s
on Land Contract w+th 10'"• down
payment' lmme(hate Possesi•Ofl
Serro us lnqu rres Only t Call

(7&lt;0) 2&lt;5 5529
We Buy land 30 500 Acres
We Pay Cash 1 800 213 8365
Antllooy Land Co

RENTALS

2 BA Ho use loc ated al 1112
Hogg Street Pt Pteasanl $290
per mont.tl References and Se
curlty
Dep osit
Requ tred
(:304 )882 '2221 t
3 Bedroom House lull basement
Central
Ar
Mason
$375 oomonrh (:»4)882 3652
3 Oedroom all electr c ranch
Mme wtth anached garage
fen c ed oack yard large tot at
Meadow Land Estate Pt Ptecu
ant $600 mon th pl us depos t
ava l~ f;:lle August 1 304 "824

2480

•

Clean n1ce 2 br basementlga
rage retldep no pe ts 304 675

5162
House lor Rent In Counlry Pa rtly
Furntshed {304)882 3970
Needed Room mate Male or Fe
male to pay 1!2 Muse hold Erp
(740) 446 3 103 or Leave Mes

sage

420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent
1 Bedroom Mol:&gt;tle Hof"e All urrl
ltles Paid c;ab te TV Pa id S275
month (304)895-3603
1t4 Condor Street 2 Bedroo ms
Mobrle Home Rent S?SO/ Mo
$150 Deposrt '740 368 8591
304 633 6937
Between All"'tens and Pome~ov 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob tle hOmes arr
conditioned $260 $300 sewer
water and lra sh rncluded 740
992 2167
2 Bedroom Trader In Small Trarler
Pa k References Deposit Ae
ctu red No Pels 740..446 1104
2 bedmom total efectnc on Cre
means Ad AI I Aullafld Oh 740..

74.2 2803
2 Bedrooms On Hannan Trace
Road Off 2 18 74()-256 6202
2 Bedrooms $325/Mo • Ut1ht1es
No Pets Central At~r 740 446
43'3
2 Bedrooms &amp; 4 Bedrooms $27 5I
Mo Or $350/Mo Plus Dep osrt
On McCorkle Road Galltpol s
740 446-6844
Tw o bedro om one balh to ta l
electrtc ouls rde Rutland area
$250 mo nth $150 deposit ca ll
740 992 7788 after Spm

440

Apartmenls
for Rent

NW Mergs Coun ty Sclp o Town
sh p 360 -t l acres appro~~. 200
1 lab e 70 fen ~ pasture limed &amp;
fer HI zed two 40x80 barns caiUe
barn wrth silo ~1lk house a nd
parlor two 7500 tiushel grarn b ns
wrth dryer 5 ponds 3 fenced wrlh
F P waterers double wtde 2 112
car garage clea n &amp; well kept
farm Senmts mqwnns only by
appom tmen t on l~ call 740 696
8254
Small self sulftcfenl 52 acre farm
w th tow workrng natural 'Qas wells
and two go6d water springs one
developed plus TPW 20 mrnutes
from AthenS 10 mrnutes from Po
meroy two nice burld tng Sites m
cludmg 14 -.70 with 7x20 l ip out
house lr ~uler $68 500 74 0 992

2 Bdrms Aefrrgerator Stove Fur
n shed 34 112 Smrlhers $250 00
Mont h Re nl $150 00 De p'ost t
740 446 3870

3564

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
40 ACRES
Only $45 000 Great For Recrea
lion Or Hunttng MostiV Wooded
Off SA 141 &amp; SA 233 Can Be 0 1
vided Road Built To Lan d Then
On Into Wayne NatiOnal Forrest
5% Down land Contract Wtth Ap
proved Cred 1 Free Maps 1 800
213 8365
BRUNER LAND
74().441 1492
Gillie Co Ha I M te Off SA 218
sa wooded Acres $40 ooo
Cash Pr ce Public Water Fr end
ly Ardge Ad 15 Acres $14 000
C ty Schools
Meigs Co Rutland Wh tes Htlt
Ad 11 Acre s $14 000 Or 9 Acr
es $12 000 Publrc Waler Dan
vrlle Brrar Rrdge Ad
7 Acres
S13 000 Or On SA 325 9 Acr es
S 17 000 PubliC Water
Call NOW For Free Maps +
Owner F ananc ng In fo Take 10%
Off L st Prrce Orr Cas h Buys•
BUII,DING LOTS
FOR SALE

Water and Electrh:: Reedy For
Hook Up Nice lota $6 000 00
Each Cal!304 773 5186
Burldlng Lots For Sa te New Ha
ven A1ea (304)882 3456
LOT .sPRING VALLEY One
large LOI Approx 101 IHI Ctty
Waler Sewer Nai Gas Elac!J rc
All Are Ava1table l ot II 17 To
V ew 740 446 9539
Prrme Build ng S te 1 Acre
( 144x302 ) Mason WV No Ae
strrclrons $15 000 (304 )882
3772
Prtme Rtver Bank Bu ldtng S11e
(63 x300) Che sh re No Aestnc
!tons &amp; M~e l s FEMA Aequ re
men1s 740 367 7669
Rive Lo t For Sale West Co tum
o a Area Potnl Pleasant S de ol
Sprlman Cnt.lr ch Call 1304 )675

1437

1 Bedroqm Apartment Stove-&amp;
Regr gerator Inc lude d 740 446 2583
I BR A/ C Ne ar Holzer I st
Monlh Free W1th 1 Yr Lease
Qu ret Locahon No Pet s $279/
Mo Plus Utrltres 740 446 2957

2 BR WID Hook up References/
~It No pets (304)675 5162

2 Rooms &amp; Bath $225/Mo

In
eludes Uttht es No KIHfhen 1
Bedroom .!1 Bath Includes Utdlltes
No Ktlchen 740 446 2477
2bdr m apls to l al electric ap
pllances lurnrshed laundry rCiom
facr l tres close ~o sc hoo l In town
Appl cat ons avatlabla at V!llage
Green Apls 149 or ca ll 740 992
3711 EOH
3 Rooi'n Upsl a u S Furn rs hed
Wrndow A r U1 tl! ltes Pa1d $285/
Mo Plu s Deposit 740-446 1340
Apartment for rent In Middleport
no pets 740 992 5658
APARTMENTS ON 2ND AYE
Near Busrness Sect on ld~at For
Sentor Persons 0r Couples 1st
Floor Real Ntce To V1ew 740
446 9539

1..- e

N1ce. 2 Bedroom Apartmenl Ap
pJ rances and all Ut ltres Fur
ntshed $375 00 per. monlh

1304)675 4302
Now Takmg Appl ca11o ns 35
We st 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments
lncl uctes Waler
Sewage T•ash $315 /Mo 740
446 0006

www poerry com

JET
AERATK&gt;N MOTORS
Repa1red New &amp; RebUilt In St ock
C.all Ron Evans 1 800-537 9528

Retail botk:ttng !SOOt square WI
corner locatton 87 M II Street
Middleport Key at ACQUISIIIOOS
91 M 11 S1me1 740 992 6250

Kenmore Washer $M 00 Ken
more D•yer $50 OQ G E Washer
$60 00 Kenmore Portable Dryer
$50 00 Call After 5 30PM 740

MERC HANDISE

..6-9066

Household
Goods

ladres gold &amp; dramond Jewelry
retired beantes wrndow A!C 304
8112 3339

A1r Condtttoners Used Dtlferent
Srzes Guaranteed 740 886

Makrla Concrele Saw Gal Pow
ered Used o ne ttme! S3QO 00
lmcoln/ 225 Amp Arc Welder

0047

App l tances
Recondllloned
Washers Dryers Ranges Refrl
grators 90 Day Guarantee!
French Ctty May;tag 740 446
7795

$150.00 (740)245 9856
Phrll ps Magnavox 60" TV PIP
Stereo Surround Sound wr\h 2
exlarnal speakers Pn!:ed to sell

(304)675 2617
~:.::.:::.:.:..:__---:'-~~

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances Z6
Vrne 'Street Call 740 446 7398
18888180128

Prlmestar tree DlrecTV Summer
Promotmn Call now 1 888 265
2123
Rap1d We igh! lossl FEN PHEN
Alternative Comb rnatron 100%
Safe Only $24 95 Buy 2 Get 1
Freet Lose 3 5 Pounds A Week
As Seen On T v Celtasene H
V•ag{n Also Avar able Call Unrted
Pharmaceutrcals Now For Info 1
800 733 3288 COD S /Pre pay I
Major Cred1t Carets

MollOhan Carpet Room S1ze Car
pets Drrve a little Save a loti
202 Clark Chapel Road Porter
(7401 388 0173 (740)-446 7444.

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Rlvenne Ant1ques
1124 E Matn Street on At 124
Pomeroy Ho urs M T W 10 00
am to6 00 pm Sunday100to
6 00 p m 740 992 252 6 Russ
Moore owner

Resort membershrp Racme OI"HO
' '\~lud es rnd oor pool Jacuzzi
bOat rental etc S2000 call 937
548-()11,

Primitive He ndmade Walnut Ar
m oue $300 Quarter Sawn Oak
Dresser Beveled 'Mnror $425
Mrscellaneous Antiques 606
928 3599

SLATE TOP POOL_TABLE 1425
24 FT ALUM WALK BQARD
$250 304 675 40G4

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlee
"HOST FAMILIES NEEOEDIII
Exchange Students From Germa
Japan England France Rus
Bra zil Students Arnve In Au
g ust To Atte nd Local Htgh
Schools For Further Information
1 800-765-4963

101)8

(304~53

304 67 5 6397 or 937

3935-;11 2 call evemngs

560

24 000 BTU Sears Power Saver
Atr CondJttoner 6 000 BT.U GE
Excellent Conr:l tton 740 .446
0514
~

Building
Supplies

Pets for Sale

2 AKC Male Vork.shrre Puppres
9 Wks Old Shots/Wo med $275
each {304 )895 3926
2 Toy Poodles 1 Male I Fema e
740 446 0325

AFFORDABLE DENTAL PLAN
Witt"~ Access to Ameri cas lar
ge sr Dental Networks About $3
Per Week 1 886 '0.7 3752xl

6 Week Old Golde n Aetrrave r
Pupp as SIOO Each To Good
Homes 740 682 7762

Allordabte Dental Plan W th Ac
cess to Amerr ca s largest Den
tal Nelwo~s Aboul $3 Per Week

3 AK C Yellow lab Pups Has
hat:! Shots $.200 00 each ' (740)
446 0080

1 888 227 3752
ATTENTION We II Pay You To
Lose Up To 29 lbs (Or More)
87 Pe op le Needed lmmedlatetyt
Offer Exptres ~7128 Call 740 441
1982

l

AKC Registered Yorksh re M1nra
lure Terr ers F11 s1 Shot s &amp; Ve t
· ~~~:;~~~;r~;: Registered H1ma
S1amese Krnen s

Day Be d Comes Wrl h 2 Mat
1 esses Pop Up Bed Frame Ask
rng $200 740 446 4397

(304)675 2063

For Sale Ceramtc Molds And
PounngTable 740 388 8183
FU LLV
LO.'.OED
PENTIUM
COMPUTERS Poor Cr~dtl 0 Kt
1 800 520 6364
GOT A CAMPGROUND MEM
BERSHIP OR TIMESHARE? We II
Take It Amer ca s ~ost Sue
ce sslui Campground And Time
sl'lare Resa le Clearmghouse Call
Resort Sales International t BOO
423-5967 24 Hours

1106

Dozer Re centl y Rebutlt
$8 500 Firm 400 Gallon Tanks
On Rubber $500 Each 740 446~

~359

"tfydrohc Hose Machme Parts
Wa sher large Assortment BCIIIS
&amp; Bends Ever yth tng Must .Go
Ca ll Sonny Today (304}675

4123
See The New John Deere 200
Senes Sktd Steer Loaders 7 5"1.
JOC Ftnancrng Carm1ct'lael s
Farnl &amp; Law n Inc 1 BO O 594
1111 Galltpolts OH We Deliver!

Livestock

630

Forsate 4 year old here!Cird bull
740-949 2649
Registered m~ntature hOrses
g~ blood lines 5 mares 3 stal
lions 2 mares are bred back

7:c6-742 2060

...

TRANSPORTATION

3323 &lt;2156
91 Plymouth Acclatm 4 ~oar
$1500
catl740 949-2270

ceo

CAR S $100 $,00 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUNDS Hond a s Toyota s
Chevys Jeeps And Sport Utrll
11es Ca ll N ow! 800 772 7470

EXT 7802

1986~rftfac Catal na Good

Ftsh Brrds Pond Suppltes
Sun 1 4 PM Mon Sat 11 AM
6PM F1sh Tank/Pel Shop 24 1~
Ja ckson Avanue/Po mt Pleasant

For sale Ja ck Russe I lemers
740 742 2050
St Bernard pups 6 male 3 le
mate $150 each 740 992 212 1

57{)

Musical
Instruments

FOR SALE CONSOL E PIANO
Respons ble pa rty wanled to
make low monthly paymenls on
prano See locall\1 Cij ll 1 800 ~68
6218
FOR SALE CONSOLE PIANO
Responsible Party Wanted To
Make Low Monthly Payments On
BOO
Plano See Lo cally Call
268 6218
Plano For Sate Sprnei iC onsole
Take on $mall monthly pay
mel") Is MjJSI have good credrt
Can oe seen ICi cally Ca 1
(800}346 1775

580

FrUitS &amp;
Vegelables

Black Berres $12 00 Gal on Also
Hay S 1 SO Ba e Fr ~ndly Rrdge
Ad 740 256 1145
Cannmg tomal oes alre ady ptcked
740 247 2063
For Sale Home Gro wn Melons
To matoes at Troye r s Wo o r:l
Crafts 9 m les we st of Galhpoh s
State AI 141 laktn Ad

5532

1970 Volkswag en Beetle Newly
Restored Must Se ll 740 367
7117
1976 Jeep CJ5 Hard Top V 8 4
Barrell Carb Al um Intake 35 "
Swampers Alum Wh ea ts 1\tew
Dual E11haust Also 2 ofner
Jeeps 1 CJ5 1 1983 CJ7 tna t
can l'le made runable a I th• ee
$4 500 (304)675-707 1

1980 1990 CARS

FROM $500
Po l ce Impou nds
And Tax
Repo s For Lrsttngs Cn l
600
319-3323 E•t 4420

1986 FOld Aerostar Tranny Pr cb
18m Won 1 Stay In Park $600 ar:
Best Offer 74()-446-4142

t 992 Shadow looks and rvns 1ke
new 70K co ld air a utoma tic
su nr oo1 4 cyl lnr:ler spotler red
$3650 740 949 2045 evenings

1995 Mon1e Ca rlo LS one owner
luHy eQuipped 740 992 5949
1995 Sebnng sa 000 M les Pow
er Wrndows &amp; Locks Moon ~ool
$12 500 OBO 740 446 2109
J996 Mustang GT Black 21 000
Mite s 5 Speed AM fFM Cas
se!te CD P laye r 460 Ma c h
Sound Syslem l oaded S15 900,
Frrm 740 446 9480
1997 Chevy Cavalier 2 Doors 5
Speed C/0 Trft Cruise Power
Sunroof 43 000 Mrles sa 500
740 992 7 02
1997 Ford Asptre 14 000 Mtlas
$4 900 740 256 1417 740 256

6228
1996 Pontta c Trans Am Fully
loaded
Pr ca Reduced t o
$22 500 00 Great Graduatr o n
G ft (740) 446-4548
1999 Ponl ac Grand Am SE 2
Doors S tver Automaltc Loaded
like New And Under Warranty
Bought New In March 01 96
$16 300 Or Best Offer 740 992
7102

720 Trucks for Sale
1950 Dodge 1/2 ton 318 P$ diSC
brakes
exce enr co ndll Ofl
neer:l s some work 1947 Dodge
heavy 1/2 ton all orrgrnal runs
great condtllon 1947 Dodge 3/ 4
ton dua ly !lad bed rough condt
Ir on $3 000 lor all OBO or sell
saparalely 740 992 4494
1979 Ford F 250 4 Wd 35 1
Mod I ed $1 200 00 080 740
379 2741 740 379 2746
1987 Ford Ranger Krng Cab 4)(4
ltlt K11 2 9 V 6 5 Speed Red
W th A o I Ba1s Run ~ GtiHll
Look5 Good 740 446 9552 740
446 9169
1992 S 10 4 Cylrnder 5 Speed
Cab
115K Mtle s
$3 500 080 740 256 1427
E~~:tended

20 " - ' '

•K852

Joicob
23 Engage In •
winter aport

se 500

304

6 A 7 3 2

• 9 6 3

•88742

• A 10 5
• 7 6 3

Q

BARNEY

4 ¥

1994 Honda Tryke Teat Green
low Miles In EKcellent Condri!/Jn
Wtth Escapade Tr a1!er lots Of
Ex!Tas 740 256 6574
1998 300 EX 4 wl'leeler ertelldect
warranty lnefuMd 740..742 2780

•

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1996 Yamaha Wavera rde r 1100
only 24 hO urs 1974 I ~ 112Ft
BaJa Skt Boat recently reuphol
stered Both run grttat (304)675
8755

.

THE BORN LOSER

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RO\f.MilU,IIOOW'I't£,
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Fa /sale 1985 Procraft bass bo.;t
w lh lrarler T1 lOng with 1989 150
horsepower Johnson mo tor lwo
ftSh I nders lwo l111e well mot01
gutde 55 lb thr ust loot co ntr ol
tro llmg motor $4000 call 7J O
992 2850
~

760

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Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1993 4 Cylinder 5 Speed Tra s
m1Ss1on 39 000 Mrte s out ul
Ford Ranger Tru c.k $ 1 200

(304)675-3634

BIG NATE
Nfl&gt; YOV li:E NAME.!&gt;
"THE SRAIW. HUH~
KIND OF
UHIU!i~J.O.L ' 1~ THAT A

5 speed tr ansm sslon for For d
Probe 89 91 6 cyl nder $2UO
OBO 740 9~2 2956
Budget Pr ced Tra nsm iSSions
and Eng nes All Types Ac ces s
To Over 10 000 Transmtss•Cin'S
CVC JO•nts 740 245 56r'

N,0.11E,

New Replacement Ga :; Ta nk s D
&amp; R i&amp;.ulo Ripley WV (!30 1)372

3933 or 1 800 273 9329

Campers &amp;
Molor Homes

1967 27ft Sou t hwrnd s Motor
Hpme 454 eng ne 39 000 m tes
A/C Sell Conlarnedt Generato•
$18 000 (740) 388 8047

~PUZZle

dlrecllon

Pass

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ON M'&lt; TOAST TllEN I'M
EXTRA CAREFUL TO MAKE
SURE IT DOESN'T 5LIDE OFF

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

FXB

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SCAFAYM
HBBD

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M&amp;A General Co ntra c tm ~ x.
Electrtc Carpe 111ry Po rchP"
Tra le r Set Ups And At Co 11
ttonmg Also Ma n!anance I J ..J
441-0 93
Rainbow Builders
Bu1ld new or repa ir old 110 tc.l
too sma I or large MaJ or c•e1
ca rds
IIWV0 ~95 8 2
C..rll
(304 )456 1049 BP 11 528 B092

840

Electrtcal and
Refrtgeralion

Res1denttal 01 r.ommer crat w1n ny
new serv1ce or rap a rs Master L
~:ansed e llk HtCIM
A denou
Electrical WV OOQ30 6 !30 I 6F
1766

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putt1ng whtpPed cream on a hot dog • - Mtnnesota Fats

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Felony· Usurp- H1ker Pansh ·HAPPINESS
Mother to teenager trytng out fOr team. •Anythtng you
are good at wtll add to your HAPPINESS "

You"" build o big ...,. egg when
JIOII '""' With the clour(ieds

ROBOTMAN

Appli ance Parts And Ser v ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E•
panence All Work Guaranleed
Fr ench Ct ty Maytag 740 446
7795

l v ngslon s Basement Wall'
Proolmg all b aseme n! rep a ,.,
done lree est ma le s hl et rrn
gua ranlee t 2y s o r JOb e~~: p e1
ence (304)895 3887

'

Celebrity Ciptlef cfYPiowam• are created !rom quollltrons by t.unous people pul and present
EKh ~- '" the cipher standi lor another Todays ctu. S fiQIIBis W

I TUESDAY

JULY 20 I

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond1Uonal hleltme guarantee :
local references fun rshe d Es "
tabllshe d 1975 Call 24 Hts (740~
44E 0870 1 800 28! 0576 Aog
ers WaterprOOfing

6323

:'ote

11=~

~ EVA RB

BUT IS TllAT ENOUSil '? NO!
IT FALLS DOWN TlolROU6H
LITTLE llOLES IN TilE TOAST.
AND 6ETS ON M'( SIIIRT!

...

collec:llon

12 Free-for•ll
1a C.nlnl ...n
22 Ex-vely

Home
Improvements

C&amp; C Genera l Home Mar1
tenenca Paint ng v ny l s d ng
carpentry doors windows ball "'
mobrle home rapa r and mo e Fo
lree esttmale call Chel 74 0 992

a Ana

7 Type"' bell '

V Ally "l dog.

SERVICES .
810

U.p """'
54 Type
of trip?

A 9 4

Pass

-

6SMIIO

action

10 Ewnlng potrty

" PEANUTS

1989 Pace Arr ow motor ho m&amp;,.
model 37J 37 long s1de a1sle
washer &amp; dryer mtcrowa velc on
veci!On oven sleeps 6 2 000 m te
on tTJotor &amp; transm1ssmr1 dO 00()
mtles on cflassrs Ona n gener a •
l or rea • vtew ca~1era! TV rz 1v :
stereo call 740 949 2t lt rf no.
answe r leave me ssag e &amp; we w II'
call badl
•
FISHING BOAJING HUNTING
01 Ju st RalaKtng In Your Own
Camper &amp; Ca mps1te OvertM ktng
Blue Lake To Vrew 740 446 ..
9S39

31-de.Janeiro
32 Yookolll111 rt-

Phtlhp and Robert Kmg have
published thetr fiflh book. 'Play II
Agam. Slam ' (Batsford) Tins one
contams 1hree pasuches a parody of
Somerset Maugham (who was an
av1d bndge player), lhetr verston of
Casablanca. and a laie m the style
of a spy story If you ve read any of
lhe earlier books you II know to
expect 1ex1 lhal IS cleverly wnlten,
but lhese tales progress slowly However, there are some excellent deals
many featunng decepu ve plays
How would you plan the play tn
four hearts afler West has led the club
queen'1
As thiS IS a book from Brnam
where the weak-no-lrump openmg
rules (showmg 12 14 potnts) South"s
reb1d descnbed a strong no trump
Hence North s game forctng 1hree
heart rebtd
There appear to be four guaran
teed losers 1wo spades one dtamond
and one dull How could declarer lhe
curvaceous and tour umes marrted
Myra Bellingham pq§stbiy succeed?
Hopmg for a 3 3 club spin she
ducked the first lnck m both hands
Sunablv duped and falimg lo note
lhat East had dropped the lowcsl
miSSing club spot Wesl contmued
wtth another club Myra won wnh her
a~e drew lrumps cashed the two
club tncks diSc;ardtng a spade loser
and clatmed
The ICXI concludes Bolkonsky
(lhe dummy) g.lled at her wnh open
admtrauon Absolulely breathtak
tng he satd
Thanks Ivan darling, Myra
replied coquctusttly J)ut whal dtd
you lhmk of my a ummy play? •
The book IS $15 95 postpatd from
Barun Barclay Bndge Supplies Call
(800) 274-2221 lo order
'

1987 FXSTC Jaw miles lots o)
chrome &amp; edras S t 5 000 7 .ao~
992 3112 alter Spm or 740 99 2 ~
0078
I

•

·-

3 F.-mol

1 The Scrlptur01

21 Romon850

By Phillip Alder

Motorcycles

v-t

24 Actor Hockmln 57 Holy
25 "Auld Lllng27 Dlallnctlve
DOWN

Play it again, Slam

(304)675-364 1

12Ft frbe r glasS john boat
molor$175 304-675509t

55 llun owoy
56 Wonted (ol l

Opemng lead • Q

nJ.stwo

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

J 10

(2-,

of

Vulnerable NeJther
Dealer: South
Soulb
West Norlb East
1•
Pass 1•
Peas
tNT
Pass 3•
Pass

1999 Chevy ZJt Silverado 1500
Red New Body Style Automatic
All Power Loaded 12 000 Mtl es
SliCker Price $28 OQO 00 Ask ng
$23 500 00 740-4445 8142

740

East

•

1994 Astra Ext Conve rsio n All
opltons like New Condlli on

$8500

21 -

• A 10 8 5 2
• K QJ

1999 S 10 Tahoe 4x4 short bed
4 3 5 sp Jaw mil es sharp

1984 23F I Prowler Glean In
Good Condttron Wrth Rool A C
740 256 6574

1991 Dodge Daytona Shelby Nice
Cond Iron Htgh Mrles $2 300
)40 441 0 17t~

• s3

Soulb
• J 8

t992 Chevy extenl cab 4•4 S
varado 350 V 8 auto excellent
shape 740 949 2830

1063

(3041675 2949

• K Q7

Alliin oklll
51 Popey8, •II
54 Army
commend

Indian menu

• K 10 ~
•

1990 Ford Bronco II 4x4 5 speed
lransmtss•on loaded exce ne.n t
cortdthon 740 992 3147

790

1989 Ford Probe 5 speed new
tires new cl utch some damage to
r gh t lront lender $1500 OBO

48 Flet-Oottomecl

07 20-1111

• J 4

1987 Jeep Wrangler In Good
ConditiOn
New Tnes And

1985 Toyo ta Ce lrca GT A4n s
Great Looks Gooril Automahc
Wrth Arr $800 Nag 740 441
1986 Old s Calats 4 cyl 4DR 5
Speed l ow M leage Mtnt Condl
han New Batlery Mulflor Brakes
$4 999 (304 )882 3894

11 high
11 118m on on

West

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

Condttf90 $700 740 256 1102

199t Chevro let Cors"a Atr/Autol
Cassette AM/ Fft1 Runs &amp; lo oks
Great Htgh M les
S2 800

AKC AoUweller Pups Champ on
Pedrgree Rased w th chi ldren
S300 to $400 {304)565 4402

I x1 Customer Dan Fin
ke "TEAM LI FE INSURANCE
1 800-706 8783

For Sale Shopsmrth Mark V With
100 bf of Walnut l umber
$t 000 {304)895 3390

AK C Reg1ste red Boxer Pups 7
weeks
Old
$250 OOeact'l

COOL DOWN
Centra l Arr Condtl Clnlng Added
To Yo~;r Furnace Comp le te Du ct
Systmes &amp; Furnaces
Heat
Pumps Ceflrl leel Installer II You
Don 1 Call Us We Both Lose' 740
446 6308 1 800 291 0098

Orspla~

Far mall 400 wtth torQue ampl fu;~r
power steerrng !we power $2100
Mr n neapohs Moline UT 100
$900 both clean w th new parnt
ca ll 740 992 3912 or 740 992
--5218

41 l l h t p i -

• Q 8 5'

North

91 Ford ESCOi t $1 500 OBQ so;,
Dodge 4x4 full stz.e $6 000 ~'
Ford 4x4 F 350 IOfl pod\ up llillf
toaded &amp; more $17 000 86 ll orO
F 150 S2 20 0 OBO 7AO 9Bl

1988 Mere Topaz 4~~:4 Automa tiC
4 Door Real N ce• S1 600 {740)"'
379-2566

37Siow&lt;-

40An~--

U~I

-sago!

Anltque Farm Tractor f 939 MIR
ne.apol rs Moltne Mtnt Condth on
$2 500 60 6 928 3599 A tier 5
Ashland KY Area

ta Prcu' elluall

AI

1

...._-45 Pale etc ftstt
15 ~ - 1 - . 46 Plll'lolen
Canecllt
11 ...
,..,..nlng
~""--...
tlpe 10 47 Geller

ooo

Wheels Too
Ewa
To
MentiOn
MuslMany
See~ To
Apspre
cuate 740 256-6574

" '

14'-72 Ford 112 ton lruck V 8 At J
67
m11es Good CoM t "
$2200 00 (7401 388 89 34 lE: J ..

740 446

740 992 2956

AKC Reg1stered Dalmatton Pup
ptes Shots And Wormed 740
245 0022
:.:::_::=~------AKC Regt stared Yellow lab P~;ps
Shots &amp; Wormed Rea dy 41h Of
July 740 256--6336

Bearcat Scanner Model 210XLT
40 Ch low la vgl htgh UHF W1th
Manua l Excellent Condition
$55 00 6 &lt;lb Gam External An
ten na GoOd Condttlon $20 00
$65 00 For The Set 740 446
4831 Altar 6 OOPm

l~~J:~~~~J1o~h~n~D~o~e:r~•:,l

AK C Golden Retr iever Pupp es
Born May 9th $75 Each Parents
On Premes1s 740 44 6- 1417

,{304::::::::J8:S:::2::33:::9~7- - - - - - -

Beanre BaOtes $4 Mostly Retired
1 Set 01 1998 Teenre Beantes
$20 740 25~909

JULY 5.IHBU_AUGUST 30
lawlf'Trac!OfS S150 011 On LTS
~ Ott LX s And Grs $250 011
300 s S30 0 Ofl 400 s And Z
Trak s Ftnancing As low As
5 9"'• FQf 36 Months 01 $250 Oil
On C o mf)ac l Utrlrty Tractors
5310 sAnd Gators Free
i)~,i;~;;; Carmichae l Farm &amp;

6196

B lock brick sewer pipes w nd
ows hntels elc Claude Wrntefs
RIO Gran de OH Cal l 740 245
5121

199&amp; 20 fl car hauler $5400
1977 Sea Ray CUddy Cabin

FAIR SPECIALS

$500 CARS FROM 1500111 Buy
Pol ce Impounds &amp; Ae pos F. or
U s l ~g s CALL NOW 1 1800 31a

550

18 000 BTU Crosley Arr Condt
tt oner Runs &amp; Cools Great $200

BIG SCREEN TV Ta ke over
sma l monthly payments Good
credtt r&amp;qurred 1 800 71 8 1657

(304)882 32451(3041882 2077

•,~,;:~;~:~:~~;;, Umts
Resldelitta l And
M
Enormous
Discounts
40x'6o 200•500 Ft
nanc:rng A\laJiable Spec al Con
uactor Dtsc-ounts Llmlred Trme
Ofler can 1 aoo 490 65!it2

Wate rll'l9 Sp&amp;c al 3/4 200 PSI
S21 95 Per 100 1 200 PSI
S37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pressron Frttmgs In Slocil
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Otuo 1 800 537 9528

DlreeTV Salelllte Systems
$69 00 one monlh tree movie
ch annels Umrted t me offer call
1 800 779 81 94

$5000

7 Ft Loc ust Fen ce Post $2 25
each 500 or mor e S2 00 ea ch

710 Autos for Sale

Utility Trater 5 F-t •tO Ft Ttlt Bed
3 Years Old Brand New 2x6
Treated Floating $650 OBO 740
446 7252 After 4 PM

18 ~

(304)458

610 Farm Equipment

STEEL BUILDING S FACTORY
DIRECT S&lt;ivlngs On Commerctal

Top Sort For Sale

10 Speed Btke Curlatns Beddtng
Dishes Woode n Charrs Rocker
Toys M sc 91 Garf1eld Avenue
Galirpohs 740..446-0639

Orscount Mob le Home
Parts &amp; Supply
Huge Inventory
Vmyl Sl'lfr tmg l&lt;rls $299 95' 5 Gal
lon Alummum Flbared Roof Pamt
$25 2 t 5 Gal Whrte Roof Pa int
$57 69 Anchors SS Doors &amp;
Wtnd ows Gas &amp; Electr c Water
Heaters Plumbing &amp; Electr ca l
Parts lnlertherm Mttler &amp; Co e
man Atr Condrtloners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennelt s Mobtle Home
Supply 740 446 9416 Gallipolis
Ohio

Ptlol Program Renters Needed I
800 383-6862

INTERESTED IN WRITING PO
~TRY •
POETRY UONTEST
$48 000 In Puzes Passtble Publt
caliOn Send One Ong1nal Poem
20 lrnes Or less To lnternat!Ofh
al library 01 Poetry 1 Poetry ~
za Surt.e 11835 Owrngs Mtfls ~
21117 O r Enter Onhne N

Mobile hoh'le srte avarlable bet
ween Alhens and Pomero~ call
740..3B5 4367

51 0

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

o..

460 Space for Rent

Ch 1sty s Fam ly llv ng apart
mar11 s home &amp; l rarler renlals
740 992 4514 apartments avail
at&gt;ie lurnrshed &amp; unlurnrshed

Grac ous I vmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apanments at Village Manor and
Rrvers1de Apartments rn M1ddle
port From $249 $373 Ca I 740
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tunnres

Grubbs Prano tun.ng &amp; repa1rs
Problems? Need Tuiled? Call the
p.ano
740-446 4525

Twrn Rtvers Tower now accepunp
appltcalr(lns lor 1BR HUD sub
sld zed aQI lOt' elderl9' and haM
!Capped EOH ~ 675-6679

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSO N
ESTATES 52 WestwoCid Orrva
from $279 lo $358 Walk ICI shop
&amp; moves Call 7 40 446 2566
Equa Housrng Opportun ty

Fu r nisher:! Up sta rr s Second
Avenue No Pets Uttl IIBS Pa1d
740 446 9523

'540

One oedroom turnt6 hed apa rt
menr tn MtdOiepon call
992
9191 J&lt;

Della 12 Planer $190 Craftsman
Contrac lor Series 10 Tablesaw
Wrth Exact Rtp Fence $325 les
Paul G1bson Gu1tar Wrth Case
And Craie Amp $1 500 740 256
1359

2 Bed oom Apartments Unlur
mshed Secur tv Oepos1t Re fe r
en ces Requtred 740 441 - 0952

Concess ton u aller lor sale one
u le ellcellem shape wued lof
elec tne and genera tor S250 0
must s ee to app rectalt 304 773

One &amp; Two Bedroom Apartments
Also Hoose For Renl In Tcwn No
PetS Deposn &amp; Rehence s Re
quweo 740-4&lt;46 9342

410 Houses for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments lur
nrshed and Llnfurn shed secu nly
depos tt requ re d no pet s 740
992 22 18

3431
fORECLOSED HOMES L9w Or 0
Oownl Gov t And Bank Repo s
Berng So ld NOW' f"manc lng
Ava tlabfe Call Nowl 1 800 730
1n2 E~~:t ao4o

Aec•eatton lan&lt;J Conn act Ava 1

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandtse

33 · - Kllpllat"
wt

, .

ASTRO·GRAPH
Wednesday July 21 1999
C1rcumstances tn the year ahead
could draw you 1nlo a more advanta
geous allmnr:e wuh someone wtth
whom yo u already have finn bounds
Collecuvely you II do great lhmgs
1ogethcr
CANCER (June 21 July 22) Try
mg to be allthmgs 10 all people ncv
er works- and tt could even cause you
to reel frustrated or madequa!c Just
be yourself and you II ge1 a lot far
thcr ahead Cancer trea! yourself to
a htrthday gtfl Send the requ11ed
refund fom1 and for your Astro
Graph predtt.:tiOtlS ror the year ahead
by ma1lrng $2 and self addressed

VIRGO (Aug 21 Sept 22) If
pnssthlc ltK.Iny lry In avmd someone
Wllh whnm you recently had L"WSs
wnn.ls Ch mcc" arc hoth ul you sttll
h.l\ c ch1ps on your shoulders .md
coultJ s.ty thtnJ:!s lo wtdcn !he ch.tsm
liBRA (Sept 21 0.:1 ~11 Ynur
hullgctc.m he 1mrrmcd upon tot! ty
tl ynu st.ut nil )llUr du} nil on the
nght root Son u ut your I m mual
nr~ md tnm wlmt )UU um ol vour

••n

t.:Xjlcmcs
SlORPIO (0LI

2-t Nm

at hntmg the

able to s1mply go wmdow wtshtng

today so unle ss you have ample
financml wherewithal tt s best to
leave your c rcdtt cards home

TAURUS (Apnl 211 M 1y 20) The

the

qualn y and sau sfacuon rather than
today ~.:oncer nmg rr ut! Jt.:a l
mIller that c.:ou ld have lnr rea~.:hmg
cllells Don 1 be too hastv

r:hance

ltnc hctween hemg your own person
or hem~ a tc,un pltycr mrgllt he
r 1ther dcl t~.:atc toduy Un l onun,t tcl y
the llumcr IUI!!ht dmnmutc mer the
I utcr Try to rc\crsc th u

10 156 Be sure 10 stale your Zodlac

spcctl

you have a

bulls eye
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
Don tlet poor JUdgment on your pan
reopen an old wound today There s
a poss1b1lny you could repeat !he
m1stake 1ha1 caused !he tnJury tn the
f1rst place
ARIES (March 21 Apnl 19)
There s no way you rc gm~g: tu he

21) Unless you stnvc In keep all nl
yo ur tesly endeavors ns

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) It s lar
more Important 1hal you strrve for

atm for menntngful ohjccuvcs wtll

SAGIITARIUS (Nnv 21 Dec

stamped envelope to Astro Graph
c/o liltS newspaper PO Bu.\ 1758
Murray Htll StatiOn New York NY
stgn

.:!.:!)

Shuultl you get nnoh ctl m" cnm
ftCtiiiH development 11xl 1y don 1
undercsttmatc yo ur .ld\crs.try lh1~
mdt\tdual could he fur slmngcr I han
yo u thmk

Takmg scatterrng pot shots at a \llrt
of targets today won t tmprove
your marksmanship Only when you

ely

hasrt.: nnd

as posstble today you could
have a tendency to furthcrcomplrcate

s1mple

SJtuatton

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
Although nonnally ynu re a reason
ably cauuous mdJv tdual who u5ual
ly 1sn't prone to lakmg btg, uncalcu
la!ed rtsks your d1sc 1plme mtghl be
at a low p01nt today Be r:nrelul

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)

GEMINI 1M 1y 21 !unc 201 Rum
the rwwcts th II h~,.,;
~~g tnlln~ •~.,r~~n~thlltttc" 1r dutt l~
Vt iU \~ IU~~:-.cJ up lfl ttl h 1'1.: h~._n
llo.;!;l"dltlc u,uld gd qutt.. It 4J hill!}
unk"s ' tiU get on tlun 1!' ' ht tght mJ
.. Ill)

hltngs It om

"
Baseban Allanla Braves at Tormlo Blue Jays

A

I

I

�Page 12 • The pally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Inducements offered ·JVIore cases of brutality surface in Kosovo
to boost peace talks I
'

~y COLLEEN BARRY
A-soclated Preee Writer
~-PiijSTINA, Yugoslavia- Hatred

cinehcJ around the body.
"Even the grave 1s full of blood,"
!\aid Nimon Fazhu. the man 's
and violence in Kosovo are clmmmg nephew. hclieving he saw dark stains
new vrcllms even as old ones are JUSt o n the dank walls of ttie grave.
bemg documented by international
Hours after International War
tnvestigators gathering evtdence of Crimes Tnhunal mvesligawrs and
atrocittes dunng the brutal Serb· Bnt"h sold1ers left the grave &gt;tiC to
clampdown_on the province.
mourners . Fazliu's twd sons and
Four ethntc Albantans ktlled over th ree nephews prepared to give 1i1m
the weekend near Klina, m weste-rn a proper hunal
Kosuvo, provtde stark evidence that
A man dug a fresh grave only 10
the ethnic hatreds that Jed to the bru- yards fro m where Serbs had buried
tal Serb-Aibanian conn~et ,are eon- liim, IR a Crude row of graves hasti·
tmuing despite attempts by NATO- ly dug m the dark earth. Fazliu's sons
and nephews waued for local imam
led peace forces to cap tensions.
Evidence of earlier brutaltty was to tlntsh another funeral to come tend
uneanhed Monday m the nonhern 10 their uncle.
The bodies exhumed Monday
town of Podujevo , where local
authonties exhumed the bodies of I 9 included stx members of the Bugu·
vtctims of a Serb massacre- includ- Je~ct family and seven from the
ing 80-year-old Fariz Fazhu, who Duliqi family. Four of the dead were
went miSsmg on March 28, the Mus- chi ldren .
lim holy day BaJram.
Nimon Fazliu s~id he believ~s all
The old man's embrotdered black the people were killed March 28, the
and while belt, part of a tradillonal same day his uncle disappeared after
costume from the reg1on , was still going to pray at the town mosque. On

. WASHINGTON (AP)- President Clinton is establishing a new strategtc partn~rshtp wnh Israel and promtsing boosts in U.S. mihtary aid and
up_ w 50 Jet fighters as mdu&lt;ements. for territorial concessions by Prime
Mtmster Ehud Barak to the Palesttmans and Syria.
U.S: ~ilttary aid to Israel will be boosted by nearly one-third, from
S1.9 mtlhon a year currently to $2 4 btllion annually over the next decade
- tf c;ongress. approve~ . And the admintstratton is urging Congress to
approve a spectal $1.2 btlhon appropriation to carry out a pullback on the
West Bank.
'
Barak IS respof\ding ~ith enth~siasm to the ovenures, promismg to test
the penlous waters of Mtdeast peacemaking for the next 15 months. " By
then we should know, " the new prime minister said Monday after a founh
'
day of talks wtth Clmton.
· He regtstered a willingness to take nsks for peace, but also assured the
lsraelt people th~t he would be ever mindful of thetr secunty co.ncems .
At the same ttme, B;uak carefully avoided saymg how much land he
would relinquiSh - on the West Bank to the•Palesumans and on the Golan
·
Hetghts to Syna.
'_'We are not talking about a mtraculous solutton·, " Barak said at •Joint
Whtte House news conference with Cltnton. ~eace, he satd, " wtll not drop
upon us from heaven iri three weeks ."
Even so, Barak 's willingness to try to end a three-year stalemate m
negottattons wnh Syna ;wd a 'Seven-month impasse wllh the Palestmtans
msptred Cltnton and h1s senior advisors to lavish pratS~ on the former gen. .
e ral .
"Your ftrst VISit as Israel 's l~ader has been an enormous success." Secretary of State Madeleine Albmghttold Barak man exchan~e of toasts at
a. dmner Monday ntght at the reSidence of Israeli Ambassador Zalman
ShovaL
NORTH RUMEILAH, Iraq (AP)
" Amcnca 's .support for Israe l's secunty, mclud1ng a strategi c edge IS
Under UN . sanctions imposed to
-Iraq's 01! industry, devastated by puntsh Iraq for its 1990 invasion of
rock so ltd.· she said.
' 1
And she assured Barak, who urged the Onited States openly not to take · war and stilled by trade sancltons, is Kuwait, the world shuns oil deals and
recovering thanks to trade - how- other business with the country The
"n the role of "judge" between Israel and its Arab ne1~hbors . that she
. ever restricted - and infusions .of I 996 exempt tons let Iraq expon $5.2
. understood " ~he hard decisions that lie ahead 'can only be made by those
111 the regmn . ·
chemicals and spare pans.
rillion worth of otl every six months,
Wtthin a year, confident oil offi. as long as the proceeds are used to
Batak and Albnght were contrnurng their talks today at her home 1n
c13ls say, Iraq will regain tiS pre-Per- meet Iraqi citizens' food, medtcal and
the Georgeto,wn sc,llon of Wa~hmgton . He also was due to mec1 wllh
sian Gulf War positton as a key worlq other humanitanan needs Special
members of Congress and to call on Vice PreSident AI Gore before, fly crude producer. .
tng to l.? ndon for talks Wednesday wtth Bntish Pnme Minister Tony Blair.
·dtSpensatton also has been given to
The
I!J?
I
war
over
Kuwait
wtped
Th~ new sttmeg1c pannershtp set up by Chnton and Barak calls for U.S
buy oil mdustry materials.
out /IS percent of Iraq's oil infraand Israeli sec urity expens to eslabhsh a jomt group and suhmtt io the
1\aqt officials have complained
structure. Since then, Iraq has clawed that rcqutred U.N. approval of each
two ,Jeaders 'measures to bolster Israel's indigenous defense and deter.
rent capabtltttes "
tiS way back to an official productton ·deal has been slow, and blamed
rate of 2.65 million barrels per day. del&gt;ys on the Untied States. But
These reco~merrdattons Will be due every four mo~ths. and Clmton ,
A return to full production- 3.5 mil- enough deals have come through to
and Barak Will meet at regular intervals, or about everv four months. as'
lion barrels - is posSible m 2000, give mdustry officials thetr first
well.
·
satd
Rafid ai-Dubom, chairman of the ' chance in years to cheer.
The United States wtll finance Israel's development of a third battery
state-owned South Oil Company.
Before I996, Iraq had the funds
of Arrow anti-misstle missiles, and Israel will purchase up to 50 F- I 6 fight·
The comeback began after far hule more than patchwork repairs
cr Jets over the next few years .
December 1996, when the Untted on factltties shattered by mtSsiles. It
And yet, with allthtS suppon, Clinton acknowledged that " we should
Naltons
allowed some exceptions to had to shut down waterlogged wells
.
have no •lluswns The way ahead will be difficult."
liS strict ban on trade with 'Iraq.
because tt couldn't1mp{lrt chemtcals

· that day, he said, Serbs rounded up
people and took tbem to the Bugujevci family home , where they massacred them in the garden.
The graves WI II provide more
evidence of the mass killings of
thousands of ethnic Albanians during
months of Serb terror, and war ciimes
tribunal investtgators were present to
document evidence.
Elsewhere in the province. Amcr·
ican peacekeepmg forces tn Kosovo
suffered their first deaths when an
. armored personnel carrie r ovenumed.
killing two soldi e\s and mJuring
three others, a spokesman said Mon day.
The deaths of the 'peacekeepersSpec. Sherwood B. Brim, 30, of Dal las. and Sgt. Wilham W Wright, 27 ,
of Clearlake, Calif. - "occurred near
Dmorovce, I0 miles northeast of
Gnjtlane, where U.S . force s are
based.
The acc1dent came f1vc weeks
after U.S. forces, ·now totaling about
5,000, entered the province along

\\ 11-h other NATO tfll&lt;lJl' umlcr .1
pcas;c ac1.:md .
· NAl 0 ha" .. trugglcd to pn:\l!nt

'to absorb the water. It lacked the
chlorine needed to maintain proper
pressure for maximum pumping '"
functioning wells and the com!'ounds
used to separate otl from water.
Waterlogged wells were the matn
reason output was low in the
Rumeilah fields, once' the most productive in the country.
Al-Duboni said Iraq has overcome
that obstacle, adding that his company now has enough chemicals 10
boost pumping rates.
·

Twonew ·watertre,tmentunitsare
to reach I&lt;;&gt; Rumeilah, 350 mtlessouth
of Baghdad, next year.
By the end of 1999, the amount
approved for chemicals and spare
parts should reach $1 billion . If
deliveries continue uninterrupted, alDubo~i reckoned, 250,000 more bare
rels per day could be pumped by
year'~· end, and another 500.000 in

· a ptecc of 4-by-4 mto a crack in the
door.
The door Jed to a lcitchen where
Industrial-size refrigerators chill tubs
of cottage cheese and shelves of cups
and plates line a ~a) I above a row of
deep smks.
The guards, as they later told it
watched for a couple of minutes ~
the man pried at the door Then they
yelled, "Stop"' Gregory Taylor froze ,
then pulled the board from the door,
leaned it against the' wall and, following instructions, put his hands
behind his head .
The arresting police officer later
testified that Taylor said he "was try·
· fhe k'tic h en to get somemg to go tn
thmg to eat." .
Taylor conllnues to deny the
whole thing. "!would never go into
that place to steal" he says addmg
that the break-in :Was cone~ ted by
one of the guards who had argued
.

me

\

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 90s; Low:.70s

mg Albanians.
As hatl'ed and violc:n cc pcrstst 1n
· Kosovo. politi cal fallout frnmlh~ war
1s mounting 1n St: rhw
For m.~ arlv IInce weeks. prntt:sts
agm'nst P1c si d~nt Slobodan Mllo!!~l!\ ll."
and h1 s gmcrn men t have spread over
much of Sc-r!lia as the opposltinn1ncs
to capttahze on pub he anger ol'cr the

de

defeat by NATO and
facto loss of
Kosnvo Bu t the opposition remains
fractured.
In an mtcrvicw with the Montenegrin Vtjestl daily published Monday, opposition leader Zoran Djtnd·
jtc rejected cooperation with rival
Vuk Draskovtc, who has so1d that
Milosevtc 's oustc'r should not he the
main oppost tioo goal.

2000. Iraq "currently pumping 1.55
mtlilon b"'rd s from southern fteld s
The tota l would reach 2 3 mtllton .
equaling southern productton pnor to
the sanctions. ai-Dubon t satd. Northern fi eJds. he sa1d , alread y arc productn g ihetr prewar mark c)f I 2 mil lion barrel s per day.
If it meets its 2000' p~otluction
goals. Iraq wo~ld lor the tlrst t11ne
earn the enttre $52 b1llt on 11 ts
all owed under · the UN . sa ncti ons
exemptions - pn)vidcd that oil
pnces elo nnl si1Jc below $15 a barlei
Get11ne all the o il &lt;'Ut could he dtf·
ftcult. U~der liN . rule s. Iraq ts
a II owe d to u&lt;c on 1v '" p1rc 1111 cs to
~e TurkiSh tcrnlln&lt;~l of Ccyhan and
Mma ai -Bakr on the Gulf. The hncs
have a combined capac ity of ahout
2.4mill ton ban·cls per day, and spare
parts to hoostthat .ha \.c not yet come

•

T YOIJ lfl'fR
CGYBIIAGE
FAMILY

Meigs County's
Volume

MEDI
ELIGIBILI7Y

PROG

CALL TODAY FOR
MORE INFORMATION
.(740) 992·2117 or
.(800) 992·2608
'

MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES
'.

.

**Annua.lln~ome

.~ •..:..... ..•.. ........... .... .. .

$12,948
2 ••• .••n~••••·••••••••••••••~•••••• ..$17' 796
3 ••. ~ .•.:•.......•.............. ~ .. $21 t 756
411.~.~r.•····~ ...................... $26,856
&amp;.~.:••:. ....... ~ .................... ·$31 ,452
.

''

'

J

'

'

~must contain at least one child under age

*•cetfam
work related expenses, such as child
•

may not count against income in
~eterminfng eligibility.
~re,

-Page4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

50, Number 32

Single Copy·

35 Cents

Kennedy, airpla·ne wreckage located by divers
By GLEN JOHNSON
-$MOC!ated Pren Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The wreckage of John F.
Kennedy Jr.'s airplane was located with' Kenne4Y's body
·still aboard and the Navy today teadied a recovery missiOfl
off the coast of Manha's Vineyard, Mass., aocording to
,
government and family sources.
"They've got the fuselage and John Kennedy's in it," a
government source with firsJhand knowledge of the inves·
dgation told The Associated Press. The White House confirmed that Kennedy's plane and a body had been found.
There was no immediate information about the bodies of
Kennedy's wife and sister-in-Jaw, who also were on board
the plane when it crashed Friday night
Jim Hall, chai.rman of the National Transponation ~fe·
ty Board, and Coast Gullld Rear Adm. Richard Larrabee,
who was overseeing the search, canceled a round of morning TV appearanCe. and went to the USS Grasp, th~, ship
where th~ wreckage was to be deposit~ after being raised
from the ocean floor.
'
1'11e heightened activity took place after ships from the
Navy, Coast Guard and National Oceanogt:aphic and
Alinospheric Admini,stration spent Tuesday night scouring
a site 7 1/2 miles southwest of the Manha's Yineyard coast,
a spot that investigators had speculated was the likely
splash point for the plane.

II crashed while carrying Kennedy,
"Several options are being discussed.
38, his wife, Carolyn Bessette
No decisions have been made, " the
family source satd.
Kennedy, 33, and her sister Lauren
Bessette, 34.
Several experienoed pilots wlici Oew
The fuselage was first sported at
into the Vineyard on Friday night said
II :30 p.m. Thc;sday, acrording to a
tlte haZy skies and darkness were chal ·
statement issued by the safety board,
Jenging even for them . Kennedy
and subsequent investigation conobtained his pilot's license in April
1998.
firmed that it was Kennedy's airplane.
While House spokesman Joe LockAt a briefing Tuesday, . Robert
hart said the discovery was made with
Pearce, wtto is heading the investiga·
remote camens. The Grasp was' being
lion for the National lransponation
Safety Board, gave a more detailed
repositioned so divers could go down
and assist with the recovery, a senior
explanation of the approach.
administration official said.
.
All seemed fine about 34 miles from
"\he highest priority remains
the airpon, with ·the plane descendmg
from 5,600 feet to about 2,300 feet at
locating and recovering the remains of
all ~. '' Lockhan·said. '
.
a slightly faster-than-normal rate of
The Kennedy family was notified
BODY FOUND - Dlvere have 700 feet per minute. .
of the discovery in the early morning !ound the body•of JFK Jr. and the About 20 miles from the airport, the
hours, a family source said. They have largely Intact fu8llage of the plane staned turning to the right and
discussed a range of oplions for han- plane that crashed and unk In climbing back to 2,600 feet. After Jevdling the remains, including the possi- 100 feet of water, killing Kennedy, eling off, it flew for a shon time before
hla wHe and eleter-ln-law.
beginning another tum to the right and
bility of a burial at sea
No dates' or details have been completed, said a family starting " a rapid rate of descent" that may have exceeded
source.
5,000 feet per minute, or about 10 times faster than nonnal.

"-WI
Jl

The descent was 3,000 feet per minute faster than what
would ~) a stressful approach for even the most experi·
enced 01er, expens said.
Pearce would not speculate on the damage caused by
such a crash, butsaid: " I'm sure you can draw a conclusion
by the debris we've been bringing in, which is fragment·
ed."
On the fourth full day of the search, the FAA acknowl edged il was asked in a phane call from an mtem a1 the
Manha 's Vineyard airport to help locate the plane Friday
night.
The caller, 21-year-old Adam Budd, expressed no great
urgency as he telephoned an FAA slation in Bridgepon,
Omn., at 10.05 p.m Friday, FAA officials saip.
He said he called at the request of an umdentified couple who had come to the airpon to tneet Lauren Bessette.
Kennedy and his wife had planned to drop ,her off on their
way to Hy311nis Port, M~.• for his cousin's wooding. .
· Budd asked if the agency could track the airplane, but
the person at the FAA station questioned him about who he
was and finally said: "We don't give this informatton out to
people over the phone."
Budd gave up, saying, "It's not a big deal."
The plane had gone down about 9:40p.m. Nothing was
done until a much more urgent call was made to the Coast
Guard at 2:15a.m. by a Kennedy family friend.

Plans ftnalized for Honey Bear Festival
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH ·'
The quartet is composed of men from Northern
Sentinel Newa Start
•·
Ohio wh&lt;&gt; cam~ together to .perform at (eslivals in
"Bears and Bees for a Honey of ~ Good Time" . the midwest.
'
will
the theme of the Honey Bear Festival to be · Calliope music will be presented during the after·
-staged in Middleport on Saturday, Aug . 14.
noon l:!y Duffield, known as the ''The Calliope
· The · festival, which replaces the .annual River King ."
.
Fest, will be held from noon to 6 p.m. at Diles· Park.
Other stage entertainment is planned a~d will
Plans were finalized at.a special meeting of the Mid• · include a band concert along with local si,ngers and .
dleport Commuhity Association h~ld last week in the dancers.
'
·.
conference room of Peoples Bank.
Sidewalk sales wJ II be held, window displays of
The schedule of activities was discussed and bees and bears will be ~ea lured, there will be a work members' were assigned responsibilities.
ing model railroad display, crafters will be .~isplay·
Myron · Duffield, president, c~mfirmed the book· ing and ,demonstrating, and a farm market wnl be
ing for one of the fealu'te attractiol\s .. Steve Conlin, operating.
the "live bee beard" person.
. Anyone wishing to participate in the farm market·
Conlin, who has performed around the country is asked to call 992-4197 for arrangements .
left, wae awarded the $500 Melge County IKES
and appeared on several te!evision shows including
In addition to (he entertainment there will b~ a
which Ia -.rde4, to one student M!lll yw.r whqJ• puraulng a NBC's To!light Show, allows 10,000 bees to form a ~ilent auction for mercha9dise donated by loca l busi con81rvatlon-relattld degrw. , He Ia a ucond-y.r student at bC81d of bees on his facl!
1 .. , nesses as will as a drawing for a:n Ohio River Bear
'Hocking College In Nelaonvllle and Ia currently taking glioIn addition to conducting live bee demonslra· • which has been especially designed for the Honey
graphlca. Shown pre81ntlng the IICholarehlp Ia Gary Dill, IKES lions, Conlin will have bee products for sale.
Bear F~stival.
·
· ·•
'·
IIICretary.
Another highlight of the festival will be the nam·
Tickets are available at several local stor~~ now
ing of a Little Miss and Little Mister Bee and Bear. and will be sold through Aug. 14 from the area
Selection will be made on the basis of costumes With where the silent auction is being held . Winners will
the jullges to select the best bee and bear outfits.
be announced thai day.
The boys 'and girls will be judged. in age cateAn information booth will be in place to give out ·
gories .. from threl: to five and six to eight •• with lour maps of Middleport to those from out of town,
four· prizes to be awarded in each age group.
and food and beverages will be sold all afternoon.
· Anyone whose children wish to participate are to Some shade will be provided for spectators who ar~.
call 992-4197 for additional information . Details of encouraged to bring along a lawn chair ·
the contest and the rules will be made available soon
Next meeting of the Association will be on Aug 3
to participants at severalloc~lions in town.
i~ .the banli's conference room .
Duffield also reported lhat ' "Popular Demand", a '
Anyone interested in partictpaling in the festival.
barbershop quartet, will present a program on stage or assisting with staging the event is asked to call
and also do strolling music about town.
'
992-4197.

be

~:::=;:~~

.

With passage uncertain, .House GOP
pushes $792 billion tax cut to floor
TREE PLANTING- Racine Brownie Troop 1100 :1\Jeldaycoordlnated the planting of a n - crebapple -tree at Star Mill Park In
Racine In memory of Carroll Teaford. Shown are, rear left, park
board member Dale Hart; rear right, Jeremy Hupp of D&amp;H Gar·
den Center, Portland, which donated the tree, and troop Ieeder
Joyce Romlnee. Girl Scouta .,attending the tree planting were
Aehley Romines, Joyce Romlnee, Georgette Brlcklea, VIrginia
Brlckles, Megan Day, Branigan Long and Stephanie Shamblin.

.

1' -BE IU.. ICIIILI! .
YOIJR FAMILY
·IS A'J'. 011.
185 Pl!llCENT
m.Of"JJJI,EitAI
...
.
.'81J••I~LINES

I .,

5·2

'

·•

..

Red defeat tigers

Kyger Creek Tournament, Page 4
Ann on teen fathers, Page 7
Family medicine, Page 7

Today: P. Cloudy
High: 90s; Low: 70s

1

.with .him over sleeptng 10 ;he church was ~ry mg bv thiS potnt. ~nd he
alcove.
thanked Father McCo ., Then he
At trtal, Taylor's lawyer Gractela th k d
..
&gt;
Martinez. argued that even' tf Taylor
a1 e ~e. . d
L
A
1
had tried to break into the church .he
ex
tee tar u11.' · os ngc 1es
was' gutlty of no more than tresp~s - ~o~nty deput y ~u~Itcddc ~e~d~r, ~ays
ing The kitchen was ' where church
ay or IS ."9 1 I e tn o c en ant
workers fed the hom I
M n·
lawmakers had tn mmd when t~ey
said, and it wasn't a ~,;:~·-in ~f ~~~~ wr~~~~~e t~r:e:~tnkes law.
..
lor believed he had penmssiOn 10 d .
f a ·
he says.
was
enter 10 get food
cst~ned or repeat felons , not rcpc~t
A jury convicted htm , a judge . nhUisances .~e puniShm ent docsn I fit
handed dow~ the law-mandated sen- 1 e ;nme.
tence . and the appeals court agreed . fere:~secutor Dale Cut ler sees ll dif·
"I was devastated "Ms. Martinez
Y· ..
.
says. "Thts was the ~ost pai~ful case
Taylor .; failed at both probatlo~
I've ever handled because II \\'as so and paro!~ · and did more than that,
.
He d td
' not
, have a v1olent he satdf ' WhatMheCvt olated· was the
unjust.
nature. He was JUst poor and hun gu
trust o a man ( c oy) wh o s~owed
Now he has 25 to life.~·
htm nothm.g _but kmdne" ove r'' mne-" He was a gentleman throughout Y':,"' pen oil
.
the trial" she recalls " Even at the · Today. Tay.lor 1" 'es among some
end, wh~n the sentenc~ was Imposed . of the country s m.ost ·vtolcnt offend He thanked the judge. then turned, he ers. He works out every other day a.nd
ts eager , to get reasstg ned

1

Sports

July 21, 191111

revenge ·l.~JIO.'Il KnM )' (' ·., Scrt'IJ :In
mm orll) a nd ot hcro:o hy Serb" target ·

Three strikes Ia~_ puts man in jail for 25 years to life for trying tc;o;i;~rio~d .
mg about the vts•tmg ro.o m. ''I'd do
a ltttle and I'd want more. That's a
· bad fecltng , when you c.&lt;llhe down off
. that stuff. I'd ask myself, 'Why ?
.Why?' It 's crazy."
Somettmes, Taylor would wander
over to the church and tell Mc&lt;;:oy,
" I'm tired. burned out " The pneSt
would gtve htm a nde back to his
mother 's house . where he w.ould
rest, dry out.
Sometimes the poltce picked htm
up lor drug use , and 1n I 992 he was
convtcted ol c?came posseSSIOn. Put
on parole, he vtolated tts terms by not
che~ kmg in wtth ht s offtcer. "l' says,
because ·he knew he wo~ld fml the
druoo test
About 4 am._. Jul y II. I997 , two
guards paused tn the shadows and
watched a tall, s lender man '" dirty
clothes and worn-out tenn.IS shoes
bend over the bon om of the back •
door to St. Joseph 's He was workmg

Weather

cthn H: au~~.:k'&gt; . btHh h rl'tUnHng l'th·
nu; Albanwn refugee' 'ce"m g

Iraq confident of coming back in oil trading

:y MA_RTHAPBELUSLE
sh1eld Taylor fro)ll 'bad tnfiuences. AI
ssoctated rese Writer
age 12. he was Imitated mto the
. CORCORAN, Caltf. - lnstde the CnpS. ·JOmmg peno\flc gang battles
pnson that holds mass murderers ag~lnst mal Bloods: It was mostly
Juan Corona and Charles Manson, a fistftghts , he says, " back in the days
37-year-old derelict named Gregory before the drive-by shootmgs.,
Taylor IS servt~g 25 years to hk
He qun school '"the 12th grade.
T~ylor dtdn t kill, or even tnjure had some run -ms wtth the law whtle
anyone. His c~me! Attempting to sttll a teen-ager, and spent time in the
Caltfom~a Youth Authonly. In hts
break mto a church to steal food.
Th~ case recalls " Les. Miser- 20s, he did a total of about two_years
ables. the classtc Vtctor Hugo nov- tn state pnson for the purse-snatchel m whtch Jean VaiJean ts tmprtS· mg and the attempted street robbery.
oned for stealtng bread, said one o~
Once out, he met Vivian Fox, a
the three Judges who ruled on Tay- new tenant in his brother's apartment
lor's appeal, m Apnl
. . .
building. He helped her unload her
. The, other two upheld the convtc· furmture and soon moved in himself
t1on ·
Vivian got pregnan t , but the re 1aTaylor's sentence stems from the uonship dtdn't last
Cahfomta lhree-stnke! Jaw mte~ded
"We had an argument and I left,"
to reduce cnme by taking .habtlual Taylor says. "When I went back, she
cn mmals off the streets. Two "sen" had my clothes out on the porch."
Taylo(s daughter. Tarnra, is 13
' o us or VIOlent " felonies , followed by
o ne felony of any sort , reqUire a sen- now. He S8Y,S he hasn 't seen her for
seven or eight yearS", mtsses her and
tence of 25 years to hfe. •
Taylor had the requtstle record. He thinks of her often.
once snatched a p~rse cont'ltntng $I 0
After his family broke vp, Taylor
and a bus pass from a woman on th~ began sleeping from ttme to ume in
s1dewalk A year later, he and ·.a bud- the laundry room or an alcove at St.
_dy, armed on ly wtlh mac ho att1tudes, Joseph 's, a Roman Catholic Church
tned to rob a man on the street
on I 2th Street, a few blocks from the
_That the second c,o nVIctt on was 14 Los Angeles fashion and flower disyears ago mattered nol.at all . With- tricts .
l~U l ~he pr:VJOUS convicti ons. tus
By day, lhe area IS an open-atr
church break-m would have d_rawn no bazaar. Mannequins in rayon blousmore than three years In stead . he ' II es and taffeta gowns hne the 1 1
he el•gtblc for parole tn 2022. the Bolts of fabric stand in rows~;~~ ~
year he turns 60.
. shelves ofb~ball caps. The sme ll of
, H1s rcma1111ng chance 1s the ~tate hot dogs flows froin food slands.
Supreme Court, whteh has not yet along sidewalks bustltgg with bar·
dectded whether wconstdcr hts case . gam -hunters . .
The three-stnkcs law was
Taylor found part-tiine work m the
approved by votc.rs'" 1994, the year diStrict. dotng construetton jobs at
alter the ktdnap-murder of. I 2-year- flower shops. running machines at a
c lothing store and , although he had
old ,Polly Klaas by a paroled. felon
'" Cntrcs mamtam that hy curtar l1ng the no driver's license, making deliver~
se nl em:mg powers of JUd~es, the ~aw 1cs for various -compan 1cs,
1yas bound to lead to UnJUSt pumshHe·also volunteered to heip church
mcnts
,.
workers feed the homeless and occaTaylor grew up tn the tough South SIOnally worked as a g~ard at church
Central sectwn of Los Angeles, o ne wcddtnes.
of mne boy s born between 1949 and ' Ten years ago, at the church. Tay'1966 to a nurse who quit work and Jor met the Re v. Allan McCoy, a
'went on welfare to care for her chi I- Franciscan priesf. They got toge)her
dren . . ·
often to talk over baseball scores.
His stern. re li gious mother gatll· family problem s, spmtuality. Some erect the hoys each Sunday · for ttmes McCoy served Taylor sandchurch. hopmg to keep them on wiches or drove him to hiS mother's
track .
house in south Los Angeles. Some" 1 didn ' t want to go," Taylor tunes he gayc Taylor money to stay
recalls , loo ktng out the vis1ting room at a hotel.
windo"s of Corcoran State Prison.
:'He was like a fathertome ," Tay" l'd say, 'I'm stck.' But it never lor says.
worked "
As the friendship grew, so did
Dunng the week, the boys heard Taylor's heroin and cocaine addtc·
sponta neou s se rm ons from thei r tlon.
mother 's two ststers. both ministers.
When he had the money, he would
His older brother, Dwtghl, who gel a hotel room for a few days and
went on to play outfield for the shoot up. When he couldn't afford a
Kansas City Royals and other· pro- room. he says. he would sometimes
less10nal baseball teams, " taught me crawl mto a tent under a highway to
how to play span s.·· Taylor says. But shoot .up
the c uri o us teen would shp away 10
His brothers tried to help. Michael
chec k o ut what the ot her boys were drove him up 10 a drug rehab center
doing .
where Taylor completed a 90-day
"At recess. we'd go in thiS lutle program and stayed clean for a few
room and be shoot mg dtce, ;·. he years But it didn 't last .
1ecalls "Dwight would come look" I d do good for a year, nine, 10
mg l'or me. and I'd hide in the bath - months," he says Then it was back
"''""""II with my feet up He'd find to the streets. he says. " not doing
and smdt' my hands and ask me. cri mes. doi ng drug~."
"You been :-.rnokmg c1garcncs ?'""
He was stuck in a cycle, h~ says.
The stnct uphri nging coul dn ' t hiS sad downward-angled eyes cast-

Wednesday

Tuesday, July 20, 1999

Man convicted in wife's death files
lawsuit ·a gainst fo;mer coroner
AKRON (AP) - A former Mansfield physician who was convicted in
1990 of murdering his wife has sued former Summit County Coroner William
· ·
. ·
·
Cox. .
The handwritten lawsuit by John Boyle Jr. accuses Cox of failing to provide
Boyle and his defense altoineys with
autopsy repons and findings on the
death of Noreen BOyle.
·
The suit asks for $10 miUion in
punitive damages from Cox. Boyle,
who ls in prison, is representing him·
self in the suit that was filed Tuesday
2 Sections • 12 Pages
in Summit County Common Pleas
Coun and assigned to Judge John R.
7
Calendar
Adams.
Cox has an unlisted phone number
9&amp;10
C!assifieds
and could not be reached for com11
Comics
ment. Cox resigned in early 1996
after being accused of using the county morgue and employees to do pri·
3
Local
vate
autopsy work. He ultimately
4-S
Soorts
pleaded guilty to nine misdemeanor
3
Weather
charges.
Abody •identified as Noreen Boyle's
Lotteries
was found in January 1990 in a base·
mcnt grave at a home John Boyle was
Qhisl
buying near Erie, Pa., but Boyle
Pick 3: 0-0-6 Pick 4: 2-8-6-9
denied killing his wife and saia the
Buckeye 5: 5-10-15-22·29
body wasn't hers.
West Vindpja
Mrs. Boyle had been missing since
P.ick 3: 94-5
Dec. 31, 1989. Boyle claimed his
Pick 4: 2· 7-3·4
wife staged her disappearance, but
c 1998 Oh1u V.lley Pubhsh!nJ Co.
police said Boyle suffocated her.

Good Afternoon

Today's

Senate budget rules, Archer on Tuesday
By CURT- ANDERSON
reduced the bill's overall cost from $864
AP Tax WrHer .
.
billion to $792 billion :..._ the same level,,
WASHINGTON (AP) - In a risky
as a Senate GOP alternative That means
roll of the political dice, House Republialmost no significant tax relief would
cans launched their $792 billion lax cut
occur until 2001.
•
towm:d a sho~down floor . vote today
.
The
Texas
Republican
said.
th~
sav
with no guarantee there was enough supings would come by phasing in the 10
port to pass it.
·
percent inc9me tax c'ul slower; delay·
Emerging from a closed-do~r meet·
ing the pace of repeal Qf both estate
ing with their GOP colleagues, Republi·
.taxeS and · the alte'r native min1mum
can leaders ·said they were still · strug·
tax, and by ~ utting corporate capttal
gling to nail down the needed voles .
gains
rates from 35 percent to 30 per "I don't think i.t"s a gamble . I don't
cent, instead·,of down to 25 percent.
think it's a bad thing to lose, but I' do
The bill also would cut top indi·
think it's a bad thing not to fight," said
vidual
capital gains rates from 20 per Re_p. ' J:C. Walls of Okl~_homa, the
SOURCES
Prell·
cent
to
15 percent, give new breaks
Republican Conf~rence chatrman .
dent Cll 10 will vetO the
for
health
care and education and
Speaker Denms Hasler!, R-111., me!
n n
e If
raise,
the
standard
deduction for j oint
late into the night Tuesday with about a ~ '/::' =~se
filers to ease the "marriage penalty" _
dozen shaky GOP moderates and said, J~ate
that hits millions of two-income cou '
the votes needed for passage Jiliely a
·
would be whipped up at the last minute on the House pies.
Casting the bill as a hallmark of GOP smaller·
floor. Debate was expected to begin in the early
government
philosophy, the chairman ~f the la,x·
afternoon.
,
"We never have them until right before the vole," writing Hou•e Way and Means Commttlee ,_, Rep .
Hasterl laid reporters. Earlier, he had appealed to Bill Archer, R-Texas, told the Rules Committee that
GOP rank-and-file in a private caucus for party unity : support for tax cuts "define the difference between
· Republicans and Democrats ... This debate is about
"I need each and every one of you. "
With only a wafer-thin majority in the House, downsizing the power of Washington. "
The Clinton administration and congressional
GO!,' leaders could ill afford to lose their own mem bers as long as Democrats remained virtually united Democratic leaders presented unified opposition to
the large Republican lax cuts as threats to the long·
in opposition.
.
term solvency of Social Security and Medicare and
The Republican moderates stood in the way.
Some questioned the accuracy of projected budget to sufficient levels of government spending.
At a Capttol Hill news conference, Treasury'
surpluses totaling $2.9 trillion over 10 years; while oth·
Secretary
Lawrence Summers warned thai huge tax
ers wanted more of the money used to pay down public debt. Still others said it would eat up the money cuts also could h~ve unwantej:! econofnic conseneeded for Medicare and critical government spending. quences, including higher interest rates, greater
"The votes are not there at this point," said Rep. inflation and a larger public debt.
"The tax cuts that have been put on the table repMichael Castle, R-Del., who has offered a $514 billion
alternative tax bill. "We need to have a smaller tax resent a reversal of course," Summers sa id . "Confidence is crucial. II is time for us to make the right
cut.··
,
GOP leaders planned to offer moderates a chance to and prudent decisi c;m ."
President Clinton has proposed about $250 billion
vote on a nonbinding resolution stating that Congress
would commit to reducing the $3.6 trillion debt to S1.6 in net tax cuts and Summers spo ke favorably of a
trillion over 10 years, but many of them complained tt $295 billion measure"'put toge th er by De mocrats , on
the Senate Finance Com mittee.
had no teeth .
Clint o n administration o fft cials satd the president
"It's being tossed out at the 11th ho ur and it has no
would veto the large tax cut Republicans h ave pro·
meaning," said Rep. Ray LaHood, R- Ill.
In part to placate ' the moderates and in part to meet posed.

·•
I

•

•'

Livestock sale
takes a new turn
Changes in the 1999 Junior Fair
livestock events at the. Meigs County
Fair have been announced by Joann
Calaway, junior fair coordinator.
The sale will be held on Friday, .
Aug. 29, and as a change from previ:
ous years~ animals will be solp at
speclfl,ed. llmes.
·
'I't!e sale scheoule is as follows · at
2 p.m. rabbits and chtckens, at 3 p .m .
datry market feeder, at3 30 p.m'\jairy
sweepstakes, at 4 p.m. market Jambs,
at 5 :30p.m. market swine, and at 8
p.m market steers.
Purpose' of the change, explai~ed
Citlaway, is to give buyers lime for a
break between sales. The change
comes as a request from some buy·
ers, she said
This yearthe livestock sale will be
a "term inal" sale which means that all
market steers, sheep, swine, and
diary feeders must go to a slaughter
house or to a vestock sa,le barn for
resale. No animal can lle taken home
in these species, Calaway said.
Weight -in wiV be held on Aug. 15
with the schedule as follows ,7 10 9
am. swine projects; 9 to 10 a m . .
sheep weigh-in; 9to 10 a.m. goat and
breeding sheep check in; I0 to I I
a.m. market stee~ 'and dauy feeders,
II to I I :30 am . market rabbtts; and
I I :30 to I 2 noon, market poultry. All
other junwr fair · ltveslock projects
must be in place by ,6 p.m

r,

Glenn-.led panel
to tackle math,
.science teaching
By KATHERINE RIZZO '
.
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON · (AP) - Tlte
space race with the Soviet Union
sp4rred a generation of Americans to
'pay more attention to math and SCI ence. Now a leading figure of th at
race, fonner senator-astronaut John

Glenn, wanlS to motivate a new

gen~

eration, beginning with their earliest
ttachers
· The Educati on Dt:partment on
Tuesday appointed Glenn to lead the
Natio nal Commission on Math and
St:ience Teaching in the 21st Centu·
ry.
"A student who is not taught the
potential\ meaning and magic of
mathematiCS and science is a student
... whose dreams go unfulfilled, and.
whose future is hm1ted, " Education
Secretary Ri chard Rile y s aid in
announcing the appointments of
Glenn and other commission members.
"I think people have a real chance
here with thi~ commission. and th e
energy th at Senator Glenn's going to
give it to make a real difference,"
said Bruce Alberts, president of the
National Academy of Sciences.
Glenn, 78, was th e first American
to orbit th e l'arth, in 1962, and last
year returned to space as a shuUi e
astrona ut.
His panel, to be known as th e
Glenn Comm ission, has been given
one year to study the state of math
and science education from kindergarten through 12th grade and recommend ways to auract, prepare and
keep good mal ~ and science teach·
ers.
•
" We can 't expect our kids to get a
first-class math or science education
if . their teachers are not trained the
way Ihey ought to be-trained ," Glenn
said .

.

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