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                  <text>••

Peste 12 • The o.lly Sutlnel

Friday

Thursday, July 29, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

Senate moves on ·GOP tax plan

ltr .Ill ABRAMS

Allooll'*l Ptlll Walta
WASHINGTON (AP) -

President Clinton

~arned anew todly ~hat he will veto 1 "large and

nsky tu cut" cbampooned by congressional Republicans, and he predicted tbattbc $792 billion cut could
carry America back "to the dark old days of huge
deficits."
"So I say to Congress, if you send me a lax cui
that shortchanges America's priorities and our children's .future I will veto it," Clinton said before leaving the While House for a trip io Europe, where be
will participate with other leaders in a summit in
Sarajevo on rebuilding the Balkans.
Republican leaders are steering their $792 billion
tax cut bill' through the Senate, shunting aside a much
smaller Democratic alternative and ignoring Clinton's earlier veto pledges. .
Backers of the 10-ycar ' plan were confident,
despite misgivings among several Republicans about
its size, of winning passage by the end of the wcelt
and moving quickly to .work out differences with a
similar House-passed bill.
Americans "are rightful heirs to the wealth they're
creating," Senat.e Finance ·eom.mittec 'Chairman
William Roth, R-Dcl., the bill's chief author, said in
opening the debate Wednesday.
"After paying for the .government programs for

which Congress bu planned and budgeted, the change
mustoow be returned to the taxpayer."
At issue was what to do with a budget surplus estimated to total S1trillion over the next decade, or ncarly $3 trillion if the revenues from Social Security arc
included.
.
'
Republicans insisted that their tax relief wouldn 't
affect efforts to restore fiscal integrity to Social Sccurity and Medicare and would leave funds to bring
down the national debt .
The White. House and most Democrats said a tax
cut should come only after the .Social Security and
Medicare issues are dealt with, and that it should ·be
kept modest - under $300 billion - so funds would
be available to .strengthen education and defense programs.
"Let me be clear again," Clinton said in his brief
Rose Garden address.
" I do strongly support tax cuts, but not if they are
so large they undermine our strength. "
"This debate is not about tax cuts, it's about how
big they should be, and what else this country wants to
dO," Clinton said.
Both sides on Weilnesday proposed Social Security
"lock box" amendments that precluded the spending
of. the Social Security surplus on anything but saving
the pension program.
·
The GOP plan. envisioning ttie biggest tax cut since

High: 100.; Low: 70s

Tomorrow: Hot, Humid
High: iDs; Low: 80s

Ronald Reagan's in 1981, would n:dlice the 1S percent because the calendar says it's spring doesn't mean that
ill&lt;Xlme tax rate to 14 percent, effective in 2001. you should put away the shovel."
Beginning in 2005, the new J4 percent tax rate would
The White House has so far insisted that it is not
apply to some income that is eurready taxed at 28 per- open to •,bill lhll splits the. d!ffere~ on a tax cut.
cent. .
·
They won t budge off $300 bolhon, saod Senate DemoIt also offers relief from the so-called marriage cratic leader Tom Dasclde of Soutb Dakota. "There is
penally. allows large r contributions to IRA retirement absolutely no room for compromise on that tax cut."
plans, cuts estate taxes and provides tu breaks for
Federal Reserve Chairman Alaq Greenspan, who
employer-provided health care, interest on student testified before the Senate Ban.king . Committee
loans and long-term care insurance.
Wednesday, was quoted by both sodes m defcndong
· The Senate defcited, on 1 '60-39 vole, 1 $290 bil- their positions.
·
·
lion Democratic alternative CCIIIered on raising the
Dem&lt;ic:rats referred to his stateme~t that the nation
standard deductions for married oouplcs, -removing "probably would be hcuer off holdmg off on a tax
more low-income families from ibe tax rolls, and pro- cut" because the surplus, left alone, was healthy for
viding tax credits for the care of children and the the economy.
.
elderly and for education. Six Democrats voted '.l Republicans countered that Greenspan also made
against their party 's alternative.
the point that he was stron~y against using the surplus
One of those, Sen. Joscplt Lieberman, D-Conn., for new government spendong.
said there should be no tax cut until the surpluseS pre"If t.hat appears to be corning. I would favor tax
dieted by economic forccaSis, which have been unreli- cuts even in the short term."
able in the past, become a reality.
Democrats did scor~ one small victory Wednesday,
Mistrust
of
economic
projections
.
was
also
winning
a procedural vote that would make the tax
1
expressed by a bipartisan group of senato!S, led by cuts effective only for 10 years.
Sen. John Breaux, D-l..a., who proposed a $.500 billion
The House tax cut plan passed last week on a largecompromise bill.
.
. ly party-line vote also outlines $792 billion in tax cuts
The.ir plan, said .S en. Olympia $nowe, R-Maine, but has elements not contained in the Senate bill, such
errs on the side of economic caution.
as an across-the-hoard 10 percent' tax cut and reducPeople from Maine know, she said, that "just lions in the capital gains tax.

-

.

-

cffer, director of the Defense Department's Infrastructure and .Information Assurance program.
.
.
·Neither expert suggested the possible scope of the
problem.
Schaeffer said problems .are complicated by the
New Year 's rollover, when some · computers programmed to recognize only the last two digits of a
year may mistake 2000 for a full century earlier.
"It may be difficult to distinguish ·between a true
Y2K event and some other anomaly caused by a perpetrator with malicious intent," Schaeffer wrote in
prepared testimony.
Both experts said the risks were exacerbated by the
amount of software repaired by companies overseas.
Valis called the situation "a unique opjiortunity for
foreign countries and companies to access, steal from
or disrupt sensitive national and proprietary information systems."
·
" Since any vulnerabilities that are implanted will
persist as long as the software is in · place, this is a
problem that will last well beyond January 1, 2000,"

New.. ·NATO military. commander
reflects future role. of air power ·

Valis said.
.. . Valis recommended that companies thoroughly
check the backgrounds of companies they hire for
software repairs. He also said they should test for the
existence of trap doors after the repairs, posSibly even
hiring teams to try to electronically crack into their
own networks.

.)

The latest warnings come on the h~els of new disclosures about White House plans to create a government-wide security network . to protect the nation 's
most important computer systems ffom hackers,
thieves, terrorists and hostile countries.
The 148-page proposal from the Clinton adminis- .
!ration describes building an elaborate network of
electronic obstacles, monitors and analyzers to prevent and watch for potentially suspicious activity on
federal computer systems.
Civil liberties groups complain that the security
tools also would make possible unprecedented electronic .monitoring, especially because of the increasingly widespread use of computers.by the government .

see-

• I

·Meigs County's

,ov.''FRESH''
Homegrown

Red Ripe

Homegrown

Sweet .

Homegrown .

By MARK WILLIAMS
A . .oclated Pre. . Writer
This is the time when corn farmers in Ohio are
most eager for rain and moderate temperatures. What
they're gelling this year is hot. dry weather that's
likely to severely affect their crop.
· .
· · Corn pollinates during a five-day period at the end
of July that determines the number of 'kernels each ·ear
will produce. TcmP.ratures in the low to ,mid 80s,
combined with moderate rainfall, usually result in an
abundant crop.
.
But the combination of high temperatures and lack
af water that's occurring in most areas of the state
means some plants may have no ears or cars with only
a few. kernels.
Rich Pratt, a corn breeder at the Ohio Agricultural
Research and Development Center in Woo~ter, says

ond was a shutdown of the Secure computer systems at the ·
weapons labs after 'reportS that a Los Alamos scientist'suspected of spying for China had shifted sensitive weapons
files from a secure computer system to one accessible to
outsiders.
.
The weapons labs all' not covered by thclatcst order.
The stand-down will cover sites that conduct classified
work. Among them are the Savannah River site near
Augusta, Ga.; the Y-12 Plant at Oak Ridge, Tenn.; the
Kansas City, Kan., plant; Pantex in Amarillo, Texas;
Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Lab near
Idaho Falls; the Hanford site in Ricitland, Wash. ; the
Nevada test site north of Las Vegas; and the Rocky Aats .
site ncar Denver. ,
·'
The stand-down was ordered on the advice of DOE's
new security chie.f, Eugene Habiger, former head of the
U.S. Strategic.Command.
SOme additional sites that deal with research, academic exchanges and other nonclassified work will be shut
before"the end ot August.
. ·
.
·
"Security must remain an inherent pan of our day-today work ethic and culture," the retired general· said.
"The stand-down .is a vital next step to ensure that all of
our facilities, regardless of their missio!L'I, are living up to
that special trust."
·
Employees will attend· seminars and conferences on
terrorism, cybet-security, export regulations, computer
hacking, problems surrounding disgruntled employees
and errors.
:&gt;ome members of Congress have complained Energy
employees all! not sufficiently aware of security needs, ..

P!iONE (304) n3·5721

PHONE (740) 446-1711

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

1-800-282-1955.

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

A suit commenced against Rutland
Bottle Gas, Rutland, on March IS ,
1Q95, was resolved in favor of the
propane gas d istributor in a decision
issued by the Ohio Supreme Court
.
Wednesday.
Rutland was successful in the
Athens County Municipal Court,' the
Ohio 4th District Cou(t of Appeals,
twice in the Ohio Public Utilities
Commission, and finally in the state's
highest court, the Oh.io Supreme
Ceurt.

Miscellaneous 4-H
judging for the····.
Me;gs County Fair
held Thursday
•
left, ehows her Vegetable Gardening I project . to Bobbl
'Pauley during mlscellaneou•
judging at the Rutland Civic
Center Thur~ay. Ro11e, 17, I• a
member of th!l God'• Country
Kldz 4-H Club.

,YJ,~
. 1. 1
-.,

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&lt;

•

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·Suit resolved in favor
of Rutland Bottle G~s

Butler County reillves tent proposal for prisoners
· · HAMILTON (AP)- Butler Cotinty officials are considering a 'temp6rary jail annex to relieve ovcrcr:owding.
.
.
A 14-by-28-foot surplus military .tent could accommodate 2fl'inniatcs,
but officials don't know where to put it. It was set up Thursday at tlie But·rcr Regional Airport for inspection.'
·
· "Except for a coupl~ of small tearS in the top, it looks pretty gOod;'' said
&lt;;apt. Norman Lewis, county jail warden.
· The jai I is authorized by state regulations to house no more ihan 85
. inmates, but has beld more than 200
'inmates in recent ilays. With only
I~ beds available, some prisoners
have been sleeping in cots in the jail
garage and on mallre'!Sts on the
floor.
Today·~
Sheriff Harold Don Gabbard
2 Sections - 16 Pages
decided io re-examine the possibility
of using a tent, an idea, he proposed
Calendar
10
more than a year ago based on a sim' 13&amp;14 ilar setup in Arizona.
Classllieds
Comics
15
· County officials supported the
idea, but Gabbard dropped the pro2
· Edilorials
posal when the Ohio Department of
Local
· CorrectionS .failed to approve it. ·
4-6
Soorls
Chief Deputy Rick Jones said he
Weather
hopes the revived proposal makes
the public more aware of space problems at the jail. The County·plans to
Lotteries
build a new one, but it won't be
OHIO
ready for more than two years. ·
Pick 3: 1-4-6; Pick 4: 6-3-4-2
Harry Hageman, ~hief of the Ohio
Department of Corrections' Bureau
Buckeye 5: 3-8-11-14-30
of Adult Detention, said state law
w.yA.
requires all new or renovated jails to
Daily 3: 2-3-0; DaUy 4: 7-5-9-1
be reviewed by the bureau and to
C 1999 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

'

I

.

'•

~

••

li t.

meet its conslruction criteria.

'' ·

The Ohio Supreme Court in a
unanimo us ruling rejected arguments
that LP (liquefied propane) falls
under Public Utilities Commission o f
Ohio regulation .
Attorney Joseph Yanity of Ath~ns ,
speaking on. behalf o f the company,
stated that "the decision is particularly satisfying to.Rutland because at the
filing in the Public Utilitios Commis.sion, it was described in unilateral
pr"lfS rele.Jes by plaintiffs as preda- ·
tory and guilty of sharp pract ices,
none of which were true or justified .
by the facts ."
The suit against Rutland was filed
in early 1995 by two Athens County
women who alleged that the company ,
violated the Ohio Consumer Sales
Practices Act: That case was dismissed, and that ruling was later
upheld by an appeals co~rt.
They then turned to .the PUCO,
all eging inadequate service and fail- .
ure to comply with natural gas company standards. Wednesday's deci sioq.in the Ohio Supreme Court was a
result of that suit. The conclusion was ·
that the Legislature· ha:s never intended fcir .LP gas to fall under PUCO reg ulatio n.
Rutland Bottle Gas was founded in
1946 to supply fuel ·for the sale of gas
stoves in rural areas.
"By virtue of free enterprise in the
American · tradition, Rutland developed into a major and successful
propahe company serving approxi mately 6500 satisfied customers in 26
counties in Ohio and three counties in . -.
West Virginia with complaints concerning its service practically nonexistent," concluded Yanjty.

Questions .mount 1n wake of Atlanta shootings

'

''

Also ... Don't Mlu Out On Our South Carolina Red, Juicy WATERMELON .
and Sweet
"Greit For Thle "Hot" Summer Weather"

GAWPOLIS, OHIO

,
The toll-frtt number for farmers littding luJy is

w~ter~ ~ystem s .

SIDNEY (AP) - Several people were injured in separate accidents at
the Shelby County Fair in this western Ohio city.
1\vo women were injured Wednesday night in an incident involving the
"Super Troojler" am~ment ride.
.
·
Janie Goings, 20, and Sally Epley, age unavailable, both of Sidney, were
being helped oft' the ride by afo operator when a child pushed a lever that
started the ride bacj( up. Goings was knocked to ihe ground and Epley was
: scooped up in the ride, said Shelby County Sheriff Mark Schemmel.
The women were treated at Wilson Memorial Hospital in Sidney and
released.
1\vo young girls were injured in the hog barn.
.
.
Krista Stewart, II, of J\nna. was wiih her barrow in a pen when 1he hog
knocked her into the side of the pen. She apparently struck !Jer head, said
Walt y.'right, chairman of the hog competition. Stewart was flown to Children 's Medical Center in Dayton and was released Thursday.
Amy Murray, 10, of Botkins, slipped and fell on a pen; injuring her liver,
said Wright. She also was taken to Children's Medical Center and was listed in go&lt;xfcondition.
'· ·

~--~::._..

BRIDGE, MASON, WV

eral government makes disaster help avail able 19
farmers.
·•Many farmers i~ Ohio are ~ot only suffering from
drought problems but have the specter of record low
prices facing them at har.,.est this fall, " Taft wrote
Glic.kman. " Many 'farmers arc being forced to feed
hay, haul -rater, abando n ~rops for livestock feed and
sell off livestock prematurely because of feed and
water shortages. ••
The ¥ate has set up a toll .. free phone number to
link livestock producers with hay suppliers.
The state also is allowing water to be taken from
m'ore than 150 state lakes and reservoirs fo r emcrgen~y li vestock use, firefig hting and community

Several people Injured at county fair

The first SOO intrusion monitors would be installed
on nonmilita·ry government computers next year,
according to a draft copy of the proposal obtained by
The Associated Press. The full system would be completed by May 2003.
The plan also suggests ways to convince private
companies to monitor, their corporate computer networks arid share information about threats.
But it said explicitly that the government will not
force companies to permit federal monitoring of their
,
systems.

•

Gall 992-21
55 for details
.
'K'Othy Willi~mson Ext. 105
Or Dave Harris Ext. 104
.

farmers have harvested i~ being used to feed cattle
this summer instead of being saved for winter. . · ,
The dty conditions come at a time of low prices for
many crops and a year after a .devastating flood swept
through eastern and southern Ohio .
Conditions this :year have varied conside rabty
across the state. While .fruit and vegetable' crops
across the northern part of the state are rated fair to
good, it is a much different story in man.~ of the
sOuthern and central counties.
Gov. Bob Taft on Thursday inv ited U.S. Agricul ture Secretary Dan Glickman to tour droughl · stricken
areas.
Earlier this month , 'he asked the U.S. Agriculture
Departmenfs Farm Service Agency in Ohio to begin
gathering damage assessments in 39 central and
southern
counties.
The
data would
be used- if the fed"
"
.
.

Regional Briefs

ALOUDI:CI

2400 EASTERN AVENUE,

he expects some Ohio farmers to be finding such
aberrations next mont h.
·
·"It is t~oroughly depressing to see ears like that. ·
There 's no othe.r word for'it;" he said ..
Roy Holler's southcr.n Ohio corn crop\ is nearly
shot. His .first cutting of hay is on ly half of normal
and there. won't be any moire this year.
" This is the worst year I've ever had farming," he
said Thursday.
Holter, 71, farms nearly 900 acres near Pomeroy. ·
"The farmers arc going to lose qu ite a bit of money
and some may go out of business," Bob Dyer, enier~ency services director for Meigs &lt;;:ounty in southeast
Ohio, said Thursday.
·
·
Across the county, growth of com and soybeans
his been stunted and much of the tomato crop has rot'ed. Pastures have been 5o ·dry that what little hay the

~-----------------=~~~~~~~=

tems ...

.

1/4 MILE NORTH OF POMEROY-MASON

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Drought means worst year f.o r some.farmers ·

in almost every aspect of 'its citizens' daily lives.
The White House defended the proposal. '
"We 'arc very concerned about protecting privacy,
rights," s•id Clinton's. Rational security adviser~
Sandy Berger. "But there is also a privacy right in not
having hostile entities attack systems. We' re not only
talking .a bout 17-ycar-old kids in their ba5«;ment.
We're talking about .g overnments that we ·know are
developing syst.c ms to get access to our computer sys-

Sweet

2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

Hometown ·Newspaper

Middleport • Pom eroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 39

Tune is running out to
Salute Your Friends.and
.
Neighbors from Rutland in
our.Commemorative Edition
forjt's. Bicentennial

Come On Over-To Bob's•••

-Page4

•

Security training b·e ing ordered
at nuclear energy research .sites

··clicking with his civilian superiors in the Clinton
By JOHN DIAMOND
By JOHN DIAMOND
·
A8110C'-led Preu Writer
•
administration. He communicated with Defense SecreWASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton's deci~ tary . William Cohen largely through other officers, . Anoclated Preu Writer
WASHINGTON (A,P) - The En~rgy Depanment is
sion to assign an Ai• Force general to the top NATO including Ralston. The distance developing between
post in Europe signals a shift in U.S. thinking about the Clark and Washington was most vividly illustrated in ordering an expansion in its campaign·against espionage,.
future U.S. military role in Europe.
June when the White House hosted a niajor meeting of moving the focus beyond ihc nuclear weapons labs and
into the research and manufaclurlng centers that handle
· Gen. JOseph Ralston will be . onJr the second Air the president with the Joint Chiefs. to discuss the Kosoclassified
security-related information.
Force general to take over as Supreme Allied Comman- vo campaign.
Energy
Secretary Bill Richardson •is ordering today a
der-Europe, or SACEUR, as the post is 'Called. All the
Clark, though he was in Washington at the time, was
one-day
suspension
of operations at Energy Department
~I have been Army generals,, reflective of the Cold
.,
·
not included in the meeting.
research and defense-related sites next week for train,ing
War strategy of massing large armies in Western Europe
"It's extremely unusual for thafkind of discussion to
against a possible onslaught by the Soviet Bloc.
take place without him being there," Allard said. "He on espionage prevention and other national security
issues.
The crisis in the Balkans haS changed all that. Twice, pointedly ')VIS not invited."
· Richardson accepted the recommendation of his newly
most recimtly in its 78-day· bombing campaign ~.ver
Clark appeared .to take the decision in stride. But
installed
security chief that a stand-down oci:ur dt:pan" Yugoslavia. NATO has unleashed air power to help officials close to him said he was miffed at how he was
ment-wide
at defense•related work sites that have not yet
quell a civil W'lf in the multiethnic region. Army Gen. informed of it in a telephone &lt;;all Tuesday from the cur-.
had
their
countercspionagotand
inf~tion !"l"''rity.sysWesley Clark commanded the latest campaign and is rent Joint Chiefs chairman, Army Gen. Hugh Shelton.
·
.ti:ms
reviewed.
The
m~in
point
of
tH~ stand-down, sched. widely regarded to have Succeeded in his strategy of
"When a .soldier's journey is over, it's over," Clark
uled
for
Aug.
3·
,
is
to
give
employees
an entire mandatory
graduated bombing pressure on the regime in Belgrade. said Wednesday, describing the action as a routine staff
day of training on information '!CCUrity.
But throughout the campaign, critics questioned the change.
"Every one Of our workers must realize - .if ihey
absence of a top Air Force general at the head of a cam"I am .very proud of wearing this uniform. I love my
don't
already - ' that every job carries with it a security
paign centered on air power. And Clark himself clashed job," he said in Vilnius, Lithuania, after "a meeting with
obligation,"
Richardson said in an Energy Depanment
with ~is superiors in Washington by arguing that ground Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus, according to
statement
to
be released today, a copy of which was
troops should remain on the table. as an option, some- Baltic News Service.
obtained
Wednesday
by The Associated Press.
thing the Ointon administration w1. most reluctant to
The administration was pulling the best face ,possible
·
"I'm
ordering
this
action to enslore that DOE is doing
do.
'
on the abrupt change of command, praising Clark and
everything possible to protect Ameriea's secrets and senNow Clinton bas decided that Oark can step aside saying that moving up the four-star Army general's
sitive technologies," he said·.
two months early next spring to make way for Ralston. departure by two months- from July to May next year
The stand-down. will be the third by the Energy
Officially the move is pegged to the legal requirements - was done to accommodate Ralston, who' must leave
Department. The first covered the nuclear weapons labs,
.
.
surrounding the end of Ralston's tenure as vice chair- his Joint Chiefs post by early next year.
including the sprawling facility ill Los Alamos, 1\!.M., tl)c
. man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
·
By law, he must get a new four-star position within
suspected target of a Chinese espionage effort. Tho;
.
Unofficially, t~e move is iwidely interpreted as an 60 days or reiire.
expression of dissatisfaction with Clark, despite his suc"General Clark is a superb commari'der. The presicess in the Kosovo campaign. It also signals lhe intent dent has tbe •highest degree of confidence in him,"
I
of the Clinton administration to underscore the waning Sandy Berger, Ointon 's national security adviser, said
·'· .importance of ground troopS and the central importance Wednesday at a White House news conference.
of air forces as_the key instrument of power in Europe. ·
"He did·a superb job in the .prosecution of the cam"It reflects changing times," said retired Army Col. paign in Kosovo. Witness the fact that we won."
Kenneth Allard, a professor at Georgetown University's
Berger left open the possibility that Clark might
National Security Studies Program. "It's a pretty strong serve his country · in "other ways" after leaving the
signal, for anyone 'looking, that this is how the United · NATO post.
States views its contribution to the alliance. It is not in •
Retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Charles Unk said he .
.
large ground forces. It's much more likely to be in air viewed the accelerated replacement of Oark as a politforces."
'
ical necessity in a 19-member alliance that was often
The signs were there all aio~g that Clark was not uneasy with the largely U.S.-Ied air campaign .

July 30, 199G

"The Dominator" plans to retire, Page 6
Children and divorce, Page 9
Senate prepares for tax cut vote, Page 16

TodiiY: Heat Advisory

Experts warn of new Y2K ·threat: the hired help
By TED BRIDIS
A••oclat•d Pre•• Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- TWo of the government's
top computer security cxperts,are warning that some
programmers hired to fix Year '2000 problems may be
quietly installing malicious software code to sabotage
companies or give themselves access to sensitive
information after the new year.
The ominous warnings were part of testimony prepared for a hearing today about the so-q~lled Y2K
glitch and cyhcrterrorism before the Senate's Special
Committee on the Year 2000 Technology Problem .
Michael Valis, director of the FBI's National Infrastructure Prptection Center, said experts hired by U.S.
companies to fix their computers could secretly program "trap door,~; •- ways to .letthcm gain access
later - or add malicious code, such as a logic bomb
or time-delayed vi.rus .that could disfjlpt systems:
"While systems have been and will oontinue to be
extensively tested, the probability of finding malicious code Is extremely. small," agreed Richard Scha-

.

Weather

'

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.)

By PATRICIA J. MAYS
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTA (AP) - Authorities are grimly piecing together What they
know about Mark 0 . Barton, the 44-year-old father, investor and former murder suspect who walked into two Atlanta brokerages and killed nine people.
Some questions may never be answered: Barton·sped away after the shooting rampage, driving to a suburb where he killed himself Thur.&gt;day evening
as police closed in. Authorities later said he had killed his .,..ife and two children before committing one of the worst workplace massacres iri the nation's
history.
· ·
·
·
Twelve people w'C!re injured, some by bullets and others by their frantic
attempts·to avoid the killer. Six remained in critical condition today.
Speculation on a motive has centered on Barton 's work as a day trader,
investors who dabble in risky, moment-by-momenl'changes in the stock market, which dropped sharply Thursday. But Barton's family was slain earlier
this week and company officials said he hadn ' I traded since April at the firm
where five of his victims died;
.
" We have no idea what caused Mr. Barton to begin shooting," Mayor Bill
Campbell said.
.
·
· Clues may be found in notes left with the bodies of his family. Police have
not disclosed their contents, except to say that they had found a list indicating Barton had intended to kill at least three more people.
The shooting rampage- the third in the Atlanta area in little more than
two months - and the ensuing manhunt stunned th'c city of 3.1 million and
quickly captured national attention. It was the latest in a grisly wave of ma'IS
slayings at schools and workplaces, and President Ointon today expressed
sadness at the bloodshed.
Barton, dark-haired and 6-foot-4, W!IS wearing khaki shorts when he
walked into ·the Momentum Securities brokerage at the Two Securities Centre building in the trendy Buckhead section of Atlanta about3 p.m. Thursday.
.
Four people W'ere dead within minutes.
" I saw a Jot of blood in the hallway," said Chris Carter, 32, who wor.ks on
·the building 's third floor. "There was a trail of blood leadi ng from one end of
the hallway to the other."
Barton then walked across a. busy six-lane road and into the All-Tech
Investment qroup. a day trading firm in the Piedmont Center building where

"Thi~ man then went into our main trading room and began indiscriminately shooting the customers."
· Nell Jones, 53, a day trader at All -Tech, said she was sitting. at her computer when she heard s hots.
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" I was sitting outside the door when he ex1ted, so I was !he first person to
'lodk into his eyes,". Ms. Jones told WSB- TV. "He was someone .who was
very calm and deterniined, no feelings. The bullet mi ssed me and then he
turned to shoot at other JXOple, so I was able to escape, "
Campbell said the victims were shot with 9 mm arod .45-caliber handguns.
For the next five hours, the mayor and police did not know where Barton
was and SWAT teams and helicopters swarmed Buckhead to look for him.
Police told workers to stay in their offices and lock the doors; some huddled
in their cubicles four hour.; after the shootings.
·
.. We put the furniture up against the door and barricaded ourselves in," ·
said Morgan Lyle, 51. "We had no idea what was going on so we j ust got
· really quiet and tried to stay calm."
The rampage ended when Barton shot himself as police cornered him in a
dark green minivan at a service station in Atlanta 's northern suburbs .
"He was pulled over, and then killed himself," Campbell said .
The bodies of Barton's 27-year-old wife, Leig~ Ann, and children, 11year-old Matthew and 7-year-old Elizabeth Mychclle, were found in their
home in Stockbridge. 16 miles southeast of Atlanta Police said they had been
bludgeoned to death perhaps as long as two days before the office shootings.
The children's bodies were in their beds, with sheets pulled up to their
necks and towels arou nd their heads so only their faces showed, said Jimmy
Mercer, pol ice chief in Henry County. Mrs. Barton's body was in a closet.
A handwritten note was left on each body and a computer-generated note
left in the living room explained "why he did what he did,·· Mercer said. He
did not elaborate. .
Barton's first wife and mother-in-law were bludgeoned to death in 1993 in
Cedar 131uff, Ala. No arrests were made.
··
" He was the No. I suspect ~II the w·ay through and still was," said Richard
lgou, the district anorney ·atthe time of the killings. The current prosecutor
. declined to say whether Barton was still a suspect.
.
Barton worked as a chemist before he began trading stocks, Campbell
&gt;aid.
1

EMERGENCY WORKERS
pollee In
Ga. , go about
the task ol removing the bodies olthose slain by Mark 0 . Burton, who killed 12 people, Including his wife and two children In
a bloody rampage Thureday. As pollee ~losed In on him , Burton
took his own lila.
he had been a client. Five died there.
· Barton, who was carrying a pistol in each hand, at one point reportedly
said: " I hope this doesn 'I upset your trading day."
·
Barton came into the office "and after speaking with our branch manager:
suddenly stood up and for no reason opened fire on the manager and his secretary," Jai Ramoutar, director of All-Tech, said in a statement relea.&lt;ed from
the company's headquarters in Montvale, N.J.

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Friday, July 30, 1999

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'F.stllbfi.sfld iJJ 1948

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Community Newspaper Holdings, l!lCROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher
cttAALENE HOEFLICH

DIANEHIU
Controller

~··lhnllger

llfM..,

.,.. Sentinel a r nw ,.,.,.,. ID
1ram , . . . , . . . allraad,..... ot tap.
lew. Shott ,.,.,. (3IJD M»fW « ,._, '-w U. bM dJanqJ ol W,. 111 II' "11Mt
l)INif ..... . . ,. ... ,..Mil .. ,...,. «1/ted. &amp;cit Mould ........ ~
.w1 . , . , _ photte ~ Spet:lly • _,.llt~w-.'• • oelaiiiiJOrli to •,...
- - . , - · .,., .,, a.- to llw - . 7INI SenUnel, 111 c-1 St.
~DJ. Ohio 46~; or, FAX ro t•r.-3J67.

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o· u an d t he·'

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chtl•ng
world.
Ya
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The long tease -- will she,
won't she? -- is over at last,
and we know that Hillary
Rodham Ointoq will be the
Democratic nominee for the
Senate seat of the retiring Pai
. Moynihan, of New York.
There was never really any
doubt about it; the whole idea
· was pfobably hatched _even
' .
before Moynihan announced h~ was steppmg
down. But a little moclest hesitancy is an excellent
thing iii ,a person, and Hillary played that game
skillfully.
Her likely Republican opponent, New York
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, has welcomed her to lhe
contest -- and indeed to the state, which has hith·
erto never been her .home. Will that matter to the
voters? It may to some, but it's worth remembering lhat New York elected Robert Kennedy to !he
Senate on the basis of a similarly short period of
residency. \bters, or at least
New YOrk voters, are more

interested
in lhan
what how
a candidate
believes
long
he or she has lived among
By JOHN CUNNIFF
them.
AP Bull- Ana~
.
In
that department,
NEW YORK (AP)- You know the
economy is booming by the pri- Hillary measures up pretty
vately owned megayachts in the harbor. They're getting even bigger, cost· well. New York is generally
. ,
a fairly liberal state, and
lier and more numerous.
And lhe ultimate is yet to co"me. That's indicated by the rapid growth of Mrs. Clinton has a track
power yachts, from about I()() feet or .125 feet three YCA(S ago to 150 feet to n:cord liberal enough to sit2QO feet in today's market
.. :
·
isfy the most demanding.
Since 1997, the biggest to cruise under ,the U.S. nag is the 315-foot, 11·· She got her start in politics
inch Umitless, owned by Leslie Wexner, head of The Limited, but several as. a Goldwater ·apparatchik
owners are said to be thinking of challenging for the lead.
• ' iq Illinois, back in 1964, but
Still, size isn't everylhing in megayacht society, where opulence knows 'by the time Wellesley and
no maximum, such as 39 bathrooms and 300 tons of marble in the Japanese- Yale had worked their magic
Turkish owned Savarona.
on her, she had seen th~· error
Wexner's yacht is the only football stadium-siZe owned by an American of her ways. Her 1993 plan
- Sakura, property of Oracle Corp.'s Larry Ellison, for example, is only to nationalize health care
192 feet- but boatyards never have been busier.
.
was a liberal's dream: a mas·
.It suggests bigger things to come. Ftom a tiny percentage just 10 years sive scheme ' to federalize
ago, American yar$ now are responsible for 34 percent to 36 percent of the one-seventh of the national
world's megayacht construction. ·
·
economy and regulate it with
Such information ·comes from Power &amp; Motoryacht l]lagazine, where all sot:ts of bells and whis·
senior editor Diane Bym~ haunts the world's somewhat secretive boatyard ties. ·:
.
:,
operators and owners in search of•information.
But don't count Rudy
The spurt in U.S. construction is significant, because. glamor yacht con' Giuli'ani out He qualifies a5
slruction was mainly an endeavor of yards in Greece, whi~h i.-still-No. t, a "moderate" Republican, as
and such countries as Holland, Germany and Italy.
·'
· ·
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most successful ,Republican '·::.--~:::
And, in fac~ most of the very large owners were foreigners too. Limitless ·candidates do in New ,York,
is still only No. 8 in the magazine's \loorld listing, just behind lhe 325-foot · but he has racked up a record
Christina 0, formerly owned by Aristotle Onassis. And Mipos, being built in as mayor that in many ways
Gei'Jllany, will measure 465 feel
w8rms the cockles of a con·
But interest among Americans is growing fast, and consiruction 4ctivity servative's heart. He inherited a city lhat was
too, enough so for Ms. Byrne to declare Fort Lauderdale, Aa., the yachting crime-ridden, shabby and demoralized, and procapital, and Palmer 'Johnson of Sturgeon Bay, Wis., one of the ·world's top ceeded to do wh3( many people (including the
builders.
present writer) w6uld have declared imp&lt;;lSSible:
'' Since yachting takes big money, there's little question that such growth tum it around. The crime rate has dropped dra·
emanates frpm the rapid rise of individual wealth in the I 990s, m'uch a result

matically. the whole city (m&lt;JSI notably including
that longtime cesspool. limes Square) looks pos·
itively' spiffy, and New Yorkers are once again
proud of their town.
.
So Giuliani will probably be a strong ·rival
where Hillary needs most to run ·up her score: in
New York City itself. In the suburbs and upstate,
Giuliani will have the usual Republican advan·
tage, and it isn't clear what Hillary Can do to
diminish il. Polls show the two CQntenders close·
ly matched, with Mrs. Ointon narrowly in the
lead.
What Hillary will bring to the table, however,
is a national notoriety that any candidate would
kill to acquire. She has been (and will be, again)
on the cover of virtually every national magazine,
looking cool, radiant and on top of the situation.'
There is little Giuliani can do about this, besides
hope that the voters will choose to value demonstrated performance more highly than pol_ished
promisesl
It is also possible lha~ at some·point along the

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Today In History
· By The Auoclated Pr•••
Today is Friday, July 30, the 21llh day of 1999. There are 154 days left
in the year.
' On July 30, 1945, the USS Indianapolis, which had just delivered key
components of the Hiroshima atomic bomb to the Pacific island of linian,
was torpedoed by a Japanese submarine. Only 316 of 1,196 men survived
the sin.king and shark-infested waters.
.'
On this date:
In 1619, the first representative assembly in America convened in
Jamestown, Va.
In 1729, the city of Baltimore was founded.
In 1792, the French national anthem "La Marseillaise" by Oaude Joseph
Rouge! de Lisle, was ·first sung in Paris.
In 1844, thC' New York Yacht Oub was founded.
In 1863, American automaker Henry Ford was born in Dearbom Town·
ship, Mich.
In 1864, during lite Civil War, Union forces tried to take Petersburg, Va.
by exploding a mine under Confederate defense lines. The attack failed.
In 1932, the Summer Olympic Games opened in Los Angeles.
In 1942, President Roosevelt sigrled a bill creating a women's auxiliary
agency in lhe Navy known as "Women Accepted for \blunteer Emergency
Service"-- WAVPS for short.
'

''
'

Capyrlght1- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.:;
WIIIIMn A. Ru8her II 1 Olltlng\lllhed Felloll
of the o•remont lnatltute tor the Study of

Sta1MI!IIInehlp •nd Polltlc•l Philosophy.

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act.·,:
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:,
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"Once he got started, he couldn't, didn't shut it off," recount_., Bush's
boyhood friend Don Evans, who serves as his national finance director. "He
didn't have the discipline."
. ,
. "He had been working toward it fof •a long time," said
Laura Bush of'ber husband 's stunning ·d~cision to go and stay
cold turkey. .
·
·
· .. •
"I think for a year at l.east he'd been thinking, 'I really
need to slow-down or quit.' Most people who try to quit drinking first think, 'Well, I'm just going to only have one drink.'
And I think in ~is mind he though~ 'Well, that's what I'll do.'
And then, of course, it didn't really work. Like for everybQdy1
just about, who tries, it doesn 'I really work."
· '
What moved Bush to quit altogether? Was it the usual list
of suspects: Embarrassment? Disgust? ,Dl!ty? Faith? Was it
ihe thrilling realization he could have --.and be •• as·much fun
and get a lot more 'ilone with a clear head?
·
. Fo• George W. Bush it may have been that most intimate
of ambitions: to be a bigger man; in his case, to·be more like
'his dad.
As for its consequences in the campaign, 1 offer an early
hu~ch. \b~e':" look for~ "connection" with a candidate: party, philosophy,
reg1on, re1Jg10n, generation.
Millions ~ay find it w_ilh this well·.bom Texas; governor through the com- '
mqn expenence of havmg beaten a bad habit.
: .
liher~ are a.lot of people in this country, after all, who know what we'r• .
·
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1\ll_ king a_bout here .. Those people, all of us, rJ!spect what George Bush, S3,
d1d'10r h1mseIf -- way back when the newspapers weren 'I asking questions, :
when the answers mattered only to his frie11ds, his children, his wife, an4j,
most of all, himself.
, '·
(Chrl• Mlltthaws, chief ot the Sart Fr•nclaco Examiner's Walhlngton
Bu..,au, Is host ot "HsrdbaU" on'CNBC cable channela.)
Copyrlghl1- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Ml.ddle Ea' st po·l··cy···n· state 0' f fl. uX '
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By Jack Anderson
and Douglas Cohn
WASHINGTON .. Sources tell us that Ameri·
ca ·s Milldle East policy is in 8 state ·o f flux,
attempting to ·evolve from confrontation to
accommodation. It calls to mind something said
by former Sen. Sam Nunn: that the United States
has no Middle East policy. ·
IRAQ
For now, British-American air strikes against
Iraq continue, almost daily, from a base in Turkey.
Containment may still be the order of the hour,
but with no weapons inspectors inside the country
··except for a United Nations team now there dismantling a laboratory -- it is hard to know exactly what we are trying to contain. To bring clarity
to the situation, President Clinton has called for
the ·overthro'\' of Saddam l:fussein and his
replacement with another regime. However, there ·
are at least 70 oppositlon groups, with few of
them willing to work together, much less disci·
pline themselves, to accomplish the tricky task of
overthrowing Saddarn Hussein. And if some of
them did succeed, could they govern? This prol:&gt;·
lem is likely to outlast that of the l~raeli·Palestin­
ian-Syrian peace process.
' IRAN
For a time, our policy was dual containment of
Iran and Iraq. In Iran, however, that's beginning
to change. With' students recently in the streets
demanding more ~eforms froro moderate Pn;si·

W. VA.

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'W hy d 1·d W ·Bush 'Q··v··e ·u p d r ·• n·' k ·• ng ?.

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It's getting even hotter in Ohio, .the National Weather Service says.
, The m7~ury could crack the 100-degree mark on Saturday. And with
h1gh hum1d1ty, a heat mdex of 115 1s possible.
.
The NWS post heat advisories for 'northwest and north-central .Ohio
and excessive heat watches for the southwest, central and west-central.
More "thunderstorms are possible Saturday night. ·
. The record-hi$h temperature for this date at the Columbus weal her sta·
hon was 99 degrees in 1940 while the record low was 49 in 1981. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:48 p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 6:29 a.m.
Wutber rorecast:
Tonight ...Mostly clear _and muggy. Lows in the lower 70s. Light and
·
variable wind.
Satutday... Hazy, very hot and humid. f:iighs in the mid and upper 90s..
• Saturday night ... Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 70s.
.
·.
... Extended Forecast: .•,
. Monday... Mostly clear. Lows in the upper 60s and highs near 90. ·
TuCS!Iay... Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms during
the night. Lows in the upper 60s am!,llighs in the upJier 80s.

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dent Mohammad Khatami, the administration,
\hough tactfully silent about the current commotion, may well be poised to pursue a more open
atmosphere ·• even while Iranian supporters of
the hard-line religious )eader, Ali lq1amanei, call
·for "Deaih to the Americans."
'
Oor approach has been zigging and zagging,
since dist~ess lingers in Congress over Tehran's
drive toward nuclear weapons. But Iran nonetheless was called "one of the brightest spots in the
M,iddle East" at a conference not long ago put on
by the Stanley Foundation of Iowa and London's
Royal Institute of International Affairs. There,
participants from the United States and Europe
noted that han has good reason to want a strategic
arsenal, and that reason is right next door, in Iraq,
a country with whom Iranians fought a biuer war
·
through much of the 1980s.
Some at the conference pointed out that offi.
cials in Tehran are convinced the Clinton admin· .
istration is manipulating the religiously fanatical
Taliban in Afghanistan, another neighbor whose
borders with Iran are electrified with tension.
That may be so, since there have been press
reports that Taliban has been at odds with Osama
•bin Laden, the Saudi terrorist said to be responsible for bombing two American embassies in East
Africa a year ago. No doubt Washington wants to
encourage this discord and stop Afghanistan from
protecting bin Laden: Still, it's hard to see. the Tal·
iban a:j a tool of Washington, as Iran apparently ·

.

does.

ISRAEL
'
Aside from . peace between Israel and ine'
· Palestinians, and now Syria, given new hope by
the election of Israeli President Ehud Barak, what ·'
are America's goals? Palestinian statehood, we
are told, may be in the cards, though there remain
g~ reasons •· such as terrorism •• for op~ing
lhiS.
.
A poll conducted by the Israel Policy Forum,
an American Jewish group dedicated to advanc·
ing the Middle East peace process, found that 83
percent of those polled said the United StateS
should assure both sides in lhe Middle East pe...i
process that their central goals would be met. For
Israel, that means security and a united Jerusalem;
··
for the Palestinians, independent statehood.
, Even former Prime Minister Netanyahu, while
ID office, referred to a future Palestinian '"entity.~·
a word that carries less ·emotiooal impact than ·
.
·
"slate" but accepts the reality.
The Jewish community's position has quietly
evolv~d to the_ point where AJPAC, the leadipi
Amenca~ !ew1sh lobby, withdrew its opposition
''
to Palestm1an statehood earlier this year.
(White Houae correspondent: Warren
Rogera;
congr•••Jonel
correspondent:
Eleanor Clift; foreign and national correapon- ·
dent: LM Cullum.)
Copy~ghl'tiell, Andoraon &amp; Cohn
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DIMrlbutod by UnHed Foaturo Syndlcoto, Inc.

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Eva Blanch .Shields

Meigs 0&gt;u.nty Sheriff ~ames M. Soulsby repi&gt;rted that 22-year-olp
George Re1.tnure, Nyc Avenue, Pomeroy, was jailed on charges of driving
under the mnuence and fa1lure to control following a wreck in Minersville Wednesday afternoon.
·
Reitmire w_as traveling westbound on state Route 124·at a h,igh rate of
speed when h1s 1989.Camaro sk1dded left of center and struck the rightrear side of a 1995 Ford Mustang driven by David G. Banks, Racine, who
was eastbound, according to a sheriff's report. Banks had just pulled onto
state Ro~te 12_4 in front of the Ashland Bulk Plant According to the
marks on the h1ghway and,the locat10n of damage on the two vehicles, it
~as determined that Banks was ·in the proper lane of traffic, the report
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stated.
. Reitmire's car skidded 150feetto the centerline and then skidded 41
feet left-of-cei11er to the impact, his ~chicle continued to slide a·nother 61
feet, the report state~. Banks' 'vehicle was spun atound. in the roadway
With the rear of the car stnkmg the guardrail.
Chris l~boden, Bradbury Road, Middleport, was a passenger in
Banks' veh1cle. All three were transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital
in Pomeroy by Meigs Emergency Medical Services and were treated and
released. The 'Syracuse \blunteer Fire Department was on the scene and
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nushed the highway.

CllliCINNATI (AP) - An Ohio
jury is trying to sort out a dispute
between The E.W. Scripps Co. and
Blade Communications Inc. that has
lingered since one company sold the
other a Pittsburgh newspaper in 1992.
Scripps contends that it should be
reimbursed $6:4 million in severance
costs. Blade argues that it is owed
$700,000 for the cos! of litigating the
dispute.
.
The trial, which started July 19,
went !o the jury Thursday. Jurors
deliberated two hours before recessing.
In closing arguments, .allomey
·Pierce Cunningham
reiterated
Scripps' contention that it was stuck '
with severance costs' because Blade
did not make firm job offers to any
employees of The ·Pittsburgh Press
before the deal was finalized.
By failing to do tha!. Scripps
. could not identify the Press employees who would be entitled to severance benefiis, Scripps contends.
Blade contends it could not make
firm offers until the Justice Department approved the sa[e, and that
approval came on Dec. 30, 1992, just
one day before the transaction was

(FRI 7/23 • THURS 7129199)
lOX OOICE Will OPIN AT 6:30 PM
FOR EVENING SHOWS.
12:30 PM FOR SAT &amp; SUN MAnNEES

Inside Mdp CountJ

26 _ ............................. .$53,82

Leading Creek Conservancy District customers on New Lima Road
from Happy Hollow Road to Smith Run Road are under a boil advisory
following the break and repair of .a main water line on New Lima Road.
&lt;
·· " ·
Racine Chapter of; the Order 'of the !::astern Star wi!l meet Monday.
Refreshments will be served.
·

Racine OES

.,

Syracuse Council

"This is a bad lawsuit," McGough
Syracuse Village Council will hold its regular monthly meeting Tues·
told the jurors. "II 's a waste of your
day, 7 p.m. at village hall instead of on Thursday.
!ime and our time because it is totally '\'ithout merit."
The Press and the Post-Gazette
Urtits of Jhe Meigs County Emergency assisted
·
had been published since 1961 under
Medical Service recorded eight calls for
. CHESfER VF1&gt;
a joint operating agreement, but·both assistance Thursday. Units responding
1 I :32 p.m.. Eastern Elemenlary School,
had effectively been shut down since included: .
false alarm.
·
·
May 1992 by a union strike.
CEJIITRAL DISP~CH
MIDDI..EPOKr
Scripps had said it would close the
12:36 am., Lasley Street, Pomeroy,
12:50 ant, North Second A~enue
Press if it was not sold by the end of Andrea Harenberg, Veterans Memorial Charles Hall, ·Pleasant V..Uey Hospital. '
1992.
Hosp~tal;
"
. POMEROY " ·.
12:52 a.m., ·!'ooler Road, T~pper.;
6:08 am., volunteer fire depanmentto
The Blade contends it hurriedly
Pomeroy Levee, retrieval of unmanned
closed the deal on New Year 's Eve to Plams;Viola Teagardner, dead on amval ;
7:56 a.m., East Main Street, Pomeroy, boat.
·
accommodate Scripps' request to Tim Underwood, VMH, Syracuse squad
,
REEi&gt;SVD.LE
save about. $5 million in taxes that assisted;
.
2:27p.m., VFD to Joppa Road, tn:elire
would have been applicable on Jan.
3:52 p.m., West Main Street. Pomeroy, on Ben Wolfe propeny, Tuppers Ptaim
1, 1993.
Sarah McCany, VMH. Middleport. squad squad a.sisted.

Meigs EMS logs

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Brand New 1999 Chevy
5-Series LS Extended Cab
• Aluminum Wheels
• 4 Wheel Anti-Lock Brakes
• Nicely Equipped!

• Air Conditioning
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~2 4'50*

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• Air Conditioning
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• Air Conditioning
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Brand New 1999 Chevy . , .
XTREME S·Series Pickup
'
• XTREME Appearance Pkg.
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Weeks .......................... .SIQ'-56

Rata Outside Melp Countr
, IJ ~ks ..• - .......................S29.2S
26 \Ye&lt;ks ............................l56.68
· • ll We&lt;u ......................... $109.72

Applications for outstanding girl scouts and outstanding girl scout
troops are due Saturday to Debbie Cooke. Make up judging is scheduled
for next Saturday, Aug. 7, at 10 a.m. atth~ S~racuse pool.

Scripps, Blade lawyers make
final arguments ·in court case

No subscription by 'mail pcnnined in arcu

, t3 \Yeeu........................... .S27.30

Applications due

.

MON NIGHT IS CAR LOAD NIGHT

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION

senor citizens activities and potluck luncheon.

Signup set
There will be a sign-up meeting for seventh and eighth .grade girls
interested in trying out for junior high cheerleader on Friday, Aug. 6, all
p.m. outside of Eastern Elementary. Questions, call 992-4494.
Volleyball practice
·
Southern High School volleyball conditioning will be held Monda~. S
to 7 p.m at Carleton School, Syracuse.

Charles E. Rhodes, 57, 52197 state Ro.ute 248, Long Bottom, was
cited this morning by the Meigs County Sheriff's Department on charges
of drunk and disorderly conduct and open container in a motor-vehicle.

FRI, SAT, SUN &amp; MON
STARWARSPO
AND
WINIG COMMANDER

. where home arrier stf\'itt is available.
Publisher re5~erves the right to adjust rales during t¥ subscription period. Subscription rate
ch'llll~s may be implemented by changina the'
'(juration,Of the subscription.

August events at the Lohridge Community Center will include a din·
ner on Sunday with serving from noon to 2 p.m. The charge for adults is
$6, for children. S2.SO. Qn Aug. 13 and 27 from 7 p.m, to midnight, country music will be presented. There is no admission. Door prizes will be
awarded and refreshments served. Every Tuesday from 10 a.m. to noon

LCCD boil order ·

The Daily Sentinel

By Carrier or Motor Route
One \\leclt ................................ .$2.00
One Montb ................................$8.70
One Yeu............. ,... ,,,,,,,.,, ........ $104.00
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily. ....................................... 35 CealJ
-subscribers not deairins lo PlY the carrier ma)'
limit in ldvinpc direa to 1bc Daily Sentinel 011
· A three, silt or "12 month buil. Credit will be
-given carrier each week.

Center announces event

Man cited on charges

• · Eva Blanc~ Shields, 98, Syracuse, ,died Thursday, July 29, 1999, at Vel·
erans Memonal Extended Care in Pomeroy.
A homemaker, she was born Feb.!, 1901, in Astead. W.Va., daughter of
the late James and Betty Price Young.
: .
· ·: She is survived by lhree sons and two ,daugbters-'tn-law, Robert and
· Bernie Salser of Racine, Raymond and Jeanette !iahler of Coolville And
Charles Salser of Racine; ~our daughters and a son-in-law, ,!lene Hayes of
Great Falls, Mont., Kathle~n and Victor Counts of Syracuse, Dorothy Harden .of Syracuse, Shirley Tipton of Syracuse; three daughters-in-law, Katherine Woo(js of Ashtabula, Carolyn Salser of RaCine and Virginia Salser of
Syracuse; a brother and sister-in-law, Harlan and Margaret Young of Colum~mpleted.
bus; 35 grandchildren; several great-grandchildren.
Cunningham said Blade's deci· She was preceded in death by four husbands, John Woods, Anthony
sion
to wait until . Jan. 1, 1993; to
Salser, William Thomas and Uge Shields, and by four sons, James Woods,
· begin hiring Press employees for its
William Woods, Henry Salser and Nial Salser.
Services will he held Sunday, 2 p.m. at the Fisher Funera·l Home in expanded Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
showed it did not have the same
Pomeroy. Bu{ial will be in Letart Falls Cemetery.
humanitarian concerns as Scripps.
' '
. Friends may call Saturdl!y, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
:·Scripps has always been noted
Northland Mall discrimination suit settled for its fair t~eatment of its employ• COLUMBUS (AP) - A lawsuit customers has been settled out of ees," Cunningham tol4 the eight
jurors,
against the owpers of Northland court.
Mall by two businessmen w~o
Blade attorney W. Thomas
The ·seulement came Thursday
claimed their kiosk was evicted after three days of trial testimony in McGough Jr. said Blade had no conbecause it .attracted too many black t)Je suit. against the Richard E. tractual obligation to hire Press
Jacobs Group . of Cleveland by employees before it bought the newsbrothers David and Harry Biddle of- paper, and called Cunningham 's conCincinnati.
.
tentions " just baloney."
' (lJSPS 213·1160)
· · Neither side would comment' on
He said the sale contract never
Cocpmunlty Newspaper Holdlap,lae.
•
the terms of the settlement.
mentioned job offers and therefore
The Biddies, owners of Page· imposed no such obligation on Blade.
-l'ublisbcd every afternoon, 'Mondly lhrouJb
Friday, til C...n 51., Pomeroy, Ohio, by ,lbo ·
ports, a pager and cellular phone
McGough said the Scripps .
Ohio Valley Publlthina Company. Second clua
business,
Claimed
their
lease
was
lawyers
deliberately chose to le~ve
postaae paid at Pomeroy, Ohto.
terminated because the kiosk attract- out of the contract with Ellade any
Memben The Associated Pres&amp; and tho Ohio
Newspaper Associati~n.
.
.
ed too many, young blacks.
mention of a severance plan for non:
·Peldllluttr. Send address C9f'('ections to The
Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
union Press employees in hopes of
41169.
avoidin~ financ.ialliabilities.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES

~2

The Middleport Polite Department has purchased three electric
engravers for public use.
According to Middleport Police Chief Bruce Swift. the engravers can
be signed out of the police department, allowing residents of the vill.gc
to engrave identifying marks on valuables.
,
The engraving process allows police to identify property in the event
of theft.
According to Swift, engraving is one of several ways to protect _property, if done properly. Swift said that names should not be placed on 11e"::s,
and that engraving should be done in a manner which is not easily
detectable. The same identifying marks should be made on all items, he
said.
He also advises [esidents to make note of serial numbers, brand names
and model numbers of valuable items.
Swift said that videotaping the contents of the home also can aid in the
recovery of stolen items. · ·

Man cited In crash

"

luck, if he is to head her off at the pass.

way, Hillary will slip and let everyone see the icy
will to power that lies at the core of her personality. Right now, however, she js near the top of her
approval ratings, coming across as the wronged
but loyal wife, of a charming ·bounder. There

of
of which old royalty seldom
enjoyed. A hypothetical 130-foot yacht with a fine interior might·sell for $13
. ..
. . ·
million, but it c;Ould run a great deal more. ,
,
Size is important for reasons of ego, but it isn't everything; t,he design, By Chris Matthlwl
and the lavish interiors and powerful machinery, can mean a price difference
WASHINGTON - Thirteen summers ago, George W. Bush woke up
of as much as $10 million, says Ms: Bryne. Some yachts -have accessories . with his last hangover. A heavy drinker right up to and including the night
such as automobiles and helicopters.
·
before, he never had another drop.
Initial cost, therefore, is merely the beginning. A rule of thumb suggests
Closing the bottle of B&amp;B opened up a whole new world
one-tenlh the price is needed to maintain a big boat for a year, meaning a for the 40-year-old Texan.
$3.5 million bill as the cost of owning a $35 million yacht.
.'
Before he stopped drinking he was a losing wildc;mer i~
For corporate owners, many such expenses are tax-deductible, but, alas, the oil business. Afterward, he became a major-league :Winner
n~l so for those who own for pleasure dnly. While their fate is hardly lam· with the Texas· Rangers. Before that moming-aftet;".in July
... entable, they do have to put forth some effort.
,
1986, he was a failed pol, the embarrassed loser· in a race for ,
·.
Such owners must be endowed with· not jus1 assets but income too, and Congress. Afterward, he become a proud,. lwo-term. Texas
therefore many of the newer owners have to work io support the yacht. Work , governor.
.
eats up time; it doesn't leave many days for sporting.
Before he was · some big shot's son. Since then, he's
Because of this, some of the world's best yachts are rented out - ,pardon, become a presidential candidate to be reckoned with.
offered for charter. Christina 0 charters for a half-million dollars a weels, ·but · ·. If no one can ever say for sure what caused George W.
dotf't get any ideas. Ms. Byrne says it's booked from April through October Bush's hard, mid-life' rite of passage, tbe question itself is cer- '
for the next eight years.
· lain .to .matter between now and November 2000. We Ameri·
•· So, you say, you'll build instead. Well, you'll just have to wait. Ms. Byrne cans may not need·· or w4n1 ··to know everylhing about the
reports that every custom shipbuilder worldwide is booked two years out.
person we elect president, but many of us demand to know
, .,
what kind of character'he has.
.
·
This decision of George W. Bus~\. to stop drinking gets to
the heart of that eternal riddle.
Question: What makes this guy tick?
•
Answer: Whatever got him to quit.
Having pursued this rite of passage myself, I recogniz.e the power of the
I just want to say a great big thanks to the town of Rudand, especially the decision. It is not some spur-of-the-moment, existential .leap .. like joining
fire department for having their Fourth of July activities on Saturday instead h F · · Le ·
·
d
t e ote1gn g10n :· but a daily decis1on to manage an .~arry on an abrupt
oft. he Lord's day as a few other towns. We must not ·forget the Lord's ~y change· m
· your l'f
1
•
h
·
d
·
1
· 11mes,
·
1 e. · Is a c o1ce rna e unconscious y .at certam
con,
~I ~~~e~-' holy. So :agai~ thanks 'Kevin Hudson and your officers for ajob sciously at others, to sacrifice temporacy P.ieasure for enduring opportun'ity.
Donna Eblin
It's the decision, made again and,again; to be-.tl greater, better person.
Rutland· . "I realized that alcohol was beginning to crowd out my energies and
~·- ·
. could crowd, eventually, my affections for ot,her people," Bush told the
1
r1
I
Washington Post. "When y~u're dFinking, it can be an incredibly selfish
Recently my family and I stopped by your library· in Pomer y to research
·
,
ourfamilyhislory: We _wereverysurprisedandpleasedwiththefriendly
way we were treated. I want to let everyone in Meigs County know what a
·wonderful facility they have there. We have s_topped at quite i few libraries
around the state and this is the first time I have. taken the liberty to write
about 'the service. The lady we spoke to was very helpful and informative
.
..
and we were able to find everything we needed. Thanks to Ms. Burkhammer
and the staff for making our .trip an enjoyable and happy occasion!
Jarn.a. Roberti
Galena, Ohio

'

~N'I' P W~ Aot:ltOSJ,.....tttCA ~ C~,. J'INA14Ci ~eFORM.,.

r::r.l"end''y tneatment

,•

••
I•

!711"1110'

I:SY The 4ssoclsted Pre..

Applauds respect for Sabbath

.. ,

I llonalletd

Daytime highs in the 90s ·
forecast for the weekend

•tor
Letters
to
the
ed I
·

'

Friday, July 30

'

.

v.s.

~~"'.:.c:::~:te::~:!~~:~~.p:~~·~~k.

Ohio weather

aren't many more sympathetic roles in American
life.
Assuming she does win the senatorship, it will
be eualy no time before the media roll out 1M
next circus act: Hillary II$ a candidate for presi·
dent or vice president This lady doesn't belong in
a collegial atmosphere like the Unitcll States Seq'
ate; she is an executive if there ever was one, used
to giying orders and expecting them to be obey~;
Whether Mrs. Ointon, after a few yem ~ .
Senator Ointon, would qualify as a strong roti&lt;
tender for the presidency or vice presidency ~~
still an open question. But she would be far frol!l
a cinch. America as a whole is noticeably moia
conservative than the state of New York,· and itls
~afe to assume that Senator Clinton's left-leanitjg
inclinations, and perhaps even the essential co14~
ness of her personality, will have been noticed. : :
· All that, however, is well down the road,
Meanwhile, Mrs. Clinton will make a formidable
candidate for the Senate. Mayor Giuliani w~~
need all his 1911ghness, 115 well as both skill ~

Property engravers now available

Scattered power outages were reported following an early morning
thunderstorm. Electric service was out in Middleport and in parts of
Pomeroy as of 10 a.m. this morning.
Emergency Services Director Robert Byer said the stonn apparently
affected most of the county, dropping trees and causing in scattered
power outages.
·
This comes on the morning of what is expected to be one of the hpttest
and more humid days of the yea,r: For peopk who· rely on air conditioners for health reasons. Byer said the county emergency services office
could "set up something quickly" for people with breathing or other prob·
·
lems.
N_o ·noodin'g was reported, Byer said. Rain gauges in Pomeroy and
Burlingham showed 1.03 and 1.14 inches of J)lin.

Snow

.

Announcements:

Power outages reporfed

'

The long tease ·is over:
By WlHIIIm A. Ruaher

.111 eoun St, Pomeroy, 0111o
74CUII2-215e • Fax: 11112-2157

oca

Frtday, July 10, 1111

.

The Deily Sentinel • Page 3 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

hge.2

.

.

'

'I·'

Brand New 1999-'chevy
S-Series LS Pickup
• 4 Wheel Anti-Lock Brakes
• Aluminum Wheels
• Nicely Equipped!

Reader Services
• Ta•es. Tags, Trtkt F,.. ex1ra. Rebale induded ~sale p!\ce d new ve!lide li~ed - .,llll!llicable. "On approved~- On soladed models.
Prices Good July 30Jh lhru'ACIJU!I1~. NoJ responsible tor typographical errOIS.

Correction Polley
O.r maio coactrl in all storlt1 ll to be
accunte. Jr you kaow or an error 11 •
stOI)', e~~ll tbe aewsroo• •• (740) 991;... ·
21.!15. We will check your lnfonnatJon
and make • col"ftdlon If warranted.

'

N-s Departments
Tile molD Dumber I• 991·21!5. Deportment utfllsions are:
Generti 'Man~~p:r: ....................... Ext. 1101 ,

Newo ................... ...... :................... ExL 1102

·

West Virginia 's t1 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer.
.
·

or E!IL 1106

Other Services
Adver1islng. ............................... ..Ext. 1104
Circulation .......... _.. ,., ... ,..,,...,.... .ElL ·ll 03
CIIWifled Ad• ................ ............. .ExL 1100

Fri . 9 em ·10 pm • Set; 9 !1m- Midnight
Sunday 1 pm - 9 pm

MtlliiiH:r Sboum

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

..

�•

Friday, July 30, 1999

The D·
a
ily
Sentinel
.
.
Peae4:

Sports

rJtorgan
helps Rangers beat .O's 3-1; . Mariners, ChiSox win
.

Friday, July 30, 1999

American League
roundup

Reds beat Dodgers 7-5, take third win in four-game series
By JOHN NADEL

LOS ANGELES (AP)- At age
34, Hal Morris spends most of his
time on the bench these days despite
a career batting average of .306.
The reason is simple- the first
baseman for the Cincinnati Reds is
Sean Casey, an NL All-Star who
ranks second in .the league behind
Colorado's Larry Walker in hitting.
· But even a player of Casey's abil·
ities needs a rest every so often, and
he got one Thursday.
Enler Morris, who made the ·most
of his rare opponunity with two singles and two doubles in five at-bats
to help the Re&lt;ls beat the Los
Angeles Dodgers 7-5.
" He's a lifetime .300 hitter, one of
the best hitters in the las! 10 years,"
Casey said of Morris, who raised his
average to .277 (23-for-83) in his
II th stan of the year.
"I asked ·Casey if he had heard ?.f
Wally Pipp," . Reds manager Jack ·
McKeon joked .. referring 10 1he firs1
baseman replaced in the New York
Yankees' lineup by Lou Gehrig.
"We're going to give hjm more
than one day off, we "'i e going 10 send
him away for the weekend." 1\ inning
pitcher Pete Harnisch sa1d of 1he

popular Casey. who is hittmg .361
despite a 6-for-26 slump.
Morris said 1t v.as JUSI nice 10 contribute.
•
"Even m your lim1ted role. you
want to contribUJe," he said. "I just
need to give (Casey) some rest ~n ee
in a while. I'd prefer Jo be playing
more, bul we've gol a fun ballclub to
play on.
·
"Sean's having a phenomenal
year, he 's got to be oul there. He's a·
great kid, il's nice 10 see h1m doing
so well."
The Reds have been doing awfully well. too. The .win was their fifth
in six games and raised their record
to 44-24 in the last 2', months. In
addition, they've won 29 of their Jasl
38 away games.
" It 's crazv. l don' I have an
answer, 1 don 'i Jhink anybody does. "
Harnisch said when asked to explain
the Reds' 34-15 road record- by far
the best in baseball.
The Reds. 24-27 in Cincinnali,
begin a six-game ·hon1estand tonight
against San Fran c is~ o.
Eddie Taub&lt;nsee homered and
drove in four runs. and Dm11ri.Young
also homered and had tw o RB! s as
the Reds bea1 the Dodgers for 1he

Hou stpi~

Basketball

AL standings
East~rn

Oi' ision

Iwn

W '

L

~

li.ll

. ,.

.'i4~

6

.61

N~w

York
Boswo

610

J9
46

55

5., 8
455
422

l6 48
46 l5

Toronto
Balrm'Kme
Tampa 83 y

1

"'
19

c~ntra l

Oi"i.sion
.... 61 40

CLEVELAND
Ch1cago
Minllesou
Kansas C1ty
. Denolt

' 604

• - "l8
.......•
42

.480

420

... .... 42 . 59
...... 42 60

12':
18' ·

Eastern Conference

. w

Iwn

New Yorl
Cbarloue
lktroit
Orlando
Wa shmgtoo
CLEVE L-\ND

II

.. II

10

...9

6

..

19

.416

412

WNBA standings

s

Western Division
......60 41

Onkland

Se:mle ..

...

....

.ll lO
l.l
...... 41 l?

.505
.475
.4-30

..... ........... AS

Anaheim .

,

.l94

9
ll
16.

Lo s, A ng d~s

14

Sacramento

... , '" 14
.. :.... 11

..,

;.. ...
M1nn~snt~
Phoentx
'1."".
UiBh

? ·O.Sp.m
..
·,
Detroit (Weaver 6-6) at Toronto (E.Koba.r B- 7).
7 05 p.m.
Chica,o (Sirotka 1·9} at CLEVELAND (Colon 9J), 7:05p.m.
·
t
Kanw City (Wituick 4-7) at Texas (loaiz:a 2-l ),
s,Jl p.m.
MinneJOta (Radkt 7-9) at Anaheim (Hill 3-9),
JO,Ol p.m.
. Baltimore (J. Johnson 2-4) at Seattle (Meche 1-1).
fO:OS p m.
.
Tampa Bay (Eiland 1-S) al Oakland (Oqu1s1 J-7),
10:35 p m.
New York (Oemens 9-4) at Boston (Roit: 6-3).
1·05 p m:
Chicaao (Navarro 7-8) 11 CLEVELAND, I :05
p.m.
'
Detroit (Mlickl 5-9) 11 Toronto {Carpenter 7-5).
4:05pm.
• •
.
.
Tampa Say (Arrojo 2-6) al Oakland (Siein 0-0),
4:05p.m.
. ..
Balrimore (Ponson 9-6) at Seatlle (Moyer !ii-S),
4:05pm.
Kansas City (Reicher1 G-0) a~ Texas (Helling !!-7).'
8:.\5 p m.
' . ,
Minnesota (Mtlton'3-8) at Anaht1m (Finley s'-9).
10 :05 p.m.

· Sunday games

11
16

~ .:!9

Sl~

21 J
11 "1.17

'

1

. .: .1

i18

"

JOO

6
8

6.'\6

II
1J

476
'50

9

)

~

Cemral Division
Houston , ..... ,.......... ,. ...... 62 41

.l80
~00
485
.480

42
S1. I.Auu .
.. ........ .. 51. l1
Piusburah' ........................ 49 ll
Mllwaukee ....... r... ............ 48 l2
Chtcngo .
...
47 l2

475 1

the Roc kies Slop Houston 's ,six-game
winning streak and avoid going win·
IC $S on their seve n· game homestand.
" He threw a great game." Castil'l a
sai d of· Kilc . "He's been like me .
He's been througli Iough times. Ou1
you have to be professional and play
hard everv dav ...
Kilc . .;,ho had given up 22 earned
runs in his previ9us four starts. he ld
his fonner team to two runs and
seven hits m what might have been

his final start in a Rock1es uniform .

"I made a commitm ent to. come
here and pi1ch the besl I can for 'as

raf' into 1rouble wilh 'a thrce-run .lead

from 9 a.m . until noon, Tuesday,
Aug·. 10 from 6 p.m. un1il 8 p.m. and
Saturday Aug. ,14 from 9 a.m. until
noon . All the sJgn·up dates .will be
held al Jhe Mason Ball Fields.
If you have any questions, please
contact Dave Jenkins at 304-88238!7 .

NFL training camps begin

~ · Sai·nts

6

10

~

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SALE

IBBEE

Sunday's game

It,s the Dealer Behind The Deal
That Makes .T he BEAL Dirrerenee/_......;

Soccer
MLS standings
Eastern Conference
D .C.

}r LSOWPu Gf
JJ 1 3 ].\ ]9

COlUMBUS ...
New England
Miarru .
Tampa Bay

11.7S ·2ti
's 10 .1 1s
. 811 J 18
.812 4 16

Iwn

NY·NJ ....

S IJ

l

9

GA

26

J5

2S

34 .

Dalhu

. 1 .~ 5 2

35

10 8 I
10 10 1
II 8 J

2tl
28
27

11 ' J ~

13

11

_,s

20 '
19

1~

LosAngeles .
14 17
San Jose ..
II S 9 . 15 16 )4
K11nsn.~ Cuy
,.
5 1-1- I J.l 22 J6
NOTE. TI1rt&gt;e p01n1s for victory one pomt for
shootout ~~o· &amp;n tJnd zero potnb fm. loss Shootout
(SOW ) IS a su bst:t of IHrlS

1999 F350 CREW CAB

1999 ·F250
. SUPERCAB
.

Oual Rear Wheel, .7.3L Diesel, Auto, NC,
All Power Equip., Conversion, Two In Stock

li.ll

•

Sunday's game
Mtarru a1 COLUMBUS, I p.m.

10 1
1

Transactions

ll
12'~
ll

.553
.539

.485
.441
.441

1\

7

11 1~

II '1

Thu"rsday's scores
•

Tonight's gall)!s.

,.

Eddie. Bauer, 5.4L V·8, Auto, Air Cond.,
Power Moonroof, Trailer Tow, Loaded!

A.merican Ltagur
OAKLAND AlltLETICS. Acquired INF Randy
Velarde and RHP Omar Olivares from the Anahetm
Angeb RHP El11in Nina arxt OF J~ff OaVanon and
OF Nathan HayrM:J .
N•tlonal Lague
FLORIDA MARLINS: Opuon'td LHP Vic
Darensboura to Calgary of the PC.L
MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Signed RHP B~n
Sheets to .a minor-league contract

'Nallonal Foolball ,League
ARIZONA CARDINALS. Signed LB Johnny
Rutledse to a four-)leat contrac t
· DALLAS COWBOYS. A~reed to 1erm$ wtth
DL ~!onto Spellman on ~ one-year contract
GREEN BAY PACKERS: Signed LB Anthony

4), 8.10p.m

Dawis .

Houslon {Reynolds q-7) at San Dieao (Clement
·
Arizona (Anderson 3-2) at Los Anaeles (K.
Brown 11 -6), 10:10 p m

l-9). Jo,os p.m.

Saturday's games
New York (001el ~ - I ) at Chicago (Lie~r 8·4}.
4:05pm.
Houston i Eianon S-3) at San Diego (Ashby 9-S).
4:05p.m.
Aorida &lt;Nunez4-4) 111 Pimbl.lrgh (Schmidt 9- 7),
.

San Francisco (Eues 6-6) at'CI~CINNATI
(Vi llofle 5-JJ. 7·os ·p n1.
Philadelphm (Person 5-2) a1 Atlantm {Giavme· 89), 7· 10 p.m

at M1lwaukee (WoOdmd

I 1 -~), 8.03 p.m
Coloritdo (8 M Jom·s ~-8) :H ,SI Loui s (Luebbers
1·1), 810JJffi
Aritona (R Johnson 10-8) at l ol An~eles ( V&lt;~ldes
8-~J . IO : IOp . m

Sunday's games
111 Allama. 1. 10 p.m
San Fr&lt;~ncisco at CINCINNATI. I 15 p m.
FIOfida at P1tUburgh. I.J5 p m.
Montreal ot Milwaukee. 2:05 p m
Co lorado a1 St louis. 1:10 p.m
New York a1 Chicago 1,20 p m.

liOn.

Football

,..

..,

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1999 FORD ESCORT

,

ZX2, 2.0L DOHC 16 Valve, Auto; Air Cond.
Cool series &amp; Hot Series
·

1997 FORD F350
4X4, 1 Ton Dually, Air Cond., AM/FM Cass.;
Till, Cruise, Only 37,000 Miles '

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS· Signe.d LB Mike
Peterson. Waived RB Chm Gall.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS : Stgned WR Larry
Pari:er to a three-year ~omract
NEW YORK GIANTS· · Stgn~d OL Luke
PetitgoUI, OL Mike Rosenthal. RB Joe Montgomery.
RB Sean Bennett, TE Dan Campbell, S Lyle Wes1.
CB Andre Wt:ather5: DT Ryan Hale and LB O.J.
Childress.
SAN FRANCJSCO 49f:.RS: S1gnfd WR Mark
Harm to a one-year ~o mrn cl. Wuivcd WR J1m
·McElroy.
'
.

Hockey
National Hockev League.

'

, ANA HElM MIGHIT DUCKS· Sijned C Antti
Aaho. LW Mike LC:clerc and LW Jeremy Ste\"e Mon
10 one-year contracts
..
DETROIT RED WINGS . S1p:11ed D Aaron Ward
to u one-year comracl
NEW YOR K ISLANDERS- S1p: ned C Tony
Hr ka(

White Sox 5, \'ankees I

Paul K~nerko hit a pair of solo
shots for his first multibomer game
in the majors, and John Snyder
pitched Chicago over New York at
Comiskey Park.

Snyder (8·6) allowed one run and
three hits in seven mnings. He was
iOto the water fountain behind the called up Friday from Triple-A
left-field fence .. giving him a home Charlotte. where he went 3·0 in three
run in every AL park. He laler ~ad a starts.
two- run double off the lop of Jhe
Konerk o co nnecled off David
wall.
·
Cone
('I 0-5 ) and Ramiro M~ndoza.
Clayton wasted no time pulling
' Russ Dav1 s and Edgar Man1nez

All-Star game. mosl umpires
resigned ,effective Sept . 2, thinking
the tactic would force an early stan
to negotiations for a new labor con mmorit) hiring 1n recent ) ears and tracl. The currenl deal expires Dec.
d1dn ·t want to decrease the percent - 31.

the decisi ons. se\·eral management
officials said. all spea king on the
condition they not be identified.
Base ball has pu~~ed to mcrease

age. of mmonty umpires. Baseball
al so had ·to be careful not tO acce pt
th e re signations or too many of the
·umun·s leaders, because that would

But more than a do7-en umpires

relu sed to res1gn and baseball hired
25 replacement s from Triple-A,
open the spon to a charge of Jil egal effective Sept. ·1: The ump,i"'s let go
sent a letter Tuesday withdrawing the
retali ation. .
.·
Phillips ·promi sed he will fi le. a resignalions.. but base ball said &gt;I was
"massive. massJve unfatr labor prac- too late . · t
Ji cc charge," and hoped to il by
Mondav. He cited a clause in the
A day earlier, m anlicipati,an of
lahor agreement barring "discnmination or recrimmatlon."

baseball's moves, umpires sued in
federal coun ·in Philadelphia. Their

NL umpire Jerry Crawford. the
union president. said the ac ti ons
were " illegal. reprehensible and
immoral."
.
On July 14 . the day following the

·attempt . to gain ~ restraining order
was denied · by !J.S. District Judge
Edq10nd V. Ludwig. but a hearing on
the case will be schedul ed after Aug.
· 12. Ludwig 's office said Thursday.

',

.

promise·su·per Bowl .trip; Picken~, ·eengals stay at odds
•

•

•

•

•

"

•

u

•

have insisted that he sign a five-year eight sacks in 1997, hasn't recovered
yards. The Saints have not had a defense nee&lt;;led as much work,", tract .r
from surgery to repair a fractured
! LA CROSSE, Wi.s (AP) - The l ,tJOO.yard rusher in a decade.
Ditka said.
Jaguars : Fi&gt;St-round draft pi ck contract.
Eagles: Defensive tackle Rhett ' kneecap thai forced him to miss the
; future is now for the only NFL team
"Of ~ourse, people are going to
The Saints on Thursday re -signed Fernando Bryant, who's'involved in
• that has never won a playo'ff game.
try to stack the line and stop !,!.icky," , safety Sammy Knight , who Jed the a contract squabble, mtssed the fin&gt;t Hall will sit out the enlire season and final 14 games last season. He ·had
might ~tire because his · ailing left major surgery on the same knee to
!
It was a message repeated over offensive
coordinator
Danny team with six interceptions last year. day of camp .
repa1r torn ligaments in 1997 .
The cornerback has demanded a knee hasn't responded to rehab.
and over by the New Orleans Saints' Abramowicz said. "We have to find Knight agreed to a five-year deal
Hall,
who
Jed
the
Eagles
wilh
four-year deal, while the Jagu ars
: hierarchy on .the first day of training a way to stop that and get the ball to wonh $9.225 million .
camp.
him anyway."
They also acquired veteran corner
"Lasl year. if I had told you the
Abramowicz
believes'
that back Ashley Ambrose, counting on .
. Falcons would be in the Super Bowl, Williams can wear down opposing his cover skills to beef up the sec'
:' .you would have" laughed," general . defenses if he is given enough oppor· ondary.
,
. • manager Bill Kuharich said !unities. He also believes that
Rams: The St. Louis Rams have
Thursday. "This year, ,we're the team . Wj,ijiams can be used as a receiver.
reponedly offered holdout running
that will make believers of people. "
The Saints, who ranked 28Jh in back Marshall Faulk a seven-year
The Saints' dedication to proving the NFJ.: in offense l~st season and contracl worth $45 million.
But his agent, Rocky Arceneaux,
Kuharich right could be seen in their dead last in rushing, also signed Jefl
offseason workouts, which were the guard Wally Williams, coupling him opposes a seven-year 'deal unless the
• most successful in the h1s1ory of the with Pro Bowl tackle William Roaf Rams guarantee they won 't make
franchise, with 98 percent of the and leaving fonner No , I pick Kyl Faulk a franchise or transi11on player
, players panicipating .
· Turley in his naJUral position a1 righl after four years. ·
'.
" These guys understand that our tackle to stabilize the line.
·cowboys: Alonzo Spellman, out
chance is now, not three years from
New Orleans traded their No. 2 of foot.ball since the Chicago Bears
, . now," coach Mike Ditka said. "The pick for wid&gt; receiver Eddie released him in 1.998 following sev• boJtom line in this business is win· Kennison. counting . on his speed to eral bizarre episodes, has agreed to a
ning The bottom line for me is win· provide a deep threaJ.
contract with the Cowboys.
ning . 1 didn ' t win my firs I two years.
"People Jalk about us giving up
Spellman:s
agenl,
Leigh
Brand New 1999 Buick
If I don't win this year, I shouldn't be all our picks Jo get Ricky," Kuharich Steinberg. said the ~efensive lineman
·' here ."
said . "But that's mi sleading. It's not accepted a one-year contracJ for the
. Park Avenue Sedan
''
New Orleans, which has nol had a as if we have only one new player veteran minimum of $400,000.'
.. winmng season in seven years. was from last year. We ' ve been act1vc in
Bengals: Carl Pickens. Jhe lead.
• 3800 V~ Power
eAMIFM Power Load
.Cassette
,. 6-10 in each of Ditka's first two sea- getting people we need and keeping ing receiver in Bengals history, will
• Power Seats
• Remote Keyless Entry
, sons. Yet when Ditka introduced the good players we have.''
sit oul the season if the team doesn't
Quarterback Billy Joe Hoben , .l.rade him.
Ricky Williams to a crowd of fan s
• Dual Climate Control • Totally Loaded!
following the draft and pronou,nced · who mi ssed all of las! season with a
As Cincinnati prepared to open
hi s team playoff. bound, nobody ruptured right Achilles' tendon , 1s the traimng camp in GeorgeJown , Ky.,
, snickered.
sta rter going. into training camp. Pickens was working out in Atlanla .
·;, 1 believe everything he says," Although Hobert has only a 3-2· His agent, Sieve Zucker, said the
Brand New 1999 Pontiac
~ said Williams, who predicted at least . record as a starter, Ditka has enough receiver WO~ 't play for the Bengals
•·
.
..
a trip to Jhe playoffs. "This is a good . confidence in him and backups Billy Jhi s season.
GrandAm GT
i team." ·
Joe Tolhver and Danny Wuerffel to
Panthers: Rookie Robert Dame!
·~.
If the Heisman Trophy winner pass on acqu~
· ing J,eff George, will miss the season ~fter fracturing a
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
f isn't ·able to cari'y the Saini.~. he Warren Moon,
I 0 Donnell and diSc m hts neck dunng a blockmg
• Ram Air V-6 Power
:; should at least give it a big boos!.
Eric Kram~r via fre agency, or trad - drill.
• Tilt/Cruise
o Automatic
~ ' . Ditka, who still' dreams of the ing for Jim Harbaugh or Brad
Surgefy 10 fuse the two vertebrae
• Fully Loaded!
·, Air Conditioning
• days when Walter Payion was carry- Johnson.
between the disc will be performed
'. ing the football for him, believes
"The only worry I have about thai next week after the swelling goes
~ Wilhams is from the same mold.
position 's someone getting hurt." down. ~ecovery is expected to last .
" I ihin.k this kid is the real thing ," said Ditka, who has started four dif- three to four months, but the team
Ditka said. "I don't think anything ferent quanerbacks in each of his said he should be able to play next
Brand New 1999
··. bothers him except not doing his job first two years.
season.
Pontiac Firebird
The defense had a hard lime last
Colts: Linebacker Mike Peterson,
and not winning."
i
The plan is to get the football to year, panially because it was gn the the Colts' second-round draft .pick,
.. William s at least 20 times a game- field for most of every game. This ended his holdout and joined the
• Tilt Steering
• Air Conditioning
' somelhing Ihe Saints have not done year, Ditka said that should not be' team at training camp in Champaign,
• Aluminum Wheels
• AMIFM CD System
·. for other.running backs.
the c~se,
m.
.
" . · Lamar Smith, last .year's leading
"Most of the work we' ve done
The Colts didn 't announce tenns
• Nicely Equipped!
• Cruise Control
rusher, had only 138 carries - an has been on the offense. That's prob- of the agreement, but his agent said
average of eight a ga&amp;e- and 457 ably not fair, but I don'! think the Peterson agreed to a four-year con·

825'850

*

.

~5,950*

Basketball
National Basketball Assoc:iation
MINNESOTA TlMBERWOLVES . S1g ned
c_oach Flip Saun~rS to a muluyear contrac1 ex1en ·

New Yo~~ (Yoshu 7-7 ) 111 Chtcago (Trachsel 314),3:20p.m
"
,
Florida (Spri naer 5- 10) at Pinsburgh (Scbourt:k
3-.5 ), 7:0.5 p.m
San Francisco (Gardner 3-8) at CINCINNATI
(Nengle 0-3), 7 05 p.m.
.
Philadelptua (Byrd l j-6) al Atlanta (Smaltz 8·3),
7:40pm.
Montn=al (Powell 0·2) at Milwauktt {Peterson 01), 8:W p.m.
Colorado (Astacto I0-9) at St. Lou11 (Mercker 4~

1'1 innings .·He js.

rumored Jo be dealt by Sunday's

Pitching in temperatures over 100
· degrees, Halama (8·2) moved within
one win of the team record for con· .
secutive vicJories shared by ScOII
Bankhead ( 1989) and Dave Fleming
(1992).

~7,450*

Saturday's game'!
Los Angeles .11 Chtcago. 4 p.m. "
New England .11 Tampa Bay. J p m
San Jose a1 Kans as City. 8.30 p m .
ColtJ rado m Dallas. 8 p.m

2' :

Juan Guzman (5·9) gave up three
runs and six hits in

also homered as the Mariners
stopped a three-game los.mg streak.
Mike Sweeney and Jennatne Dye hn
consecutive home runs for the
Royals.

s

·- .

28
25 · 10
15 Jo

opportunities.

1he Rangers back aheag. openmg the
lllth mning by dm 1ng a J -1 pitch far
,~ ,er the wall in center
Thai pr'oved to be enough offense
lor Morgan. whose last sun Friday
'" Tampa ended when he was hit by
· a ltne drive in the right forearm.
" !was very lucky it wasn't broke .
It might have ended my season.
maybe my career," Morgan said . " I
spent til)le in the training room all
week to gel this thmg ready to go."
In other AL games, Chicago beat
New York S-1 and Seattle stopped
Kansas City 8-4.
Mariners 8, Royllls 4
Alex Rodri guez homered for the
first time al Kauffman Stadium. and
Joh~ Halama won his eighth straight
decision as Seattle beat Kansas City.
Rodriguez hit a 418-foot drive

~· MARY FOSTER

,

";i

Orlando a1 New York, 4 p.m.

taking over the team lead in wms . He
was 4-Hl lifetime against Jhe Orioles.
and had not won in Baltimore since
September 1985. Earlier this ~ear. he
gave up eight runs in the first' inning
in a loss at Camden Yards.
·
John Wetteland pitched the ninth,
completing the three·hiner for his
major league-leading 3.1st save in 38

each spent more than 25 years in the major league umpires arc depaning . NL umpire Steve Rippley said.
NEW YORK (AP) - Afler major leagues and worked f&lt;;JUr
Pulli, 64, has been a member of adding Jhal the firings h ~vc made
spending their careers ejecting play-' World Series apiece. •
.lhe NL slaff since 1972. He was him consider reliremenl.
ers. 13 National League umpires
"These are some of tilt: fines! planning to retire afJer Jhe 2000 seaMa~y umpires spent the day won ·found themselves tossed out.
umpires in the history of this game. " son .
dering if they'd be kept or let go.
In an unpref,:edented purge precip- · union head Richie Ph1llips said.
"'It's a slap 'in lhe fa ce . ·This is
"We've been waiting since 6:30
'italed by a labor stra1egy Ihat back- "Terry Tala has worked many, many what I deserve after28 years'" Pulli thi s· morning, calling pe ople and get· fired , 13 NL umps lost !heir jobs imponant games. Whal they ' re say- said from Pittsburgh . where he was 0ng · phone call s. " NL ump· Dana
Thursday. meaning one-third of ing is that an umpire who has never to work the Florida-Pirates game DeMuth said in Los Angele s before
· maJor le ague umps will depan Scp.t . even worked a spring !raining game tonight.
.
the Dodgers played Cincin nati .
2.
in his life is 'more fit to umpire in the •
'Tm ready Jo go Jo war.'' he. said. ''And from thai tim e on. our hearts
Joe Wesl . famous for slamming major leagues than Terry ·Tata.
"Thi~'is the bi"ggesl favor they ever' have been jumping .
pitcher Dc;nnis Cook to the ground, in
"I think the conduct of major tlid for this union. These gpyS' will
"We're SIIIJldin·g ·here wiih our
1990. and Eric Gregg, criticized for a · leag~e b'*eball is, reprehensible and come together. 1guararilee you thai ," head s in a guillbtine , and Ihe blade is
·wide ;strike zone i'n the 1997 play· oppressive. What they '·ve really done
Many NL umpires were angry right here. " he said, holding his hand
offs. were among those lei go , man- ~ here is attempt to exer.:ute surren- with commissi'oner Bud Selig 'a nd behind his nec k.
agement officials said; speaking on dered prisoners . 1 absolutely vow to Sandy Alderson, the vice pre~ident of
He survived, but also lei go were
lhe condition they not be identified. · fighl to the dealh m this case, and 1 baseball operations in the commis- Gary Darlmg, Bob Davidson . Bruce
Bill
Hohn. Sam
Tom Hall ion, suspended for three will never, ever rest until 1 rig~t this sioner's office, say mg 1he moves , Dreckman,
were made over the objec tion of NL Holbrook, Paul Nauert, Larry
. ·games earlier this month for bump- wrong."
Poncino and Larry Vanover.
ing.a player and coach, will be forced
Nine AL uinpir.es were told president Len Coleman. ·
to. leave, l,oo. along with crew chiefs Monday that their resignations were
'"This is a plan by Bud Selig and
Ability, diversity and experience
., _F.rank Pulli and Terry Tata, who have· accepted. That means 22 of. Jhe 68 Sandy Alderson Jo break Jhe union.'' .were among the faclors used to make

1

JER

struck out two and walked . two in

trade deadline; if he g~s . Jhen h•'
la.;t p1tch with Baltimore ""uld ha1 &lt;
been the one that Rodrigue&lt; hit mt '
the left-field seats to g1ve Texas a .'·
I lead 1n the eighth.
" I'd like to stay here . I ha1 en1
had any problems here; they trc a1me
first-class," Guzman said. " Bul d I
have to go somewhere else 1 ha1.e to
be a professional . I've been Jhruugh
thi s b'ef0re. last year.''
Guzman was oblain ed by the
Orioles from Toronto lasl Juh before
Jhe tradmg deadline. If 1his was
indeed an audition. then the only
thing he didn't do was win the game .
''I feh like I did mx job. 1just didn't get any runs.' ' Guzman said .
Kelly opened the third int&gt;mg with
t\is fifth homer. a shOl to center eSti mated at 41 8 feel , bul he gave th e run
back in the founh when he los l Mike
Bordick's fly to right in the sun .
Bordick was credited with a 1riple
and scored on- a single by B.J.
Surhoff.

By RONALD BLUM

BBYFL to start registration Saturday

in Jhc eighth.
The Astros pulled to 4-2 on Mall
The Big Bend Youth Football
Mieske's pinch-hi!, RBI single and
League
announces ils sign-up dales
loaded the bases with two ouls . After
fnr
Jhc
1999
season. The league is for
falling behmd in the wunt , Kik
third.
fourth.
fifth and sixth graders.
escaped the jam when Ri t:hard
Parcnls
shou
ld
bring their foo1ball
H1dal go ll1ed out to right field .
player
lo
the
sign-up
so thai !heir
"I' m uckled to death for (Kile)."
helmels
can
be
fitted,
Jhe
player can
Rockies manager lim I;eyland said.
be
measured
and
measured
for, pads.
"I'm tickled to death for me. We
Cheerleaders
may
sig
n-up.
'at the
needed to win a game-· desperately.
same
time.
..
He came up big today."
Sign-up dates are Saturday from 9
Dave Veres pitched the ninth for
his 19th save in 24 chances. He a.m. unlil noon. Saturoay, Aug . 7

fondly remembers thai year, mainly
because of Ripken .
"'He's obviously one of the best
ever, a class act and a great team
player," Morgan said.
Robeno Kelly, Royce Clayton
and Ivan Rodriguez hit solo homers
for the Rangers , whose lOth win in
II games expanded their lead in the
AL West to a season-high nine
games. Texas is 12-2 since the All Star break.
Morgan (11·6) allowed one · run,

National' League fires 13 umpires; Phillips .vows to fight bacl(

"

~50

Baseball

We.iltm Oi"lslon
Ariwna ..
.. ......... 51 46
San Franmco
..... -.. 5S 47
San Diego ...........:............ .49 52
Colomdo
...... 4S 51
Los Angeles . .... r ..... .. . ... ..45 S1

Ptlilndelphi&lt;~

victory over the Houston Astros is a

400 games.
·•over my career, 1he learns rve
been on have won a 101 of stans.
That's why r m still pitching," he
sa1d. ··1 guess 400 is .an accomplish·
ment. Good things have happened to
me in the 21 years I've been pitching
in this game. Eleven teams/ and 21
years. ll's been nice."
While No. 400 proved notewonhy
to Morgan, it remained elusive to
Ripken, who went I -for-3 and failed
in a thiro straight game to attain his
400th homer.
Ripken came close in his first at·
bat, driving a 3-2 p1tch to the top of
the left-field wall , but the ball bounded back onto the field. and he had to
settle for a double .
•
"They· buill the wall just high
enough," Morgan. 39, said with a
grin. ' 'It was a slider that backed up
and he knocked the heck out of it. 1
caught a break.''
One of the lousy learns Morgan
played for was t~e 1988 Orioles, who
lost their fin&gt;t 21 games. Bul Morgan

'

Saturday's games

602

...... l8

~ - 7J

Casulla has flou ndered at the plate.
hitting .203 since the Ali -S1ar break.
Both arc hoping Thursday's 4-2

Castilla's two-ru.n homer, his 21st,
off Chris Holl (2- 10) broke a 1-1 tie
in the (iflh. Hollleft with two outs in
the stxth after left fieldec Daryle
Ward misplayed Neifi ' Perez's dou·
ble, allowing Terry Shumpert to
score from first.
In other NL acJion , Philadelphia
defeated Florida 12· 1.
PhUiies 12, Marlins 1
Bobby Abreu went 4-for-4 with a
home run and Jwo doubles as
Philadelphia beat visiung Florida.
Abreu scored four times , Doug
Glanville homered and drove in four
runs and Alex Arias added a threerun homer. The Phillies moved 10
games over .500 for the firs! time
since July 13. 1995.

stranded the 1ying run a1 second
when pinch-hiner Tony Eusebio
grounded out to end the game.
"I try to make i1 exciting," Veres
said jokingly. "One, two. Jhree ...
anybody can do Jhal."
The NL Central-leading As1ros
losJ for just the founh time in 18
games. They are IJ-4 .since Dierker
returned from a seizure that required
brain surgery.
'
"This game was close enough to
·be a win. 1 don' l think anyone is
happy about winning three of four, ..
Dierker said. "We expecl to win
every game and that is how you
should be. If you arc not a good
Jearn, you can say thai. but you are
kidding yourself. Wilh our club. we
can win every game."

.. ThursdayJs score

""

. Monnenl (Thurman

to entertain trade otTers.

long as I'm here. and that's all rm
trying to do, ·· Kile said. " You sian
thinking aboul other things and
you're going to get out of your
game."
•
Though Kile had a live faslb~JI
and retired the side in order four
times. Aslros manager Larry Dierker
was hesitanl to give him too much
cred11.
" I didn't think he threw the ball
very well ·in the early pan of Jhe
game," Dierker said. " ! thought we '
wenl sleepwalking into the game and
didn't really stan getting some intensity until the middle innings. When.
we picked it up, (Kile) picked it up."
Kilo cruised lhrough the firs!
seven inmngs. Jhrowing '70 pilches
and allowing just Jhree hits. but he

M1am1 .1. Tampa Bay l. SO

ll' L

7:05p.m.

By DAVID GINSBURG
BALTIMORE (AP) - Few people remember that Mike Morgan was
selected 44 playen&gt; ahead of Cal
Ripken in the 1978 amateur draft.
Although Ripken will one day be
inducted to the Hall of Fame,
Morgan has enjoyed a career wonhy
of tbe No. 4 overall pick.
Morgan made his 400th career
stan a memorable one, limiting the
Baltimore Orioles to three hits in six
inmngs Thursday and holding
Ripken wllhout his 400th homer in
-: the Texas Rangers' 3-1 victory,
• Morgan's lifetime 132-176 career
can be attributed in pan to the fact
ihat he has played with more Ihan a
few bad teams . Now, however,
Mj&gt;rgan is the winningest pilcher on
a winning team and one of only 99
pitchers in baseball history to sJart

in !he bullpen to hold them ."
Eric Karros bn hts 24th homer to
'stan the 'Los Angeles sixth to cut
Cincinnali's lead to 5·3, buJ the Reds
score&lt;! twice in the se1•enth otT On an
Masaoka on RBI doubles by Young
and Morris to extend · thetr lead to
four runs .
.
Dave Hansen htt a two-out. \WO·
run . do~ble otT Reds rehever Gabe
Whtte 1n the e1ghth to complete the
scoring.

Pboeru!li at Hou5ton. 4 p.m
. CLEVELAND 111 Detroi l. 1:30pm.
. Charlotte a1 Minnesota. 8 p m.
Sacramenro at Utah , 9 p.m
Wuh1ng1on at Los Angeles. 10.30 p . m~

Atlanta
......... 6,2
.l%
New York
............. ... 61
l92
Phtltldelphla ..
... 56 46 .l49
l
Flonda ...... ..... ......
... 40 6.1 .388 '1 21 ':'
Montreal ... ........................ J7 61 )78
22

'

Roc k1cs

Tonight's games

Colorado
Chicai!O .·

NL standfugs
.. Eastrm Diwision

.

H6

runs right there."
Harnisch (10·6) allowed six hits
and Jhree runs - two earned before bemg lifted for a pinch hitler.
He walked Jwo and struck out five.
Scon Williamson.. the founh
Cincinnati pitcher, got four outs
wilhout allowing a runner for his
14th save.
.
"'This is another lime we fell
behind and came back," McKeon
said .." We've gor thai feeling: Stay
close, we'll win, we've got enough

Western Conference

Deuon :11Toronro. I :0.5 p m
Chicago a1 CLEVELAND. 1·05 p m,
T11n1po Bay al 0/lklanCI. 4.05 p.m
Baltimore a1 Seaule. 4 :~ 5 p.m.
New York al Bo5ton, 8 05 p m.
Kansas Ciry at Texas. S·OS p m
~inrM:sola ,al Anaheim, 8.05 p.m.

Philadelphia 12, Aonda I
Co lorado 4. Hou~ton 2
CINCINNATI 7, Los Angeles .5

By AARON J. LOPE:Z:
DENVER (A P) - Vinny Caslilla
can empathize with Darryl Kilc .
While KJie has strugg led . on the
mound. promptin g the Colorado

New York at Charlolte. 7: lOp m ·
Utah a1 LU5 Angeles, 9 p.m

S~tunlay's ga~

CINCINNATI

II

Houston 71, CLEVELAND 65
New York 13. Orlando 65-0T
Sacramen1o 70: Washington 54
Phoemx 79. Mmnesota 46

. Tonight's games

Iwn

10

..

National League
roundup

Thursday's scores

·

New York (lrabu 7-3) a! Boston (Portugal 6- 7).

'•

~:'iO

.... 18

,Thursday's scor:es

Ch1cago .S. New York- 1
Seattle 8, Kansas C1ty 4
Tex~s 3, Balt!ITIOI'e I

9
10

Western Conrerenu

- 19'

Hous1on

Texas ... .... ..... ......

L~ "Gl!

rally and pul the Reds ahead 5-2.·
Young opened the mning by hitting
Dre1fon's first pitch for his sixth
homer to lie it.
Dreifort gave up eight hits and
five runs in six innings while walking none and striking out. seven.
"A couple pitches made the dif·
J'erence," he said. "The first ,pilch
was the one righl down the middle to
Young. home run . The second was
the pitch rig hi down the middle to ·
Tau~nsee, home run . That's four

Rockies top Astros 4-2; Phils whip Marlins

Castilla homered and Kilc (6- 10)
pitched eight strong mnings to help

at San Diego. "1 ,05 p m.
m l ~' ) Angeleli. 4 10 p.m.

Ar~zona

"It seon1&gt; like we're on a tread·
mill. where \\ere going nowhere
fast. " said Dodgers manager Davey
Johnson , v. ho'c Jearn has lost eight
of 10 after wmnmg eight of 10. " We
had a lead. and then came the si&lt;th .
!l's like we take one step forward and
one step back . That's kind of been
Jhe slory all year long."
Taubensee"s IOJh homer wilh Jwo
on and one out in the sixth off Darren
Dreifort (8· 10) capped a four -run

sign of thmg s to come as the Rockies
prepare to open a 12-gamc. 13-day
rohd trip wnight m St Louis .

Scoreboard
Baseball

thi~ U~1e m four games.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

NEW YORK RANGERS . Signed 0 Te rry
Virtue
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS . Stgnt:d RW M1k:tel
Renberg and RW Sand y McCarth) 10 on~-yt'.u con·
1rac1s
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS:' S1_gned lW
Frederik Modin :md LW Todd Warriner to one -year

'Phone

7 40-992 .:. 2196

..;onlmCI5.

WASHINGTON CAPITALS· Announced 1he
of C Dal.- Hunter

rcl!r~ment

..

461 S. Thin_.
Ave.
Middleport

·,
""

~

ICC's Coles offers to repay ski ·
·, trip expenses paid for by SLOC
SLOC"
As ~f Thursday, neither Coles nor
Rofe had responded to the statement,
Shaw said.
Efforls Jo contact Rofe late
Thursday were unsuccessful.
The mvestigaJion into th e SaiJ
Lake Cily bid. com mittee's successful effort to wm Jhc 200~ Winter
Games resulted in sJX IOC members
being expelled and four resigning
The bid committee distributed to
IOC members al least $1 million in
direcJ payments, scholarships. free
medical care, travel allnwan ~ ~s and
Jav1 sh gifts.
Coles was allowed to J.. c~p hi s
!OC membership. bul "'"' repri 41
ing ~.:.orn mittcc docs not l)ehcvc Mr. manded. He also was forced . In resign
• Coles is legall y ob li ga1cJ lo pay from the Sydney o rganiLin g. t.:ommit -

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) When Australian Phillip Coles was
fighting to keep his International
1 Olympic Comminee membership
during the Salt Lake City bribery
scandal, he offered to repay ski-trip
expenses that were picked up by the
bid committee.
The bid committee's suc cessor,
•': the Salt Lake Organizmg Committee ,
'· has taken him al his word and billed
him' $42 ,000.
~
The statement o f cx~ensc s was
: se nt July 15 Jo Co les' attorne y,
Simon Role , The Salt Lake Ttilmne
reponed today.
SLOC spoke swoman Caroline
~ Shaw said. however. "Th e org;miz-

tee and was banned for two years
from being a member of any IOC
commission or working group .
Coles first was .linked to the scan·
dal in a Feb. 9 report to Jhe SLOC
board from . ils independent ethics
panel. It stat e~ thai Coles , !OC member Willi Kaltschmitt Lujan of
Guatemala and their' spouses made
four visits 10 the United Slates at Salt
Lake. City bid committee expense.
including Super Bowl trip.
ll1c Auslralmn responded Ihal the
ethics' panel repon ":'as 1nacc urate
and defended himself before an !OC

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o Air Conditioning
o Power Door Locks
o

Brand New 1999 Pontiac
Grand Am SE Coupe
• AMIFM Slereo
• Traction Control
o Nicely Equippedl

•Taxes, TaJl!l, Trtle Fees e~ra . Aebaie ooudod in sale price cl new vorkle t~li!O 1111ere a~llle. "On awoveo credt. On selected models.
. Prials Good -"'Y 30th lhN August 1st. Not respoflsible for lyPOgtaphical emn.

a

inv est i~ativ e commission , at which

time h; promised to pay out-of- pocket expenses picked up by the bid
(Scr IOC on Page 6)

{

west Virginia's t1 Chevy, 11ontiai:, Buick, Olds,
And Cus~om Van Dealer.

Fri. 9 am ·10 pm • Sal. 9 am· Midnight
Sunday 1 pm • 9 pm

�P9 6 • The Dally Sentinel

.

Friday, July 30, 1~ ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Fridlty, July 30, 1999

Hasek announces he'll retire
at end of 1999-2000 season
ByJANSUVA
.
PRAGUE, Czech Republic (AP)
- Dominik Hasek, the five -time
choice as the NHL's best goalie, will
retire after next season so he can
raise his children in his homeland.
" I have decided that 1he upcoming season will be my last," 1he
Buffalo Sabres ' star said today at a

news conference .
The 34-year,old native · ·czech
won .the NHL's most valuai:)le player
award in 1997 and 1998. helped the
Sabres reach lhe Stanley Cup final s
this yea, and led the Czec~ Republic
to Olympic gold in 1998.
The Dominator had another reason for quitting: He hates the limelight.
.
" The attentiqn I've received is
overwhelming,' ' he said. "It's some'
thing I don't enjoy at all. It's time to
. step back."
Hasek said his family wanted to
move. back to the Czech Republic
after hockey. He and his wife, Alena.
have a nine-year-old son, Michael.
daughter.
and
four-year-old
·
Dominika.
'" We want our· kids to go ba.:k to
Czech Republic and share in our
families' backgrounds and culture."
Hase k said. " I can see e\·ery year it' s
more and more difficult. especially
for my son. to adapt to· the Cze&lt;h life .
Ever}' year he has more problems to
speak Czech . This is one of the rea-

tributions to not only 1he team but to
Buffalo.
"Obviously it will be difficult to
replace somebody of the caliber .of
Dominik Hasek, " he said. " But he
gave us the opportunity to plan ... our
future a year in advance.'' •
Despite struggling much of last
season with a groin injury. Hasek
helped the Sabres reach the Stanley
Cup finals , losing to Dallas in six
games.
Hasek, known for nopping to . the
ice ro block shots and even releasing
his stick and grabbing for 1he puck
with two hands, was paid $7 million
last season. Only Patrick Roy of the
Colorado Avalanche, who made .$7 .5
million. had a higher salary among
goalies.
Hasek has two years remaining on
his contract, $7 million for the
upcoming seasOn and $7.5- million
for 2000-0 I. and the club holds an

ly DAVID

DOMINIK HASEK
HC Pardubice during the 1980s and
went to the NHL in January 1990
after the fall of ,tho Iron Curtain. It
rook him three years to make his big ·
breakthrough. ·and his years as ·a
backup left him contemplating a
return to Europe rather than sit &lt;&gt;n the
bench.
. . He w.on his first Vezina Trophy as
the NHL's best goalie in 1994 with
Buffalo - . at t~ age of 29, rathet'
late even for a goalie .
•

defeat
~ ~Rockers; Liberty,
~ Mercury also win
~

-

WNBA roundup

.

&lt;.

•..
.... . .

S: .: Marauders' cross country practice

.r.to start Monday at Meigs High School
'

.

.

.

Cross co untry practice for Meigs High School and Middle School will
begin on Monday, August 9 at 8 a.m. in the high school lobby.
·
~
All boys and girls interested in running this year should attend at this
time even if they don't have a phy sical.

:

i,,

..

:JOC &amp; Coles .. , (Continued from Page 5)
.. .
.comm1nee
within IOC guidelines. The three
· ; : IOC investigators sai d Co les too k prist-vote trips involved no " quid pro
for votes and were not grounds
....-•five tri ps to Utah between. 1991 and quo''
for di smissa l, the IOC said .
:rt998 .
" • In additi on, his daughter and son... in-law also were treated to a ski trip
"\at bid·comffiluce ·e xpe nse fiVe
::;,Tionths be fore Salt lake City 's rirst~· ballot victory in 1995. Coles said he
•· :ilid not know until later that the bid
~ cummillee pa1d for hi s daughr ~r·s
... Vacal m n.

~

The IOC accepted Cole's exp la: nalion th at only o~e of his two pre~
· -.iote trips to the Deer Valley resort
'.occ urred when Salt La ke City offi• cially was a ca ndidate, and thus was

JOC in vesti gators also found no
.wrongdoing in allegations that Coles
accepted expen sive jewelry from the
Athens bid commiuc c in its unsuccess ful pursuit of the 1996 Summer
Olympics.
Michael Jordan of the
Chicago Bulls scored in do uble
figures in 840 consecutive
games, f rom I 986 until his
retire ment in 1998.
•

•

Jarilla, Briana Tucker, Jeasl ·Austin, Stephanie
.Jarvis and Hallie Brooke, In the·· third row . art
Ashlee Swartz, Charlotta Bibbee, Sarah Wllkel ..
and Amber Cadle. Standing' 1r4 Leeiln Martin';
Melissa Workman, Branda Moore and Emily
Shoemaker. Teammatas not making the photo session were Sareh Belcher and Tiffany Mynea. .

0~,
op_·
' P,.
.' .
r'

J.: .

million in remuneration from President Clinton. it's now up to Paula Jones'
legal team to decide whether to push for more or put an end to her claims.
. Clinton's lawyers' say the president is willing to comply with a federal
eourt order Thursday to p_ay about $90,000 in penalties for giving false tes.iimony about his relationship with Mo nica Lewinsky.
But some in Mrs. Jones' camp, who -had sought nearly $500.000, say they
may appeal for more.
.• · "We feel the coun vastly underestimated the reasonabl~ .mo~nt of time"
Spent workihg on perjury and obstruction"of-justice 'issues, the Oallas-based
law linn of Rader, Campbell, Fisher &amp; Pyke said in a siatement. "In sum,
·we continue to assen that Ms. JoneS: attorneys are entitled to the full arriouilt
'of fees claimed, if not more .." .·.
·
·Peter Lavallee, administralo[ of Clinton's legal fund , said the trustees
wouldn 't consider whether they could use the money they ' ve raised·for legal
fees to pay the president 's line unless Clinton tells them he wants them to
do so.
The award by U.S. District Judge Susan Webber Wright was on top of
$850.000 Clinton paid to Mrs . Jones to seule lhe sexual harassment lawsuit
~he bro.ught against him.
·

John DiPippa. a constitutional law professor who has close ly watched tl¥
Clinton 's teStimony m the case led to his impeachment by the U.S. House
case, said Mrs. Jo nes' lawyers should consider$90.000" VICtory and put"!'and eventual acquittal in a Senate trial.
••
The JUdge in April issued a hi storic contempt ruling against Clinton and end to the case.
" I think that the Jones attorneys come out better here in the end than the'
said she would order him to pay for costs that re,ulted from "false. misleading
'and evas1ve an!lower.s'' in his January 1998 depO!-tllnm m Mrs.1ones ' lawSUit. president," said DiPippa of the University of Arkan sas at little Rock. " ('The
The preside nt · ~ lawyers argued Ihal a reasonable ~a n ct 10 n s hould be m j udge ) took a more generous view than 1he president' s attorneys and did sa:
the range of S 12.300 10 $33.737 .
as a way to send a message to. the president 's la., yers and o ther attomey!t
Mrs. Jones' lawyer.. meanwhil e, had reque&gt;ted $~96.358 to cove r com
that they shouldn 't act like thi s in deposition ."
incurred after C l i nt on · ~ deposition .·
Wright wrote in her order that she took "no plea&gt;ure in imposing conIn he r o rder. \Vnght ~ai d the lawyers' claims were ··cxct!!-.~ ivc and musl tempt sanctions'' against Clinton. but, they were necessary to " redress th~
be reduced ." She denied compen sation for various news conferences held ' president 's misconduct and to deter others who might-consider emulating the.,
by Mrs. Jones' lawyers. as well as anorney expenses associated with Inde- · president's misconduct.''
.
·
:
pe~dent CounsCI Kenneth Starr '&lt; prohc of Clinton.
.
·' '
The Dallas law linn was awarded $79.999 and the Rutherford Institute•
The judge limite d the sanclmns tO the t'OSIS most direct ly a~~ocill ted ' with S9 ,48S . The judge also ordered Clinton to pay the co ~rt $1 ,202 for her trip
C linton's testunony about Ms·. LC"~in s k y. heginning after a wr itten statement to Washington at the president 's request to pres ide over his deposition.
he ga\'C o n Dec 23 . '19n. The JUdge said about 20 percent of ClintOn's Jan .
In her lawsuit, Mrs. Jones claimed that Clinton made an unwanted sexu17. 1998, depos iti on dealt wi th Ms. Lew in sky.
al advance in a little Rock hotel room in 1991 while he was Arkansas govThe Dall as fim1 said Thursday that it could have sought more than $1 mil - ernor and she was a state empl oyee. Wright dismissed her suit on April \
li o n, ''so the f~o:l:s we rcqu~:slcd arl: clearl y fair and reasonabl e.··
. 1998, but Clinton agreed to the $850,000 settlement after Mrs. Jones. appeale~
J ohn Whitehead of the Rutherfo rd Instit ute, a conservati ve group in Char, the dismissal . Clinton admitted no wrongdoing.
' -:
Jo nesv ille. Va .. that also repre sented Mrs. Jones' team , said he was pleased
Mrs. Jones lawyers ' drew Ms. Lewinsky into the case in an attempt to s ho~
that Clinton was penalized but might appeal the amount.
a pattern of sex ual misconduc t by Clinton.
:;

Camera failure leaves probe with no images of.asteroid :]·

.'

{~Comets

~

A. UEI

Aaaoc!Med Presa Writer
LITil..E ROCK. Ark. - After five years of court battles and almost SI

option at $9 million for the following

RESISTANCE FROM BEHIND- The Cleveland Rockers' Michelle
· ·.Edwards ~ts some resistance from behind in the form of the
;:- Jiouston Comets' Cynthia Cooper as they battle for the loose baa1.. ketball in the first half of Thursday's WNBA 9ame in 'Cleveland,
: where the Co.mets
erased a halftime djlficit to wm 71~5. (AP)
sons .
.
.-.,
"The longer we stay in ihe United
States, the harder it will be for .o.ur
kids ."
.
.
· · He said he was making the
announcement now to · head· off
rumo~s about retiremen·t during the
season and " minimize the distraction
for my teammates, for me and the
Buffalo Sabres organization so we
can concentrate only on .hockey."
"I want to have lots of fun with
my-teammates.
"
•
55 .1 seconds ,left in the extra session
said
he
stifl had hopes for
Hasek
gave New York a 68-64 lead. After
•
Stanley
Cup _to Buffalo.
bringing
the
Orlando failed to ans.wer at its end,
. '
Hampton was fouled and hit two free saying he wanted to win the last
game
of
next
season.
. CLEVELAND (AP) The throws for a 70-64 lead:
He also said he would like to stay
. ~ Houston Comets climbed out ·of a
She hit two more for an eightconnected
with the Sabres in some
&lt; 13-point hole in the se"cond half to point lead and Robinson added one
fa,hion
after
retirement and will ,
· : i&gt;eatthe Cleveland Rockers, 71 -65.
with 21 seconds left to give New
remain
active
with
Buffalo's Variety
REPRESENTING TEAM OHIO ~ - Will Power
: : Houston was down 50-37 when York a 73-64 advantage.' ·
Club
•.
an
organiZation
that
lakes
care
Tumbling
of Gallipolis will represent Team Ohio in
Hampton
and
Sophia
~Alley turned lh~ game around with a
of
chtldren
from
poor
famlltes
and
the
Junior
Olympic .Games, a four-day event that
• 28-8 run .
·
Witherspoon scorei121· points each
pays
fo~
lhe1r
hockey"trwmng..
.
will
start
Sllturday
In Cleveland. This partlclpetlon
·
:.,: Sheryl Swoopes led all scorers for New York.
Sabres
asSistant
general
manager
will
.
mark
WPT's
sixth
year In competing at lila
with 28 points in Thursday-'s game.
Sh~nnon Johnson led Orlando
larry
Carriere
attended
the
news
national
level.
In
front
are
(L-R) Tessie J'llcharda
She wasn' t fazed by Cleveland 's . with 25 points and Taj McWilliams
conference
and
praised
Hasek's
i:onand
Brittany
Burnett.
In
the
second
row are Dianna
• early lead. .
.
had 15.
.
.
.
" I think anytime we step on the
McWilliams ' "layup a's lime
, court, we .know that teams are going expired in regulation tied the score
to b&lt;; ready to play," Swoopes said. 56-56 and forced overtime.
"As long as we stay focused
Monan:bs 70, Mystics 54
;,.. throughout the game, · because we
At Sacramento, Yolanda Griffiih
know they are goi ng to make a run at had 19 points and nine rebounds,
;: us ... t~en I think we have a good helping the Monarchs pull away.
shot at winning."
.
Clinging to 'a 36-33 lead early in
•
The key to the turnaround was the second half, Sficramento went on
Houston's press. The Comets turned a I 5-3 spurt .. Griffith ~taite d the
; up the heat in the second half.
surge with a basket i_nside 'and had
~"We did a very poor job of han- the run-'·s final seven points as the
...;dling the pressure," said Rockers' Monarchs took a 51-36 lead with
:"'·coach linda Hill -MacDonald. "We 12 :19 remaining .
·. :).ave a press offense and we did not
Reserve forward Tangela Smith
i; run it."
scored I 4 points and Ruthie Bolton..
~ : The Comets took their first lead Holifield had 10 for the Monarchs.
. • with 7:30 rem aining in _the game ..
Nikki McCray scored 16 points
~ Cynthia Cooper blocked the shot and Chamique Holdsclaw had 12 for
•of Cleveland's Merlakia Jones. then Was hington, which comm itted 25
..:sprinted down court to take a lead tutnpvers. ·
Men:ury 79, Lynx 46
; ::;pass ,from Swoopes and score. That
; "i'ul Houston ahead 57-56 and the
At Phoenix , Jennifer Gdlom
r c.omets never trai led again.
scored 22 points and Minnesota tied
: • Comets '
hoad
coach· Van the WNBA's season- low point total.
1
:
~hancellor ranked the game htgh on
Phcienix won its stxth straight ' at
.. Houston 's list of ach-ieve mentS. .
home and seve nth of. its last eight
_
"It ranks right up in the tops overall.
.
~ . because we were down by 13,"
The l ynx scored the first basket
Cha ncellor said. " I don't believe of the game for their ~nly lead before ·
;.:.::j·ve ever seen us out of sync so the Mercury went on a 16-4 run .
bad." ~
·
Minnesota cut the read to seven on a '.
:~ ' Cleveland had a 34-26 lead at the three-pointer by Tanya Edwards .;,ith
: · ~alf, sparj(ed by a tight defense that II :35 left. but Phoenix scored the
• limi ted Houston to 10-of-30 shooting next 10 points for a 28- 1I lead .
:: from the floor. Jones led the Rockers
• The Mercury scored the last seven
,;..Iiiith 15 points Cooper chipped in 16 points in the first half for a 37-16
•·..points a_nd seve n assists for _the lead . T,he 16 points tied the thirdlowe st IT)ark for a half in league his-"'"'i Comets.
.
·
Liberty 73, Miracle 65 ,
• ·
tory. .'
.
f.:
At
Orlando, Fla.. Crystal
Edwards scored 10 of her 16
:. ~oblnson hit a key three-pointer and points in the half and shot 4-of-9
•
:_ Kym Hampton made four free from the field , The rest of the team ·
.... t~rows late in overtime as&lt;-the New was just 3-of-18.
:::.York libe rty beat Orlando ?3-65 · Edna Campbell had 13 points for
Phoenix .
;.;tl:lursday night in the WNBA.
:; : Rqbinson's three-pointer with

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Federal court orders Clinton to pay $90,000 to 'J ones

season.
He said he first started thinking
about retirement nine months ago
and had a meeting with Sabres' management about it in November: He
and his wife made the final dec1stOn
to quit just before the playoffs, he .
said .
For all of his NHL accolades,
ho wever, Hasek's career highlight
came not in the playoffs but m 'the
1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano,
.
Japan .
1 ·
· Buffalo acquired Hasek in 1992 in
a trade from Chicago, where he was
a backup to Ed Belfour.
Belfour was in goal for Dallas
when the Stars beat the Sabres on a
controversial triple-overtime goal by
Bren Hull in Game 6 . Hull's skate
was in the crease, but the goal ' was
allowed.
'
Ha~e,k played for the Czech club

•

By MATTHEW FORDAHL · , , the 'o bjectives of the $152 millioQ
the flyby. and its data could help
AP Science Writer · ·
.
mission. NASA said.
researchers figure ' out the rock 's
: LOS ANGELES- NASA scten" This whole asteroid encounter · composition, the scientists said.
lists sounded philosophical after a was pure bonus ," Rayman said.
Still. the la~·k of images is disapcamera flub on the Deep Space I
One of the technologies, the
probe left them with no images of its Au~onomous Navigation system , lost
brush with an asteroid.
the target asteroid about 20 minutes
· After all. they said, the sp.ace- before the 35,000-mph encounter. ·
. Based on data that was still arriv· craft's use of 12 new technologies to
forge more than 117 . million miles ing from the spacecraft Thursday, scifrom Earth was no small feat..
enlists believe th~ probe's camera
"There' s no secret ·we wanted to ' missed the pass.
'
. get neat pictures," deputy mission . "We jusl haven 't gotten enough
l)lanager Mar~ ; Rayman said on data down yet to determine where the
· Thursday, "But il"s a very small dis- broken link is," Rayman ·said.
appointment at the end of a very sue- "AutoNav had already successfully
guided the spacecr~t for many, many
cessful and important mission ." ·
· The probe is estimated to have mo~rhs and worked extremely well."
flown within 10 miles of the AsterAmong the other technologies
oid Braille late Wednesday, the clos- aboard is an ion propulsi'on engine
est flyby ever of an asteroid. But pic- that moves lhe spacecraft by sending
tures it sent back from the encounter out a stream of high-speed particles.
The engines are considered prefershow only empty space. said Robert
Nelson , a mission scientist at NASA's able for future spacecraft because
Jet Propulsion laboratory in Pasade- they deliver 10 times more thrust !han
na. Calif.
; a conventional ~ngine for a given
The.' barrel-shaped. ~-foot space- amount of fuel, allowing spacecraft to
craft, daunc hed in October and be 1smaller, lighter and less e&lt;pensive.
designed primarily to test new forms . An instrument that analyzes ions
of technology for future deep-space appeared to operate normally during
\
flights. otherwise accomplished all of

pointing to scientists given how lit- · asteroid impact on Earth 65 million
tie is known about the thousands of years ago is believed to be responsiasteroids that irregularly orbit the sun, · ble for the extinction of the dinosaurs.
sometimes colliding with planets. An
Deep Space I will remain -func -

2000 CHEVY SILVEUDO
3/4 TON TRUCK
Heavy duty, auto, V8, air, keyless
entry, PL. t&gt;w, tilt, cruise, I,.S
Decor WAS $29,331

NOW$27

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cially end s Sept 18. but co uld ny b.J.'! ·
tw o comets in 200 I if an extended ·
.mi ss io n is funded

'

the AU
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In
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--~
~~=

~M

seeks reversal of $4.9
billion judgment in civil suit

4x4, locking dill, auto, air, VB,.
trailering, cass #4559
MSRP $24,97-4
1

LOS ANGELES (AP) - General Motors Corp. asked a judge to overturn an unprecedented $4.9 billion product liability judgment for six people
--:no were severely burned when their Chevrolet'Malibu exploded in flames
In a 1993 collision.
"If this award is nol over the line, there is none. It cannot stand," the
automaker said in legal papers filed Wednesday in los Angeles Superior
Court.
.
.
..
On July 9, a jury awarded Patricia Anderson, her four children and fam- • .
ily friend Jo Tigner $107 million in compensatory damage$ and $4.8 billion
in punitive damages for injuries they suffered during the 1993 Christmas Eve·
accident. They were badly burned when their car was reaPended by a drunk
driver and exploded.
"
GM contends that punitive damages should nor have been allowed in rbe
case. The judgment, according to GM, is some 200 times and nearly $4.8
billion greater than the highest award in a federal case.
·
OM said in coun papers -that there was " no evidence, much :less clear and
convincing evidence" that lhe company put profits ahead of safety in designing the 1979 Chevrolet Malibu.
Attorneys for-the plaintiffs argued in the trial that the gas tank was placed ·
too close to the rear bumper and that better designs.wo1,1ld have placed it over
the axle or incorporated a 'shield. They also said a GM anal'ysis showed the
cost. of settling 'lawsuits arising , from crashes in which. victims are fa!ally
burned was less- $2.40 a car - than the cost _: $8.59 a car- of fixing
the problem.
'
.
·
.
; In it s motion to set aside the JUdgment, GM again argued that the placement of the tank behind the axle was safe and that placement of the lank over
the axle ·could be dangerous . '

Land

tr~nsfers

The following land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs Cqunty Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton:
Deed,' Jerrpld P. and Brenda K.
Egri to Lavern · and Mary Jordan.
·
Columbia;
Deed, Randall T. Roush, Randy T. ·
Rousl] to Roy D. and Alice H.
·'
Adkins, Sutton;
Deed , Juanita l. Allen. Juanita l.
Erb, William E. Erb to Thomas E.
Allen. lebanon;
Deed. Roger and Yvonne Young to
Wesley R. and Jodi L. Young, Scipio;
Deed , Walter M . and Deborah S .
Shirkey to John C. and Orva J.
Bond, Scipio;
' Deed , Jims Production Company
to State of Ohio, Sutton, 10 acres;
Deed. Jims Production Company
to State of Ohio, Sutton, 11.056
acres;
Deed, John E. Blake· to Adam C.
Martin. Pomeroy;
Deed, Adam C. Martin to Christine A. Martin, Middleport;
Deed, linda S. Grover to Gregory S. Gr(\lt'er, Salisbury ;
Deed , Southern Ohio Coal Company to Clifford Wooten, Columbia;
Deed , Joseph Richard Hilf Roush .
and Jennifer l. Roush to Jeffrey C.
and Deborah M. Harris. Sutton ;
Deed , Cleve and Dorothy M
Mullins to Robert D. Ellis to Candace
N. Miller, Chester:
Deed, Thomas E. Allen to Ricky
l. and Argyle Dee te r, Leban o n;
Deed. Malcolm E. and Do nna J.
Guinther to Ricky L. and Argyle
• i:&gt;ceter, Lebanon ;
Deed, David Jan and Jane Lynn
Wiseman to Owen E. Wi seman and
Mary l. Hud son, Rutland ;
::&gt;eed, Juanita L . Guthrie to Randall l. Mowe, Bedford;
Deed , Da vid Spencer, Linda J.

E'osjju"B S9

::; _$29,980

$21

95 CHEVY -G20

Now

98GMC JIMMY
4 Door, all power, 4x4
WAS$23,900

CONVERSION VAN

posted

Spencer, linda Spencer to David
Spencer. lihda Spencer, Racine;
· Deed, Jetta M . Bolin to Keith A.
and Meleah J. Ha~nah, Scipio; ·
Deed, Gary Lee and Bonnie Sue ·
Warner to J'!5on and Sheri l. Huff.
man, Salisbury;
Deed, Minter J. and Carol l.
Schartinger to. Randy Perry, Rutland ;
Deed, Doris F. Grucser, Doris F. ·
Grueser Living Trusl to Robert
Grueser1 Sutton;
Deed, Marjorie Hope Drake to
Harold l. and Grace 1,.. Adams,
Olive;
Right of way, Melanie and Jason
Quillen to Columbus Southern Power, Sutton ;
.
Right of way, Ernest E. and Connie S .·Halley· to CSP;
Right of way, Michael ,H, and
Joyce N. Cline to CSP, Chester;
Right of way, Edith Mae Welch to
'cSP. Scipio;
.
Right of way, Samuel J. Bennett to '
CSP. Scipio;
Right of way, Jeffrey l . and San·dra K. Folmer to CSP, Salisbury;
Right of way, James J. and Yvonna S. Persinger to CSP, Letart;
Right of way, Oscar and Lillian l.
Maynard to CSP. letart;
Right of way. Kenny and Susan
Wallbrown to CSP, lebanon ;
Right of way, Jennie and
l~rence Hayman to CSP, Lebanon .
Right of way. Jack 0 . Devo re to
C SP; Chester;
Right of way. Julie A. Curtis to
CSP, Chester;
Right of way, Phillip A. Moon to
Tri ad Energy Corporatio n. Bedford ;
Deed , Dorothy Zimmerman to
Lavern and Mary Jordan , Columbia:
Deed, John E. and Judith E. Martin to Beneficial Mortgage Company.
Bedford.

4 Dr, leather. V8. loaded
WAS $32,900
.

· auto, air, loaded
IWA•S $22,995

No~

$21

94 LUMINA 1•34 V6, auto, air, loaded, Black WAS $11 ,900........ ....... ................................ .......

$9,200
99 BUICK. LESABRE loaded, White, only t0,500 miles WAS $2! ,900 .........................::.......................;................,........ :...........:. .......:............. $ 19,500 .
98 CHEVY MONTE CARLO V6, auto, air, lin, cruise, AM/FM eass; WAS $14,995 ............. :.. : ................ ,....................... :....... ........................ $12,90.0
95 (AD SEVILLE SLS loaded, leather inl, WAS $24,900 .. ........................'...............:.......
.. ..................... ,.......
. . · '$18,900 ·
19 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX V6, a4to. air, Nice WAS $5995 ...................
, .......... ..... ·········'
$4,400
95 CHEVY S•1 0 V6, 5 speed, air, stereo, WAS $7,900 """"'"""""""""":...... ........ ....... .... ........
................ ...... .. ...........
. $6,700
98 PONTIAC GUND 1M V6, auto, air, tin, cruise,AM/FM eass .. WAS $t3,900........
............. ...... .....
.. $10,800
96 LINCOLN TOWN CAR VB, aulo.lealher in! .. White. only 40,000 miles, WAS $19,900 ........................ ............................................ .. ... $17,450
91 CHEVROLET CAVALIER 2 .DR Coupe 4 cyl, auto, air,AM!FM cass .. lin, cruise: WAS $U ,999 ... ................... .............. ..
....... $9,850
97 HONDA ACCORD EX4 cyl , auto, ai ~ AM/FM cass .. ti~. cruise, WAS $17,800 . ,.....
.................. , ..................... ..
.$15,750
91 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 18 to~ded.WAs sts.99s ., ................... .... .,; ..... ... . . . .. .. .... .. .......
.. ...... .................. .
.....$15,995
94 P,LYMOUTH ACCLAIM 4 cyl, auto, ait, Nd/FM cass, tilt, cruise, WAS $3,995 .................... , .:.... :.• ................. ,
..... $2,850
97 PONTIAC GUND'IM Gl V6,AUTO,AIR: TILT, CRUISE, WAS $13,999
················ ········· ... $12,750
.......... :............. :.'
......... $6,750
. 93 HONDA CIVIC DEL SOL 5 speed, removeable hard lop, cass, WAS $7995 ...
95 CHEVROLET S•10 PICKUP V6, 5 sp, air, Black, WAS $7,900 ........ .
········ ··············· .................................. ,,, ........ .
... $6,250
96 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME. V6. auto, air, loaded, 15,000 miles, WAS $14 ,900 ...,
..... $12,950
9f GUND AM 4 DR auto, air. till. cruise. alum wheels. AM!FM eass .. WAS $15,999 ................... ............ ......................
..... $13,880
92 CH.EVY 1/2 TON SWB V6, 5 Sp.. till, cruise, air, AM/FM cass .. Sport pkg .. red . WAS $11.900 ....... . ... ............ .. ..
.. ... . ..... $9,450
98 PONTIAC SUNFIRE. auto. air. stereo, PS, PB,Iow miles, WAS $12,900 ..
............... ........ ........ $10,800
99 CHEVY PRIZM auto, 8.000 miles. WAS $13.999 ..·............................. '
. ..............................
$11,900
93 ASTRO EXT CONY VAN loaded, WAS $8 ,999 ...............................
..... .......
.. .. . .......... .............
.. $7,450
94 CHEV C·1 0 LWB two tone paint , Red/Black, va. auto , air, till, cruise, AM/FM cass .. WAS I1.995 ..... ..
.$9,450
94 CHEVROLET 1/2 · 4 WD LWB V6. auto , air, AM!FM. WAS $10,900 .
.. , ...... , ....... .
$7,990
........ .....

., .......... .,....

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OHIO 308

MAIN (704) 992·6614. (8C)O) 837·1094

Mon.·Fri. 9 am·B pm; Sat. 9 am·4 pm; Sun. 1 pm·S pm
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BUICK•

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Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, July 30, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Debris from '48
Y2K ~xpert believes scattered
problems will linger after Jan. 1 Alaska airplane
By TED BRIDIS

1il1l1 a~out tadures with slates. fcdcrnl ag~nC il'~. corfll.mH t on~ and foreig n f!O\'·

WASHlNGTON - Don't expect the Year 2000 technol ogy problem to
, disappear after Jan. I. President Clinton's top Y2K expen said failures could
extend well beyond New Year'~ Day.
.
Although John Koskinen predicts there will be a national "sigh of relief"
in the early hours of Jan . I, he also anticipates scanered electronic .fat lures
over the first days, weeks and even months of the ne w yeai.
'

crnm&lt;nl&gt;
· Kt,sktncn.urgcd people to pre pur&lt; fur p~&gt;ssinlc lrpunlc as they mi ght for
a wmt'er stnm1 m • hurrican.:: Bu) ll•hh ltghh an,d nallcnc&gt;. keep enough cash,
food and " .ncr f~&gt;r ,c ,·cral duvs and mai-t· CO!liC&gt; nf tinanda l and medi cal
records.
But he also caUt ioned agai nst "h~~..- kpdmg ·mppl it's. ,,· hi~h L'ould lead to

Koskinen. chairman of the Pre sident's Counc il o n·Year 2000 Conversion.

lol·a l ~h urt ages , 11r ~rai ning hanl a~.:~· ,,.u n ts . '' hil:h ~.: o u ld ~t rai n the natio n 's

said in an interview Thursday~witltThe Assoc iated Press that some failures
may not become obvious until the end of Januarv. the fi rst time after the date

financial system.
·
,
"If we get a couple hundred mlll i,,n,'\mcricans doing anything differently,
we're gomg. to create e~.:o numi L prob lems.'' he s~itd .
An AP poll this .month foun d most Am ericans don' t expect major problems, but nearl y, a third pl an (O stock up on food, water and other supplies.
About one -quarter of American s planned to withdraw cash in case of !rooble.
·
Kos kinen predie!cd the most widespread problems will occ ur in devCIoping nations that were slow to beg in repair woik. He named ce rtain region s
that recently suffered lln an~ lal problems. incl ud ing So utheast Asia, Eastern
Europe and Russia. But he acknowledged that parts of Africa, Centrai'America, South America and the Caribbean also were likely to suffer.
" Clearly. some of the developing co~ntrie&gt; of the world are go ing to have
some difficulties." he said. adding that only 25 to 30 of I he world's nation s
were well prepared. "Many more countri es are going to have problems than

rollover that consumers ¢ view their mo nthl y bank statements, credit-card

bills and other financial paperwork . .
" lt won't evaporate until after that." Koskinen said . "Clearly, this is more
than a Jan,uary I problem. " But he also slightly hedged his predictions: " None
of us are really going to know until after January I. ''
Unless repaired. some computers originally programmed to recognize only
the last two digits of a year will not work properl y beginning in 2000, when
those 'machine s will as~um e it is 1900.
Some computer systems may shut down quickly with obvious failures,
and others may grad ually ex perience subtl e problems or degraded performance that may take weeks w not ice .
"The more difft cuh pro blem will be where tlie system looks like it 's doin g
it correctly hut it 's doin g it all wrong." Koskinen said.
Sonic failure s won 'L be recog ni zed until the work wee k ~ tart s Monday.

Jan . 3. as empl oyee s return

to

ihe ir offi ces and turn on their computers for

not. "

,

,

The State Department will begin issuing travel advisories in September

the first time.

for U.S. citizens about which counlries 'to avoid.

Repaired computers also wi ll need to recogn ize 2000 as a leap year, even
though mo&lt;l years ending in '"()() " don 't need to OdJUS! for Feb. 29, he said.
. A.new $40 million lnfo m1a1ion Coordination Center being organi zed down

Koskinen also disclosed that the government will consider .evacuating .
American citizens from countries with widespread failures. He said each U.S.
ambassador will make that decision
·.

'

t.ion prov isi'on .

,,

Both family planning advocates
and anti-abortionists claimed vi ~ tory
in back-to-back votes on amendments
late Thursday, But a prohibition on
money to. any group . lobbying .for
abomon laws courted a prestdenl:ial
velo.
The House worked on the bill until
just after midnight this morning,
postponing a final vote until Monday.
The administrati.Qn says the legislation's cuts of $1.9 6illion from President Clinton's requests would hann
a wide range of foreign policy efforts,
honing t,he poottst countries and
diminishing the ability tq respond to
foreign crises, 10 prevent nuclear
smuggling, to deal with the ~ s ian. crisis, to expand the Pea!'e Corps and to
help refugees.
•..
.B.ut many Democrats agreed to
support it, hoping'1o find more money for critical pr?grams arid to delete

the abortion restriction duripg House- men~ will be funded if the anti-abor- operations bill include:
• $2.88 billion for Israel, repre.
Senat~ negoti ations on the fi scal 'lion language is removed.
The abortion debate obscured · se nt ing a $1 20 milli on reduction in
2000 budget.
.. , T he .Sentue passed a $12:7 billion deep concerns over spending levels in economic and a $60 million increase
foreign aid bill"last month 'without the · the bill, which is $1.9 billion bel ow in military aid .'.
~·' ·~
Clinton 's request, $715 million below
abortion lan guage .
• $2 billion .for Egypt. a $40 milVoting 2 28-200. the , House fir st last year's bill and ' $20.7 billion lion reduction in economic aid but no
passed a now-fami liar amendment below this year 's actual spending on change in military aid.
sponsored by Rep. Chris Smith, R- aid, including emergency appropria• $725 million for foi)ner Soviet
N.J . It would ban aid to any group tons. ,
stat os, $307 million below Clinton's
Rep. Sonny Callahan . R-Aia .. request It would withhold 50 percenl
lobbyin g fo'r changes tn abortion
law s even if the group uses private- .who chairs the forei gn operation s of aid Ia Russia unless it ends missile
appropriati ons subcommittee that cooperation with Iran.
ly raised fund s.
.
crafted
the bill. 'said it could be the
Then , lawmakers approved, 22 1• $680 million for child survival
208. a measure echoi ng claims that biggest pe.rcentage cut from actual programs .
famil y planning reduces abortions. It . spending of any budget bill in hi sto• $4 ro million·for fam.ily planning
would require groups rcceivuig aid to ry.
'"
activities, including $25 million for
A Clinton administrati on state- .the United Nations Population Fund.
certify that they will use 'funds to
rllent
said sen ior advi sers wo uld recreduce the incidence of abortion .
• $240 million ·for the Peace
ommend
a veJo if fOreign. operatiOns· ' Corps, equal to this·.year's level bul
Smith described it as a deceitful
anempl to lure away foes of abonion funding is not increased above bot h $30 million below,Ciinton's request.
from his hard-line position against bills' appropriations.
• $285 million. for'intemational
"Funding at thi s leve l \vould se n -. narcotics control.
any U.S. funding helping abonionously impair the president's ah i lit)~ l u
ists.
• $181 .6. million to combat terrorRep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y., pre- co nduct an effecti ve foreign policy, .. ism and the spread of nuclear
dieted that Smith's more .restrictive th e statement Said.
weapons and for removal of landIt said the bill would cut fundin u mines .
·language would be taken ·out in
.,negotiations to avoid a presidential tO mternattonal lending institUtiOn~
veto. Bitt Smith said he hl\5 guaran- by $493 million from amounts needtees from Republican leaders that no ed to ineei U.S. commitments.
payment of overdue' U.N. assess-_ · Major provisions of the forei gn

landers

he told Israel anny radio.
Beilin played a key role in negotiming three interim autonomy agree-

ments with the PaleS!inians in 1993,
1994 and 1995.
His concept was to buiJd trust

between. Israeli s and ' PaleS!inians
with a serie.s of small steps over an
interim period, w,hil e begmning nego-

James R. ~impkins

..

I

.

"As we got more and more into it, I got more and more intrigued,''
Millican said.
.
·
Prior expeditions. some lured by rumors of gold aboard , had declared
the wreckage too dangerous 10 .approach. The pair located il only after
repeated'y flying and hiking through the area.
"We took literally thousands of pi ctures , but we never saw il," Millican said :
'
The longtime friends said they diseovere~ c !he wreckage in 1997 but
waited to inspect it until receiving government clearance and unanim ous
consent from victiius' families .
·
·
"It's a reopening." said Dorothy Denman of Anchorage . whose uncle,
August Koistinen, was a passenger.. " I' ve. be en crying."
Millican, 42 and M&lt;;Gregor, 44, have •been delibemte1y vague about
the debris '·location to safeguard it from the cur)ous. They say they hope
some wreckage they brought back - a twisted table knife with the old
Nonhwestlogo, an engine plate, a scrap of aluminum - can be di splayed
in a musey~. or used in a memorial to the crash victim s.
..
National Park Service officials have declared the area closed .for two
months while they decide how to handle any other visiting requests.

Meigs graduate
given Atwood Award

,.,

Rebecca Johnson of Middleport has
been awarded the Atwood Award for
Excellence by the University of Rio
Grande .
.
,
The award is a tuition -free scholarship
'
awarded to hi gh school· students who
demonstrate academ'ic excellence. '

.

Johns~n

By JOHN LEICESTER
A111ociated Press Writer
BEiJING - Chinese police today
detained at least 20 people and beat
one man outside ·the co mpound
where China's leaders li ve and work,
while authorities stepped up a campaign to crush a banned meditat_i on
sect.
Two police offi cers. one wielding.
a wooden pole and the other using his
lists, beat the man outs ide the north west gate of the tightly guarded
leadership co mpound , know n as
Zhongnanhai.
The man, who' was eventually
pulled onlo a bus by police, had
fought back with hi s fi sts. One pol'ice
officer had bl ood on his neck and the
man 's face appeared swoll en foll owing the beating .
At least. 20 other detamecs were
held in a bus outside the red-walled
•leadership compound. the focus of
earlier protests by the Palun Gong;
which last week was banned as a
threin to the gove rnm ent Later, ~he
detainees were transferred to small- ·

cr vans and driven away.
The detenti ons L"amc a day afte r
Chi'na is sued an arrest warrant for the

through e xercise , mediati on and
attemptS ~~ channel unseen force s.

US.-based leader o r the meditation Falun Gong 's teachings draw on
group on charges of spreading super- · martial arts, Buddhism and Tao ism.
Official estimates had put the
s ti tion .
group
's membership as htgh as 70
The Warrant for L1 Hongt:hl wa$
miilmn
- 9 million more than the
read out on state telev ision. It wasn' t
d ear whether China would see,k to Cemmunist Party - although the
e xtradite Li , a for:rncr· Chinese gov- government has since said the group
ernm ent c lerk who now Iivcs in New has juS! 2 mill io n members .
The crackdnwn was precipitaled
York Clly. State media. however.
protc S!s that began with a silent
by
re ported that China wo uld seck
vigil
on April 25 by more than
un specified cooperati on from mem10,000
Falun Gong devotees outside
be r.countrieS of Int'e rpol. the inte rn a·
the. leadership compound in central
ti ona! police agency.
Beijing.
J hc group said it w~s
The U.S. Slate Department said ir
protest
ing
offi cial harass ment.
would not exlradile Li because the
Li,
who·
founded Falun Gong in
two countrieS have no extradition
1992
,
has
denied
gove rnment accutreaty.
More than 2 million confiscated sati ons of havi ng pqlit ical ambi tions.
Falun Gong publications, videos and · He also has den ied organi zi ng the
casseues were destroyed Thursday by April gathenn g or other protests and
dozens of provinces and cities nation- has told re porters he didn't even
kn ow about them in advance . .,
wide , the state-run Xinhua News
China 's. arrest order acc used Li of
Agem;y said .
organi
zing demonstrati ons wi th out
Falun ·Gong is one of many
required
permils. Xinhua said.
schools of qigong, a traditional prac;

I .
.

'

1

Chu.:ago. Il l. 60611 -0562 . (In Cana·
Ja. ~e nd $5.1 5.) To find out more
ahout A nn Landers and read her piist

LOS ALTOS. CALF

dbu ut I'Cuplc &lt;'IH&gt; died because th'e\

t&lt;Jiumns. visit the Crea tors Sy ndi -

ncglcqcd ah s~c..,.,c d Iee th or i n fc u~J

ca te web page at www.creat ors.com.

~EAR .

.md l

LOS ALTOS: ~&lt;:~ ha'c

,h;! \ 'C · ht: ~rd

re ~:o vc r anJ rchuil d the ir nation anJ 11ivc·s aftCr the
&lt;.k\'a sta ti11n cau "eli h~ H urrt G~nt:" 'GcnrgCs and

M11ch in

Ne\~ H on ; on ~ pro, JJ ~~Jo int rcadt ncss opporfu r the U.S . u nll ~ whKh \\ Ork with host
t:ountry n..• , l d~nt~ tn· o., uprmtin g h-umanllarian
assi s tan c ~ p r og:r~1 ms and di ~as tcr rcl1d. Cffons td
t un l t i e~

R.I. CAP ) -

There's nothing

•
time in the past 126 ye ars.
Before thu nders!Onn s

~ truck

we stern Pennsyl-

ne s~ ~ 1 /L' envelope and a check or
ma ne) order fo r $4.25 (this includes

.'

the people s of the Ca ribbean and Ce ntral Amen S1rnpk in" ' Is. a heavy e(iutpnient operator with

the 718th Comhat Support Eng ineer at Fon Ben nin g. Columbu s. Ga. He is the son of Maxine
Ro.\(', Rac me. and hrother of Jeffre; A . Silnpkins.

Acv.. onh . Ga.

they were "inspect ed' ' to make sure th ey wcrcn ' t
wearin g underwear. Men were also as ked to

.,
Exp0 s and the r mmise of a year' s supply of dia- _
pers for the firS! to de liver.
"Remember: thin k blrlh !Onight.'' the ,public
address ann oun cer sa1d . as the sound of a cryi ng
baby hlared in the backgrou nd ., .
A local obstetn c1an sat w ith th t: wo men

behind home plate. and a .fleet of ambul ar ces
We don' t have a thcury - no rai n dances be in g. idled outside the ballpark ready to carry. the
perfonned th at I know of." sa id horough manag- would-be mothers 10 the loc al hos pital
"We heard there's so meone that's overdue ,"
er l3ruce Wcrmlinger.
·The Rain Day ce lch rat io n began in the late said contesta nt Lisa Ann strong. who's been hav1800s when a customer in Wi lli am Alliso n's drug 1 ing mild contractions all wee k. " It 'll be tigHt

a

stofe compla ined that n un always fell o n hi s· race ."

·

·

• None went in to labor dun rig \he game, though
1
the 'first to delive r will be declared the winner.
Lowell. won the ga me 7-2.

birthday, Jul y 29th. Alli son wage red a new hat
with a travet'ing sa lcslnan th at rain would fall ,
and a traditi on. was ·born .

-sion after the Mond ay night party.
Word spread aft er Charles Koral! brought hi s
PROV
O.
Utah
(AP)
- Real estate agents here
On Wedne sday, the counctl denied, a special · CBS crew one year, and one by one. ce lebriti es
events li~ense and a liquor li cense (o. organizers - im' ludmg Bing Crusby, Bob Hope and Johnny are takin g the literal approach to the marketing of
1.•Bridal Veil Falls: " Buy your bride a waterfall' '.'
seeking to hold an other party at the, mansion'. · Carson - aU los t.their hats.
w
the sign outside the 18-acre parcel reads.
Asked about the memo , Harle Tinne y said she
" If I had \he money, I'd sure huy it .' : said broLOWELL. Mass. CAP) - In the latest - and
had not been aware of lhe inspections. ''I'm
ker
Tom Heal , who· is handlin g the sale of the
perhaps
ihe
strangest
twist
on
the
old
-time
ashamed of myse lf for not Sloppin g thai." she
sa id .
·
ballpark giveaway. the Class A Lo we ll Spinners 607 -foo l waterfall in Provo &lt;:;,an yon. ','I'm very
invil cd l n~.:al c xp!.!ct:ml mulhl'rs fur t11c ir first- · serious. Where else ca n you btly a waterfall ?' "
~
Heal say s he ha s already gotten sc .v e r ~ l. cail s
WAYNESBURG . Pa. (AP ) - Confounding ever " Binh Night "
.
Thirl y preg nant women wen; gi ven free tick- for the propert y, which is just a few mile s from
skeptic s. rain fell in time for the annual Rain Day
celebrnti on, dampening a July 29th for th e l05th ets to Thursday's gu m ~ agat ri sl th ~ Verm ont Rober! Redford 's resort

.

'

DEERE TRACTORS ON THE FLOOR.
'

.

DEERE TRACTORS ON THE FLOOR.

99
99

DAYS SAME As CAsH*•
DAYS SAME As CAsH.

99 DAYs SAME ·As CAsH.
·0

!

-'

. , • Rear Sofa Bad
.. Fiberglass Running Bds.

··Totally Loaded! .

t:r/3!/Lawn »actor
.• 13 hp

'

'· &amp; LX255 Lawn »actor
• IS hp
• 42-inch convertible mower deck
• Auromaric rransrhission

•,38-inch cutting width
'
• 5-speed shift-on-the-go transmission

$38 PER MONTH*
* Raised
Brand New 1999 Chevy Astro
Roof Conversion Van

.$66 PER MONTH*

.

r

..

~ AMIFM Cassette

•

• Rear Sofa Bed
• Loaded!

5I *

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.
Your John Deere dealer
is passing along 99 days Same-As-Cash"' on a. fullline .·or. lawn
equipment.
\
. ' and garden
.
But only from July 6 through October 31, 1999. So hurry, because even-ifthe offer still stands, the traclors keep
rolling out of the door every day,
'

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'Taxes, Tags, Tille Fees axtro. Rebelo -In sale price al
Nsled - · l!llllicable. "On II!IIIIO'Itld creel!. On oeleclod II'Gdels.
P- Good .hAy 30fl thru Allwot 111. Noii8IPMiible tor lypograpltlcaii!IOII. "'ett:k! shown with~ from an ~ldopoudel• 8141Pior.
See tho .....,., mal'lllt tor lnbmollon en a!eralicnund W.nintles.'

G

.R u

s

L

I

K

E

&amp; 3251Awn and Garden »actor
• 18-hp V-Twin
• 48-inch deck
• Auromatk: rransmission ·

$113 PER MONTH*, .

D

E

E R E"
www.deere.corn

\.

Athens, OH
Wakefield Garage
US# 50 West, P.O . Box# 639
74~593-3815

·Bidwell, OH

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
668 Pinecrest Drive
74G-446-241 2

Parkersburg, WV
Larry's Cycle &amp; Tractor Sales
2706 Pike Street
:104-42S-7102

.

'

•otter ends'October 31. 1999. Subject to approved credit on .lohn Deere Credit Revolving Plan~ for non-commercia l use. A 10% down po:~ym~nt f-ef1UII~ It the ba lance Is not pa1d rn lull by the end ot Same As Cas'1 promotronal penoo. interest wrU be assesseo !rom the origtnal date of
purchase at 19.8%APR unless you res ide inCA {19.2% APR )~ Al , 'Fl. Ks: LA, ME, MA. MN. NE. NC, NO, PA, Vl, &amp; WV 118'ili .6.PRf T~ (14~ AP R, bi.Jt rate may vary); AR(9 5% APR, but rate rna~ var~ ·, with" $0 SC permonth m1r.•mum Ta ~es . fre1ght . setup and del•very charges ~uld Increase
monthly payment. Larger monthly payment may be reQu•red 1n California. Other $P«•al r,ates and ter ms may be av~~ lable, roclud'P€ mstallment fman.:::+ng and t nanc1ng !OJ commerceal use .Ava,l&lt;'! tllt• 11 P&gt;lr f,r· pat n11, df!alers Pnres and'models mliy "ary by dealer

/

•

simil ar S torie~

thi s sCasid,c, c it'y. But a rio-underwear party . vani a on Wednesday and car l' Th ursday. Gov.
auended by 820 people at Belcourt Castle went , Tom Ridge declared a drmight eme rge ncy. and
. 100 far, cit y'offin al s say.
. ' "
forc~.: aste rs had predu.::tl:d on ly a 25 pen: en t
A mem o wrinen by poli ce Sg t. Ru sse ll Hayes chan ce Way nesburg wo uld gct .rai n.
described female gues ts standing o n a· mirror as
'·We have a droug ht going vn . ~ o it ·s wei rd .

.•·

• Loaded!

• Air Conditioning
• High Gloss Walnut Wood
• Re~r Sofa Bed

old ~pn .md a prcg:nanl wife .
Srncc thl 'l experience, my v.1fc

medtt:al his10ry on
a four year l1 cc n ~e .

97 JoHN DEERE TRACTORS ON THE. ·F LooR.
·96.- JOHN DEERE TRACTORS O N THE LOOR.

Brand New 1999 C~evy Full
Size Raised Roof Conv. Van

• Color iV &amp; VCP
• Air Conditioning
• Power Windows &amp; Locks

lice. intended to improve health

plans to ·major irl nursing at

Rio Grande. She is the daughter of lane
·
Bergman.
The Atwood Award for Excellence is
presented to students in honor of the university's founders. Nehemiah and Permelia Atwoo4. Eligibility is based on

• Fiberglass Running Bdl.
• Custom Alum. Wheels

.

gcrou.., dn vcr u!T the road. but the
DM V insisted on licensing him to
entbn gl!r oth ers. Sr ary : isn' t· n ·~ .-

ing about loud , drunken gues ts leav ing- the I.n an-

activities.

.

'

postage and handling) to: Friends,
c/o An n Landers. P.O. Box 11562,

prove they were without briefs.
The 60-room chateau -style castle is l'requcnt'ly rented out for parties by its owne rs. Dmiald
Tinney and hi s w1fe, Harl e.
Coun cilwoman Kathryn Leonard said she got
several telephone call s from neighbors compla in-

scholastic achievement aptitude te st

.

Chinese ·authorities make more
arrests of banned sect members
.
..

GIRLS AND GEMS - Two girls froni Meiga County were
among the 30." middle school student~ selected to take part in
GEMS- Girls Explori!lg Math and Science, at Hocking Cpllege last
week. · Amanc!a Barringer, Eastern, lett, . and Annetta Pridemore,
Southern, represanted, Meigs County,

scores and leadership in extracurricular

121 '950

Lon e&gt;umc' Take charge of your

tion &gt;pread to ht&gt; hloodstream and
i-1ll ed hun. He left behind a 2 ; ear

unu sual aho ut g ra nd Soi rees 1a l the ma ns io ns in

Full Size C~nversion Van

.. 4 Captain's Chairs
• Rear Sola Bad

for savmg ~orne l1 ve~ today.

,·.Od-d s and Ends ·

NE ~PO RT.

* .Brand New 1999 Chevy

•liortec V-8 Power

\A.! ho v.as upset because her

Two months later. he p;t&gt;scd away.
My l'amily tri ed to got a very dan -'

function. In spite ofl111 degenerati ve
di sc a~ ~.: and lhc
fi le, he rc~.:c J vcd

,

'.

99 JoHN
98 JoHN

122 950

~Nom a n

hu,band &gt;oakcd hi&gt; 1nfected ingrown

life and tu rn 1t around . Write f6r Arm
Lande rs' n~~ boo klet, ''How to
Mak e Fn cnd s and Sto p Being Lone-

continue helping the peo ple of Ce ntral America

in the disast er whil!! atteriding an Air ForL:e reuni o n.

• Color TV And VCP
• Rear Air/Heat

for taktng thr ume to wrne . There's

co un\ s.
Dear Ann Landers: A while

1ocha1lm lle'r cmc ~ pol . I can assure ·
)OU. Ann . 1he no1.:k po t is nol what
she needs 1'0 \\ OITV about. Five years
ago, we boned o~r 24 year old son
whn dt ed lx:~.:&lt;.tu\c he neg lected to
trcm an in grown toe nail. llJe infec-

Army Reserve Sg t J am c~ R. Simpkin s part i&lt;.: ipmcd in a tra'ming C ~o;en: i st h.' rmcd ' 'Ne w Hori zo ns" in El Sal vad or. The so ld ier was n mcmhc r
of a ta~ k force comprised ~ ) r r c ~ etve ~.: omponcn t s
from· al l branchs of the U.S. mil itary se rv il:e w ho

, A few years ago, McGregor and Millican, both comm ercial pil ots,
: began probing the debris ' localion after discoverin g their mutual inter&lt;st'

·• 350 Vi Power'

go,ernment and pUl your \'Ote where

Military news

time .

124150*
'

smuses. Plea.e tell \ our readers lhat
no infection ' hould he neglected. ·
LAFAYETTE . LA.
DEAR LAFAYEITE: Bless you

no question • bout 11 -- you perfunned a trerncnJuus public service
b~K k . y ou pnnted u le tte r from a . by alenin g m) readers. Thank you

the mcdac .JI h1 ~to ry form . The doctor
an,wered "yeo,;" to tht: followmg.
Has a h t~!Or) of alcoholism. b on
mcdK at !On ~ !hat ~ho uldn ' t he talcn
while Jrl\ t n ~ . Hris a ~:ond Ht on that
can eau 'c ~Uddc n loss of motor

Dear Ann Landers: After read- childrel! are in rags. Our c lothes forms. swim goggles and mus1cal
ing the lener from "Been There and come from second hand shops, and I instrume nts. When I ask their father
Done That in N.Y.," I knew I had to buy macaroni and cheese by the for a liul e extra help . h e says.
· write. "Been There" says he pays a .case. Sometimes, the kid s don' t gel ''Tha1's what c hil d support is foi-."
- 1\&gt;t of money for child support, and haircuts wh en th ey need them Please print this, Ann. so he clln sec
it's not being spent on his two boys because the electri c bill was due or the other side.-- N.Y. DILEMM A
because he had to "pa~. for their hair- one of the kids go t sick and I had to
DEAR N.Y. D.: Money is often
cuts and .winter coats. Well, I'd like bu y medici ne.
· used by one or both parl!nts as. a
\ to tell him my side.
"Been There" also says the chil- means to con trol the other. UnfortuChild support .goes 100 percent dren should li ve with him because nately. it is the children who pa ~ tho
for our children's care. It pays for they cry when they leave hi s house . ·price whe n th e adu ll.~ c&lt;.~ nn ol gcf
the_m ortga g~, utilities. auto expens- Big deal. My kids do the same thing. alo ng. Parent's, please remem ber to
es. food . clothing and the day 10 day but they al so cry and cling to me put your children fi rst.
extras. I do not go out partying. nor when they leave, my house to visit
Dear Ann Landers : I, too .
am I dressed to the nines while my their father. These are children of woul d like 10 know how tn pu1 an .

hc.1rd a lot of complamt&gt; about the
C.tl il &lt;&gt;rnla DMV. and your letter
n p lat~s "h) . The best way 10 effect
change os " 'co mplain to the S\lltC
t1

the DMV anJ had h" Jouor ft ll out

dances , theate r costum es. spo rts un i-

'

tiations ·on a final peace treaty. The
thorniest issues. like the future of again .
Jerusalem and Israeli seulements in
When asked what it would take (O
the We st Bank. would be lci"t for lhe arrange the fir st-ever meeting
end - after trupt was built.
betwe e n Syrian President Hafcz
Critics call ed Beilin's approach Assad and an Israeli prime mini ster.
too slow say.ing it gave extremists on Levy !bid ~nny radio: " I will. say thi s
both sides time to try to sabotage the openly, Without diplomatic eoating ,
process. Palestinian militants have we need more ilitcnsivc American
carried out suicide anacks, killing diplomatic acti vity."
"Things will become clear" aft er
scores 'of Israelis, while Jewish setllers have put political pressure on !he Secretary of Stale Madelei ne Albright
-Israeli government to stop the han- vi sits the region next month, he said .
Peace n~gotiati ons between Israel
dover of land.
'After meeting Egyptian President and Syria broke down three years
Hosni Mubarak in Alexandria, Egypt. ago. Smce. Barak took office thi s
on Wednesday, Barak again said he month , the Israelis say they have
would carry out the Wye accord if the received signals from Syria about its
Palestinians refused to a mend it. but will ingness 10 re open the talks. but
warned thi s might lead 10 obstacles in the two sid~s have not agreed on con ditions.
which is the permane nt settlement , ...

ca~c . He ow a~ aho -.tubhorn .md
refu sed to &gt;lop dm mg. 1 wrote to

There are many npcnscs that chi ld
support does n't cove r - sc hool

having sounded no distress report.
.
Only the aurora borealis has bee n bl amed; it was shi nin g th at night like
" the headlights of a car." a.pilo! who searched for the ill -fated fli ght told
M&lt;;Gregor. Perhaps the pilots were blinded by the northern lights reflecling off a thin cl oud layer atop Mount Sanfo rd , in vestigators said arthe

talks on a pennanenl peace treaty.
Israeli of(icials say they worry
about handing over terFitory that
migh't make Jewish settlements vul nerable to te_rrorist al!acks by Palestinian extremists. Such attacks could
stop the negotiations, they say.
Also today, Israeli Foreign Minister David Levy said the United States
should get Israel-Syria talks moving

end I&lt;&gt; tht&gt; non-.ense v.tth the C"Jhforma Department of Motor \ 'chtcl e&gt;. 1.11 father was a l on~um c •k&lt;•-.
hohc " ;!h Jd\anced 1'.1ri-;"'on\ J " -

activaucs because I make sacnfices.

Peace pioneer pushes .for swift
. Israeli accord with Palestinians
'
, By MARK LAVIE
Associated Press Wmer
JERU.SALEM - The Israeli
politician who mvented the step-bystep approach to Israeli-Palestinian
peacemaking said today it 's time to
take a leap forward to begin work on
the final peace treaty.
The Palestinians are wasting time
insisting on implementation of yet
another interim accord before agreeing to negotiale a pennanent peace ·
deal, said Juslice Minister Yossi
Beilin, considered a dove in Prime
Minister Ehud Bara~'s government .
Barak has tried to persuade the
Palestinians to ·skip parts .o f the Wye .
River interim agreementan&lt;,l move to·
'so-called final status talks. The Palestinians have rejected .the proposal,
demanding Israel withdraw from
. 13.1 per&gt;ent. of. the West Bank, as
'stipulated hy Wye, before beginning
final talks.
" Don ' t stick to conc.epts of the
pas!," Beilin urged the Palestinians.
Such an approach would onl y "set off
argume nts ... waste our energy.
instead of working on the big issue ,

di\'Orce. They lo' e U&gt; both and wish
we could he with thern all the ume.
My children ha&lt;'e been able to
hve decenlly and continue thetr

a irborne fo r just an hou~ would ~: ras h int o a mountain m good weather.

'

By DAVID BRISCOE
Associated Press Writer
WASHfNGTON - A $12.6 billion House foreign aid bill faces
strong · obje,tions ft'om the Clinton
administration because or deep
spending cuts and a tough anti-abor- ·

Financial or emotional: supporting children of divorce

By ALLEN BAKER
Associated Presa Writer
_ANCHORAGE, Alaska - For years. Mane Milli can and Kevin McGie.gor have been fasc inated with Nonhwcst Airlines Fli ght 4422, which long
ago plowed into a mountain on a cloudless night , killing all 30 aboard.
The two pilots made it to the wreckage of the 1948 di sasler on. Saturday, reaching debris nestled in a remote valley buuressed by avalancheprone walls and tucked under a glacier ·about 200 miles east of Anchorage.
They found not onl y bits of the flight 's twi sted propeller and shredded fuselage bu~ human remains long preserved by icc and snow.
· Alaska state troopers on Wedne sday retrieved a hum an ann and hand
from the wreckage, which Millican and McG regor found scauered about
I 0 miles inside Wrangeii ~SL Elias Nation al Park and Preserve. The hand
may be in good enough condition 10 be fin gerprinted, said patrol
spokesman Greg Wilkinson. '
The wreckage for years had been too remote to reach safely. But a glacie{ has since pulled it down from its origmal 8,000-foot resting pl ace on
Mount Sanford, and it can be hiked to.
The DC-4 is believed t o have collided with a ncar-ve rtical wall along
,the mou~tain's 16,237-fool peak on March 12, 1948.
.
. The crash killed six crew members and 24 passengers, most of whom
were members of the U.S. Merc hant Marines who we re returning from
deliverin~ a cargo ship io Shanghai . Th~ fli ghi was bound for Edmonton,
Canada. and New York City.
.More than the di saster'~ location has sa t unr~so l ved . AvtalOrs sti II don't
completely understand why a fli ght piloted by two veteran Al aska flt ers

Foreign aid bill
. draws White House ·o bjections

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

crash located

the '"'·ct frmn the Whit e House "ill "P&lt;'r:ttc unttl M•u, ·h. sh.utng infonna-

Aiaoclated Preas Writer

Friday, July 30, 1999 ·

I

r

�•

Page10 • The Dally Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

FrJday, July 30, 1999

Friday, July 30, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Meigs County Fair, the place to shoW what you grow
Two flower shows will be staged at the

136th Meigs County Fair offenng gardeners

a ~ace to show what they grow as well as

thetr creative skills in arranging nowers.
''Mother Earth-Father Sky" will be the
theme of the artistic artangements classes
for the shows to be held on .Monday and
lln~rs~ay. Seven regular cla~ses and one
~nv~tattonal class, along with two classes for
JUntor exhibitors, will be included in each
show.
. New things ·are again being introduced
Into the show schedule, wi~h the· spec ial
class m the Monday show bemg a spiral
design titled "Eye of the Stonn" where the
design can be viewed from all sides.
In the Thursday show, the special class ts"Lightning m the Sky" . a framed spatial
design with the f{llme not to exceed 30 x 48

inches, designed so th:it it can be viewed
from both sides.
Other classes in the Monday show are
"Sunnse"' an inspirational design; ··colors
of the Rainbow"', a creative mass: ""Mighty
Redwood· Forest", a creative vertical design :
"R1vers and Streams.. one with water show-

ing: "Our Solar System': a satellitic design ;
"Birds and Bees", an interpretative arrange-

wood; "Lightning in the Sky"' . framed spatial design; "Rocky ChiTs"". mcludong ro.:ks.
and "Sunset", a transparency

'

The junior classes for the second show
are "Hiking the Deset1 Trail", an interpre11vc
destgn; and ""Hiking the Woodland Trail "'.
including treasured wood.
In each of the shows there are more than
40 classes for hor11culture specunens, as

ment, and ''Forest Fires", wann colors
· Jum~r classes tn the.first show arc "" Btg
Rock eandy Mountain" including a rock or,
rocks. and "Gone Fishing", ·a desi gn show. ing water." Classes for the Thursday sho\\·
arc "Fields of Flowe"rs"', a traditi onal mass,
··wi ndy Weather". showi ng motion ; "Deep

cial exhibi t. This year the commercial
exhibit will be provided "by Debbie Burke of
Waterscapes Plus. A part of her drsplay will
kat ure a theme sign painted by She I ia Taylor.
As in previous years. all classes of the

Blue Sea'.'.. underwater design; "Creatures

show are open for cxhibns to all restdcnts of

well as educ3uonal,t·lasscs. and a commer·

Great and S~all". an tnterprcttve .design ; .Meigs County and to all members of a
··woodland Treasures·. featuring treasured Meigs County Garden Club. Participan ts do

not ha\'c to be a member of a garden club to
enter. The only fee to exhibit is the purchase
of a se.ason or membership ticket.
Jun1or classes are open to anyone under
I'I years of age. The deadline for entenng
classes 1n the show is 4 p.m on Saturday,
Aug. 7.
·
Both shows Will be judged by an accredited judge of the Ohio Assocration of GardeQ
Clubs. "The showroom 1s to be cleared by
noon with the judging to begin at I p m.
On Iy one anistic arrangement may be
placed in each class by an exhibitor. In the
homcu lture secuon an exh1b1tor may e nter up

to six specimens with each to be a different
variety or type.
Top awards will be a senior best of show
with a prem1um of $3 ; a senior 'reserve best of
show. $2: a senior honiculture sweepstakes

$3 ; a creative award, $3; a junior best of
show, S2; a junior reserve best of show, SI;
junioc horticulture sweepstakes S2; and &lt;
JUniqr honorable mention, SI. ·
::
Ribbon~ will be awarded in three places in
all classes in the shows with SS for blue, $4
for red and $3 for white m the senior and

a
a.or&lt;~~

$1.75 for blue, $1.50 for red and $.25 : ~
while in the horticulture specimens.
·Committees for the show are Shade Valley, show schedule; Shade Valley and Wildwood, staging; Chester and Rutland Frienply,
photography , Winding Trail, . class sign~
....
Shade Valley; show entryway stgns.
.;..,
Wmdtng Tra1l , Chester, and Rutland
Friendly Gardeners. placement of exhibits;
Wildwood, Middleport Amateur and Rutland,
placement of ribbons and JUdge 's committee.

Ubort! Auombl! or God
P.0 Box 467. Dudding Lane

Mason, W.Va.

Pastor: Neil Te,nnant
Sunday Services· 10·00 a m. and 7 p.m

Baptist
Mart~ulQ

and don 't fully antie~pate the time tt
'. It was just two' years ago that
takes to achlcl"c ·wns istcnt sue- siock market (Uics were changed
cess ... 'aid Rnhcll Rak, m&lt;1deratm g•ving greater freedom to small
of a number nl \ iay-lruchn g Wch investors to do the kmd of trading
site&lt;
"that professional brokers do. Al so

death hi s w1fe and two children as ·
long as two days before the rampage
started. commi tted suicide later
Thursday.
Just 5.000 in numhcr, day traders

dollars. (hen sell them mrnutes laler
as the stock rises or fa! b. hoping 10
make a qu•ck prof1t.
" The wav this morkct IS so
volatile. it 's ,-just really stress ful. ""

stocks' volatile ups and downs man
iniense and volaltle profcs:s1on that
IS grow1ng m populamy

make up ·a n increasmgly po werful
force in the marke ts .. Another
250.000 others. also caught up m the

sa1d Nick Granko. 'an Oklahoma
City day lrader wh&lt;\ qu1t selling
used cars s 1x months ago 10 try h1 s

Granko sa1d he 's see n trad\:rs at -' new ~rc the electronic networks that
hi s firm .. wlho h:I\'C no bus iness day traders use .
hem g 111 1he re The) dun · 1 k.nnw l. • Recentl y, sec unlles reg ulators

They rap1dly buy and se ll shares
via Internet ltnks set up at burgeonmg day traJ•ng offices Many have

nati onal pasllme of market watching, do the same from home fullume.

hand at the stoc k market. "" It lakes a
lot of. nerve disengagi ng .YOUr cmolions from trading ."

what they"re d()lng They' re ulraid.""
Omar Amarhtt. an ow ner o l lite
New York day trading firm

have express concern that some day
tradin g companies, which provide
work space and traintng to would, be

··' aband oned regular JObs
Mark 0. Bar~n. the day trader

Day trad;ng tenainly i~n ' t a job

Because the game is so new and

Tradescapc.com. has wa1chctl as h1 s
ofl~ees have grown from 25 traders
a year ago to IHO.

traders . could be m1sleading them

who killed nme people at two brokerage finn s 111 Atlanta on Thursday
- a day when the markets plunged
-traded at one of the finns where
he opened lire Barton, who beat to

for everyo ne It req uires strong '
nerves, an abli1 ty to make snap decisions and a capacuy to cope with
huge ri sks.
A trader llllght buy hundreds of
shares ol stocks, wonh thousands of

the spo ils so seemingl y endless. day
trading is . auracung many people
unsuited for the game. tradc~s say.
"U nfortunately, I feel most peopie who get mvolved in day "tradtng
don"t understand the risk invqlved

On Wednesday. he ·said h1s ftrm
also gets, dozens ol ca ll s and e- mali s
f~~lll wannabe traders , many with
httlc ex penencc.

about poleittial profits. Regulators
have stepped up · ,scr~tiny of . the
·

Pastor: Jim Dill~
.570 Grant St, Middleport
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Worship · 1l a.m. and 6 p.m.
~ednesday Service· 7 p.m.

firms .
" Day trading is not. as simple as
it appears," said Ari Kiev. a psychi - .
atnst and author of "Trading to
Wm : "The Psychology o( Mastering

.

le ss expensive and so forth.
But they don"t really tell you
how risky it is." he sai d..
AP Bu!'.iness Writers Eileen
G/amon and Raclr el Beck con tribured to this repon.
.

'
Yeast Breads: Kelly Johnston,
grand champiOn.
,
Mini Meal Magic. Emtly AshiJ!Y,
grand
champion:
Georgana
Koblentz. res~rve champion; ' Laura
Bmley, Heather Jones and Davtd
Tucker.
honorable mefition.
•.
You're the Chef: Jamitha Wilford, grand c hampion; Erin Bush,
reserve champion; Tara Rose, Allysa
J1olter and Nancy Pickens, honorable mention .
Meals in Minutes: Abbie Cheva-

lier, grand champion; Krista White.

Star Spangled Foods .. Andrea
reserve champion.
. Tedford. grand champton; Roger
The Global "Gourmet: Theresa Chadwell. reserve champion; Joseph
l)aker, grand champion; Sara Cam- !\1cCall and M1chael Taylor. honormarata, reserve chamP10'n ; Sarah

able mention

Hquser, honorable mention.
Pany Fun with Foods: Jenifer
Chadwell, grand champwn; Jess1ca
_Qtllon, reserve champwn; Bethan~
eooke and Sarah Houser. honorable

Food and Fitness for Fun.: Joseph
McCall. grand . champion ; Stacia
,S1ms,&lt;l' reserve champion ; Alison
Hay s, honorable mention .
f;ood and Fitness Choices for .
You. Joseph McCall, grand champton. Extraordinary Eggs: Grant
Arnold. grand champ1on;, Rachel

mention.

' The Outdoor thef- Joseph
McCall. grand champion; Grant
Arnold, reserve champion.

Morri s~

,

1

Sunday School - 9·30 am

Pomeroy Flnl Baptist
Wt Mam St.
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - l0:30 a.m.

.

Flnt Southern Blptist
, • 41872 ro{iicroy Pike
.Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School - 9:30 a m
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7:00 pm
Wednesday Services· 7.00 p m

With temperatures in the 90s and
humidity levels maktng it feel as hot
as I I 0 degrees, it was a lonely day
to be a furrier in Omaha, Neb.
Business wasn"t exactly booming at Heather Ray 's Christian
Nobel Furs, despite an atr-condt.lioned store and furs for up to 75
percent off.
"I can't even give them away,"

she said
··
Like much of the country.
Omaha .sweltered through another
day of scbrc hing temperature s
Wednesday as a heal wave that has

·killed people in mne states rolled on
with little relief forecast until the
weekend.

The hot weather has been blamed
for at least 55 deaths since July 19.
Hardest hit have been Missoun and
Illinois, each with I 8 deaths.
Temperatures were in the 90s
from the Plains to the East Coast
again Wednesday, with ,the heat

'

index -

a measure of terripcrature

and hum;dity -{lining triple digits
in many areas.

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. ··whew," sa1d Ant01ne Dean,
wiping beads 'of sweat from his
brow as he worked at hi s food cart

in downtoWn St Louis.

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Rarlne First lbP.Ilsl
Pastor: Rick ,Rule
S1,1nday S~;hool . 9:30a.m
Worsh1p · 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m
Wednesday Scrvtcts- 7:00p.m.

Not all regidns were dealing with
'"Most days people want the rchef durmg extreme heat.
seVere heat. · .
snow cones, but today they're tak"If you talk to the elderly, theY · · Heavy rain slammed into Southing the big cups."
will tell you h.ow they used to sleep erq California and Arizona on
New Jersey Gov. Christie Whit- · out on the porch or with nothmg bul Wednesday, swampmg streets and ~.
man said "she planned to Jssue a the wi~dows open." she added. strandmg dnvcrs. In Ohio, high
drought warning so that water can " But they .can "t do that any more ." winds knocked down trees and ,
be transferred from welter areas to
Meanwhil e, utility companies caused sca11ered power o uttlge!:&gt; .
drier ones.
braced for more heavy demand as L1gh1ning struck 'the PromiSed Land
l.n Bismarck, N.D.. temperatures · m1lhons kept thetr air conditioners Baptist Church tn Elyria Townsptp,
reae hed l·OO degrees for the first cranked up.
·
. sparkin g a fire .thai cause d $225.500
ume in eight years.
•
Some areas ha~'e set recm ds for m damage. fire offll:mls sa1d .
The nation 's high Wednesday electncal usage. Mike Jones, J
Mostl y. though . it was Jhe heat
was Ill 1n Pierre. S.D. L1ttle Rock, spokesman w1th the Omaha Public that gripped much of the co untry
~rk., had the highest heat index at • Power Distnct, satd the record ·for
One man who ~x pect s to remain
II &amp; degrees. .
'peak usage was broken three t1me s husy unt1l the heat wave breaks IS
A senes of showers helped cool "t'iver the last eight day s
Rod Challburg , .&lt;he manager of
~orne parts of Missoun but much of
People haven ' t been the on ly Snell Services in Sidney. Ncb ..
the state topped 90 degrees far t.he ones affected by the heat.
which repairs air condittoners.
14th straight day.
· In Nebraska, more than J.OOO
"We d.o about eight estm1atcs ·a
. sm~e the heat wave
'
In St. Louis. two men in their 80s c.attle have d'ted
day. and when we get back 1 there·~
were found d,ead Wednesday in their . began July I 8, according to a Fann 12 more calls for esllmates." Challhomes wtth air conditioners turned Service Agency survey.
bqrg said '' If there 's any refrigera·
off and the windows closed.
And in Iowa, hundreds of fish tion technic tans out there, tell thet~
'!We see these 'S ame thmgs Over ha&gt;e been ktlled . in increasmgly we're loo king for good people. We
and over again. Air cOnditioning wann waters. State biologists, say " just cant get caught up ...
wasn't _a pan of their lives while algae die in the water an&lt;;! release
they were growing up, anti a lot of carbon dioxide, robbing the fish of
· them feel they don't need tt now," oxygen A ll)illion fish died in
said Jacqualine Hutchinson, spokes- Maryland"for the same reason a few
woman for Operatio,n Weather Sur- days ago.

l.anpl'llle Chrisdu. Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesda y Sc:rvtct 7.30 p.m.

Sllnr Run Baptist
Pa5tor Bill Ltttle
Sunday School • IOa.m.
Worship - t Ia m., 6·30 p.m.
W~dnesday Services'- 6.30 p.m.

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H~miMk

Grove Churth
Pastor Gene Zopp
Sunday school-'l0:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30am, 7 p m.

MI. Union Baptisl
Pastor : Joe N Sayre
Sunday School·9:45 a.m.
Evening • 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

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Reedsville Church or Christ
Pastor. Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m·
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible•Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Btthlehem 81pt111 Church
I . Great Bend, Route 124, R11cine, OH
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Paslor : Gene MrJrris
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Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
.. • . ·Sunday Worshtp- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
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Wednesday Bible Study · 6.00 p.m.
: •

I guess everyone el\ioys the. sunshine and people seem to be in a
better frame of mind oo a sunny day The sunshine seems to 11ft our
spints, and things usually seem to go better wben the sUn IS out. Although
we do not get as many full days of 9UIIllhine as we would like wbere I live,
that helps to'make us inore appreciative o! the sunny days we do receive.
God made a wonderful universe and He created the sun that provides us
with heat and light upon which we are all dependent for surviVaJ.
Jesus was transftgured before·Peter, J301es, and John and His face
• shone like \he sun, and His clothes became as white 1as light: Also, Jesus
Is referred to as the light of the world. I believe Heaven is a marvelous,
bright, sunny place, where we will always feel peace and love, with no
tears or pain. Perhaps, on sunny days Wll are capturing a little part of
heaven, and this can be a reminder to us that someday we will spend
eternity with llle Lord, th~ eternal light.

vival, which pr~vides education and

urday and Sunday Full Gospel .of the
The Community Calendar is pub- Living Savior Church, Route 338,
Friends of the
RACINE
lished as·a free service to non-profit near Racine. Eddie Buffington to Library, 7 p.m. Monday, Racine
L•brary.
groups wishmg to announce meet- · _speak.
ings and special events. The calenEichinger
RUTI.AND - Vacation Bible
SYRACUSE
dar is not designed to promote sales
reunion,
Sunday,
Carleton
School,
School,
Rutland Church of God,
or fund raisers of any type. Items are
Monday through Friday, 6:30 to
printed only as space pennits and Syracuse. Lunch, 12:45 p.m.
8:30 "p.m. with clas.ses ~gc three to
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a
ATHENS __..:. Brickles reunion at teenagers."
specific number of days.
home of Danme and FLossie Bnckles,
Sunday on Pleasant Hill Road. . CARPENTER - The Board of
SATURDAY
CLIFfON
Gospel si ng , Potluck dinner at noon, games, fish- ' Trustees of Columbia Townshtp . .
Monday, 7:30 p.m . at the fire staClifton Tabernacle, Saturday, 7 p.m. ing ;md special music in afternoon.
tion .
featuring "Delivered."
DEXTER - Homecoming at the
· RACINE - Southern Local
Shade River old Dexter Church, dinner at 12:30
POMEROY band camp session, Mon summer
p.m.
wtth
smging
to
begin
at.
I
:30
Coonhunlers, UKC-licen ses memoday
through
Friday. Aug. 2 through
rial hunt, Saturday, fatrgrounds , pm.
Aug.
6
and
Aug.
9 through Aug. 13.
with bench show, 5 p.m. treeing
at Southern Juntor H1 gh School
contest and mght hunt to follow.
Greg Vance, band dtreclor.
Trophies and plaques to be awarded. MONDAY
CHESTER
Free ski n .testing
Refreshments.
SYRACUSE - Sutton Townclinic by Conntc Karschn•k , R.N..
sh•p
Trustees, Monday. 7.30 p.m ..
Meigs County tuberculosis nurse,
SUNDAY
Syracuse
v1llage hall
RUTLAND - Davis reun1on, Chester Fire Station, Aug. 2 from
Sunday, Rutland Ftrcmcn"s Park, 4·30 to 6:30 p m All indi vidual m
.
basket · dinner at noon. All descen- food scrvic'e are .required to oblam TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Mrddlepon
·
yearly
skin
tests.
dants of Orlando and Katherine SheMasomc
Lodge
363.
F&amp;AM
. regu line Davis and fnends or'the family
lar
metmg,
work
in
the
E.
A
degre
e,
SYRACUSE - Southern High
~ nvited .
School vo lleyba ll condi ti oning. 7.30 p.m. Tuesday. Ref1eshment s.
REEDSVILLE - Forked Run grades 9-12. Monday, 5 to 7 p.m.
POMEROY ~ Salisbury Tow •. Sportsman Club, benefit hot shoot, Carleton School.
ship
Trustees, regular monthly
Sunday, I p.m. Proceeds 10 go to
LETART - Letart Tow nship meeting, Tuesday. 6:30 p m at the
Barringer family.
Trustees, Monday. 6 p.m. at -rhe township hall , Rocksprings Road.
Pomeroy,
RACINE .- Revival service Sat- oftice bu1ldmg.

Miranda Beha, John Cooke, Taryn
Lentes and Rachel Morns, were
awarded honorable mention for
their work.
In the 'wnung and reponing for
teens Jennifer J_amben took grand
champion.
· · ·,

Hickory Hills Churth of Christ
Evangelise Mtke Moo re
Sunday School - 9 a.m
Worship - 10 a.m., 6:30·p.m.
Wednesday Services· 1 p.m

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Dtlllll:r Church of Christ
Pastor : Jusltn Ca mpbell
Sunday sc hool 9:30 a.m.
· Norman Will, supc:rinlendent
Sunday worship· 10 30 a.m.

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Old Belbel fo' rec Will Baptist' Cburtll
(_1.:
28601 St. Rt. 7, Midd leport
r..
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 7:30p.m.
' .
Thursday Services • 7:30
r.

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Hillside Bapllst Church
St Rc. 143 just off Rt. 7
Paslor: Rev. James R. Acree , Sr.
Sunday School· 10 a.m
Worship- II am., 6 p.m.
Wednesday SeN ices -7 p.m.

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· No longer will 1M run be yaur light by day
Or til&lt; moan be'yrrur light l&gt;y nigh~
I, 1M Lord, will be your elmlat light. ..

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Good News Bible
Isaiah 60:19

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-Time is rutlt$g out to
Salute·Your Friends and
Neighbors froni Rutland in .
our Commemorative Edition
for.it's Bicentennial
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Rutland Church or God
Pastor: Ron Healh
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday SerYtces • 1 p.m

Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausma n
Worshtp · 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m. _
Thursday Scrvtces- 1 p.m

First Church or God
Apple an4, SecondSts. ·
Pastor: ReY Dali id Russell
S4nday Sc:hool and Worship- JO am
Evening Servtt:es- 6:30 p.m.
··Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

MI. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Ma1n St.,·Middlepo rl
Pastor . Rev. G1lbcrt Craig, Jr
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
• Worship · 10:45 am.
Anliqulty Baplbt
Sunday School -9:30a.m
Worship · J0.45 a.m.
Sunday Eventng ·6:00 p.m.

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ChUrch of God or Prophecy
O.J . While Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor. P.J. Chapman
Sunday School- 10 am.
WorShip - II a m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Congregational
Trintt1 Chun:h
SCcond &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor. Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunda)' school and worship 10·25

Rulland Free Will Bapllsl
Salem St.
Rev. Paul Taylor
.·ro a.m.

Episcopal
Sacrtd

161 Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pa.c;tor· Rev . Walter E Heinz
Sdt Con. 4:45-S:l5p.m.; Ma~- 5.30 p.m.
·
Sun. Con. ·8.45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass· 9·30a. m.
Dailey Mus- 8:3Q a.m.

Church of Christ
Pomeroy Cllurdl or Christ
212W: MainSt
.
D
.
M.m1s1er:
ann~ 8 "'
·
Sunday School- .30 a.m. '
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Gra« Epl5copal Church
326 E. Main St., Pomeror
Rev. James Bernackt, ·Rev. Kalhann Fr;tsler
Rev. Debor'ah Ranktn, Cl~rgy
Holy Euc harist and
Sunday Schoollt·OO a.m.
www.frognet.nel/-deanery

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship · 9·3(1a m
Su1,1day School - 10·30 a m
' Long Bullum
Sunday SchrJol · 9.30 am.
Wors h1p · lO JO a m

•
Rm:lsville
Worship · 91 30 a m.
Su nday School · 10:30 tun
UMYF Sunday 6·30 p m
First Sunday of Month - 7:30 p m. se.rvice
Tuppcn Mains Sl. Paul
Pastor. Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9 a m
,
Worship - tO a.m.
Tu~sday Services- 7 30 p.m.
Central Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor. Chad Emrick
Sunday School· Y:45 a. m.
Worsh1p • l l am.
Wednesday Servtccs - 7·30 p m

Syracuse Finl UniiN Pnsbyte..oiaa
Pastor· Rev Knsana Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Morse Chaptl Church
Sunday school- 10 a.m.
· Wurshtp · I I a.m.
Wednesday Serv1cc · 7 p m.

HodUngpurt Church
Grand Strcel
Sunday School · 10 a m
Worship · II am.
' Wcdncsd~y Services 8 p.m

Faith Gospel Church
Long Botlom
Sunday School · ?·30 am
Worsh ip · 10·4) ani, 7·30 p.m.
Wedpesday .7 30 p m
MI. Olive Communily Church
Pastor Lawrence: Bush '
Sunday School-9:30a.m
Evening -? p.m
Wedncd aY. Serv1ce · 7 p. m.

Whilt 's,Chapel W~sltJan
Coolv ill e Road
Pastor Rev, Phillip R1denout'
Sunday School • 9 30 a m.
Worsh1 p- 10 30 a m
W,ednesday Service . 7 p.m.

Rutland Church of the Nazarene
P;~stor . Rev. Sa muel W Basye

Fiahtoods
Pastor· Ketth Rader
Sunday School . 10 a m
wOrSh"lp · 11 a.m.

Portland t'irsl Church of the Nazareoe
PaM or: Mark Matson
Sund&lt;~v School -1 0·10 a m
. Mormng Wors htp 11 :\5 a.m.
Sun dH~ Sef\'tCC
· • 6 p m.
Wedncsdu)' Scmcc~- 7 p m.

1

Eden United Brttbrtn in Christ
2 I~ m1les north of Reedsville
on Stale Route 124
Pas10r Re v. Rol:icn Markley
Su~day School · II am.
Sunday Worsh•p • 10·00 am &amp;·HIO p.m.
Wednesday Servu:es · 7.30 p.m
Wednes da~ You th Servke • 7.30 p.m.

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FRfdom Gospel Mi1sion
Bald Knob , on Co. Rd 3 l
Pa~ t or · ~ ev. Rogn Willford
Su nda) School · 9 3U a m
Wor ship- 7 p m

Chester Churrh or the Nazarene
Pastor Rev. Herbert Gdtc
Sundav s~hool. 9.30 a.m .
Worsh1p- ll .1m, 6 p m
Wedncsdrty Scrv1ee~- 7 p m.

Communlly Church
Pastor R~v . Amos Tillis
Main Street, Rutland
0
Su nday Worshi~J 00 a.m.
Sund'Y Se•v•·--7
....., p.m

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Carlelon lnlerdenominalional Church
Kingsb ury Rood
Pastor qyde Hend ersun
Sunday Xhool ·9:30a.m
Worsh1p Servtce 10·30 a.m.
No Sund ~y or Wednesday Night Services

Pomeroy Church or lht Nazarene
Prtstor· Rc~ Llt1yLI D. Grimm,Jr.'
Sundav School - 9 30 a.m.
Worship: 10.30 a.m and 6 p.m
WcLin~·.l;du y Semces · 7 p m

Holiness

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon Uniled Hrtth~n
in Christ Chun:h
Te~as Communiry offCR 82
Pastor . Robert Sandc:r.i'
Su nday .S~hool · 9.30 a.m.
Worsh1p • IU 30 a m q:JO p m.
Wedne sday Sc.rv1ces · 7·W.P m

Soulh Deibel New Testament
Silver Ridb't
.
Pastor. Robe r! Uarbe r
, Sunday Sc hool · 9 a m
Sun. Wors hip · lO: IOn m .6p.m.
Wednesday Servtce- 7 p.m.

S) rae use Church or the Nazarfn'i,
Pas tor, Robert J. C~n
Sunday School· 9:30 am
Worsh1p · I0·1Uam, 6 p m
Wednesday Scrv1ces · 7 p.m .
Wedncsd:ty Kids fo r Chnst- 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9 JO a m.
Worship _ IO:JO a.m., 6.30 p.m.
Wedue sd,ly s~rV I CCS- 7 p. m.

Sevenlh·Day Adnntisl
Mulbcny Ht~ Rd ., Pomeroy
Pa~lut Roy Law1nsky
Saturday Ser\'tceso
Sabbath School - 2 p m.
Wur~hip • 3 p.m.

Full GrJspel Ughtbouse
33045 H1land Road, Pomeroy
.. Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School 10 a. m
Evening 7.30 p m.
Tuesday &amp; Thur sday- 7.30 p m

• Rtedsvlllt Fellowship
Chur.cb of-the Naurtne
Pastor Teresa Waldeck ·Sunday SchoOl - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10 45 a rn ., 1 p rn.
Wc~nesday Sc:rvtccs - 7 p.m

Enlerprlse
Paslor: Kc tth Rader
Sunday School . 10 am.
Worship . 9 am "

Seventh-Day Adventist

Uniltd~ Fallh Church
Rt. 1 on Pomeroy By-Pa,ss
PastOr: Rev. Robert E. Smnh, Sr.
Sunday School· 9 JO a.m. ·
Wors hip · 10 30a m, 7 p m.
Wednesday Ser\licc: · 7 P.:m.

Middleport Church or the NllUI't'nt
'
Pastor· Gregory A Cundiff
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10 30 a.m., 6.30 R.m. ~.
Wedncsda)· Scrvu:cs • 7 p.m

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Middltport Pttibylerian
Sundav School- 9 a.m.
WoTship : 10 a.m.

Dye5villt Community Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a m.
WrJrsh1p • 10 .30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Bethel Church
Township Rd. 468C
Su nday School · 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a m.
Wednesday Ser-vices· 10 am

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HarTisonville Prtsbylerian Chu~ '
. Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 9 45 a.m. .,

Hazel Community ChUrch
Off R1. t14
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School· 9.30 a.m.
WorshiP- 10 30 am. 7.30 p m.

Nazarene

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Presbyterian

Syracuse Mission
141 1 Bridge man St , Syrocuse
Rev. Mike Thumpso n,Pastor
Sunday School · 10 a·. m
Evemng- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 P·~·

Torrh Church
Co RLI 63
Sund~y School - 9·30 a.m.
Worshtp· 10 30 am

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Middleport Ptnlecostal
Third Ave
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sund~ y School · 10 am.
Evenmg · 6 p m
Wednesday Servtces- 7:00p.m.

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FairvM-w Bible Church
Lelart, W.Va. Rt [
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School- 9.30 am .
Worship 7 {Kl P m
Wednesda y Blble Study-7:00p.m.
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Faith Fell01tship Crusade ror Chrisl
Pastor: Rev F,ra.nklin D1ckens
Service: Friday. 7 p m

Wedn~~~~Ntces~7p.m. ~~-r~~..~~~..~..~.-~~~~~~iiiiii~. .~~......~~~--~........~~~=:........~~iiiiiiiiiiii._......'................~....~~;;;;;;;;~~~~~

ese area

RACINE PLANING MILL
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Jlfisqrr Jlf uttmtl Jl'lomr .Jlnc.

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

264 South Second Ave.•MLddleport, OH 45760
740-992-5141
Bruce R. Ftsher • Dtrector

992-3785

992-3978"

590 Easl Main Street • Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992·5444

James A. Acree, Jr · D1reclor

Agency Inc.
Full Hrre of
Insurance
Products

Bill Quickel 992-66n

Call 992-2155 for details
Kathy Williamson Ext. 10~
Or Dave Harris Ext. 104

Church of God

.• MI. Olive United Methodisl
Off 124 bch1nd Wilkesville
Pus10r: Rev Ralph Spires
Sund~y School -9:30a.m.
Wors hip . 10 3U a.m , 7 p.m
Thursday Serv1ces · 7 p. m.

Fallh Bapllsl Church
Railroad St., Mawn
Sundir School· 10 a.m
Worsht p • 11 a.m., 6 p.m
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

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Tllis Size Ad
5
Only 20.00

Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Htlg hes
Sunda~ School - II a.m
Worship · 9.30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wed[lesd,ay Semces- 7.30 p m.

Graham United Mttbodist
Worship· 9:30am (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7·30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Ser\ltce · 7.30 p.m

Penlecoslal As5tmbly
St. Rt. 124, Ractne 1
Pastor. William Hoback :
Sunday School • 10 a m.
Eventng . 7 p~ m.
Wednesday Se rvices· 7 p.m.

Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Rood
Pas tor· Rev Emmett Rawson
Sunday Eve nLng 7 p.m.
Thursday Scrvtce · 7 p m

Cooh•llle Unlt'Cd Methodi51 Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline
CoOlville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School - lO a.m.
Worshtp - 9 am .
Tuesday ServiCes· 7 p m

St. Paul Lutheran Chun:h
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev DOnald C. Fntz
Sunday School • 9·45 a.m
Worshtp - II am

Pentecostal

Mlddltpon Community Church
575 PearlS!., Mttklleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday Schoo \ 10 a.m
Ev~ning · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce - 7:30p.m.

Racine
Pastor : Brian HarknesS
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worshtp • 11 a. m.

Our Saviour Lulhenn Church
Walnut and Henry Sis, Ravenswood, W Va
Paslor: David Russell
1
Sunday School - 10 00 am
Worsh1p · II am.

l\-hlp Coopen~lln Parish
Northea1t Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday Sc hool · 9.30 a.m.
Worshtp. 11 am , 6.30 p m.

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Sl. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grovf
Rev Donald C Frttz
Worship • 9:00 a.m
Sunday Sc hQOI 7 10 00 am.

to"u11 Gospel Church or the U.-in&amp; S1t"ior
R1 338, Antiqu11y
Pastor. Jesse Morns
Asst. Pastors: ltm Morris
Servtcc::s· Saturday 7 30 p.m..

Harrisonville Communit)' Churrb
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9.30 am. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m

East Ulart
Pastor: Bnan Harkness
Sunday School · 10 a.m
\i\Vor.ship- 9 a. m. •
Wednesday · 7 ~. m.

Lutheran "

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Tbt Bellnrrs' F~llr;twship Ministry
New L1rne Rd ., Rutland
Pastor Rev Margaret 1. RObinson
Services: Wednesday , 7:30p.m
Sunday.1·30 p m.

Moming Star Pastor . Dc:wayne: Stutler
Sunday School · 11 am
Worsh1p- lO :~ m.

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ML MOiilh Churdl of God
Mile Hill Rd .. Racine
Pastor; Brice Utt
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m
Eventng • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

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The Church or Jesus
Chrlsl uf Laurr-Doy Saints
St. Rt. 160,446-6247 or 446· 7486
Sunday School 10·20-ll a in
ReliefSoctctyiPritslhoo&lt;l II 05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Se rvil-e 9 10.1 S a.m.
Homcmaktng meetmg, 1st ThU rs.· 7 p.m.

Victory Baptllllndependanl
525 N 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship. 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Foresl Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship·- 11 ,a.m.

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Hartford Chun:h or Christ ia
Chrisllan Union

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Carmel-Sutton .
Ca rmtl &amp; Bashan RQs.
Racmc. Oh•Q',.
Pas1or: Dewaync Stutler
Sunda) School · 9.30 am.
Worsh1p- 10.45 a m.
Bible S1udy Wed. 7'()() p m.

. ,.

!'-jew Life Vlctocy Ctater
3773 Ge orges Creek Road, Gallipolis., OH
Pas1or: 8!11 Staten
. Sunday Servtt.-cs · 10 a.m &amp; 1 p m
Wednesda y- 1 p m &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Faith Full Gospel Chun:b
Long Bottom
Past(W Strve Reed
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 9 30 a.m and 7 p.m .
· W~dnc:.sday- 7 p m
Fnday · fellowshtp sery1C1! 7 p m

Bethany
Pastor : Deway nc Stutler
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Worship - 9 a m.
Wedn ~sday Services- 10 am

United Methodist

Christian Union

Syr~~cuse

'

Rtof1aniztd Church or Jesus Christ
of Litter. Day Saints
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor· Jc:rr) S1nger ~'
Sunday School . t.l ·JO am
Wurship - 10 30 a m.
\
Wednesday Servtce.s . 7.30 p m.

Clifton Tabtrnacle Churdl
Cltfton,, W Va .
Sunday School • 10 a m
Wors hip - 7 p m
Wednesday Service · 1 p.m.

Hobson Chrlstiaa Fdlowshlp Church
Sunday service:, 10:00 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Youth Fc:llo~ ~h1p Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday scnncc , 7{10 p.m.

Snuwville
Sunday School · 10 a m
Wor~ hip - 9 a.m. .

Latter-Day Saints

Church rJr JtSus Christ,
Apostolic f1ith
1! 4 mile: pa.s1 Fon Meigs on New Lima Rd.
Pas10r: Wi lliam Van Mc!er
Sunday- HXJ p.m.
'
W~dnesday-7:00 p.m.
Fnday-7:00 p.m

Christi1n Fel1owshlp Ceoler
Salem S1., Ruth~nd
Paslor Ro~rt E. Musser
Sundn' School · 10 a m.
Worshtp· - 11 : 15 a.m., 7 p m.
WedllCsday Serv1~: 7 p.m.

Salem Crnter
Pastor Ron Fierce
Sunday School· 9.15 a.m.
Worsh1p - 10 15 am

Lau'rel Cliff Frft Methodist Churrh
Pastor: ~harle s Sw1gger
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvu:e ·- 7·00 p.m.

,.

fo"•ilh Cbaprl
Y2J S Thml S1., Mtddlcpon
Pastor Ern1e Weng~ rd
Sunday st'rvice. 10 a m.
Wellnesd•) service:, 7 p.m.

Rulland
•
Sunday School · 9:JO a in.
Worshin · 10·30 a m
Thursday Service~ · 7 p m.

H)'sell Run ·Holiness Church
' Sunday School - 9:30 a m.
Worship ·· 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7:30p. m.

Bradrord Cbun:h or Christ
Comer of St. R1 124 &amp; BraQbury' Rd.
Mtmsler: Doug Shamblin
YoUih MinJsler· Bill Ambergc; r •
Sunday School -9:30a. m.
Worshtp ·8:00a.m., 10 30 am., 7:00pm.
Wednesday Servtces -HlO p.m.

Flnl B•ptlst Churtb
Pastor:.' Mark Morrow ,
6th ~tnd Palmer St., Middlepo11
Sunday School · 9· 15 a.r:n .•
Worship- 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servke- 7:00p.m.

-I Always Feel Better
When It's Sunny

Heat -w ave rolls on; death toll climbs

Rutland Church of Christ ~
Sunday School • 9:3Q a. m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Servit.&gt;e tunc: Sund•j l0.30 a.m
Wednesday pm

RO\"k Springs
Pastor. Kc1th R,otdcr
Sunday School .,9JJ5 a m.
Worshi~ · 10 am
Youth Fdlowshtp, Sunday- 6 p m.

.

Wesley1n 81ijle Holiness Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pas lor Rev. Doug Cox ,
Sunday Worshtp • 9·30 p.m ,•7:30 p m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Bndbury Cbun:h or Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School ·9:30a. m.
Worship - 1O·30 a m.

Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.

'

.

Tupper, Plain Church"ofChrist
lnsnumental
Pastor. Terri Stewart 1"
Worship Service· 9 a.m.
Ccmmunion · t 0 a.m.
Sunday School· 10;15 a.m.
Youth· 5.30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wedne~ay 7 pm

Ff'H Will Bap1lst Chu_ftb
'Ash Street, MiddlcpO'r! .

Rutland Fint B1ptisl Cbun:h

.

reserve champiOn .

1

Pastor: Us Hayman
Sunday Service· 7:00p.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
W~dnesday Servicc-7:~ p.m.

the Markets.''
·
" It 1s easy to get into it and all
the ads for 1t m a ke it secnl like it is

tn

Rrjoidna: ure Church
500 N. 2nd ~ve, Middleport
Pa.o&gt;tur Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worshtp- 10:30 am
W~dn~sday Services· 7 p m

173-SOll

Pomeroy
Pastor · Con ntc Fmres
Sunda~ Sc hool- 9·15 am .
Worship ·' 10 30 a m
Bibk Study Tue'~ay · 10 a.m

Pine Gron Bible Holiness Church
mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley f
Sunday School- 9 30 a.m.
) orshtp · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
'\dnesday Serv1ce- 7·30 p.m.

Zloa Cbun:b or Cbrist
Pomeroy, Harrisonvt lle Rd. (Rt.143)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School . 9:30a .m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servkes- 7 p.m.

Hope Baptbt Cbun:h (Soulhe,.)

Winners in 4-H nutrition projects announced writing contest named
More than 60 4-H food and nutriuon proJects were evaluated in
Wednesday afternoon 's Judging
with grand and reserve champions
being named in 15 categories.
Project winners were:
Adventures With Food: Andrea
Grueser, grand champi_on; Alyssa
:Baker, reserve champton ; and Lindsey Houser, honorable mention.
· Quick Breads: .Erin W~ber, grand
champion; Tabitha Jones, Reserve
Champion ; John Cooke, honorable
'·
.
mention.

Burwatlow Rld&amp;e Chun:h of Christ
Pas10r:Teny Stewart
Sundiy School-9.30 a.m.
Worship- 10·30 a.m , 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service!&gt;· 6:30p m.

Wednesday Service- 7·30 p.m. "'

wInn
• ers ·•In 4·-H creatlve
•
Sara Cammarata was grand
champwn tn the 4-H creative writmg contest judged last week in
preparatiOn for the Meigs. County
FalL
Taking reserve champion in the
dass was Rachel Marshall. while

•

Burlingham -742-7606
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Morning Service 11:00 a.m.
Evening Service · 6:00p.m.

·The volatile, risky life of day tradi.ng in the bull market
~

B1ptill (burch

AIIIW Ufe Ct•ter
Ch un;h •
PaSlurs Joh n &amp; Patty Wade
6W Second Ave Mason

Purll:hapel
Sundtt}' School - 9 a.m
Worship- lO am:

l

Sthenvllle Word or Fallb
Pastor · Dav1d Dalley
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
evemng- 7 p.m.

~Full-Gospel

Minenvllle
!'astOr Ch:~d Emrick
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worshtp - 10 a m

Rose of Sharon Holl•ess Church
Leading &lt;::reek Rd ., Rutlan d
' Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kmg
Sunday school· 9 30 a m
Sunday worshtp •7 p.m
Wedne~ay prayer meeung· 7 p.m .

Keao Church or Cbrbl
Worship . 9·30 am .
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m
Pastor -Jeffrty Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday

Harvtsl Oulradl Mlaistrin
47439 Rr1bel Rd .• Chester
P~ors; Re v. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services· 10 am . &amp; 6 p m.
Wednesday Servicrs- 7 p.m.

H"th (Middleport)
P.tstor VC'rnB&amp;a}'e Sullivan
Sunda) School • 9.30 :~ . m ,
Wor&lt;;hip- 10:30 am

C1lvary Pilgrim Ch1prl
Harrisonvi lle Road
Pas1or: Rev. V~t:tor Roush
Sunday School 9·30 a. m.
Worship . II a.m., ,7:30 p.m.
Wednes.Jay Semce • 7 30 p.m.

CaJ.-ary Bible Chtdt
Pomeroy Pik~ . Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev.lfilackwoud
Sunday School- 9.30 am.
Worship IO.JO am , 7:30p.m.
Wed nesday Serv 1tt • 7.30 p.m.

Other Churches

Paswr Chad Emnck
Sunday Schoo( - 10 am
Wor!!ohip · 9 a.m
Thur\d~) Scrv1ces · b·30 p m

310S7 State Route J25, Llngsvlle
Pas10r: Gary Jaclu;on
Sunday school-.9.30 a.m.
Sunday worship· 10·30 am. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer strvice- 7 p.m

Middleport Cbun:b of Cbrilt
Sth and Main
Pastor: AI Hanson
Youth Minister· Bill Frazier
• Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 8· 15, 10 30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Assembly of God

'

. By MAGGIE JACKSON
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) Day
traders are the ri sk takers in the bull
market, ,pursuing prof1ts amid

or J.... cltrlol "-olk

Suoday School · 10:30 a.m.
Eveninc·7:JO p.m.

junior artistic arrangements classes, an~

.

332.26 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday S4.:hool - 1la.m.
Worship- IOa.m., 6 p.m
Wednesdty Services. 1 p.m.

VanZ..ndt and W11d ltd.
Pastor Jam~ Miller

t·oruc Run

o.._-nlf HofiiMtl Churth

"-"'YWetUideC~urdoofCiorhl

Apostolrc

Support your
local
churches
Pla&lt;:e an ad in 'this space

Buy, Sell or Trade
in.the

Sentinel
CLASSIFIEDS!

Brogan-Warner
.
.
INSURANCE
~ERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

Crow's Family Restaurant

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

Buy, Sell or Trade

Our help is in the
Clean out your basement "Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken" lntJm:e of the Lord,
made heaven and
or attic with the help of the 228 W. Main St., Pomeroy
earth.
CLASSIFIED SECTION!
.992-5432
Psalm i24:

We Fill Doctors'
· Prescriptiot;s
992-2955
Pomeroy

NEW
HAVEN
. FUNERAL HOME

EWING FUNERAL HOME

'"'/t'e ompi 'Preirmi•T"ro,sfi·rs ··

Established 1913

812·1200

992-2121

Dignity and Service Always

Lundy .B rown · Regan Brown
Director
174
Street 106 Mul~rry Ave.

Time to clean house?

Pomeroy

Searching for a
local church?
I

Check the Sentinel
every Friday!

in the

Sentinel
CLASSIFIEDS!
F.FER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075
172 North Second Ave.

:Francis FLORIST
Me,igs Cmmly il OkJe3t PlorUt

31i! Ellt Mill PIHJIFIY, 011
740-992-2644
740-992-6298
,,.., u~ s..,.r/ r,,., T/u,.Yfh' ~ lf'i1h

Advertise your
business each week
in this space
and support local

, Oh

. '

�Page 12 e The Dally Sentinel

Summit seeks prosperous
new start for Ba'lkan states
By ROBERT H. REID
.UeociMecl Pre•• Wrher

was ready for democrallc change
after a decade of ethnic conflict.
SARAJEVO, Bosma- Herzegov- which prompted the recent NATO
ina - In this scarred cny, Prestdent bombing over Kosovo.
Clinton and the leaders .of some 40
"! don't think anyone wants to
nations are trying to secure stabthty leave the Yugoslav people out of the
and development for the Balkans. opportunity thts pact gives," Ahllwhich have known little of etther saan said. although Western leaders
since the days of World War I.
have ruled out rebutldmg Serbia wuh
·At a one-&lt;Jay summit today, the Mtlosevic in power.
major powers were· prepared to comBodo. Hombach, Balkan coordt mit to helping poor Balkan nations nator for the European Un1on.
move 'beyond ancient ethnic hatreds emphasized that the benefits of the
' Yugoslav President Slobodan Stability Pact would be e&gt;tended to
Milosevic, under indictment as a war Yugoslavta if there was a clear move
·
criminal for allegedly fomenting wars toward democrauzation.
in the Balkans, was pomtedly not
About 4.000 internatiOnal peacekeepers were deployed to protec t the
1 invited. H1s political opponents were.
leaders
Numerous street s'' were~
Chnton arrived amid heavy security -armed solpters were posted on closed to traffic. an&lt;! most bus messrooftops whtle .helicopters hovered es were closed. On roads from the auoverhead He flew into Sarajevo's air- pan. residents were dtrcctcd to stay
port aboard an Air Force C- 17 cargo off thetr balcontes. .
The SJte of the meeting 1s the Zctra
plane, rather than hts usual prestdensports
conlplcx, wher.e tile I Y!S4 Wm tial jet, which was deemed too large
tcr Olymptes were held - a place
to land at the airport's runways .
Accompany1ng Chrnon were Sec- that was de vastated dunng the 1992retary of State Madeleine Albright 1995 s1egc of Sanu~\' O hy Bosman
and World Bank President James Serb torces.
The confl!rencc \~as tlk ing: place
Wolfensohn The pres1dent abo
an
a
city Whose name ~y mho !Jzcd the
brought computers and other supplies
to be presented to a htgh school lat· brutaluy ot: the.cthntc con lltcts whtch .
er today after h1s mcetmgs Wlth swept the Balkans foll ow mg the
Bosma's three presidents , Z1vko breakup of Yug os lavta 111 1991 .
But Balkan troubles go back furRadisic. Ante Jelavic and AhJa
ther. This was the reg ton that dragged
!zetbegovic
.•
The leaders are e&gt;pected to Europe into World War I. endured a
/ ; endorse an iOtc;rnatlonal pact to pro- half-century ol L'Orn,mun Jst m1sru\e
mote· a hl:althter fut ure for the Balka- and e&lt;ploded tnto neighbor-agamst-.
ns. Goals mclude creall ng mature m!iglibor wurfart' ""hen Yugoslavia
'
democractes and vtbrant market dtStntcgrated .
During
a
preltm1nar};
mecline
combating corruption and
·. economie&gt;.
organtzed cnme and preventing fresh Thursday. European Umon officmls
wars and refugee crises.
offered tncenltvcs to Balkan leaders.
Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari mcludtng the posstbility of eventual
said he believed the turbulent region EU membershtp, tf they accepted

.

" .

..

.. '

Friday, July 30, 1999

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

goals of the Stahtltty Pact and undertook specific . steps toward implemenung them
.
In advance, Clinton compared the
Stabiltty Pac t to the Marshall Plan ,
which rebuilt Western Europe after
World War!!
In Belgrade . Mtlosevic's under·
ltngs denounced the gathering and
.atd stahihty in the reg ton depends on
Serb1a
~
.
·There is no united southeas(ern
Europe without Yugoslav.a:· said h•tca Dack, a spokesman for Milose n,··s ruling Soctalist Party ... Everythtng else ts continuation of ulttmatum~ whtch Yugoslavm and tis people have faced all these years ...
Yugoslav opposition figure s "ere

Advancw-Out.(3:1,000.00)
Refund of Prior y..,.
A-pta ............ (1 9,57o.t1)
Tots! Other Fin. Sourceo
(U-) .................. 133,06S.43
Excoaa Roc:olptO/Sourcss
Ovor/(Und..-)
Disbursements &amp; Other
UMO/Net ............. (58,06S.26)
AG~NCY FUND:
OPERATING RECEIPTS
Extrocurrlcutsr Actlvttt....
...............................30,169.91
Total Reeolpts-(Operatl"11)
...............................30,169.91
OPERATING
DISBURSEMENTS
Supplies &amp; Metertals ........ .
............................... 29,229.615
other Objeeta ...... 1.275.00
Toto! Dlsburaemenll·

Misc. Roc:etpto
.........................510,873.35
Gronta
In
Aid·
tntermedlato Source•
........................... 11,117.74
Stale Soun;eo
.... ................ .. 2,495,703.13

Federal
•
Sourceo.......... 331 ,492.10
Tolot
Receipts·
(0perattngl ..5,491 ,351.83
OPERATING
· DISBURSEMENTS
Instruction

....................$2,705,978.22
Supporting
Servlcea....... 1,815,267 .SO
Extracurricular
Acttvl11oo:..........91 ,326.47
Focttlttee

In Lovin11 Memory of

IJ&lt;JISEF'H RAY GILKEY

w.g.. ............. ll,442.44

EmptoyMo Retirement
Bentltto............53,27Ut
Purct.Mcl
Servfceto........477,575.73

Supplies
&amp;
Motartoto......... 151,3-46.44
Capital Outlay..1,074.00
Other Objocta .. t ,940.00
Totot Dls.bursemtnll·
(O.,r.) ..........9,898,373.83
Exc .
Rcplt .
Ovori(Under)
Dtob ........... (4,407,022.00)
NON-OPERATING
RECEIPTS
(DISBURSEMENTS)
Earnlngo
on
lnvostments ........... 369. n
Canlrlblltlons
&amp;
Donottona..............935.00
Proceeds !rom Salt of
Notes ............~,091,967 . 15
·State
Sourcos............14,685.79
Federal Sources

........................ 1615,584.78
Operating Tranaler•ln
................ :............5,000.00
Advance•ln

.. ....................... 146,000.00
Operating TransleraOut.................... (5,000.00)
Advonceo ,out
...................... (146,00(1.00)
Refund of Prior Years
Roctlpts.......... (22,570.91
Total Other Fin.
Sourcn

(UMS) ..........8,250,991 .58
Exceaa

Recelpta/Sources

Ovtr/(Under)
Dlsburaemonto &amp; Other
Usa0/Nat.. ....5,843,969.58

30

July 30, 1998

A couple of your
'meeting. Bosnian leaders announced Iyoun~ buddies came to
a 15 percent redUC(IOn In Bosma's coon hunt one night.
mil'itary forces and called on tiS
Uttle did they know of
neighbors to make stmilar cuts.
all the fight.
Some Balkan leaders , however.
appear to have misgtvmgs . Slovenia
Since then life has
and Croatia are reluclant to commit
neW meaning and
themsel vcs to a pact
light. Someday we
know everything will
lllrn out alright.
We visil your grave
Imagine your new
lhome on the hillside.
In peace,
and nature
will every abide.
The memories you
with friends and
lfatlllily will never fade
la~•av. Alid we long to
reunited with you

.. .

Exceaa RecelptatSourcea

Over/(Undor)
Dtobursemonts &amp; Other
UMO/Nit .................... 875.26
TOTALS:
OPERATING RECEIPTS
RECElPlf:
To............... 1,698. 1 96.85
Tulllon ..................... 421 .06
Earnings on lnveatmentl
............................. 221 ,920.65
Food Service a SofH ........ .
...............................77,803.96

....................... ....119,894.33

minastcr.

Branko Peruv11:. sa1d h1s govcrmncnt
would take steps toward breaktng
with Yugos lavta tf Belgrade refuses
1ts demands for greater self-rule.
During Thursday's prelmunary

NOM-OPERATING
RECEIPTS
(DISBURSEMENTS)
Contr1butiona &amp; Donattona
....................................510.00
Total
Othor
Fin .
Sou&lt;ceo(U"") .......... 51 0.00

................. :...... 136,128.46
Ctaoo Materials 6FMI

Zoran Djtndjtc and ex-central bank
chief Dragoslav Anam cwi~.· .
.. It w,ould be bad tf all the countncs nt the regton worked on concn:te
- proje~: tS and Yugo~lavta were exciiJdcd. ·· Avramov~~: s;:ud ·
Also altt:ndin2 wa"i a delc ~a tJ on
trom Mon.tcncg;o a rro-W~stcrn
Yugos la\' r~pubbo.· whose leadership
oppo~ed Mtl ose\ t~-.· ·~ ~.:onfrontati ona l
poltctcs that led to the 7S -d,ty NATO
a1r campaagn
forc1gn

-Acquleltlon .. 4.329,010.18
(Oper.) ................... :IO,!Of.615
Dtltl
Elr.c. Rcpto.. OVHI(Un*r) Servfceto..........172,tlllll.l1
01111............................ 3615.26
Employ- S.lor1H &amp;

Extracurricular Acllvltles

In Memory

·1m ired to the conference, mdudwg

Montenegro's

Public Notice

Pub!!c Notice

Pub!!c Notice

Sadly missed and
loved by:
Judy Gilkey ll family

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB BENEFIT
HOG SHOOT
Sunday August lsi 1 pm
All proceeds go to
Barringer Family

Slugs &amp; Buck shots
Hog is freezer ready
JENIEER R. SELLERS

.BINGO

BOm8/l/BO
killed by drunk driver
Feb. 14, 1999 •t
Utde we knew when we
woke that morning, the
sorrow the day would
bnng The knock was
sudden, the shock severe,
to pan with the one we
loved so dear.

.AMERICAN LEGION

POST 467
RUTLAND, OHIO
GUARANTEED 60 A
GAME, OVER 80
PEOPLE 80 A GAME.
OVER 90 PEOPLE 99.00
AGAME PROGRESSIVE
STARBURST AND
COVERALL
MON &amp;WED. DOoRS
OPEN AT 4:30
GAMES START AT 6:30.

Happy 19th BD
baby girl
~

mtSs you very much
Love, ,Dad, Mom, J D ,

Public Notice

Business Services

OOYPIIIIENTAL
fUNDS
Beginning Fund Co..,
B l -...........31t,tcll...
Ending Fund Cos~
Bllenco........4,21 3,07'2.12
Rnttved
lor
Encumbrellctt ...t.433.07
Unreaerved

St. At. ·1

. I

,_

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

Business
Services.

,\ \) \ EH'\'\ ~ \\\ C \l E.\\)\.\\\\~ ...

.'

FRIDAY, AUGllS1' 6, Call
1999
at 992-2155

FOR MORE INFORMATION
. "

.
-.-

------------~~-----------r~----------~~----------Public Notice

~·--~~~~~~-.,..

.:. . Combined Ftnanctaf Report
·
of tho Board ol Education
For tho Ftocat Yoar Ended
Juno 30, 1999
SOURCE DESCRIPTION
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS,
RECEIPTS:
·•··

.. . .

Taxea ............. 1,696,196.85
Tultlon ..................... 421.06
Eernlngl On lnveatmenta.

............................ .221 ,920.615
,
EXTRACURRICULAR
" · ACTIVITIES ......... 105,758.55
'\,

MISC. RECEIPTS .............. .

............................... 35,359.78
Grantt In old·fntormedlate
Sourcea ......... ,....... 11,117.24
''

Sentinel

State Sourcea .................. ..

.......................... 2,495, 703.83
Fedorot Sourcea ............... .
............................. 331 ,492.1 0
Total Rocolpts·(Operatlng).
..........................4,897.470.06

Public Notice
DISBURSEMENTS:
tnslructton .... 2,705.978.22
Supporting Services ....... ..
... .................,..... 1,815.267.50
Extracurricular Activities
....e..........................91 ,326.42
Factffllas Acquisition ...... ..
,,, ... ,............. ,.•.•• 4,329,080.68

Debt Services .. 172,065.81
Total Dtoburooments(Oper.) .............. 9,113,718.63
Exc. Rcpts. Ovsr/(under)
Dlob ............... (4,216,248.57)
OTHER
FINANCING
SOURCES (USES)
Contribution• Bo Donations
....................................425.00
Proceeds lram Sale of
Nolts ................ B,091 ,987.15
Advanceo-ln ..... 146,000.00
Operating Tranalors-Oul
..................... ,........ (5,000.00)

Public Notice
Advances-Out. .... .............. .

Public Notice
Employees

Retirement

.......................... (1 13,000.00) Benefits ................ 53,276.59
Refund of Prtor Years Purchased Services ..'....... .
Recelpta ............... (3,000.00) ............................ .477,575.73
Total Other Fin. Sources Supplies &amp; Materials .........
(Uooa) ............... s, 117,412.15 ............................. 122,116.79
.Excess Receipts/ Sources
Capital Outlay ...... I ,074.00
Ovor/(Undor)
• Other Objocts ......... 665.00
Dlaburaemonta &amp; 0\htr Total Dtaburaomonts·
Uao0/Net.. ........ 3,901, 163.58 .(Dper.) ................. 754,150.55
PROPRIETARY FUNDS:
Exc. Rcpts. Ovor/(Under)
OPERATING RECEIPTS
Dtsb .................. (191, 139.69)
Food Services Sales .........
NON-OPERATING
............................... 77,803.96 RECEIPTS
Claaa Malerlala &amp; Fees .... :
(DISBURSEMENTS)
.................... ,............ 9,894.33
Earnings on lnveslments .
Mloc. Recotpta.475,3)3.57 ..................... :..............369.77
Toto! Racatpla-(Operatlng)
State Sources .... 14 ,68~ . 79
............................. 583,011.86
Federal Sources .............. ..
OPERATING
............................. 165,594.78
DISBURSEMENTS:
Operating Transfilrs-ln
Employe.. Satartea &amp; ................................. 5,000.00
Wages ................... 89,442A4

IIIISS )'011 {of.) I .

Lovt,.
Savmmafi rRose

Road

Racine, Ohio

45771
740·949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
·

DEPOYSAG
PARTS
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Ca~e-IH Parts
Dealers. ·
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolvlllo, OH 45723

740 887-11383

Siding &amp;. St~llif
1·800-311·3391
Free Estimates
Contrutors Welcome
Albarry, Ohio

740-992-3470

7127/99

2 mo. pd

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

August 14tlt
Middleport 12·6 pm

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Featuring

Live Bee Beard Demonstrations

Agricultural Ume,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

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

10!2~11n

I

Several Statas Setl.ng To Pubtie
&amp; Oeatera. t P~tct Dozens &amp;

c.. t..ooo.

Terms.: Cash, No Cheal
e.n.nd Lowe 1 Old u S 52 (Co.
RoOd 1) Buningmn. 00.0 - Gloy · 740-e94-1819

-=

Found. SmaU Blade Dog VICmity:
State Route 7. 5)'camore. 740·
256-9316.

Gr\t\o\f\9

Mon) Fri. 9:00 to 4:
Sal 9:00 to 12:00

Flulfy
Aroo. 740-

Fol-.._

111ft, AMI eolat. St. Rt 338 Tanners
RLM'I araa. 7..0.247·2161

.'{r\11\
• S\\ll('~

70

Yard Sate

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

.....

Galli poll•
&amp;VIcinity

"""-Cheap!
166 Hubbard Avenue , Kanauga.
July 30th, 3Ut, Furniture, Baby
Things, Etc 1
4

w.oalrlcll

on

~

1st Road On Right

Past Pirate•

Clothes,

~ i scellaneous

hltm6.
1st Time Yard Sate· 612 5th Ave·
nut, Saturday July 3tst, 8 A.M.
Till?

26-t LeGrande Boulevard. Saturday July 31st 9-5.

A &amp; DAuto Up olstery • Plus, Inc

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE
·,

SHADE RIVER
AGSEaVICI!"

~

HagQp•

EXCAVATING
..ackhoe 8! Bull&lt;lozer

(740) 992·3131

1·740·985·3949

Sen-ices
Site Preparation

Septic Systems
RODNEY KELLER
Owner/Operator
2mo

REYNOLDS
CONSTRUCTION
'

.Shingled R()Ofs
Vinyl Siding &amp; Sofit
.Professional work at

· an affordable price

7 40-339-4160
Free esttmates

..
I

'JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUaiON
N~w

Roofs • Repairs •
Coaiing • Gutters •
Siding • Drywall •
Painting • Plumbing

AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive top line.
Uc. I OD-50 nn....,

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

Tour

INC.

DRIVEWAY STONE

New Homes • Vinyl
-SiC!ing • New Garages •
•Replacemenl Windows
•Room Additions
•Roofing
COI&gt;IMERCIAl aod RESIDEtmAl
FREE ESTIMATES

Conerete

Light Haulins
uP to 8 ton

740·992·7643

992·5455

(No Sunday Calls)

'
Stop In · And See
Steve Riffle
'" Sales Representativ~
..._
Larry Schey

.

·Wells, cisterns, pools, .
trees, lawn·&amp; gordens

CREDI7 PROBLEMS???
No Embarrassment...
You're Treated with Respect!

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

rro pd

Dr
Friday, Saturday. 30&amp;31 Julv.
Large Vard Sale, 1st This Vear
Something
For
Everyone
. Cheshire At 7 At The Traffic light

Re ,:~&lt;H'c~lJI~.., Rat~·:;

Fnday, Saturday, Mile &amp; 1!2 Out
1
OnVancoAoad

:!O L ·o t' l. 'f~~" '~~' lf ~"~

Huge Yard Sale July 31st. Green
Terrace In Centenary, Furniture.
Computer Pnnter. Brand Name
Clothes. B.aby Items, Brass, Lots
MISC.

(740) 388-9686
ANN OUNCEMENTS

005

July 30th, 31St, 9·4, 1073 Bladen
RoaCI, 1 Mile From AoU18 7 South

Personals

SaturCiay July 28th, 8 ·? On Pain·
at Aoad Olf 775, 1st House On

1 will not be responsible from any

Right 0~. Everythong Cheap!
Saturday. 8.00AM·4 OOPM, 633

debts other than my own ,• from
th is ctay forward, Ju!y 26, 1999.

.

Oebble Onve, 2 Miles Ou t 141
Womens Sizes 6·8 Tandy 386
Computer, Panasonlc Colm ·Print·
er. Segagenlsls And Games S1lk
Flowers, Much Misc.( Rain May
Cancel).

Master Psychtc Kleara Reulnte&amp;
Lov~:~ rs /Ma tes . Immediate At·
suits. Guaranteed• Complements·
ry FREE Aead1ng By Pr,one 800·
912-2215.

gles In Your

A~ea .

Call For More

Ext 9735

992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yro. Local

Linda's Painting

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
•message. After 6 pm

740·985·4180
Free Estimates

4 farTJily garage sale. ra i n or

ro&lt;me&lt;~y Jo's Gilt Shop,
Syracuse, 3202 SL AI. 124, Fri.

shtne.

3Q_, Sat

31. Mon .

2, back to

9 West Stimson, Athens

school Jea ns. dreS6es, shoes,

740-592·1642
Quality cloth'lng and hou.ehotd
Items S1.00 bag sate every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

toys ; baby c!o thes , hiQ.h cha 1r,
baby swing, baby seat, ,troller,
heater, w1ndow tan. coffeepot, tots
of what·nots, sweat Shirts

40

4 family yard sale at 692 Art t:ewls St , Ml,ddleROrt, Fnday, Satur·
day. Monday &amp; Tuesday.

9:()0.5:30.

Giveaway

1 ~&gt;arson's Good Horne. Beautiful,
High Strung, Grey And )Nhite,
Spayed And Oeclawed Cat 740·
446·2624 .

AU Yard Saltt Mult Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day betore the 1d 11 to run,
Sunday .&amp; Monday edition·
'1:00pm Friday.

2 Cats To Go0t1 Home Only, Both
Neutered &amp; Declawed, 740·256·
'6419 Mornings OnlY.

Bashan Ad , 1 mile from 248,
household Items. larger size wom·
en's clothes. Aug. 2·3. ·

• 5 boxes of yard-sale lell·overs. 1
set of encyclopedli$'. 1 lour
month old kitten (304)675-7223

Huge sale, Tuesday, August 3rd,
n1ce ciQthes, baseball cards,
Longaberger, comiCS. morel Nelson RCI , Rutland

Adorable Kltlens, To Good Home,

July 31sl &amp; August 2nd &amp; 3rd, t
112 mile up Bailey Run Ad .
July 31st. 9·5, south ol Eastern
Hlgl1 School, on SA 7, eJeclrlc
stove 'Sony Playstallon , clothes
and lots ot mLSC

Be8gte &amp; Boston Te rrier MIK
Pups, Looks Like Boston Terrier

740-446-3t49.

.

Border Collie, 7 Months Old, To A
Good Home, 740-446-1379."'

'

Female tidull cal, gray &amp; white,
long hair, spayed. 3 mo. old black
kitten. 740·992·7894.
Free Pallets304-675· 1256
Free PuppieS, 6 Wks Old, 1/2 lab
Retrievers 740·245·5946. leave
Messaoe
Lab!Husky Mb. 'puppies Yellow,
Chocolate, Black 6Wk OICI To
good home. (304)576-2339
Mixed Breed 1 Year O ld Male
Oog, Needs A Good Country
Home, Great With l&lt;tdsl 740·441)1978, Leave Message If No An·
swer
Please help 5 oeaut1ful kittens lind
loving ca ring homes They are
darling! 740-992·5755
Roosters · Silkle. Fnzzle, Ja·
panese. 740·985·4288 .
Three Kittens &amp; Mother to give
aWBtf (304)675·2457

60

Lost and Found

Fo und· med 1um sized , female
mixed breed dog, 1 blue eye , 1
brown eye, Middleport, 740·992·

0037

W"" F"'

........

~0

Boo&lt; 667
.-.on, OH•56o40

local Tractor Trailer Or1ver
Needed . For Loca! Truclung
Company Mus! Be Over 21 ,
Clean DrMng Recore Class A
cens.e W1!h Tanker Endorsement.
,Home Everyday. Interested Per#
5005 Oriy', 740-24~9557

Anttques , top pnces pa1CI. R•vtr·
1ne Anti ques. Pomeroy. On•o,
Russ Moore owner, 7&lt;40-992·
2526.
•

Local Trucking Company S&amp;ei.•ng
Oualtfled Truck Or~vers Good
Pay And BenefitS Send Res ume
To Driver. P 0 Box 109 Jack·
· son,,Dh1o 45&amp;40, Or Cali 1·740.
286·1.463 To SChedule An Inter·

Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks . low M1les. 1995 Models
Or Newer, Sm1th Bu1ck Pontiac,
1900 Easlem lwenue, GalttpoliS

REWARD!

BOY

u-

SCOUT PATCH-

ES May Be Wonn ThOusanCis
Cast! Paid Nn Order Of The Ar row Patches Pre·1968 . Most
Ha\le
Call John Wil·

·www.•

IiamS. 25H72-o956.

Mo ~lng sale, rain or shine. 30111,
31St, 151 furniture. clothes, TV,
exercise equipment. t1res, spot·
ling goods. toys &amp; lots more ,
Center St., Mason, WV

Moving sate· everythmg must go,
tns1de &amp; out. 811·818. 9 to dark
Township Ad 17/McGrath Ad
740·992-2969
Tuesday August 3rd, Chester. 1
m1te east on Sr 248 m1sc furnl·
ture, odds &amp; ends clothing,
bool&lt;s, m1sc Hllrs
'

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Adull &amp; children&amp; namebrand
cJo Jhes , all sizes, Longaberger
Items, toys, househOld 1tems,
lots more Rain , or Shine 12
AldgewooCI Estates 3. 4 m1les out
Sarldhlll Ad
Corner of 3rd &amp; Center St , Ma·
son Friday, 8Am·4PM . Old
Oulllsllots of other thmgs

80

Auction
and Flea Market

'

Rick Pearson Auctton Companv.
full t1me auclloneer, complete
auction
service
Licensed
166 Oh1o &amp; West Vlrg lnla , 3Q4 -

773-5765 Or 304·773·5447

.

Med1cal Proce&amp;&amp;Of, FPI PT No
Experience Necessary 40K PC
RtquW'eCI. Cal· 1·800-663-7440

Need 1 l.adie~ To Setl 'Avon . 740-

«6-3358.

... ,o

Help Wanted •

Steklng emptor"• to wort In
ttte·Pt Pltllant arta 11 Pirct
Care
tf tot ilditidlllll wlh •
velopmefttll d inblliliJt. ~~
include teach•no daily living
sk11r act1v1t111 while WOrking in
client's nome. and prOYicting ,...
ptte to tamll'fi. Must h.w 1 car
and a vat1d dnvers license
Vaned houri. 1ra1ning PfOVided.
Must be ava1labloe for Uaining tn
Hunllngton Oeg•nning August
16. 1999 To apply con1act Per·
SOr'lal Dept P 0 B0111 507 Hun1lnglon W\125710 304-525-«11&amp;

s..

Program Coord•nalor Po&amp;iUon
Available For Res iden tial Programs For Persons With MRIDD
In Jackson . Ft1ke . Atheos And
Hodang Counltes ReQutrements:
Bachelor's Degree And One Year
E~nence In A Human 5eMcel
F1eld Valid Or~ver' &amp; Ucenst.
Thret Years Good Dnving Ellper lence . And AdeQuate Auto·
mobile Insurance . Prev10u1 E•·
penence W•th Personnel Super·
VIStOn PrefeJTed MUll l.Ne 0r Be
W•lttng To ~elocate Within 30
Mtles f30 Minutes Ot Jackaon.
Fl&amp;lllble Hours L•beral Beneflr
Package Salary· $20 · 22.000 I
Year Stnd Ae&amp;ume To· Buckeye
CommuRIIy Serv•ces, PO. Boa
604 . Jac61son . OH &lt;45640·0604;
ATTN ' Ceclba Deadline For AP"
p11cants 8/4199. Plea&amp;&amp; indicate
Posi1ton Applytng For Equal Op-

-E-

Wan1ed- dnvers to transport carl
to &amp; from auctions, call 740·992·
6088 between 1Dam &amp; 6pn

LEGAL SECRETARY

769-733t .
$2,000 WEEKLY! Ma o,ng 400

Brocnurest Sat1sfact1on Guaranteed• Postage &amp; Supplies Pro\lld&amp;CII Rush Self-Addressed
Stamped Envelope I GICO · DEPT
5 Bo11 • 1438, ANTIOCt.l, TN .
3701 1-1438. Slar11mmediately

93 Year Old Needs Daytime CZom·
pan ton, Cooklng 1 Light' House·
keeping , 74{)-446-4333. can Aher
6PM
.

ADIIINtSmATOR
Centurion Management Group. A
Progressive Long Term Care
Company Is Currenlty Takmg Ap·
plication'S For An Adm ln1 slrator
We Are Seek1ng A Challenge
Ortven Individual With The Ability ..
To Lead B~ E11ample And Ensure
The Highest Slandard 01 Aesl·
dent Care . The Applicant Must
Have Expenence In Long Tefm
Care, AM Be A llcensEid Nws·
mg ttome Adm1n1s1rator In The
State Of Ohio Candldales For
This Position Must Possess The
Ability To Lead W1th A FocuS On
Marketing, Financ•al Manage·
ment, And Employee Relations
Centurion Management Otter-s A
E11cept1onat CompensaiiOn Pack·
age 11 Interested In A Challenging
Pos1110n Send Your Resume And
Salary ReqUi re ments 'To Teresa

Davis, MH'A . LNHA. BSN. ANC .

V1ce Pres ldenl 0! Operations AI
' Centurion Management Group,
3490 Far Hllls Ave . Kelterlng,

45429 EOE

Appllcarlons are .be1ng accepred
tor Home Healll\ A1Cies Applu::: ants should have a h1gh schoo l
diploma or G j: ,O.• rel~ble tra ns·
portallon, telephone In the home
and Willing to work week-ends &amp;
holidays. Must be motlve.led and
flexible Experience rn providing
d~rect care or workmg Wllh older
adults a plus. Will train. Slate
tested nurs•n g ass1stants encouraged to apply Applications
are available a1 lhe Me1gs Mulll·
purpose sen1or Center, Mulberry
Helghls, Pomeroy On An EOE

Empklyer

Shlney Spears 304-675-t429.

Avon Products Start your own In·
Home Bus1ness . Wo r k. FleKible
Hours. Enjoy Unl1m1ted Earnings

.-

CLERICAL $12 -$16 /HR. Full
Benellls No Experience Neces ·
sary 1(800)941·8310 E111 3200 .

Caii8AM -aPM
Computer Users Needed . Work
Own Hrs. $25K ·$BOKI Yr 1·800·
536·0486 X 1n1, www 1cwp com

~xpeuencect

Legal Secretary
Needed Immediately. Typing
Speed Of 70 WPM . TranscriptiOn
EKperience . Excellent Word Pro·
cessing, Gramma.r, SpeJMng Communtcatlon AnCI Organizational
SkillS Are ReqwreCI . As· Are The
Abilities To Organize Prior1t1es
To Work Welt Under Pressure
and To Be An tntegat Part Of C11·
ent Serv1ce Will Also AUISI In
The Management Of Bllsy Lao,y
OrfiC&amp;. References Also ReqUtrecl
Salary Commensurate With Ex·
pecience AM S;kJft Level

CLERi&lt;.rrYPlST
OHict Experience. M1mmum T'fl)ITlQ Speed 0170 WPM , Communl·catlon And Organ•za110n Skills
Reqwred Relerence Also Required Salary Commensura te
With Experieriee And Skin level
Please Forward Resume W tlh
Cover Letter StaMg The POS ItionS For WhiCh You Are A.pply ·
1ng And S-alary ReqUirements To.

INGS • REGIONAL IOTA Start AI
29 CPM /All Mi • Unloading Pay Personalized D1spa1Ch · Home
Qflen - Holiday /Vacation Pay •
401 1&lt; !Medical / Pres. / Oental As·
signed 99' T2000's · RICier Pro·
gram. 9Bo/. No ·Touch Freight
Call Butch At Summ11 Transporla·
Uon 800·876·0680 EOE .
Drivers · Free 3 -Week COL
Trai'nlng Earn $26 · $32.000 /1sl
Yr w /Full Benefits . No EIIP
Needed P. A.M. Transport Spe·
cial Call Toll Free 1·877·230·
6002 Sun -Frl, 7 AM -7 P.M
www pamtranspor1 com
I
Employment Opportunity Consoli·
dated Securily Systems ls Ac·
ceptlng Applications For The Po·
sit1on 01 Secur1!y Systems In·
stallaiiOn And Ser\IIC&amp; TeChn l·
clan . Qualified App11cant W1tl Be
Responsible For The tnslallation
And Servlng. Ot Var~ous Security
A.Jarm Systef)'ls CCTV Systems
And Ele ctron •c Access Control
Syslems And Other Dulles As
Assigned . This Is A Full· Time
Position With Bene111s. Respond
W1H1 Resume To · Consotldaled
Securil)' SyStems, 240 Upper RIVer Road . Gallipolis, OH 45631
Employmenl Serv1ces $800
WEEKLY POTENTIAL Complele
Si mple Government Forms A-1
Home No Expenence Necessary

CALL TOLL FREE · 1-800·966·
3599 EKt 2601
Groom1ng Ass islant needed In·
eludes Evenings and Weekends
No Phone Calls! Please Mall Ae·
sume to Groom &amp; Supply Sho,P.
373 Georges Creek fRd
Pleasan1 Valley Hosp11a1 Is cur·
renlly accepllng apphcal tons !
resumes lor a RaCIIOiogy Tech ,
lor local OrthOpedic Off1ce. Part·
time poS1t 1on With polenllat ol
lull-lime Must have WV l1cense .
App ly to Pe1sonnel at Pleasant
Valley Hosp11a1 . 2520 Valley Dr ,
Pt Pteasant.W\1 25550 or fall 10

Wanted· Surveyor FGf Construe·
t10n Lay-out Of Site Work. BuildIngs. Hlgnways And Brtaoes: And
Some Property Survttymg For
Firm In Southeastern Oh•o. F1~
Years Experience Using Total
StatiOn; Knowtectge 01 CAD And
SOftdesk Survey Application&amp; Will
Be Helpful PrGie&amp;&amp;IOnal AegiStra·
11on Not ReqUired Send Resume
To CLA 480 cia Galhpolis Daily
Tnbune, 825 Th1rd Avenue, Gallipolis Oh10. 45631 . Benefits And
Salary Package Commensurate
.W1th Expenence.... Equal Oppor-

tunny Emp!¥&lt;

WILDLIFE JOBS To 'S21.6P /HR .
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR·
DENS. SECURITY, MAIN ·
TENANCE. PARK RANGERS NO
E')(P NEEDED. FOR APP AND
EDM INFO, CALL ' 1·800-8133585, EXT 14211 8 AM ·9 PM.
7 DAYS tds. inc '

140

auslnen
Training
Golllpolls eo_, Coltevo
(Careers Close To Home)
CaM Today I 740-446-4367,

William N Eachus
Attorney A.l Law ,
A.TIN PAT BROW'N

PO. Bolo 351

1-80Q-214-0452.
R&amp;Q t90-05-1274B.

.

GalliPOliS, Ohio 45631

NO TELEPHONE
CALLS PLEASE'
OWN ACOMPUTER, PUT IT TO
WORK , $850 ·$3.500 MO PT 1Ft
FREE Details : log Onto · http II
www hbn com Access Code 5298
Own A Compuler? Put It To
Workl $25 To 1;75 An Hour, Part·
Time, FuM-Time. 1-80()-294·9640
www work-trom-home-loday nel

OWNAPC1
PUT ITTO WORK I
$2.5 -$75/Hr. PT 1fT
, -800· 784-8556
www pcpays.com

Cosmetologlsl Needed. Full &amp;
Part T1me Pa id VacatiOns, Free
C.E.U Hours, 740-44&amp;7267
DATA ENTRY • NatiOnal Billing
Seeks A Full /Part Time Medical
Biller Salary AI $46K Per Year
PC R'equ lred. No EKperience
Needed Will Train Ca ll 1·888·

251-7475.

Pleasant Valley Hospna 1 1s cur·
rently accepting apphcal 1on s/
resumes lor Certllied Nurs1ng As·
sistants for Long Term Care and
Ppvale Duty Apply to Personnel
at Pleasant Valley Hospital ,
2520 Valley Dr., ' Pt Pleasant,WI/
25550 or fax to (304)675-6975

AAIEOE
.PLUMBING ,
So Ohio Company Has Qpemng
For E•perienced Plumbers We
Olfer Excellenl Pay Wilh Full Ben·
et1ts Send Resume To ·
Plumbers

DRIVERS · IMMEDIATE OPEN-

1304)675·6975 AAIEOE

ldl. inc.

Need someone to work ' IO 12 Wanted E"xper1enceCI tuur. stylist
5hif1, canng for the tiCitrly, call . tor part or full ume position .•t
between the hOUI'1 or
&amp; .tpm. Fo•y Locks Ha1r Care Salon 1n
Monday thru Friday. 140-992· New 304-8823794

OFFICE POStTlONS
AVAILABLE

HISS·561·2866

~YS

sam

EMPL OYMENT
S ERV ICES

Oh~

view

POSTAL JOBS To &amp;11.35 /HII.
INC BENEFITS, NO EXPERt·
ENCE FOR APP. AND EXAIII
INFO CALL 1·1011-115-35&amp;5.
EXT ,.210 I A.M. · • P.M .. 7

SOCIAL WORK POSITION:
Hinng

Absolute Top Dollar. All U S Sll·
AnCI Gold Co.ns . Proofuts,
Diamonds. Ant6Que Jewe lry, Gold
R1ngs , Pre -1930 U S Currency,
SlerJing, Etc. Ac:qu1S1tlons Jewelry
• M.T.S. Co~n Shop, 151 Second
A~. GallipoliS, 740-446-2842.

ver

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell

NewTo'lbuThrlftShoppe

Angora cat, spayed, front paws
dectawed, to good home, 740·
992·9197, 738 Pearl St. Middle·
port, Oh.
I

•Room additions &amp; Remodeling
•New Garages
•Etectrlcal aPlumbing
•Rooflng aGutters
•VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
•Palla &amp; Parch Decks
F,.. E•llmafla
V.C. YOUNG Ill

Mmersvllle Htll RO

30 Announcements
::;::_:..::...:.:..:...:.....:.....:..-"'-.....:::"-1

, Dtlmp Truck S.fvlrt
' • Gravel• Limestone ·
• Fill Dirt • Etc.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

3 lam1ly yard sale, Wed A.ug 3,
8-4, comer ol Foresl Run Ad and

Start Dating Tonight! Have tun
playing the C&gt;No Oallng Game, 1800·R0MANCE, exten~ton9681

740-446-3479

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

Houseware , Sn')all Furn , Book·
case, ShOpvac, Toys. 88 Debbie

DOZER WORK

J.M. ROWE TRUCKING

740-247-4292

750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
'
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better Wa , Eve

WORRYING!!!

Frtday Only! Baby Mise , Clothes.

. &amp;VIcinity .

7115199 1

992-1717

Friday &amp; Saturday. July ;)Oth,
31st. 9·4. 504 R1dge. Avenue, RIO
Grande

Information 1,800-AOMANCE ,

740-742-2080

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

Girageo
Free E1timote1
740-742-3411
Bryan Reeve•
Swa11 Reevea

2 5 yrs .eJfper.

.
'
The-Water-Man

740-992-0()38

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

Clothes. Furniture, We1ght Bench
Set, Fish Tanks, AnCI Lots Moret
TownhOuse On Lovers Lane 011
St At 1 , Fnday 30th, Sat~rday
3151
•J
'

Pomeroy,
Middleport

WATER HAULING

.Call for details ·

HARTWELL
STORAGE

• 10:00 •·"'- Slturdoy.

STAAT DATING TONIGHT'
Have Fun Meeting Eligible Sin-

(toll free)
Free Estimales

We deliver ALMOST anything ,

"'TFN

edition • 2:00 p.m.
Frtdoy.llondoy edition

Connection
740·742·8015
877·353·7022

tel"~'-!~ 24 Hr. Taxi

FREE ESTIMATES

Df&amp;PUNE: 2:00p.m.

tho doy - . . .......
te 10 run. SunUy

Ratpn Shutt

BISSELL BUILDERS,

Topsoil &amp; Mushroom
Compost'

Be P81d In Advtnce.

Free Estlmslss

Don '1 Need A Big One
Call A Little Oroe

Landscape Material,

AU. YMt SIIH Must

po

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

So OhiO CompaftiJ Hal Opemng
For Lead HVA.C lnst.ll'n We
Olio&lt; Exco11en! Pay
1180efiiL SenCI Aestlrte To

Wanted to Buy

"WANTED" 73 People To lose
Up To 30 lbs ' In 30 Oa'IS Programs StartiQg At $39.00 1·888-

Now ConlltUCtlon &amp;
Remodoting-Kitchtn CoblntiS
Ylnyl Sldtng-Raafi.Otcki-

• 7/23199 1 mo pd

Room. Batwd. 6t4-2t7-5354

La Cantina. (30&lt;)67H115.
WanJe:Si, Coot. Bar1erdef

Many Mont 1toms

San88t:Boma
Construction

740-992-5212

HouHkMper for O!Sabted Prachclng Anorney ltve·ln Salary,

Gal-.

110

~D~D&amp;D.SwuetHome.com

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ollio

G a -. OH

WeCiemeye r's Auclion Service.
Ohio 7&lt;0-379-2720

Beanie Babies, Glass ColleCt l·
bits, Baby Items ~ CloJhlng AM

740 742-8888

.High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

Como And J"'" Ua - Coo&lt;iton Nt
Ot Gallrpolt$, 407 TblrCI Ave,nue .

Fary~ity

6 Miles Route 7 South , Longa·
barg_er Baskets. Beanies. Clothes,
Misc. Items, Saturday Only, 8-4

~ - H'lbu'roU­

Wnh Your Current Po11hOf" -

10235 State Route 160,
Friday ·Sunday. 9 A.M. ·5 P. ~

~

Now Jlentlng

Bulldoser &amp; Boddooe
Se"'ice•
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
. . Grading
Septic Sylle,.. &amp;
Vtilitie•

4

HEATING AND COOUIOO

.....

Help Wedtd

110

H~Wrmtecl

Needed lmmechatety S.rvtce
Techntellt'li And lnstalterl Top
Ply • lnsur.ance , V•ullon .-,nd

B1il Mood1spaugh Auchoneenng
Comp'-t• Aucboneeung Servicu . Consignment auctiOn · U ti!
Street. MtCidltport . Thursdays
OhiO license •7693 H0-919·
2623.

Road, 740-446-«19.

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

7/23 1mo.

KCB

day, Furniture, Tools , Tires. Tub·
bies, Beanlt Bab1es. Bears Guns,
Clott'les For All, 4110 M1le Kuner

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

Feed &amp; Show Supp'lies
And Sullivan Show
Supplies
Call 985·~1

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

3 Famity Thursday, Friday. satur·

Rutland, Ohio

Complete Line of 4-H

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

7/22/TFN

121 5 Cora M111 AoaCI , Sa1urday
3151, 9-? Clean Clothe&amp;, Dfesses,
Maternity, Infant. Toddler, Hou,se·

Boy

al(ri Delivery Service

• New Homes
• Garages
•,Com.p late
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
985-4473

12 Family. 55 Garileld Avenue,
31st. August 2nd. 9-7

July 30th,

COWl, SR. 160. Friday, Saturday,

'

HONEY BEAR FESTIVAL

TREE SERVICE

'

EOE

949-2168

We Deliver
Limestone, Gr~vel,
Sand, Fill Dirl,
Agricullural Lime,"
Mulch, Top Soil ·
(Low'Rates)

Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock

. . . . .h 1

Has part-time and
fuiHime )x&gt;sitions
available for RN's &amp;
LPN's. All shifts.
Anyone interested
please contact
Michelle Gilmore,
. ADON,
740-992-6472.

740·742·2138

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

JD.IS'

•231)

-01---From

110

Stortng
3nl.
Ev•ry Tue.loday AI 6 P.M. Truck·

LOll· tema.Mt Rot1weilef. blad( &amp;

...................
.• ,,.....

Help Wanted

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

WICKS
"fiOL~HG IHC.

Area

90

The legal Ad for
Fanners Bank
(91 Chevy Cavalier)
to be sold
July 31, 1999
ran In error on · :
Wed. 28 &amp; Thurs. 2',
&amp; wil be rescheduled.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

"'"""'' mo. ""·

446

7 40.985-3813

"

Pub!!c Notice

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel

3/11/99TFN

Found: $mol G&lt;wy &amp; -

Tuppers Plains, OH

,,. ,A. ...

Fund

Howard l. Writesel

Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

Dolt ,,_

Rollinllown

Fund

SAYRE
TRUCKING

29670 Bashan

~

,.

Love you &amp;

HILL'S
SUF STORAGE .

DAVEor KATHY

The Dai

Jiappy 'B111fiday,
:Jhmt]en!

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$8.00 PER.DAY.

Found: Brtttlny Spam•l. Crab
AIM.I30oi)I1W702.

~

-Dog.--

8' Gravelless Leodr
100' -1000' Rolls 1" &amp; 3/4" 2001 Water Line
FvU line ol Gas f'ipe &amp; Regulatcxs Waitt Storage Tanb

JJ Page Sind, Middleport, Ohio

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel _Will Have A
Special Meigs County Fair Preview Ed~tion. This Year's
Edition Premises To Be One Of the biggest And Best Ever!
Look For This $pecial Edition In You
Fri,day~ August 13th Paper!

ad Coll992 ·215b

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

fund

(ifJ~&amp;ntu

....

lll1

80

(301)11S-3Na

Blllnco........4,228,472.07 .
Colh In Bonks (Not) ·
......................4,238,1105-'1!1
$UMMARY
•
INDEBTEDNESS BONDS
Botanco B11Jinnlng ql
Parlod...............20,000.00
RedHmed-Durtng
·
Flocal Per1od .... 20,000.00
SUMMARY
INDEBTEDNESS NOTES ·
LONG &amp; SHORT TERM ·
Balance Bogtnnlng of
Perlad ..........7,B85,325.68·
RedMmad-Durlng
Fiscal Por1od ..676,232.07
Bolo nee 6-30-11111
...................... 7,219,093.01
MEMORANDA DATA
AaaoOHd Votuatlon
~ ........................68,334,880
Property Tax Levtto
Inside 10 Mtlt.........3,5000
Outside 10 Mltt ..28,8900
ADM ..................... 7S7.!10
Number ol Non-Cert.
Emptoy-..........·..... 35.00
Numbor of Ctrt.
EmplayMs ...............so.oo
I cartlly tho following
roport to bt correct ond
true, to the bill of my
knowledge:
Dennie E. Hilt, Traosurer
of tho Boord of
Educatlon
740-94&amp;-2213
(7) 30 1TC

110

To plt11 P

Found. Malo Boogto

Bltonco ............. 10,11 1.18
TOTALS
'egtnntng Fund Cost!
Bllance........... 394,9311.10
Ending Fund c..h
Balanco ........4,738,1105.74
,ReserVed
lor
Encumbr8ncos ·
...................., ........9,433.o7
Unreaerved

60 Lost and Found

Collar,

Blfan«........4,203,at.35
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
Boglnnlng Fund Cosli
Bltance.............67,CIII1 .47·
Ending Fund . Coalf
Blfonco........:......1,022.16
Unreurved Funlt
BIIonce...............9,022.14
AGENCY FUND
BIIJinnfng Fund Cll'l
Batonco............. 15,835.!10
Ending Fund Cosh
Bllonco
·
:
........................... 10,811.10
Unreaerved

The Daily Sentinel • Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, July 30, 1999

P.O. Bolo 667
Jackson, OH 45640
Position Field Represomartve
Woodmen Of The World lite In·
surance Soclety
If you want 10 make money, ate
willing lo work hard and hke lo
help others. we may have a JOb
,lor vou Local E\esldenl Excel·
lent mcome poss1b llllles and
hOme off1ce Ira1n1ng for persons
selected M.usl have pleasing
persona li ty and be willing to
meet the pubHc .,N.o expertence
necessary. For more informatiOn.
call Clay RoneY at J&lt;M·675·601 9:
or malt resume 10 2C 13 J.ackson
Avenue: , Point Pleasant , wv

25550 EOE
REGISTERED NURSE
Holzer San tor Care Cenler Now
Acceptmg Applications For 'AN 's.
If Vou Are Energetic AM Oed• -'
cated To Caung For The Elderly
Please Send Resume \O RhOnda
Coe AN , Don At Holzer Senior
Care Center. 380 Colontal Or ,
Btdwell OH Or Apply In Person
To VIew Our Beautiful Fac11ity For
Yourself Holzer Senior Care Is
"Highly Sklllet1 Jn Tl'l8 Art Of Car·

mg' EOE

AN Chmcal Coo1dmator wahted
for newly created pos1110n m Gal·
lla/Jackson area, •deal candJdale
will be mdependenl,hlghty organ·
1zed &amp; e~tpertenced with ger1atnc
populatton all weekends , evenmgs, &amp; holidays otf Send reSume
to Enc Haseme1er. Medical Olreclor, On Call Medical Assoc1ation,
PO Box 270, Alhens, Oh, 45701
·AN Cllmcal Coordmator wanled
For Newly Created Poslllon In
GallipOlis, Jackson Area Ideal
Candidale W1ll Be lndependenl
Highly Organized &amp; E11perienced
Wllh Ger1atrlc Populat iOn Wee·
-.ends, Even1ngs &amp; Holidays 011.
Send Resume To · Eric Hasseme1·
er MeCIIca t 01rector On Call Medl·
cal Associa tio n , P 0 Box 270,
Athens. OH 45701

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·

GREE

OUICKLV,

Bachelors,

Master~ . OGclorare . By Corre·

sponCienc:e Based Upon Pnor Ed· ,
uca11on And Short Study Course
For FREE lnlorma1ion Booklet
Phone CAMBRIOGE STATE
UNiiJC:RSITY 1·800-964·8316

NURSING ASSISTANT
CLASSES
Holzer Senior Care Center No1111
Accepting Appltcat1ons
For
Nurse Aid Class To Seg1n Au·
gust 16 Those lnleresled Please
Apply Wllhln At 380 Colonral
Olive, BICiwell, OH EOE

180

Wanted To 'oo

Ch1ldcare In My Home 15 Years
E~tpe nence , References . 7 A .M •
5 P.M Call Anytime , 740·2"5·

5052
Christian Mother Of 2 Will Babysit
In My Home Monday Thru Friday

6 OOAm To 5 00 Pm. Call linds
740-388·8872.

Cleaning ServiCe- offiCes, rentals,
homes. protesslonat e11penence,
protess•onal eQuipment, 740·662·
"~
2603.
E &amp; ·s Lawn Serv1ce · Oes1gn.dm·
p lementai iOn, and Service
Available for Spnng Clean up,
fertiliZing and planting. Free esll·
mates Salistactton guaranteed
Greg Milhoan 3041675-4628
G B 'S Oleanmg, Pa1nt1ng, Car·
pantry. Cement And Yard Work
740-256 -6827 Don 't Fuss , Call

Us'
George&amp; Porlable Sawmill. don't
haul your logs lo lhe mill just call
304-£75-1957
H S Contractmg,,Rooflng. Sheel
Metal, 3·0 l:.ap Shingles. Pa1ntmg
Over 15 Years E11penence Oect.;
Building 740-441·0653, Call AI·
ter 6 OOPM
J1ms Drywall &amp; Construction
New ConstructiOn &amp; Remodel!
Drywall , S1ding. Roofs Add1 ·
tions Pa intj ng , etc (30&lt;4)674·

4823 or (304)674-Q t55

Shrub• Trimmed , Mulching ,
Painting, etc . Call Bill . Leave
Ueauge 1304)675-7112. .
We Do Oe molil!on/tearing down
· old Mmes et c. and trash ptck·
'up . (3041773-61 67
w ,ll do House Cleaning Have
Ae1erencas and E•periencl!l l
(740 )· 388· 8421 or ( 740 )· 446 ·
2646

FINANCIAL

210

Buelneas
Opportunity
INOTICEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends tnat you do busl·
ness ~ltn people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall unlll ~ou have Investigated
the offering.
ARE U LAZV? I f4m AnCI Earn
$1 ,000 A Day NO Selling Nol
MLM Free Info. PaCkage . 1-800·
786·~9 . 2&lt;4 Hrs . XT 27

DISTRIBUTORS WANTEDI Eco·
nomlcal, Easy ·Starting '011181
Genera tors ' Prov1de Electricity
When And Where Needed. Backup For Every Home . Excallenl
Markup : low Investment. Call To·
day For !nlo Packet. 1·888· 504·

6773.

�•
Friday, July 30, 1999

•

Friday, July 30, 1999

The Dally Sentinel• Page 1:i,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Cro1sword Puzzle
•

PHU.I.IP
ALDER
320 Mobile HciiNs

540 Miscellaneous

for Sale
t995 Wast lndtes Brandywine.
76 2 8od11&gt;0111 Pantry Utility

ASSEIIBLY AT HOIIEII Crafts,

t••
Room

Toys. Jewetr,, Wood, Sewmg.

TYI"''Q Greoo

Poy!

CALL 1-80().

9390

795-mao E.ll.l201 12• ....~
Avatlabfe Vend•no Route 10 20
locabOns $4K ·$1 OK $4,000 H
Mo.. Jncome All CASH• 1 DO"%

F.nance Available 1 800-380

2615·24Hr&gt;.
BU$JN£$S Sp6Cf RENTAL Of.
hce Speee Or Sales Rooms For
Lease On 2nd Ave , Gallipolis
C1051 Tq Coufthouse &amp; C1ty
Suildlng 1, 2 3, "' Rooms All NIcely Docorotod. A.C Water, Sew

"11140-446-9539

EARN $1 ,000 WEEKLY WORK
lNG FROU HOMr=.m No Ellpen
ence Aequued' Bonuses PAIOI
GUARANTEED PROGRAM! 1
31~Ext-c

on-

~--~
vvo ·~ oa

Set-up. Oelrvary. AJC 1Undlrpir.nmg, &amp; $500 WaiMart Shopping
Spree w•th each home purchased Stop &amp; see your nametown housmg speaahst Woody
W1Han:1 (304tn6-7&amp;99 or 1-.800922 9976 CrossLanes E.1ut ot

www~xcom

310 Homes for Sale

DANCERS
MAUl
GOOD US And II s FUN 808

249 2«9. E-Mail CharheOPara-

diseSI)IC8Models com
Get Into A S4 Billton IMustry! Up
To 50% Commtss1on Market
Umque Fund -Ra ls1ng Product
Representing Top Fast Food
Chams Excepoona~ S$$ Potential
www scratchcard 'r.;;:Jm Or 1-888·

875-1245
IT'S
HOT'IT S

GROUND

FlOOR•IT WORKS! Become A

MET4BOLIFE

(TMI D•strlbu·
Fastest Growtng D•e·
3~6

tor Today'
tary SJpptement Ava•lable Free
tntormat1on Free Call 888·86J-.

8859 METABOLIFE ITM) INDE
PENDENT DISTRIBUTOR Ap·

1

S2381)Ao ' ($23 9951

9%/

8CJ0.691-6111
j,lew 48R 16 wide . $500 Down.
S219 permo Free Ail 1~1

6711

Yrst TOll free 1..f300.945-3040
3 Bedroom House With 3 Acres·
Land Few Frutt Trees. 2 Bed·
roo~;ns &amp; Bath UpstamJ 1 BM·
room Front Room D1mng Room
Utility Room, Kitctlen. Bath Down·
stairs S•ts On Storys Run Road
on Route 7 For More lnt)rmatton
Call 740 367 7576 Alter Noon

MEDICAL BILLING Unt1m1ted In
come Potential No Elpenanee
Necessary Free lnformaUon &amp;
CO · ROM Investment $4,995 $8 995 F1nanclng AvallatMe IS·
land Automated, Medical Servec-

......
Tannmg Bed Bu~ness for sate, 4
Wolfe T Beds A-1 ConditiOn Will
Sale as Busmass br Separate

ARIZONA LAND LIOUIOATION

es. Inc 800-322·1 139 Ext 050

Call

(740~387.()612

WORK FROM HOME • Grow1ng

Company NEEDS HELP $399
S4.999
~gns.com

PTIFT www JCSdes·
1-888·283-2372

220 Money to Loan
S$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remalnmg PayiT!ents
On Property Sold! Mortgages•
Annu1t1esl Settlements' Immediate Quotesl'l ·Notlody Buts
Our Pnces • Nallonat Contract
Buyers 800 490 0731 Ext 101

www natiOflalconlr~ com
SSS OVERDUE BILLSI!I SS$ Con
solldate Debts! Same Day Appro

val NO APPLICATION FEES!I 1·
800-863-9006 EKt 936 www helppay-bills com

$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Wealthy Famlltes Untoad•ng Mil·
lions Of Dollars, To 11elp Mlntmtze
Tl'leir Taxes Write Immediately

Wlndfalls 847·A SECOND AV~
SUITE 1350, NEW YORK, NEW
~~

1
,

I

VORK 10017

'
BANKRUPTCY $79.,. Stops Garnishments! D1vorce $99+ Also
Foreclosure Avo•dance Program
Homeowner Loans FreshStart 1·
888· 395·8030 Y:!ww fr8shstartu

sa com

CASH NOW' We Purchase
Structure Settlement Lotteries
Annuities Mortgage Notes Call
Montclair F~nanc1al Group 1-800·
422·731 1
CASH Or LOAN! Farm Capital
Wtll Purchast Or Loan Agatnst
Your Go\lernmenl Farm Pay
ments (CRP! PFC) Call Farm

Capotal t-888 -FARM·ACT (327 ·
6228)
CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monthly Pay11'18nt6 20 -50% Save
ThouSands 01 Dollars In Interest
Non·Profit TCC 8()()-758 3844

CREDIT PROBLEMS? VISA
'ci(RO Guaranteed Approval ·
No Credit Check • O%APR Ae·
qwrements 18+ US Citizen Have
cneck1ng Account Phone Appro
val 1 BOO 737 0073 Issued By
Merriqc; Bank SLC UT

GET YOUR CASH NOW' OldeSI
Buyers Of Structured Settlements
Annuities And Government Farm
Payments Also Purchasmg lot·
terles And Pnvate Mortgages
Call Settlement Capital, 1 800959 0006 www selll!!ment capi·
lal com
RECEIVING PAYMENTS? Investor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Ftnanced Mortgage,
Real Estate Cgntract 1 Insurance
Annuity H1gtf'est PriceS Free
Quotes Why Wa1t? Call RIC.h 1·

800 888 6450
RECEIVING PAYMENTS? In·

I

vestor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Fmanced Mortgage
Aeal Estate Contract Insurance
Annuity Highest Pr ces Free
QUotes Wh~ Wa1t ? Call A1ch 1

800-888 6450
WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS
MORTGAGES
DEEDS OF
TRUST NATIONWIDE CALL
BEN OWENS (TOLL FREE) t
888 399· 1965
230

Professional
Services

Approved Master L1censed Elec·
tnc •a n WV0259 56 Estimates
for
Residential
Services

(304)875·7927

Hook-Up. Nice Lote. S&amp;,OOD QO
Eotelt C.ll304-773-6tfl6

LOT .spRING VALLEY One
.large Lot Approx 101 x171 C1ty
Water Sewer Nat Gas, Electrtc.
All Are Available lot 117 To

Voew 740-448·9539

$19 800 Brooks Realty Call Greg
1 800-71 1 2340 E:d 2105

740.256-1491
20ACRES

$23 ooo OT'i Land Contract
S I 000 Down W /Approved Cred
11 Mostly Wooded Great For Re·
creat1on Or Hunt1ng Ro•d Built
To Land then On Into Wayne
National Forest Free Maps 1•
800-2t3-8385

360

Anthony Land Co

RENTALS

410 Housas for Rent
2 Bedrooms $3251Mo • + U1il1bes
No Pets 740-446-431 3

Mor~ey

Oownl No Cred1t Needed'
Take Over very L.ow Payments!
1 800·916 9191 !1H5023
'

3 bedroom home full basement,
central alf, Hud tlpproved, $475
permanth 740-9921099

HOMES FROM $5,000. Fore·
closed And Repossessed No Or
Low Down Payment Credit Trou·
ble 0 K For Current Usung Call

3 Bedroom House full basement
Central
Air
Mason

S375 oomonth (304)882 3852

1-800·31 1-5048 E•l 3372

3 bedroom. all electnc, ranch
home Wllh attached garage.
fenced back yarel large tot al
Meadow Land Estate PI Pleasant, S600 month plus deposit, •
BVBIISbfe August 1 30d·824·

N1ce 3 Bedroom 2 Bath Home,
Full Fm1shed Basement Wtth
F1replace. 1 43 Acres located 4
M1les From NOC'Ih Galha $55 000
740.367 794:;

2480

Ntce two bedroom brick house
wtlh llvmg room, dmmg room
ktlchen bathroom and sunroom
newly remodeled, also has tull
basement two car two s1ery ga
rage corner lot with mce yard &amp;
good n&amp;~ghbor hoo d 740 992
2:333 or 740·992·2326

3Bedroom/2Balh Large Lot C,n
~rat Air C!ose to Town, On JerIcho Ad /Pt Pleasant No Pets
S400 OOMo +Deposit Lease Re C!Uifed
Apply 9· 5PM only

(304)675-4t67

I304-675-4040
TURNED DOYffl ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!

1-888·582·3345
WANT A VISA CARD? $12 000

Two bedroom hOuse In Pomeroy.
nice big yard and trees. no •nstde
pets $400 month plus deposit,
Will cons ider selling on contract
with references 740-698-7244

Three Mdroom hOuse for sale
one and 112 baths lully furnished
n1ce yard close to park 477 Sycamore- Street, Middleport call
740.367·7000

420 Mobile Homes
tor Rent,

Tn level three bedroom two
baths, llvmg room fam1ly room
dtnu'g room, two garages basement b1g porch, asking $65 000

12K60 tra1ler, total electric, S250 a
month, $150 deposit, no pets,
740-742 271-t

74o-742 3039

~ 1987 14K15 Ft Forest Park, 3

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Bedrooms 2 Baths Wtth CIA In
Sidwell, Ref•ences &amp; Deposit ReC!Uired, 7&lt;W-388·9no

12x65 2 bedroom, total electnc
on Cremeans Ad, At! Rutta:nc~r Oh

Between Athens and Pomeroy .2
&amp; 3 bedroOm mob1le homes. atr
condtiiOned $260·$300 sewer
water and trash included. 740·
992 2167

740.142·2803
14 Ft x1ci Ft 1999 Fleetwood
Trailer 2 Full Baths, 3 Bedrooms
Furnished , To Take Over Pay
menls 740-379t·2734

2 bedroom, total electnc. on Cremeans Rd Al1 RuttancJ, Oh 740-

1969 2 8drms New Carpet
Washer Dryer Gas Sto\le Re
frrgerator, Microwave 2 Window
A/C s, $6,500 00 740·245 5946
Leave Me!Jsage

?42 2803
2 Bedrooms $250/Ma , $250 De
pos1t Georges Creek Road 740·

446-4110

t 980 14x65 electric 2 bedroom,
2 bath, new air condilloner un·
great condU/on
derpmnl'ng

2 Bedrooms 2 Baths CA Stave
Refrigerator Water. Trash Furnished. Very Nicel S350/Mo
Oepostt 740-388-9686

$9,500 740 949-2452
1988 Redmond Danv11ie 14x70
Also Has Expanelo Very Nice,
New Heat Pump As lung $ t 4 ooo.
740 388 8335

3 Bedroom Mobile Home, N1ce
Clean Mercerv1lle Area 740·

256·6514

440

1990 14x72 Sk~ltne 2 Bedrooms,
2 Baths, 16x81(8 oack , 12x10
Shed, Natural Gas Heal In Great

+ Unsecured Bad !No Credit OK
Everyone Wel come ~ BOO 285

3588

•

1 bedroom apartment In Middle·
port, all utilities paid, $270 per
month. $100 deposit, 140 99.2 -

7806
1 Bedroom Apartment , Slave &amp;
Aegrigerator lncUJded, 740~446-

2583
I Bedroom, A/C WID Hook· Up,
Near Arbors Nursing Home No
Pets, Ouiel Locations, S279/Mo •

+ Ulllliles. 740.446-2957

I
(

lOtf" 202 Clart Chapel.
7.tQ....U&amp;-74oU 741()-3f:IIH)t13

New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga
Beds Ches1s. Couches. Tab!••
Much Moret Slop And See Us
740-446 4782.

rooms. lR

For Lease Beau•tful Spac1ous
Two Bedroom AC Apt . living
Room Dlnlng Room At 57 112
Court Street Gallipolis Totally
New. Lois Of Storage $600/Mo •
Plus Utilities Secur1ty And Key
Deposit No Pets References Re-

740-446-4425
,BEAUTIFUL AP.t.RTME~TS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
qulr8d

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive

from S279 IO $358 Walk IO shop
&amp; movies Call 740-446·2568.
Equal Housong Opportunoty
Christy's Family Living apartments. home &amp; tra1ler rentals.
740-992-451-t. apartments available, f!JmiShed &amp; unlumlshed
2 Bed1oam Apartments, Unfurmr;hed Secur~ty Deposit Referei'ICfi Aeqwrec:l, 740-4414J952
Gracious IMng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V1llaga Manor and
RIVeTS'de Apartinents m Middle·
pori From $249-$373 Call 740·
992 5064 Equal Mousing Opper
tumrles
For Lease Large, Second Floor,
Three Bedroom AC Apt Living
Room Dlmng Roam. On Galllpohs
C1ty Park, Ott Street Parkmg
$400/Mo • Plus Ullht1es Secunty
And Ke~ DepoSit No Pets Refer·
ences Aequtrecl, 7-tQ-446-4425
Ptlot Program, Renter&amp; Needed 1·

Goods
Horton EXP crossbow, 1501 pull
With SCOpe &amp; ICCeSSOfleS perfect COndiiiOn, $325, 8' flat fiber
glass topper. for ~ a8- 98 Chev
pk:k-up. tree 8' bec:lht'llf included,
... $300, 7«&gt;992-j;277

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Rrvanne Anltquas.
1124 E Main Street. on R1. 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 600 pm , Sunday 1:00 to
6 00 p m 740 992·2526. Russ

540 Miscellaneous
Exchange Students From Germa-

ny

Japon, England, France. Rus·

&amp;&amp;a Brazil Students Arrive In luJ..
gusl la Attend Local H1gh
Schools For Further fnlormatiOn.
1·800-765-of963.

t.t' aluminum boat farm wagon,

puartj8rs,740-88~168

Twin Rivers Tower now accepting
applications for 1BR HlJD sub
$1dlzed apt lor elderly and hand
lcaPPfd EOH 304-675-6679
Valley View Apartments Rio
Grande Oh No""' Accepting appllclllon for Immediate occu~:&gt;an ·
cy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apts A1r Condillon,
Kitchen
appliances
Fenced In Play Ground Laundry
On Sight Management Water,
Sewage and Trash Paid Full lime
Students must met FMHA Qual·
lflcallons For more Information
call (740) 245- 9170 Monday -

thiu-Thuroday

9~

·12 00 noon

Pot Scrubber o 1shwasher

(3041113-!10~ 1

4 Place Webster W1lcox Sliver
Tea Set (Sugar Bowl Requires
L1d Knob Replaced) 740-446

50x100, 60x120, B0xl50 Doug 0

1800)3711-3754
American

Racing

t

aluminum

wheels, 15x7"ololltcf. $200, 740..

0047
Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers Ranges, Refrlgrators, 90 Day Guaranteef
French Ctty Maytag, 7-40 446 ·

1195

EXT 1832.
1977 CJ-S. 304-V-8. 3Spd Exc:allent Condition Soft lOp &amp; ~
m Top 6" L1ft 35 5x12 5 Tlre1
OutlaW 2 wt\eels, NO&lt;! Bors, Roil
Bar, Consote New Jlt Black
Paint &amp; Plency of extras S4 000

740

Neg. (304)11'3-5178

cond. 304-8112-2692.

1979 Corvene, T·Taps. 72,000

1200 Sportsier 3.8 au· ·
Tanl&lt;. Lots Of Chromo. 740-256-,

550

Building
Supplies

Block, brrck, sewer pipes wmd
ows. lintels, etc Claude Wmlers.
Rlo Grande OH Call 740-245·

5121

Runs decant. Overheats, $500

OBO. 7•0·258·&amp;419 Mornings
Only.

1110 ·1110 HONDA CARS
FROM 1500 Police Impounds,
And Tax flopo's. For LiltJngs Call

t-800-3t9-3323 Ext 0420

t980 Olds Cutlass. 260 V-8 auto,
ilr• .t dr. looks runs good S500

7.t0-2.7-4292

•

1981 Buick 2 Doors, 350 AutomatiC, Runs &amp; Drives Good,
$450 740-446-1568.
1981 Ford Granada, 40R Good

Condltoon $t200 OBO (304)675
33t31(304J!I75-1400

1984 Cutlass Good Work Car,
$975, Also Btg Block Chewy Engme Complete. S1 500. And
MISC B1g Block Parts, 7.t0-446-

3t00

$350 frno 1304)675-2867

Pats for Sale

560

A K C Min Schnauzers Boston
Terriers &amp; Shih· Tzu shOts &amp;
wormod 304-675-3381
AKC Cocker Spaniel Mate. 6
Months sso oo. Jack Russell
Terrjer, Male. 1 Year ~ Old

1986 Olds CalaiS 4 Cyl 40A, 5
Speed low Mileage Mint COndi-

tion New Batt Muffler Brakes

(304)882·3894

$4,999

1988 Dodge Qynasty; Automatic .
Good Cond1:1on, $1 ,300 , 1995
Dodge Neon 5 Speed, ~. $3,500,

740-446-!158;!.

AKC Reo{stered OatmaHon Pup·
pies, Shots And wormed 740~

245-0022
M1niature
mate $250,

AKC Regl&amp;tered Shetland Sheep
Dog Pupple~. 1 Blue Merle &amp; 1
Blade. &amp; While Female, Known, As

Slooltle. $300,740-379-2838
ShOts &amp; Worrotid, Ready 40'1 Of

-

F1sh, B1rds Pond Supplies
Sun 1-4PM, Man ·Sat 11AM·
6PM F1sh Tank/Pet Shop 2413
Jackson Avenue/Point Pleasant

1989 Dodge Aries 100 000
Miles, Good Condltton Needs
Few Repaus, $900, 740·446-

1614

1989 Grand AM PW Tilt AM/
FM, .t cylinder 2 5 motor, Front
wheel Or.ve. 4 door looks and
runs good I $1 500 00 Phone
(304)-773·5884

1989 L•ncotn Contlnemat Signature Ser1es 'A.IC PS, PB Runs
Good. Looks Good! Ask1ng

$2100, 740-387-7480

1989 Pontiac Sunbird, 740 446

8398
t989 Volkeswagen Fox 4Spd ,
4cyllnder Runs Good Good
Cond1hon $1500 or tradi for

truck 1304)576-2753

(304)1175 2063 •

7229

CFA reg•stered Himalayans, 2
males, $100each 7.40-742·1019

1993 Fireb1rd 76,000 Miles, V 6
Power Wlndowr; Power Locks,
Cru1se. TTops $7,000 740-446

Colloe Pups For Sale S75 00
Each 740-441-o865

Central Air Cond1t1onmg Added
To Your Furnace Complete Duct
Systmas &amp; Furnaces Heat
Pumps Certllled Installer II You
Don t Call Us We Both Lose! 7 4[).
446-6308 1 800-291 0098
Couch Loveseat &amp; Matching
Chair Also Upright Plano, 9 A M
7 PM 740-441-1)640

OIS&lt;Oun1 Mobile Home
Parts &amp; S\lf)fliY
Huge Inventory

'~JJnyl Skirting kits $299 ~5. 5 Gallon Alum1num Fibered Floot Paint
$25 21, 5 Gal White Floof Paint
$57 69 Apchors $5, Doors &amp;
Windows Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters. Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts, lnterlherm Miller &amp; Cole·
man Air Condlllaners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennetts Mobile Home
Supply, 740 441.! -9416 Gallipolis,

Ohio

Far sale- St Bernard puppies 5
weeks old. $150 each, phone
741).992-2721
Registered 2 Year Old Female

RaiTerrler $125,740.446-7573
Registered Atredale puppies.
make great hunters. larm dogs,
loyal gentle pets Shots wormed

$200, 740 992 7688
Registered A ad Bone pups for
sate, $200 each, contact T 0
Stewart 740.742-2421
Two AKC Registered Black l,abs
Have had shots &amp; wormed $100

each (304)675-6046
570

Musical

•

DP Health Treadmill El(cellent
ConditiOn I Ha9 Calorie Couter,
Miles Has Savers! Dlf1erent
Thtngs That Momtor, 740-446-

1849

For Sale by Bid 1997, 3112 ton,
12 Seer, Rl:lem Air Conditioner
Condens•r and Indoor coli Send
bids bV 8109199 to GMCAA Box
212.. Ctieshlre, Oh 45620
ForSale Old trunk/old kitchen
table w/Metal top Also 2pr gold
and 1pr peach draPes (304)675·
7223

FULLY

LOADED

INTERESTED IN WRITING PO·

ETRY?

580

POETRY CONTEST

$48,000 In Pnzes PoSSible Publl
cation Sertd One Orlgmat Poem
20 lines Or less To lnternatlon

al Library Of Poelry 1 Poelry Pia·
za, Suite 11835, OWings Mills MD
211 17 Or Enter Onllna At
WWN poetry com

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repe11ed New &amp; Rebutll In Stoct
Call Flon Evans, 1 800-537 9528
Kenmore &amp; G E Washers, White,
$75 Each Maytag &amp; Kenmore
Dryers $70 Each Almond Ken
more Dryer $70, Call After 5 30
740.446-9066
Prlm11tlr· free Dlrec:TV Summer
Promotton Call now 1 888 265-

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

For Sate Home Grown Melons,
Tomatoes. at Trover's Wood
Crafts 9 m1les west of Gallipolis
State At 141 Lakin Ad
Sliver Queen Sweet Corn, Large
And Small Orders Welcome Call

740·882·8850

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

PENTIUM

pano Or 740-448-.t525

2123

Femele Medium Sutter Crested
Codl.atoo With Cage Hand Fed
, And Talks 4 Years Old, Very Af·
lectionate. No Bad Habits, $500,
7-40-446·4815 After 6 PM

7042

----~--------!~
1994 Ford Taurus Show All Power Keyless Entry, New Tire$ Au·
tomatlc. 4 Doors, $4 ooo Books

$6 000,

740.367·0671

ctal, S3350 (304)576 2667

Massey Ferguson T0.35 tractor,
gas, 12 \/Oit, new tires goad oondihoo $3,800. 740-949·28n
See The New John Deere 200
Senes Sktd Steer Loaders, '7 5%
JDC Financing Carmichaels
Farm &amp; Lawn tnc 1·800·594·
1111 , Gallipolis, OM We Dellver1

630

Livestock

3 Geldings 1 Six Year Old Arabi
an One 2 Year Old Arabian One 3
Year Old Appa loosa, Two 11 Old
Meres, 1 Arab1an One 1/2 Quarter 112 Mmgan Installment Plan
For Horses To Good Home 25%
Down, Affordable Rates. 740-388-

8358

1106

41 - -

1996 Suzuki Katana CIOO. T. .l.
Purple. Yellow L1ke new 3,000

rrifes.2He0ntts.(3CM)675-t195

•

... '

BARNEY

4·:

1997 Honda Foremap 400.
Wheeler; still undef Factory warranty $3,500-Farm! p40) 251-

--FER

1597

$2,350 (304)57&amp;-2847

$9 200 00 740·682·7512

1996 Mercur~ Sable, hunter
green. loaded, good condition
84 000 miles, $5,700 OBO, 740·

992 4561
1996 Oldsmobile Aurora excel
lent coodlt1on. low m1les call Tom
Anderson 740·992·3348 alter
5pm

1997 Chevy Cavalter 2 Doors. 5
Speed. C/0 Ttlt, Cruise, Power
Sunroor, 43 ooo Miles, $8,500
740-992-7102
1998 Oldsmobtle Sllilouette GLS
4 Doors, Fully loaded CO Player
V-6 Metathc Gray, Leather Interior Asking $24 000 Good Condi·
t10nl740.388 8915
1998 Pon1iac Trans·A.m, Fully
Loaded! Pnce Reduced to
$22 soo 00 Great Greduat1on

11 Jeckle'a
20 Sei..

I·

55Siofe55 Depellda
57 my.bltly

I

21 Colt'• 23 Ugh! brown
24 C..:no game

DOWN

25Sowlet27-lnv.lld

1~

31P8?rtotlcorg.
u 0ppos.w or

2

34s:lfi-.t.-

4Yale-

21Umb

~uudln

ar-

-lea
3 Type ot rfllem

33~oiNNW
'

9 Rop.'l Ofll.
10 l..eo'IOOII
11 Anclenl

5 DecompoN

e "Wonderful!"
7 Slrange.-o
8 Pubbrww

Jewllll

aocellc

12 Toke cent of
(2 &gt;fda.)
19 Roced
22 Flail !rap

Weot
2NT
Pus
Pus

South

3•
Pass

24 -Abllui-

Jabbttr
26A-Garr

Nortb
Pua
Pass
Pass

28 Long cut
30 Hand motion~

34 Portugal'l
contl,.n1

35 C"!"mon
houN pel
36 Boy
38 lntroduclory
matter

39 Runway
perllcfpanto "
40 Spanish

title

42 Rental ttlgn

By Phillip Alder
"
Who wrot~ th1s? "I am berng
frank about myself m th1s book I tell
of my first mtStake on page 850 ..
There are people who w1ll ne•er
admit to havmg made a mtstake,
because lhey thmk tt IS a s1gn of
weakness In truth, 1t IS the oppoSite.
a s1gn of strength
Sadly, bndge players are loath to
apologtze for error, but Hugh Ross,
a Bennu&lt;,la Bowl world champ•·
onsh1p wmner m 1976, '85 and '87,
does not fit this mold He pubhc1zed
th1s deal agamst htmself.
First, wtth those West cards, what
would you lead agamst three diamonds doubled?
•
Over East's three clubs (Stayman).
' rf South had passed, East· West wl)uld
have ended m three no-trump. Nole,
lhough, that they are laydown for s1x
clubs , but thiS IS very drfftcult
(imposstble?) ,10 btd with a natural
syslem
If lhe opponents are sacnficmg, 11
1s usually beSI to lead a trump. Well,
tl wasn'l here After a black-su1t
ailack, declarer can be held to f•ve
1rump lncks for plus I 100 to East·
WcSI
However, havmg read all lhe lext·
books, Ross led the diamond ace
Now, a switch to the ace and
another hearl can nel plus 500 from
one tnck m each suil and 1wo hcarl
ruffs Yel not fancym g,. any sw1tch,
Ross led a second trump Disaster!
Not only d1d thts p1ck up hJS partner s
pck , bu1 after drawmg lrumps ,
declarer could dnve ou1 the hearl ace
and clmm hiS con1rac1. Eas1-West was
mmus 670 The openmg lead potentially made the small difference of
1.770 pmnts 1
' l"he aulhor of lhe quolallon IS
Henry KJSsmger

Ohio Valley Bank Will Offer For
Sale By Pubhc Auction A 1998
Honda TAX250W ATV 1119321
At 10 00 AM On 8114199 At The
OVB "Annel 143 Third Avenue,
Galhpohs . OH,. Sold To Hll}hell
Bidder "As Is ·Where 11• wnnour
Expressed Or Implied Warraniy
&amp; May Be Saen By Calling The

AI:.· :\

OVB Reserves Thre Rtght To
cept /Reject Any &amp; All Bids, &amp;
Withdraw Items From Sale Prior
To Sale Terms 01 Sale CA'H

OR CEIITIFIEO CHECK.

750 .Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale
S5~800 or lake over PaYments! 99
Sea-Doo GS 2 Seater 85 hp • ,
Brought New In A.pnf, Trailer, Life ,
Jacket, Cover (740)·247·2581

call after 4 00 PM
12' v bottom boat. tilt trailer, 3 11
2hp, Evmrude Mmn·Kolla troillng
motor Hummmgblrd lish finder,
wry good c:ondiiiOn, $1400 OBO.

THE BORN LOSER

740-949-7009
16' Basstracker II bass boat with
trailer 60 hp Mercury Power Tilt
ltlm trallng rootor, 11\18 well depth
fiRder, runs great $2200 OBO,

740-992-+494
1986 BayiJnt( InbOard, OutbOard,

Cuddy Cabin, Exoeilent Condition
740 448 0038

1999 Landau llat boltom John

boat &amp; 1raill&lt; pair, t6 1eot long, 80

inches wide with Mariner 9 9hp
motor &amp; gas can removable carpeted floors Included, $2,500, •

74()-696·291 5

BIG NATE

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Budget Priced Transm1ssions ..
and Engines, All Types, Access
To (ilver 10,000 TransmiSSIOns,
eve Ja1nts 740 2.&amp;5 5677
~

C.HESS CAMP WAS
OKAY, I!&gt;UT i'IY SUNK·
MATE GOT ON MY
NERVES AfTE~ AWHILE 1

ALL HE' TALKED A1lOUT
WAS C:HESS. 2~ HOURS
A PAY' /\&gt;ID HE 1,//\S .
COIISTANrL'C' &amp;UG.GING
ME TO PLAY CHESS
MATCHES I HE WAS
RELENTLESS!

New Replacement Gas Tanks D
&amp; R Auto, Ripley, WV {304)372·
3933 or 1-800 273-9329

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1973 Motor Home. Dodge Chassles $2,000 Or Trade For Box
Truck 740 441-0584

1995 Bu1ck LeSabre Custom 4
Or Pwr Wndws Pwr Seat , T1lt
Cruise. AMIFM Casselle Ahmu
n1m Whaels , Cloth lntenor

-ldnola

It is a proof
of strength

1998 Polans 250 Tra1: Boss. 4
Wheeler. 2WD in good condi

760

47 hllndloiitlc
.......
41 a. widet
51 HNvy
54 5edelive

1111eet
17 Guido'a lllgll

Opening lead: ?'

TIRMIT&amp;S

1998 Harley Davidson XL 1200
Vfl!IY low MIIH, ExtraS Excellent
Cor:t;ditiOn. Call 7-'0-446-2311 Al·
tAr 3 ~M

tlon

....,_..
menu Yelllie

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

••

$8 500 00 740.245-9239

..
,

PEANUTS

1989 Pace Arrow motor home:
model 37J, 37 ' long, s1de a1sle,
washer &amp; .dryer, microwave/con·
vect10n oven sleeps 6 2,000 mile
on motor &amp; transm1sslon 40,000
miles on chass1s, Onan generator rear view camera/TV, 2 TV,
stereo, call 740 949 2111, If no
answer. leave messag~ &amp; we will
call baCk I

, l WENT
TfiE PO\I~!NG
~AlN AN060T
VOll~ Dt5H ..

(2

wdo)

44 becreaotng

49 Medloval

sor.::h

•ummer

52 Compeae pl.
53 Chemical
ending

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Cllmpos
CeWirity Cipher cryptograms are created lmm quotabons by ramous people pasl and present
Each l8ttei 1n the ctpher alands lor ai'IOther Todays clue K eoua/5 D

MCDK

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Margol Fonteyn said thai real hie comes when she's
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four scrambled words be·
low to form four 11mple words

US I L

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Husband to w1fe 'W1Ih
transportation the way 1t 1s 1l1s
1mposs1ble to have d1stanl

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PRINT NUMBfRED 11
tEllERS
•
.
UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
•

'•

I I I II I III

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Engage. Lunch . Nt;Jedy Hearse · CANDLES

1989 5·10 wl!h a Pop·Up Camper
(Scampet) Refr igerator, Stove
Furnace, S1nk 10 Gal Water

Tank (304)675-4&lt;331

Don I g•t SIU11g by hog~ pnc.s1
Shop th• cloSSI(iNI ••won

1996 Pop Up Palommo Camper
Used 1 S4mmer Excellent Condl·
uon, $2 700, 74(}-388-8526

.You know 1t w1ll be a bad day when your b1rtliday
cake collapses from lhe we1ght of lhe CANDLES

"'

I FRIDAY

•

FISHING BOAT!NQ HUNT!NQ'
Or Just Relaxmg In Your Own
Camper &amp; Campsite Overlookmg
Blue Lake To View 7 40-446·
9539

JULY 30

I

1 ~10
M~\Ri'f
iO fiLL 1\-IE. S\LI't.!CE

SERVICES

G•hll (740)·446-4548
1999 Pontiac Grand Am SE 2
Doors Sliver, Automatic Loaded,
Like New And Under Warranty,
Bought New In March Of 98
$16,300 Or Best Offer, 740 992·
7t02
81 Olds Torn 5 7 Diesel runs
good, AfC Am/Fm Cassette
clean
Good Ttresf $600 00

720 Trucks for Sala

$200 Off LX s And GT's $250 Off

John Deere Tractor, 1010 Spe-

• K Q 10 7 4
• K Q 10 9 6 3
• 5

t988 HO

790

Lawn Tractors $150 Off On LT's,

300 s $300 011 400 s And Z
Trak s Financing As Low As
5 9% For 36 Months Or $250 Off
On Compact Utility Tractors,
5210s 5310s And Gators Free
Delivery Carmichael Farm &amp;
Lawn Your Local John D~er•
Dealer, Gallipolis Ohio 740 446
2412 Or 1·800·594·1 111

• 2

1986 Honda 250 R set up for
cross country racing , like new

1995 Black Foret MUstang Grey
lntenor Very Clean Fluhs Great
Spoiler.
Headlight ~.: Cover

(740)-446 8611

61 0 Farm Equipment
FAIR SPECIALS
JULY 5THRU AUGUST 30

Motorcyc:les

CollectlOn Depl At 740-&lt;41-1038

1986 Dodge Daytona. run$ gOOd.

Bows For Sale Bear Wh1tetall
Legend, $60 High Country Salarl
Hunter w1th rest $200 (304)675

:.:..:.:::::..:::;,::::..:..;~:::,.;::::;:;.__ 1 Grubbs Pta no tuning &amp; repairs
490
For Lease
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

Air Conditioners, Used D1llerent
Sizes, GuaranteetH 740 886 -

S30 740'388-8676Nter5

Voylger. 1979
ton. e&amp; cab

IMPOUNDS Ha.nda' s Toyota S,
Chevy~ , Jeeps And Spor1 Ut1li·
t1es Call Now! 100-772·7470,

1992 Shadow, looks and runs like
new 70K cold Blf. automatic
sunroof, 4 cyltnder spo1ler, red
$365p 740-9.t9 2045 evenings

Frae5a"1JJe5

GOT A CAMPGROUND MEM·
BERSHIP OR TIMESHARE? We'll
Taka It! Americas Most Sue·
cessful Campground And Time share Resale ClearinghOuse Call
Flesort Sales International t-800
423-5967 24 Hours

Good a

Weslo Treadmill S150 Magnavox
Web TV . Keyboard S75 Coffee
Table. End Tables. $75. Floor
Model Tv Neeas Tlnl Repa.r

.klly 740-256-8336

Mobile hama site available bet ween Athens and Pomeroy call
7.&amp;0-385·4367

Household

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

JOCI&lt;5on. Ohio, 1-11011·537-9528

BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 bs. 3D DAY MONEY

Go Carl New Tires 5 HP: Briggs
&amp; Stratton Engine, 740-446-4310

510

s,_

AKC Regl&amp;10rtcf Yellow Lab P\11)5,

Moblte Home Lot For Rent References Sequ~recl, 740.256·1922

MERCHANDISE

$37 00 Per 100; All Brass ComptliSSion FdMgSin

992-61162

BACK GUARANTEE! Natural, Or
Recommended 740-441-1982

listongS CALL NOW! t.aoG-319
1192 Plymouth
3323112156
Ford Van , 314
CARS S100, $500 &amp; UP POI.ICE (304)675-1604

1979 FotU Mustang loots Goocl,

314 200 PSI

Nortll
0?·30-tl
•109654
• J 8 6 3
• 5
• J 9 4
West·
East
,• K J 8 3
• A Q7
• 5
• A 9 2
• j 8 72
• A4
•K&amp;32,
• A Q 10 8 7
South

1500 CARS FROII $500111 Buy 080, 740-256-12!13.
Pohce Impounds &amp; Repo• Far

Used Microwave Will Sell For

Waterline Spacial

conllol

e•JN~atwe

1989 Pfymoutll VOyager V-6, ..,_
106,000 ...... $1~ Or

""' Soil For Sole. (304)ol53'&gt;6196

$21 95 Per tDD. I' 200 PSI

t- =--..-:;""'

...--.• t

.,_-to Ptit1D IMI PUIIII

4081rdflllfl

'hill

15 8'

256-9103, 740 146 8112.

AKC
registered
B945Nter5
Panscher. 8 wk old,
All STEEL BUILOINGS 30 -50%' 740-247 2103

Off Factory Liquidation 40x60 ,

TRANSPORTATION
- - - --710 Autos far Sale
.

83&amp;-4052

$25 00 Calf740-24S·

1 'b I
AI*-7 Pr I I

~: tauhw
~~·ton :•

Milos. $6,100 00 OBO: 1990 a.
rona GT $2,400.00 080 740·

AKC Reg1stered Boston Terriers
Show Ouahtyf Shots, Wormed
1 Ready to go Allgust 1st Now Ac
29 &amp; 38 Gal Acquatlumr; for
cepling Deposits to Hold! 740·
sale All Accessories No Leaks
388-9325

460 Space for Rent

For Lease Olf1ce Su1te Espec1ally
Good For Insurance Real Estate
Or Accounting 1300 Sq Ft Four
Rooms Plus Large Clencal Off1ce,
K•lCI'ltnette And Storage Room
ADA Restroom Nat Gas Central
A1r, Csrpet Corner Of Th tr d &amp;
Olive Galhpolls OH 740·446·
3994

SOCIAL SECURITY DISAIUUTY
'Claim Denied? We Specill•ze In
Appea la And Heartngi FREE
CONSULTATION Benetlt Team
Services. fru::: Tall-Free 1-888-

1

COMPIJTERS Poor Credit 0 Kl
1-800.520-6364

Retail bu11d1ng, 1600+ IQuare loot
corner location 87 Mil l Street,
Middleport Key at Acquisitions
91 Mill Street, 740-992-6250

,..,.l'trq&gt;St25. 740-256-93«1

Commode (304•-~ 15
___....;___;___"--,..--

COOL DOWN

Tara TownhOuse Apartments
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms 2
F.foors, CA., 1 112 Bath Full)' Carpeted, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Patio Start $330/Mo No Pets
lease Plus Security Deposit Ae
qulfed 614-367·7850

R1Ue w1th A .&amp;x32 Tasca Scope
L1ke Ne• Aosst 22 Mag-

s 1so

2 Bathroom Sink Basins, 1 G E

Now Takmg Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water
Sewage, Trash, $315/Mo 740·

One bedroom furnished apart·
ment in Middleport, call 740 992
919t

Speedmaster. Model

552, Seno Automatic:. 22 Caliber

$5000740-256-6162

Buy, 5811, Trade Smoking P1pes.
740-446.-4922 After 6 PM

For lease One Bedroom AC
Apt Carner Of Second AM Pine
$250/Mo Ptus Utthtles Security
And Key Oepos1t References Required No Pets, 741)-446-4425

Pbarmaceuekats Now For lnil t·
I
Major CrO&lt;I1 CORio.

800-733-3211 COO'S IPre-poy

8 man Old Hot
polnl brand, saoo f~rm 30.t-8742167

Modarn 1 Bedroom Apartment,
140 446--{)390

quritd 740-446·9342

COl Urotod

Washor/Dryar SOl

Sporting

520

Buck Woodburner Insert Stove,
740-256 9331

One &amp; Two Bedroom Apartments
Also House For Rent In Town No
Pets Deposit. &amp; Refrences Re

AlSo-

5443.

800·383-6882

446.()()08

Vllgi'O

S20 00 Or

992·2218

$16 500 00 (740)446 8113

(304)675-1926

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur·
nlshed and unfurnished, security
deposit reqUired, no pets 740

1991 14rtx721t Shingle Roof Vinyl
Siding, E•cellent Condition

1994 Trailer Vinyl siding shin·
gle roof 3 bedroom 2 baths New
llvlngroom carpel
$18 000

•

House In Chester good size
rooms &amp; yard, lots of poss1b1llties,
6 t-4-501-8339 after 7pm

Restored Vtctortan hOme Slluated
on 12r acres VIllage Mtddlaport
secluded and pnvate appomt
ment, call 740.992·5696

1994, '14K70' All Electric 2 Bed·
rooms Extras Include W/0 2
Decks Outbuilding And Aiding
Mower ltke New, Under $20,000
740 256 6859 leave Message
For An Appomtment To See Any·
lime

Real Estate
Wanted

We Bu., Land 30 ·500 Acres,
we Pay ca,n 1·800·213·8365,

Shape $16 000, T40,387·7724

Beautiful Cleanmg
In ~ou r
home or btrs!ness Carpet and
upholstery to mler1orlextermr
walls. decks and driveways The
complete cleanmg serv1ce. Call
Cteerly Clelln Far Free Eetlm111

'

Mab11e Home Lot For Sent,
$100 oo Month In Crown City

HOME FORECLOSURES , No

sa... A

Merchandiee
'HOST FAMiliES NEEDEDIII'

Water end Electric Ready For

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down' Gov't And Bank Rape's
Be1ng Sold NOW! Fmancmg
Available Call Now• 1·800·730·
n12. Ext 8040

Mollohan Carpots "Orlwl A L -

APABTIIENTS ON 2MQ An.,.
Near BuSiness SecttOn Ideal For
Seniors 1st Aoor Reat N1ce To
"irFIN 740-446-9539

FOR SALE

Completely remodeled house 4
bedroom lamlly room, Uv1ng room ,
kttchen uttllty room &amp; bath basement with ba1h new carpat
throughout central air beautiful
v1ew ot river call 740· 992-9012
appointment only

3QC...675-2015

Dt93.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

BUILDING LOTS

Buy Homes Hom $1 0,()1).)
1 5 Bedroom Local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Fu'lancmg
PosSible, For L1stmgs Call 800·
3t9-3323 Ext 1709

frencet And Dtpo$11 ReQuired 1·

Aap•d We19ht Loss• Fen Phen
AJternat1ve Comb•nallon 100%
Safe Only $2.&amp; 95 Buy 2 Get 1
frHI LDH 3-5 Pounds A WHl
As Seen Qn TV Cellastne. H·

Ra~ton

Lrvmg Room Set 4 Paece Thic:ll
Wood. Early Amenc:an , Nace
S22S. Or By Pieces. 7.&amp;0·4·411 ·

Moore """"'

glew•des Allowed Land Contract
Available On!) $27 000 1·800·
2t3-8385

Beaut1fUI br ick 3 br nome on
lovely acreage must see to appr9Ciate 304-273-9485

3 Bdrm Unfumishec:l Pt Pleasant

1-888-11 5-0128

Apartment For Rent 6 Miles
N,orth Of Holzer Hosp1tal State
Reule 160, 7~3185

218 South 01 Gathpohs S1n·

• Former Pnst~ne Government
Lantt For Sate Scentc N W An
zona 40 Acre Ranches From

2bdrm apts • total etectnc, appliances furmlhed. launGy room
tacilitiu, dose to school m town.
Appheat10ns available at V•llage
Green Apts 1119 Of call 740-992·
3711 EOH

Washers, dryers, refngeratorS,
ranges Skaggt; Appliance• 71
Vma Streel. C"l 740-oU6·7391,

Apartment: for rent •n Middleport.
no potS 7«&gt;992-5858

double garage, full basement, 1·
1/2 acres on rtver m Syracuse
Ohio 7-40-992 3860
HOMES FROM SS 000 Fore
closed And Repossessed No Or
Low Down Payment Credit Trouble 0 K For Current Listing Can
1-800 311 5048, Ext 3875

2 Rooms &amp; Bath S2251Mo . ~In·
eludes Ultllltes . No K1tcMn . 1
BemxJm &amp; Bath lndudls Utihbes.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Double W•de On Lot $250 De·
poSit , 800-383-6862

23 Acre&amp;, 2 Mtles Oft SA 7 &amp; SR

5 room brick ranch two ba th

7806

--1304)1115-~

3rd Avenue Aparlmenl 2 Sed·
DR ~ KitChen. Laundry.
$350 OOhnonlt (140~3811-&lt;1826

NEW ON MARKET

prowl IN345508t599

mOf'lth $100 depoSJI. 7.&amp;0·992-

Far Sate ReconcllttOned walt\·
ers dryers· and refngerators
Thompsons Apphanc:e 3407

Spec1al 28x80, 3 or 4BR $1000
{)own. $322 per mo FrH Dallv01)1 &amp; Sen.!&gt; t-oo&lt;l-691-6111

Pnc9 $49 500
3 94MSrooms Basement 2700 Sq
Ft Fireplaces. In Ground Poo l
laqje Lo&lt; S R 588 Gai&lt;POUs City
Schools $79,500,740-446-7438

port wa PB'f watar, sewer ' nsr,
you pay gas &amp; eloctrlo;. $200 per

Area, Eacelfent Cond111on Re·

New Bank repos only 2 felt we
finaiDt cal304-722·71.a

15 t/2

2 bedroom apartment u'l Uwk!le·

28 F' Tra11er W•th Awning &amp;
Dedt o...nooltiitg ()h;o R- Ful
Kitchen &amp; Bath Furn1shed S225J
Mo. 1 888 8400521

New 3BR 2 Bath. 14 WKII S500
Down $ t 15 pet' mo Free Air t •

160 ACRES WYOMING L1m1ted
Supply At Pnces Soon Ots ap
pearing "ntetope, Wl1d Horses
Great Speculation' $195 dn/

2 8dtms RM•IQINaiOf. Stowe Furnoslwd :M tf2 Srnotoon 1250 00
Monlh R.nt. $150 00 Depostt

S39i5 Owek Mhvery Call 7-4().

New Bank Repo s Only ~ left. 18()().383-6862

RE~_LE ST AT

(14014*-2200

No-140-446-2411

385-9&amp;2t

actvertised ... this newspapet'
are availabAe on an equal
opponurtitybasis

1 8R Apt tor rent on Ma•n St
Po1nt PJeaso~nt C304t875-2t74

Good seteclton of used homes

-20J3btd&lt;ooms Startingat

thai all -lings

~!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!~

EXOTIC

164

~

t Bodn&gt;om Apw*'-0 Rio
Grande Coll•ge. S2f01Mo . All
lJtiiMs Paid. 1 •• Q-0521

1-.31110,

Cross Lanes Home Centet Free

are ...........,

EARN S90 000 ¥EARLY Repa1r·
lng, NOT Aeplaong Long Craclcs
In WtndSh utAds Free V1deo 1
aoo 826 8523 US /Canada

(740)·2•5-

736-3409

adYeltiSemer'!l Jtw real estate
wh!cf't tS "'violation of the

&gt;c~W

•

$&amp;99 Down All Slft9tes. $999
Down Doubles. Super Low Pa.,ments. Limited T1me Oakwood
Homes. Barboursvllh! WV :3iO.&amp;

- wtl1""'
knoooingly-

,_

8utfdong

"-o-w o.u-T

AI real estate ad¥erti5ing IWl
this USII p1pn 15 subject ICr
.., Feder.ll F;w HousingAcl
o! 1968 which makes • ilegal
to adw!ftise •any Plefelettce
eimrtahol't 01 dcsc:nn'W\abOn
based on cace color reltgiOn,
sell tam!MI status 01 nabQnal
ong~n , or any inCention to
mal&lt;B any such pn&gt;fe&lt;ehce
llmllaOOfl or ~tiOO ..

er 81lls Are Paid Malle Vour
Cho1ce Now You Must Site
These Spaces Phone For Show

S.t6

Mlrchlndlee

,-, P111W IMI of

ACROSS

1985 Ford F-150 351 Molar 58
Liter Supercab long Bed law
M•leage Excellent Condition One

Ownerl $2,400 00 OBO 740 256
6-171

t988 Dakota V 6 Automatic
78K, EKcellent Cond1tlon $3 295,
1994 Dodge Conversion Va t]..
W1th All Options Cook Motors

740·446-1l103
1994 S·10, lceCold Au, 86 000
M1tes, 5 Spd Runs EKcellent
Looks Sharp! $5 000 00 OBO

740.44&lt;3·0562

730

Vans &amp; 4-WDs

1986 Toyola Truck 4K4 $1 200

740.446-6869 74().446-225\

1989 Ford raised roof lull size
Con11ersion Van, like new Inside/
out only 24,000 miles extra
sharp TV $11 900 OBO 740·
7-42·2574 8'veRingS
1991 5-10 Blazer, 2 dr 4:-~4, new
4 3 mo1or with warranty, rebuilt
transmission. new pamt, auto alr

1111 asking $7,500, 740-742 2574
eventngs

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime guarantee
Local references furnished Es
!abttshed 1975 Celt 24 Hrs (740)

-

441 0870 1-800 287 0576 Rag·
19rs Waterprootlng

"'

Appliance Parts And Sar\IICe Alf
Name Brands Over 25 Years Expenance All Work Guaranteed,
French Clty Maytag 740-4467795

ASTRO-GRAPB
fold Everyone m1ght be pleasantly ·
Salurday, July 31, 1999
As you expand your range of
mteresiS in the year ahead, you wiU
also enlarge your cucle of friends,
bolh soc1ally and commerctally Thl5
wJll enable you ro get Involved tn

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence Painting vinyl siding,
carpen1ry dOor&amp; windows baths,
mobile home repa1r and more Foe
lree estimate cau Chat, 740..992·

6323

some excuing new areas

ll\llnQSton s Bas-ement Water
Proofing all basement repairs
done tree estimates, llretime
'Quarantee 12yrs on job experl·

LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) If you 're
totally unable to motivate someone to
JOin tn on a social activity, don't walt

ence 1304)895·3887

around for h1m or ht;r to get mto gear
Get tm w1th your hfc wtthOIII this per·

M&amp;R Electrical Contracting
Trailer Set-Ups, Carpentry,
Porches Trailer Set-Ups, And Air
Conditioning Also, Maintenance
1
740 441-0193

son. Trymg lo patch up a broken
romance? The Astro-Graph Malchmaker can help you understand what
to do to make the relationship work

Rainbow Bulldera
Bu1ld new or repair old, no job
too small or large Major credit
cards
tWV029582
Ceil

1304)&gt;458·1049 BP '528·8092
840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wiring
new service or repa~rs Master u
cens&amp;d electrician A1denour
Etectncal WV000306, 304-675-

178S

•

Mwl $2.75 to Ma1chmaker, c/o thiS
newspaper, PO Do• 1758, Murray
Hill Staloon, New York, NY 10156
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) A
change an some underlymg facts that
come to your attentiOn could be
responsible for achtevtng your obJes:·
ttves

today You'll be able to act on

what you couldn'l do befoJC.
LIBRA(Sepl 23-0cl 23) Include
someone in your soc1al actiVIties
roday who usually " Jeff oul of fhe

surpnsed at dtscovenng that thts
IOdlVIU8J IS 8 niCC addttion

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov

221
A.mhtlton IS ltkely to permeate your
being today and as such, you mtghl
begm to ferret out ways as to how to
reach out for somethmg you previ-

ously (eli was loeyond your grasp
SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
2 l 1 We1ghty matters arcn 1 hkely to
overwhelm you today You have the
natural ah1!11' oftakmg that whtch IS
lroublesome and tum 11 1nto some-

thin@' of worth
· CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
Those cold lcet you had concernmg
a fimmc1al ~· ndeavor that was more
complex th m what you're accus-

lomed lo m•ghl get wanncd roday as
you unearth the way it needs to be'
handled
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 191
Sound deciSions can only be made by .
laking adcquale 11me1o carefully bal·
ance all the facts and altemaltves
When thiS is accomplished, you can
successfully make your moves

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) You

may d1scover that someone who
' 1rea1cd you a b1t shabbily tn the pasl
has changed for the bet1er U this IS
the case, be wtllmg to g1ve h1m or her
a second chance

ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) So
long as you lake ample ttme to lhmk
things through thoroughly and care·
fully today, you can rejuvenated a
project m such a manner that' II bnng
tt success. D1g out the details

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) The
only thing that matters IS to know that
your mottves are pure So don ' I be
overly sensitive regardtng What
another n11ght thmk about your
actiOns af you beheve you're nght ,

GEMINI (May

21-J~ne

'.

20) Pre-

sent your plans an a stratght forward,
easy·to-understand manner and
you'll rece1ve the type of cooperatmn
you need to execute your tdtas A nononsense approach ts best

.'

CANCER Oune 21-July 22) Dom'l
waste any ttme thmkmg about dtvldends to wh1ch you're not ent1tled If
you're prepared to earn whal you get
you'll ftgure uut dozens uf ways to
add to your resource s

Today (CC)

League Baseball

-'

�f'

•

Along the River

Senate
prepares
for
vote
·
on
$79~ billion tax plan
•us

WASHINGION (AP)- A Republican bill to cut taxes
by $'792 billion, after dodging numerous attempts 10 alter or
shrink it, headed for r y in the Senate and the larger
ohotacle ofa promised presidential veiO.
·
The GOP majority
expocted to give solid backing
ltlday to the Hl-year plan that would reduce the 15 percent tax
bracket to 14 pertent, ease the so-called marriage penalty,
reduce esta1e taxes and increase IRA contribution limits.
With passage, GOP leaders intended to move quickly to
resolve ditferences with a House-passed bill that wollld reach
the same $'792 billion level of iax relief through different
kinds of cuts. The bill, however, was not expected to be· sent
to the pRSident until September, giving both supporters and
opponents a chance to press their case during the August

w'"'

recess.

CDC: Life
expectancy has
climbed 30
years since. 1900

President Oin10n reminded Congm;s apin Thur:;day that Caslers were wrong. and that even if the surpluses were real·
the bill faced a cenain veto. In remarlts before leaving for i:zed they should be used for deb! recb:tionand.-ledspend·
Europe, he said the " large and risky tax cut" oould carry ing programs.
America bad "10 the darl( old days of huge deficits."
"This is a bright -line tes1," said Sen. Byron Dotgan. ().
QiniOn has said he would accept no tax cut greater than N.D. "There is a mdical difference in tennsofwhat we Sland
$300billion and only if it came after the future of Social Secu· for and wtmt we fight for.•
·
rity and Medicare was secured.
On Wednesday; Republicans, joined by six Democrnts,
"We've got a veto threat but we've also got a respons1bil- rejected a Democralic alternative that would have limited the
. ity to the American taxpayer,"said Sen. Frank Murkowski, R· tax cut to $290 billion. On Thursday, a $500 biiUon comproAlaska, a member of the Senate Finance Committee !hat mise bill that attracted moderates from both parries was with·
crafted the legislation.
•
drawn under pressure from Jl!l'ly leaders. ''I don't think either
Economists have forecasi that the budget surj&gt;lus would of the two parties at this time is supportive" said Sen. John
total nearly $3 trillion ovei the next d«:ade, but the fight was · Breaux, D-4., who sponsored till: alternative with Sen, John
over what to do with the non·Soci.al ' Security surplu~ of •OJafee, R-R.I.
.
approxirnately '$1 trillion. .
·
·
Also defeated was a proposal by Sen. Edward Kennedy,
Most Republicans said the bulk of'that should be returned D-Mass.. that the bill be alteied to include funds to provide .
to taxpaYl:rs. DemocratS said there was a real diarn;e the fore- prescription drUg benefitS to Medicare recipients. "Our plan

•

B.lack
'

..

'

u

,.

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

_as
.

ac

,/

.

..

"

•

'

'

....,.

atyour Chevym Dealer!

.'
'

'

Check out the othergreat offers . .

"

.

'

.."

..

.·

'

'.
'

I

Humidity and high temperatures,
coupled with a heat- and stQrm·
• · related power outages affected area
residents all day Friday.
·The southwest part of Galli a
County was under a severe weather .
watch Friday evening. As of Satur·
day morning, however, no reports of .
damage had been filed with Gallia
emergency agencies .
In . Middleport and Pomeroy, a
tree contacting a power line after an
early Friday morning storm left
about 1,000 American Electric ,
Power customers without service,

.

'

'•

'.

• '11

·.. ·

.·

throughout the day.
·
Pqwer was briefly restored late
Friday night, but went back off
again anfl was restored early Satur·
day morning.
.•
As temperaiures 'quickly climbed
into the ·90's and stayed there ·
throughout the day and ·early
evening, Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services took two calls
. from Middleport residents needing
assistance due to the heat.
.
Everything ·was closed in Middleport, according to a police depart· '.
me.nt dispatcher.
,
.
Many of the village's residents
I left town, and were ):alling· the
police department Saturday morning
to see i£ electric ~ervice was
"'
restore~ .
· High temperatures were to blame
for an outage that affected approxi·
mately. 3,100 residents of northeastern Meigs County.
·" .
About 500 .scattered oulages were
alSo reported,, in Meigs County and
about 200 scattered outages were
replrted in 'Mason and Gallia countieS.
. Most· of the outages Friday· were
due to excessive heat,. not stonns,
according tb an AEP spokesman.
The National Weather Servie said
Saturday temperatures ·would be
cooler today, with · highs ranging
from the low 80s to around 90.

Good Morning

s2,000 Cash Back'

Malibu® ·.
51,500 Cash Back·

or

or

.

s-1o~2wb

..

Stocks

RD/Shell .............;.. .... ;..........61'•

.,

'

continue to evolve."

Sears ........ .-............................41'1.
Shoney's ....;....................,........ 2\'.
Wendy's .....•.........................29~.
Worthington ............. :: ..........14'1•

Power outages plague
· Gallla, Meigs Friday

·

"We're increasingly seeing prob~
Ieins with antibiotic resistanc·e making some of.the infections harder to
treat," Hughes -said. "So these
microbes that created these illnesses

Kmart .....................................14~.
Kroger .................................,.26'Lands End ........................... 45"1.
Limited ................................. 45~.
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 18),
OVB ..................... ~ ................. 32~
One,Valley ............................. 37~
Peoples ............................... ,.28~
Prem Flnl .............•....... ~ ......... 12l'.
Rockwell .........................58'\'. ·

'·

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s163/Month 36-Month Leaset

Today's Gl~~~e:atbcel
.14 Sections : 128 Pages
CalendarS

...

~lassllleds

Comics
Editorials
Alon1 the River
Obituaries
S!!Qrls

189/Month 36-Mpnth Leaset

5

s1,398 Due at" Lease Signing

sf63 Du.e at Lease Signing
(Tax~ title, license and registration are extra.)

(Tax, title, license and registration are extra.)

,

,

,

.

'

Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt Pleasant • August 1, 1999

Vol, 34, No, 24

•go,

WilliaJ)I Browning was terminated as village administraA year
a cltiZfllla group 1«1 by
IOr after the record keeping errors were revealed.
Jean Cr11lg, now pt'Nident of the Bollrd of
. The levels of trichloroethylene have fluctuated, 'from
Public Aff11lra, uncovered IMcCiiriiCiea In
a level of 3.6 parts per billion in 1994 to an undetectable
rKOrd #fHplng, noncompllllncfl.with EPA .
level last November. Village officials were heartened
regulation•.- and contllmloanfll In one of
when the levels dropped to the 'undetectable readings;
the village'• two water wella.
but Crisler warned them thai the levels would likely rise
again, which they have. The 'latest test results, from sam- ated from undetectable levels to 1.7 ppb in 1993.
ples taken in June, show a trichlorethylene level of 1. 7
The latest results, from a June. sampling, showed
pArts per billion, still well below the maximum allow· dichloroethylene af 1.15 ppb.
able level of S parts per billion.
·
. While completely uncont.tininated water is the ideal,
, The levels of dichlorethylene, which is used in mak- it is important io put the levels in perspective, Craig
ing adhesives, refrigerants and plastic wraps, continue.to said, noting that the levels are similar to putti'ng an eyeappear on lab reports, as well. In 1992, the level of dropPer full of !he contaminant in a swimming pool, or
dichlorethylene was detected at 1.2 ppb, but has fluctu·
Continued on ~•.112
·
'

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Celebrating an anniv,ersary: ·M~igs .Local

By JIM FREEM~
.
Tlme•Sentlnll Sblff
. POMEROY - l,;he Meigs ·
Local School District was one
of 45 districts throughoui the
state approved Thursday for
more than $1.03 billion in
' state ' funds to build new
schools, il!ld repair and renovate existing schqol buildings. ·
The action by tJ!e Ohio
School Facilities Commission .
was praised ·by Governor Bob
Taft.
"
'
"Ohio is committed to
. '·i'
viding safe and"$CCUre
APi»ROII&amp;D - The Ohio
TOOII)S and school buildings
· CommiNion Thurldll)'
fC?r our children. By combin· 1pproved '
In conatructlon
)ng •end of the year surplus funding ror
~Ia In the Metefunds with other dollan, the loall School Dlatrlc:t. The j:lroJecl, H ·
Ohio School ·Facilities Com- 1pproved by voter. tn N-ber, wtll
mission is now able tc offer repl- eight IChooll lncluclllig Mtlgl
assistance to many more dis- Mllidle School In Middleport 1hown here.
"· tri.cts in need and to commit . LOCIII reeldente will have to pontrtbute
PREPARE FOR FAIR- Steve Wll10n, kilt, GaHie County 011 Dlrec:tor, and No-'f Delaney;011 Maintemillions m~re dollars to $5,72e,OOO to the proJect.
nance Dlrec:tor, pntpenl their booth In Ill• Commen:lll Building tor the upcoming Gallla County Junior Fllr.
school coniltruction, repair and renovation," said Taft.
The school distri~ts approved for assistance must provide local dollan to
. help pay for the cOnstruction and .renovation projects. Projects with a stale
share of more than $40 million will have funding disbufl!ed over several
By I(EVIN KELLY
involved is up and that's great. The quality of the pro'·
years. The State Controlling Board must approve the awards and is expect·
jects also continues to improve."
·
·
TlmH..Sen11ntl Staff
ed·to consider the·OSFCs recommendations in ·August.
GALLIPOLIS -While the Gallia County Junior
As of late last week, beef projects totaled 183; hogs,
The Meigs Local School District was approved for $32,,582,763 in con·
Fair _marks a special time for youths and adul~ alike, 596; sheep, 146; dairy, 43; horses, 37; goats, 16; rab,
struction funding, including the state share of $26,856,763. Local residc;nts
this year's exposition will be more memorable .as it.· bits, 110; poultry;23; ducks and geese, eight; tobacco,
will have ·to contribute $5,726,000. ·
, . . , :.' ..
· . ,
·
notes its 501h anniversary of showcasing 4-H and 114; ·general, 750; home economics, 405; and clover·
. Plans call for building two new 468-stu9,eq\ ~~!!'!'O..'Yf,scl!ll"l~ to house
Future Farmers o{ America agricultural, h&lt;ime e&lt;:o- buds, 110."
· "•
·
grades K-5, a new 4.?0-stu~ent middle school iO 'houSci grilde€ 6-8, .and ren·
nomics, engineering and general projects.
" All exhibits, with the exception or market hogs and · ovations to .the existing high school to house grades 9·l2·
A recognition ceremony honoring over 130'·people steers, are to be checked in between 9 a.m. and 8 p.m:
The district's board of education is considering a November bond issue .
wtw have been associated·with the fair since its reB.cti· . Sunday, !)eel advised. Market hogs and steers are to be
for the project:
·
'
. vation in 1950 will be a highlight -of the fair's first day checked in prior to the weigh-in starting at 6 p.m. Sun·
The twO new elementary schools "v;ould replace seven existing schools
Monday, The ceremony, set for 1:30 p.m. and follow- day. Market lambs will be 'weighed in starting at 8 a.m.
while the new midHJe school would repllice .the current building in Middleing tht official opening program at I p.m., will honor Monday: .
.
.
port. The new middle school would most likely be built on district-owned
former fair bOard members, youth leaders a~d 'others
A new aspect to this year's fair is .the division of the
..
land adjacent Meigs High School near Pomeroy. ·
who played a role in staging the fair.. .
annual livestock sales . iniO two days. On Friday, the
"It's another step in the pr~ss, • Meigs Local Su~rintendent Bill Buck- ,
Remembering the fair's history since the 1950s will 4.tst market lamb sale. begins at 10 a.m., followed by
ley said of the OSFC vote.
.
continue th'roughout tbe week at a .visitor's center set the 48th market steer'sale at rioon, and the 17th 'tobac·
"We're certainly looking forward to it,"' he said. "I h~nestly believe we
up illong the old midway at the fairgroundS, The center co sate at 1;30 p.m. in the show arena.
·
.
.
..
can pass it."
The · 39th market hog sale is Saturday, Aug. 7,
witl feature photos and other memorabilia of past fairs.
Buckley said people he has talked to have responded positively to the
It, the recognition ceremony and related activities beginning at 10 a.m. ·
· .
proposed measure .
are t~e work of a 50th anniversary eommittee formed
· M~nday's highlights or the fair, following · the
"We· have to make our decision ,based on what is best for the kids;" be
.at the direction of the Galli a COunty Junior Fair Board recognition ceremony, will be the Little Miss and Mr.
said, adding .that a proposed rollover of the distric~ perman~nt improvelast year to note the occasion.
Gallia County .antest, sponsored by. the Gallipolis
ment levy into the building issue has been &amp; big selling point.
Fair exhibits will move onto the fairgrounds !)unday Lions Qub, starting at 6:30p.m. on the main ,stage, and
"If it passes the permanent improvement levy will.be declared surplus and
. in preparation for judging. Fred Deel, Gallia County's the annual Miss Gallia County queen pageant at )1:30
be used to decrease millage on the building issue." he said. "That will help."
· 4-H extension agent, noted that the number of project p.m. on the main stage.
Buckley said the district's students would have more opportunities in new
entries continue~ to climb.
This year's contestants ar~ Ginger Canaday, Jody.
schools.
"We have a few areas where it's down and others . Kuhn, Becky Little, Jodie McCalla, Niki· Mills, Sasha
State Senator Michael C. Sh'l"maker (D'l3oumeville). a member of .the
Continued on page A2
wheie it's up," Deel said. "The number of kids
Cont.lnued on .peg• A2

Ga:l~ia

County Junior Fair turns 50

By MILLISSIA RUSSELL
.come and do the same.
'
·~ . dents as well, aluiough ma'ny .~led
Tlmea·Sentlnel Stan.
"We offer free transplrtation fro~ that their fashions leav.e a lot to be
RIO GRANDE- Sodexho-Mar- anywhere in Gallia, Jackson and Vin·';- desiied..
riott, the food service provider for the tori counties," Qayton said "Our ~
"If my mother. could see what
University of Rio Grande/Rio Gninde vans are · 'paid for . by mileage, so these kids were wearing today, she'd
Community College, in conjunction believe me, we'll come and pick you ·;. roll over in her grave!~ one senipr
with the Area Agency qn Aging Dis· ·up wherever you are,"
' noted, laughing. '
·
.·
trict 7 Inc., and the Retired Senior
"There's really no excuse no! 10
Soon, program coordintllors hope
\kllunteer .Program, has launched a come and · take · advantage of these lp offer the seniors even mort than
prograln that offers free meals 10 any .meals," he added: "There is a won· food. Bible study, shopping trips,
person .ovei th~ age of 60 in Galli a, derful variety of .food, and it's a great . sewing classes, and card and ~
Jackson and Vinton counties. ·
·
opportunity for the seniors to get out •·_ games are just a few of the ideas that
The . congregate meal program is and socialize."
are being considered for before and
fUnded by the Area Agency with FedSeniors not only get to meet with after lunch activities.
eral Older American Act funds, and each other, but also with Rio Grande
The pool and fitness center at Rio
· provides a hot, nutritious hmch to students, who voiced their enjoyment Grande are already open · to the
those who wish to take adv~ntage of of the seniors' company.
seniors, and, beginning in the fall,
it. Right now, the meal site averages
"I think it's great,." Jay Trewartha, they can llegin taking college courses
about 20 senior citizens a day, with a Rio Grande junior noted. "I bCiieve · for ·credit.
.
over 200 currently signed up.
they have a lot to offer, and !love 10
The meal site is located in the uni·
One day recently, over 50 seniors hear their stories."
versity cafeteria, 'and is open from II
came to Rio Grande for the free meal.
"I actually think the food has got- am. to I p.m., Monday through FriSERVING SENIORS - The congregate meal pro- hot, nutrltloue lunch to thoae wleh to take advantage
Mickey Clayton, transportation direc- ten better since they siarted coming to day. If anyone is interested in joining
tor for the Retired Senior Volunteer eat here," he added.
the meal program, contact the RSVP 'grem le funded .by the Area Agency on Aging with · !If It The mHI 11te aven1gee 1110ut 20 eenlor. cltlzenl
Federal Olcier Amerlcen Act Iunde, end provldee • . • .d1y, with over 200 currently elgneil up.
Program, hopes that many more will
, The ~eniors seem to enjoy the stu- office at 1-877-286-4918. ·

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·a pproved for
OSFC fun.d ing

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There is a free lunch·:~ federal funds provide meals for area seniors

·See Your Local Chevrolet' Dealer Today!

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C2&amp;4

0 1999 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

It's a great.time to buy or l~ase the Chevy ofyour dre(1ms!
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monia·.

Gannett .................................74 1/•

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pageA2

EPA official·urges action on village water problem

or·

The worsi U.S. epidemic of a~
infectious disease ·was in 1918,
wheri the flu kill~d 500,000 people . .
Pneumonia,
TB . and
diarrhea/enteritis w~r« the three
leading causes of death in 1900,
. . Today, the leading caus~.~ are heart
·
disease, cancer and stroke.
Early on, improyeffients in sani·lation, hygiene and living coqctitions
helped control outbreaks of cholera,
TB and other dise.ases, the CDC said
in the latest in a series of reports on
health improyement&amp; In the 20th
century.
·• Chlorination contributed to the
'decrease ·of waterborne dis'eases,
while· improvements · in .housing to
reduce crowding hel!l"d in theJight
against TB, which in 1900 killed
194 of every. 100,000 Americans. 'i
The improvements had a pro·
found effect on children under 5,
who in 1900 accounted for 30.4 per.·
.cent of all deaths. That' dropped to
jusi 1.4 in 1997, the CDC said.
lp the 1910s, serologic testing
became a basic .tool to . diagnose
m~ny diseases like syphilis and gon·
orrhea. The development of cell cultures in the 1930s paved the way for
large-scale production . of li.ve or
heat-killed viral vaccines,
Thb 1940s ushered in use ·Of
antibiotics like peniciilin, which was
used to treat sick and wounded U.S.
'
soldiers. And state and local health
departments began instituting .childhood vaccination programs, which
helped virtually eliminate &lt;Often-fatal
diseases like smallpox and polio.
During the later part of the centu:
ry, advances in molecular biology
technology have further improved
testing, diagnosing and monitoring
disease, the CDC said .•But the successes ·in reducing deaths led to
some complacency, the health
agency warned.
,
·The 1980s saw the emergence of
AIDS and other new diseases and
the re-emergence of TB and pneu-

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AmrTech ............................... 11~.
Ashland 011 ...••...•..•....•..........38\1
AT&amp;T ....•................................ 53'i•
Bank One .................. ,...........55\1
Bob Evans ........ .-................... 20'~
Borg·Warner ........................ so~.
Champion ............................... &amp;~.
Charm Shps ..........•...... :..........6'!.
City Holding .. :.......................25'!.
Federal Mogul ....................... 49'!.
Rratar ...................................... 26

Ohio Valley Publishing Co,

inaccuracies in record keeping, noncompliance with
EPA regulations, and contaminants in one of the vjllage's
MIDDLEPORT~ A year after problems with Midtwo water wells.
dlejx)rt's water system and water ·testing methods were
Middleport's Well Four was revealed to be contami·
uncovered, an .Ohio.EPA supervisor monitoring Middle- nated with trichlorethylene, a chemical solvent used to
port's drinking "(ater supply said Wednesday thai he is clean -electric motors, as well as dichlorethylene, !IJlOih·
keeping a close watch on the levels of contaminants in er volatile organic compound.
the water, and is encouraging the village to connect to
Craig's in.,estigation also revealed that a bacteriologanother water system.
. ·ical sample report, filed with the EPA, listed apparenlly
However, Jeffrey Crisler, environmental supervisor false water sampling results, including samples from
in the EPA's Logait office, has-said ihat residents should .residents who deny that . village personnel have ever
· keep the contaminant levels in perspective, and main- drawn samples from their homes.
tains that the problem is not an immediate health hazard.
As far back as 1993, the village failed to n&amp;ify resi·
A year ago, a citizens group led by Jean Craig, now dents of the .oontamination problems : through a legal
P!esident of the · Board of Public Affairs, uncovered notice irr the newspaper, as is required by the EPA.

eases.

Detail• on

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HI: 90s
Low: 708

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·Fellow Texan Republican Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison said
tbe across-the·lloard cut was "the fairest of all tax cuts," but
Democrats assailed it as unfairly ~nefitting wealthier tax·
payers.

ElY !IRIAN J. REED
Tlme•Sentlnel Sblff

• ...

Probe
crashes
o·n the
moon

•

marriage tax.

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FMtur.d on Pege C1

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Associated Press Writer
· ATLANTA (AP) - Americans
can expect to live nearly 30 years
longer than they di~ at the tum of the
. centU!Y because of antibiotics; clean·
drinking water and advances that
have helped control infectious diseases, govemment 'researchers say.
Since 1900, the overall death rate
from diseases like pneumonia a~d ·
tuberculosi~ has d.eclined from 797
per 100,000 to 59 per 100,000 in .
1996, the Centers for Disease Con,
trol ·and Prevention said Thursday.
Ali a result, life expectancy dur·
. ing that period 'increased from 47.3
-years to 76.1. ·
" O~e of the conclusions might be
that investments made ' in the tools
that are needed to monitor, diagnose
and treat and prevent infectious diseases pay dividends," said Dr. James
Hughes, director · of the CDC's
National Center for Infectious Dis-

Inside

Meigs County
Fair
entertainment

pn:sents a clear choia: between pre;criplion drug coverase
for the elderly and Unnrces'l3JY new tax breaks for the
wealthy," he said.
Finance Committee Olaitman William Roth, R-Del.,
promised action on the prescrip1ion drug issue in the fall, but
"we should not be pressured into simply accepting something
that does ·require our l1l05t careful and studied attention."
From the Republican side, Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas,
sought changes to make the bill more. compatible with the
House version. Oramm's amendment, defeated on a proce·
durai vote, would have .eventually reduced all ii)COOle tax
rales by 10 perten~ repealed estate taxes and eliminated the

•'

By PATRIC.IA J. MAYS

..

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Friday, July 30; 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

8f ... AJIR
•ru c' 'I d ~ Wilw

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P8ge16 • The Dally Sentinel

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