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Thursday

Wednesday, August 4, 1999

Pomer.,y • Middleport, Ohio

12 • The Daily Sentinel

Thousands may be spent on Kennedy crash. investigation
By MEUSSA B. ROBINSON
Atisoclated Preu Writer
WASHINGTON - When John F.
Kennedy Jr:s plane was first report·
ed missing . the go,•emment sent
sailors and pilOIS, aviation experts
and even two hydrographic survey
ships.
Two week.s later. federal costs arc
still being totaled, but estimates surpass $500,000 but much of that
would have been spent anyway.
· Some factors;
. • The U.S. Coast Guard total cost
was close to $492,000.
• The National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration spe nt

Gun wound
treatment
cost $2.38

about S55,000 to operate the Rude · made ''a.' for tht..' hunJI·Jt-~a ."' SJJJ
and Whiting in the &gt;earch for wreck- a tanul) spo~~sman .
Pre;~d&lt;nt Clont,&gt;n hom &lt;ell has ta~ ­
age.
• Forces from the Navy and Atr en respon~tbllu~ h'r auth\mzmg th..:
Force were sent. including one ship c\1fJordma~ dlon to n. . . .-0\er th..:
that otherwise wouiJn ., have been at pn\Jh: plane . HI! bJ.,~d ll on the
sea. The Defense Depanmen1 would Kenned\ familv's rok " in our
not release figures until n completes national.llH'S. ;nd hccJU!-1.' of the
enonTtous lo~~) thai the~ ha\ c ~u~­
its review.
• The Nati onal Transportation talned in our lifetime~ ...
Tile co~ts are hard to cJiculate. J.t
Safety lloard ha; cmharkcd nn an
Jn\'esti gauon that,\ expected to take least in Lt!ml~ ot dl!h:nmmng \\hat
six to nine JlHmth~ and in\'\)IH· was SJ"' nl tor the Kenn edy crash that
wouldn't have been spe nt otherwise.
numerous experts.
AllhDugh, thL' fL.:dcral . gm:crnThe USS Briscoe, a Navy guided
menl's role \\' rl" L'~IL'ns.i'' C'. it didn 't m1ssile destroyer on \l&lt;hich the
come at thr: Kl:'n nl'J) famil) ·~ Kennedys gathered privately 10
. request.
release the ashes of JFK Jr.. 'his v. ifc
"The onJ, rc4""'' the fanHI) ~arolyn Bessette Kennedy and her

1s

an estimate

o~

STORE HOURS ·

Moaday ••ru

s....., .

ho!&gt;.pt tals tn t\'t.iry land and New York

that year. from South Carolina emergency rooms in 1997 and other
"'0UTCCS.

" We have been concerned th at a

89

I AM·lO.PM
291 SECOND ST.

what

the nation spent treating gunshot
victuns in 1994. based on d'ata from

there," O'Dell said.
Likewise for NOAA. which
would have had 10 spend about
S30,000 of the $55 .000 cost regard,
less of the Kennedy crash. said
Jeanne Kouhestani. a spokeswoman
for the Commerce Dcpanment,
which includes NOAA . That means
the Kennedy mission cost an additiona! $25.000.
The Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation
Safety -Board will never ·have e&gt;timates for the Kennedy crash because
tbey don't break down costs on a
case-by-case basis. spQkesmen said.

COCA
PRODUCTS

By KATE N. GROSSMAN
Associated Press Writer
CH ICAGO.,... The cost of treating
.. ., 1hc natiOn's gunshot vict i,ins in a
rt'ccnl year was $2.3 b!lli'on and the
gove rnment paid half the bill v
rc,carchcrs reponed today.
The figure

ha'&lt; ~n fuel. he said.
•
"The boat is there. the crew is •

cally operates with a crew of 100 and
probably costs about $25,000 a day.
F ederanon of American Scientists, a saod John Pike, an analyst with the
Federation of Amencan Scientists
n onprofit resean:h group.
11le Air Force contnbuted 10 the
The Bmcoe. w1th a crew of about
3 SO, "as o n a traming missiOn off search as well. prohahly addin~ thou \! 'irgin1a when it was dive ned to tbe sands of dollars. said Pike.
··1 would be puzzled if they came
K enned\ mission. so some of tbe
up
with a number that was only ten•
c JSIS prubably would ha\c been
of
thousands
for the air component. ,.
i1 ocurred anyway.
.. Even on its way up there. it. was he said.
The Coast Guard would ha,·c
a ole to du some oflhe tr.iinmg." said
•ncurred
much of its $492,000 in
Lt. Cmdr. Lydia Robcnson, a Navy
costs
even
without panicipaling in the
spokes woman.
·
The USS Grasp. a Navy salvage ~earch because its personnel g(t the
ship that's smaller and less compli- sante pay whether they are on a misc.lled than the Briscoe, was sent from sion or not, said Jack O ' Dell, a Coast
p on and retrie,·ed about 75 percent of Guard spokesman. The only extra
tl1e plane. A .s hip of that class typi- cost for the Kennedy mission wou ld

~ oster. Lauren Besseue, costs rough·
1~ , $100.000 ada) to run. says tbe

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fo lks don 't see gun vic:&gt;lcnct! as
their problem .. lhey see it as someone
e l ~c 's problem ,'' said one of the
,rc &lt;c·arthers, Philip Cook, .director of
the Sanford Institute of Public Poli cy at Duke University.
.. ·n1c costs are shared by everyone
through governme nt payment ln that
&gt;\Cn.,.~. we all have a stake in reduc ing gun violence ."
k11 (t f

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This has nm been lost \11l manv
L' itt l!s and co.unlies - ar tcast.2 3 are

B~NELE!S PORK

pur~uiilg gun ri1akcrs in court l\)
1'42COVC'r moftcy SjJcnt treating gunshot

vic tims.
'
T he srud y puhl1 sht..~d in tnday.\
1llUrnal of !he -American ML•JJ . .·al
t\s~ociation looked al th~ L'l1SIS hospi tals 1nt urrcd tn:oHing alrn n~ l
I ~5.0(~l gUnshot mJuriL' S.. including
fa1al one s The , a\c'r;lgc cQ:-t per
lllJUr) wa.., $ 17.000. \\' he n a ,·ictiin
w:1o; lmspitaliJcd . the average llfctimc .

""" . jumped &lt;0 S35.000. the
rc..;carrllers est imat ~d.
A n:-scarchcr not in voi H~d 111 th~
s,t udy sa id it whs a soltd analys1s .or
the 'iimitcJ data that is avail able.
. Mark' Cohen, a Vanderbilt Universi·
ty economist Who docswresearch in
thi s area, said the hreakdow11 of who
bears the costs of gunshot wounds is
the study:s most valuable component.
The government, mostly through
Mediqtd and Medicare payments.
paid $1. 1 b~li on of the total cost: the
· study found . Pri vate insurers covered
I~ percent of the cost. and vict ims
picked up another I9 percent. '
The rc~earchers speculated that
victim.s' cOsts are oft en passed on to
other patients because man y victims
can't afford treatment.
,
Despite the seemin gly hi gh numbers. Cohen sa id the costs are small
when compared to the $1 trilli on
spent un medH.: al care annua ll y.
" If you did away with gun shot
injurie s. would you reduce medical
· costs'!" Co hen sa id. "Not by m4uh ...
He said fraud is more cos tl y to
hospital s than gunshot wounds .
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Tomonow: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 60s

Red Sox defeat Cleveland, Page 4
Ann on great sex, Page 8
4-H judging results, Page 6

•
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Meigs (:ounty's

64

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By DAVID JACOBS
..... oc:l.ted Prws Wriblr
CIRCLEVIu.E (AP) - Stories ltbout
troubles flllltm are facing bicause of this
summer's drought quickly came to. life dwing.a tour of some parched fllnns, Gov. Bob
lift said.
,
·
" This is a very whnd a serious situation ·
for thasc who arc farming. who are taking
risks, investing. providing the food," Taft
said \\tdncsday. "Th~ brings it home, d:iVe5 it home -the waency of the situation."
Taft spent two bows touring fllllts in
Pi&amp;:kaway County, one of 39 OOWities in the
centn1 and southern parts of the state he .
recently asked to be s~cd for drought ·
damage. Today, the federll Agri~ulture
Department's Stale Emergency · Boand is
expeciCd to evaluate crop losses.
...
The ears of Pickaway CQunty com on
WCdncsdily were dry and shrunlu:n, not full
of kernels as they should be this time of year. ·
Mites attacked soybean jilanls which only
came up to his knees, rather .than his waisL

During his tour, Taft ~ that he neighboring states, making fllnners eligible
had asked the state's congressional delega· frir low-interest loans.
lion and U.S. Agriadture Secretary Dan ·
The nine southern Ohio counties included
()liclanan to find fedenl money to help · were Athens, Belmont, Columbiana. Gallia.
farmers. Taft boped for crop disaster pro- Jefferson, Lawrence, Meigs, Monroe and
grams, a li~ feed program and low- Washington.
cost loans.
•
Piclc,away. County wa5 left out, although
In WISitington, the Senile approved $7.4 530 .farmers have ·reported produCtion I~
billion in emergency aid for farmers hurt by ranging from 30 percent to 100 percent.
drought and low crop priees. llle House has
"It's some of the driest s6il l .have evei
yet to consider ' farm aid, although Speaker · sceq." Taft said during the' tour of the county
Dennis Hastert has said he's com milled to south of Columbus. ·
passing some type of help.
Aside from worries about crops and
Rep. John Boehner, R·Ohio, the only con- finances, tbe dryness also raised con~m
gressman from Ohio on the Agriculture about possible problems for an annual fall
Committee, is watching the issue closely, pumpkin festival bere. Usually•. the regiou
said spokesman Dave ScltniUger.
produces thousands of ils own pumpkins.
" The governor's . concerns are well- . This year, some inay have to rome from elsefounded, and we share them," SchniUger where in Ohio.
said. Emergency low-interest loans and other
"This won' t be the happiest pumpkin fes·
help is likely, he said.
tival in Circleville, will it?" Taft asked farm, Some help .already is on the way. Earlier ers.
this week, federal officials declared as disas:
Taft toured Jerry arid Betty Wolf&lt;it'd's
ter areas all of West Virginia and parts of four family farm, where a field normally full of

By Jill FREEMAN
Sentinel N - Steff
BELUNGHAM, Wash. (AP) -A Tacoma native who had returned for
A new law modifying conDict of interest rules
family ·and high. school reunions died while hiking near Mount Baker, for members of the Ohio Depanment of Trans~'
portation 's Transponation aDd Review A«,ivisory
Whatcom County sheriff's deputies said.
/
Council hu rome under .fm: by groups opposed to
Bruce Perry, 38, of Wyoming. Ohio, and his best friend were descend.
ing from the 6,972-foot summit of Twill Sisters on Tuesday when Perry a local highway proji:ct. . ·
-p.:
Coalition
Against
Superfluous
Highways
slipped on a steep snowfield, tried to stop himself, bounced hard and landand,the Buckeye Foresl Council said they will orgaed on his ice ax, sheriff's Sgt. Ron Peterson said.
·
.
nize an association of public interest grOups: to stop
"It was just an .accident.. They weren't doing anything reckless or careimplemenlation of Hoose Bill 287.
less," Peterson Sllld.
·
The legislation, signed into law Tuesday by
The body was recovered late Wednesday at about the 5,4QO..foot level
Governor Bob Taft, renamed several highways and
111d was taken to Bellingham for an autopsy. · ·
also included a provision eliminating the ament
Peterson said Perry, a product development manager for Proctor and • ronDict of interest rule for memhen; of the Transponation Review Advisory Council which is
Gamble, attended a Camily reunion last weekend. This weekend he had
responsible for prioritizing and approving funding
planned !0 attend his 20th class.reunion at Stadium High School in Tacofor Ohio projecls.
ma. where he h~ been class presidenl
CASH aDd BFC are opposed to HB 28"/ because
He left a wife and three boys. ages 7, 4 and I.
it would allow former Athens t,tesseoger publisher
G. Kenner Buoh,··a member of the TRAC,Io partieipa~e in deliberations and votes,c:onoeming a pro.· ONCINNATI (AP)- Laboratory tcsls are being perfqrmed by the Ohio . posc,d relocatloo of Roote 33 from Athens to Dar·
Department of Health to detennine if 20 E. ooli ca.&lt;;es in southwest Ohio are · win, .a projccl the groups oppose.
related and come from a single.source.
·
·
· Tlie groups filed a lawsuit in Franklin County
eallier this year which was dismissed eallier this
A team from the federl!l Centers for
week after they and ODOT agreed that Bush would
Disease Control is helping trace the
not participate in di5CUS5ion and votes on Route 33.
source of the bacteria, which the
The suit explained that Bush had voted on the
•health department has identified as E.
project even though he sefVed Is co-chairman of the
coli 0157:H7.
. ., Highway Usen Committee of the Southeastern
That is the strain that first appeared
Ohio Regional Council, an organization which
in
1993
in
the
Northwest,
when
300
advocates and supports highway projects in the
2 Sedlo1111 : 12 Pages
people were stricken after eating
region.
,·
According to Todd Acheson, CASH
--~hamburgers
from
the
Jack
in
the
Box
120
Cal pwpr ·
~-restaurant chain.
spokesm1111, "This legislation is a direct attack on
the public interest. It will permit the. administration
C!m!Dec!s
9&amp;10
The bacteria has infected eight peato st,l:k the council with representatives of srecial
Comics
1l
pie in Hamilton County, six in Oer·
interests. Business groups who advocate highway
_~;oEd!!Jill!to111rtJlau;lsL-_ _ __,l~
. --,-I' m&lt;&gt;n1 Co~nty and six in Butler Coun· . construction will "f''W be able to authorize spending
rn..1 1
3
. ty, said Jane Beatltard of the Ohio millions of taxpay~dollars on their favorite high...,...,L-_.1 Department of Health. No one has way
projects."
·
~
Spolia
4&amp;5
died from the infection, but some of . ' . Jason Tockman, representing BFC, questioned
3
the infected people have been hospiWeather
the merits and prOcedures behind the legislation.
talizM, she said.
'
"lt makes common sense that those voting on
Lotteries
"The CDC team will ..,...ist with the
the use of Ohio highway monies should not he affil food survey of the victims'; to 6nd out iated with woups advocating particular projects. It
OHIO
is absurd that the governor and the legislature
'
everything they've eaten and where
Pkk 3: 9-0-5; Pick 4: 7-6-8~
would
change the law without hearing from the
they all: it;" Beathard s~d We!lnesSloper Lotto: 5·11-12-29-41-46
community and public organizations throughout
day.
Kicker: 2·1-6-3-3-9
. Ohio most affected by this change."
· E. coli can be transmitted through
Slate Representative Joho Carey (R-Well5ton)
W.VA.
cOntaminated waler, uncooked fruits
said
this morning he supported HB 287, saying
Dally 3: 7-5-0;Dally 4: 9-0-6-7 "
and
V..getables
and,
in
many
cilses,
by
regional
representation is important in making
o 1999 Ohio Valley Publillhins Co•.
eating u~dercooked ground beef.
highway decisions.

Ohio climber dead after falling on Ice ax

.

20 stricken with E. coli bacteria
Good Afternoon

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FARM FRESH PRODUCE - It's been • long time since you could buy frHh produce on the
atrHt In downtown Pomeroy, but this summer, Jeanie Price h . . been dohig • brisk bu.slness from
the corner of East Main end Court StrHts. P.rlca, with a friend, picks the produce fresh from her
fields·and brings It right to town, where It moves quickly from the bed of hsr truck. Soma of the
sweet corn and tomatoes coma from other fllrms, but moat of It comes from her own fields In
Pagevllle and on Charry Ridge near Pomeroy: cabbage, green and red peppers, melons, and soma
unuaual Items, too: eggplant, tometllloa, end sight varieties of hot peppers. Price eald ehe con·
aldars the operation a summer hobby.

! .
)
\

I

BARREN LAND - Ohio Goll•mor
Bob Taft, right, and Agriculture Director Fred Dailey examine soil at
Rhoades fllmlly fllrm In
County, ne,ar Clrclevll.. on
dey. Taft end other state
toured two fllrms for • look et
end pastures d1111111ged by the
droughL

"That's the whole idea of the TRAC," he said.
· "That 's the reason,for having people from different
parts of the state on the TRAC."
When TRAC, was first organized, the original
members were appointees from rDajor urban ceoters. Carey and other stale represematives were 'able
to change the make-up of the group to include
memhen; from sootheastem Ohio and other parts,of
the state they claim art nesJ&lt;Cted for highway
fund·
1
ing.
' ·
·
"It doesn't make sense that they can't advocate
for highways," Carey said. "We wanted an advocate
for our part of the state. (Bush) has been a pretty
good advocate. He 's done a good job."
The old oonftict of interest rule prevented advocates of specifiC highway projects from being
appointed to the TRAC. the new law only probibits
the appointment of paid advocates in highway pro·
jects.
"The eurrent r~triction is imponant sinoe the
TRAC is supposed to be an impartial board in
regirds to the projects it reviews. The removal of
the eurrent conDict of interest clause opens up
TRAC to members who have very specific agendas,
and TRAC will lose credibility as a board that can
prioritize and fund transportation projects objeclively aDd in a manner that is host for all the citizens
of Ohio," Tockman said. "Environmental issues arc
likely to he of little .concern to TRAC members
hand picked by highway interests and local business groups."
No member&gt; ~f CASH or BFC were asked to
testify regarding this bill, even though the lawsuit
was ongoing, Acheson explained,
"This amounts to stealth legislation on the pan
of the General AsSembly. This special inte.rOst pro·
vision· was snuck through as pan of the Highway
Naming Bill, apparently to prevent any meaningful
public. input. The· governor and the legislature
. should he ashamed of themselves," .he said
romeroy attorney St~ve Story, C&lt;H:hairman of
the Southeast Ohio Regtonal Council's Route 33
committee, has maintained that Bush's membership
in the TRAC does·not represent a conflict of inter,est.
~
.
"The fact that Bush is interested in better highways for the region does not represent a conDict of
interest," he said earlier... Everyone has an interest
in good lransponation."
.
He said SEORC memhers are not pa1d for advo·
eating development in southeastern Ohio.
. ..
TRAC memhen; faced stiffer conflict-Qf·.i~terest
rules than other stale board members, he sa1d. Thts
gives them lhc same rules as. everyone else, he
explained.
!!.
1

Syracuse Village Council., meeting in regular session Tuesday night, approved raises for village offi'cials to take effect at the beginning of the next term in
January, following the November election.
The mayor's salary will raise from $!50 a month to,
$400 a month; council members from $25 to $35 a .
month;·.. coun clerk from $75 to $100 a month and
clerk/treasurer from $500 to $550 a month.
O)uncil also approveil the purchase of two bulletproof vests which the police officers will be required
to wear while on duty.
II was noted that a ban on unnecessary water usage
iri the village been lifted following recent rain showers:
·'
Conservation measures are strictly voluntary, it was
noted.
.
.
· Council approved closing the pool after Aug. IS
due to the fair and the begiqning of the school year.
Scheduled pool parties will still be, held, it was rioted.
Potholes were also discussed and it was noted that .
some pa!chi!lg work would'be done . In addition, it was .
noted that the maitl pump ' at the pool will need
replaced before next year.
.
Clerk(freasurer . Janice Zwilling submined the
financial repon for July showing the following bal- ·
ances: general fund, $36,900.79; street construction,
$19,195.44; highway, $2,523.53; fire, $11,979.49;
water, $11,367.57; .pool, $5,781.90; guaranty meter,
$3,629.37; cemetery, $201.80; law enforcement,
$681.40; total, $92,268.64.
Also present·were Mayor George Connolly, council
members Larry Lavender, Bill Roush, Mony Wood, ,
Donna Peterson and Eber Pickens Jr., and police officer Richard Wamsley.
Not present was Councilwoman Kathryn Crow.

Middleport VOC lf?vels down
The Middleport Department of Public Affairs has
released the latest laboratory results from samples of ils
drinking water.
Levels of two volatile organic compQunds,
dichloroethylene and trichloroethyl.ene, arc both down
·.
from the June readings.
The level o~ dichloroeihy(ene decreased from 1.15
parts per billion to 1.14 ppb. and the level . of
trichloroethylene decreased from 1. 7 ppb to 1.6,
according .to the repon from samples collected on Jtily
14.
The village has begun testing the levels of VOCs
each month.

House eases legal services cuts

$349

·$189

soybeans is bam:n.
·
"It got so dry that we couldn't plant,"
said Mrs. Wolford. who estimated losses of
several thousand dollars.
Her husbarid told Taft the summer !::--.,.'lilt
drought has ~n made· wo~ by a dry
spring that left fields withou! moisture
resen.:es. That's why rain is still needed this
year, Wolford said.
" Rain not o~ly affecls this year's crops
but crops for years down the road,.., he said.
Despite the drought Wolford remained
optimistic.
.., I know this is something that ~on 't be
forever, .. he said.

New TRAC conflict of interest rules Syracuse Council OKs
draws fire from project opponents officials' pay raises ·

HAPPY .BABY
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Taft tou·r s dro·u ght-stricken farms

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Cantaloupes •••:::·... 89. · 99c
spu"u"n'
C.

(REG. OR LT.)

Sentinel

STOKELY.
TOMATO
C .~ · JUICE
.

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TodiiY:Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 50s

Regional Briefs

12 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

County Court
The followmg cases .were recently resolved in the Meigs County
Cou~t of Judge Patrick H. O'B rien .
Ftned were : Anthony C. Rou sh,
Syracuse, obwucting offic ial business, costs. probation. restraining
o rder i s~ued. six months jail suspended 10 live days. six months
house arres t; resist ing arre st, costs,
probation. 9li-days jail suspended to
five days concurrent , six months
house ~ arrest concUrrent; criminal
damaging , costs, proboti on, 90 days
jail suspended 10 five days concurrent , six months house arrest: R.
Michael Bauer, Coolville, fai lure&lt; lo
control. $ 100 plus cost: left of center,
$ 100 plus costs: Herbie Mitchero, ·
Pomeroy, expired license. $100 plus
cos ts, three days jail . suspended:
speed. $25 plus costs;'
James J. Hawley, Pomeroy, drivin g under FRA suspension. $200
plu s costs. 10 days jail suspended to
three days plus $100 suspended if
valid OL presented within 30 days ,
one year probation; failure to control,·
$30 plus costs: David T. Snipes.
Mooresv il le. N.C., speed: $26 plus
costs; Christopher Courcll. Portland,
reckicss operation, $100 plus COS IS,
three day s rcs idc ntial -treatrnent program; Shaw n King , Pomeroy. domesLi e viole nce, costs." 30 days jail suspended to one day, one year proba-

4

2 LITERS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

....

Augn81 5, 111118

Clinton having requested $340 million for fiscal 2000
By ALAN FRAM
and the Senate having already voted for ~300 million,
Auochrted Press Writer
·
WASHINGTON (AP)- The House is ready to ease the final figure is likely to grow.
The
25-year-old,
nonprofit
corporation
receives fedplanneil cuts in legal aid for low-income Americans as
eral
and
private
aid
and
distributes
grants
to
local boards
Congress tries to wrap up some of its spending work
of'
la\Vyers,
who
then
provide
free
legal
assistance
to
.
before embarking on ils August recess.
··
The House planned to resume debating a $37.7 bil- low-income people in civil cases.
The overall Commerce:Justice bill faces a White
. lion measure today that would finance the depanmenls
of Justice, State and Commerce and smaller agencies for House veto threat because the measure provides less ·
than Clinton wants for legal aid, hiring local police offi·
the coming fiscal year.
·
·
cers,
protecting endangere~ species and U.S. paymenls
And the Senate 'was ready to continue conside~ing a
$14.1 billion t)leasure financing the Interior Department to international organizations.
The measure, written largely by Republicans,
and cultural programs. That measure h31i become a battleground over mining and· other issues pitting industry includes nearly all of the $4.8 billion Clinton requested ..
for the 2000 census.
against environmental concerns.
·
Bowing to budget pressures. it declares $4.5 billion
The House Commerce-Justice measure had contained
an emergency, exempting that money from spendof
it
$141 million for the Legal Services Corp., which provides free legal representation in.civil cases for the poor. ing limits and paying for it out of expected federal surBut in an alliance of Democrats and moderate Repubh.- pi uses. De!J1ocrats, then conservatives, lost separate
cans, the House voted 242-178 Wednesday to boost that · attempts to knock that emergency designation o~t of the
bill.
figure to $250 million .
.
'
The Senate began debating the Interior bill last week
"Simple decency and a commitment to equal j ustice
as
Democrats
succeeded in knocking out four provisions
under the law should be enough" to win support for the
that they considered anti ·e nyif9!1.!11~~.~·
corporation, said Rep, Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y
But supporters of the d~leted language were expected
On the losing side were conservatives, who try lo .
slash Legal Services' budget virtually every year. .This to try reviving their provisions.
Among them is Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas,
year they cited a new report by Jhe General Accounting
who
for the fourth time wanls to delay the Interior
Office, ·Congress' official auditor, which found that five
of the corporation's local offices had ,~ounted 75,000 Department from forcing oil companies to pay higher
royalties to the government for drilling on federal lands.
cases in 1997that they couldn't document.
With the stan of fiscal 2000 less than two months
Rep. Dave Weldon. R-Fia.• called the undocumented
cases "one of the most outrageous misrepresentations of away, the House has so far approved 10 of the 13 annuany agency ... probably one of the worst in this centuty." al spending bills for 2000.
The Senate lias approved nine, including a $68 billion
The $250 million still falls short of the $300 million
provided for Legal Services this year. But with President measure financing agriculture and food progr!lfl\S.

•

�,..a

Commentary

ThUreiiiiY, ••vlllt I, 1811

The Daily Sentinel Banned in America; sold overseas
. 'EstUfislid ill J948
111 Cou" St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740 8112-21!18 • Fu: 1112-2157

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ROBERT L WINGETT

PUbllaher
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a ..... ,
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Qwrtcqlumn

Rural traffic fatalities
should concern everyone
lull rilllllld by Lt. Rlclwd E. G...,
On June I, nine pcojSie were killed and 83 people were mjun:d m Little
Rock, Arbnsas, when an American Airlines jet crashed after landmg, skidded sideways down the runway, and then slammed into a hght tower as tl left

By Jack AncleriOn
and Dou91U Cohn
" Banned tn America" is not the label of chmce
for producers of pcsbcides. but netther tS tl an
impediment to uporting. A c:ombinatton of
money pohbcs and insufficient c:onc:cm for the
hves of fon:tgn men, women and children is
allowing American companies to spew poisQn literally on a global scale.
An estimated 21 million pounds of pestictdes
that were hanned in the United States were
exported from U.S. ports during a recent two-year
period, mostly to underdeveloped countries. And
this is a low estimate because specific: product
names were eliminated from the shtpping records
for nearly two-thirds of the exported pesticides
A pestictde ts registered by the Environmental
ProtectiOn Agency (EPA) when tl is deemed to be
safe. The rule ts stratghtforward: no registration,
no dtstriburion, leaving companies
wtth an overwhelming mcentive to
· find other markets for thetr ll:Jecled products, which could more
properly be labeled "Banned
ONLY in America." This is hardly
the foundatton for a long-term foreign policy.
Here is the way it works: During the EPA's review of a produc:L
whtch can last up lo five years, no
restrictions are placed upon
exporting. Further, the EPA never
reviews the effects of a pesticide
manufactured stnctly for export.
Under regulatoons established tn
1970, exporters are requtred to
notify importers if 'a, pesticide is
not regtslered for use in the United
States The foreign tmporler ts .
required to sign a statement
acknowledgipg the product's quesIIOnable status, and the statement is
then forwarded to !tis government
The reality ts that such notifications often do not occur, and the
United States has sought to remedy
this through another treaty But the
Senate, ever mindful of wealthy
constituents, is dragging its feet on
rattficalton.
Further, when a company

beheves its pestictdc is about to be awarded the
"Banned in America" label, it can simply withdraw the product ·from the EPA's consideration
and avoid the stigma of reJection.
Separate from labeling are the problems asso-.
dated with the approv&amp;l process A General
Accounting Office investigation revtaled that
only Z50 of 20,000 pesticides had been reregis·
tered under the 1972 and 1988 laws which took
into o;onsideration the long-term effects of pesti·
cides. Such considerations dtd not exist before
1972, resulting in the phenomenon that older is
beller for~ exj1011ers of pesticides.
In the final analysis the exportation of questionable or banned products ts both a ~oral and a
foreign-policy issue. We remember when an individual approached us with an investment opportunity He said we oould make a killing in the expor·
tattoo of a substance that had been banned in

AmericL It was causma birth defects. What he
proposed wu perfectly le&amp;al and obviously
1mmoral. We pused on the killing. but the killin1
.. literally and financially •· continues. Perhaps
the EPA's expolt duties ought to come under the
auspices of the Stale Dcpartm~nt, when: foreign
policy .. if not moral pohcy •• IS conducted
Our government has spent decades overcom·
ing the foreign perc:eptton of the Ugly American
who supported dictators and thei~ minions in pursuit of Cold War containment policies. Now those
efforts may be for naught if a new cry is heard
from the millions · of people who have been
adversely affected by America's Ugly Products.
(Congrenlonal comapondent: EIMnor
Clift; lorelgn and nlltlonal -:reaponclant LH
Cullum.)
,
eopyrtgltlt-. Anderaon • Cohn
DlalrlbUied by unn~&lt;~ .,.....,. ~~ync~~.-te, 1nc.

'thursday, August 5, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

------~----------------------~--------~----~~~--------------------~

I Death Notices I
Dorothea Fisher

Friday, Aug. IS

-

Ol

Dorothea Fisher, Lincoln Htll, Pomeroy, dted thts mornmg al Veterans
Memorial Extended Care to Pomeroy Arrangements wtll be·announced by
Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

Clinton offers plan to,help
ailing U.S. steel industry

I llonalleld lsrt!t] •

I

INO

0.
olColumbua 15t·.-· I
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Inc

·o f6•• • • •~ •
&amp;.my Pt. Cloudy

the pavement
In 1996, a Boeing 747 exploded off Long Island, New York, and all 230
pMSengers on board were killed That same year, 110 people were killed
when a ValuJet plunged mto the Aorida Everglades
During each of these tragedies several peripheral toptcs remained conSianL The media fbcused considerable attention on the tremendous loss of
life and into the investigation of why the indilent had occurred. The g"t:ner·
a1 public focused thoughts and prayers on the families of those whose hves
tngically lost, and on the search for answers &amp;S to why an event so
tncic: could happen.
In each of the airline disasters listed above, then: was considerable attention paid to the stgntficant loss of life, and on what could be done to prevent
future incidents from occurring.
Now, focus attentton on Ohio roadways and examine the tragedies taking
place there. It may surprise some, and it should concern everyone, that more
people died on Ohio roadways during the first half of this year than tn any
of the airline'tragedtes this nab on has seen.
Through June of this year, 439 people were killed in rural traffic fatalities
in Ohio. This total marked a 6.3 percent increase over the 1998 total for the
'
same time period.
439 dea.ths in half of one year. Why ts there not a greater search for
answen? Where is the public outrage?
The bottom line is more and more people are &lt;lying every day on Ohio By TOM RAUM
, and reassert its fealty to a "one' Both Tai~an an~ China have lions bet~~·· the U.S. and \ai·
roadways, in largely preventable circumstances, yet very few people seem to, Auoctated Preu Writer
,
Cbina" policy, new pressure was increased mthtary f11ghfs over the wanese m1lttary forces and authon:U
care.
WASHINGTON (AP)
In commg from congressional conserv· Taiwan Strait, and on Monday China the sale of a broad array of ncl!'
The Ohio State Highway Patrol cares. Thalts why state troopers work so 1996, after Cbtna fired miss!les. and attves to do more to support Taiwan. tested a long-range missile. Chinese weaponry, including mi~sile d~fen_se
vigorously at reducing motor vehtcle speeds, gettmg people to buckle up, launched provocative war games in
The Senate Foreign Relations officials increased their criticism of systems and advanced atr-to·atr rots'
and at geHing impaired drivers off the roads
the Taiwan Stratt, the Umted States Committee planned a hearing today conltnued U.S. military sales to Tai- siles.
.
. ,
Despite an array of public education and enforcement efforts, a lack of tmmediately sent tw" aircraft carri- on legtslation by its chairman, Sen. wan.
No doubt mmdful of Cluna's
safety belt usc continues to be dtrectly tted to motor vehtcle fatalities.
ers and other warships steaming to Jesse Helms, R-N.C., to mcn:ase
Last week, during a meeting of "fan-the-flames" remarks, State
Wearing a safety belt does not totally. ensure safety in a motor vehicle the region.
,
military support for the island.
Asian leaders tn Singapore, Secre- Dep~rtment spokesman James P,.
crash. Nothing is that certain. Safety belts do, however, greatly reduce the
But such gunboat diplomacy
The legislation, co-authored by tary of State Madeleine Albright Rubtn urged Congress on Tuesday
chances of serious injury or death in the event of a motor vehicle crash.
seems the last thing on the Clinton Sen. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J., reasserted U.S. adherence to "one against any such effort
Through May of this year, 46 percent of dnvers ktlled tn Ohto traffic administration;s mtnd m the current would toughen tHe 1979 Tatwan China" and was indirectly critical of
He said the Tatwan Rel~ltons ~~
crashes were not wearing safety belts at the time of the crash, whtle 61 per· high-risk confrontatton between Relations Ac:t, whieh commits the Lee, Taiwan's president
of 1979 "has served l~ts nation
cent of passengers killed were not buckled up at the It me of the crash,
Lee's explanation as to what he extremely well, .. .' both wtth respect
China and Tatwan.
United States to Taiwan's defense.
Despite overwhelmmg evidence that safety belts are the single best safeThe admtnistratton must w11lk a
Congress passed the act after had tn mind with his slate-to-state to our support for Taiwan and with
ty device available to motor vehtcle occupants, too many an: still not buck· difficullltghlrope between tiS desire then-President
J1mmy
Carter remark "thus far don't quite do it," respect to promoting bolter relations
ling up, and too many of those people are paytng the ulltmate pnce wtlh thetr to improve relattons wtth Cbt~a and switched U.S. diplomatic relations Albright srud
with China." ~t should not be modi.
'
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~
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the U.S. legal obligation to defend from Taipei to Beijing.
Chinese Foreign Mtntsler Tang fied, Rubtn ~~d. .
.
The decision whether to wear a safety beltts not JU,St a personal decision. Tatwan, which has strong congres·
For decades, the peace has been Jiaxuan told her that China reserved
The admmtslralton behoves that
The deciston not to buckle up definitely affects other people. Whether it is stonal support.
maintamed lfy the deliberately tts right to use force and urged her to any such adjustment in the secqrity
vehicle occupants ejected in a side tmpact colliston, or approaching cars as
Recenlly, mcreased tenstons ambiguous "one-China" pohcy, tn be "very careful not to say anythtng act "would ~PI be helpful," the
a driver is slung to the passenger side of a car when the driv~r swerves to across the Taiwan Strait and conttn- which the United States acknowl· to fan the flames" of Taiwan inde- spokesman satd.
miss a deer in the roadway, choosing not to wear a safety belt ~ffects other ued Chmese anger with the acciden· edges that governments on both pendence.
.
"We don't think that given the
people.
·
_
tal U S bombmg of their embassy in sides of the Taiwan Strati hold that
But the Albright·Tang session did sensitivity of Taiwan, both to Tai·
Everyone must endure the higher insurance and medtcal costs as a result Belgrade raise the stakes for a meet- there is only one China
lillie to persuade Helms and other wan and to Clnna, that tfiere's evc:r a
of motorvehicle crash injuries and deaths
tng next month between President
Tensions have increased dramati· Taiwan boosters in Congress to back good time to make adjustments in a
Ohio's safety belt compliance rate affects everyone. The most ~cent Cltnton and Chtnese Prestdent Jiang cally in the past three weeks, roiled off. Instead, they're turning up the policy that has served our nation
safety belt survey indicated only a 63 pereenl compliance rate tn Ohio. '
well," he said.
.
Zemm.
by Taiwan President Lee Teng-hui 's heat.
Not only do we know safety belt oompliance ts a way to save hves on
The meeting, in New Zealand at statement that Taiwan and Cllina
Helms accuses the Clinton
But Helms, who still calls the
Ohto roadways, we also know the specific driving errors most frequently an economtc conference of Pacific should operate on a "stale·IO·state" administration of "a boundless country "Red China," said in a
lead to senous injury and fatal crashes.
Rim nations, wtll be the two leaders' basis The mainland government desire to appease the Cllinese com- statement distributed by his office
More times than not, the causative factor of a ·senqus crash ts either first opportunity to meet since U.S.- saw that as a step toward formal Tat· munists."
that he sttll views President Carter's
excessive speed or failure to yield. -That is agam the case wtth this year's Chinese relations began their recent wan mdependence.
,
The Helms-Torricelli "Taiwan dectston to switch diplomatic relarural fatahly increase
·
nosedive.
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China has always insisted tt Security Enhancement Act" would lions from Taipei to Beijiog "one of
The solutton to reducing fatal crashes is actually quite a stmple one, yet
Even as • the admmistralton would use force if Taiwan declared prohibtl limitations on arms sales to • the most regrettably cold-blooded ...
too many drivers are still not heedtng to the old adage of dnvtng slower and
sought to defuse the lalest d1spute independence.
piwan, establish direct commumca- dects~ons in America's history.'~
obeytng the posted speed limtts, buckltng up, and driving sober.
Despite all the efforts of state troopers tn communities throughout Ohio,
they cannot be successful at keeping the roads safe without help from the
motoring public. Ultimately, voluntary compliance of•motor vehicle laws is
the best way to make the roads safe
•
million •• mainly from Asia •• that had to be he started in 1996 mto Vice President AI 'Gore's
By Morton Kondracke
You can help us by reporting dangerous dnvers, by callmg 1-877·7·
infamous fund-raiser at a Buddhist tel)lple.
returned
,
, It smells- Desptte abundant
'
.
PATROL
Cameron reported that Mansfield, who sue·
He,
too,
has
refused
to
cooperate
wtth
Conevidence tffat Democratic fundLt Grau Is the commander ol the Gallla-Melga Post ol ths Ohio State
cesst't!lly
prosecuted former Rep. Jay Kim, R·
gress,
yet
was
permitted
to
plead
guilty
to
one
ratsers channeled ·Chinese govHighway Petrol.
Calif,
was
ordered to desist in a letter from Lee
felony count of making false statements to the
ernment m.oney mto the U.S.
'
Federal Election Commission. The charge carries Radek, head of the public integrity section of the
election carnpaogn m 1996, no
a maxtmum sentence of up to six years in prison Justice Department, on grounds that tl was a mat·
one is going to jail
and fines of $350,000, btit prosecutors recom- ter for an independent counsel to investigate.
One by one, Allomey GenerBy The Auochlted Preas
mended that Trie get a penalty of three years' pro- However, no tndependent counsel was ever
Today is Thursday, Aug 5,lhe 217lh day of 1999 There are 148 days left al Janet Reno's Jusltce Departappomted •· wtth Radek reportedly one of those
batt on.
ment has cui generous plea barin the year.
The third maJor Cllinagate fund-raiser, Johnny most vociferously urging Reno not to take that
gains with the money launderToday's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 5, 1962, actress Marilyn Monroe, 36, was found dead in her Los ers and hasn't come near prosecuting any Demo· Chung, was sentenced tn December 1998 to pro· step.
Burton also has been chasing down evidence,
bation and community service But at least Chun
Angeles home; her death was ruled a ''probable sutctde" from an overdose ' cratic Party or White House officials
did
cooperate
with
Congre!IS,
relating
howll!..!
ialso
reported by Cameron, that in 1997 the Justice
And tf there os any conneclton between Chiof sleeptng pills,
nese
general
of
military
intelligence
told
h
,
Department
ordered the immediate return to
nese money and cozy Clinton policy toward
On this date:
Chtna, tt's unltkely to be disoovered as Justice lets "we really Jil{. your prestdent" and "we hope e Washington of an FBI agent and prosecutor, sdnl
In 1861, the federal government levted an income tax for the first time.
In 1864, during the Civil War, Umon Adm. Davod G Farragut is srud to the fund ,ratsers off and removes lhetr mcentive to will be re-elected," and channeled $300,000 to to Ltllle Rock, Ark., to stop documents from
ing shredded by Trie 's secretary.
him, $35,000 of which he gave to the Democratic
have given his famous orde(, ·"Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!" as he talk. ·~ j
And Burton charges that, for two years, the
National
Commtllee.
Today, one of the maJor figures in Chinagate,
led his fleet against Mobile Bay, Alabama.
Chung
also
wore
an
FBI
body
wire
when
an
iusltce
Department failed to follow up on inforIn 1884, the cornerstone for the Statue o( Ltberly was laid on Bedloe's John Huang, ts scheduled to be sentenced to a fine
and communtly servtce after pleadmg guilty lo emtssary of the general warned him to keep hts mation it had about the wire transfer of $300,000
llland in New York Harbor
minor charges having nothing to do with the $1.6 mouth shut and to especially conceai •Cllina's 10 Cbung through a Citibank aca&gt;unt of Liu
In 1914, the first electric traffic lights were installed, in aeveland, Ohio
In 1924, the comic strip "Lillie Orphan Annie," by Harold Gray, made its mtlhon he ratsed that the Democratic Party was interest in doing business with U,S. space tech· Chaoying, a Cbinese military officer, aerospace
executive and daughter of China's former military
nology firms.
forced to return
debut
chief.
Chung's
testimony
demonstrites
that
Sen.
Instead, the Justice Department charged him
In 1957, "Amen can Bandstand," hosted by Dtck Oark, made tts network
Burton has appealed to Reno and to federal
with making two illegal donaltons worth $7,500 Fred Thompson, R-Tenn., was not wrong in 1997
debut on ABC
he
alleged
-to
much
hooting
from
Democwhen
judges
in Little Rock and California to hold off
in
two
Californta
campaigns
in
1993
and
1994
In 1963, the United States, Britain and the Soviet Unton signed a treaty
rats
··that
Chtna
attempted
to
influence
the
1996
of Trie and Huang to give them an
the
sentencing
Huang
formerly
was
an
employee
of
the
in Moscow bannmg nuclear tests tn the atmosphere, in space and under
U.S.
elections.
Indonesian
Lippa
Group,
which
does
big
bustness
to
testify before his Government
incentive
water.
What's
disturbing
is
that
Thompson
and
other
Reform
Committee,
in
Cllina
Whtle
an
official
of
the
Commerce
In 1969,the U.S. space probe "Mariner VII" Hew by Mars, sendmg back
Cbances are, the fund-raisers will get off The
Department with a top-secret clearance, he Republican leaders haven't kept energetically
photographs and scientific data.
digging
into
the
finance
scandal,
leaving
the
work
former
forchief counsel in Thompson's 1997 c:am·
allegedly
made
mysterious
phone
calls
to
his
In 1981, the federal government began firing atr traffic controllers who
to
a
few
journalists,
right-wing
activists
and
Rep.
mer
employer.
Then
he
was
a
Democratic
fundpaign
finance
probe, Mtchacl Madtgan, said that
had gone out on strike.
•
who's
easily
dismissed
for
Dan
Burton,
R-Ind.,
ratser
woth
close
lies
to
the
White
House.
the
plea
bargains
have "all the earmarks of someIn 1984, actor Richard Burton died at a hosp11al in Geneva, Switzerland;
hyper-partisanship.
spite
of
all
the
tantalozing
invesltgaltve
leads
In
thing
betng
swept
under the rug "
at the age of 58.
Last
week,
Burton
blasted
Reno
for
prestdtng
-and
tn
sptte
of
hts
utter
Indeed,
they
.do.
Before the llvidence dtsap.Huang
represents
Ten years ago: Five Central American presidents began meeting in Hon·
over
an
invesltgation
thai
"has
been
grossly
refusal
to
cooperate
in
congressional
Cllmagate
pears, congressional Republicans need to create a
duras to discuss a timetable for dismantling Ntcaraguan Contra bases.
~relict in gelling the facts" and cutting "sweet·
invesltgaltons
··Justice
ts
closing
out
its
probe
of
select
commltlee to get to the boltom of Chtna•
Five years ago: A three-judge panel of the U S. Court of Appeals in Washheart
deals
for
presidenttal
friends."
Huang
with
a
slap
on
the
wnst
and
a
promtse
to
gate
and
see whether U.S pohcy was bought for
Ington chose Kenneth W. Starr to take over the Whitewater invesltgation
Burton
JS pursumg some tntcrcstmg avenues,
bring
no
further
charges
agamst
campaign
cash.
hom.
from Robert Fiske.
(Morton
Kondrock•
Ia nacutt11• editor ol RoH
such
as
a
report
by
Carl
Cameron
of
Fox
News
Later
this
month,
Justice
is
scheduled
to
close
One year ago: Iraqi Prest dent Saddam Hussem broke off cooperation
can,
newapapar of Capitol Hill.)
that
a
former
crack
federal
prosecutor
in
Califorthe
books,
too,
on
President
Clinton's
friend,
Yah
with U.N. weapons inspectors and demanded the commtssion monitoring
Ltn "Charlie" Tne, who raised more than $1 3 nia, Steven Mansfield, was ordered to halt a probe Copyrlghl1- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
the weapons be reorganized.

-

Admini$tration on tightrope over China-Taiwan

GOP .rJ:Iust launch new probe of Chinagate

---Today _In History...,...----'-

til.-

J
•

The Daily

ClOUdy

snow.rt

T storms

Rain

Flumea

Snow

lot

Mostly sunny skies will
pr~vaU in ~rea on Friday
By The Aabclated PrHa
High pressure butldtng across Ohto wtll provtde more pleasant weath~r gomg mto the weekend, forecasters said.
Except for a few clouds in the far north, skies will be mostly sunny on
Friday, with highs 80-85.
Tomght, temperatures wtU drop into the 50s under clear sktes.
Storm clouds could roll into the stale Friday- night. There w1ll be a
I c~tan•:e of showers and thunderstorms slatewtde on Saturday
The record-high temperature for lhts date at the Columbus weather station was 103 degrees in 1918 whtle the record low was 46 in 1951 Sun·
set tontght wtll be at 8:42p.m. and sunrise Frtday at 6:34am.
Weather forecast:
Tonight. ..Ciear. Lows in the upper 50s. Light and vanable wmd
Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs from the upper 80s to near 90.
Fnday night...Mostly clear. Lows 110 to 65.
Extended Forecast:
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Highs to the upper 80s
Sunda,y.. Partly cloudy wtlh a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
ru&gt;ws in the mid
and highs in the mid and upper 80s.
Mcmday ... Pilrtly cloudy wtlh a chance of showers and thunder5torms
f L&lt;&gt;ws m
mi&lt;H&gt;!Js and htghs m the mtd 80s.

69s

•
h
f
Man denles c arges 0

kl.lll" ng hl"s

stepchil~ren

By JAM~S HANNAH
Aaaoclated Preas Writer
A man
, URBANA (AP) accused of ktlhng his two stepchtl~ren proclaimed hts innocence
today in hts first court appearance
·
in the case.
"You know I dtdn't do th1s, and
I'll prove it," Kevin Neal told the
victims' mother, Sue Neal, as he sat
down at the defense table tn Champaign County Common Pleas Court
Sue Neal, who cned tbroughout
the 10-minute proceedtng, told
friends that tl wasn't fatr
"He's still 1tere and my ktds
aren't here," she told those comforting her. She refused comment
after the hearing.
Kevm Neal, 33, was tndtcted tn
May on charges of aggravated 'IIUr·
dcr, kidnapping, offenses against a
human corpse and tampenng with
evtdence 10 the deaths of lndta
Smith, 11, and her half-brother,
Cody Smtih, 4. The indtctment

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acc•ntt. If you know of an error In a
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The main number Is 992~115~. Depart~
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By KEVIN GALVIN
Asaoclated Preaa Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Chnton admintslrattOn has deyeloped a plan to bolster the troubled
steel tndustry agamst unfair trade
practtces, tncludtng a proposal to
fight tnternational loans that would
substdtze tmports
Admtmstraltqn offtctals were
presenting the proposals to industry
chtefs and labor leaders at a White
House meeltng today as Congress
sent Prestdent Chnton a $1.5 boll ion
loan package atmed tn part at help-'
ing steel producers.
Surging steel imports in recent
years have dnven down pnces and
forced at least three publicly traded
Amencan steel compames to
declare bankruptcy
Imports have begun to recede
and the admmistralton 's focus conhnues to be on enforcmg extsting
trade laws. But tndustry and labor
have pressed for tougher steps, and
loday's sesston aimed al reassunng
them the steel remams a pri6nty.
"We're gotng to put forward an
action plan that bastcally says we

and International Monetary Fund
loans that would further substdtze
foretgn steel mduslnes and ensure
that the next round of World Trade
Organization talks maintains strong
sanctions against unfair trade.
-A comprehenstve Commerce
Department n:vtew of extsltng government substdies of foreign mdus·
lnes and other "market destroymg
trade barners," such as the decltne
in production of iron ore and coke
-Participation tn global forums
on unfatr trade practices that can
lead to excess capactfy tn the steel
market, deflatmg prices.
The House gave final congresstonal approval Wednesday to federal guarantees for $1.5 billion in
loans for steel, otl and natural gas
compantes, aimmg to help mdustnes
that have been rocked by low pnces
The 246-176 vote came seven
weeks after the Senate passed the
btll by a 63·34 vote. Supporters saod
they expected Cltnton to stgn th~
legtslahon.
Opponents said the measure was
little better than the , protecttomsm
the U.S. government critocozes other

are not done," one administratiOn

countnes for.

offictal satd " We wtll not tolerate
unfair trade."
The industry has foled trade complamls agamst a vanety of coun·
tnes, and won several cases, but
those take a long tome and have to
be handled for one ktnd of steel at a
ttme.
' Manufacturers have complamed
that as soon as one country reduces
exports of a certam type of steel,
another steps up tts exports, leavmg
American docks JUSt as loaded with
mexpenstve ,
hard-to-competeagiu nst steel
The issue has vexed Vice President AI Gore as hts prestdenltal
campaign courts labor's support.
The Umted Steel Workers union has

Sen. Robert Byrd, D·W.'{a.,
pushed the steel atd through the Senale earlier lhts year 10 legtslatton
paying for the air campaign agamst
Yugoslavta. II was designed to help
only some small steel companoes,
10clud10g Wetrton Steel tn West Vir·
gmta.
He took tl off that bill in
exchange for promtses that Congress would constder tl separately
Sen. Pete Domenict, R-N.M., won a
simtlar pledge for asSistance for ool
and gas compantes.
The bill would provide steel companies federal guarantees for S1 biihon 10 loans. Steel companoes would
beeligjbletoborrowupto$250miilion each at market interest rates.

opposed an early endorsement princtpally because of, theor dtfferences
Wtlh the admtnoslrahon over trade
AFL-CIO
President
John
Sweeney and George Becker, presi·
dent of the Steel Workers, were
expected at the sessiOn wtth Whtle
House Chtef of Staff John Podesta,
Commerce Secretary William Daley
and Gene Sperling, the prestdent's
economtc advoser, The heads of
t;!ethlehem Steel and Wetrton Steel
also were auending
Ar)long the proposals were:
~A pledge to block World Bank

oil and gas producers and servtce compames could borrow up to
$10 milhon each from a fund guaranteeing $500 mtlhon 10 loans.
The measure would cost taxpayers an estimated $270 molhon to
back the loans That would come
from tnmming federal administra·
tive costs.
A $187 mtllion tax break for the
struggling U.S steel mdustry fell by
the wayside Wednesday as Congress rushed to assemble its tax·cut
bill before the August congressiOnal
recess.

menl at an afternoon news conference

10 Wash10gt6n.
The safety of foretgn earners has
become an issue for U.S rurlines
because many of them now have part·
nerships wtth ove(SC3S atrhnes known
as "code-shares."
Under such an arrangement, the
carriers buy ltekets on each other's
planes and then sell them lo passengers on connect10g fltghts as tf they
were thetr own. Under those circum·
stances, a passenger wtlh a UmtedAirhnes hcket may fly on a Umted plane
to New York and then transfer for a
Hight to Europe wtth the airhne's German partner, Lufthansa, even though
the ltcket still reads "Umted" and has
a United fltght number.
Both carriers have excellent safety
recbrds, and atrhnes favor such partnerships because it allows them to
pmJecl the tmage of a larger route network.lt also gtves passehgers the abtlity to make seamless connecttons
between atrhnes.

alleges thai the crimes were commttled wtlh a sexual motovatton.
Champaign County Prosecutor
Ntck Selvaggio has satd he wtll
seek the death penalty.
The chtldren vanoshed July 9,
1997 Neal told poltce they dtsappea red from theor yard while he was
cleaning the house.
On Sep\. 6, 1997, a farmer found
the badly decomposed remaons of
the chtldren stde-by-stde near Nettie Creek Cemetery, about three
mtles from their house m thts comI I
mumly about 35 mtles northeast of
Dayton.
Dunng today's heanng in a near- By GLEN JOHNSON
ly full courtroom, Judge Roger Wil· Associated
Press WrHer
1
son found Neal to be indtgenl and
WASHJNGTON/ (AP) MaJor
saod he w111 appoml a lawyer. An U.S. atrlines and the Pentagon have
arratgnment wtll be scheduled once reached an agreement unde( whtch the
Neal has a lawyer.
atrlines wtli check the safety of thetr
Neal, weanng an orange Jatl sutt foretgn partners who help them fly
am! shackles, asked the Judge for Arnencan !t:oaps overseas.
evtdence comptled in the case and
The agreement, a descendant of
thai the tnal be moved out of th e concern about troop safety stemmtng
area.
from a 1985 charter crnsh in NewWtlsolt satd he would make no foundland that killed 248 U.S. soldecisions unlll Neal had a lawyer.
dters, should also help prevent comShortly after the chtldren dtsap- mereta! passengers from ending up on
pearcd, Neal began servmg a 15- foretgn carriers with substaridard safeyear sentence in Indiana on a con· ly records.
vtclton for sexual battery and cnmThe U.S. atrhnes plan to certtfy
mal confinement of an lndtana~hsIll-their foreign fltght partners meet
woman in 1995. Prosecutors
specofic safely requoremenls, such as
Neal lied up a female netg or
havmg a top offictal dedtcated to safeheld her at gunpomt and threatened ty and matntenance and pilot traimng
to rape her.
programs that meet spectfic standards.
Neal was extradited from lndiOffipals fo:om the aorlmes and the
ana to face the OhiO charges
mtlitary were to announce the agree·

u.s.

A"rl·n es, p ent agon agree UpOn
safety checks for foreign partners

'

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...................... 36'·
Akzo ........................................ 43

AmrTech ........................•......72'·
Ashland .Oii ............ .,............ 39Y.
AT&amp;T ............................ .........49'1.
Bank One ................ ., .. .,,.,., ... 51).
Bob Evans ............................19'i.
Botg-Warner .......... .,., .. ., ....... 49l.
Champion .............................. 6'1.
Charm Shps .......... ., ......, .... ....6Y
.
City Holdlng ............................ 27
Federal Mogul ......... :.. .,. ., ..... 42'!.e
Flrstar ................................... 25Y.
Gannett ............. .,..................70i.
Kmart ...................................... 14
Kroger ....... ., ..........................25 Y,
Lands End ............................ 42~
Limited., .. ., ... .,... .,................. 44').
Oak Hill Flni .......................... 1BY
,
OVB ........... .,........................ ..33'1.
One Valley ........................... 37'1'.
Peoples ., ....... ........................ 27Y
,
Prem Flnl ............................... 12~
Rockwell .................. ., . ., ..57"!.e
RD!Shell ......................... ....... 62'1.

Sears ....... .............................40~.
Shoney's ......................... ....... 2\

Wendy's ............................. 28'Y.
Worthington ....................... 14'•

-·-·Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

Meigs EMS logs 12 calls
8:26 p m., Palmer Street, Faye
Units of the Metgs County EmerWallace,
treated at the scene.
gency Medical Servtce recorded 12
REEDSVILLE
calls for asststance Wednesday.
2:03 p.m., Swan Road, Ruth
Umts respondmg mcluded:
Stethem, Camden-Clark Memonal
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:46 a m • Baum Addttion, Hosptlal.
RUTlAND
,
Chester, Betty Toney, Veterans
7:09 p.m , volunteer fire depart·
Memorial Hosptlal, Pomeroy squad
menl and squad to Parkinson ~&lt;:1._
asststed ;
I :49 a.m., Metgs Mtne 2, Roger • automobole ftre, Bnan delaiid
McDade, Holzer Medtcal Center;
owner. no IDJUnes reported
SYRACUSE
8 a.m., state Route 7, Pomeroy,
10:56 a.m., Syracuse Traoler
Harold Ntce, HMC,
12·48 p m, East Mam Street, Park, Barbara Stahl, VMH, Central
Dtspatch squad assisted,
Pomeroy, Lois Hawley, HMC;
10·40 p.m. , College Road ,
5:09 p.m., Side Hill Road, Rutland, Carol Hubbard, Pleasant Val- Kathryn Crow, HMC, Central Dis·
ley Hosptlal, Rutland squad assisted. patch squad assisted.
MIDDLEPORT
11:24 am , Bradbury Road,
Arlene Davts, HMC, Central Dispatch squad assisted;
5:07 p.m., Overbrook *'ursmg
Center, Albert Dement, HMC;

.i"i&lt;ANAUGA.oi:ii\iE::i~t.i·l
FRI , SAT, SUN &amp; MON
.

·-..-

...--·
-...-.

ADAM

SANO~ER

BIG DADDY'""
ANO

AMERICAN PIE •

....
·..

...
........

Charges pending in bicycle theft
Metgs County Shenff James M Soulsby reports that c harge' are pending agamst two boys, ages 15 and 12, 10 the theft of a b•cyck fro m the
Rick Bamnger restdence Qn Coolvtlle Road on the weekend of July 16
The bicycle was recovered, but woth swotched parts, the report stated,
and the two JUVentles were rel eased to thetr parents pendong a court hearing.
The older boy will also face charges of rece tvong and dosposong of
stolen pl.oJ't"'y. from a breakmg and ent enng o n Number None Road doscovered last weekend
cntcnng have
Soulsby reported all the otems stolen in the breaktng
been recovered with the exceplton of a spottmg scope wh1ch was left wot h
a person out-of-county

arm

Special speaker announced
The Rev Bob Robinson Wtll the guest mm .. ter at the ror,t Baptost
Church in Mtddle por:t Sunday Toptc of the 10 J5 se rmon wtll be Chnstian Dtscipleshop Requtres More than a T-Sh ort C loche " Fo r lh&lt; Sunday
evenmg service, Mrs Jo an Robmson will be guest sol01..,t. tht: Rev Robmson wtll speak on "Three Pholoso phtc~ of Lofc., at 7 p m

Sayre reunion set

·

The Sayre Famtly reunoon "'"be held Sunday, Aug I&lt;. at noon .11 Star
Mtll Park, Racme.

VFW dance on Saturday
The Tupwrs Pla ons VFW 9053 wtll have a rou nd and squa re dance S.!l "
urday. 8 to II p.m True Country to pro\lde musoc. Ronnoc Wood. caller

Gospel singers to perform
There woll be specoal songers, Lewts a nd Garrett, a\ the 10 .10 a m Sun day service at the Fatth Full Gospel Church. Long Botto m

Board to meet
Thf:; Me1gs County Board

of Elt::ctlons will met.:t T llt:SU.t\ &lt;J

d

m

Bible school set,
Vacatton Boble school wtll be he ld at the Mon crsv ol k Uno ted Meohodost
Church, Monday through Froda) , 6to 8 30 p m More on turon.Ji o~n rnoy be
obtatned by calhng Sheryl Roush
'

Vacation bible School to start Monday
Vacalton Boble School al the Racone Forst Baptost ChurLh "'" he held
Aug 8-12, 7 p m There woll be classes tor all ages Dan Ondr.1 .m"l, woll
put chalk art, musoc and hghtong onto a tapestry of sogh t, 'ound 111d
ratton. For a rode call 949-3131

""P'·

Oklahomans reclaim serene
space in Murr~h' Plaza
By CAROL COLE
Associated Press Writer
OKLAHOMA' CITY (AP)
The plaza adjacent to where the
Alfred P. Murrah Federal Buoldtng
once stood reopened qutetly today,
a serene space for workers and
vtsitors to stop amod the sounds of
a cascadmg fountain and reflect
on .theiT memones
The plaza used to be a perfect
lunchltm e hangoLtt. with workers
eat tng from brown bags tn the
mtdday sun
That was before A pro I 19, 1995 ,
when a bomb ropped apart the
butldmg, ktlltng 168 people and
InJuring hundreds of others.
'
The restoratiOn by the General
Serv1ces
AdmmJslraiJOn
1s
respectful of the plaza's place tn
htstory, remembered as a stagtng
area and triage center for the rescue effort that ternble day, but
also as a popular spot for employ ee gatherongs tn years past.
Now sounds of water cascadong
over a semt-cylindrocal Carnelian
grantle founlatn wtll soothe workers tak•ng a break or VISitors
observmg progress ot butldtng the
Oklahoma City National Memonal.
"For some of us there 's bad
memones here, but It's a lo l mce r
now," satd John Cresswell, who
was a GSA mamtenance mechan1 c
at the Murrah buoldong
He was at the plaza tho s mo rn tng to check tl out
"I thonk ol 's beauttful It adds to
the healong proc ess " sa od GSA
employee Ron Brown
Another GSA worker, Rober!
Breaux, sa td he hoped coon s
tossed on the fountaon would go
toward the bombong me moroal
" It's the mos t peaceful thong
I' ve ever seen m an urban area."
George Hozendorf, spectal ass ostant to the regoonal admono stralo r
of the GSA, s a td Wednesday

I PR ING VALLEY CINEMA
446•45 24

Oli10H""&gt;UT[

I~IIJ

JM

'~WI

,t

"'~l&gt;N 1'1"1

7

INSPECTOR GADGET (PG)
7.00 &amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1 00 &amp; 3'20

AMERICAN PIE (R)
1 20 &amp; II 20 OAILV
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1 20 &amp; 3 20

BIG DADDY (PG13)
700&amp;9100AILY
• MATINEES SAT/SUN I 00 &amp; 3 1Q
SEA (R)

7 10&amp; 9 100AILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1 10 &amp;3·10
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHf

1 00 &amp; 9 30 DAILY
MATINEES SATISUN t 00 &amp; 3 30

II

Doors open A.t 12·30 I'M

*

..

**~..., ~*

IIM'IY BilliE "' 1:30, 4:00, 7:15;"9:45
ltaiYIIil ~ Rmllll&lt;le ~Wit Ebooo .t&lt;r ··'"
IIIP£CT1I um 1·00,a:oo.5oo.1:00, s·!Jj

[ldilll&lt;h!ml i;Jt:hew"""- illrro FJ" ,~•. o ,,

BIG DAIIIY"", 1:00,3:15,5:30,7 45, 1a 00
[Comedylidamiionde• JreiLa,•eri,J~

• • .,

A11REM PI ~ 1:00,3:30,5:45, 8;00, 10:15

IC«ned!lJao&gt;o ilr;9s.1Jys;ro1..-.gao

f5)

LAKE PLACID '' 1:15, 3:45, i:3ll4(1

[ldm'ldom)Bnl?JI Rroa B1 f~Ji:llr ~~ ;•,,

~

Q

TIIIIAII'iiNl ""'' 2:110, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30

MATINEES SAT/SUN 1 1S &amp; 3-40
NO PASSES. NO BARGAIN NIGHT

RUNAWAY BRIDE (PG)

a.!) Is !Itt rNI

TIIRZAN ~ e1:45, 4:15,6:45, 8:45
if""lyiAnlmalediVoces at Tooy Goldw\" Mm e :,.,,

WILD, WILD, WEST (PG13)
7 tS &amp;II 40 DAILV

S~UE

Th e ele vated pld z.o " h&gt;c.Jt,,J
over the garage 11nmedo.ot d) 'oulh
of where th e tederal hudL! u1g unu:·
stood
The re ~ r e nat l\ ~: trt:c-" and
plant s on 47 planter;. 'tlnld to
cl osely mat ch the ,o rogonal l'l/7
landscapong
" It 's really ntc~ [ hn~d 11 l
appre913tcd that tht;y tn~.d t&lt; r li
back th e on g1na!.
,.,,d Jn 1
Denny, father of ~u r\-t\m.., H1:..tn·
don and Re becc .1 wh n \\ ~;re 1n thL
bulldmg's day care \..t'Olt r 1h1,.: d t'
of the bombong
The prOJ eCt also ha' ontt 'I"'
ttve stgns refcrnng I•' dlitl
nt
reff!ren ce p O H]iS and thr c 1 ,,.
flagpol es pu t u p m r~trl 'h • ... l~lr­
wuh the nat iOna l mc nw r1II
Arwng those wh o pla nned I&lt; •
return IS bomb tng sun IVOJ PJul
Heath, a psycholog J"'t 111 tht·
Departme nt of Veteran ~ ~\!l:.ltr.,
" h 's a wondt.: rlu l ""tl'P tnr~
ward ," he sa td.
''Not be mg .1 ble w l:'!nn~ '&gt;nillL·
on e bac k dne"in t n1h 'ou trom
havmg tht: op po rt unl t\ (II ! \pt.:n
encrng th e po~JtJ\ ( m . mnn o!
thos e peop le; wh en ' ''· " ' "
around o n the pi .JZd . H~ .Jth ,.tid

~IIWy)OavdliQoele.l\jiH&gt;;;I 0avt:·.

lOX OffiCE Will OPIN AT 6:30 PM
, FOR EVENING SNOWS,
12:30 PM FOR SAT ' SUN MATtHEIS

DEEP

•• Just .so calmt1ng ~,

UPETS 1111 SPliCE ' f:30, 7' I0

(FRI 7/30 • THURS 8/5199)

THE HAUNTING (R)

520 W. Main St. Pomeroy, OH
P.hone 992-2588
V~nton - 388-8603
Gallipolis - 446-0852

Page 3

•nt1nPI •

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,.

I• '·

Will Will Mil f'l1lJ 2:15, 4'45, 7"15 9:45

$

(C!modr) WI Slo&lt;l\ Ko• Kr&lt; KW&lt;'J &amp;nt

1HP 11.11 SEA '' 2:311, 4:50, 7:311, 9:50
[llriwlsmr.rn.. n.m. ... cC.nJ "'"'" ,m;
EYES WIDE SHUT ' 41$) 4:00, 9:15

[illol)T11n C..S. 1m~ ~• ...- , !11 )rt• ,.,:.,

NntJ Shows SIRrting Frili4y
~CMMUIWI

•11:00 , 3:3ll, 8:45,9'15

[llilli-1Pl!&lt;te Q

SIX1H S8VSE

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1111W GIANT

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1:00, 3:45, G:OO, ll:3ll

[H«!w)lirl&lt;l \'lils Ha&lt;y ~ CW~ T;o :.Oi&lt;•e ~" ~ 'n

1·15, 8'15, 5:15, 7:30
h,-, ~",,
MYSTBIY MBV ""''•1:45,4:15,7:00, 9:5ll
~llliyl m~d "'"'liJevr&lt;&lt;I1J51,

[Colldyl Ben Sile HaM Ala~ Wk • Mo.1 • •

I

RICHARO GERE, JULIA ROBERTS
7 00 &amp; 9 20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN I 00 &amp; 3 20
NO PASSES NO BARGAIN NIGHT

Ulll1!alPROlCh l ~:00,4.30, 7:45,10.:0
1"-1 """' lkmli.E V.:..ll'ilws jy" .MRtl~tee$

'.

Shown Et'elydaJ'
ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

•

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

ThunMia~Auguat5,1t88

Page4

Rangers whip Twins 10-0, tie Tribe for baseball's best mark

Thur.dlly, August S. 1e99

·

Gwynn, McGwire
close in on career
·homer, hit marks

Am er ica n Leagu e ro undup
By BRIAN ORII'ICE

By JOSH DUBOW
AP Sports Writer
It would only be fitting if the
greatest home run hitter and the best
a verage hitter of this generation
reached their career milestones on
the·same field on the same day.
Mark McGwire hit his · 499th
career home run Wednesday night
and Tony Gwynn had a grand slam
and two sin gles, gi.ving him 2,998
career hits and leaving both players
poi sed to make history when they
.'pl ay again in St. .Louis tonight.
" It would be great," Gwynn said
after the . Cardinals beat his San
Diego Padres 7-6. "Bul you kind of
feel gUJlty hecause this is Mark 's
town . I wi s h we c ould kind of each
have our moment. hut 1 just want to '
GOTCHAI - Cincinnnati second sacker Pokey Reese lays the
leather on the Colorado Rockies' Dante Bichette after Bichette tried
to stretch a single into a double in the fourth inning of Wednesday
night"s National League game in Cincinnati, where the Reds won 6·
3. (AP)

get

·
1Ius

d

Somebody should remmd the Texas Ranaers that
Clevelan~ and New York are supposed to be the class of
the Amencan Leajlue. .
.
. ,
Esteban LoaiZa pitched stx shutout anmngs
W~dnesday ~igbt. and Texas improved to 10-0 against
Mmn.e sota thts ~ason as the Rangers~ the TWans 3·1
and lied the Indtans for the best reconl m basebalL
The Yankees sal a half·game behmd both teams.
Te.xas manager Johnny Oates, whose learn has won
, four m·.a, row and as 17,3 smce the All-Star break, WlS
~IY. tmp~ssed.
.
••
. .. .
Right now, what does. at get me? Oates srud. It ts
part of our goaL We. want to have home-field .advanta,ge.
But other than feeling ~ood., about how we
playmg
nght now, It gets us notbang.
.
.
The Rangers can only b~pe that th~ar succe~ agrunst
remrunmg foes matches .!hear doma~alton of Mmnes~ta.
The1r stnng of wms agrultst the TWans are !he most m a
season against one team since winning II straight
ag~.nst Oakland in 1,977.
. .
.
~f I bad a vot~, I d say !hey ~ the ~SI ~am an baseball, Mtnnesora s Denny Ha&lt;:kang saad. These guys
are playing with a purpose."

I ~ hitless innings for the victory. ,

In other NL games, it was New
York 9, Milwaukee 5; Pittsburgh 3,
Atlanta 2; the Cubs 5, Montreal I;
Los Angeles 2. Houston I; Arizona
8, San Francisco 4; and Philadelphia
4, Aorida I.
Mets 9, Brewers S
Robin Ventura homered for the
seventh time in eight games and
Kenny Rogers (1 -0) earned his first ·
victory in the NL as New York completed a three-game sweep at
Milwaukee.
The Mets, 16-4 since the All -Star
l,&gt;reak, increased their lead in the NL
East to two games over Atlanta.
Marquis Grissom , Jeff Cirillo and
Geoff Jenkins ., homered . .for
Milwaukee, which has lost five
straight and 10 of 12 . Kyle Peterson
( 1-2 ) took the loss.
•

n:

Four-pronge~

At Pittsburgh, John Smollz (8·5)
remained winless in six starts since

one.
" I just want Jo get '.'."" hits, take June 18 as Pittsburgh took advantage
lny bows. and mu ve on ·
of second baseman Bret Boone 's
JUSTICE SCO-RES-· The Cleveland Indians' Dava'd Justt'pe
.
~ slides
10
, There s no place McGw,(e would throwing error beat Atlanta.
into Boston backstop Lenny Webster on a double by Jacob Cruz In
rather be than at Busch Stad1um .
If the season ended after the ninth Inning of Wednesday night"s American League game in
watchmg Gwynn's quest for }.000 . .. Wednesday' s games , the Braves Boston, where the Red Sox won 7·2. (AP)
Never before has one player reached would be out of the playolfs lor the
500 home runs and another reached firSt time since 1990. Atlanta, which .
3.000 hits in the same game.
has won seven straight division titles ,
" If you love the game of baseball , is three percentage points behind the
.I would think you'd try to find a way Red s in the wild-card mce.
into the ballpark, " MeG wire said. " It
Todd Ritchie (I 0-7) gave up two
should be exciting."
runs in eight innings and Mike
By JOE KAY
Nea d c t2 -3) has won both of his
Gwynn got a standing ovation Williams pitched the ninth for his
CINCINNATI (AP) - The li nal starts since (ctuming from his seo- after each of his hits, which left him 16th save .
·
By JIMMY GOLEN ·
thing 1 tell the young pitchers on this
Cubs S, Expos I
BOSTON (AP)- Mark Ponugal team,'' he said. "They booed me off
pieces of the puzz le seem to be fit - ond extended stay on the disabled two shy of becoming the 22nd memting in place for the Cmcmnati Reds. li st because of weakness in the back bcr of the 3,000-hit club. His third
Sosa hit his major league-leading is 36- old enough to remember a ,the field before, and I'm sure it will
In desperate need of pit ching , of his pitching s.houlder. .,
.
career gmnd slam in the fifth inning 42nd home .run and struggling Steve time when complete games weren't happen again. "
they were able to trade for Juan
The left-bander gave uP three hit s put the Padres ahead 6-3 and drew an Trachsel (4· 14) pitched a five-hitler the rarity that they are today. At his
Not this time, though.
Guzman and get Denny Neagle bac k and one run in six mnings to a n even larger ovation from the 43 ,546 at Chicago.
age, he isn't pitching too many of
Portugal struck , out five and ·
from the disabled li st .inthe past six offense that leads the NL in ~atling fans .
Sosaledoffthesixthbyhittingan. them .
walked none before running into
days .
'··
:· average and hits. It was a sign of
"I can 't 1explain it," Gwynn said. 0-1 pitch from Jeremy ·Powell (0-4)
"Nomar Garciaparra and Val trouble in the ninth the on.ly
Unable to win at home JilOSt of how far he's come.
· "You could not envision what hap- into the left-field bleachers to give (John Valentin) were getting on me a inning the Indians mustered more
the. season, they fin ally got their
When Neagl e , la' t faced the · pened. It 's a great, great feeling the Cubs a 3·0 lead.
little bit about being old anti, not than one hit, geltin$· f.bree for !heir
Cinergy Field record io .500 for the Rockies· ar Coors Field on May 19, because I'm not at home."
Dodgers 2, Astros 1
. being able to finish the game.-" only earned run. Tins time, Ponugal
McGwire was having a quiet
At Houston , Kevin &amp;rown pitched Portugal said Wednesday after get· got a big hand when he left, and
,first time all year by bCatin~ the he couldn't hold a huge lead and
Colorado Rqckies 6-3 Wednesday wound up gct'ting a no-~ecision in a night, going 1-for-3 with a · bases- a four-hitter to continue his recent ting within one out of his first com- manager Jimy Williams was booed
·night. • .
.
24-ll win . Neagle then 'went on the loaded infield single, before hitting a mastery of the Astros.
plete game in Boston's 7· 2 victory when he came out to the mound . .
And by winning nine of their last DL for the seconc:l time .
1;0 pitch from reliever Donne Wall
Brown (12-6) has won his laSt owr the Cleveland Indian$.
"He'd done the job. He pitched
II, the Reds have moved perce ntage
Asked how much better Neagle . (6-3) an estimated 436 feet over the three starts against Houston, includPonugal (7-8) scattircd 10 hits such a great game," Williams said.
points ahead of Atlanta for the was this time · around. Colorado 's bullpen in left field in the seventh mg. a 2~1 VIctory wnh 16 stnkeouts and one earne&lt;j run in 81.3innings to "He's a tough customer, to bounce
National League's wild card playoff Dante Bichet)e said he had forgotten inning.
whal~ pttchmg for San Daego 10 last · rebound from his shonest outing in back like that. It' was imponant for
:'
·
aboulthe earlier game
It was McGwire's 15th homer in years playoffs.
.
lhree years; a one-inning, six-run us , with the relievers gelling a rest.
berth.
"Who would have thought ,at this
" I don' t remember. That was a 20 games and No. 42 of the season,
Brown.• who be~t Houston 1-0 outing in which he literally fell off (It was) certainly ·a lift for him, too."
stage that we'd ' be ahead of nightmare," he said .
keeping him even with Sammy Sosa, earher lht~ season 111 Los. Angeles, the mound.
First baseman Mike Stanley
Atlanta?" manager Jack McKeon · Until now, thai description also who homered earlier in the day for hasallowed only two runs 111 has last
He was booed off the Held that joked that the players in !he dugotJt
said. "But what it goes ,back to is has fit Neagle's season. Acqujred the Cubs. McGwire's ·one hom'er 25 ll1ntngs agall1sl the Aslros.
time by a full bouse that included his were going to 'blqck Williams' path
Cha;as Holt &lt;2-Il) took the loss.
children. "They were probably to the mound.
,
pitcliing. Their pitching broke down from Atlanta last November to sig- away from ·becoming the 16th mem-.
and they didn't have enough depth. nificamly upgrade the rotation. ber of the 500-homer club, and he
Dtamondbacks S, Giants 4
(among) ·!he 33.000 . booing me ," .
"You're just pulling for the guy ,
Ycu qn 't get enough of it."
Neagle has been on the outside look- even pumped .his ·fist as he rounded
At Plt,oe~ax,· Steve Fll1ley hat two Portugal said.
_.
to get that complete game," Stanley
With Neagle giving hi s second in g in .
the bases.
"' of Anzona s five home runs as the
"You can't dwell on it. Sure, said. "On the other hand, by pulling ·
solid performance smce returning
Now. he 's a key to the Reds '
"Why can't I show emotion?" Dtamon,dbacks took two of three to you ' re upset that you didn' t do the hirll out, he ·gets a chance to gel all
from the disabled list, the Reds think c hances · of contending down the McGwire said. "\Vhy is it out of the pull 3 0 games ahead of San job. But one thing l've ,gonen better that adoration from the fans. And'
·
'
ordinary? I've put my fist in the air
at is blocking that . out. That's one
they may ' have enough. pitching to ·
(See .INDIANS on Page 5)
stay in it.
(See REDS on Page 5) ,
before."
·
'
(See NL on Page 5)

·

Red Sox notch ·7-2
.
victory ·over Indians

.

Scoreboard
47 60

Loll Angeles

Baseball

4J9

B .

uncoodit•onnl rel~ase
FLORIDA MARLINS. Announced the rcsignauon of Jim Ron . wtce pre§ident of sale5 and rnnrket-

Soccer

Wednesday 's scores
C h tca~l'

AL standings .

5, Montreal I

mg..

MLS standings

I'IHiaJdp h1a ~ Flor1da I

Pmshurgh ~ - Atl:1ma
E11 s trn~

ClNCINNAI1 6

Division

l!' L

Itam

ln.

New York

64

42

.604

Toronln

60 10
.58 49

.54.'1
5-i 2
--f.\9
407

I.Joston
Balumorc
T:nnp3 Bay
CLE\IELAND
Ch1cago
Kan s ~ ~ Cuy
Mmnuota

., ""
••

'

64

..,

"

42 65

,,

Ar 1fllll:l

Oakland
Seanle
Anahei m

" ·"51
. 53

.

56

'

54

:49)

41 61

425

Ph iloJclpt) tu (Person 5-.1\ at Fl onda (Nunez -'-4)
7 05 p.m
.
Atlanta (Gl.wi nc 9-9) :11 P1u ~ bu rgh (Schourek J.
'-1 7 · 0~ pIll

9
12
19';

'

San Otegu (Ashby 9-5\ m St Louts (Lueb bers 1l lM I Up rn _

.

Basketball

Friday's games
CLEVELAND (Burb&lt;l b 6) at l"ampa Bay (Arrojo

'2· 7), 7:0l p.m.

Detroit (Mikk.• ~- 1 ,0) at Baltimore (Musstna 136). 7:Js p.m.
Minnesota {Mrlron 4-8) at Kansas Cily (Retc hert
1-0), 8:05 ·p.m
Toronto (Carpenter 7-5) at Teli:IS t Helhng 8-7 ).
8·3S pm. .
.
Boston (Saberhag~n 7-41 at Anahei m (Spark 5 5- ,
7), 10:05 p.m
·
New York (0. Hernandez 12-7) at Seaule
(full!rO 4- 12). 10:05 p m
Chicago (Navarro 7 ~ 8) at Oakland 1Hered1 R11-5).
10:.\5 p m

Montrc11l ....
Aoridn ..

ll' L

66 43
..... 64 45
. .. ~ 9 48
..... .41 63
. 41 67

ln.
W6

587
511
394
11\0

GJ!
2
6

22' ,
24'

Cenlral Division

Houston ...
CINCINN ATI
St. Louis . ...
Pittsbu rgh
ChicDJO .
Mii ~VBUkc.'l:

Arizona

San 1-rancJsco
San Diego
Colorado ..

Eastern Con'ference
l!' L ~

Ne"' York .
Charlolle
De trott.
Orl ~ ndo ..
Wash1ngton . .
CLEVELAND

Huus10 n
Los A ngek ~

f.a§tern Divi1inn
Atlanta ... ......
Philadelphia ... .

Ium

II

II

il

56l
.560

...... 10

13

458
A3S

I)

.......
::

14

10

1 17
.6 J9

GJ!
2 '\

292

J
6\

.240

8

Western COnrerence

NL standings
York . ..

WNBA standings

.. .65 &lt;.1

6(]2

61 41

' '!(]

.55 5J

. ~09

'.

:'iJ

100

49 56

467
46&lt;

5.1
49

"

l28

.' 7

467

60

4 .~9

"
•

I'
10
II
14

Mt nt'lesor a
P!ll&gt;e n i.~

Utah

.

4

833
727

10

.600

11

II

.. 10

I.1
Jl

Sl2
.4.15
14 8

•

'
Wednesday's scores

l)tmort ~9. Mm n esot~ 56
Orhmdc 70. C"LEV F.I ._A.ND 62:
S ac ~;unento 68. Charlolte 62

Tonight 's games
Orlnndo at wa.~ hrn ~n n . 7 Jl m

Los Angeles Jt U101 . 9 p m

.1~

Friday 's games

West r rn Ohision
6 1 &lt;8
. 57 5I

so

~

~ac r amcnto

... 20
16
. 15

lt&gt;O

1
10
I1

LO$ Angeks at Mmne$0 1~ . !I r ·m
Ch ~ r1 une oll Houstrm. K ~0 I' m

New York at Phocmx. 9 p m
Detroit a! Sacran'll!nto. 10 p m

.,
3
~ ·.

7':

lh

.19
.\7

9

17

Natlomli Hucke)' League
CALGARY FLAMES S1 gned F Jason W1o:mcr
and F Andaei Nazaro~
CAROLINA HURRICANES St!!fl&lt;!d 0 Steve
8 ;mcroftto a one-year contract
TAMPA DAY LIGHTNI~G Acquued D Andrei
Zyuzin, D Bill Houlder. LW Shown Burr and (.w
SIC'\'e Guollil from S ~ n Jose for LW NiUa ~
Sunds1rom and the New York Ran ~eu 1hird-mund
dra ft choke 111 2000
VANCOUVER CAN UCKS . S•g~d 1J l&gt;out. BoJgt:• to a ont... yeiir ~ om rnc t .

Nltlonal Football Leagut
DETROIT LIONS: Signed QB Donald Hallas.
Released QD Ron Powlus
'
OAKLAND RAIDERS Signed RB "Ray Zcl.lars
nnd RB Tyrone Wheatley Ann-ounced the ret1rerncn1
Basketball
of QB Andre Ware
.
Pt-II LA.OELPHIA EAGLES Srg ned OL Ed
National Haskelball AsS&lt;H:iation
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS: Si~ned F Lnmond. Kehl
Murray and trudcd hun to Cleveland fOJ G Der~k
PITTSBURGH STEELERS. S1gnC'd OT
Anderson and G·F Johnny Newman
Emerson Martin.
ST LOUIS RAMS : Agreed to tmm with RB
PORTLAND TRAILBLAZERS: Announced the
r~s •g na.tron of lohn Cbnstensen. director of sports Mnnhnll Fnulk on 11 seven•yenr contract.
co mmunications.
•
S~N FRANCISCO 49ers_· . Si~n_:d .Y!_
R Jesus ,

Friday's game
New E11glan.d at Colorado, 9 p.m.

Transactions
Baseball

$17,995

r'rii'G"i:i:scilli'T,

Dealer Retains Rebate

:SUMMER SALE:
I REDUCED PRICES .ON I
I ALL IN STOCK &amp; SPECIAL I .
ORDER
·
•BERBER
. •COftWERCUII. I

1900

I
I
I
1 CaU For Free Estimate 1
I 992~7028 I

I

9·5 Mon. • Fri. • 9·1 Sat. ·

1

rn ve .

Gallipolis; OH

I

12'1.~n,!A~,!,l~e~'!J
,,

. Paul D. Williams II of Gallipolis
joined multiple winners Jared
Grabiel of Mt. Gilead, Levi
Kilbarger of Logan. Mike Morgan of
Sandyville, W.Va.
and
John
Wisenbarger of Orient among the
victors of Round 16 of the 1999 Ohio
County
Fair
Motocross
Championships at the Gallia County
Junior Fair Wednesday night.
. Among the runners-up in the four·
wheel races was Lenny Tennant of
New Haven, W.Va. Scott McMillin
of Hartford, W.Va. took third in his
motorbike race . Langsville 's Dan
l)emko took fourth in his four-wheel

(7 40) 446-2282

TOLL. FREE:
'Next

to Wai-Mart"

. h
.., E . lie · 1;.877 -446-2282
H t.g
way 1 o xce nee
·
. ·

•'

game road skid .

Boggs singled down the first · hase line m the second
for hi s only hit of the game. He we nt 1-for-3 and .now has
2,997 career hits.
. Eiland (2- 6) all owed fi ve hils whil e st rik ing out five
and walking one in wi nnin g for the first time since July
7.
.
.
'
Gil. Meche (2-2 ) all owed four run s and SIX hits in r .
mmngs .

offense helps Miracle defeat Rockers 70-62

Dunkirk. H; Bill Burba, Germantown,
Y
·
Micro 4-6 year-olds: Shawn Rife,
Kyle Cottrill,
Springfield, 0;
0;
Kyle
Litteral,
Lancaster,
Mechanicsburg, 0; Aaron Adkins,
Huntington~ W.Va .. 0; Tyler Fife,
McArthur, 0
Micro 7-8 year·olds: Andrew
Murnane, Westerville. 0; Eric Denney,
Proctorville; 0; Shane Riddle,
Laurelville, 0
65CC 7-ll year·oldii: Levi
Kilbarger. Logan. K; Ryan Allbaugh,
Athens, K; Robert White, Candew, K;
Ryan Brumfield, Proctorville. K;
Brandon Bmgen, Newark K
Mini Junior: Kevi Kilbarger.
Logan. K; Carl Custard, Dunkirk, H;
Ryan Brunfield, Proctorville, K;
Brandon Adkins, Huntington, W.Va..
K; Roben White. Candew, K
Mini Senior; Jared Grabicl. Mt.
Gilead, K; Matt McCabe. Circleville.
Y; Crystal Williamson, Logan, K;
Shawn lies, Westerville, Y; Zach. Rice.
Thurman, H
Schoolboy; John Wisenbarger,
Orient, Y; Chris Leadbeater Jr..
Gahanna, Y; Ricky Custard, Dunki~k,

.race.
Racers will be identified in order
of finish by name, hometown and
make of vehicle (H-Honda , K·Kawasaki, 0 ;6\lter, S-Suzuki .,d YYarnaha).
,,
: 12SA: Mike Morgan, Sandyville,
W:Va., S; Tony Robinson, Findlay, .H;
Scott McMillin, Hartford, W.Va., K
250A: Mike Morgan, Sandyville,
W.Va .. S; Mike E. Blair, hometown not
reported,. S; Douglas R. Flinner.
Gallipolis. 0; Richard E. Cu.st~rd Jr..

Reds win ...

,
Orlando 's lead to 59-57 at the 4 :06 her in the second half. When you from a 55-46 defic 1t. ·
mark . Orlando, though , made nine of play three games on the road. the
Brandy Reed led Minnesota with
10 free throws from there to help . players tend to pace themselve s. a lit- 19 points and Ang1e Potho iT added
secure the win.
ti e bit ."
13
'
The Miracle were led ·by Taj
Orlando led 30-25 al halftime as
Je nnifer Azzi keyed De~r o iJ ·s
McWilliams with 16 points and nine Cleveland struggled from the floor, comeback, scoring five points in a.7rebounds. Nykesha · Sales had 15 shooting 31 percent. The Miracle o ·run that pulled tho Shock to withm
points and Sheri Sam and Shannon made nine of 10 free throws and , 55-53 with 3:49 tp play.
'
McWilliams led .all scorers with 10
Johnson bad 12 each.
After Tonya Edwards increased
the lead , to three by hitting a free
Cleveland was led by Nemcova points. "
with 12 point s, though she only
In other WNBA contests, Detroit thro"' with 2: II to go . Whitin g made
made five of 17 shots:Rushia Brown outlasted Minnesota, 59· 56 and it a one-point game with two free
added 12 points off the bench. The Sacramento downed ··Chari one 68- throws and Brondello put Detroit
Rockers struggled from three-point 52.
r;,
ahead with a running bank sho1.
territory, making two of 12 shots.
· Shock 59, Lynx 56
Whiting then stripped the ball
This was the third road game in a
AI Auburn Hills, Mich., Sandy from Reed and made ~ne of two free
row for Cleveland and Hill- Brondello scored 21 points and Val throws to make il 58-56 with 36 secMacDonald feels some players may Whiting had · 12 points and 13 onds &lt;emaining. ,
have been fatigued. Michelle rebounds to lead the Detroit Sha&lt;:k
Monarchs 68, Sting 62
Edwards, for example, scored seven to ,. a 59-56 victory · over the
AI CharloUe, N.C. , Yolanda
points, all in the second half.
Minnesota Lynx on Wednesday Griffith had 21 point s and II
rebounds as Sacramen10 ended
"Michelle has played 32 to 36 night.
The Shock snapped its five-game Charlotte 's francliise-record winning
minutes in the previous two games, "
Hill-MacDonald said . " She was losing streak, outscQring the Lynx . streak at six games.
.
pretty tired ,ln the ·first ~alf. I needed 13-1 in the .final six f!!inutes to rally
Griffith scored four points and

stretch. So far, he's given two reasons to think he's up to it
'•
"Today, I was beuer," Neagle
said. "I felt like my control was better. But more important, I was throw: ing the changeup. Fro~ . the second
inning through !he sixth , my change.up was better."
. · In two starts .since coming off the
' DL, Neagle has gone 2-0 and
;.achieved something that has eluded
: Darryl Kile all season. Kile has yet to

.

lose...

NL games ...

H; Kyle Ringwald, Williamspon, K;
Tad Saunders, Gallipolis, K
l2SAB: Jeremy Banieu, Hamden,
S; Ricky Custard, Dunkirk, H; Chris
Leadbeater Jr. , Gahanna Y
12SC: John Wisenbarger. Orient, Y;
Mitch Warrens. Jackson, K; Tim Kelly.
Circleville, H; Travis
Young,
Lanc.aster,Y;
Kyle
Ringwald,
Williamsport. K
250B: Josh Hamilton. Westerville.
S; Tony McNeilan, Winchester, H; Paul
Bradbury, Gallipolis, Y; Joey Canter.
Oak Hill, K
250C: Paul D. Williams 11.
Gallipolis, H; Marty Warrens. Beaver,
K; James Bevins, Proctorvill e, S; Tony
Pape, Lower Salem . . S; Tony Young.
Nelsonville: H ,
Open : Dwight Voltz Jr., Mt.
Sterling, K; Bart Barok. Grove City, H;
Dale Wingwald, Williamspon. K;
Shaun Swisher. Gallipolis, H; Terry
Fout, Ray, K
16-24 year-old
class : Josh
Hamilton, Westervill e. S: Tony
~obinson, Findlay, H; Jeremy Barnett,
Hamden, S; Tim Kelly, Circleville . H;
Paul D. Williams II , Gallipolis, H
·
25-plus: Mike Morgan. Sandyville.

· W. V~ .. S; Mike E. Bfi ir, hometown not Apple , Grove, W.Va .. · H; 'Brian
reported, S; Douglas R. Flinner, Coleman. Gallipolis, H
Gallipolis, · 0; Tony McNeilan.
Micro 4·8 · year-olds: Dani el
Winchester, H; Richard E. Custard Jr.. Wagoner, Logan , Y; Kyle Cottrill,
Dunkirk, H
'
Lancaster,. Y; Matthew Cooper,
30-plus: Marty Berberich,'Fairbom, ' Wellston, y; Tommy Bentley, Creola.
H; Richard E. Custard Jr.. Dunkirk, H;
Bill Reiss, Marysville, H; Gerry .
Bennett, Columbus, H; Bart Barok,
Cros~ country practice for Meigs
Grove City. H
40·plus: Bill Reiss, Marysville, H; High School and Middle Sc hool will
Gerry Bennett, Columbus, Columbus. begin on Monday. August 9 ai 8 a. m.
H; Terry Sheets , Zanesville, Y
· ·
in the high school lobby:
· Quad 2-stroke: Scott Weppler,
Whipple, H; Lenny Tennant, New
•
·Haven, W.Va., Y; David Argabright,
Beaver, . H; Dan Demko, .Langsville,
0; Michael Evans, Jackson , H; Murrell
Bailey 'Jr.. Albany, 0; Jerrid Douglas,
Gallipolis , H; Brad Flint, Wilmmgton,
0; James· Bishop, Jackson , H; Andy
Smith, Leon, W.Va .. Y
Quad
4-stroke :
Jeremy
Wallingford, Peebles, Y; Randy
LcCray, Ashville, H; Josh Reed,
Lowell , H; Adam Biehl , Whipple , H;•
Dana Wheeler. Marietta, Y: Jason
Smith, Lockbourne, H; Jamie Patrick.
Apple Grove , W Va., Chad Long.
Apple Grove, W.Va .. H; David Nelson.

Ruth1e Bultun-HoilcfJcld added fi ve
Uuri nl:!

3

l&lt;J-8 run to ~ tarl the second

hall ; nd gi1e 1hc Monarchs the lead
for good.

CharloJJ e led 3 1·28 at halftime.
but Sana m~ m o \.\'Cnt ahead 38-37 on
Griflith's driv ing Ia) up 5 1/2 minutes into !he second half.
.
Vick y Bull ell h1t a j umpe r to pu t
C harloll e bac k up 39'·:18 . hut . Linda
Burgess and Bollon-Ho li efi eld hit
layup&gt; to pu t the Monarchs .ahead
42-39.
Sacramento· exlcmJ e&lt;l the lea d to
47-3 '1 wHh 1mce-poin1ers hy Kedra
Ho lland-Corn
and
BoltonHo licfield .
The rest o f the way. Charlon c
could only get as close as 61 ·58 o n
Charlotte .Smith'&lt; 1wo free throws
wuh 3:33to go
Dawn Staley scored 12 points and
Andrea Stinson adde d 10 fo r
Charlotte. Bullen lini shc d with nine
Points. ,,

a

Star .b reak, the ' Rockie s have
matched their season low a. ' 13
games under .500 (47-60).
.
By contrast, the Reds have
improved their ~orne record to .500
for the first time this season (28 -28),
a nice complement to a 34- 15 road
record !hal's the best in the major
leagues: .
"All I'm looking at is 04r 62
wi 0 s," McKeon said. " Where you
get them, who cares?"
Noles: Colorado's Larry Walker,
the NL's hatting leader, was 0 -for-2
with a sacrifice fly, dropping his
average two points to .360. Walker is
in a 3-for-20 slump and has gone hit-

Offerman tripled to · the deep~t
part of !he ballpark in center field to

(Continued from Page 4).

Francisco in the NL West.
Jay Bell , Finley and Luis
Gonzalez hit home runs in a five ·run
first innin g against 24-year-old righthander Joe Nathan (2-2).
Mark Gardner replaced Nat han in
the second innin g and gave up ~
le ado ff home run to pitcher Brian
Ande rson ( 4-2).
Phil!' es 4 , Marlins I
Paul Byrd allo wed one run

.'
I

less in consecutive games for only
the third time this season .. ... ~asey
was 2-for-4, raising his average two
points to .355 .... Bichette singled in
three al -bats against Neagle . He's
2l · for-44 (.477) career against the
left-bander.... Vinny Castilla singled
in his last at-bat, extendi~g his hil- ,
ti 0g streak to eight games (12·for31) . ... Cincinnati's Greg Vaughn .
,grounded out and walked three
times . He 's 11 7for·57 (.193) with
five homers since the AII ·Star break.
... Left -h~nder Steve Avery will have
surgery Thursday to repair a partial
tear m his rotator cuff, ending his
season.

lead off the first, then scored on home Garciaparra in the fifth to
Valentin's single. Daubach walked, make it 5-1.
In the seventh, Offerman drew a
and Garciaparra and Trox O'Leary
leadoff
walk , · took third on
· had RBI singles to make it 3-0 .
•ingle and. scored on
Daubach
's
Cleveland made it 3-·1 in the third
when Einar . Diaz reached on Garciaparra 's double . Butch Huskey
Valentin's error at third base and was intentionally walked lo load the
scored on Roberto Alomar's double. bases, then Daubach scored With tw&lt;Y
Daubach's RBI single in the fourth outs to make it 7- 1 when Diaz couldmade it 4·1 , and Trot Nixon singled n't hand.le the third strike to Nixon .
,---------------------------.,

g~mes .

i r1

innings and Rico Brogna hit hi s sec ond homer in as many nights . for
Philadelphia at Miami.
Byrd (I 3-6) allowed 10 hits - all ·
.singles - and two walks, but got the
Marlins to hit into three double
plays. Steve Schrenk gol two outs for
hi s fir st c areer save.
' Denni s Sprin ge~ ('i· ll) took the
lo~s .,.

20% Off
Selected Boots
StQp In And See Our
Selections
·-·

·-

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--

~

---...................
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. .-.. .
..
--

---

.

~-

--

--

1

lniAINI'I 8
-

-

.

-

'

992-2156

(ContinuedfromPage4J
reli!=hed base four times.
A pregame fire caused minor
damage to the Fenway Park roof, bvt
did not delay the first pitch. Fire
officials said that worker's blowtorch was to blame.
·
B;utolo Colon (10-4), who had
been 4.-0 with a 1.16 ERA since the
All-Star break, gave up three runs
before recording the first out. He
allowed five runs on eight hits and
fi~e walks while striking out four in
4 1.3 innings as Cleveland lost for just
the second iime in its last nine

Ail boy s and girl s interested in
running this year shoui d ·ancnd at
this time even if ·the y doni .have a
physical .

The Sendnel News Hotline

·'

Taubensee's sacrifice fly .
"Darryl gave us a chance to
win," manager Jim Leyland .said.
"He threw pretty good for six ·
innings . He gave us a shot. But our
offense was·just too little too late. "
It was too late after Jerry Uipoto
gave up three more runs in the sevenlh. Dmitri Young and Sean Casey
had RBI singles and Dipoto 's wild
pitch let in a run that made it 6-1.
Danny Graves gave up Todd
Helton's run-scoring double aqd
Bichette's RBI single in the eighth as
he pitched !he final three innings for
his team-high 16th save.
By losing 14 of 21 since !he All·

Y; Kyle L111eral, Mechanicsburg, Y
80cc 9-12 &amp; 13-15 extra: Jared
Grabiel, Mt ·Gilead , K; Matt McCabe,
Circ leville, Y: Carl Custard . Dunkirk.
H; .Cry stal Willi amson ., .L ogan . K. ;
Shawn lies. Westerville. Y

Meigs CC practice to start Monday

(Continued from Page 4)

'
;you want to make .~ure, that it
•remains a good outang.
·, In addition to rescuing Ponugal
from last week's embarrassment, the
'outing ·rescued an overworked
Boston bullpen that h~d blown the
previous two games in the ninth
inning.
"It was going to be important for
us to get into the bullpen," Indians
,manager. Mike Hargrove said. "But
we just couldn't score many runs
today."
Nomar Garciaparra went 3-for-5
with two RBis to taise his leagueleading batting average to .368. Jose
Offerman and Brian Daubach each

Power Windows ·AM.:FM (:assette
Cruise Control Tilt Wheel · P~ss Through .Rear Seat
Remote Dec'k Lid Rel~ase Rear Deek Lid Spoiler

.

I
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1•

double in the second, a run-scoring st ngle in the founh
811d an infield single in the fifth.
.
Ken Hill (4-10) won for the first time in seven dec•sions, all o wang three runs and five hits in 6\, innings.
Troy Perci val pitched the ninth for his 25th save.
Jay Witasick (4-8) took the loss for visiting Kansas
City, gi vi ng up four ru ns, two earned. and six hits in
three-plus mnings .
Angels first· ba&lt;e man Mo Vaughn sat out the game
bccau~e of a staph infecu o n in hJS rig ht shin.
. ·
DevU Rays 7, Mariners 1 - Dave Eiland pitched sax
shutout inn ings and Wade Boggs inched closer to ht s
3,000th hit ·as Tampa Bay snapped Seanle's m-gam ~
winning streak .
..
: ·
.
Mike Difelice. had a c areer-high four h its. includmg a
home run, and scored three times for Tampa Bay. Frod
McGri ff h1t his 26th homer and we nt 3- for-4 as the Deval
Ray s shapped a fiv e-game losing streak a nd an eigh t-

Tennant, ·oemko stand among top four in Gallia motocross races

'~ Indians

1999 Grand Prix Sedan

. CLEVELAND INDIANS: Assigned INF Jose
Olmeda to Columbus of the South AUantac Leagu~
,
Nallonal Lea1ut
.
ATLANTA BRAVES: Named Paul Faulk and
Juhan P~1. sc outing supervisors.
CINCINNATI REDS Acuvatt d RHP Ja~ o n ·
Bert off th~ IS-dtly disabled list and was gi11en ht s

Ii,

811d drove in five runs .S Hideki lrabu improved to 8-0 in
his last 12 518!15 for the Yankees .
lrabu (9-3). the AL pitcher of the monlh for· July,
allowed three runs and seven hits in seven innmgs , striking out eight and walking none .
Knoblauch bit ninth home run off Kelv1m Escobar (98). It was the third time in the last si• games that he has
·gotten New York started with a first ,inning homer.
After Derek Jeter singled , Paul O' Neill walked and
Williams fo llowed with hi s 16th home run , givi ng the
Yankees a 4-0. lead before a bauer was retired .
Orioles 9, Athldks 5 - Jason Johnson pitched
seven strong innings and Mike Hardick' s lhree-run
homer highlighted a six-run fifth as Baltimore broke a
,
six-game losing streak by winning at Oakland.
Alben Belle also homered as the Orioles stopped .the
Athletics' five-game winning string. ·
Johnson (3-5). who retired 12 straight batters during
one span , gave up three runs and six hits while p1tching
into the eighth inning for the first tinie this season.
Hardick's eighth homer of the season came off Jimmy
Haynes (7- 10), who lost his third straight stan. Haynes is
0-5 against his former team.
Angels 4, Royals 3- Ben Molina, playing h1s third
major league game and first of the season, went 3-for-4
with two RBis lo lead Anaheim .
Molina , who went 0-for-1 last season, had an RBI

~·.

'
Kile (6- 11) gave up eight hits over
: six innings and allowod three runs in
' the founh. Barry Larkin had a two.: run triple and ' scored on Eddie

American IAa&amp;ue
BOSTON RED SOX : Assigned C Creighton
Gubanich outright to Pawtucket of the International
~..~!ague Trilled INF Jo se Olmeda to a~vrland for
LHP M1ke Mauh~wJ . Assigned Matthews to Trenton

7

away from -,vhat had gotten us here .
We
took a few chances defensively
WNB~
and had people out of position . We
lost our intensity to cominunicate.
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - · We recognized that as a team and
Winning brought back some fond stepped it up."
memories f(\1' the Miracle.
,Orlando cenainly stepped it up at
" We were starting to wonder if the free throw line, making 26 of 35
we knew what it was like to gel a attempts, jpcluding 12 of 14 in the
win," said forward Yoland.r Moore . . final 4:57. Cleveland only .made 10
"·It was a much-needed "(in for us. of 18 attempis.
for our spirits, for our fans and for . . "That's the ·game right there, "
our run at the playoffs."
Cleveland coach Linda Hill- ·
Orlando entered the game against MacDonald said. "We are not getCleveland on a three-game losing ting !here.
"It' was very frustrating. We outstreak and had .struggled at home.
But Orlando placed four starters in shot them from the field (42 .4 10
double figures to win 70-62 and 41.2 percent). we outrebounded
improve to 5-7 at the Orlando Arena them (30-29) and we only had 14
Cleveland is 2·10 in road games.
turnovers. We lose a game because
" We got the monkey off our back we did not getlo the foul line.'"
at home," coach Carolyn Peck said.
Orlando started a 14-2 run with
"There were games when we played 7:32 remaining in the game to lead,
Eva
hard but not good enough to win (al 59-54. But Cleveland's
home). We finished t~is one. We got · N.emcova hil .a thr~·pointer to cut

· win consecutive .starts.

01icago al Kan sas C1ty. 8 p.m

of the East~rn League

'

.\ 4

Hockey

Football

Tonight's game

Col orado {B.M. Jones 5 81:u Flonda !Fern andez
5-7), 7:05 p.m
San D•ego (Hitchcock 10-8) at M o nt~ a l (S mith
.~ - ~ l. i :OS p m
·
Art zona {R JohnJon 11 -R) at Phila~clph ia (Wolf
5-] ). i :35 p.m.
San Franctsto (Estes,7-61at Atl anta (Maddull 126). 7:40p.m ·
LoSAngeles (Park 6-8) at"New York (Dole I 3· 1},
CINCINNATI (V1llone 5·4) at Milw aukee
(Woodard 11 -5), 8.05 1&gt;,...
'

26

IB 26

18

Reyes .

Dallns 2. New York-New Jersey 0 ·

pm

1

28
20
.l 5_

PIJTSBURGH PIRATE..'\: Purchased the contract of LHP Lyle Premp:~s from Schaumburg of lht:
Northern le&lt;"gue nnd as~tgned him to Lyn ~ hburg 111
the Caro tin:~ Le~gue . "·

SACRAMENTO KINGS: Re-signed F
Lawrence Funderburke. S1gn~d G Darrick Martin.

Wednesday's 'S~ore

Friday 's games

NO p.m

GA

.W
29
l!

Western Conference

n

Boston (Rose (i.J ) at Anaheim (Finley 5- 10).
10:05 p.m. .
ChiCago {Sr rotka 7- 10) at Oakland {Oiivarc$ 9-9),
10:05 pm
New Yo~k (Cle mens 9-4 I at ~a nl e (Moyer r0-5).
to:mp m.

G[

Colorado,
.... 14 5 2 :'&gt;8 ~ 5 21
Dallas
... n II 1 31 J7 21
Los An ge les.. .. ..
... 12 8 .1 30 25 17
Chicago .. ,..
...1 0 9 1' l!! 29 ll
San Jose .
.. 1'1 9 9 1.5 28 '6
Kansas Cily .. ..... .•...... 6 14 2 14 24 .\8
NOTE: Three points for ~ictor y. one point for
shw 1ou1 wm nnd zero poinli ft:lf lOu. Shoo1ou1
(SQW) r ~ ~ ~ ub sct of wins

Chiciago (Farnsworth l--1 and Serafint J-2). 1.05 p.m
DH · Sr l..out .~ Uimenez 5- 11 nn1 Aybnr -1 -4) at
Pmsburgh (Anderson 0- 0 and Schmtdt 105~05

7:Jl p.m.

81 1 J

.S D J
... . 5 14 .\

NY.NJ .

DH: Houston tUma 1-1;6 and Bergman 4-5) :u

~ Tonight's games
Ot troit IW.e~ver 6-7) ar Baln more (Ponson 9-7).

I.SOWPts
I.\ 7 J .' n
.... u 7 5 29
. ...... 9 12 4 19

MI OOU ,

2 20 pIll

2~

New York 8, Toro m~ 3
Boston 7 CLEVELAND 2
Balumore 9, Oakla11d 5
Texa~ .\ . Mmncsota I
'
An ahei m 4. K~ns as Ci1y 1
Tampa Bay 7. Seattle 1

N~w

Frann ~co 4

(Q iorndo !Mtac10 11 91 :u CINC INNATI
tGtuma11 0-0i. 1Z:J5 p m
L'lls An~rb iValdc' K-'H m Hpuston tRq nol ds
117 J, I \5p m
.
Montrr:a l (Thurman 1-7) ~ ~ Ctncilgo ( LJ e~ r M-4).

Wednesday's scores

Ium

COLU MBU S ..
Tampa D t~y .
NC\Io' England

Today's games

607

.m

fl Sar1

.W

lWn
DC

St Lou1s 7. S.m Diego\'!

6
6'
17

\\rslern Division
TnM

Eastern Conrerence

Los Angd ('S 2. Hou s!tln I

1.1
20
.4 15 - 20' .
.J9.l

J

Ne\1 York 9. Mil waukee .'i

GJ!

Ctm r:.l Division
.. 65 42
607
,.. 51 H . 486'
... 45 62 .411~

lktroll

~
Co l o r~ o

.

Texas has built a nine-game lead in the West thanks in
large part to a 20.5 record against !he Central.
Loaiza (4-1) was a big reason for lhe team's latest vic·
· tory. Working around inconsistent control - he walked
five -the right-hander allowed two hits to !he Twins in
winning his fourth straight decision.
.. Anytime you get six shutout innings, I' II take it ,'"
Oates said. "'Five walks are too many. but the defense
~·iled him out I"d like him to throw more strike s.'"
Jeff Zimm~nnan pitched two innings and gave up
Ha&lt;:king's home run in the eigblh. Wetteland pitched the
ninth for his .33rd save, completing the combined fourhitter for the Rangers.
·
,
Rafael Palmeiro"s sixth·inning sacrifice ny broke a
scoreless tie. and Mark McLemore added a two-run single in the seventh.
. 1
Brad Radke (8-10) allowed three runs and nine hits in
6~ innings for the visiting Twins.
·
"When we take the field , we expect to win ,'" Rangers
left fielder Rusty Greer said. ·:The pitchers have been
giving us a chance to win. "
,
In other AL games, it was New York 8, Toronto 3;
Baltimore 9 Oakland 5· Anaheim 4 Kansas City 3; and
Tampa Bay Seattle 1.'
'
Yankees
Blue Jays 3 - At New York , Chuck
Knoblauch opened !he, game with' a home run for the
third time in a week and Bernie Williams hit two homers

roundup

Pirates 3, Braves 2

Reds record 6-3
·win over Colorado

·

AuoclmH Prna Writer .

Heathcliff Slocumb (3-1) worked

National League
roundup

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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..

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992-6250

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, August 5, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NOllfiNG RUNS
UKEAOEERE-

Meigs County 4-H grand-and reserve judging announced
Gnnd and reserve champions in miscellaneous 4-H fair judging at the Rutland Civic Center last week, have been announced by the Meigs
County'Exteasion Service.
The champions and those receiving honorable
mention iri thcir.respcctivt projects were as follows:
Dlscoverlq 4-H I: Cassie Hauber, grand
_champion.
·
Dlacoverlq 4-H ll: Autumn Hauber, grand
.
champion.
Explorlag Alllmals: Andrew Bissell, grand
chamjlion; Jennifer Grady, reserve champion;
Amanda Eason, honorable mention.
Explorlag Me aad My Home: Nalausha
Arnott, &amp;rand champion, Qmie Myers, ·reserve
champion; Laura Bailey and lindsey Houser,
honorable mention.
Galaea Pig: Sarah Clifford, grand champion.
Cat 1: Chelsa Dilcher, grand champion,
Whitney Thoene, reserve champion: Ashley
Gibbs and Sarah Wachter, honorable mention.
Cat 2: Andrea Tedford, grjllld champion; Jessica Taylor, reserve champion.
Cats 3: Sara Cammarata. grand ,champion;
Bethany Cooke, reserve ch~mpion.
,
Small Aaimals: Sara Cammarata, grand
champion; Jessica Amon, reserve champion. · ·
Fint Aid: Sara Mansfield, grand champion:
Sarah Houser, reserve cha.mpion; Nat~usha
Arnott, Meghan Avis, John Cooke, Andrea
Grueser and Amanda Windon, honorable mention.
Looking Good: Rachael Morris, grand champion.
Keeping Fit: Amy l.ee, grand champion;
Joseph McCall, reserve champion.
. Tobacro· and You: Meg han . Avis, grand
champion; John Cook, reserve champion; Tara
Rose, lionorahle mention.
·
'Alcohol Decisions: Julie Spaun, grand champion; Meghan Avis and Bethany Cooke, reserve
champion.
Self-Determined: Melissa Kirk, grand cham. pion; Elizabeth' Bird, reserve champion;
Matthew Salser and Mike Salser, honorable
mention.
And My World 1: John Cooke, grand champion.
Aad My World II: Bethany Cooke, grand
champion:
Mysteries of Microwave: Whitney Thoene,
grand champion: ·Jessica Boyles, reserve champion, Luke Lowery, honorable mention.
Laundry for Beginners: Tyler Johnson,
grand champion; Morgan Werry, reserve champion; Stacey Ervin and Lindsey Houser, honor· al&gt;le mention.
,
· Laundry - Advanced: Andrea Tedford,

grand champion.
Adnatura witll Your Ca•en: Betsy
Uvlag aacl Learaiag wllb Chlklrea: Nicole' Sheets, grand champion.
·
Jones, grand champion, Kay Willis, reserve
Exploring Pllotognplly: Becky Taylor and
champion.
Kenda Wheeler. grand champions.
More Uvlag aad Learalag wilb Clllldrea:
Advntures witlll Alljustable Ca•ens:
lindsay Bolin, grand champion, Meghan Avis, Beverly Burdette, grand champion; Stephanie
reserve champion.
Burdeue, reserve champion.
.
Teeas Lura About Cblldrea: Ashley ColArt As Expmsioa: Theresa Baker, grand
well, grand champion; Amy Lee, reserve cham- champion; Brittany Hauber, reserve champion,
pion; Bethany Cooke, honorable mention.
Stephanie Burdette, John Cooke, Becky Taylor
Family History Treasure Hunt: Sara Mans- and Chelsea Young, honorable mention.
field, grand champion; Ben Crane, re~rve
Let's Explore the .Oatdoon 1: Natausha
champion; Meghan Avis, Erin Tay.lor and Amott, grand champion, Talisha Beha, reserve
Chelsea Young, honorable mention. Becoming champion.
Money Wise: Jessica Boyles, grand champion;
Exploring Our Forests: Beverly ~rdelle,
Becky Taylor, reserve champion; Melissa House grand champion: Robbie. Weddle, reserve. cham;
and Christina Miller, honorable mention.
pion; Bethany Cooke and Michael Taylor, bonYou and Your Moaey: Whitney Ashley, orable mention.
.
grand champion; Robbie Weddle, reserve chamOhio B'i rds: Tabitha Jones, grand champion; '
pion; Kimberly Ritterbeck, honorable mention.
Natausha Amon, reserve champion.
Adveatum ia Home Uving: Morgan Werry.
Trapping Muskrats in Ohio: Chris Cowgrand champion; Jessica Justice, reserve cham- dery, grand champion: Hannah Williams; reserve
pion; Beihany Cooke and Brittany Hauber, hon- champion
orable mention.
Fisbiag for the Begianer: Derek Roush,
Furaiture and Woodwork Reeycliag: Erin grand champion; Brandon Fitch, reserve chamGerard, grand champion; Rachel Marshall, pion; David Barnes, Jacob Barnes and Nathan
reserve champion.
Cook, honorable mention.
·
Designing lnterion: Andrea Tedford, grand
Fishing for the lntermeclillte: Jqsh Rathchampion.
.
bum, grand champion; Brandon Werry, reserve
ColleCtibles: Bethany Cooke, grand champi- ·. champion; Kelby Brown, honorable IJICntion.
on; Ryan Wachter, reserve champion; Meghan . Keeping Fish Alive: Jordan Pierce, grand
Avis, John Cooke, Tyler Johnson and Tara Rose, champion; Tara Rose, reserve champion; Ken- .
neth Ryan Barnell, honorable mention.
honorable mentiqn.
Rockets Away: Luke Lowery, honorable
Safe Use of Guns: Der~k Roush, grand
mention.
champion; Robbie Weddle, reserve champion:
' Science of Flight: Jo~n Cooke, grand cham- Jacob Hunter ·and Charles Lawrence, honorable
pion; Luke Lowery, reserve champion.
mention.
You and Your Bicycle: Heather Jones, grand
Basic Archery: Alyssa Baker, grand cham pichampion.
on; Robbie Weddle. reserve champion; Joshua
Magic of Electricity: John Bentz, &lt;grand Nelson and Carson Yost, honorable mention. ·
champion; Andrew Bissell, reserve champion;
Exploring Our Insect World 1: ·David
Derek Taylor, honorable mention.
Barnes, grand champion; Jessica Arnott, reserve
lavestigatlng Electricity: Christina Miller, champion.
.
grand champion.
.
·
·
Cofl!: Aubrie Kopec, grand champion ..
· Rope: Meghan Avis, grand champion; BranFrom Seed to Flower: Becky Taylor, grand ·
don Werry. reserve champion.
champion; Rachael Morris. reserve champion.
Lawn &amp; Garden Power Equipmeat: Tyler
Indoor Gardening: John Cooke, grand
Johnson, grand champic,m.
champion.
'
Measuring Up: Robbie Weddle, grand chamVegetable Gardening '(: Tara Rose, grand
pion; Erin Taylor, reserve champion; John champion; John Cooke, reserve champion; Sarah
Bentz, honorable mention.
Lantz, honorable mention.
·
Making the Cut: Autumn Hauber, grand
Demonstration
champion; Adam Johnson, reserve champion.
judging results
Nailing It Together: Brandon Werry, grand
Demonstrations - Individual: Brooke
ch'ampion.
.
O'Bryant, !lrand champion, Whitney Thoene, ·
Shielded Metal Arc Welding: Lester Parker, · reserve ch~mpion; Nathan Cook, Jennifer Grady
grand champion; Robbie Weddle, .reserve cham- and Rachael Morris, honorable mention.
pion; Kelby Brown, Adam Johnson and Chris
Demonstrations- Team: Shane Milhoan and
·Parker. honorable mention.
..
·
Eric Wood, grand 'Champion.

,.._Gil,

.

668Pii-IUDI'tw

Au&amp; ... w. ..... w.s ........

.

•

'

.

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio ·

All--·
·-h-.. . . 200

·
WINSTON CUP SERIEI

8:30p.m. • Thursday • ESPN

Comii)C up:, Brlcky;lrd 400
- . : lndla'lapoiiS Motor

Speedway.

-=

W I - Cup, ISI1clly•d 400

-···-

- -

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... ton, Sltllw.-1. 2.5155

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2.142
QOI'J s..,w. 2.5&amp;1

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........... , _
Mf IVYIS. 2,415

ifldy ....... 2.374

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' · ............ 2.241

.. a.lll!' - · 2.111

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· Accessories

St. Rt. 248

Chester

'

985-3308

,
I

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2.
3.
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7. (7j Dale

10. (91 Mice Skinner

J:dnt f.lleaiant MUd §erie§
l
13aUie MaiUIIIent State JWk

Oeu NASCAR This Week.,
., Hm is what we think 'IIWkl be
a wry for NASCAR tO .level tbc
playing r.Ckl alittk and tiJhlen up
the champiOI'dhip race.
. . 1. Put o.W
. back in • Chevy.
2. Put Ernie lt'\'Ul back in a
Fonl
) . Put Rusty Wallace back in a

___ ._....,...,_

·

....,.~.lila

... _ C u p l l y t Q 111 ..., """ -13th • tho

after star.._ 18th. He held off
Rand)l'la.Joie, wl'lo had hiS belt

nnish since a &amp;eaitOO-ol)eniiC
win at Daytona. and~ back
·the poW. lead from sixth-place

--2-.0............

.I!MIIpOIIo,

Wallace lo win the SuperTruck
race In Loudon, N.M. Oodles
finiShed In two of 11\e top t1vee
sPOtS. with setzer first and .
Stacy Comoton third; iletllnd

"~

X

Uinw.I1JIIUI: SlrWIO '·

Dear NASCA,R This Week.,
Why don'! eoncme.tncb hl\'e
as muth tne1ion u asphalt tracb
do?

lUI

.,.a-.tet- Corto. -Ill"
DoieoridT_E_

0 PQiio. 0 - - - 0
•' 1111&gt;10.. nur17 S100.000 In
-

.... ·

(-1
r

Bttslol, Tem. .

oOotop;, S.C.
Rlchmor'ld. VI.

........

· pointed in

c.~.

,'lou

Concord, N.C. •

=ac:.
'

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dl-lnt them."
WHAT Jl TNI IRRIT OF VOUR'BUSCH

•lJClh·•

;j

:;·

IIIII

·we

CIIWID NATIONAL IUCCDif
h"" '
close' ~. a cl:oH r.. ..tlonshiJ!,

1

EamlieRit, 'Theysay _ _ ........l l y - lln)(.lld, "' E'"')l&gt;ody else 101111' .., but N -~
fOOl (Bodine! c•'t 1101111' .. -~us. '" He's~
ta&lt;tUIIIY 35) ancllllll 'drMrc Buscll cars. Thll O&lt;Ch!
ID tell )OU IIJ!i)OihlrC.'
'

•

'

• HOT: Dale Jarrett•. headed to
. one of his better tracks .

~

IIAICAW ll&amp;la W M k ' o - 1111
"The.......,.
"""'"'t &lt;lomnllcaW!I'I,itiiO E'
b1lck"' tile next rooe
at c:-.y).

ojllniN:
yet. And he ceme
~~&gt;uw aot to

(Saturday

I

&amp;

• .k . . _
.

1 _.;.... - · ..

-

.

!hall still-the Olijoyment out of ~- I
lhlni&lt; I ~ ~ 1 ~ Cor 1!10fe'thln
!"'ybody on tile !'K«racll. I~ enJo7, .,_

·

drl'lintl 1 ..-car. I con1 tell )OU- mUch

fun It Ia. •
DO YOU,'IHIIIII YOU'RIRUDY FOil '
WINSTON CUI"''I know- 10U1J1 Nls,lf
lhot'o """' )OU moon. tt'll be ,eors belontl
can loOk owr to (cr,w cnie~ Tony Eury ..,q
say, 'Tony, I think we•re adO&lt;J fO&lt; U.. pole.' 1
YoU don1sly !hot kind of thlnt: "'"'l ~ )OU

ara thklkln&amp; n,

)'DLI

do~'t say~··

'

' '!

consigned to sixth In the
.

1.

Who Is the only driYer to '(eln the Daytona
500 wilhooJt changirc Ures?
2. WhO was the oldest winner of Winston Cup's rookie. • • of-the-year award?
3. Who war; the ftrst Ford driver to win the BriCkYard 400?
'9661

u1 uaJJer 9iBO ·e

~Bl' aJe 1e 'ai,.OIJ! ljOKJ -~ :€961 Ut puri1 Au11 '"t

~nts.

.

SIIJMSNY

••••••••••••
•

- ~ar

NASCAR Tbis Week,
How do you decide whal cars
get (in-car) cameru each Md:?.b
it Q\&amp;alifying positions? How many
(are) in51ancd aroond ~
tnck?
Jantn .K. Edward
Htreford. AriL

All.rucJi decifiDM an miJIJt by
·Ute·compGIIY Orne-~ lltat ldt·

visru

Althl:lugh Mark Manin has ~r
~n the Brickyard 400, he lwl finished in the lop five in th~ of his
five Indianapolis Molor ~pecdway

appeannces.
Martin fiftishcd second to Jeff
GaJdon last year, foorth ittl996 and
fifth in 199S. Curtenlly he is &amp;CCOnd
in the Winston Cup standings. 2S4
points behind Dale Jarrett .
Following his Indy lest, Martil'l
uid: "We ran the~ like we run

head of the class, but we're right

lhm.
COD)fi&amp;M 1&amp;99 The Gnton
'

'

.F&amp;i;nps·
• Jim Oufty runs an out:rlt called
Catwing MusiC (P.O. Box 47 ,
Buski'k. NY 12028) and has put
togetner an auto raci~ album
· that deal$ with action from
Winston Cup to the dirt trades. In
malked oonlrast to many musical
workS designed to capitalize on
NASCAR 's growth, thiS one isri 't
half bad. For more informat~ .

schedule. II 'M&gt;Uid take effort for me
to get caught up in the media's
hype. It pays a lot. I've run third,
fourth and fifth there, and when I
finished fifth I made more money

than I bad ever V!Qil for wiMing any
of my JO,rw::es.... That's a seencard.. What it pays, the size of1~
trophy, those are alltcorecards for
imponaOCOt buc aU throu&amp;hout my

the $3.000, but a l'lKCT should.want
to win all 'of them." . ; ·

X
SHOULD BE TOUGH: Ja.Ten
won the Brickyard in 1996. outdueling t~-tearnmlle Ernie lrvan,
but the cumnt point Jeadcr.could
easily heve 1tnc vklorin at Indy.
He dominated much of the race in
both '97 and '98. l.uc year he llD
out of &amp;U while leadina but wenl

up on this year because we're gonna
be taking the: same race car back. II
tested well. So we're excited aboot
gomg NICk. We've looked at h 0\"er
the year1.and Robert Yates' can;
have had opportunities to win

m

alrno&amp;~all of the Brickyard 4()0&amp;,
and 'Wt've only rome aYII)' with one
of them, but we'd like to think
we've &amp;04 a good shol: again ."

• Slnco-- no .

. Wlntton Cup~ itllt
_.., let'l rtlwonl ofl.
thMioCk I&amp;Ctlvtty. Car
Tim 111¥orler 11ft
recently olp.d • chief James lnce,
onCtnebui-Ct.udo

own.,

X

back -out and made up four laps,
only to fin.ish 16th.
'"Any 'ime )'00 have the besl w
you'd like Ia take alh'anta&amp;e ~fthat.

RATINGS INCREASE' Th&lt;
1999 Pennsylvania 500 telecast Df1
Supcrstalion TDS rtgisterc.d a 24
pc~l increase over the I~8
·event Tbe event dn:w a Nielsen

especially a race as big u Indy." he
said. "But !think it gave us a heads-

cable rat inc of S.l, as opposed to •
4. 1 the prewious year,

.

..'

Qu... ond driYtr Rich
Bickle to mulllyQr

CCIIIri&amp;Ctlto Sill' will&amp;
!he Ponttactoom,
which Is COflllntl oil 1 ·
HYontlt-placO ftnloh Ill

~N.C,i.GAZatte • Olstflbul&amp;d by Un!wnial Prest Syndicate 18001 25_5-6734 • Fof r111use ~of AultJSI 2. 1999 • ou~en: c.arteGraonk:• Inc ., Sarlllota, 'Aa.

'

-·

'

AITENTION

ADVERTISERS! r

9f You Have Cfhe .N eed for Speed...
we've got it!!!

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Dave• Ext. 104
.Kathy Ext. 105
For more information

~.

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c~.

AROUND TH! GARAGE

cateer, I'd race for $200-to-win one
night and SJ,OOO.Io-win the next
night. Whatllbc difference? I want·
ed to win the $200 to win just as
bad as we dia the Sl,OOO to win.
Obviously, we ate" be1tc:r if we wo~,

everywhere else ri&amp;ht now. that's
my best answer to it We're not the

l'WII(. '" SOTM NUU.

p4J' lo IUJ~ CQMmJS

'

','II takes na effort at all for me to
look at thai u the next race on the

NASCAR This Week

we•

,SfKWOIJ

Does Martin have what it takes for Brickyard?
By Mom. Dutton

'

carr:erJS

Uuwlltd in ctrl4ill

•

• NOr: Jeff Gordon. now

ilralhll."

.

- •'
••••••••••••••
'HotNot

"""'old

1

.. •

P1&lt;1!11e- They - ' t put meln 1 altuiiiOn

• PihOo PN1o (~ Colo.J: IIIO!Iiritilot llodirleiM a.

'

·-

where 1°d totattr bomb out. I'm • ra'i:e-car
driYer. I'm not oll)OI&lt;elj)erson. I'm not on
actor. They'ro waltlrC IOr)OU to uy
somelhinl stupid, ond I'm tryina to'

fEUD Of THI WIIK
'
: ~ &amp;mblnlt Jr•.¥1. Todd lcidlne' , ,,
· Thll .... 101- two \ooelootllll *&gt;d 10 IO!ntlll&gt;'linCO&lt;. AI

'

know; ·~
nefd 1DI'bt
t. lllenl.'
.. herf,
aot

...... encllhl. . . I really triltt lhol8

·-

·

_.IJI!In!IO!Id.Wonlytura......,,
t1
wu O.lfl;Jr. meet? on )lllh. 1

_ _,.._

-11 lot 0t 1100&lt;1 ~ lltiPinC
·
• me, tt I&gt;'IPI'" mo fO&lt; tllinCIIilce prest ·

R~.N.C .

-~lnlllewall,.,.....hlmtf-.klc:IIGnJrld

x. .

lhi"&lt;Wlt directiOn.

)OU 1110&lt;1.10

~-- ,....

Arttlondllt. NtL

HOW DO Y O U - AU.OP'IHI ,_Ill? 'The

only tllinC IIIII saves 1111 Is, 1
". leelil"" I'll\ 41Woyo IOitln&amp;

......... ot;H.

eov.r.
,..

StWt (May 30, 1999,

- •~J.polt(-),wln

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Leo's Cruist
&amp;'Irawl

Ill

N.C., llllooln

.. ·~ ~No.8,. . :S

~GiwJ.N .Y.

Call us for all your .
lravel needs

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Wlrile Moe 'n! ar il. wiry ttOt ptlf
Hwry Gan~ bock in 4"'
Oldsmobile?

tho

,.

1999 WINSTON CUP SCHEDULE

wtn

llrltlllll

Ml:24
. . II!IIIEI'OM: Born Ill

CNAF1SMAN TRUCK .ERIES
Dennis setzer held off Mike

flnisher..Matt Kenseth.

·"111h0id I Puctae

infOflllfion

Bwldrk, N.Y.

Hili...... .
'LJitloE'IIII&lt;i_a._
GilniNIItirlllil
lila y,.;..,
111811,

Wallace's Ford.

For-•

. . . , . f'80I " ,...

fROM LAST WHK

·BUSCH·- NATIONAL
Dale Earnhilldt Jr. won the
race at Gateway, near St. ·louis.

KdjExt.lOS

-4. Put Jeff Gordon bkk in a
spnnt car.
Jh• Dolly

Dlllt. ,_ . . . . . . Q! ( , _

dWii.hlhiC) In

ADVERTISERS!!

r&gt;reiented In (;(JnJundJallmb The

Jr.

.. ...... woy"'
NASCNI-.
lnllla _ _ _ Cup

Starting to pick up
He's not happy here
. He's a pole man

8. (8) ' " " l.abantt&amp;

t. (101 ll...ty WOI-

. page
Cai992-215S
Dave Ext. 104

YourTurn

-.Dole-Jt.n. .

.. _ ..

Advertise • tlis

··Lllllll m. o. In 11 s

---Cupdlom-

Fond memories ol'95

-=

A1TENTJON

ADVERTISERS!

••••••••••••

·

DellllteU.. ~N
cona,-.,_..llle..,ofa

Gail!llllng away
Brou&amp;hllhe broom to Pocono
Brickyard,win wooid be·frttln£
Lacks consistency
Psyched for ln&lt;ly
011 those DNFsl

-·&amp;It

laps/ 137.2 miles

NAl;CAR Tlllo- .

TOP Tltf

Dole Jorrott
_ , Labonte
Milk MMtln
lefllurton
TCIIy S-ort
lefl-

Green , ~- 113.461

Dale
Earnhardt
'.,.......,_

~ Hensi~J, 2 .245

. • \fjeekly ranklnp ~ NASCAR This Week wtlter Monte Dutton .
La~t week's ranhif11: is In parentheses.

Ridenour
Supply

(.6Mmile track!. 200

mph , Aug. 4,1994
\
Thursday. Au£. 5 .
o.t.ndlnC cMmpl Dfl: Jack
BUSCtl CIRAIIUIIATIONAL
....... :.Jimmy
Conolni•P: tvoger 200
Heosley. OldsmobHe. 96.923 . Sprague
Quol~ _ , . , R""&lt;ly
lndianapoHs
mP, , June 22. 1985
TOlsma. Ctlevrolet, 110.829
Raceway Park. Clermont. Ind. . "CRAFTSMAN====-==SERi=::::IES::::mJ'I, July 30, 1998
(.6Mmlle tracJ&lt;J, 200
R.e~~ rwconl: Mike Skinner,
laps/137.2 miles
Comii)C up: Power StrOke
a-Ole!.
85 .720 mJ'I ; Aug.
-Friday, Au£. 6
200
1. 1996 '
Detlndlnl dw:t¢1 1: Dale
Where: Indianapolis

PROFILE

- . - - . 2.3151

~

Raceway Park, C1ermoot. Ind.

Eamllan!t Jr.
Qu..lfttiiii'ICOI'd: Oavid

Ron ~- 2.358

l&amp;.loie. 2.3UI

·

Power Tools &amp;

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State Park

2.412

See us for Your Stihl"

202 W. Second Street .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

, • 7:30p.m.

lrvan. Pontiac, 179.394 mph,
Ally 30. 1998

2SIO

Stlty Cor'n&amp;J~Qn ,

.Mtf Grwn, 2.131

.. .,., a... 2.1W

511HJ:.
'II

**sene-. 2.621

o.lt ~ • .• 2,947

.... .....-2-

0 . . . . . 3,014

Ind.

saturday. Aug. 7
- . ................ :Jeff
' Go&lt;dOn
Quo!~_.., Emle

1999 POINTS STANDINGS

I. MiiliMiiM.2.7tO

S~ay,

_ , . , Dale ·
Earnhardt; Chevrolet;
155.206 mJ'I, fwll. 5 , 1995

12.!knile tr&amp;c:k)l60
iaps/400 m)les

1 p.m. • saturday • ABC ,

s...

ON THE SCHEDULE

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8:30p.m. • Friday • ESPN

. 740-992-4233

• Free To The Public
• Thursday
August 26, 1999

992-2825

740 992-2196

•

-

106 North Saco.'ld Ave. • Mldcl1port, Ott

- L F II.C..·-

In Recognition-of
'

•

.......
--11oo--

,,

Pleasant Valley Hospital's
40th .Annivers~ry... ·

•• -..Gil?

.. ,,

.

DENVER (AP)- Colorado has'signcd an agreement that could make
it the first state in the nation to let lawyers file lawsuits over the Internet:
" ·
.
The state si!lned a deal with a Texas col)lpany, JusticeLink, last week
to phase in electronic. filing in districi courts.'state':"ide.
Officials say that by the end of next year, if all goes well, lawyers will .
be able to push a button on their c~mputer terminals to make filings from
their offices, while judges will have the option of e-mailing orders and
decisions instantaneously from their chambers.
" To be frank, it's an experimental system that is not wo•king anywhere in the country," said Bob Roper, director of integrated information
services for the Colorado Judicial Department. '
·
.
' We.'re kind of pioneering with the vendor on this one. We:ll see how
it goes.' '
.
Electronic filing is aVailable in some counties across the country, but
'
not in any e·ntire stale, Roper said.
The voluntary system will start in Novel)lber in ,:\rapahoe County District· Court, Denver Probate Court and the Water Court in Greeley, he
said. The system will expand county by county1 with a statewide system
in place by December 2000.
'
.. ,
Under lhe system, attorneys can sign up with JusticeLink and pay 10
cents a page to make filings over the Internet, said Henry Givray, president of Justicelink. The company will process the filing, then notify the
courthouse in Colorado through the Internet, he said.
·
Roper said the court clerk then reviews the filing and pushes a button
to accept it, and the system automatically assigns it a case number and a
judge. Judges, in turn, can read the files over the Internet and even e-mail
decisions to attorneys, he said.
The state has tested a similar syster;n in Arapahoe County for the past
nine months. Lawyers and judges embraced it, said Arapahoe County.
court administrator Greg Langham.
·
For alleaslthe first year, the courts will make paper co.pies of files for
judges, attorneys and the public, Roper said. ·
"We recognize this is going to be a pretty significant business change
for everybody," he said. ' ·
'
'We're not going to force it on anybody."
.
The state has not decided how the public will have access to ,filings.
The stale may make files available on the Internet with or without a fee .
. Givray said counties using the system have placed computer terminals
tn courthouses for the public.
The system comes at no cost to the state because the .company k.eeps
the per-page filing fee, he said.
.

G1lllpolls
35WIIst

(740) 44~24.12

businesses now isn't motivating them to join us have trouble figuring out which to use. Some
Aaaoclated Press Writer
- that, we've done,." said Segal, who formed are focused heavily on work skills, such as how
CHICAGO (AP)- Eli Segal has spent the the partnership at the urging of President Clio- to show up on time, while ot~ers teach practical
past two years prodding businesses 10. hire peo· ton, · a longtime · friend. "We've got to !DOVe skills, such as using computers.' Some follow·
pie off the welfare. rolls, trying to convince from recruitment to service."
·their clients for a year; others only work with
, Getting more hires, Segal said, will require them until they are hired.
.
them that welfare-to-work is good for the boi.
.
,
more practical advice,.
.
· The need for such services was supported by
· tom line.
To thai end, the group r~leased guides 10 " preliminary · results from focus groups conBut he doesn't like to be called a cheerleader
foe the cause.
.
combating drug and transportation problems, vened Monday that included . businesses, ~on- ·
Now, Segal and his Welfare 10 ·Work Pan- and a new Internet site is meant to help people profit groups and welfare recipients, amqng
nership are hoping to shed that image for good connect .with groups that can .help them.
, others.
.
.
"There is the perception that service
as they move away from persuasion and toward
But Labor Secretary Alexis Herman; who ·
the nuts and bolts of helping companies 'make addressed the conference Wednesday, suggest- providers and businesses often talk past ·each
their programs work.
•
ed that the cheerleading was still im'portant, other, not to each other," said a summary of the
"We were concerned we ~ould be accused particularly among small businesses who may results made av~ilable Wednesday.
of being cheerleaders- of only being the good not have trie~ to hire off the welfare rolls yet.
"Businesses.- particularly small ones, don 'I
news boys," Segal said Wednesday as his
"Businesses have gotten the message, but I · know where to ·go or even where to sta!" lookgroup's national conference wrapped up a think you can't take that for granted," Herman ing · for assistance ... with how to implement
three-day meeting. "We're sure that's behi'nd said in an linterview.
.
welfare to work programs."
.
u's now."
· .
"'This is an area where repetition is very,
One small business owner, partic,i pating in
Some · 12,000 busine~es have joined . the very important. This (welfare) is a 60-year-old the fopus group, put it this .wa'y: "Business is
partnership, pledging to hire at least one p,erson system. We're not going to change it in three or being bombarded with 'what I can do for you'
off the rolls.
·
.
' ··
four years."
with no way of sorting through who can proBut the group's internal polling finds that
Still, hoping to be more practical, the .part- vide what and their success rate."
one-third of businesses haven't hi,red anyone. nership plans to help businesses choose lh!!
The focus groups, run by pollsters ', from
yet. And focus group~ conducted during· the right outside agency, sometimes called a ser- Wirthlin Worldwide, , also found that nearly
conference found ' lingering concerns about vice provider, to trn:in and prov_ide low--income three years after Clinton signed ,the federal weld~ug addition, child care, transportation pro~workers..
.
.
fare overhaul bill into law, businesses are· con- .
lems and workjng with the nonprofit groups
Many cities have dozens of these mostly cerned with child care, transportation and trainthat train low-income workers,
nonprofit groups offering such services, but ing- the same things policy experts were con" The best way we're going to help these businesses- particularly small businesses- cerned about wlien welfare reform began.

Colorado signs deal to
pioneer ·I nternet lawsuits

•

~1

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

Welfare to work group shifting away from:cheerleading ·
By LAURA MECKLER

The Dally Sealiael • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thu~y,August5,1999

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Kathy Ext. 105
For more information

COMM U NICAT i uN~

•
I

•

.

�By The Bend

The Daily Se·n tinela

Ann -Landers
Doar Aim ( .allekrs: This leuer is
in ~sponse to "Ed m Carpe ntersvillc. ;~ .. who wrot~ about good
sex. I was a faithfUl wife for 26

but sex was not one of them.
He. too. approached making love
the way he .approached life -- with
joy and enthusiasm. He was cari ng,
generous and inventi\'e. Over and

years.

My husband made love the way
he did everything else -- mechanically, wilhout auempting to invest
himself in the process. and expending as liule energy as possible to get
lhe job done. This is also the way he
played the role of son. husband.
father and employee..
'
After we parted, I met someone
else. 11lere were several reasons I
. chose not to marry my new friend ,

above his own physical gratification.
he wanted to give me the gre~test

pleasure posSihle.
If I had not met thai man . I would
have died without knowing what
"good sex" was.
The real differenc[" wa...:; that oncpanner. pl ayed me 1\l;e a Stradivar-

ius. whi le the other.was just fiddling
pround .
MEMORIES IN VIRGINIA

to whomever is gawking . snickeri ng
or bemg rude .
Working with special needs peopie is the most challenging and
rewarding thing I have ever done. I
love them ror who they are and what
they hO\·e to offer. They are the most
appreciative and down-td earth peopie one could ever have the pleasure
of meeting. They love what I do for
them, and I love doing it.
I would appreciate it if you would
print my letter in order to help these
special needs people know there is
support oul there. It will help them
to know they are not alone. -CYNTHIA IN WINNIPEG. CANADA
DEAR CYNTIUA: You ha ve
chosen to work in a field lor which
)O U arc ideally suited. Your compas-

My eldest brother is still
estranged from the ramily. When my
father beca me ill, I phoned him

he is now filled with re~l5 and earrying a heavy load. If lllis lettrr
makes just one person realize the
importance or mending £amity ri£ts,
it will be my tribute to my father. -EAST ~OCKAWAY, N.Y.
DEAR N.Y: You will never know
how much good you did by writing.
Thank you, thllnk you, thank you. '
What's the truth , about pot,
cocaine, LSD. PCP, crack. speed and
downers? "The lowdown on Dope"
has up to the mmute m£ormat10n on
drugs. Send a self addressed, long.
business size envelope and a chec.k
or money order £or. $3 .75 (this.
includes postage and handling) to:
Lowdown , c/o Ann Lander: PO ..
Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 6()(.. · -:
0562 . (In Canada. send $4.55.) To:
find out more about Ann Lander~

sion and cari ng comes thro ugh loud

(again st my mother's Wishes) and

and read her pasl columns , visit thC:

I be lieve the wav to deal "ith

and clear.

told him what was going on . He

Creators Syndicate web page at:

sPeak one's mind

There

never did come to see Dad. I know

www.creators.com.

DEAR MEMORiES: It sounds
as if a fabulous mstrument met a ' ' Iftuoso performer. The result- beautiful music ..He added a wonderful
dimenston to your life. Be grateful.
De-ar Ann Lande"': I am wriu'ng
'" response to the leuer from "lgnoranee Huns." whose sister was confined to a wheelchair and subjected
to all kinds of ignorant and rude
behavior. I have taught special needs
children and am presently invo lved
in coac hin g for the Special
OlympiCS.
It 1s appalling that ncg ai i\'C
behavi&lt;'r tow ards the disabled s11ll
occurs.
It hurts me to know that even
with the integration of special needs
ch1ldren in the school syst,em. the
starin•. laui!hing and O"e rall i• n&lt;&gt;ranee ~-;till

c;ists~

,

such h~havtor is to

...

IS

is becoming more enlightened in
dealing with the disabled. We hear
the word "handicapped" less o£tcn.
The phrase "special needs" shows
much mo~ sensitivity. ·Thank you
for writing. and bless you for all that
you. do.
Dear Ann Landers: You' ve said
many times it is important to make
peace with loved qnes while they are
still living. I am indebted 10 you for
that advice.
My father passe!l away recently. I
helped care for him the last weeks of
hi s lire. I took thai time to tell him
how much I loved 'him and how
sorry I was £or all the hurt I had

~aused .

evidence thal the world

'· First reunion held by -descendants of Lovett f$mlly '
A reunion of desce ndants of the
Daniel, Deliliah and Orange Lm•ett
£amities· was held recently at the
home of Kathryn and Harley Johnson of Pomeroy.
The Lovett family history dates
back ' to '1798 when Dani el Lovett
!lJld .Phoebe West were married at
Marietta. They had a son William
Lovett in 1804 who married Mary
Smith, and they were the parents of
II children, Henry,' Betsy. Elizabeth.
Daniel, Delilah, · Sarah. Mary.
William J .. Phoebe. Hiram and
Orange. It was the descendants of
Daniel, Deliliah and Orange -who
came together for the recent l:.ovett
£amity reunion,
The idea £or the reunion occurred
a couple or year ago when Susan
Young or Kentucky made contact
with numerous lost Loven family
members on·lhe internet. Other fam ily membt::rs became involved and
the ~union was the result the vari ous contacts. In the process a contac t
was made with' Kathryn Johnson of
· · Pomeroy, who is the daughter of the ''
late Orville and Ada Slack. the only
child or the Slacks residing in Meigs
County. The. reunion resulted from
that coniact with Johnson who hosted the gathering. It ~an at her
home initially and then relocated
down the road to the Zion Church of
Christ.
Once at the church, Frank Riffle,
a descendent of Sarah Lovett Boyd,
gave the blessing and a potluck meal
was enjoyed. The afternoon program
opened with Susan Young explaining how it all .came about. Dorothy

in£ the afternoon .
cncc of the pmncer fJmil y's name
Candle holder&gt;"" " 1he name uf
Dirccrly across the street from the
the event and the date were g1ven as Old Loven homeplace is the Morse
mementos to tho·se whose names Chapel Church. established in 1859.
were selected '" a drawing.
Virginta Kiser. a great-great-grandA tnP. was taken hy 'ume famil y daughter of Willi am and Mary
members arou nd the grounds of the Smith Lovett, went ins1de the church
old Loven 'rann. wh~eh was the and played a few . hymns on the
home of Wi lliam and Mary Smi(h Drgan. It marked a special time for
Lovell who wi:re married in t 826. the fanuly The family which extendAll eleven of their children along cd thanks to the congregation for
with man y of their granpchtldren access to the church. A visit was also
were raised on the fam1.
made to the cemetery at Morse
Leaving their mark on history is a Chapel where many of the Lovett
' county road .s!gn that says ''Lovett ancestors are buried.
·
Rd ." and rellects the remaini ng presArter leavin~ the farm. the eroup

Are you interested in working with children? Have
you ever thought about foster care- but just don't
know if you want the commitment?
Host Home, a 1-14 day respite care network may
just be the opportunity for you. You would be
offering your home and yourself to children in short
term need. If you are interested in a challenging
· opportunity to make a difference in someone's life,
are flexible, and ready to learn- give us a call.

went tn Syracuse to visit the Syracuse Hills Cemetery on Snowball
Hill .· Graves were cleaned and a
markor was placed on William Wade
Lovett's grave . Will iam Wade
Lo'veu. He was killed in 1907 and
has never had a headstone.
From there they stopped in Syra cuse and viewed the Lovett lots
before returning to the home of
Kathryn and Harley Johnson.
· Those . anending who were

descendants of Daniel were Susan
Young . Ann and Bill Jack, LaVerne
and Walter Smith, Roger and Kay
Slack. Roger Slack Jr. and son
Joseph Hinkle. Harley and Kathryn
Johnson . John and Vivian Slack,
Gene and Candy Slack, Tammy
Dummitt, Cheryl and Jerry Holley.
Calvin and Justin, Terry and Debbie
Slack, Virginia Fmk Kiser, Earl
Wade Kiser and Beverly, James E.
and Ruth Douglas, Bill and · Carol

COUNTY: MEIGS
and tho appro1111f or
PUBLIC NOTICE
dlaappi'OVII ol plana ond
The following oppllcetlona apeclfiCIIUonL
"DreH
ami/or verified complaint• Actlona": are wrttten •tatewere received and the menta ol the Olraetor ol

following draft, Jiropoaed,
or final octlono ware laaued
by the Ohio Envlronmenllll
Protection Agency (OEPA)
taot -k. "AcUona: Include

lht adoption, modlflcallo'n,

or repeal ol ordara (other
than emergency ordert);
the
taeuance, denial,
madlftcallon or r•vacadon
ol llcen..., permlta, leu..,
vo~aiJCH, or certlllcatee;

Envlronmenllll Protec-tlon'o
(Oiroctor'a) ln111nt with
reapoct to the laouance,
dontal, ate. ol 1 permit,
llcenae, order, ,etc. Inter·
nted peraona moy aubmlt
written
commenta
or
requeat a ·pubic muting
regordlng draft . actlona.
public
Commentt . or
II!Htlng roquelill rnu.. be
oubmltted within 30 daya ol

92nd Curtis reunion to be held
The 92nd a~nual Curtis fami.ly
reunion of Metgs County will b'e
held on Sunday, August 15. at the
Star Mill Park in Racine .
A basket dinner wi II begm at
12:30 p.m. at ·the small p1 i: ni c
shelter there. The family hi storian
will be present with all the information on the Jamily ancestry a
well as all the information on the
Meigs County branch. The ancestors of the family are David and
Sarah (Grow) Curtis, came wi'lh
· their family to Meigs County in
1811 finally settling near Chester.
All ' descendants of James and
Nancy Hood family, the · Jacob
and CJ'ara Gaul family , and the
Phineas and Cynthia Eastman
family are part of the Curtis family and should auend as well as
any llther Curtis family members
of Meigs County. Among those
expected to attend is J&gt;arbara
Curtis Weaver· of New York,
national'· president -of the Curtis
Family Association.
.
Sponsoring .this yea,r's reuniOn
are descendants of Sonoma (Cur' tis)· Osborn McNickle. For more
information family members may
call 992· 7874 or 949-4000.

Parade participants needed
The Meigs County Junior Fairboard is seeking· participants for
the annual Meigs County Fair
parade to be held at 5:30 p.m.
Sunday, Aug . 15. in front of the
gnindstand. Lineup will begin ·at
5 p.m on the race track . There is
no fee or preregistration required .
Entry forms can be found in
the Fair premium list.
Awards will be given '" three
classes : best walking un it, float,
and animal. The parade is open to
all local residents, organizations
and businesses . More information
may .be obtained by caUing 992- ·
3771.

45 Yrs. and Up

freeling Cllrdt

with
George Hall
Monday 6 til1 0 pm .

......
Only 90C

For All Occasions

Good Times
Present ~·cactus"
Live Band
Saturday
9:30 to 1:30

Cassette Tapes
Country &amp; Oldies
Reg . 1 4. 99_

Only

SJ.39,

notice o1 the draft octlon. ol lhe Dlreclor which are "Propo8ed Actlono" ara effective upon lauance or II '
written atatements ol the ototed
allectlve
dote.:
Olrector'a
Intent
with Pursuant to Ohio Revised ·
reapect to the luuance, Code Section 3745.0.,.. a
denial, madlllcatlon, revo- flnol octlon moy be op- ·
cation, or ranewol ol a peoled to the Envlranmenllll'
permit, license, or' variance. Review Appeal a Commlo- .
W~tten
comments and alon
(EAAC)
formerly ·
roqueota lor 1 public known u the Environ- :
moetlng . ·i'lgardlng . a mentsl B011rd ol Review) by ·
prapoaecl action may be 1 perao~ who hat 1 perty to :
submitted within 30 doy'a ol a proceeding btlore the .
notice ol the propoaed dlraetor by tiling on appeal ·
aCtion. An ld)udlcotlon within 30 daya ol notice ol .
.hea~ng may bt held on a
the ftnoloctlan. Purauanltopropoaecl - n II a hearing Ohlo Atvlaed Coda Section
requeot or obJection It 3745.07, a · flnel octlon.
rac:elved by the OEPA within laaulng, danylng, modify··
30 doya ol lnuance ol the lng, ravot&lt;tng, or renewing • ·
prapoaed action. Wrlttan permit, llc.nH, or Ylrllnce ·
commenta, roqualill lor which Ia not preceded by a .
mHtinga,
and prapoled action, may bt .
adjudication hearing re- appealed to tha EAAC by ·
queata muot be aant to: flllng an appeal within 30 :
Hu~ng Clerk, Ohio Envldaya ollaauance oltha llnol
ronmen..l
. Protection octlon. EAAC eppeole mu..
Agency, P.O. Box 1049, bt lllld with: Envlran·
Columbua, Ohio 43216-1049 mental Review Appeala
(Telephone: 114-644-2129). Commlaalon, 236 Eoot Town
"Final Actlona" are actlona Street,
Room
300,
Columbue, Ohio· 43215. A
copy olthe appeal muat be ·
110 Help Wanted
urved an tho director ·
wl)hln 3 daye alter tiling the ·
appeal with the ERAC.
FINAL ISSUANCE OF.
REGISTRATION
33 Pagt Simi, Middleport, Ohio CERTIFICATE
AS
4
GENEAATO A
OF
INFECTIOUS WASTE
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSP., t 15 E. MEMORIAl:
DR., POMEROY, OH
.
FACILITY OESCRlPTlON:
INFECTIOUS,.WASTE.
APPUCAnON NO. 53-0•

Has part-time and
fulj-time positions
available for RN's &amp;
LPN's. All shifts.
Anyone interested ~S FINAL AcTION NOT
PRECEDED BY PROPOSED
please contact
ACTION
AND
IS
APPEALABLE TO ERAC.Michelle Gilmore, RENEWAL CERTIFICATE.
5 lTC
ADON,
740-992-6472.

Hauling

Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

'-embran'd t
Toothpaste

740·742·2138

.,

3/11/99TFN

Spon•ored by tl1e

tiiVal
5 le29

Pack

Everyday

Tickels. $10.00.Donalion Each/1000 Maximum

L:...---==================----J

-··-·11:8

·lllatlat
·llalclt...
• leteln... Willi I lrlcll
...... Coallractla

The-Woter-Ma'n
'.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
816tn, 7tn, 2993 R 1.t1 , Cente-nary. KIDS Ctotnes , Toys, House·
hold Items, Free P1cture W1ndow

Servic~
We deliver ALMOST anything

All V1rd S1le1 Muat Be Paid In

Culverts: 4" • 48" in stock

8' Gravelless leach
100'- 1000' Rol~ 1" &amp;3/4' 2DO#Water Lire
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp;Regulators Water Storage Tonks
.~. .. : •• A

I

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representalive
Larry Schey·

750 East State Street
Alhens, Ohio 45701

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

..

8 / 5/99 - Don FitCh. Sumne1 Ad
Home lnteriOt . Gra'le l y n,ower
9am-6pm. Ra1n cancels.

Phone ,(740) 593-6671

· AOYAICEO DRAINAGE SYSTEMS INC.

YOUNG'S
CAIPEIIIER SERVICE
•Room lldcllllonll Remodeling
•Now Gorogeo
•
•Eitctrlcai &amp; Plumbing
•Aoollng &amp; Guttm
•VIny1 Siding &amp; Polnllng
•Pitlo &amp; PO!Ch Decks

Frre Elllmlltt

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pal"j''eroy, Ohio

..

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,
' Mulch, Top Soil
(Low Rates)

'New Roofs • Repairs •
Coaling • G~tters •
Siding • 'l,lry~all •
Painting • Plumbing

All Makes Traclor &amp;
Equipment .Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 Sr. Rt 7 Slluth

Frt~e

Esllmates
Joseph J~cks

140-992-2068

KCB
EXCAVATING
. Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer
Services
Site P.rejiai-ation
•Septic Syslems
RODNEY-KELLER
Owner/Operator

. 1·740-985·3949
:I mo . pd.

oH 45723
74G-IB7-GIII

.

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

992·1717

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
.• New Homes .
·Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
985-4473 .

REYNOLDS

DRIVEWAY STONE

CONSTRUCT.ION
Shingled Roofs

Topsoil &amp; Mushroom · Vinyl Siding &amp; Sofit
Compost
Professional' work at
.Light Hauling
an affordable price

740-339-4160

992·5455
Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Free eslimates -

Ouahty clothing and household
items . $1 oo bag sa l e every
Thurselay Monday thru Satu rday

Giveaway

I Cat To Good Holhe, Declawed ,
Neutered , Hou se Tra1ned . 740·

245-9651 .
2 Abandoned Or Lost P uppies

Entortatnment

For More Information : 742-3020 or 992·6435

Look i ng For A Good Home. 1
Male , Brown &amp; Black Markir,~gs ;
Female: Black &amp; Brown. Appro11.

10 w..os Ol&lt;l. 740-446-3769.

4 Kittens, 6 Weeks Old, Part Him a layan. Part AnQ ora. 7140 -441 ·

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

1659.

6 Weeks Old Kittens . 740-256·

6806 .
Electnc range to naut away, 740·
992-7565.

• Vinyl Siding ~ Garages
New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience ·
Free Estimates ·

Free Puppy&amp;, COl lie-Mix, To good
llome. One HoundOog , 6 mo
Ol&lt;l.(304)576-2273 .
Fr&amp;e Tires, AUio!Tra c~ Take all
or none: (304)6~5-2440
Free to good home , small dogs,
call 740·742·2773 or 740-386 ;

Call 614-843-5426

9331
Free Wood , Needs Split. 19 15
Chatham Street. Gatlipolis

,_,

"I'M BACK"
Young Former Owner of
KEN'S APPLIANCE SERVICE

Ken

985·3561

Aeg•ste[ed ff!:male Dalmat ian , 3
years old ; brow n male Chow, 4
years okt 740-949·2619.

II&lt;·" II

part' •.· \\ill dl'lhu

60

Lost and Found

Lost State Route 850, KefT, Oh io.
Male Oatmat10n (740)·245.0022

Linda's Painting
Take the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message . After 6 pm

740·985·4180
Free Estimates

Mon - Fri 8:3.0 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

7/27/9~

2 mo. pd.

Los t: Large White Dog lost Near
R IO Grande , Reward ! 74 0-2 45·
0485 After 6:00 P.M
lost Paii of Glasses along road
at lower Five Mile or Crab Cree~ .

(304)675·4815

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis

.&amp; Vicinity
1st Time : Friday, Saturday, 9-?
2124 Kr1ner Oft 218, lots Of Eve rythtng , Cheap!

(740) 742-8888

.·WORRYING!! I

SERVICE
Agricultural Lime, 6
Ll mestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

4 Famili es! Sat . 817/99 10:00Am
To 1 2336 Cen!enar y Ad Desk,
Chairs, Home Inte riors, C lothing.
Bai;JY Clothes. Ect.
4 Families : Friday On ly, 9·5, 1/4
Mile Pas! A1ver Valley H 5 On
Lmle Kyger Road.

S..._•

Mutl
Be Plld In Advance.
DEADLINE : 2:00p.m. , ·
the day betore the ed
Is to run. Sunday
edition· 2:00p.m.
Frldey. Monday edition
• 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

No Credit· Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
. Repo • Dlvorded

DUMP TRUCK

Drive. Off Of S.R. 1-41 . 816th, 7th,
Time 8·4 .

A1J. Yard

CREDIT PROBLEMS???

R. L. HOLLON
TRUC"KING

1:00pm

F~da)'.

August 6· 7. 9am ·4pm . Russell
res1d ence. wolt6 Pen Road. Po·
ICJ;.

No Embarrassment.. .
You're Treated wllh Respecll
Call Now 'for lns~nl Approval II..

August 9th, &amp; lOin , 8·? LOIS 01
Crall Supplies. Ceram ic Molds &amp;
Pour i ng Table, 266 H omewo od
Drive, Bidwell, Ohio.
Friday ·g.? At Qua il Tra il er Park ,
Lot 95. Be h1nd Bodi mers Store .
Clothes. Craf1s. Toys. Morel
Garage Sale : Friday, August 6th ,
17 WIIIOWOOd Drive {Off Burkhart
lane) 9 A.M. -4 P.M.
Moving Sale : Frlde~y Augwsl 6ih ,
Saturday 7th, 309 Vlne Street,
Crown City, Ohio, waaner. Dryer .
Tools . T.V.. Couch . Chair. Pans.
D1shes , Etc.

CMLMR.-FDRD

(740)'tta•••

ASSEMBLY AT HOME!! Crafts .
Toys , Jewelfy. Wo od Sewing
Typ1ng Great Pay! CALL 1-800·
79~·0380 Ext 1201 (24 Hf&amp; ).

Attn · CNA's Home Hea lth Ager')·
cy Now H1r lng F uii·T1me And
Part-Time Poslt1ons Agen cy W1ll
Ttall') For The PCA POSIIIOns .
Must Ha'&gt;le H S Otploma . GED. Or
Some Expene nce Canng For The
Elderly You May P ICk·UP An Ap·
pllcat10n To . 266 Upper R 1ver
Road. Gall1p otts. OH 45631 . No
PhOne Galls Please 1

Big gar'age sale· f~tsf•ti me m 7
~arsl Augu st 6·7, 8am -5pm. At 7
byp ass TR 207 , Pomeroy. muo
Glass, lurnl!ure, tOOls ahd m1sc.

Avon Products Start your own In·
Home Busln&amp;S$ W ork F1e 111b le
Hours, En1oy Unhm'1ted Ea rnmgs

Friday, Augu st 6. -one day only
Bone Hollow Rd oil SA 7 . BOy' s
clothes , women's clotnes , VCR
tapes . toys, kn1ck kna~ks , jeans ,

Thur sday, Fr i d~y. Saturday, 8·4.
Kanauga , Behind Aaybur('l's Mar·
ket &amp; S E. EqL·Ipment. 0 Foster's
Trailer Park t5 , Glassware \
H ouse hold
Items.
Clothes.
Beaniln, Cardlogllde, Couch ,
Rocter. More!

10/25!'96 tfn

•·
•

/
I

1·888-561·2866

Help Wanted

Person or mau ed couple To as.s•st w 1th milking ana car~ng fo1
large oauy ne1a H ous1ng utlltlles. et c lUI mshed Respond to
Pt Pleasant Reg1SUH. E B 4 .
200 Ma1n StreeT PI Pleas anl.

WJ 25550
POSTAL JOBS To S 18 35 /HR
INC BENEFIT S ""0 EXPEAI·
E NC E FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1-BC.0·813 3585.
E"XT •4 210 8 AM S PM 7
DAYS Ids. me
AN Chn1cal Cooi':J,na!Of ... anted
lor newt,- created p0S1t1on 1n Gal·
11a1Jac11:son area 1de~J cand1aat e
w11l be mdepen::!er.1.t'l1gnly organ·
1Zed &amp; eiCPB'IrtQced w11h genatnc
pop ulat1on. all weekends. even·
mgs, &amp; hO lidays o•r Send re-sume
to Enc Haseme1er MP.d1cal Orrec·
tor , On Ca11 Mo~:d1cat A:..soc1a:.on.
PO Bo11. 270. Amens On, 45701
AN Chnlca i'CoorOiflator V.anteO.
F6r Newl y CreaiPO POSIIIOn lr
GalliPOliS Jarks"n Area Ideal
Cand1date w 11: 8e lndepencen l
H•gh ly Orgamzeo o Expenenced
W1th Ger)a:r(c Popu a1 "ln Wee·
Kenos E;e.,1ngs ~ rtol1oa,-s Qlf
Send Resume Tc: fpc Has:.ema
er MediCBI D1rertor Or Cat. Medl·•
Ca l ASSO CtC.IIOI"' P 0 SOM 270.
Athens, OH 45 7J1

SINGERS ! GOSPEL. OR CLE AN
Carleton School and Me 1gs In·
COUNTRY Cpll N::.w Toll Frt;~e 1·
Clustr1es Is seekmg qualified ar:&gt;
BIJO·J39•42{:4 Or 1 800 469·8,64
phcan1s for the follow1ng subslr •
For App01n1mP,n: .TG COfT!8 To
be&lt;ls.
•
•
lute pos! t10ns . Bus drrver. cook. ·
Nas hv1!1e Tepness&amp;e Anc! A.Jdl·
Health Ser'llces Coordinator ( AN
t1on For Ma1or qecord Producers
.Garage Sale ! 1 day Only, Fnday
or LPN ), hablhtatton and w'orkS•"''P
I
'In ternet WW~J WCII al"
Aug ust 6t h, 8·? , ra m or s/"&lt; IMI
s!Jeclal!st (Adult Ser'.IICes). Jan1·
341 R~tand Street, Middleport
tor. janitonal crew leaders . secre·
Someone NeP.OP.'; 1 :.rt with el·
tary/cl erica l. teacller. teachmg
Large yare! sa le- ·Saturday &amp; Sun· ' ass1stant. veh•cte a1de. van dnv- de[ lY ady 4Pt.! 8PtA E~"rHngs
and br ,..Je;o~"'"1" 1:,3041675·
da'jl No clothing, rebuilt conces·
er Subm1t resume by August 13
~854
sion traUer. 14' alum inum bOat &amp;
1999 to . Car leton School/ Meigs
trailer, car dOlly, 1996 Jeep Cher·
lndust n es . P.O Box 307 , Sy raStra •gl"l Sl?clms:·ess SP.arns
okee. large hobby norse, .And er·
cuse, OhiO 45779 EEO
Wan'ed 74J·3&amp;6 ~31:.0...:9...:·5:__ _
son windows, lots of mise, too numerous to mention . Locat ed be·
Computer Users Needed Work'
1eac her's Ace dr.,~ Cool\ Part
hmd Mas on Famil y Res taurant,
Own Hrs. S25K · $80K/ Yr 1·800!1me pOSII'·On:. -11 !h oene!IIS A10€
Mas on, wv. Follow si gns Cash
536 ·0486 X 7777 www.lcwp.cont
hours are M-F '1 )"'A.M-5 3/) PM
only, no cnecks
Cosmetologt$1 Needed . F ull ' &amp; COO /I nours e1 t M·'F 8 ~OAM·
1 OO~M Must be, at least 16 yrs
Movln_g sale· e'o'erything must go . Pa rt T 1me Pa id vacalions . Free
old wJth a HS d C·OMa 01 ~ED
Insi de &amp; out. 8/ 1-8/8 , 9 to dark,
C E u. Hours. 740·4411·7267
Atde . e•pe· e-n~"' •trrHk1ng w.tn
Townsh ip Ad . 17 fM cG ra th Rd .
Counselor Post tiOn - Arl Outpa
0h1ldter Pr.,!em•a Ceo~· ca1d
740·992-2969.
expenef"IC-t' as j .COO l\ ptefefred
tlent Alcohol And Ot h~r Drug
Mov1ng salt;~ - Thursday, Fr iday
Agency Located In Gall•a A M ' Sen d resurne to R1Ve1 .:alleY. ..
Saturday and Sunday. some furn 1·
Jackson Count •es. IS Seekmg A CDS P 0 8~x 5•141 Huntmg !on
ture, washer and dryer, law n tracQual if ied Person To Pr ov10e AI
WV 25701 :Jy Aug 6 EOE
tor , Troy·b lll hiler( m1sc . to ols. ' coho! And Other Dr ug Couns'e l·
household items, clothing (w om·
mg: Counselor Wtl1 Work With Atl
Wantea Suney::&gt;r FC' Cvn~:~tn..1C·
en's larger sizes) . cham saw 01r·
Age Gro ups. Knowledge Of
!ton lay O•Jt 01 Sll"' 1;\·or~ BUild
Chemtcal oependency Aeq utrea
culate saw and much more. Route
mgs, H ahwavs Al":i 8r1dges And
143 to Cotterill Rd . to signs . ap·
Bachelors Degree. CCDC , LISW,
Some Pr cp&gt;rty St,.n.P~II"I£ For
And /Or LPCC P referred Send
s: trm In SouthP&lt;lStfHr fl• o Ftve
prox . one mile on left.
Resu me By August 20. 1999 To · Years E . . . pertbcP lis 1 Total
Mu1t1p1e ram11y, Saturday &amp; Sun·
FACTS, t770'Ja ckson Ptke, 'BtdStatton Knc~&lt;&gt;te1 ,:. ::&gt;~ ·:.l..D A.,1
day, 7th·81h . 500 l i nc oln Hill
Softdesk SII'H&gt;y A:rr&gt; ~r.' ~t; w ,t;
wet). Ohto, 45 6 14 Or FA X 7 40·
(across from water tanks). Pomer·
446·80,4 EOE.M!FIH
Be,Helolut Prcf~&gt;so:. ··n 1 Rr&gt;1.~ o;1ra
oy, 9am-6pm.
t1on Not ReQUited S"'"'O RE'sume
DATA ENTRY' · Nall onal B illing
To C LA 480 C·O Ga pn11~ Oa1ir
Saturday, August 7-, 9am·4pm . Seeks A Full / Part T1 me Med ical
Tflbune. 825 Th&lt;'d ~vt."nuP Gal
Four fam ily, Home lnten or, Ind ian
Biller. Salary A t $46K Per Year.
pol1s Oh10 , 456 31 Ber~e!1b Jl.r ,:J
Items, children's clo!hing In gu~at
PC Aequ~re d N o Expenence
Sa lary Pac~&lt;;age Comrnen:,ura1e
shape , good priceS , beside
Needed . W1ll Tram , Call 1 -888·
W1th Exper1en ce Eoual Oppor·
school m Rutland .
251 · 7475.
:'"_:"c_'Y_:E::_m:::
P:IOY'.:'::.'--7 ---~
Thursday &amp; Frrday, Gravel Hill , Direc tor 'of AdmiSSIOns and Ma rWild life Jo t~ 10 $21 60 Hr
536 High Street, Middlepo rt 9am·, keting HealtlllNursing back·
ln'c Bene '1ts
Game·War.QE'"l~
3pm.
ground, abil ity to wnte markelmg
Sec ur1ty Ma 1ntenMC!!
Park
Range rs No Exp ~eeded F •
plans,, sales calts, rel ate to phy si.Yard sale , Fr 1da y. 34269 New
cla ns and d ischar ge pla nner s
App fExa m Info Cal1 "·800·813·
Lima Rd.
· '
wel l.
Int eres te d candidate s
3585 .. EX T 882 .. 8AM-9Pr.t l
should submit thelf resume lo
Days Ids 1nc
Pt. Pleasant
Rocksprings Rehab . Cen ter ,
&amp; VIcinity
36759 Aocksprmgs Road , PamerWILDLI FE JOBS To $2" E2 hR
oy, Ohio 45769 . Attn: Lisa Yelll.
INC BEN EFITS GM;1 E Y..AP·
1st Vs.rd Sale Sa!Urday,- 2907
Adm i nistrat or, 740 · 992 ·6606
DENS .
SECUPITY
'...14. !~B i rcn Ave , Pt. Pt. , SAM-2PM . Equa!Opportunity Employer.
TENA NCE, PARK F·t."GERS r..o.
S ize ~0 miss es •. gym eQui p , L1t·
· EXP NEEDED cop ;.pp 4\{"l
tie of everything.
Do You En toy Working With The . EXAM INFO C A.LL • ·t'l\'0 B'..;
Elderly ? If So, W ffr Have Trle .Job
35B5 E:wT ~4 2';
A
.o PM
3 Fami ly, 1 day only FMay, B/61 For You . Now Hiring CNA' s,
7 bAYS Ids. nc
99 , 2223 Jack'ion Avenue
STNA 's And Ell:pe nenced HHA s
App ly ,At . 762 Second Avenue .
X·Aay Tecl&lt;1 Ultra-S ,r:
J •
August 6th &amp; 7th. 9AM-7 4 Faml· Ga llipolis. OH Or PhOne 740·446·
Po rn I Plea sa.,• Pnyo;,,· 'Jr, v'
ty, West Co lumbia, 2 Miles North 3808 , var ious H ours Currently
lice Sel"ri A~ Sur"'&gt;
C9 1
ot Mason County Falrgro\!nds . Available, EOE .
Pojf' Y P·1eas3nt ReT:. It'!
'' .,
Bed . Liv ing- Room S ur \, C.O. s.
200 Ma 1n St ref' P1 F' e~~,
Bicycles, Electronics, Clothes , DRIVER S ~ Cannon Ex'p re$$ 99°'o
wv 25550.
and More.
"
Onver No Touch Fre ight Starr' At
Business
.32 Geni s MI . f5 Yr t E x.p ., .3 1
140
Clifton , W'IJ., August 4,5,6 .. 9AM· Cen!S MI. 13 Yr : .30 Cents Mi. /1
Tra ining
?. Clothing/Misc . Old Bottles, 2 Vr : . 29 Cents Mi .~ ~ Mos., .28
Antique Hair Cryer Chairs, good Cents Mi. 12 •6 Mos . Students Or
Gallipolis Career Colte-g~
working condition. Hydralic Cha ir 1 Mo. EMp. $ 350 Wk Pay Aa 1se
(Careers Clf'Se T H~r1e 1
&amp; Other Salon Equip. CMinSaw. Every ' SO .OOO Mi les B onuses.
Call Today 1i'•IC-.146 4113,
WeedEa ter, Homelile Gas Pow·
1·800·2l.! (J5:
ered Water Pump &amp; Other lawn &amp; A1der Program. Paid Vacations .
Ins.
Ava il.
www.cannonex·
Reo • 9J ~; :21.;8
garden equ ip.
press co m. Call For D etails 1 •

e v

Gall ipolis Ferry. Across Fr om

:800::::::,:-84::::::5·,:93::90::::__
. -----~

AKZ0. 9· ? Friday.

DRIVER S

Manufa ct urer s Fleet
Needs
Trucks For Growmg Bu smess
A~y Or J1m 800·5f'4· 111 1.

Huge Yerd Sale Sat August 7,
9AM:?? Along Route 33/North of
.Mason, Across from Golf Course.

Or~ver s Free 3 · Week CDL
Training• Earn $26-$32 000 1\st
Yr W /Ful l B enefitS. No EXp
N·eeded . P.A.M Transp ort Spe·
c1a l Call TOll Fre e 1·877·2306002 ·sun · Fn , 7 AM ·7 PM
www.pamtransportcam

Multi -"Family Yard Sa le. 2806 &amp;
2808, Birch Avenue . Fn day, Au·
gust 6, 9AM· ? Clothes . Toys.
Shoes. HousehOld Items aM
much more.
,

Easy Work ! E11ce11en.1 Pay! Assemble Producls at Home CaiJ
Sa! BAM-4PM 75 Burdette Addi·' Toll Free. 1'· 800·467 ·5566 Ext
tlo n. Bed ding. Furniture , Clo th es, . ,.•2::'.:.'0:__ _ _ _ _ _ __
Misc .
Yard Sale, Six Miles out Jerrys ,Full or par111me pos1t1on foi AN on
Run,' Apple Grove Aug 5. 6. &amp;7. 7·3 shl!t. Rockspnngs Rehab1l1ta·
9AM· ?? Matenal . Needlepoint tlo n Center IS curre~;~ t ly acct~pting
Book s. ·foys , Baby Ite ms, Lots of appi1Cat1o ns ror an ex-per1ence,d
nurse Jomm g our team at .Rock·
MISC. (304)576·2635 .
.
spnngs 1S JO in ing an exceplional
group of nurses thai tru ly bel1eve
Auction
80
m . prov'idtng excellent nurs1ng
and Flea Market
carE! Full benefi t package S'Ubm1t
resume to· Aock sptlngs Ae habih
Bill Mood ispa ugh Auc tioneering
Comp lete Auctio neering Serv 1c· tatlon Center. 36759 Rockspr1ngs
es. Cons 1gnm ent a uction- M ill RO .. Carol Greening DO N. 740 ·
Street . Middleport. T hursdays ·992-6606.·
Oh io Lice nse 17693 740·989·
HAVE DOCTORS . NEED BILL ·
2&amp;23
ERS . FfT. PIT Med1ca1 B1Jhng. t-Jo
Rick Pearson Auction Company, Expe nence Necessary. Ear n ~P
full tlme auctioneer, complet e To S4 0K+ Working At Home
auc tio n
service
L1c ensed Mu'st Have ISM Compat1ble PC •
f66 ,0hio &amp; West Vrrg 1n1a, 304· Call 1·800J697· 7670. www mediS·
taff net
773-57B5 Or 304-773-544 7

Local Trucking Company Seek!:'IQ
Oua l1f1ed Tru c k Dr1v,ers . Good
Pay And Benefrls. Send- Resume
To Dr1ver. P 0 Box- 109 Jack 90 Wanted to Buy
o son. OhiO 456 40. Or Call 1-740·
AbS olute Top Dollar All U.S. Stl· 286·1463 To Schedule An lnterver And Gold Coins, Prool sets. v·':.•w:.·--------~
Dtamonds , An!1que Jewelry, Gold · LUMBERYARD
Rings, Pre · 1930 .u S Currency,
FORKLIFT OPERATOR &amp;
. Sterlin g Etc AcquJS IItons ,Jewelry
CL ASS B COL DRIVERS '
. M.T.S . Coin Shop. t5 t Second
UPTO '
.t.venue. Gallipolis, 740·446-2842.
$28,000
PERYEARTO START
Antiques. top prices pa 1d RiverIne An ltqlJes. Pomeroy. Oh10 .
PLUS:
R uss M oore owner. 740·992·
- MONTHLY BONUS- PROFIT SHAR I NG ~
25~ .
Wedameyar's Au ctio n Service,
Gallipolis. Ohi o 740·379--2720.

~ PAID VACAT ION ~

Cann i ng Jar s. Quarts aM PmTS
Prelerabl? wide-mouTh (304 )675 ·

~ PAID

Clean Late M odel Cars Of
Trucks, L ow Miles, 1995 M o~els
Or Newe r, Smith BuiCk Ponllac
1900 Eastern Avenue. Gallipolis.
Wanted To Buy 1955 Gall 1a Academy Higll School Year Book. Will
Pay Re.aso nabl e Am ount. 7 40·

446·2 188

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

SICK DAYS -

- PAlO PERSONAL OAVS" PAIO HOLIOAVS-

, 9:26.

~ AND MORE ~

YEAR ROUND EMPL OYMENT

CALL TODD FRANKLIN AT

!14-885-4421
Arlington ·BI1Jnt Lumber 1
CCillumbul, Ohio
An Equal Opportunlly Employer
Med ical P1 ocessor. FPI PT No
E11penence Necessary, 401&lt; PC
Requtred, Call t-800·663· 7440
N1ght snttt. 7pm-9am. Small grouo
home . call for m1erv1ew, 740·992·

5023.

110

Help Wanled

AVON! All AreaS! To Buy cir SelL
Shirley Spears, 304·675-1429

•

150

·Ow ner Operators

Huge Sale. 8/3·816 . across from
' PPHS . 9AM· ? Large Clothes. [n f·
ants , Household Items. M1sc.

Salutday 8·5, B1ke , Old Oil Lamps,
Household. Books, C lothe s,
M orel l inwood OH lake Rio
Grande.

14527NI71

POTENTIAL

1·800-966-3599 Ext 2601

Found : money, call to Identify,

740-949-2286.

'i I(H'i Bi gln l!idg&lt;' Hd .. lon g Bullu111. Ohio

BISSELL BUILDERS, .
II~ C.

Pupp1es To A Good Home, 740·
245-9754.

4288.

THE APPLIANCE MAN
• \\'l' S&lt;'nit'l' allmakt·' • ( \t·d IJ&gt;pli :lll&lt;t''

Male Chocolate lab wltn lillie bit
Beagle, 740·992'-6206

Red, female . lull blooded Dober·
man. 18 months old, 740-985·

Now

Free Estimates

740-247-4292

Coni: NWV003508

TONIGHT!

Ext 9735.

40

D emonstr~llons

boat covers. carpets, etc.

Albany, Ohio

FREE ESTillfATES

".).

1·800·311·3391

949-2168

Henderson, WV
We Do•••
- Parking Lots
• Basketball Courts
• Driveways
• Grading Work
• Hauling Stone
(304) 675·2457 OHkt
(304) 674·3311 Cell Ph.

DATING

9:00-5:30.

-.·A &amp; D Auto Upholstery • Plus, Inc
WILLIS'
Rutland, Ohio
SEAMLESS
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
GUTTERS
tru.ck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops.
Sitlin, &amp; S1llil Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
Contractors Welcome

500 gal; per day 1200 gal. cap.
Porta Jon rentals
S$ptlc Tanks Pumped

Cr,1fts [J,srlays ·

(r-Io Sunday Calls)

START

Have Fun Meeti ng EJigible Smgles In Your Area Call For More
Informat ion . 1· 800· AOMA.NCE ,

740-592-1842
1

St·pll·mht·•· I Hth "" I ()lh

740·992·7643

Personals

New To You Thrlf1 Shoppe
9 West Stimson, Athens

j

r;J.e,gs County Fa11grounds

New Homes' Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
•Replacemenl Winqows
•Room Additions
·Roofing
COMMERCIAl and RESIDENTIAl
FREE ESTIMATES

005

Start Dating Tonight! Have fun
playing the Ohio Dating Game. 1·
BOO·AOMANCE. e11tension 9681 .

f;,.,.,_,~ )-·'

' ~, s. c:{J
.,;:~
-~ ' EXPO '99

•1 •

ANNOUNCEMENTS

30 Announc11menta

.

r,

ct.. Cl&lt;nsil..0

2 Fam1ly Yard Sa le. 260 Sanders

FREE ESTIMATES
4r.l TF N

740-7 42-3411
Brya11 Reeve•
Sutan Reeve•

7/22!TFN

Don '1 Need A Big One
, Call A Lillie One

up to 8ton

New Construction &amp; .
Remodollng-Kitchon Coblnota
Vinyl Sldlng-Roof•·Dockl·
Gorogn
Free Eslimate•

7123/99 1 mo. pel

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main SL,
PomeroY, .OH_
Paying SSO.OQ
per game
$300.00 Coverall
' ..
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive top line.
Lie. 11 oo-so· nno""'

Sunaal Rome
ConstrucUon

740·992-5232

-

~

uracw.Sun•eiHome.com

33795 HUand Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Coolville,

.

Auguit 14th

Hire aVer. ··

High_&amp;D~y
Self-Storage

DEPOYSAG
.· PARTS

Dump Trudt Service
• Gravel • Limestone
• Fill Dirt • Etc.

740-742-2566

ttfiOUrtQ lrtC.

JACKS ROOFING
~ CONSTRUOION

Supplies

HOWAR~'S TRI· COUNTY SA~LON

Now Renting

740-992-3470

22 yn. Local

J.M. ROWE TRUCKING

7123 1mo.

WICKS
We Deliver

And Sullivan Show

Call 98S·383I

,.,.. ,... r,.,. tn 1&gt;""' e..r e.,..

day before tnt ad l e to run ,
Sund1y • Monday edition -

WEEKLY

Complete S1mp le Government
Forms A.t Home . No E~~:penance
Necessary CALL TOll FREE •

815 &amp; 8/ 6 , lourth hOuse pasl Naza rene Cnurch in Chester K1d s

Advtnct . Deedllne: 1:OOpm the

-.

Brochurest SatisfactiOn Guar ·
anteEJOI Postage &amp; Supplies Pro·
'o'ldedl Rush Selt - Addressed
Stamped Enve lope! GICO, DEPT
5. B ox 1-438 , .ANTIOCH. TN
37011-1438. Stan Immediately

$800

110

Help Wanted

$2 ,000 WEEKLY! Mathng 400

clorhes and lots rT'Ofe

7 40-992-0038

740.985·3813

11 111 1

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

atrrl Delivery

Roush
949-1701

110

&amp; Conning .W•

Call for details

Wei~,

MYERS PAVING

Bee and Bear Costume Contest, Honey Bear
Raffle, Crafts, Demonstrators, Sidewalk Sales,
Farm Market, Window Displays, Calliope Music,
Model Railroad 'Display, Food, lillf:! Entertainment
and More. Information Call 7 40:992-4197

tt~~~~ 24 Hr. Taxi

Plastics and Supply
WATER HAULING " G&amp;W
Tuppers Plains, OH
St. Rt. 7

Mighty Mac Aeration Systems

Live Bee Beard Demonstrations

To place an ad Call992-2156

•LawaC..•II It•

(740) 992~3131

cisterns, pools,
lr~es, lawn &amp; gardens

Yard Sale

s

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Syaterw &amp;
U1ilitU.a

HONEY BEAR FESTIVAL
Featuring

Ke11neth McCullough, A. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, A. Ph .
Mon. thru Fn. s a.m. to 9 p.m.: Sat. 6 am -6 pm
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955
E. Main
Friendly Service
Pomeroy, Oh.
Week
'till9
·

SHADE RIVER

Four-Wheeler purchased at:
Riverfront Honda, Gallipolis, Ohio

Middleport 12·6 pm

~~~~~~~!

Feed &amp; Sho,w Supplies

Drawing to be held at 12 pm on
Sunday October I O, 1999
For More fnfonna tion Call I· 740-541-4001 Local Call
u1· cunta c t &lt;my P omero y Squad Member

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949·2217
Sizes 5' X 1o·
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

Complete Line of 4~H

Pomero y Volul!teer EmeriJellcy Sqund, lr~corporoted.

Claar-ettes

Hill'S
SELF STORACE

SHADE RIVER AG
·sERVICE

1999 HONDA FOREMAN
450 ES 4X4 GIVEAWAY

On.l y $4.49

70

1r Wlllfl.f Music it Yow [a,

Sue Hokomb. Shirley Ann Douglas.
Belly Marion , Kevin Simmons and
Karie Lu cas.
Descendants of Delilah attending
were Dorothy Schou; Presley Winncr and John Price Winner. Orange
West 'de scendants were descendant s
of Orange West were Marlin and
Cheryl Lovell. David Brewer, a
cousin to Dorothy Scholl was also
present.
·

.SAYRE
TRUCKING

1/2 'Price
Reg. $6.99

Semke•
Il ouse &amp; Trailer Sit es

Llfndscape Material,

Sunglasses
.

HeCc

Bulldo•er &amp; Bacldroe

7/1 61991 mo pd

EOE

2-3 oz. Tubes.

n

IT

s

Pullllc Notice

Schott ga~e presentation S' using

Society
Scrapbook

u

740-742-2080

.

r===========lr===========lr===========-lr===========
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice

Contact: Amy Boster, Director of Community
Support Services or Melissa Kimmel, Host Home
Coordinator at .ACCEss· to Human Resource
De~elopment 1-800-562·5565. ACCESS is . a
community mental health center in Gallia,. Jackson
and Meigs counties and is a AA/EEO Employer. " ·

ramily chans to explain relationships within the family. ·
A descendent chart prepared by
Kay Slack was displayed for viewing and pictures of the group and
individual families were taken dur-

.'

HOW D
EICAVAniG CO.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • M'ddleport, Ohio

Business Services

Page
Thuraday,August5,1999

Great sex is about giving pleasure to your partner with joy and enthusiasm
.

Thursday, AugustS. 1999

, OWN A PC?
PUT IT TO WORK!
$25 -S751'Hr. PT 1FT
1·800·784·8556
www .pcpays com

Schools
Instr uction

EARN A LEGAL COlL.f OE DE·
GREE OUICK '•.V
f-l1 "''
•Mi! Ster:&gt; o·, ·:or~:.: b~ .(
spor•dertce l:::~s. j Llf' · rr
c.-.
UCB,t!On .lf'd St1r-·• ::-t.,/1 , : , ~
For F~€E lrfJ,.,. l'~&gt;.J' q '('~
Phone CAI\''BP :vj:;:
~.-.Tt
UNIVERStn
~J 1 F

•-a . . ·:.....:

E•ce llenl Oj:'~r&lt;fu•-. !J

~

mer.t Yc_,r lflC ":1f' • :,...,,.,,n
conie Ta'l P·"t.d·;&gt;! . • ' ; ,', •
Course . Cia!.~,~ ' C.&lt;lt ! ·.:~ '
A.M . To 4 PM C;:al Cd • ·~ ..- ·
Tuesday s 10 T 4 ,.._ • ~, ...:F
8178 Or 1 800 (':'LB· ,t,

MAO DOGS PA LACE
PRO-WRESTLIN G TRAI"liNG
AND PROM OTION5
;;:o Yr~ E&gt;.; e11t-r
0756 Tramer f&lt;rp.t· tlc:.·.,.,Memorv of Ma&lt;J C- 01 1::
Sawyer Tqir&lt;" \C 1'1€&gt; .,., P ' •·
mar'lagers 01 ballr&gt;l :M, ~ •
ma le)

180

Wanted To Do

~ab)'S tl llng :rt (""~ "

.,.·

"'

Haven $15 ;; rlrl&gt; ,..,.l
ed Have Refert&gt;' .,
.:

'

.

8000
Cert 1l1ed Nur~ "·:l f,
o·o,ln·Home - ·p'
446--j659

E &amp; S Ld"-'' S·. '• 'to l ...
plernenlqJ ~·r
·"
AvallabiP !o• ~ . .
fert ltwna C!r1 .•1 'I : 1 •
matPs Srlt ~t11, · ,, ,
Greg !,.My,i\rt ~lr1 \) ·lr
G· B S Cf'J'1"() Pl1'
pentr'y Cprr,pnr ,,. ' '&lt;i
740 -256·68:?~

·D:-r ·

.

'

•

~

Us'
----~--

Gpo·ges Uor i '" , •·•
hac~ 1
:o1.• r.·o~ tu I", "
304·675 1::15-

H

q

Cnntr.:h-~

"g f:.

'I

'-''

Me tal 3·0 Lao Sh··•J .,~ f':•• •
Over 15 Yea•!' E-rer f •, I
BUilding -.10 ~4 1 .~t&gt;~ ·,

...

ter 6 ()QPM
Hou~erleH~''I'Il(l

''t•n f.,

.r., , ;

Tv Gi11l1D01''- th
l-ad~ CJ 1i "AQ.,::.J~·5

,•

c t'

,J A~-'. f, t

D1ane
~rms OryY.JI

&amp; Cons'r&gt;~c t l:'n
New Construction &amp; Aem.onel
Dr~wa ll, S1orng. Roof:.. Adj
t1ons. Parn11 r~ e1c 1304167&lt;~·.
4623 or 1304)6-4-Ql ~5

Non -SmOio:inl.i
Re~pons1blP
Teache r 0n Lfri\IP w.11 3~bys·t
Toddle f A.Je Cr, 1 If!' I tn '•'I
Home . ?40 2•Pi 5823
·
Shrubs Trimmed . ~u fc hing,
Painting . et c Call Bill Leave
Message (304)675·71 t 2
W1H do eloerly care ha~£1 exoe·
ance o~nd refare!lce::. '11Qhl!-. orlv
NA tra•n 1nQ 7.SC SM9 232G
.

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursdlly,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio •

~ugust 5,

1999

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Thurscbly, August5,1999

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

aiUDOK
PHILLIP

ALDER

twa 1
.., tmprKIIcal

ACROSS
1 Pwtoflhe

............. G~-

I Dell._
46F-' .....
1D_Ior_ 41C't8tory
u~

.. r::.
u'at"

·

14-

15FINANC IAL

210
S Earn

220 Money to Loen

Buelneea
Opportunity
E~~:tra

Need a loan? Home Auto &amp;
Debt Consolldatton Good or Bad
Cred1t Call toll free 877 658
0551

Income $ MercMn

chsers And Demonstrators At
Local Retail Stores Will Train
Only Dependable People With
Good Work Elhlcs And Trans
porlallon Naed App~ 1 800-464
5813

$1 000+ WEEKLY WORKING
FROM HOME !II Aecerve S4 00
Per Envelope Processed S~p
phes Provided! Guaranteed Pro
graml CALL NOW! 24 Hou rs
FREE INFORMATION ! 310 288
1816Ext UP
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus1
ness With people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you nave mvest1gateCI
the offenng
ARE U LAZV? I Am AnCI Earn
$1 000 A Day No Selling Not
MLM Free Into Package 1 800
786-8849 24 Hrs XT 27
1

FREE MONE'fl 11 s True Ne\ler
Repay GuaranteeCI $500
$50 000 Debt ConsoUdauon Per
sonal Needs Med1cal B1lls Edu
calion &amp; Busmess 1 800 511
2640

1989 Redmond Oanv1lle 14K70
Also Has EKpanct'b Very Nice
New Heat Pump Asking $14 000
740-388-8335

Professional
Services

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win'
1 888 582 3345

DENTAL BILLER Up To $20 $40
/Hr Dental Blihng Sollware Com
pany Needs People To Proc ess
Medical Cta1ms From Home
Tra1nlng Provided Must Own
Computer 1 BOO 223 1149 EKt
460

FAiTO LAY / PEPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE
$1 OOOt
WEEKLY
POTENTIAL
ALL
CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO
CAL SITES ON GO~NG SUP
PORT SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS I 800
731 7233 EXT 3103
Get paid lor your computer knowl
edge Skyward Technology a local
partntr and Handtech com a
subsidiary ol Fingerhut Corp are
looking !or talentect mdlvleluals
and busmesses to jo1n us In
changing the face of PC retailing
Earn from the computer adv1ce
you grvel Start a revolut ion m
your iilet No rrsk 30 day mon~y
back guarantee Phone 740 985
3498 or v1sil us on the web at
http llwww handteam comfskyward

1 Bedroom A/C W/0 Hook·Up,
Near Arbors Nursing Home No
Pets Quiet Locations $279fMo
+UtilitieS 740....w&amp;2957

136 3409
Cros~ lanes Home Center Free

Set up Dehvery AJC Underpin
mng &amp; $500 WaiMart Shoppmg
Spree w1th ea ch homE! purchased Stop &amp; see your home
town housmg specialist Woody
Willard {304)776 7699 or t 800
922 9976 CrossLanes Exit ol
164

2 bedroom apartment in Middle
por1 we pay wat8f1 sewer &amp; trash
you pay gas &amp; electric $200 per
month SIOO deposit 740·992
7806
28 Ft Trailer With Awn1ng &amp;
Deck OverlooKing Ohio Fhver Full
Kitchen &amp; Balh Furnished $225/
Mo 1 888-840-0521
2bdrm apts total electric ap
pliances furnished laundry room
lacllil•es close to scl1ool In town
Appllcal!ons available at Village
Green Apts 149 or call 740 992·
3711 EOH

Apartment tor rent in Middleport
1"10 ~IS 740 992·5858

APARTMENTS ON 2ND. AYE
Near Business Section Ideal For
Seniors 1st Floor Real N!Ce To
VIeW 740 44&amp;9539

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
trom $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740 446·2566
Equal Housmg Opportl.lmly

Acreage

Brooksiele Apts Are Now Accept
lng "ppllcalkms For 1 Bdrm Apt
With Washer &amp; Dryer Hookup
Water Pa1d S279 00 Month Any
Questions Call 740 446·9611
Between I O:OOAm And 9 OOPm

3 ad1acent plots K•rkland Memo
rial Gardens $1200 (3041895

Christy s Family Lrvmg apar1
ments home &amp; tra•ier rentals
740 992·4514 apartments avail
able fu rnished &amp; unfurniShed

3422
NEW ON MARKET
23 1\cres 2 M1tes OH SA 7 &amp; SA
21 B South Of Gaillpolis Sin
glew1des Allowed Land Contract
Ava ilable Only $27 000 1 BOO
213-8365

3 Bedroom House With 3 Acres
Land Few Fr Ui t Trees 2 Bed
rooms &amp; Bath Upstairs 1 Bed
room Front Room D1n ng Room
Utlltty Room Kitchen Bath D~wn
stairs S1ts On Storys Au!) AoaCI
Off Route 7 For More lnformallon
Cali 740 367 7576 Alter Noo n
PriCe $49 500

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments Un·
lurnished Security Oepos11 Refer·
ences Fle(lulr&amp;d, 740·&lt;146-1066
or Weekends 74()-441....{)952

BUILDING LOTS
FOR SALE

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartiTJents ar \11llage Manor and
Alverside Apartments In Middle
port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tunitles

W1ter end Electric Rtady For
Hook-Up Nice Loti $6,000 00
Each Call 304 n3-5186
In Syracuse two tots lor sate one
1 2 acres the ottler 1 5 acres
both !.or $15 000 call740 992
4561

5 room Orick ranch two !:lath
double garage lull basement 1
112 acres on river 1n Syracuse
Ohlo '7-40-992 3860
~

94 locust Street $280 00 Plus
Deposn 1740)-446-1340

3 Acre4Qj) Homesite 1-t MIL
Additional Acres Green School
D1Strr ct Between 6 9 PM 740
446 3545

large lot Pnced upon 1nspect1on
(304)675 2510

Buy Homes From SI 0 000
1 5 Bedroom Local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Fmancmg
Posstble For L1s1rngs Call 800
319 3323 Ext 1709

HOME FORECLOSURES No
Money Down! No CreC11t Needea•
Take Over Very Low Payment s•
1 800-916 9191 .:H$023

We Buy Land 30 soo Acres
We Pa¥ Cash 1 800·21 3 9365
Anthony Land Co

HOMES FROM SS 000 Fore
closed And Repossesse d No Or
Low Down Payment Credit frou
ble 0 t&lt; For Current Llstmg Call
1 800-3t1 5048 E•t 3372

RENTALS

House ~r Sale By Owner 3 Bed
r-ooms 2 Baths W1th Large Co\1
ered Deck Also A 30X40 Garage
3 M tles Froi!J R•o Grande Ideal
Starter Or Ret~rement Hon;~e 740
286 2554
MAKE OFFER! House AnCI Lot 2
Bedrooms , 1 Bath $600 00 Down
Near Bidwell Contac t David At
BOO 333 6910
Three bedroom house for sale
one and 112 baths fully furnished
n1ce yard close lo perk 477 Sy
cemore Street Middleport call
740 367 7000
'Two bedroom beh1nd laurel Clllf
church Pomeroy eail 740 992
6572 between 5 IOpm
.. HOMES FROM $10,0001 .. 1
5 Bedroom Local Repos &amp; Fore
closures Financing Possible For
liStings I 800-719 3001 x1185

Nice Ground Floor 2BA W/0
Hook up Reference Deposit No
PelS (304)675-5162

20 ACRES
$23 000 On Land Contract
$1 000 Down W / Approved Cred
11 Mostly Wooeled Great For Re
crea11on Or Hun1tng Road Bu11t
To Land Then On Into wavne
N'at1onal Fore st Free Maps 1
800-2 t 3-8365

360

Real Estate
Wanted

•.'
\

------------

410 Houses for Rent

2 Bedroom House In Gallipolis
Newly Redecora ted Deposit &amp;
.References Required 740 446
0893
2 bedroom house m Pomeroy prr
vale settmg $260 per month
740 985 4256
2 Bedrooms S32.5/Mo
No Pets 740 446 4313

t

Utli1t1eS

3 bedrpom home full basemen!
central a1r Hud approved $475
per month 740.992 1099

420

Mobile Homes
for Renl

t2x60 tra1ler total electr c $250 a
month $150 Clepos1t no pets
740 742 2714
t987 14x75 Ft Forest Park 3
Bedrooms 2 Baths W1th CIA In
BidWell References &amp; Deposit R&amp;qulrad 740 388-9770
2 Bedroom Gas Heat ww Carpet
A/C VerY NICe 740 446 2003
740-446 1409

HOMES FROM S5 000 Fore
close d And Repossessed No Or
Low Down Payment Credit Trouble 0 t&lt; For Current L1s11ng Call
1·800-311 5048 El(t 3875

2 Bedrooms 2 Baths CA Stove.
Refr ige rator Water Trash Fur
nished Very Nice! $3.50/Mo
Depo~l 74D-388-9ES6

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

2 Bettrooms All Electnc CA
Washer Dryer Drshwasher &amp; Ml
crowave $300/Mo $300 Deposit
References 740.446-0743

1971 ~emorant 12x60 Stove Re..
frlgerator Oil Stove Stay Asking
$2 000 Needs Some Work 740
258 6973

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment
740 446-{)390

Mobile Home lot For Rent
$100 00 Month In Crown Cfty
740 25&amp;1-491

FAEE MONEY I Its True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500
$50 000 For Debt Consolidation
Personal Needs Med ca~ Bills
Educa1ion &amp; Busmess Call Toll
Free 1 801H24-6047 (24 Hrs)

House and One &amp; One Half Acre
of Land Cali After 8PM (304)882
2663

P1IOt Progmm Renters Needed 1
800 393.fi662

LOT -SpRING VALLEY One
La rge Lot Approl( 101 x171 City
Water Sewer Nat Gas Electric
AU Are Ava ilable Lot 117 To
V1ew 740 446-~539

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down! Gov I And Bank Aepo s
Be1ng Sold NOW! Fll')ancing
Available Call Now! 1·800 730
7772 Exl 8040

3 Bedrooms Ali Elect ric , Trailer
w1th Washer/Dry Hook up $350 I
Monlll (740) 367·0611

510

HouHhold

Hot Tub W1th Deck New Cover
s.so 740-44' 1502

Goode

INTERESTED 1N WRITING PO
ETRY? POETRY CONTEST
S48 000 In Prizes Possible Publtcal!on Send One Original Poem
20 lmes Or leS&amp; To International ubrary Of Poelry 1 Poetty Pia·
za Suila 11835. Owilgs M•Hs MD
211t7 Or Enter Onlme A.t

A1r Cond1t1onens Used Olllerent
S1zu Guaranteed' 740 886

0047
Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers, Ranges Aefrlgrators 90 Day Guarantee!
French cu., Maytag 7&lt;10 &lt;1&lt;16
n95

"""'poeUy com

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Catl Aon E~~ans 1 81»537 9528

For Sate Recondit ioned wash
ers dryers aM retngerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jad&lt;son Avenue. (300)675-7388

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers relrigerators
ranges Sk"aggs Appliances 76
Vine Street Call 740 446 7398
1-888 81'8 0128

Kenmore &amp; G E Washers White
$75 Each Maytag &amp; Kenmore
Dryers $70 Each Almond Ken
more Dryer $70 C@ll Arter S 30
74()-446 9()!;6

Mollohan Carpels "Drive A, Little
Save A LoW 202 Clark Chapel
740-446 7444 74()-388.()173.

Ufl Chair Electric Paid $1 000
W1ll Take $800 090 740 367
02fi7

New And Used Furn1ture Stort
Below Holiday lin Kanauga
Beds Chests Couches Tables,
Much More! Stop And See Us
740-446 4782

OWN A COMP~TER PUT IT TO
WORK $850 S3 500 MO PTJFI
FREE Detail&amp; log Onto http II
www hbn com Access Code 5298
Pla11orm rocker $75 straight
padded ChBir $95 sewing ma
chine $35 TV &amp; stand $135
7&lt;10.992-5907

Washer $95 Dryer $95 Electric
Range $95 Refrigerator $95 Side
By Side Refrigerator $195 Wash
er $205 Dryer S205 t Year War
ranty Freezer $295 Skaggs Ap
pilances 76 VIne Stree1 Galllpo
liS 740 446 7398

Prim.. tar· trw DlrwcTV Sumrner
Promotion Call now 1-888-265l
2123

Wooden BunkBeds Can sepa·
rate Ladder Included/Mattresses
(one unused) (30.t)875 7314 1!11·
ter SPM
_ _....:,_ _ _ _ _ _....:,_

520

Rapid Welgh1 LOlli Ftn·Phen

1

SI!Ortlng
Goods

Remington 12 gauge 1187 Preml
er like new asking $475 740
965-3810

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Fllvarlne Antiques
1124 E Main Street on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm Sunday100to
8 00 p m 740·992·2526 Russ

Moore owner

3 Room Furnished, Utilltles Pa~

Double Wide On Lot $250 De
poSit 1 ~00 383-6862

•·credit Card DEBT"' Debt Con
sol1dall0n Stop Collect•on Calls
Reduce Paymeh ts &amp; Fman ce
Charges Avotd Bankruptcy 1
BOO 270 9894

OVER YOUR HEAD IN DEBT???
Need More Breathing Aoom7
Debt Consolidation No Qualify
lnglll FREE CONSULTATION
800 556 1548 Ek1 214 www ane
whOrlzon org licensed /Bonded
~n Pront ~atlonat Co

1 Bedroom Apartment Partly, Fur
n•shed Ma1n St Pt Pleasant
(7&lt;10)441.()772

I
B·L-o-W ().IJ.T .J;
$499 Down All Singles $999
pown Doubles Super Low Pay
ments Limited T•me Oakwood
Homes Barboursville WV 304

Completely remodeled house 4
bedroom family room hv1ng room
k1tchen uhhty room &amp; bath base
men! w1th bath new carpet
throughout, central a1r beaut•lul
vrew of nver call 740 992 90 t 2
appointment only

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
oruce Visit Necessary Up To
SSOO lnslalllty Call Toll Free 1(877)·EA~LV · PAV
1SI
AD
VANCE FREEl Lief cc70036

1 Bedroom Apartment Sto\le &amp;
Aegngerator lnctud&amp;a 7-tO 4&lt;162583

1996 Noms 16X80 2BR 2BA
AR.ISktrllng Financing AVIIIIIb~
(304)675 6055

$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Wealthy Fam111es Unloadtng Mil
liOns Ot Dollars To Help M1nlmi2e
The1r Taxes W11te Immediately
Wmdfalls &amp;47 A SECOND AVE
SUITE 1350 NEW YORK NEW
YORK 10017

1Bicom

1 Bedroom Apartment, 76 Vlnt
Street GallipoliS 740 446·7398
Or After 5 PM 7-t0-367 7886

Spec1al 28x60 3 or 4BR $1000
Down $322 per mo Free Dellv
ery &amp; Setup 1 800-69t 6m

2 Bedroom House w1th extremely

220 Money to Loan

GET YOUR CASH NOWI OldaSI
Buyets Ot Structured Settlements
Annul1ie&amp; And Government Farm
Payments Also Purchasing lot
terles And Private Mortgages
Call Setllemenl Cap1tat 1 800
959·0006 www settlementca)ll

"11

Spacious " 1984 Mans1on Mobile
Home 2 3BR 1BA HeatPump
Front Porch $7 000 Oaytime/
(304)675 2716
Evenmg /
174P)992·«77

310 Homes for Sale

Need A Loan Try Debt Consoli
dation $5 000 $200 000 Bad
Credit 0 K Fee 1 800 770 0092
E.:t 215

CREDIT PROBLEMS ? VISA
CARD Guaranteed Approval
No Credit Check O%APR Re
quirements 18+ US Cl!lzen Have
Checking Account Phone Appro
val 1 600 737 0073 Issued By
Merrick Sank SL C UT

1 Bearoom Apartment Across Rio
Grande College $290/Mo.
Uti Miles Paid ~ -888-&amp;40-0521

New Bank repos only 2 !eft we
l1nance call 304 722 7148

REAL ESTATE

MEOICAL BilliNG l.lnilm1ted in
come Potent1al No Exp&amp;nence
Necessary Free InformatiOn &amp;
CD·AOM Investment $4 995
$8 995, Fmanclng Avatlable IS
land Automated Mect1cat Servlc•
es lne 800 322 1139 E•t 050

CONSOliDATE OEST Red uced
Monthly Payments 20 50% Save
Thousands 01 Dollars In Interest
Non Profit TCC 800 758 3944

1 bedroom apartment In Mlctdlt
port au utlhtlts paid $270 per
month $100 deposit 7-tO 992
7806

t991 14t1x72ft Sh1ngle Roof Vlf'l)'l
S1dlng
Ex cellent Condition
$16 500 00 !740)446 8113

tt;&amp;

Pets

mshed and unlurmshed secuflty
deposit required no pets 740
992-2218

1990 14x72 Skyline 2 Bedrooms
2 Bath s 16x8x8 Deck 12xt0
Shed Natural Gas Heat In Great
Sha,. S16 000 740-367 7724

350

No

1 and 2 be&lt;lroom apartments fur·

New 4BR 16 wid e $500 Down
$219 permo Free A1r 1 800 691
6777

ThtS newspaper Will not
know1ngiy accept
advertisements tor real estate
which is 1n VIolation ot the
taw "'ur readers are hereby
1n!onned that all dwellings
adverttsed 1n thrs newspaper
are available on an equal
opportumty basiS

Health Food Store For Sale Ap
prox 15 000 l6 llOO Inventory
$~ 000 Shelving &amp; Equ1pment
Price Negotiable Th 1s Busmess
W•ll Add $~0 000 ISO 000 In
Gross Sale To Afl Ex1stm!J Bl.ls
ness Wil l Not DISCUSS Price
Over Phone Call To Set Up Ap
pointment 74Q.446 1207

CASH Or LOAN! Farm Capital
W11l Purchase Or Loan Agamst
Your Government Farm Pay
menta (CRP/PFC) Call Farm
Capital I 888 FARM ACT {327
6228)

rent
Absolutely
(304)675-2117

New 3BR 2 Bath 14 Wide $500
Down $J85 per mo Free Alt 1
800-691-6777
A!l real estate aQvert151ng In
th1s newspilper IS subJect to
the Federal FaiT Housl(lg Act
of 1968 wh1ch makes 1t 111egat
to advertise ~any preference
I m11at10n or diSCrlmmatlon
based on race color rehg1on
sex lam1hal status or nat1onal
ongm or any lntent1on to
make any $UCh preference
hmltallon or d1scnm•na110n •

Apartments
for Rent

1 &amp; 2 Bearoom Apartments lor

New Bank Aepo s Only 3 Lett 1·
111)().383 6862

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Repair
1ng NOT Rep1ac1ng Long Cracks
In Wtndsh!Bids Free VIdeo t
,. 800 826 8523 uS /C anada
www gtassmechanll( com

CASH NOW! We Pl.lrcha se
Structure Settlement Lotteries
Annuities Mortgage Notes Call
Montclair Finan c;1a1 Group 1 aoo
422 73t7

440

(304)67~5

Mounts Tree Serv1c:e "The Tree
Pro1ess•onals" Bucket Truck
Serv1ce Top Tnm Removal
Stump Gnndmg Free Esnma1es
FlJily Insured Works Comp BICI
well OH Call And Save 1 800
838 9568 7 40 388 9648 Owner
Ru:.t. Mount

BUSINESS SpACE RENTAL Of
lice Space Or Sates Rooms For
Lease On 2nd Ave GallipOliS
Close To CourtliOuse &amp; C•ty
Building 1 2 3 4 Rooms All N1
cely Decorated A C Water Sew
er B1ils Are Pa id Make Your
Cho1ce Now You Must See
These Spaces Phone For Show
lng 740-446 9539

Mobile Home lor Renl Call (7~0)
446-1279

1988 Schultz
14K72
2
BA LA OR HMtpump 2Bath
Deck includeCI
$tt 500

Beautiful Cleanmg
In your
home or bus1ness Carpet and
upholstery to ntenor/exter 1or
walls decks and dnveways The
complete cleanmg serv1ce C•ll
Clearly Clean For Free Estimate
I 304 675-4040

Best Home Based Business'
Own M ln1ernet Cas1no Become
An lnttrnet Junket Rep Mm In
vestment $3 750 516 578 1405

S$$ OVERDUE BILLS!II $$$ Con
solldate Debts! Same Day Appro
val NO APPLICATION FEEStf 1
800 863 9006 EKt 936 www help
pay bills com

1980 1 4,65 electnc 2 bedroom
2 bi1h new air conchlloner under
pmmng great condition $9500
I
740-949-2452

ApproveCI Master Ucensecl Etec
trlc1an WV025956 Est1mates
for
Residen tial
Services
(3041675 7927

Available Vendmg Route 10 20
Locations S4K S1OK $4 000 •I
Mo income AlL CASH' 100%
Fmance Ava1lable 1 800 380
2615 -24 Hrs

Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile hom.s air
Cljlndlttoned $260·$300 sewer,
water and truh included 740·
992 2167

1972 Bassett House 12x65 2 br
2 ba very n1ce cond stove/re
lng $3 500 304 675-5687

WANT A VISA CARD? $12 000
+ Unsecured Bad /No Cred1t OK
Everyone Welcome 1 abo 285
3588

230

MerchllndiH

1969 2 Bdrms New Carpet
Washer Dryer Gas Stove Re
lrLQerator M1crowave 2 Wmdow
AIC s $6 SDO 00 740 245 5946
leave Massage

RECEIVING PAYMENTS? In
vestor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Fmanceel Mortgage
Real Estate Contract Insurance
Annuity Highest Pnces Free
Quotes Why Walt? Call Rich 1
800 888 64!!o

540 Ml-'laneoue

r11ERCHANl11SE

320 Mobile Homee
for Sale

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

460 Spaca for Rent
Great Bend Sell Storage 51110
thru 10x30 All sizes available
Located on 12&lt;1 In Ohio 3 mile.s
from the Fl1tch1e Bridge Call 7_.o843 5577 In Ohio or toll free 1
877 270.()520 1rom wv
Green Scttool Dlstnct 4 M iles
From Holzer Hosp1tal Some A&amp;
slnCIIOns Apply 14Q.446 4053

11" Dl,.c:TV SlttiiHe Sylteml·
S89 00, 3 montn lru programk\g
L1mlled time oller call 1..SOO 779
8194
4 Nascar 9r1Stol Tickets (All To
geth&amp;r) August 27th 28th 740
441 1349
so• Hllactil TV trimmed In oak 6
months old brand new condttlon
pa1d $3 300 Besl Ofler (304)675·

1481
Air Conditioner 24000 BTU,
Whirlpool Coolerator (304}882-

2686
eeanle Babies for Sale $3 00
(740)·256-6909

BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 b~ 30 DAY MONEY
BACK GUARANTEE! Natural Dr
Recommended 740 441 1982
Free Samples
Cherry bed lull size p11tow top
mattre&amp;s &amp; box springs included
OP exerc1se bike antique chest
of drawers 740-742· 1347

GOT A CAMPGROUND MEM·
BEASHIP OR TIMESHARE? We II
Take 111 Americas Most Sue
cessfut Campground And Timeshare Resale Clearinghouse Call
Resort Sates International t 800423-5967 24 Hours
Gravely Mower Electric Star!
Runs Good $350 Horton Hunter
Supreme Crossbow With Target
L1ke New Condition $200 740
245 9355
Grubbs P1ano tunmg &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
prano Dr 740-446 4525
Refrigerator Gold Kflnmore 1:3

cu tt 5 years okt spotless S22S
In Letart Fans _. call 740·i49·4000
lor appointment
Stainless steel 20 piece cook
ware set lor sale tow mo1sture
healthy cookmg gr.. l buyl Call
740-992-6564 mornlrvs

Mobile home site a~aila.ble bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy call
740-385-4367

Steel Beams All Sizes And
Lengths 10 Plf' lb Steel Cable
t /2 Inch Thru 1 Inch 35 To 7!1
Per Foo1 Culverts 8Ft X 20Ft
Call For Pricing L&amp;L Recycling
74(}.446 7300

Rerarl bulidtng 1600+ square loot
cor ner location 87 M111 Street
Middleport Key at .ltcqul~ltlons
91 Mill Street 740-992-6250
•

STEEL BUILDINGS • 5 ONLYI
25x&lt;IO 30x80 .. 51190, 5011&lt;10
"SOLO" Must Move! Free D&amp;liv
aryl 1 800-462 7930 135

MObile Home Lot For Rent Refer
ences Required 740-256 1~

W1lnut Colonial Dining Room Su·
lie SLOOO 1~0s Bedroom Suite
Wllh SF Mattress Se' $500, Zenith Console TV $1bO Maytag
Washer D,..,.r Pair GOOd Condi
lion $500 740 256-6167
washer/Dryer set B months old
Hot Point Brand , $&lt;100 Firm
(3041674-6127
Waterline Specla~ 3/4 200 PSI
$~1 95 Per 100 I " 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pression Fittings In Stoctc
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Oh10, 1 800 537 9528

WOMEN CHEST ENHANCER
TABLETS Natural Ahernallve To
(2) STEEL BUILDINGS 40x30
Implants Seen On TV Grow 1 2,
Woo $9 970 Sail $3,470 50x75
Was $19,600 Sell $8 900 Cave ~ Even 3 Cup S izes GUAR
ANTEED I
1 800 870 99~8
0 800·379-3154
Check Us Out www thermo
'HOST FAMILIES NEEDEDIII'
SIIIJ.com
Exchange Students From Germa
ny Japan England France Rus550
Building ·
Sia Brazil Students Amve In Au
Supplies
gust To Attand Local High
Schools For Further Information
2- ALL STEEL BUILDINGS, 1 1 800-765-4963
40~e60 &amp; 1 - S011tOO ...ust Setl 30

Computer Programs Flight 11 &amp;
Combat Flight Simulator WWU +
Srdewlnder Joy Slick Used "1
N1ce One Bedroom Unlurnlshed 1-' Montn 740-2!\5-5116
Apartment Range &amp; Refrigerator
CDOLDOWN
Provided Privata Parking Water
&amp; Garbage Pa id Deposit Re
Central Air Conditioning Added
qUired Call 740-446 4345
To Your Furnace Complele Duel
Systmes &amp; Furnaces Heat
N1ce Unfurnished 3 Bdrm In
Pumps Certified lns1aller If Ydu
Pomt Pleasant Ar9a Call 304
Don t CaU Lis We Both Lose! 740
675 2015
44&amp;-6308 1-SOD-29Hl098
Now Taking Applications- 35
t&gt;iscount Moblie Home
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Pans &amp; Supply
Apartments
In cludes Water
Huge inventory
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740
VInyl SkJrling KitS $299 95 1 5 Gal446·0008
lon A.lumlnum Flbered Roor Paint
$25 21 5 Gal Wh ite Aool Paint
One bedroom lurmshad apa,rt
$57
69 AncMrs $5 Doots &amp;
ment In Middleport call 740·992
Wmdows Gas &amp; Electrtc Water
9191
Heaters Plumbing &amp; Eleclrlcal
Parts lnter therm Miller &amp; Cole
T~ra Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spac1ous 2 Bedrooms 2 man A1r Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennett a Mo.blle Home
Floors CA 1 1/2 Bath Fulty GarSupply 740 446 9416 Galllpo11s 1
peted Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Ofllo
Pallo Start $350/Mo No Pels~
Lease Plus securlly Doposll Re
Fiberglass 1ruck cap for full sJze
qui red After 5 740 4&lt;16 0101
truck askmg 5300 excellent conBefore 5 740-446-3481
d•llon 74()-949-2112
Twin R1vers Tower now accepting
FULLY LOADED
PENTIUM
applications lor 1BR HUD sub
COMPUTERS
Poor
Credit
0 Kl
sid1zed apt for elderly and hand
' 800 520 6364
lcapped EOH 304-675-6679
Valley VIew Apartments R1o
Grande Oh t~ow Acceplil'\g ap
pllcatlons for Immediate occu
pancy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apts Air
Conditioning Kitchen appliances
Fenced in Playground Laundry
On S1ght Management Water
Sewage and Trash Pard Full time
Students must meet Oh10 Hous
ing Fmance Agency Ouallflca
lions Semor Citizens Welcome
EOE For more Information call
(740) 245 9170 Monday thru
Thursday 9 00 12 00 noon

Alternative Cct"'bination 100%
Sate Only $24 95 Buy 2 Get Freel Lose 3 5 Pounds A Week
As Seen On TV Celia sene, H
V1agra Also Available Cali Umted
Pharmaceulicals Now For Info 1
800 733 3288 COO S /Pre·pay I
Major CredH Canis

- 50'll Off Or Besl Oltor I!OD-3793754
Block brick sewer pipes wind
ows lintels etc Claude W10ters
R1o Granda OH Call 740 245
5121

Pets for Sale

560

AKC Cocker Span1el Male 6
Months $50 00 Jack Russell
Terrier
Male, 1 Year Old
$50 00 740-256-6162
AKC German Shepherd PupS
FaQ'lous Snowcloudiine 3 Pure
White 7 Silver /Sable Purebred
Bengal Kittens 2 Males left Lots
Of GHtter 74Q-245-9213
AKC Registered YeJIOW Lab Pups
ShOts &amp; ,wormed, Ready .tth Of
Ju~ 74D-256-6336
Fish., Birds, Pond Supplies
Sun t 4PM MQn Sat 1 ~AM6PM Fish Tank1Pe1 Shop, 2&lt;113
Jackson Avenue/Point Pleasarn
(304)675-2063
Collie Pups For Sate, $75 00
Each 140 441-0865
For sale St Bernard puppies
t150 eocl1 phOne 740-992 2721
For sale St Bernard puppies 5
weeks old $1 SO each phone
740.992 2721
Reg istered Airedale puppies
make great hunters farm dogs
loyal gentle pe1s Shots wormed
1200 74()-992-7888
Rottweiler Pups t.st Shots &amp;
wormed $125 Each 5 Lett No
Papers, 740-446·_i:197

Musical
Instruments

570

FOR S~LE CONSOLE PIANO
Responsible party wanted to
make low monthly payments on
plano See Locally Call t 800
268 6218
Peavey Eleclric GUitar S200 506
Zoom Pedal $100 Both In Great
Shape! 740.367·0622
Spinet ·Con1ote Piano For Sale
Take On Sm•ll Payments See
Locally 1.-343-4otk

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Black Berries St3 00 Gallon
$3 50 Quart Ava ilable through
August (304~5&amp;·1667
Canning tomatoes lor sale $4/
bushel you piok $51 bushel 1 piCk,
Chris Wolle call 740 9.(S.2773 or
740 949-3315
Cannrng tomatoes you pick $3 a
bushel we pick S4 a bushel Jim
0 Brien Letart Falls 740·247·
21 13

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; liVE STOC K

610 Farm Equipment
FAIR SPECIALS
JULY 6 THRU AUGUST 30
Lawn Tractors St50 011 On LT 8
$200 Off ll&lt; s And Grs 1250 Off
300 o. $300 011 400 s And Z
Trak ' s Financing As low As
5 9% For 36 Monlhi 0&lt; $2~0 Off
On Compact Utility Tractors.
5210&amp; 53tOs And Gators, Free
Otlivery Carmichael Farm &amp;
Lawn Your Local Jonn D•ere
Dtaler. Gallipolis, Oh1o 7&lt;10·446~
2412 0&lt; HIOD-594-11 11

11 s-po~o~o
17 E'*'IY

610 Farm Equipment
St..l The trfew Johp Oi"ere 200
Selle&amp; Skid StHr Loadefl 7 5%
JDC Fmanclng CarrrJlchael's
Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc 1·800·:i9•·
1111 Ga/lipoHs. OH we DeiiYO~

620 · Wanted to Buy
Wanted lo buy Used Tin apy,
lridlh, Re ..onably Prlcodl (7'0)
256·1 ... 5

630

Llveetock

3 GeldirtgS 1 Six Year Old Arabi
an One 2 'Year Old Arabian One 3
Year Old APQlllooSa Two I t Old
Mares 1 Arabian Ona 112 Quar
ter 1/2 Morgan Installment Pll:n
For Horses To Good Home, 25%
Down Affordable Ratu, ...740-388--

8358

.t

Year otd Golden Palomino
Mare Broke to Ride -s 1 000 9
Year Old Registered HOHA
Be~ge Mere Bread to Registered
AOHA In June Green Broke
S2 ~00 1 Yaar OIQ Jatl&lt;·$500 DO
(740)-388-9736 after &amp; 00
•
4 year old QH gelding, incentive
lund gentle, would go green rem
erorEngliSh 740843-5176

Hay &amp; Grain

640

Hay 1 oo• bales $20 last Years
hay $12 caH 740 992·5698 after
4or740 742.:!405after6

TRANSPORTATION

710- Autos for Sale
$500 &lt;;ARS FROM 1500111 Buy
PoliCe Jmpoundi &amp;: Repos For
Llsllngs CALL NOWI 1-800·319
33231&lt;2156
CARS $100 $500 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUND$ Honda's Toyota 6
Chevy&amp; Jeeps And Sport Utili
lies Call Now! BOO 772 7&lt;170
E&gt;CT 7832
1977 CJ 5 304 V 8 3Spd E1
ceHent Condition Soh top &amp; bikl
nl Top 6" lift 1 35 5x12 5 Tires
OuUaw 2 wheels Nert Bars Roll
Bar, Console New_Jei-Biack
Paint &amp; Plenty ol &amp;J~.tras $4 000
Neg (:)04)n:J.5878
t979 Olds 98 Regency Blue
Good ConditiOn $400 740 256·
6167

1980 ·1180 HONDA CARS
FROM UOQ pollee Impounds
Ana Ta• Repo•s FOr Ustlngs Call
1 800-319 3323 Ext 4420
1983 94&lt;1 PQnche good condi
lion $3.500 or OBO (740) 388
8591 or (304)-833-8937
1984
$975
glne.
MilO
3100

Cutla11 Good Work Car
Also Big Block Chevy En
Complet•. $1 500 And
B[g Block Peft&amp; 740 446,.,.. l

1995 S 10 LS Extended Cab 4
Cylinder 5 Speed Run&amp; Looks
Greatt Hard Shell Tonneadu COY
jl, Balow ~.oa~ SUOO. 740·446
1968 740·388-8637 Stt AI A'"o
llimCenle&lt;

1989 Ford F 150 XLT lariat
(304)895·3378
1990 Dodge Spirit Cold A/C
Child Safe Doors Autom Runs
And Looks Good $1 200 oo
090 74Q-446-8627
1991 Cavalier Black , Tinled
Windows, AJC CD Runs GOOd
123 000 M&gt;les $2,500 (30~)675
2443
...
1992 Olds Cutlass Supreme
While wllh blue interior 4DR
Sh~rp (304)675-6153
1992 Shadow looks and runs like
new 70K cold air au1omatlc
sunroof ~ cylinder spoiler rer;J
$3650 74D-949 2045 evenings
'
199.2 Toyota Corolla 5 spd .t
dr AC cruise, AM/FM Cas&amp;
good condition, cuna great
99.000 2nd owner Call Wendy
(31U)675·4003
1994 Cavalier Wagon See by
appointmint $3 800 Also rollaway bed atmost new $75
(304)675-3275
1995 Mercury Traeer automat•c
air new tires cassette 10~ mile- •
age sharp
74()-992 6810

ssaoo

1995 Monte Carlo looks and
runs like new one owner t993
Chevrolet 1500 Series Extended
Cab excellent cond1hon, loaded
740-992 5949
1995 Z 34 MonteCarto Red With
Grey lnt&amp;rlor. T-Inted Windows
Excellent Condition (304)576
20921(304)675-2714

199! Olds Calais 4DR 4Cyl 5
Speed Mint Condition (304)882
3894 S2995
1998 Chevy Cavalier Sunroof
C D Player, 4&amp;pd AuiO, AIC,
PWID Locks, $13 900 (304)773·
5117
1998 Pontiec Trans-Am Fully
Loaded! Price Reduced lo
$22,500 00 Great Graduation
Glhll (740)-446--4548
1999 Monte Carlo 23&lt;1 Black,
Leatner
Sunroof
loaded,
$19 000.740 245 5983
91 Buick Perk Avenue Good
Condltron leather and Loaded!
(740) 256-6·112

720 Trucks for Sale
1982ChevyS 10 VB Auto
Good Condition $3500 OBO
(304)675 1550
1985 Ford F 150 351 Motor S 8
Liter Supercab, Long Bed Low
M1ieage ExceHenl Cond1110n One
Owner! $2
00 OBO 740 256
6471

•oo

• K J 10 5
• Q 9
•KJ732
• 6

32 Shad,..
:M Do a pllot'llob

menu

~~-

South

BARNEY

26
Pass

HAVE YOU SEEN
MY BACK
SCRATCHER,
PAW?

WAS USIN'
IT TH LAST TIME
I LOOKEf

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

0

THE BORN LOSER

.,

1-1()2'1*..1/E:~'r [ eml
~ EI'\I'I.O't'E£ flUE

1993 Honda Aspencade Lots Of
Extras! low Miles, Excelktnt Con
dltiOn Must See! $tO soo can At ...
IOf S PM 740·388-9780

~N(£

197'F'

r

.,

a\,YOJ'IJ(. ~ el&lt;\~ f'Uf.

R::K TWENI'(Y~,
L -

-.....

W"t w.fVf.. Ql&gt;ll.Y
Wa1:JI.E.D• ~01 iW

1998 Harley Davtdson 883 Sport
star black w1th eKtras (e11cettem
conditiOn) 740..992-5828
Honda Halik Motot Scooter
250cc Engine Perfect Condttion
Baby Gokl Wing Ma'"' Oltor 740
245-0485

BIG NATE
o OH

YES' yES'
r S.URE
WOULD'

1986 Baylrner tnbdard Outboard
Cuddy Cabin Excellent Conchtlon
740-4-46-0038

JU5T 5TAY Rt(oHT
THERE, '(OUN&lt;'&gt;

LADY. WHILE

I &lt;oET MY

CHECK600K 1

1987 Bass Tracker TX 17 70 HP
Mercury Trolling Motor Tilt
!2,800 740-446 2519

Auto Parts &amp;
Acce11orles

Budget Priced 'Transmtuions
and Engines All Types Access
To Over 10 000 Transmissions
OVC Joints 740 245-56n

'

West
lt
Pass
Pass

Norlb
Pass
Pass
Pass

29 Some bllll

Dbl

By Phillip Alder
Rose Kennedy offered th1s adv1ce
to rnamed couples "Make sure you
never, never argue at night You JUSt
lose a good mght's sleep, and you
can't settle anythmg unul rnommg
anyway"
Shannon Ltpscomb and Mtke
Cappelletu Jr becam~ engaged to be
mamed JUSt before the Vancouver
Spnng Nationals And they gave
themselves a perfect shower presenl
a wm m the Moxed Pans It was the
hrsl nallonal tttle for either of them
nus aucllon features a gadget that
has become almost ubiqUitous m the
toumamen1 world West couldn't
double two clubs for penahoes
because 11 would have shown exact·
ly three spades the so·called support
double You or I would have reb1d
three d1amonds with that Easl hand
But m case her partner wanted to play
m two clubs doubled, East doubled
Wes1 was delighted to do busmess
However, North was unw1 se to pass
If he had corrected 10 two hearts, hts
sode would have been ou1 of the fry·
\ng pan
Cappellelll led 1he spade nme
three f1ve, queen Declarer played a
d.amond mmmg for a ruff m the
dummy Howeverl. on wmnmg With
her kmg, L1pscomb switched to a
1rump whtch declarer ducked to
Wesl 's kmg Back came another
lrump. k1lhng lhe ruff In dummy for
the only lime declarer ran lhe heart
JaCk Cappellelll won w1th the ace
cashed the dtamond ace , 1hen led
another doamond Declarer could
ruff, but sun had to lose two spade
tncks to Easl and a trump tnck to
West ThiS meant South went two
down, mmus 500, gmng the engaged
couple a near top

31 Alr-ll:.tllc

control
ayat.m
33 Wild hog
38 - do COIO!I""
.0 Male cluck
opllona
42

. ~

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llull(-.)
43 EWI\ii_..a
44 No-.1111

Hunter

46

48Art-

lll--

50-11..52 Pholo-

(plctoll•
'
taking-)
•
53 UK

broadceo..,.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Campos
CeWirity Cipher CJYPIOQfaml are Ct"Mied !rom quoi.M!OOI by famous people put and presenl
E.::h lett* 1n the cipMr IWidl tor another Todily s 00. B ~Is C

KVVP

Residential or commercial wiring
new serv1ce or repairs Master L1
censed electriCian Ridenour
Electrical WV000306 304 675

WtKW

NC P

WFIICFZ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "I look upon 1rue patnol•sm as 1he brothemood of
man and the service of all to all • - Helen Keller

r:~;:.v S©\\cSU"l!A-l£f.[fS•
_ _ _ _...,._ _ Edllo. br ClAY l . POUAN

WDID
IAMI

0

Rearrange letters of ti-le
four scrambled words betow to form lour slrnple words

RICDOH

A R F Y0

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CEEMOB
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No one hkes to be cheated
but 1t seem&gt; hke many people
are eager to see how close • · ·
-can ....

l

0•

Complele 1he chuckle quoled

by f11l1ng 1n the m1ss10g words
you develop from steD No 3 below

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Don 1geo !lunf

by h•gh prKes 1

Shop ,,. CloiSI(ird ..,,.,.,

Attire Yucca. Enslie- Jumper REST UP
1don t take vacatwns one dummy sa1d so I wont
have to come home and REST UP

AUGUST 5l

lTHURSDAY

1r1Walo~flng

Electrical and
Refrigeration

'

PLJLFHNCP.'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Unconditmnal tlfehm,e guarantee
Local references lurmshed Es
1abhshed 1975 CeH 24 H1s (740)
446·0870 1·800 287 0576 Rog

840

AOLCK

GLK·GNCP

NCP

ZFNHHR

N G VIE

DVCPFZMIH

AV

Home
Improvements

Rainbow Bulldert.
Bwid new or repa~r old no job
too small or large Ma JOr credit
cards
*WV029582
Call
(304)458 1049 BP 1528-8092

BFHFGZNEYZR

LCBZFPLGHR

SERVICES

M&amp;R Contracting Electrical And
Re Molding Trailer Set Ups
Porches Carpentry And Repa irs
24 Hours 740-441-0Hl3

AVXFEWLCK

LA

'EWFZF

9539

Livingston i Basement Water
Proofing all basement repairs
done, free utlmates hlellm e
guarantee 12yrs on job experl
ence (304)895&gt;3887

ar.- apread

47 Preclouo

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

FISHJNO BOATING HUNTING
Or Just Relaxing In Your Own
Camper &amp; Campsite Overlooking
Blue lake To View 740-446

C&amp;C General H(.lme Main
tenence Painting, \llnyl Sldtng
car~entry doors windows baths
motlll&amp; home repair ai'ICI more For
free estimate call Chet 740 992
6323

Get\eiiC

PRINT NUMBERED
LETIERS IN SQUARES

1976 Pro•r Camper 18 Fl Very
Good Condition, $2 500 7 40
446-6754, After 5 PM

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
peuence All Work Guaranreed
French C11y Maylag 740 446
7795

South African

Dutch

I ..

PEANUTS

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

All types of masoi'M'y work brick
blOck, atone COf"Crt1e 20 yeal s
experience free estim ates 30-4
773-9550
__;,_;==.,_ _ _ _ _

"

27 Wlldl'-

East

1974 Coachman Motorhome
Dodge Chassis 75 000 Milos
Sleeps B. $3 500 740-446 1420

810

23 ' - - firat

28

~_;,,l..;;_-il_::.,l,-ilr;7;111iarl

New Aeplacemen1 Gas Tanks D
&amp; R Auto Ripley WV (304)372
3933 or t 800-273-9329

790

cou .......

22 LUXUI'- fur

you

A wonderful
engagement gift

I

1987 Suzuki Samauri $1 800
(304)675-1272

Sea Doo GS 2 Seater, 85 hp
Brought .NeW in April Trailer Ute
Jacket Co~er (740) 247 2581
call arter 4 00 PM

Lance-

20 Eye layer
21 Truated

41 Ual of

0

Ohio Valley Bank Will Offer FOr
Sale B)l Public Auction A 1994
Toyota &lt;1.1&lt;1 PU 1219689 At 10 DO
A M On 8/21/99 At The OVS
Annex t43 Third Avenue Galt1
polis OH Sold To Highest Bidde r
"As Is- Where Is" Without E•
pressed Or Implied Warranty &amp;
May Be Sean By CalMng The Col
lec1ion Dept At 740·441·1038
OVB Reserves The Right To Ac·
cept /Rejecl Any &amp; Ali Bids &amp;
Withdraw Items From Sate Prior
To Sale Terms Of Sale CASH
DR CERTlAEO CHECK

Motorcycles

18 Judp

Tonnlo....,.
25 Leave out

Operung lead: • 9

1

740-742 1316

7_40

tan1tory

Dealer: West

1995 Jeep wrenger Excellen t
Condition 7-t&amp;367 !5039

88 Codge Caravan 7 pass V 6
,gQCd con&lt;Jilion 13S!I miles $800

12 Upper •rm
bone
13 Driller I deg ?

~7 WhtWhorN'a

Vulnerable North South

1993 Fonl F 250 XLT 4x4 Die
set Must Seel Call aller 5 oo
(7 40)-2511o1565

t998 Jeep Cherokee Sport 4114
Pl PW, cruise, tilt amffm cas
sette excellent condition HO
992·2143 740-992-6373.

I Ol...:tor KaUn
9 Tranamlltad
11 Invitation lnlll.

24

•1989 Plymouth Voyager II 6. Ao·
10mllliC, 108 000 Milas, S1 ,200 0&lt;
OBO 7.00.251;.1233

1992 Toyota 4 runne'r SR 5 V 6
4 Wheel dr Sport Utihty loaded
wl!h sunroof &amp;llcellant condltlon
1 owner 96 000 mile&amp; A&amp;~mg
S10 500 (304)675-5164

5 Club-

8UIIfl9hi31Manlcurllfl'

10 9

Al~hl

3 Eaau 1 country
• Jape-

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35-n

6AI0973

ASTR0-08APH
Fnday, August 6, 1999
Several people you ve known
purely on a plalomc soc~allcvel could
begm 1o play vety 1mportan1 roles m
your affa1rs rn the year ahead llus
might come about through an unusu·
al cham of events

LEO (July 23·Aug 22) Get a JOb
descnpt10n first before agreetng
today to take on any added rcsponsi
b1h11cs for your organ1zaUon, group
or club You need to cons1der 1f It 1s
meantngful to you 10 desirable ways
Get a JUmp on hfe by understandmg
the mfluences that II govern you m

1he year ahead Send the requ~red
refund form and for your AslroGraph pred1clmns by maohng $2 lo
Astra -Graph , c/o this newspaper,
PO Bo• 1758, Murray H1ll S1auon,
New York NY 10156 Be sure 10
stale your Zod1ac s1gn

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sepl 22} II
could prove w1se for you to functton
as the power behtnd the throne
mstead of betng m the hmehght
today If parllctpallng JR a new
endeavor try to pmttUon yourself as

such

Do so loday

donnanl for some ume could get a
chance to revave Itself today It may
be wtth a proven pal who no longer

time to stop percetvmg yourself as
the underdog tn an arrangement
tmponant to you You re m a much
better pos1110n than you may reahze

LIBRA (Sepl 23-0cl 23) An old
fr1endsh1p !hal has been allowed to he

restdes m your locale

SCORPIO (Ocl 24·Nov 22)
Somethmg you prevaously tned to do
but were unable to a~.;comphsh m1ght
be resurrected uml rejuvenated today
Thts umc around your efforts wdl be
more suu:cssrul

SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) Pnruu::ro;htfl!' ynu estobhsh today
for etthcr busmcss or soctal purpos·
es ha\C a h4;:ttcr than average chance
for suc~.:css tf your ch01ccs are wnh
those who have mtegnty and reha-

blhly
CAPRICORN (Dec 22·1an 19)
1he chance for gcnc:raung carmngs
from somewhere other than your usu·
al sources IS very hkely 1oday Make
financtal actiVIties your pnonly, they
could be rcwardtng
AQtiARI$ (Jan 20 Feb I?) If
there IS a relatlonsh1p you·vc been
hankenng to develop, you'll have IO
be the one to take the m111aUve Tile
other party 15n'1 hkely to move firsl

PISCES (Feb 20·March 20) h's

ARIES (March 2l · Apnl 19)
Today's aspecls offer you the oppor·
tunny to gam acceptance tnto mo~t
any group you encounter If you've
been wantmg to make mroads tn a
parucular cncle. now ts the ume to
lry to do so
TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20)
G81RS are andtCated today but you
can •t wan for thmgs to come to you
Use your m111atrve to make hfe happen, cspec1ally where your matenal
mtercsts are concerned

GEMINI (May 2l·lune 20) R1gh1
the ume ts very proptltous
launching a new enterpnse

nCiw

for
or

endeavor Begm to set thmg ~ tn
mouon today on a new proJect and
take It as far as you can go

1 CANCER (June 21 July 221 Try
to wrap thmgs up today Cln mvolvc

ments you've been workmg on for a
• long ume and developed as far as you
could, even 1f a d eparture would he
snrnclhmg you rc rcluctanl to do

1788

'I
\

s

2~

31Jinclt8

1986 Full S1ze Van (30&lt;1)67.5
6153

760

M&amp;J Aulo 740·388·9693 01 740·
992-6326

AU..'*' v.aws AST1'12£

10_1_

27~(abbr.)

East

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

$5 800 or take 0\ler Pavmentsl 99

1986 Ford Tempo au~o runs
good de,.ndatlle car $515

li!t:Kt. .

•

DOWN

llollby-

37

Alter 6 PM 740 256

$800

211 I Ia cIley gtMI

• Q 4

• K 8

Wagon
1799

1989 DOdge Daytona runs good
5 ap , amlfm cass 4 good tires

StiAru~ ~

57 Malle a goal

3&amp;C..at
Asian holiday

750 Boets &amp; Motors . •
for Sele
·

1988 Chevy Cavaher Z 24 2 dr
black with black velour interior
(v:ery clean) sunroof air asking
$2 200 740·992 1606 days 740
949·2644

• Q

EEK&amp;MEEK

tntGmll1lly
23 ·--Lucy"

South
6 A Q 8 6

1991 Ford Explorer XlT 4·Wheet
Dnve o4 Door Auto loaded Ex
c,nent ConditiOn "&amp;king $81000
OBO (304)882 2997

alarm

55a-1UI
56 Large knife

20Coun-•

• J 10 7 6 5 4 3

Must S•e 1980 Chevy 1 Ton
Factory Aeb•lt 350 Engine New
Tires, S3 000 080 740-25&amp;- 1722

11I~~'Piymdbtrf Reliant Station

1986 Buick LeSabre Good Shape
Runs Good $2 200 Serious Calis
0.~ 740 441 0616

54 Rnpvud to ttw ~~~~:-f.C.f!!'

wtlcft

.. 7 4 3

a

51 GIWtdt

18 The¥ could be

1881 ForO F-150, 6 Cyllndtl': 5
SPMd I&gt;JC e.~..,, Condllion
$3 650 Cell Aller 5 PM 7&lt;10 3118
9700

~liD Pt&amp;¥1C ue fi'UIIIe

I

•

�P~~ge12 • The Dally Sentinel

The Cornmuniry Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar is not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed only as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Community
Center. Sen. John Carey to speak.
RUTI.AND - Rutland Township Trustees, Tuesday, 5 p.m. Rutland Fire Station.
RACINE Racine Grange
meeting Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Grange Hall. Election of officers
will be held.

Courthouse to appoinl replacemenl
for retired County Recorder Emmagene Hamilton. Typed or hand-written applications for the position
must be submitted to the Meigs
County Republican Chairman
Bernard Gilkey by noon that day.
RACINE -Southern Junior
High School volleyball meeting , 4
p.m. Friday. Anyone interested
attend.

THURSDAY
EAST 'MEIGS - Eastern local
REEDSVILLE - Olive Town- Board of Education, special meetship Trustees, 7:30 l'·m. Thursday at . ing, 6:30p.m. at Eastern Elementary
MIDDLEPORT - Information
township . garage on Joppa Road. cafetorium. subjects, personnel and meeting for students, Mt\igs Middle
Meeting preceding with insurance grant approval.
School, those interested in playing
representatives.
football this fall. Friday, 9 a.m. in
SYRACUSE- Girl Scout e'veht, the auditorium. seventh and eighth
POMEROY - Junior and Rita Thursday, Carleton School, 6:30 to graders .
White of Kyger'lo entenain at Meigs 8:30 p.m. Thursday with the proSenior Citizens Center, Thursday, gram 10 go for six weeks. Questions
MIDDLEPORT Christian
5:30p.m . l:'o admission charge.
concerning the program and enroll- comedian Mike Warnke performing
ment in girl sco utmg may be direct- Friday' through Sunday. 7 p.m.
RUlLAND
Rutland Bicen- · ed to Brenda Neutzling at 992-541 S. nightly at Ash Street Free Will Baplennial Committee, Thursday, 7:30
~
tist Church. Admission is free .
p.m. at the civic center.
FRIDAY
POMEROY. - Meigs County SATURDAY
POM,EROY ..-. PERl meeting, Republican Pany special meeting
REEDSVILLE- Wells reunion .
Thursday. b p.m. Senior Citizens Friday, 7' p.m. ~t the Meigs County descendants of John and laura
- - - - - - - ' - - - : - - - - .·- - - - : . . _ _ - - - - - ' ' ---.

Layette shower held tor Angie Morris

Thursday, August 5, 1999

Calenaar~-----------...:....

Wells. Fork~ Run Sate Park, noon
Saturday.
RACINE - Hudson reunion,
Saturday. S p.m. Star Mill Park,
Racine. Table service provided.

BASHAN - Red Brush Church
of Christ, special services, Saturday,
7 p.m.; Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Speaker will be Denver Hill, Foster,
W.Va.

public.

SUNDAY
HARRISONVILI:E ~ HarPOMEROY - 30th anniversary
risonville lodge 411 , R&amp;AM. Sa~­ ~vival , faith Valley Tabernacle
urday, 7:30p.m. at the hall. Refresh- , Church, Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy,
ments.
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, 7
p.m. eac h evening. Evangelist
SALEM CENTER Star George Scon, Huntington, W. Va.
Grange 778, Saturday, potluck sup- Rev. · Emmen Rawson, pastor.
per al 6:30 p.m., regular meeting, 8 invites public.
p.m. Plans for ·Meigs County Fair
·display to be finalized . Officers to
POMEROY
Meigs Coun1y'
be elected.
Humane Society, general membership meeting, 3 to 4 p.m. Sund~y at
POMEROY - Beegle family the Pomeroy Public library. A fund
reunion , Saturday, II :30 a.m. Senior raising dance, Thrift Shoppe volunCitize ns Center. Square dance to fol- teers and other matters will · be dislow at 7 p.m at home of Ronnie and cussed.
Leanna Beegle.
' '
REEDSVILLE
Connolly
RACINE - Annual Smith-Sto- , reunion S!lnday at the B'elleville
ban reunion, Saturday. American Locks and Dam shelter house ..
Legi on hall, Radne . ·
MIDDLEPORT Christian
'I

.

.

comedian Mike Warnke, Friday
through Sunday, 7 p.m. nightly at
the Ash Street Free \\'Ill Baptist
Church, Free. Susan Warnke to
speak. Pastor les Hayman invites

. POMEROY - Right to life,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Lihrary.
POMEROY
Signups for
Meigs Middle School 'cheerleading
tryouls j Monday noon to 2 p.ll.· 'lfld
Tuesday, 10 a.m. to noon.
' RACINE _ Board of Public
Affairs. Monday, 7 p.m. 'at the
municipal building.

.

The Meigs C:oun1y Fair, leg- were hoping to attend part of those who ·assisted and fhen •
isla tive issues, and aciivities of youth camp.
announced that the · float , which
the junior grange memtiers were
A discussion was held re gard- was a seve n-foot birthday cake,
topi cs of discuss.ion when Racine ing the~u ent problem over a won first place in the patrioti c
Grange met recently with Chuck gay pri
ag being rai sed over category of the Racine parade .
Yost. master, presiding.
the Ohio apitol Plaza and then
. The death of retired Ohio senKeith Ashley noted that plans being torn down.
.
ator, Oliver Ocasek, was not ed.
are moving forward for the Meigs The members decided that there . He was currently serving · on the
County Fair booth.
sh9uld be limitations on the types e&lt;ecutive committee of the Ohio
It was pointed out .that . the of flags that could be displayed. · State Grange .
materials in the booth are in poor One type of . flag that would be
The installation of ceiling fans·
condition and repairs need to be · s~re to · raise some antagonism was completed. A discussion to
made.
was the Confederate tiag should move the fall pig-incthe-poke
. Emma Ashley reported that it ever be flown similarly.
auction was discussed :
four Junior Grangers , Carson The master directed the legislaHemlock Subordinate Grange
Yos't, Steven Yost, Hannah Yost, tive chairman to. bring back a res- visited Racine Grange and Resand Emily 'Ashley, · recently olution for consideration at the a lie Story of the visiting grange
attended the Ohio State Grange next meeting.
presented a patriotic lecturer's
Jr. camp at Friendly Hills Camp
Keith Ashley, Fourth . of July program followed by humorous
near Zanesville. Also, IJ"O youths parade float chairma~, thanked stories.

Aw!lrded scholarship
.
The Uni'versity .of Rio Grande
recently presented Reedsville resident Jessica Katherine Elaine Bran- ·'
noR. the Grace Davis Will Scholarship.
•
She is the daughter of Paul and
. Joy Brannon·.
,
''The university is very pleased to
offer this special award to Jessica,"
said 'Mark Abell, director of admissions at the University of Rio
Grande. "She displays many qualities we want to see in scholarship
recipients andwe are ~appy that she.
has elected to study here."

Meigs County 4 - H members
participate in livestock skillathon

JESSICA BRANNON
Receives award

Michael Leifheit, son of Roger
and Lenora Leifheit, Pome"'Y· has
received an Ohio Nbrthern University Outstanding A~ademic Performance Award.
He :''is a second-year pharmacy
major.
'
. The Outstanding Academic Performance Award is presented to students whose grade point average is
3.5 or higher for 45 or more credit
hours of graded courSe work for the ,
academic year. ·
On camp~s. Leifheit was active
in the marching band,' the pep band,
the symphonic b~nd ·and Phi Eta
Sigma freshman honorary.
·
Founded in 1871, Ohio Northern
i~ lq&lt;;ated in Ada, and is a private
university affiliated with the United
Methodist Church.

Approximately 230 Meigs County 4-H members participated in a livestock learmng laboratory/sktllathan at the Rutland Civic Center last week
for beef,. ~heep, swine, dairy, ~ultry, rabbit, goat and horse projects. Ohio
State UntverSJty Extenston spectaltsts, along with 4-H and Junior Fair advi~~ sors, provided the educational base for the event which made learning and
knowledge assessment fun.
·
'
The livestock learning laboratory kits/skillathons are designed as a series
of nine learning st.ations with a facilitator at each one. Participants rotate
from stauon tostatton attemptmg to perform specific livestock-related tasks.
Th.e statton facthtator allows the participants to test their ow'n project knowledge and abthues. The techmque ts referred to as experiential learning "learning by doing."
The objectives of the skillathons are' to enhance knowledge of the livestock tndustry, provtde a fu~, hands-on method of evaluating a member's
proJeCt knowledge and abthttes, to help youth feel more comfonable in talkmg to an adult about their projects, to gain self-con'fidence and skills in one- Jerry Lewis recovering
on-one communication, and to develop responsibility for project comple- from viral meningitis
tion. The event also helps to develop critical thinll!ng and problem-solving
LAS VEGAS (AP) --;: Jerry
sktlls and to provtde opportumttes to recogmze youth for their accomplish- lewis is " doing. fine" following a
ments.
bout with viral meningitis and will
The "skillathon" livestock judging learning laboratory provided an excel- . be ready ' to host his annual labor
lem method of mvolvmg 4-H and FFA members in a challenging. learn-by- Day Telethon next month, a
dmng acttvny deSigned to test their project knowledge and help develop spokesman said.
tmponant hfe sktlls and project skills. The event was made possible and the
" He's had a miserable week and
livestock learnmg lab resource kits were purchased through monies. received will likely be spen\ling some time on
from an Ohto Attorney General Grant awarded to Meigs County 4-H. ·
his boat for .some r-and-r,'' executive
assistant Claudia Stabile said
Wednesday ..
lewis, 73, was ·hospitaliZed in
Darwin, Australia, earlier lhi s week
Fair "show and tell" time planned
after falling ill Sunday during a perA tiny tots "show and tell" will be staged by the Meigs County Junior Fair fonnance tour..
Board on Thursday at 4 p.m. of fair week on the Hill Stage.
.
He had hoped to re sume perfor. Girl scou.ts, boy scouts, and 4, H members are invited to panicipate and mances today in Sydney, but the
mcludes dat ste s. browntes, ttger scouts , bobcat scouts,wolf scouts, and decision was made to cancel the balcloverbuds.
ance of the tour and return home.
As explained by Julie Spaun; president of the Junior Fair Board, the lewis was described as feeling fine.
achvity offers youngsters a change to show one of their fair projects. They liut not well enough to perform .
Will have the opportunity to explain different aspects o.f the project.
lewis lives in las ,Vegas with his
·
The Stgnup sheet for the event will be posted in the Ju.nior Fair Building wife and daughter. He is expected to
durmg booth set- up and in the ,Junior Fair Board o(fice until the day of the fly home in the next few days , Sta~nt.
'
bile said.
·
·

Fair "sho:w and tell" time planned

'

'

Rockies beat Cincinnati 2-1 , Page 4
Ar1n looks at infidelity, Page 8
Internet stocks continue·to plunge, Page 6

Today: Sunny
High: 808; Low: 60s
Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 808; Low: 60s

POMEROY. - Girls volleyball
practice, Meigs High School, Monday, 10 a.m.

College News

RONALD EARL HART
CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY - Ronald Eari Hart of Racine recently
cele!Jrated his 85th birthday at Ma Perry's Restaurant In
Ravenswood, W. Va.
He was presented balloons, gifts and a cake. Attending were his
wile, Betty, a sister, .Joyce Manuel, nieces, Donlta Sayre and Robin
Manuel, and grsat-meces, Breanna Manuel, and Deeanna Sayre.

Augu8t 6, 111111

Weather

MONDAY
CHESHIRE - Disabled American Veterans of Cheshire, Monday,
at the hall . Dinner, 6:30p.m.; meeting, 7p~
·

I Racine Grange makes plan·s for Meigs County Fair' booth

Angie Morris was rece ntly hon- Fern Morris. Mary Showalter. Jackored with .a layette shower at the ie and Ka yla Icenhower, Betty
... ,;1
Bradford Church of Christ.
· Tripletl, Shelly Sauerfield. Cheryl
\'W
Hoste sses were Nancy Morris and Mary lathey. and Dee Willis.
and Beuy 't'riplett. Baby bears were
Sending gifts were Charlotte Van
used as decorations .arld a baby no- Meter, Cherrie Williamson, Suzie
ral centerpiece was made by Char- Will, Betty Smith, Sue Fry, Made-.
lotte Van Meter. Games were con- line Painter. Kristen Eblin, Carol.
dueled by .Barbara Triplet, and win- Jimmy and.....Ross Andersop. Bill
ners were Barbara Fry and Gerry Rumfield, Helen Icenhower, Janet
lightfoot. Door prizes went to · and Terri Manuel, Peggy Harris,
Angie Morris and Maggie Satter-.. Dick and Ruby Eblin, Frank, linda
field. Jason and Tyson Morris and Vincent Broderick, Don and
assisted their mother in opening Sandy Hanning, Dixie Peters,
Kathy, Megan and Brooke Madison
gifts.
'
Sandwiches. chips, cake punch, Dyer, Richard Henry, larry and
coffee nuts and mints were served,
Paula Pickens, Ron and Charlotte
Others attending were Jo Good- Hanning, Jim, Steph, Josh and Jerad
nile, J~ckie Reed, Becky and Cleland, and Bill and Carolyn
PARADE FLOAT- This float
of the Racine Grange featuring a
Bethany Amberger, Dena Eblin, Nicholson.
,_....,-'- - - - - - , . . , . , .
.seven-foot tall birthday cake
won flret place in tha Racine
·July parade.

Friday

Meigs County's ·

•

Hometown
. Nt'!wspapl!r
. .

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50. Number 44

Single Co py- 35 Cen ts

Don't obscure your license ·plates, lawmen
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
Some,imes people do strange things with
their cars' license plates:
,
They cover them up with license plate covers (that officers can't see through), surround
. them with brackets that cover up the registralion sticker, or sometimes don't even bother to
put them on iheir vehicles, according to Meigs
County Sheriff James M. So~tlsby.
The Ohio Department of Public Safety
recently began a campaign to ensure license
plates are visible.
··
Soulsby said Ohio law states license plates
can not b.e covered by any material which
obstructs their visibility.
The unobstructed view of the county sticker,
alung with the validation sti~;ker, assists local
and state l~w enforcement agencies in identify· .i~g vehicles th~t have ~en used in the c?mmisston ~f a cnme or. tmproperly regtstere~,
•ccordtng to the Oh10 Department of Pubhc
Safety.
.
..
Sgt. George Harlow of the Ga.llta-Metgs Post
of the State. Highway Pat;ol said a lot of troop-

ers have been paying attention to the problem, sure all of the license plate is visible.
and are writing tickets for tinted license plate
Another common .offender is the tinted
covers and tinted windows.
license plate cover, he pointed out.
"The ones where you can't. even read them, . Motorists can be stopped or ticketed for this,
those get citations," he said.
he said, adding that his department generally
· "You are not supposed to have any .license gives a warning first.
co,ver with a color that changes color of the
Even clear license plate covers 'get cloudy
plates," Harlow said.
.
over time, or still obs.truct the vie~ of the reg.. "It is . illegal to change the color of the istration sticker, he said.
plates."
. .
. To avoid a ticket, he tells motorists to make
He sald some of .the clear covers are okay as sure the registration sticker is on the rear plate
long as they don't obscure the plate and ,are and that both front and re.ar plates are visible.
changed when they begin to cloud over or The car's windshield is not the place for the
crack.
·•
front license plate, he pointed out.
Perhaps the most common offender is the
Soulsby said some departments do issue
.
. dealer-installed license plate bracket, used by tickets for these violati~ns.
dealers to advertise their businesses.
"They are cracking down on it," he said.
These brackets commonly cover the plate's
WHAT ARE THOSE NUMBERS? registration and county sticker, Soulsby UcenH .pllltel with CoVered numberl or
explained.
_
_.
reglltndlon lllckera a111 more and more
Dealers are ask~ to 1nsure that hce~se ·plate drawing , the attention of Olilo law offl·
~rlll'kets they prov:de do not obstruct mfonl)a- C8fl, Here, Melv- Sheriff James M. Soulatton on the plates.
. .
.
by polntl out a clear llcanH plate cover
However, the owner of the 'vchtcle, not the that hila turned cloudy all oot hiding the
dealer, is ultimately responsible for making Information llenMth. '

Regional Briefs

~arn

,·,
•

Meigs County receives CHIP funding

. The Ohio Department of Development recent- tion within 90 days after the HOME-CHDO
'CHIP grants were also .awarded to the cities of
ly released a list of Community Housing Devel- Opera.ting Grant ·agreement has been executed by Gallipolis, Wellston and Jackson.
opment Organization and Communi.ty Housing the CAA and the Ohio Department of DevelopCHIP provides funding for a flex ible, commulmprovement.
Progrl!ffi
recipients,
which
includment
for
the
development
of
the
project.
nity-wide
approach to the improvement and proQNCINNATI (AP)- The driver of a tractor-trailer natbed
ed
a
combined
awatll
amount
of
over
$2.5
milThe
CHDO
Competitive
Ope,rating
G~ant Pro- vision of affordable ~ousing for low and moderbeen charged with four counts of involuntary manslaughter and five
lion for Meigs and Gallia Counties.
gram provides operational grants o,n a competi- ate-income persons, and 'to help develop local
counts of aggravated vehicular. assault following a crash that killed four
According to State Rep. John Carey, R-Well- tive ' basis to state-designated or state eligible · capacity to administer housing programs . Grants
Kuehn, of Cadiz, Ky., was dri.ving the truck 'that triggered a ston, the GalliaiMeigs Community Action CHDQ's located arid·doingbusiness_in communi- are awarded competitively, and commu.nities can
Agency received a CHDO grant for $25,000 to ties designated as HOME Non-Participating undertake a broad range ofhousing-related activmJ~~\::~~~~~~~t~~~ rush-hour crash Thursday on Interstate 275 just nonh of · develop 10 single family homes within the. two Jurisdictions.
ities, including necessary infrastructure improveC
authorities said.
·
·Meigs County receiVed a CHIP grant to .be ments.
.
The Hamilton County ·sheriff's office said Kuehn's truck struck the rear counties. The funds will be used to begin prean
in-fill,
lease
purused
in
rehabilitating
27
owner-occupied
homes.
"Galli
a,
Meigs
and
Jackson
Counties,
along
development
activities
for
of a van carrying 12 children and four adults from a youth church group
from Eternal life Harvest Center church in Knoxville, Tenn., and then chase, scattered site project and also to take a Improvements will include conducting lead- with the Ohio Department of Development, have '
leadership role in the restructuring of projects based paint hazard reduction .and evaluation taken a large step in the fight for affordable housstruck a pickup truck. Those two vehicles then struck a semi-tractor rig,
with
expiring Housing Assistance Payments work on six rehabilitation projects and providing ing in Ohio," Carey said.
deputies said .
(HAP)
· rental subsidy contracts. The homebuyer assistance to 10 households.
,
"With the operating grants awarded by the
All four of the victims were passengers in the Teooessee van, officials
Gallia(Meigs
CAA
plans
to
submit
a
Housing
All
projects
will
be
available
throughout
state,
we can expect Southeastern Ohio to continsaid. Their names were not released.
, Development Assistance Program full applica- . Meigs County.
ue this fight now and well into the future ."
The accident occurred near the Montgomery interchange just bef"'re 5
p.m. The van was so crushed by the impact tliat firefigllters had to cut it in
h~lf to free its oe&lt;:upants, said Sycamore Township Fire Ctilef Bill Jetter.
"The people in the van were on top of each other," Jetter said. "We had
After' spending nearly three decades leading Bob
·
co)ltinuing to work with him to sustain the company's
to cut seats out, actually take the van in half."
Evails ·Farms Inc., Daniel E. Evans plans to step down
strong financial performance," he said.
One person was in critical condition Thursday night, one in ~erious
as chief executive officer of the Columbus-based food
Owens, 44, joined his -fam.ily's business, , Owens
rondition, seven were listed in fair condition and three were treated and
products and restaurant busitiess on April . 28, 2000,
Country Sausage, a regional sausage company based
released, authorities said.
the company announced Thursday.
·•
in Richardson, Texas, before graduatmg from Southern
Westbound 1-275 was closed about three hours following the crash, and
Its board of directors intends to elect Stewart K.
Methodist University. He became president of the firm
eastbound tmffic was restricted. aeanup crews were still on the scene six
Ower.s, the current president and chief operating offiin 1984. The company ·was acquired by BEF thtee '
hours later.
cer, to the CEO post on the same date; a BEF news
years later.
release said.
Owen~ was named .executive vice president and
• , Evans, 6~, will conti~ue as chairman gf the Bo"!'d
chief operating officer of BEF in 1994, and president
throygh Apnl 2001, and tf nomtnated and elected, wtll
the follow!n.g year.
.
serve as a board member until he is 70, the company's
Evans JOmed the company m 1956 and succeelied
mandatory retirement age for directors.
his father, Emerson E. Evans, as ~hai rma~ and CEO''"
Owens is expected to become chairman of the
1971. Emerson Evans was BEF s foundmg chrurman
board in April 2001.
in 1953.
"T am very pleased to be in a position· to turn th.e
Dllririg Daniel Evans' tenure as board chairman and
reins over to an executive with Stewart Owens' broad
CEO, the company's sales have grown from $16 milexperience and detailed knowledge of both the food
lion, generated mostly from ~au sage . products, to an
products and restaurant businesses," Evans said.
expected $I billion in the current fisca'. year . BEF's
"Stewart's leadership has been particularly valurestaurant busmess has expanded from S!X Ohto locaable in the revitalization of our restaurant operations
lions to a position of naiional prominence in the fami ly restaurant business.
..
.
over the past few years," Evans continued. "The board
The company 'currently operates 424 restaurants m
of directors and I agree that he is the best choice to
. lead aur company going forward."
Dan Evans
the U,S., and is a pn)llucer of food ptoducts under the
Owens said he was "honored" by the board's confidence in him.
Bob Evans and Owens Country Sausage brand names. BEF's annual share-.
"Dan Evans has been an excellent mentor, and I am looking forward to .. holders meeting is set for Sept. 13 ·at Rio Grande.
,

Evans to step down next year as Bob Evans Farms' CEO

Ra~k Aft~r Rack of Clearance Bargains ••• .
Tables P1led H1gh WHh Values Throughout the Sto~l

SS~1§e
All SESAME
STREET TOYS

REG.13.99 TO 39.99

30"off
ALL DART
BOARDS

.All25"off
50%off 30%off
CLEARANCE
ALL
. All GAS GRILLS
TICKETED RIRNITURE

DOT TOYS

40%off

30%off

ALL GYM&amp;
SWING SETS

ALL MOWERS

Huge Markdowns on Clothing, Lawn &amp;Garden, Toys,
·· . Sporting Goods and Items for the Home~ .
.This .Is a St'rewlde Savings Event, So Hurry ln.
.

•Grills~"As Is" needs parts $50.00 each (10 to choose from)
•Summer .F ashion Clearance additional 40% Off
•Additional 50% Off all Clearance toys
•Additional 40% Off Clearance Shoes
•50% Off peat moss, marble chips, playsand and 20 lb. potting sol
•Electro dusters back-end cleaning $5~00
.
*Limited to store stock. Sorry, no ralnchecks or layaways

on clearance.'

Clinton vows: Tax cut will not .become la·w

~~!:;'.~~

immediately so that the president ·can't veto it
By .CURT ANDERSON
while
they are away for the August recess. But
AP·Tax Writer
WASHINGTON {AP) - Only hours after . Qinton said Thursday night that no m~tter when
Republicans pushed their $792 billion tax cut the bill arrives at the White House, ''I will have no
Woman sentenced for her part fn·faffed.Jall break through Congress, Presid~nt Clinton declared c.hoice but to veto it immediately."
·
PAINESVILLE (AP)- A.woman received a 90-day jail sentence for
"It threatens .Social Security and Medicare,
today that "this tax cut will not become law."
her role in a foiled plan to get her boyfriend out of lake County Jail.
Qiinton repeated his determination to veto the makes it harder to pay offlhe debt and imperils the
lati~ha Smith, 26, of Shaker Heights, was sentenced Wednesday. She
bill as he left· the White House for a trip to prosperity that has brought real benefits to Ameripleaded gui~ty to one felony. count of conspiracy to commit burglary in
can families," the president said.
Arkansas. ..
·
June.
'
The bill would trim the bottom 15 percent
Republican ·congressional leaders prepared to
The attempt to break her boyfriend out of jail failed in January when a take their case for the tax cut to the .American peo- income tax rate to 14 percent in 2003 and reduce
sheriff's deputy caught Smith, along with her two young children and a ple during the August congressional recess.
the other rates by I percentage point in 2005.
• •
friend, staking out the .~uilding, 1
Filced with a certain presidential veto many Relief from: the "marriage penalty" ·that affects
Acco,rding to police, Smith carried masonry nails for climbing ·up the
moderate Democrats and Republ icans say it · millions of .,..o-income couples would begin in
side of .the brick jail, a hacksaw,
.
would be better to figure out how to devise a ' 2001. .
extra blades to cut through a metal· smaller compromise tax cut with a chance at
The estal,l' tax would .IJe repealed gradually
'COVered Cell windQW and a COrd tO · becoming law.
·starting in 2003, and capital gains taxes ·would be
shimmy away to freedom .
· "Hopefully, we can come back and do it one cut from , 20 percent to 18 P'(rcent for . most
Smith is no longer seeing the man
more time in a better fashion," said Sen. John investors retroactive to Jan. I, 1'999: There are
.she attempted to free from jail. But Breaux, D-La.
breaks for education and health ·care, expanded
the man - who may also face
Republicans won an imponant victory for a IRAs arid pensions and a legion of breaks for busicharges from the attempted escape
bedrock political issue with what would be the nesses large_and small.
Democrats portrayed the package as 'primarily
- is still serving time in jail, said largest tax cut since ·President Reagan's in 1981.
favoring
the wealthy and business and c~mserva ­
lake County Assistant Prosecutor ·The Senate approved the bill Thursday narrowly,
tive
groups.
They said it unwisely uses a third of
Russell W. Tye.
50-49, after it cleared the House 221-206. Both the
the next decade's projected $2.9 trillion budget
The man's name was not released
House and Senate adjourned until Sept. 8.
.·
because charges have not been
"Individuals and families are due a refund,.and surplus for tax cuts at the expense of safeguarding
filed .
thai is exactly. what we do with this legislation," Social Security and Medicare, repayi11g ' the
said Sen. William Roth, R-Del., chairman of the national debt and 'preventing deep cuts in govern Fire causes $4 million
Senate Finance Committee. "Government is not ment spending.
In damage to factory
· "It is radical, it is risky, and it is reckl ess," said
automatically entitled to the surplus." ·
AKRON (AP) - A factory
.
. .
With little chance of becoming law, the bill will Sen . Kent 'Conrad, D-':•I.D. .
machine sparked and caught fire,
Most polls show the pubhc cons1ders cuttmg
Lotteries
ser\'e mainly as a defining issue between Republi!.causing about $4 million in damage
cans and Democrats in the 2000 struggle for con- taxes a lower priority lhan ensuring' that there is
1
to an indlustrial suP.,ly company, fire
OHIO
trol of Congress and the race for the White House. enough Social Security money to handle baby
officials said.
Pick 3: 1-0-5; Pick 4: 6-8-3-9
"There is a dramatic difference between boomer retirements. Nearly half the public thinks
Heavy smoke from the fire ThursBuckeyeS: 5-15-21-23-33
Democrats and Republicans in this .capital cit.y, wealthy people would benefit most from the tax
day
at
Specialty
Products
Supply
w.yA,
and this is the dividing line," said Rep. Btl! • cuts, according to an ABC .News poll of 1,012
forced
the
evacuation
of
about
a
.
Archer R-Texas
chairman of the House Ways and addl.ts taken July 28-Aug. I.
Dally 3: 7-7-8; Daily 4: 5-~-0-7
dozen
nearby
residences,
fire
Capt
That
poll,
which
had
a
margin
of
error
of
plus
Means Committee.
C 1999 Ohio Vallry Publishing Co.
Rob Ross said. No one was injured.
GOP leaders will not send the bill to Clinton or minus 3 percentage points, indicated that about

when 1 flatbed truck driven
Clayton
alammed Into
the rear of tha vehicle they were riding In Thursday. The bua
had to be cut In half to free tha paaHngera.

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

. .

•

a fourth of the people thought the cuts would benefit everyone equally, while 14 percent said it
would benefit middle-income people most, and '6
percent said the ,poor would benefit most.
o
. Republicans said such polls only demonstrate
that they are acting on principle by returning
some of the surplus in the form of tax cuts.
"We know it may not be the single most popular thing, but it's the right thing to do," said Rep.
David Dreier, R-Calif.
Democrats, however, claimed that the motive
for the tax cuts was the GOP's desire to curry the
favor of business and conservative political supporters. "A wish list ·so that every contributor ...
will get a promise, " Rep. Charles Rangel, 0-N. Y.,
called it.
The legislation was crammed with dozens of
items sought by liusiness lobbyists that total $60
billion ·over 10 yeals; according to Democrats.
Some examples:
.
• Business and restaurant lobbyists would gain
ait increase in the deduction for business meals
from 50 percent to 60 percent, costi.ng $3 .8 bil lion .
·
• For Silicon Valley firms and other ma.nufacturers, would get a five-year extension of the .
research and dev.elopment tax credit, wonh $13 .1
billion .
.• For chicken farmers, a new credit for elec-

tricity produced from poultry waste, along wit~ a
four-year extension of biomass and wind electricity credits, about $534 million .
All Democratic senators and four Republicans
voted no: Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, George
Voinovich of Ohio and Olympia Snowe and Susan
Collins, both of Maine.
The lone absent senator was Republican Mike
Crapo of Idaho, who was attending his daughter 's
wedding but supported the tax cut.
Five Democrats suppotted the measure in the
House and four Republicans voted against.

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