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                  <text>Tuesday
........ 24, 1. .

Weather

Atlanta burns Cincinnati 6-2, Page·4
Ann on a lonely_experience,, Page 6
Society scrapbook, Page 6
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Tod-r: Shower.
High: 80s; Low: 60s
Tomorrow: Showers
High: 80s; Low: eo.

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Meiss County's
Volume 50, Number 54

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

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Single

Copy. 35 Cents

Middlep9rt pool to close Saturday
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel N - St8ff

including complaints of drivers' speeding in village alleyways, trash
not being picked up in certain areas of the village, and Rumpke
~e Middleport Pool will close for the season after Friday.
.
employees leaving residual trash on the ,curbsides.
M1ddleport Village CoiUicil voted Monday night, in regular ~ion, to
·.Gill said that the company had received direct complaints about
speeding
by a company driver, and that the driver has been repriclose !he pool after business on Friday, due to a decrease in patronage llfld
· the financial strain that opefllting the pool will likely place on the village manded. She also said that the company would respond to other
general fund if it remains open for the final few days of the summer season. · complaints as they arc received.
Oerk Bryan . Swann reported last night that the pool account currently
lannarelli said that while several persistent complaints have been
carries a $2,000 deficit, and Mayor Sandy lannarelli said that on Monday, received by the village, other residents have laken time to call her to
only 41 patrons had visited the pool, most of whom were admitted on sea- commend the company for its quality of service, and noted that the
son passes, meaning that they did not pay at the gate to enter the pool.
·village was only concerned about resolving consistent problems.
lannarelli commendc,d village street workers for their work in a
lannarclli also said that the supply of treatment chemicals for the pool
would only last until Friday, at which time additional chemicals would have village clean up last week, and said that residents and village workto he purchased.
ers had cooperated well in cleaning up private properties of trash
.
Councilman Steve Houchins, who voted _against closing the pool this and refuSe, high grass and other unsightly problems.
Council
voted
to
again
.usc
village
employees
to
open
and· close
· weekend, said that it would be unfair to those who purchased season tickets,
because they were sold with the understanding that the pool would remain graves at Riverview Cemetery, Complaints have been received by
~::i!:~~:in~~~~~
~
rear, of Rumpke of Well·
. open through the Labor Day weekend, the traditional closing date for the the village in the way that a private indivi.duJl_has performed the
to discuss residents'
pool. {In the past, the pool has closed on weekdays after the beginriing of · work, and Jannarelli said that bookkeepin'g'"'problems .have also aton, met with Middleport VIllage
arisen through the arrangement, in which the village was to receive complaints about the way trash Is collected In
village.
school, and opened on weekends.)
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ment, will be posted in The Daily Sentinel.
S'fann said that the pool cos~ the village some $2,200 in salaries every $50 per grave from the private fW~Ve digger.
Council
also
dis&lt;;ussed
problem~
with
flags
being
damaged
at
the
ceme. After meeting in executive ·session, .council appr~ved the hiring of Carla
IWo weeks, plus the i:ost of fringe benefits and supplies.
Sam Eblen. who has served in the past on the village recreation com~it­ tery, and other damage to headstones, in the process of mowing at the ceme- D1ll and ~borah Wells as cook/custod1ans for the VIllage, at 28 hours each ,
tee, said that last year, the pool closed with a deficit of $5,000, and Swann tery, and the need for maintenance at the old cemetery, located across the and at m1~1mum wage. .
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Councilman Bob Robmson mqUired as to the progress of msututmg a noestimates a deficit of $8,000 this year if the pool is to remain open through road from Riverview Cemetery.
lannarelli said that she had met with VillageAUomey Linda Warner about sm?king policy in village hal! . l~nnarell! said th.af a committee ap)lOinted to
Labor Day, not including utility costs.
After hearing Swann's financial report, council voted to transfer $3,000 an in-house posting for the position of building inspector, and said that wnte ordma_nce language was s~1ll meetmg to d1scu~ the n~w pohcy.
lannarelh noted that the pohce department contmued to rece1ve numerfrom the village general fund to the recreation fund to cover anticipated Warner had advised that the position, which is vacant due to the death of
Amold Johnson, would be required to be a part of an existing village posi- ous complaints about le:"'h law viol~tions an~ barking dogs, and that repeat
expenses involved in operating the pool through this week.
. .
In other business, council met with Peggy Gill of Rumpke, the Wellston lion, and that a village employee could not be contracted to perform the offenders would ~ ,subJect to fines m M~yor s Court.
a
conflict
of
interest
Present,
'"
.add111on
to
Houchms,
Robmson,
Swann
and
lannarelh,
were
work
due
to
finn which provides residential trash service under contract with the village.
The
position,
which
provideS
a
portion
of
building
perinit
fees
as
payCouncil
members
Roger
Manley
and
Rae
.Gwiazdowski
.
. Village Council has heard a number of recent complaints a)Jout the finn,

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Page Forty-Eight-AuHand Bicentennial Edition, The Daily Sllntinel, August, 1999

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Regional Briefs

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Rutland Furniture Store and Rutland· oUlad·Gas·
Salutes· .
Arnold Grate
1917 • 1989 The Founder
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.Rutland ·Furniture was established in 1948 when Arnold purehased the former Steiner
prope~ iil Rutland just North of the bridge on Main St. At ftrst they planned to only
sell ~sed furniture, however, business was so good they invested in several thousand
.,
dollars worth of new furniture and the business prospered.
In 1950, ·they started the bottle g~ ~usiness· which went hand in hand with ·selling
ranges.
·
,
~n 1953, the original Rutland Furniture Store building was completed. This building
burned in 1980 and the present building opened later in 1980 and is now used to house
the Bottled Gas Store. The company closed the Rutland Furniture Store in 1997.
The Bottled Gas business has prospered over the years with its beginning in 1950, in
1963 they purchased land in The Plains and started their second bulk plant, in 1992
they installed propane plants in McC~nnelsville and Torch,· in 1995 another in Rio
Grand~ andj~ckson. The six plants have 180,000 gallon storage capacity.
In 1982, Arnold retired and in 1989 his three sons were left to operate the business.
Proudly remembered by the three sons on the occasion of Rutland's 200 years- Herbert
Grate, David Grate-, &amp; PhiiHp Grate ·
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July jobless rates decline
across southeastern Ohio
While the slate'sjobless rate remained at4.5 percent for July -unchanged
~June- ~nemployment rates throughout most of southeastern Ohio fell
dunng ~ penod.
.
.
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In Me•gs County, the jobless rate fell by I.S ~nt during the penodfrom 11.9 pm:ent to 10.4 pek::enL The st8k: report lndicales 900 members of
the county.s labor foroe of 8,(i(J()_as jobless. ,
.
. According to the OBES, the Jobless rate 10 Galha County fell by 1.7 per·
cent between Ju'!_e and July- from
percent to 7.8 percent. OBES fi~
shJow 1,200 members of the county s 15,100 labor force as unemployed m
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Other

. reg~onal southeastern Ohio jobless rates for July {June rates 10
parethes•s) were: Athens: 4.8. (4.4) percent; Jackson: 6 .3 (7.7) · percent;
Lawrence: 7.2 (~.9) percent; Scioto: 7.5 (7.7) percent; Vinton: 9.8 (10.4) per·
..
cent; and, Washingto~: 5.~ (6.5) ~rcenl
Across the state~ a shghtl~'" su~mer u~employm~nt clatms was ~ffset by mode;'t Job ~wth •n several mdusl!'es, Including manufactunng.
James Mennts, admtrusuator of the OB~. S8ld.
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31
He srud the total number of people '" the labor force •s a h•gh for the
year. .
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Oh1o's rate was slightly higher than the national figure of 4.3 percent, also
unch~.ged fromJun~. .
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It SJusl the
time smce October ~992.that 0~ 10 SJobless ~te W."'l ~·gher than the national percentage, Menms S81d. Ohao also had shghtly higher
unemploym~ntthan the national rate in July 1998.
' The states July 1999 rate w:"' ~ fr?m .the 4.8 percent of July · 1998.
Over th~ year, !he number of Ohioans working mcreased by 191,000, up from
5.4 m1lhon. The number unemployed has decreased by 8,000 over the year
from 273,000 .. ,
.
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Among OhiO s 88 counties, the July Jobless ~ales ranged from al':"" of 1.9
percent m Delaware County m. central
Oh10 to a h1~ of 13.2 percent I~ Morgan County'" southeastern Ohio.
Eight counties 'had rates below 3.0
percent in July. Seven had iates high·
er than 9 percent.
1 Sedlon • 10 Pages
. Student$ awaiting ruling

f!'"'l

Good Afternoon
Today's ·Sentine

-----------1 on school voucher case

We~ther

Lotteries
OHIO
. ·Pick3: 3-5·5· Plck4: 1-8-8-6
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Buckeye 5: 1-3-17-20-35

W.\'A,.

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Dally 3: 1-3-3; 'Dally 4: 8-8.Q.2
0 1999 Ohio Vallt~ Publishlng Co.

CIEVEIAND(AP)-Wiiileclass·
es at some schools that ·accept state
hiition voucher.; alieady have started,
students still don't know yet if they
will be allowed to use vouchers again
this year.
A coalition of civil liberties and publie education groups sued in July and
said the program violatedtheconstihi·
tional separation of church and state.
The program .uses . tax ~oney, and
nearly.all ofthe560evelandschools
that accept vouchers are religious.
The case has been assigned to u.s.
District Judge Solomon Oliver Jr.,
who was expected to rule this afu:r·
noon whether the voucher program
will resume for the school year.

Courthouse.restoration planned; Commissioners
~e~~~~!E~!ate capital appr?!,~~~~~~~ !~~~~~.£~~}~~~.IT 1 ~~~~~

Sentinel N - Staff
emphasis on ADA compliance and privacy improve· The Meigs County Commissioners have asked for ments, $110,000; a tollil electrical system upgrade, io
nearly a half-million dollars for a courthouse facelift.
include improved lighting and energy efficiency, power
The commissioners have petitione,d State Rep. John distribution, fixtures, computer and telephone line
Carey. R-Wellston, for $445,000 from the state's capital upgrades and distribution, heating and cooling efficienbudget to make major renovations to the historic build· cy improvements, $160,000; 0ew tile, carpets and trim,
ing, which was.consuuctcd·in ·1848. The wwk proposed including floor structural repairs, $35,000, and $30,000
. - by the oommissioners would not only 'improve ·the for permits, design work and engineering fees .
appearance of the building, but would restore the histor·
Howard s8id that the county is unable to provide any
ical integrity of the building, as well.
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· financial contribution to the project, but that some grant
At their regular meeting on Mpnday, Commissioners funding through historical organizations might be availJanet Howard and Mick ' Davenport discussed the able..
request, and shared the contents of a letter written to
In other business, Howard said that a meeting has
Carey on August 12, in which the commissioners relate been set for September 9 at 7 p.m ., for township trustees
a courthouse renovation project to Pomeroy's revitaliza- and county officials, to discuss ·upcoming Issue Two
tion program and the county's efforts to attract tourism. applications.
"As Meip County is a small C()unty withoui a large
This year; the county will allow townships and viitax base, it is difficult for us to find any extra money for lages to join with the county to apply for paving and
·this project," the leUer states. "Pomeroy looks great, and other highway projects through the Issue two program,
many tourists are now visiting. The Meigs County Cour, and Howard said that the rreeting would allow those
thouse is located in the heart of Pomeroy, and is the focal involved in the projects to formulate eligible projects for
point for ·the town, as well as being one of the main . the funding round.'
.
attractions to tourists."
Howard said that ~llowing townships and villages to
The board has proposed an extensive renovation pro- join with the county would allow for funding that 'local
gram, which would provide an aesthetic facelift on the · governments might not otherwise qualify for, and would
inside and outside of the building as well as electrical also increase the eligibility poi~ts that the county
upgrades.
'
receives in its application .
Greg Bailey of Home Creek Enterprises, a Pomeroy
The commissioners approved, certification adjustcontracting firm, provided .the commissioners with the ments in the budgets of the DARE program, the county
following repair estimates; exterior painting, miscella-· commissioners, and EMS, and approved payment of
neous repairs to the exterior and dome repairs. including bills, in the amount of $428,203.02.
dome lighting, $65,000; removal of old sidewalks, side·
The boarJ also approved the advance of $12,000 to
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walk lighting and installation of new sidewalks and the county's L11ter Control program, representmg the
AJ:)A~mplaint ramps, $45,000; interior improvements local match for the program.
·
to include acoustical tile · new wood trim finish
Also present was ·Oerk Gloria Kloes.
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lannarelli
filed a petition with
the Meigs County Board of Elections as a write-in candidate for the
November mayor's race.
lannarelli was appointed to. the
mayor 's office to replace Dewey
"Mack" Horton. who resigned due
to hea.lth problems earlier this
year.
'
A Republican, she had been a
member of Village Council since
1995, and was appointed president
of the board in January . .
Daughte( of the late David and
Betty Ohlinger, lannarelli has
spent most of her life in Middle;
port.
.
lannarelli is the owner of the
Chateau Sat·on in· Pomeroy, where.
she worked as a cosmetologist for
a number of years .
While working in the business,
she helped found the Pomeroy
Merchants Association, .a nd has
been active in a number of other
community organizations. She was
a long-time member of the Ameri can Heart Association 's local
board. and ·served as president of
that organization for several years .
She also served as an early presi dent of the Boys ' Athletic Association in the Meigs Local Sch()QI
District.
She now represents the v illage
in the Middleport Community
Association and the Meigs County
Chamber. of Commerce.
"I have tried to do everything I
have done on village council, and
now, as mayor, for the people of
Middleport," lannarelli said.
"I want to do what is right, to
help make Middleport an even bet·
ter place to live."
· '" My heart is in this, and I' m
re ady to work hard and do the best
that I can ."
According to Rita Smith, direc.tor o f the Meigs County Board of .
Elections. write-in candidates fo r
village and township office have
PRETTY BABY, BOYS:- Taking ftrat place In the pretty baby contest for boya at the Meigs . until september 13 at 4 p.m. to"fi le
County Fair Saturday and their participating parent or representative were, left to rlgh,t, Michael a petition for candidacy.
Eugene Cremeans with Mellaaa Cr8f!1elns, Brock Denzil Roush with Trlcla Roush, Jordan Wyatt
Chadwell with Patsy Chadwell; Jake Roush with Christl Roush, Wyatt King with Lea Ann King,
Drew Grovar with Mark Haley, and William Whittington with Greg DuVall.
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:Pretty baby contest 'Winners named

'·····
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Arnold Grate- Founder

1917-1989

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Rutland Bottle Gas - Today
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More than 80 infants and toddlers
competed in the annuai 'pretty baby
contest at the !36th Meigs County
Fair held on the hill stage Saturday
morning The event was chaired by
Jane Fit~h.
~ A first place winner·:-vas sejec.ted .
in seven age categones, rangmg
from birth to four years of age. Outof-county judges 'were used to select
the prettiest child in each category.
Rules specified that the cont.estants
be dressed in t-shirts and shorts.
The winners rece ived trophies
and all of those who entered
received ribbo ns.
.
Girls selected as first place WID·
ners in the ir respective categories
were ·Karle&lt; Ann Norton, up to 3

months; Katlyn Holsinger, up to six
month~; Breanna Colburn., up to 12
months; Lauren Booth, up to 18
months; Kari Arnold, not more than
IWo years; Autumn Nicole Porter,
not more than three years; and Kiana
Cheyenne Osborne, not . more than
four years old.
In the boys competition, the win·
ners were Michael Eugene Cremean~, up to three '."10nths; Brock
Denzil Roush, up to SIX months; Jor·
!Jan Wyatt Chadwell, up to 12
months; Jake Roush, up to 18
months; Wyatt King. nor more than
two years; Drew Grover, not ~ore
than three years old; and Wilham
Whittington, not more than than four
years old.

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PRETTY BABY, GIRLS - Flrtll place winners In girls
the pretty baby contest In the various
age categories, pictured here with their mothera, were, from the left, Karlee Ann Norton held by
Ann Norton, Katlyn Holsinger held by Michelle Holsinger; Breanna Colburn with Tracy Collins;
Lauren Booth with Julie Booth; Karl Arnold with Donna Arnold, Autumn Nicole Porter with Misty
Porter· and Kiana Cheyenne Osborne with Connie Osborne.
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Death Notices

Commentary
111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
74G-W2·2150 • Fu: w:!-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

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ROBERT L WINGETT
PubiiU\er
DIANE HILL
Control ..,

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

o....., ...nav-r

n.Sentinel asle=•IH,.,. W 1M lldlfcw tRim,....,_ Oft • btoMI ~or top.

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'2 UW, •nd ~ phoM nwrtbw. "'""'• Rf• ffth-.'•. rwfwWIW to • ,._
Woue """"" tK ,.,.,, llaH to
to the «&lt;lttK, The Sentinel, 1J1 Coun St,
PomMiy, Oltlo _,..;or, FAX to 7f/J ~157

t..,_..

Tips for college
financial assistance
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By Rep. John C•rey

Upon high school graduatiOn, many dectstons need to be made on what
the next step in hfe will be For many Ohioans. that next step ts an easy one
to make - college However, paymg for college is not so easy.
'
To help make college's financJal woes easter for students to handle, Ohto
has made a concerted effort to offer financial assiStance and resources for
individuals attendmg college tn Ohio. In fact, thts June marked the passage
of Ohio's first educallon only budget btll. Htgher educallon fundmg was
mcreased by nearly 10 percent to more than $5 bJihon Tins mduded addttional fundmg to freeze tuttton at two year colleges during fiscal year 2000
and actually cuttmg tuttton by 5 percent at two year institutions m FY 2001
Althou&amp;IJ you and your famtly have the pnmary responstbthty for financmg your college educahon, financ18l asststance ts posstble Part of the
process of linancmg college IS researchmg posstble sources of scholarships
and grants and educatmg yourself on asststance possibtllties There are several types of financtal asststance They mclude
• Scholarshtp non repayable awards based on ment or men! plus need,
• Loans: funds loaned through a Jend10g mshtullon or college wtth IOterest rates that are usually reasonable For federal loans. quahfying students
may have theu interest patd by the government while tn school Loan programs are also avrulable to ellgtble parents to help w1th college expenses of
·their children; and
• Work study programs JOI&gt;s that allow students to earn money toward
their educatton whtle they are enrolled m school. Students can sometimes
get Jobs related to thetr program of study
'
Sources of finanCial asststance mclude the federal government, state
agencies. professional and servtce organtzattons. pnvate foundattons and
mdividual post secondary schools There are also several resources available
to help students detenmme scholarshtps they are ehgtble for It ts vttal, )lowever, that students seeking out scholarshtp servtces are aware of tllegtttmate
and fraudulent services. There are several signs of scholarshtp shams Six
stgns to beware of 10clude
• "The scholarship )S guaranteed or your money back "
• "You can't get this information anywhere else ..
• "May I have your credit card number to hold this scholarship?"
• "We'll do all the work"
• "The scholarship wdl cost money."
• .. You're a final1st" in a contest you've never entered
Most tmportantly. mdtvlduals seeking scholarship servtces need to
remember that most legitimate services have accesstble mformation, wtll not
charge you for theu servtces and that free money shouldn't cost a thing. Two
free and helpful scholarshtp services on the Internet are the Federal Trade
Commtsston at www ftc gov and Mark Kantrowitz's financtal rud mformation page at www cs.crnu.edu/-finaid!finatd html
The Ohto Board of Regents (OBR), State Grants and Scholarships divtston ts also a useful resource for Ohioans looking for college fin aneta) asststance. OBR offers 10 student financtal atd programs The •Ohto Student
010icc Grant program ts for Ohio restdents enrolled full ttme in baccalaureate degree programs at Ohio's pnvate non profit colleges and umversthes
The gQa) of the Student Choice Grant ts to narrow the lutlton gap between
the state's public and private non profit colleges and umversittes Ehgibihty
for the Student Choice Grant ts not based on need or academtc ment. Outstanding htgh school graduates can receive Academtc Scholarshtps m order
to attend Ohto's higher educational instituttons These scholarships provide
$2,000 each year for up to four years.
Other financtal asststance opportunities mclude the Oh10 War Orphans
, Scholarship program, part time students mstruct10nal grant program, Ohto
Safety Officers College memorial Fund, the Nurse Education Assistance
Loan program, the Robert C Byrd Honors Scholarshtp program and the
Ohio 12th Grade Profictency Tests Scholarshtp program. For more mformation on state funded grants and scholarships, call ~- 888 833-1133 and for
federal financtal aid programs, call the Federal Student Aid Jnformatton
Center at 1-800-433-3243.
Once you find a financtal asststance program that sutts you, remember to
fill out all requued paperwork. Thts mcludes the Free Apphcatton for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) You should be able to get a FAFSA from your
guidance counselor, college/university financtal aid offtce or at
ed gov/offices/opec/express html on the Internet. Also, check with
mdtvtdual colleges and universlttes to make sure all necessary paperwork
for theu mstttullon ts completed.
Wlitle financmg college can seem like the biggest concern of those four
years, 11 tsn't. Attendmg college is about educating yourself and deCJdmg the
path you want to take m life. I wtll continue to assess ways that htgher edu.cation can become more a.;cesstble and affordable for all who wtsh to con.tmue theu educatton after htgh school If you have any questtons or concerns
regarding this or any other tssue, please contact me, State Representative
John Carey at 77 South Htgh Street, Columbus, Oh10 43266-0603
John c....y r•pr..ents th• 84th Dllltrlct In the Ohio Houee. of Repre-

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Mntlltlv...

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Today in History--

By The A..oclllted Pr...
Today is Tuesday, Aug 24, the 236th day of 1999 There are 129 days left
'
in the year.
Today's Htghlight in Htstory.
On Aug. 24, 1949, the North Atlanttc Treaty went mto effect.
•
On lhts date:
In A D. 79, Jong-domtant Mount Vesuvius erupted, burymg the Roman
,
cilies of Pompen and Herculaneum m volcamc ash, an esttmated 20,000
· ' people dted.
In 1572. the slaughter of French Protestants at the hands of Catholics
. •: • began in Paris.
In 1814, Bntish forces 10va~ed Wash10gton, setting fire to the Capt to I and
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; . the White House
In 1899, Argentine poet and author Jose Luts Borges was bam 10 Buenos

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! ':.1~ Aires.

• In 1932, Ameha Earhart became the first woman to fly nonstop across the
:l}nitcd States, travehng from Los Angeles to Newark, N J , 10 just over 19
~
hours.
•
In 1954, the Communist Control Act went into effect, virtually outlawing
the Commumst Party 10 the Umted States.
In 1959, three days after Hawaitan state~ood, sen Htram L Fang and
,,
Rep. Daniel K. Inouye were sworn in. Fang became the first Chmese-American senator, and Inouye the first Japanese-American congressman
In 1968, France exploded a hydrogen bomb 10 the South PaCific, becom·
: _ ing the world •s fifth thermonuclear "power
In 1981, Mark David Chapman was sentenced in New York to 20 years
to life m pnson for slaying rock star John Lennon. ·
In 1992, Hurncane Andrew smashed 10to Flonda
,,

attempt to force-feed Russia on free-market ceo- peace 11 h~r to m~ntam as et,jlntc Alb~l~
All of a sudden, a world of
nom i~hich has tmpoverished the Russian pop- take out repnsals apnst the Scrtli who vtcttmtrouble faces the Untied States ulatton and soured tt on the United States
tzed them.
• and 11 opens Vice Prestdent AI
The Umted States mststed that Russia " privaNATO forces arc hard-pressed '? keep onder
Gore to foreign policy attacks
ttze " former government-owned enterprises, and h~ve as one o.f theu tasks disarm10g the
whtch were ma10ly bought at fire-sale pnces by Alban111! KO&amp;Ov~ Ltberallon Anny. U.S. casual·
from presidenttal rivals.
New cnses m Russta, the
their managers and friendly money men, who tics, .avOided dunng the war. would cost 010ton
Taiwan Strmts, Colombia, North
promptly looted them and moved thetr profits politically
.
S rb"
Korea and former Yugoslav1a all
abroad
Despite U S ~fforts to ts.olate htm, e tan
serve as fodder for opponents to
Jlte Umted States also uncntically backed a boss Sl?bodan Mtlosevtc !s stillm power. And so
charge that O mton-Gorc for~I icy of masstve Jendmg to Russta by the Inter- ts lra&lt;j s Sack!am Hussct~ , The U.S brokcred
e 1gn pohcy has been mept, based on wishful na~onal Monetary Fund Mueh of that money was peace 10 Bosma, but now 11 s revealed that Serb,
also wasted or stolen As a condition of the loans, Ooatian and Mushin leaders there may have
thinkmg -- or even corrupt
Gore inevitably wtll be assatled for the Demo- mean!Jme, the IMF demanded government austcr- stolen up to $1 billion m mte~atJonal rchcf.
crane Party's receipt of As1an contnbu!Jons m tty -- whtch meant that thousands of Russtan
Elsewhere, ':l~h ~o~ IS potsed .to . test a
1996 -- whtch opponents tie to a favorable nit workers lost their JObs
long-range balhstic mtsstle -- whtch, tf tt haptoward Cluna tn US foretgn policy
U S. policy has Jed to the vast ennchmen! of a pens, wtll represent a fatlure of US. carrot-andThere'ts a debate among GOP candtdates over class of pohtically powerful oligarchs close to s!Jck diplomacy -- and lndta and Pa~stan have
China pohcy -- but unammtty around the 1dea that Yeltsin who may do anythmg -- mcluding, per- been fightmg m Kashmtr and rattlmg nuclear
Clinton and Gore wmked at Ch10ese esp1onage, haps. cancel elecllons -- to keep theu power
weapons
human nghts crackdowns, arms
butld10g and trade violations ·
Last weekend, rehg10us conservative Gary Bauer cnttctzed GOP
front-runner George W Bush for
advocating the same pohcy toward
Ch10a as Gore because Bush
,favors mamtammg normal trade
relattons
But Bush makes tt clear that he
does not beheve -- as Cl10ton and
Gore do -- that the U S ·Chma relahonshtp JS a " strategtc partnership, " but "competition"
The latest rumble over Truwan 's
parttal declaratton of mdependence
from Ch10a creates a dangerous
ne~ sJtuatton -- and more material
for pohttcal dtspute
Some Republicans thmk the
Umted States should unmtstakably
back Tatwan, a free -market
democracy Others favor both
restrammg Ta1wan ·s bfeakaway
movement and also wammg Chma
that an attack on the tsland might
lead to hosttlthes wtth the Umted
States
Both GOP facttons, however,
•
accuse Clinton and Gore of allow•
mg the sttuatmn to reach this dan- L....:..---~---------------....-------'--------------:-1 -,
ger pomt and of fathng etther to back Tatwan or
Accondmg to The Washington Post's Robert
The U.S.·assisted anti-drug war is fruhng m '
restrain it
Ka1ser, U S dtplomats m Moscow hav~ been pre- Colombta, where the country is gradually being
Gore ts also pohhcally vulnerable over devel- vented from reporting back to Washmgton thetr taken over by leftist guemllas working hand-in'
opments m Russta He has been the top U S. offi- real worries about pervasive high-level corruption hand with narcotics traffickers
ctal m charge of dealmg w1th Russta 's vanous m Washmgton, because top offictals fear the
And peace efforts in Northern Ireland and the
pnme mmisters as Russta has sunk deeper and reports wtll leak and embarrass Gore
Mtdeast -- whtch Ointon may have seen as his
Republicans are sure to seize upon such ttckct to a Nobel Peace Prize and pohhcal vindtdeeper mto financial and pohtical cnsis.
Both The New York T1mes and The Washmg- reports --and, mdeed, The New York limes quat- cation •• both are struggling \,..
ton Post last weekend earned extenstve cntJques eq Condoleeza Rice, a lop forctgn policy advtser
What all thts means ts that foreign policy may
of U S. pohcy toward Russta .. especially of to Bush and former Russta expert in his father's be a maJOr tssuc in 2000 Repubhcans wtll pqint
uncntJcal support for Russtan Prestdent Boris Whtte House, as saying that the Clinton adminis- lingers at Gore, who wtll respond - justtfiably -Yeltsm, whose regtme ts 10 tatters -and whose tratton miscalculated in being too permisstve "OK, what would you do?" It's a question the
unpopulanty rubs off on the Untied States
toward Yeltsm
press should ask; too.
.Sore's Democra!Jc nval, former Sen. Btll
Meanttme, there are other troubles in the
(Morton Kond,.cke le executive edHor ol
Bradley, D-N J., also has been cntical of the U S. world While Chnton won the war in Kosovo, the Roll C..l, the new•Pill* ol C•pltol Hill.)
By Morton KondniCke

'F.sto.IJ(is(w{ in 1948

"

condftlonS.

lorecalll for

The Daily Sentinel Foreign policy is big 2000 issu~

•

Goldie Hendren

Wednesday, Aug. 25

H

0 1999 f&lt;ccuWedler, Inc

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Su'r!y Pt Ckludy

face."
At Georgetown College, on the
heights above the Potomac Rtver,
John McElroy. the ~chool's bookkeeper, looked across the ctty, then at
hts pocket watch
He made a ne~t journal entry :
" Aug 24, 1814 - This evening
about dark the British arnved in
W C. (Washmgton Ctty), fired the
Cap1tol about 9:06 ..
Prestdent James Madison, a fugt·
live on horseback in the Virgtma
countrySide, saw the bummg ctty
and shuddered at what a member of
his party called "the dismal stght"

The latest telling of the story ts by.
Anthony ~ . Pttch 10 "The Bummg of
Washmgton The Bnttsh Invasion of
1814," published by lhe Naval Jnstttule Press in Annapolis. Md
The late summer of 1814 had
been hot, steamy and rainless The
war between Britam and the Umted
States that had sputtered for two
years had been a dtstant rumble at
best.
But the defeat of Napoleon m
SpaiD that spnng had freed the veterans of the Duke of Welhnglon 's
army for duly m America. Their officers were 1n a mood for repnsal The
year before, U S ~orces had burned
JOVemment butldings in York (now
Thronto), the capital of the Canadian
provmce of OntariO.
The Amencans, seeking to keep
vttal supplies out of Bnhsh hands,
struck the first match, lighting fuses
at the Washington Navy Yard to
deslroy ammumtion, satls, masts,
lumber, pttch, ropes, even a frigate at
its moonngs.
At the Capttol, the two British·
commanders, Army Gen Robert
Ross and Adm George Cockburn,
ordered rockets fired through the
roof of the House chamber ,
" When the roof fat led to ignite, a
few soldiers clambered up, only to
find tt covered wtth sheet iron,''
Pttch wntes "Undeterred, they

e.

never "feeling the allure" of
all that "fame and fortune."
They took the death of an
innocent woman and con·
structcd a moraltty tale, one m
whtch those tempted by ghtz
and glamour perish, and the
virtuous souls who feel no
n"Cd for such things prevail.
I first read thts story
last January, and it has stayed wtth me ever smce.
One reason is that it's a fascmating example of
how so many of us cope with the randomness of
tragedy, shapmg that senselessness into narrattve
form, assunng ourselves that by heedmg the cautiOnary tale we wtll be safe.
But there's also another, more selfish reason
for my obsession. The comments stuck with me
because I am a New Yorker. And although I have
not suffered for my sin the way Webdale dtd, I've
met many who would be qutck to say "I told you
so" were I to be so unlucky.
Did I move to New York because I wanted a
glamorous life? Yes. I like seeing mllvie stars on
the street and I hke gomg to parttes at the Rainbow Room -- or, more accurately, the one time I

went to a party at the Rainbow Room, I hked it.
Do I like the fast pace? Sort of, though that in
itself was never a big attracbon. It's a myth that
New Yorkers are preoccupied wtth betng up-tothe mmute and modem Actually, we are hopelessly old-fashioned. New York never changes,
and that's how we like tt We don't want to dnve
cars; we want to ride trams. We don't want to rent
videos, we want to go to movie houses. We don't
want to go to supermarkets; we want to go to
butcher shops.
But every time I leave New York, I invartably
meet someone wlio tries to make me feel shallow
for Jovmg my CJ!y
In case I doubted it, they are also qutck to
mform me that they wouldn't hve m New York
for all the money in the world
I never know how to respond to this But I
have fantasized a couple of rephes. I could say,
"That's so mterestmg, because I would hate to

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hvc m your town.

too'"

Or I could simply say, "Good "
Copyrtghl1tllll NEWSPAPER !:NTERPRISE ASSN.

Send commente to IM 1uthor In c•r• otthll
n-•pep.r or nnd her •mall •t earaeumiiOI.com.

----

Fk.n*

Mayor's Court cases processed
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Va~ghan
, processed a number of! ca§es m
Mayor's Court recently.
'
Fmed were: Bobbie Jo Runyon,
New Haven, W Va., no chtld
restramt. $120 and costs, Hank Rood,
Reedsville, open contamer, $83 and
costs; Amanda Lang, Portland,
excessive wmdow hnt, $60 and costs,
Kevm Whobrey. l'omeroy, DUI,
$395 and costs, speed, $69; Isaac
Barnett, Pomeroy, underage consumphon, •$108 and costs, Chuck
Smtih, Pomeroy, leash lawn, $58 and
costs, Barbara Ebersbach. Pomeroy.
speed, $64 and costs; Stephame
Davts. Gallipolis, wrongful entrustment, $170 and costs; Sarah K Dtll
Waugh, Pomeroy, FRA suspenston.
$170 and costs, unsafe vehicle, warnJOg; Sally Beaver, Pomeroy,
Pomeroy, FRA suspension. $170 and
costs, no chtld restramt, $140; Altsa
R. Bonecutter, Pomeroy, speedmg,
$42 and costs; Fredenck Bennett,
New Haven, W.Va., FRA suspenston,
$170 and costs, fichttous tags, $83,
Stacy M Broce, Huntmgton, W Va ,
speed, $70 and costs;
Forfitmg bonds were. Guy Bmg,
Mtddleport, runmng red hght, $83,

Published every afternoon, Monday ihrough
Fnday, Ill Court St , Pomeroy, Oh1o by the
Oh1o Valley Pubhsh1ng Company Second class
postage p11d at Pomeroy, Ohm
Membtl': The Assoc1a1ed Press and the Oh1o
Newspaper Assocutmn
Puetm111cr Send address correctiOns to The
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slol)', ~•II the nrwsroom at (740) 992-.
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Community New1papcr lloldinp. Inc

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The Daily Sentinel

•

Rein

By The Auoclated Press
There was a threat of showers and poss1ble thunderstorms across Ohto
tomght as a low pressure system approaches
And more storm actJvity ts likely Wednesday and Thursday up and
down fronts assoctated wtth the Weather system, forecasters satd
Htghs through the penod wtll be 75-85, the Nahonal Weather Servtce
said Overntght lows wtll be tn the 60s
The rccord-htgh temperature for this date at the Columbus weather stahon was 97 degrees m 1948 whtle the record low was 47 in 1971. Sunset
tontght wtll be at 8:17p.m. and sunnse Wednesday at 6.52 a.m
Extended IOrllCIIst
Wednesday night: Mostly cloudy wtth a chance of showers and
thunderstorms Lows m the mtd 60s
Thursday: Partly cloudy wtth a chance of showers and thunderstorms Htghs near 80
, Friday: Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms tn
the afternoon and evenmg. Lows m the mtd 60s and htghs m the mtd 80s.
Saturday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms during the
day. otherwtse lpartly cloudy Lows m the mtd 60s and h1ghs m the upper
80s.

'

I would hate to live in your town, too!
By Sara Eck•l
Last January, a mentally unstable man pushed
Kendra Webdale to her death on a New York Ctty
subway track. Webdalc was 32 years old and had
moved to New York three years before m the
hopes of bccommg a wnter Her hfe and her
dream vanished instantly. for no reason "It was
her tum,'' her killer explained.
.
The cnme was a disturbmg remmder of how
arbttrary life can be, but that wasn't how many
residents of Webdale's nattve Buffalo seemed to
sec it At the offices of Gallagher Printing, the
company that publishes the Buffalo community
newspapers where Webdale once worked as a
reporter and photographer. a New York Ttmes
reporter found a shghtly different perspective
"People feel the allure of New York,'' one
employee told tlu: Ttmes. "I know people who
have, and I'm glad I never dtd "
" Poor Kendra, " added another " New York is
about faine and fortune. and I don't want 11 Look
what you get. It 's so sad, but tl 's the chance you
take"
lnterestmg. Instead of moummg the unhmely
,death of thetr na!Jve daughter, these people
mstead chose to congratulate themselves for

Showers T ttorma

W VA.

Rainy couple of days ahead

r·

made a bonfire of wooden furniture house collapsed within a shell of
in the center of the chamber, setting fire·scorehed sandstone walls.
11 ahghl with the rocket's comAnd then, around midmght, carne
bushble matenal Flames quickly a storm whose pure destructive fury
engulfed the mahogany desks, tables would have been talked about for
years even tf it had not been assoctand chmrs ... "
With the Capttol bummg belimd ated wtth the end of an invaston
him, Cockburn led a file of silent
'' Bolts of lightnmg tlluminated
British sailors the mtlc down Penn- scenes of chaos," Pttch writes.
sylvanJa Avenue to the Whtte House · Whtppmg winds ripped off roofs and
First lady Dolley Madison had "carried away feather beds." Several
remained at the president's house as British cannon were tumbled away
long as posstble. But by 3 p m. she hke a ~and sweepmg paperwetghts
could hear distant cannon. Messcn- off a table.
gers soon arrived with wond the bat·
And the fires slowly sputtered and
tic had been lost In a famous acnon, dted
" Great God, madam, ts thts the
she ordered Gtlbert Stuart's full length portrmt of George Washing- kind of storm you are accustomed to
ton to be taken from its frame and m this infernal country?" Cockburn
carted away.
asked one of the many WashmgtomWhen Cockburn arrived he found ans who kept JOUrnals of the events
the White House deserted. But the of 1814
'
table in the State Dining Room was
The victonous British Army was
set for 40, wtth food and wme ready soon marching out of Washington.
to serve.
Unexpectedly, the War of 1812 had
The British officers consumed JUSt two more acts
their commandeered dinner with
The British fleet and army were
toasts to success and sneers at "little repulsed before Balttmore, where
Jemmy Madtson." Then, one of Gen. Ross was killed FranCis Scott
-Cockburn's lieutenants remembered, Key, scribbling by "the rockets red
" they finished by setting fire to the glare," wrote the words to "The Star
house thai had so hberally enter- Spangled Banner "The Bntish were
tamed them "
defeated again, this time deCisively,
"Our sailors were arttsts at theu at New Orleans. By then a peace
work," wrote Anny Capt Harry treaty endmg the war had been
Smtih The mtenor of the president's signed

Qoucty

Goldie Hendren, 82, formerly of Batley Run Rd , Pomeroy, d1ed on Sunday, August 22, 1999, at Charleston General Hospital m Charleston, W Va.
followmg an extended Illness.
She was born on January 21, 1917 m Galha County, daughter of the late
Levt and Lizzie lane Hughes Scale She was a homemaker
Survtvmg are a son, Robert Hendren of Chillicothe. a nephew, two
nteces and three grandchtldrcn.
Besides her parents, she was preceded m death by her daughter. Nancy
Wells, and a son, Melvm Hendren
Funeral servtces wtll be held on Wednesday. August 25, 1999, at 10 a m ,
at the Ewmg Funeral Home in Pomeroy, w1th Dr James Acree offictahng
Bunal wtll follow at Mtles Cemetery m Rutland.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m.

Ashley Brooke Holliday

"''

Copyr1Ghl1888 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. ,

By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
Auocllled Pr•H WrHer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
fires reddened the sky m towers of
flame that could be seen 50 m1les
away.
The deck officers on the shtps m
the Bnhsh mvaston fleet, anchored
m the darkness of the Patuxent River
near Chesapeake Bay, remarked
there was a fire m the dtrectJOn of
Washmgton
A Bntish Army heutenant, retummg from Bladensburg, the Maryland
battlefield where the Amencan
forces had been routed, recalled that
the fires so bnllrantly ht the sky that
"a dark red hght was thrown upon
the road suffictent to' penmt each
man to view dtstinctly hts comrade's

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I(Y

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British burn capital, Aug. 24, 1814

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lu·1711· I •

•I Cotumbue 187'171' I

SO,TH£RE
REALLY ARE
MOOSTER5?

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tueaday, Auguat24, 1999

Lester Bush, Pomeroy, fat lure to control, $83. Carolee Rtchards. Crown
Ctty, speed, $64, George Donovan,
Syracuse, speed, $70, Hank Rood,
Reedsville, possession of manJuana,
$133, Sammy Maynard, Ewington,
speed, $68, Vien Paphanckith, L1ma.
speed. $64, Fand Noor, Marlton,
N.J , assured clear dtstance, $63,
loUJs Kerp, Athens, speed; $40; Jeffrey LeWts, Langsvtlle, speed, $69,
Hany Barton, Racme, fatlure to control. $83; Peggy Clark, Galllpohs
Ferry, W Va., speed, $67, Mary
Beebe, Chesapeake, Va., speed, $66;
Maury Mtltleman, Athens, speed,
$72; Michelle Sayre, Racme, speed,
$70, Arbie Allen Belcher, Otfton.
W Va., expired regtstratton, $83;
Wtlham Cooke, H1llard, speed, $68;
Grant Ctrcle. Racme. speed, $64
James Gtllenwater II. Bidwell.
public mtoxtcatlon, $133; Beth Oatley, Ptckenngton, speed, $68, John
Stewart, failure to appear, $128,
Eugene Long, LOng Bottom, speed,
$65, Shannon Gtllenwater, Btdwell,
pubhc mtoxtcahon, $133, James
Gillenwater, Mason, W Va , public
mtoxtcahon, $133, Alcena Moms,
Long Bottom. speed. $68, Ktmberly
Turner, Coolvtlle, excesstve wmdow
tJnt, $83, Raelynn Basham,
Coolville, excesstve wmdow hnt,
$83; Chns Higgenbotham, Columbus, assured clear dtstance, $63,
George Stout. Albany, speed, $67,
Davtd Brandenberry, Rto Grande.
speed, $68; John Stumbo, open contamer, $108. pubhc mtoxtea!Jon,
$133 (on each of two counts); Teny
Boggs, Mason, W Va , speed, $66,
George Payne, LaurelvJile. fat lure to
appear, $45, Heath Shultz, Belpre.
speed, $67, Frank Hauser, Rutland,
pubhc intOXJCattOn, $133.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ... .... .. .......36'/,
Akzo ........ ........................... ,48''/,,
Ashland 011 ..... .... .. .........37u/.,
AT&amp;T ....................................47'1•
Bank One........ ......... .. ........SS),
Bob Evans ....... ............... 19"1.,
Borg-Warner .. ........................50
Champion .. ...... .. ........ .......... 6
Charm Shps ............................5'City Holding .... .. . .. .......23\
Federal Mogul ......................47'k
Flrstar ...... ....... .. .. .. .. 28'1..
Gannett .. .. ... .. .... . ..... ....69'k
Kmart........ .. ... .. ..... 13"1.
Kroger .. .. ... .. ................ 25'k
Lands End . .. . .. .. . SO'Io
Limited ....... .. . .. .......41').
Oak Hill Flnl ........ .. . . .. 18
OVB.. .. ... . .. . .. .. ........33',\
One Valley...... ... .. ...... ..38).
Peoples ......... .. ............. 27
Prem Flnl ............ ............ .12'1..
Rockwell ..........................61'"
RD/Shell .. .. . ...............63'/,
Sears ............ .. . · · · ... ·11
Shoney's.. . . ............ 2 ~·
Wendy's ........ .. 1. .. . . .281.
Worthington .............. ... ..15'1•

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

-

Ashley Brooke Holliday, 11 , of 10771 State
Route 5~3 , Btdwell, dted Saturday, August 21,
1999, at Chtldren's Hosptlal m Columbus followmg a short tllness. Born Aprtl I. 1988, m Galhpohs, she was the daughter of Gary and Renee Queen
Holhday
Holliday was a member of the Danvtll e Holt ness Church and Morgan's Ratders 4-H Club and a
student at Btdweii-Porter Elementary School
Holhday ts survtved by her parents and eightyear-old brother, Davtd, maternal grandparents,
Mary (Homer) Ward of Btdwell and James Queen U:..::'&lt;L.!
of Galhpohs, paternal grandparents, Avanel HaJJiAshley Brooke
day of Langsvtlle, Ohto, and Robert Holliday of
Hollldsy
Middlepoft
She is also survtved by several aunts, uncles and cousms Robm and Donald Martm of Btdwell; Cathy Hawks of Btdwell, Judy and Joe Nelson of
Salsbury, Md, Matt and Ltsa Queen of McArthur. Ohto, and Floyd and
Otane Holhday of K.isstmmee, Fla., Shawn and Lon Hawks of Vmton,
Bradley and Dawn Belv1lle of Athens; Wendy and Brad Casey of Btdwell;
Amber Belvtlle of B1dwell, and Jesstca Holhday of K1ss1mmee, Fla.
Holhday ts also survtved by a great-uncle, Joe Barr of Cht lhowte, Va ,
and fnends Bndget Shupe. Vilma PtkkoJa and Dr I H Kim
Holhday was preceded m death by her maternal great-grandparents, Coy
and Maggte Barr and Perry and Nettle Queen and by her paternal greatgrandparents, G A and Juamta Radekm and John T and Pauline Holhday
Funeral servtces wtll be held at 1 p m Wednesday at the Danvtlle Holtness Church Rev Gary Jackson and Rev. Rtck Maloyed w1ll offic•ate BurIal wtll be m the Morgan Center Cemetery •
Vis1tation wtll be held Tuesday at the Cremeens Funeral Chapel from 2
p m to 4 p m and at the Danv1lle Hohness Church from 7 p m to 9 p.m.
Tuesday evemng
Pall bearers 10clude Matt Queen. Floyd Holhday, Brad Belvtlle, Shawn
Hawks. Rtchte Ebhn and Buck Hall . Honorary pall bearers mcludes Donald
Martm and Brad Casey

Auditor and treasurer offices will remain opefl
The offices of the Metgs County Audttor and Mctgs County Treasurer
wtll make computer modtficauons on Wednesday and Thursday The
modtficatJons are necessary to become compliant fo r the year 2000
According to Aud ttor Nancy Parker Campbell and Treasurer Howard
Frank, all mformation relaung to real estate, mob1le homes and personal
property taxes will not be access tble through the computer on those days,
but the offices w1ll rema10 open to accommodate other busmess
Computer actt vity wtll resume on Fnday
Reumon planned
Stiver Run Grade School Reumon wtll be held on September 5 at the
school ground "flat," beg10mng at I p m Those attendmg should bnng
lawn chatrs and memorabt ll a Ltght refreshments will be served, aqd the
Btg Bend Clogge rs wtll perform
1

Eden United Brethren homecoming set

Eden Umted Brethren Ch urc h, located two mt les north of Reedsvill e
on State Route 124, w•ll have a homecommg celebra!Jon on Sunday Worshtp servtcc wtll be held at 10 a m , Sunday School at II a m. Peter Marlindale and Fanlll y wtll present program Carry-tn dmner wt ll be held at
noon, Calv10 and Rubel and Fnends will smg at 1 30 p m • and Vtck t
Vogges wtll perform at 2 p m The publi c JS 10v1ted

Card shower planned
Mrs Myrtl e Craft. Tuppers Pl ams. wtll celebrate her 90t h btrthday on
August 28 Her famtl y w1shes to honor her wtth a card shower Cards may
be sent to her .at 50150 Pme Tree Dnve, Reedsv tlle, Oh10 45772.

Chester Garden Club open meeting
The Chestef Garden Club wtll hold ns annual open meeung on September I at 7.30 p m at the Chester Umted Methodt st Church Hal Kneen,
OSU Extens1on Agent, Will be the guest speaker Members of area garden
clubs and the public are IO VJ!ed to attend the meehng

Winding Trail club to meet
The Wmd10g Trail Garden Club w1ll meet at the home of Karen Werry
at 8 p m on Tuesday

Lodge meetings announced
Shade R1ver Lodge. 453, F&amp;AM wt ll hold a spec1al meetmg on Tuesday at 6.30 p m Work wtll be m the Master Mason degree
The lodge wtll also hold a spec1al meetmg on Saturday Breakfast wtll
be served at !\ a m , w1th meetmg at 9 Master wtll be m the Fellow Craft
degree

Correction
Cectl Johnston ts a candtdate for Salem Townsh1p Trustee Hts name
was reported mco[rectl y m Fnday 's ed1t1on of The Da1ly Sentmel

American Legion chicken dinner set
The Rac10e Am encan Leg10n Post 602 will hold a fn ed chtcken dmner
on Sunday, beg10nmg at 11 am The cost ts $5, and ca rry-out orders will
be ava.lable

Scout meeting slated
Btg Bend G1rl Scouts Servtce Umt meeung will be held at 7 p m on
Thursday, at th e Me1gs County Pubhc Ltbrary 10 Pomeroy Leaders
should bnng "Safety W1 se" book

VFW meeting to be held

Bertha Swanson

The Tuppj!rs. Plams VFW Will meet on Thursday at 7 30 p m , wtth
name drawmg to be held

Bertha Evelyn Faye Swanson, 82. formerly of Toledo, dted on Fnday,
August 20, 1999, at Veterans Memorial Hospttal in Pomeroy
,
Survivmg are two daughters and sons-m-Jaw. Barbara and Ray Wyatt of
Flonda, a11d Gayle and Wtlham Morns, Dexter, a son, Gaylen Swanson,
Dexter, and a daughter-m-law, Dons Swanson, Rutland; 25 grandchtldren,
46 great grandchtldten and five great-great grandchtldren.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Eldon "Jack" Swanson, a son,
Rtchard Swanson, and a daughter, Carol Rudd
Funeral servtces wtll be held on Wednesday, August 25, 1999. at 10 30
a.m , at Walter Fnneral Home, 4653 Glendale Ave., Toledo , wtth bunal to
follow at Roth Cemetery.
Fnends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 2 to 9 p m

Green Thumb to hold enrollment

Man's death won't end his
chance of fathering a child
CLEVELAND (AP)- A man
dted chtldless, but his wtdow may_
one day bear h1s chtldren
Todd Reese, 38, of suburban EastJake, dted Sunaay of compllcattons
from cys!Jc fibrosts, a disease that
attacks the lungs wtth a thtck mucus
Before hts death, Reese and h•s
wtfe of 11 years, Ttna, drew up a
contract that stated their wtsh that
sperm be taken from h1m after hts
death Dr. Steven Kahan, a urologtst
at Umverstty Hospttals, performed
the procedure and the sample was
sent to a sperm bank
Mrs. Reese satd she doesn' t know
yet tf she wtll use the sperm.
" I'd rather have Todd's baby than
a stranger's baby," she told The Plain
Dealer " It would be a part of Todd.
I'd be able to tell htm what k10d of
person Todd was. Todd's already
said he wtll be up there watch10g
over us."
u&gt;
The techmque of harvesting
sperm from the deceased tS about 20
years old, but tt's rarely done, Kahan
satd Usually, an unexpected death
would be the reason to take sperm
post-mortem, but in Reese 's case. hts
fatlmg health requ1red a procedure
that he d1d not want to undergo
before his death, the doctor satd.
)Cahan ctted a study done at the
Umverstty of Pennsylvama Center
for Btoethtcs, which found doctors m
22 slates rece1ved 82 requests for
post-mortem sperm procedures from
1980 to 1995 More than half were
made in 1994 and 1995
Kahan, who wrote an arttcle m
the June edthon of The Journal of
Urology on the legal and ethtcal
aspects of the procedure, satd the
Reeses' request was unusual because
11 was well planned and documented

EMS units answer four calls
Metgs Emergency Servtces umts
answered four calls for asststance on
Monday
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2.41 a m , North Th1rd Ave. Mtddl eport, Mary Murphy, O'Bieness
Memonal Hospttal,
7·56 p m , wtth Salem Townshtp
and Rutland umts, motor vehtcle
acctdent, State Rout e 684, John
Rathff, Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal,
Stdney Wtse, refu sed treatm ent;
11 16 p m , Ove rbrook Center,
Alice Swtdcsk• . Veterans Men10nal
Hospttal.
MIDDLEPORT
8 19 p m , Russe ll St . Dorothy
Jenkms, Pleasant Vall ey Hosp1t al

" Most people who come to us fa&lt;
retrievals haven 't thought about 11
ahead of ttme and dtdn't get consent
from the deceased," he said Monday.
" But the Reeses knew they had a termmal dt sease and gave tt a Jot of
thought. "
Mrs Reese satd they chose not to
have chtldren before because they
knew one day she would have to provtde constant care for her husband
She got a degree In respiratory theraPY so she could take better care of
htm
Cys!Jc ftbrost s a ff11cts about
30,000Amencan chtldren and young
adults and half d1e by the age of 31 ,
usually from chrome lung mfect10ns
Mrs Reese satd she and her husband agreed to hav e ht s sperm
destroyed tf genetic tests show she
carnes the gene for cystic fibros1s,
whtch would gtve the ch1ld a 50 percent chance of getting the dtsease
About 8 mtlhon Amencans carry the
gene for the d1sease but do not suffer
1ts effects
Mrs Reese satd ratsmg a ch1ld
alone would be a challenge but she
feels confident that she could overcome that hurdle as her husband dtd
wtth h1s tllness tor so many years
Reese was a professiOnal roller
skater who also enJoyed scuba dtvmg, skyd1vmg and wh1te water raftlOg

Man gets 12 1/2 years for
eight bank robberies
CLEVELAND (AP) - An exconvict has been sentenced to 12 1/2
years 10 pnson on hts gutlty plea to
robbmg more than $13,000 10 etght
bank holdups
Herbert Edward Cox, 42, was se ntenced Monday by U S Dtstnct Judge
Peter C Etonomus.
He was ordered to pay $13,875 m
reshtutmn to the , Cleveland-area
banks.

Green Thumb, Inc., a semor commumty servtce employment program,
ts now holdmg an open enrollment penod The servtce prov tdes asststance 10 provtdmg employment or tra1010g opportumt1 es 10 the local area
Applicants over 55 should call (800) 338-7032 fo r 10formatmn

Benefit Hymn Sing scheduled
The Rutland Freew1ll Bapllst Church w1ll hold a benefit hymn stng on
September 10 at 7 p m , to benefit the Rutland CIVIc Center S10ge rs w•ll
mclude the Butlders Quartet, Dan and Faith Hayman, Jumor and R1ta
Wh1te, Rev and Mrs Joe Gwen, Henry and Hester Eblen. th e church
chou and others Paul Taylor, pastor, 10v1tes the pubhc

Testing clinic slated
Holzer Medtcal Center wtll hold a testmg clime at the Sc1p1o fi re statJOn on Thursday from 10 am unttl noon Tests wtll mcl ude cholesterol,
blood sugar, blood pressure and body fat analysts The cllntc JS open to
the pubhc The semor ct!Jzens of Harnsonvllle will hold thctr regular
meetmg on Thursday at the ume of the event

Eastern open house
rro begm the new school year, the Eastern Local School Dlstnct Will
hold an open house at th e htgh school and elementary school on August
30. Students m grades 7-12 can p'tck up schedul es and f10d out homerooms Students m grades K-6 can meet thetr teachers and VIStl thetr
classrooms The schedul e for the evemng ts as fo llows from 5 to 5 15
p m, staff wtll be mtroduced, from 5 15 to 5 30, tours of the butld10 gs and
grounds wtll be conducted, and from 5 30 untt1 7 p m , students wtll meet
wtth teachers and pnnc•pals and ptck up schedul es Door pnzes and
refreshments wtll be prov1ded

Omission
Dustin Johnson was a f~rst-place wmner'" the most unusual category
at the Junmr Fa.r Pet Show, w1th hts pet green tguana H1s name was omitted from the results reported to The Da.Jy Sent10el.

port: Taft increases pay of cabinet
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov Bob
Taft 's cabtne1 rece1ved pay ra1ses
that averaged 4 4 percenl on July I,
gtvmg a thtrd of them a double-dtgtt
mcrease over what then counterparts
made under former Gov George
Voinovtch The Columbus Dtspatch
reponed t~day m a copynghl story
Some got a ra~ se even 11 they had
been on the JOb JUSt a few weeks or
monlhs Taft took off1ce Jan 11 , but
dtd not complete h1s cabmet appoml·
m ents unttl m1d Ma y
Taft's cabtnet members now earn
an average of $107,664 a year, compared wnh $98,985 under Vo mov~e h
Taft spokesman Scou Mtlburn

satd the ratses were part of the governor 's plan to eval uate hts cabmet
and staff Jt Ihe begmmn g of each fiscal year The next round of pay ratses should be m July
"The governor has satd repeatedly that one of the chall enges m
puttmg together a cabmelts compel mg wtth the pnvate sector," Mtlbum
told the newspaper

1Mystery Sclence Theater 3000 ran
tor 10 seasons, outlastmg such class1c

shows as I t.ove Luc' .md Uwe me &amp;
Slur/ex wh1ch lasted e1gh1

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�Sports

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Page4

Tuesday,August24,1999

August. Septembet J. nd haH' 11 h~
hkc a playoff game In :1 ~e n sc. alluf

these games an: playot I games ..
The MeL' kc·pi pace wllh Atlanta.
beaung the Hou . . hlll ...-\-,trus ' 2 on
Matt Franco's puh.:h-1111 ~tng l c with

.:,

The NL's best home team , Atlanta
improved its mark at Turner Field to
43-21 agamstthe B1g Road Mach me
The Reds won 33 of their prev10us
44 games away from home and still
have the top road mark (38- 18) 111 the
majors.
Brett Tomko (4-7) took the loss
Mets 3, Astros 2
Franco, who personally ' blamed
himself for a loss the previous day.
delivered the game-winning hit off
Jay Powe ll (4-4) in the bottom of the
nmth.
''It was great to have a chance ·to
do somethmg good ," Franco saod
· A day earlier, Franco grounded
mto a bases-loaded double play and
also miSplayed a fly ball into a threerun double dunng the Mets' loss to
St. LouiS m the second game of a
doubleheader.
'' Matty redeemed himself a little
bu ," Mets manager Bobby Valentine
com mg wtthm one swlen base of the saod. " He's a standup guy and he got
lranch1se reco rd . Jones also scored a b1g hn for us "
Armando Bemtez (3·2) struck out
on a v.t ld p1tch that'rolled no more
'
Lance Berkman w1th runners at the
than 4 feet from 1he plate .
· Regard less of whose fault illS. il corners to end the mnth
TUCKER SCORES - The Cincinnati Reds ' National League contest against the host Braves,
Expos 11, Cardinals 7
shouldn't happe n that many 'llmes Ill
Michael
TUcker slides past Atlanta catcher Greg who won 6·2. Tucker came home on Greg
a game." Red s ca\c her Eddie
•
Myers
to
score in the first inning of Monday night's Vaughn's double. (AP)
Tauhensee 11aid
(See NL on Page 5)

"It's a great qualuy to have. to
know we can strmg a coupl e of htts
together and get a wm agamst a team
like f:louston," sa~ d Mike Ptazza.
By JOSH DUBOW
whose streak of I0 straight games
AP Sports Writer
w1!h an RBI came to an end
Score Round I for the NL East.
Wuh the pennan\ races startmg to
On a night when the top four heat up, the . only changes m the
team s 1n the National League 9tandwgs came m the w1ld-card race,
squared off, the Atlanta Braves and where the Mets moved 2', ·game s
New York Mcts of the Eastern ahead of Cmcmnat1.
DivisiOn beat the two best teams in
The Astros are a hal f-game ahead
the NL Central on Monday
of the Reds.
Ch1ppcr Jones homercil and drove
In other Nl games , H ·was
10 three run s. Kevm Millwood ( 14· 7) Montrcal·ll. St. LouiS 7. Anzona 2,
pitched three-hit hall for !'.even Pittsb urgh
l . San D1eg&lt;&gt; 7.
tnning ~ and Atlanta remamcd atop Philadelphia 6. and Los Angeles 8.
the NL Eas~. beatmg the Cincmnall Milwaukee 4
Red s o-2 ·
l)le San Francts~o G1ants" game
"Th1s IS a lot of fun," smd Jones, aga mst the Chtcago Cubs was ramed
who h1t h1 s 33rd homer and had two out.
of Atlanta's seve n stolen h.tses "11\
Braves 6. Reds 2
mce to come to the ballp.irk m Jul y.
Atlanta shook up .Cmcmnall by

two out"

111

the ntnth tnntng to

a halt-gam~ · hc h1nd

rc mam

the

.

Marin·e rs down _Tribe 4-1, halt .Cleveland's winning streak
three hns. struck out a career-h1gh 12
By JIM COUR
SEATTLE (API - Aller three and walked four.
Then the Manners' bu llpen,
maJOr surgene.s Palll Abhott knows
he's lucky to be pnclml~ m the maJOr whwh blco. a 4-3 lead 10 a 10-mmng ,
leagu("s
7-4 loss to the Indians on Sunday
Abbott, 3 1, preven ted a lour- mght, prese rved Abbott 's lith Victogame swee p by Cle,cland at Safc co ry in a career that began m
F1eld on Monday n1~h1 h) p1tchmg Mtnnesota m 1990
Abbott made f1ve starts for
c1ght s huwut mnmgs m 1hc Seatt le
Manners' 4-J vtctory
Cleveland m 1993
As il turned out, Abbott got all the
" He 's arguably our b~. :~ t r1td1er,''
smd Alex Rodng uez. who helped ru ns he needed m the fll'st when Ken
stake Abbott (5"0) tu a 3-0 flfsl- Griffev Jr and Rodnguez hit co~sec­
!llnmg lead wnh a honic run
' ui!ve homers for the fourth t1me th1s
" That's probabl y the, most pllches season and ninth time m thetr
I've thro~n smcc my e lbow careers.
surgery,.. Said Abbott, who's also had
Griffey hn h1s AL-leadmg 39th
operat10ns on Ius n g; ht shoulder and homer, a two-run shot, off Charles
Nagy ( 13-9). and Rodnguez' folnght knee.
In 128 pnches, Abbott allowed lowed w1th h1s 33rd homer

.,

&lt;

"Jum or hll hiS pretty good,' but I 1t's hard to d1g y~ur way out. "
All of Rodnguez's homers have
was shoc ked that mme went out ,"
Rodngue z sa1d "That' s about the co me smcc May 14, when he was
best ball I ve h1t here, and I didn't acl!vated from the d1sabled hst He
thmk It was gmng to make it over, to has mne m 25 games a! Safeco F1cld
" You've just got t o keep gomg,"
tell you the truth So I was very
Rodnguez
saod. "Tomght was mce.
pleasantly surpnsed when the ball
We
need
to
really get some wms
went over the fence ,.
Gnffcy's homer was his ninth back to back to back."
Abbott made JU St h1s fourth stan
Since the Ali·Star break .and 389th of
h1s career, tymg Johnny Beach for of the season and 23rd ol hiS career
34th place on the c\"eer list. Gnffey Recovering from surgery to repair a
became the third player to hn 200 torn ligament 1n hiS · n ght knee,
homers m a four-season span,joinmg Abbott wasn' t act1vated until ' June
25
Babe Ruth and Mark MIJ!wore
He said the homers by Griffey an~
"I made a bad pitch t't!riffey and
Rodn
guez made h1m feel more
he hamm ered 11." Nagy said. "Then
ARod hn one and It just kept gomg relaxed, but not too relaxed.
"That's always a nice cushiOn,
and gomg You put your team m a
hole like that, 3 to 0, and sometimes but for a team like Cleveland it's not

that dlff1cuh to erase ... he said
Seattle manager Lou Pmlclla sent
Jose Pamagua uut to replace Abbou
at the start of the mn1h P1mclla

loaded·. but cl oser Jose Me sa finiShed
the l'l\ c- hnter, stnkm g out pm ch-hittcr R1 Ch1e Sexson wnh ' the buses
loaded for hi &gt; 28th save In 32

almost dtd 11 an innmg carlter.
" We were a little hc s1 tant to se nd

chances
Mesa gave up a

h1m out to p1tch the eighth," he sa1d

Sexson m the lOth Sunday night

'' But1t waS JUSt a tremendous j oh by

Mesa's stnkeout Monday gave the

Abbott."
Cleveland
manager
M1ke
Hargrove saod n wasn't all Abbott.
though .
"We helped hun ou\ by swmg1ng
at some bad pitches. but he threw
stnkes when he needed to, "
Hargrgve sa1d. " He threw enough
strikes around the plate to get us
swmging the bat "
· Paniagua forced m a run when he
walked Eonar D1az woth the bases

Marmers ;1 season-h1gh 15.
Nagy pnched a SIX-hiller for his
first co mplete game smce last Sept.
II agamst the Ch1cago Wh1te Sox.
He struck out five, walked one and
· hn a batter
,
Raul Ibanez had a two-out RBI
smgle 111 the founh for the Mariners,
who stopped their three-game losing
streak and Cleveland 's four-game
wmmng s\rcak

1wo- run

homer

to

Yankees flog Rangers 21-3; Soxes, Orioles also tally wins
Girardi , who was on an 0-for-17
slump and had just 13 RBis in !58
at-bats commg m, was 4-for-6, as
was Brosms, who had been in a 2for-37 slide.
" You·v~ got to enJOY !l because
yo u' re not gomg to do 11 agam
tomorrow," Brosms said. " A game
like that JUSt happen s every once in a
o.h1lc "
Except thi s year The Yankees
beat Cleveland the AL Central
leader, 21- l at Yankee Stadmm on
July 24. but had been slumpm g at the
plate of late. sconng JUSt 29 runs m
mne games ~omg mto thell' senes
agamst Te x as~ the first-place team In
the AL West.
Tmo Manmez. who ha d been m a
_1- for-2 1 slump, was 4- for-6 with

(8- ll) at the Metrodome as Boston
stopped a four-game losong streak
and lied Oakland for the wtld-card
lead.
Pat Rapp (5-5) gave up one run ,
By The Associated Press
e1ght h1ts and three walks m SIX
Twenty-one seems to be the New
mnings, and Derek Lowe fimshed for
York Yankee s' mag1c number thiS
hiS seventh save,
•
se&lt;1so n at least wh e n the .Wo rld
Blue Jays 9, AthletiCS 4
Scnes champiOns play 1he leaders ol
Ton} Fernandez had three doubles
the A.L's ot h e r two di VISIOn s
and droVI: 111 three runs, and Tony
·'It'~ a o,; trangc g~tmc ,'' Joe G1rard1
Balista and Bnan McRae homered as
sa1d after drivmg 10 a career-h1gh
Toronto gamed • ·split of their fourseven 1un s M onday n1 gh t m the
game series at Oakland
Yank ~c~ · 2 1-3 rou t of the Texas
The Blue Jays are two games
Ran ge rs
behintl Boston and Oakland .
Scoll Bros tus had a career-h1 gh
Dav1d Wells ( 12-8) got hiS first
SIX RBls-, and the v1sltmg Yankee~
wm smce July 22, apowing four run s
had 23 h1ts. thelf mos t smcc Aug. 25.
Yankees manager Joe Torre sa1d and etg ht h1ts m 51· 1nnmgs . Kcvm
1984
"We weren 't trymg to rub it 10 You Appter ( 12-ll) gave up se ven run s
can ' t stand at the plate and not - three earned - and c tght h1t~ m
Southern golfe'rs take third in 1999 opener swing . You JUSt hope you've saved 3'11 mnmgs
somethmg for tomorrow"
White Sox 10, De•il Ra)s 2
The Southern Tornado golf 1e am medalist honors wnh a 33.
In other AL games , i1 was Boston
Jam&lt;~ Baldwm (8 - 11 )' allowed
Southern was led hy B1ll Coe 's 4, Mmncsota 1, Toronto 9 , Oakland two runs and s 1x hils m se"en mmngs
tnuk thud 111 the openmg "'m atch at
Kyl e Norns' 42, Chns 4, Chi cago 10. Tampa Bay 2. at Tanipa Bay. improvmg to Il - l m
Arwwhcad Ptncs m Beve1lv · Hosl 41.
Wa1crford led the way w!lh a-sco re of Randolph's 47. "J:ony Hupp 's 49. Balt1more 4, Kan sas City 2, and domes Paul Konerko ttcd a career160 followed by Trimble. 169. B1andon Wolfe's 50 and Joe Anaheim 6, Detrott 5
h1gh w!lh four RBis ,
, Southe rn 179. Millet. 185. Federal Cornell' s 53.
Red Sox 4, Twins 1
Chicago, which has won nmc of
The next match will be today at
Hock 1ng 192. and Eastern, 218.
Trot NIXon and Troy O' Leary h!l 12, stopped the Dev1l Rays' four Tnmblc's Trent Patto n earned Pme Htll Course m Pomeroy
two-run home rs off LaTroy Hawkins game wmmng streak. Tampa Bay

American League
roundup

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four RB!s and Paul O' Neill, who was
in .a 3-for-22 slide, went 3-for-5.
"We' ve played good baseball this
year. Tomght I don't have an
answer," Range,; manager Johnny
Oates said. :·we threw a lot of bad
pitches and they took a lot of good
swmgs."
• Andy Petlitte ( 11-9) won for the
fourth lime m five decisiOns since
the July 31 trade deadline, allowmg
three runs and I 0 hits in eight
inmngs. John Burkett (4-7) was
tagged for eight runs and e1ght hils in
2';, moings
The 21 runs were the most ever
scored against the Rangers
"I've been on the other s1de,"

allowed l 0 or more runs for the 20th
lime thiS season
Bobby Wilt (7-I0) 1gave. up seven
runs and fi~e h1ts 10 21, mnmgs.
Onoles 4, Royals 2
,
Scott Erickson (10- 10) allowed
two runs and ' eigh\ hils m etght
mnmgs for VISI\mg Balt1more to wm
for the etg_hth lime 111 I 0 deciSIOns.
M1ke T1mhn pilched the nonth for h1s
16th save, sendong Kansas C1ty' to 1ts
fourth straight loss.
Royal s starter Dan 'Reichert (2-2)
left mthe fifth when he was hn m the
arm by a &lt;&gt;ne-out Imer off the bat of

Scoreboard
Baseball
AL standings

--...,:

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Fast~ rn

C rn lr~l

CLEVELAND
Ch1 cago

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49 75
49 7l

J95

76 48

60

484
415

8'·
20

10'·

21 '1

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161

24 :

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01VISIOn

Seanle
AnahcJm

&lt;I

O&lt;~ klanJ

11

Monday's scores

27
27

( AI~arez

7-

M 1 nne ~m :t

(Ryan 0-0)

il 05 p m
Baltlm t) l~ (1 Joh nson 4-7 1 m K.1nsas C1ty (S1e1n
0-0) 8 tl'i pIll
Te~as

.'

Monueal
Flonda

"63

•

rm

Wednesday's

~ames

( IXVII.ANL&gt; (Cu lpn I 1- 41 :ll 0.1l.lalld

( 01JIII~t

Ch!Ulgo!Sn)'dl!r 9 81 :n Tamp.1
-

I I '1

25 &lt;

26

"'
591

4!8
447
426

Basketball

13 '~

18'4

21
8

16

B~y

tRutiC 7 6l

~hnncs01.1

I Rndk ~ 9

WNBA playoffs

11

first~round ~~:ames

Eastern Conftrtnct
Char lotte at Detroit. 7 p m
Wt~ttm Conrennc:e
Sacramento at lm Angela, 9 p m

17',

Conference finals

(Best·of·three)
Ea!ltrn Gvnrerence
FrKIIy
Nc::w Yort nt Ouwlottt"·Detrmt \I. Inner. 8 p m
Sunday. Aus. l9
Charlont -Dctroll wmner at New York, 8 p m
Monday, Aug JO
Cha r ~te Lktrott wtnner at New York , 8 p m , 1f

Atlanta 6 CINCINNATI 2
Ne" York J 1-fouston 2
San D1ego 7, Ptuladelph•a fi
Son Fr:mc1sco at Cht cago. ppd ram
Los ,\nl!eles 8 M1lwaukc::c:: 4

nec~s5afy

Today's games
C l~~~;ag o ( Lormm~

Transactions

Ill 210pm

St Louu ( H o tt enfi~ ld
(Va.zquel l:l·fS ) 7 0~ p m

16·5) 111 Momreol

Anzoml C
Bencs 8 II) at Ronda (Nunez '\ ~I
7 05 p m
C(IJoradfl ( Oohanon 10 10! at PutSbursh
( B~n~ o n 10-10) 70'ipm
San DLe~t) jSpen cet 0 61 ,11 l'hilild.: lphw W)rd
l&lt;-())71'ipm
KJ 7 40

pm

jH,unplo.n 16

~~ :11

f H .nn1s~h

Ne"

YN~

mar~llng

PH ILADELPHIA PHILLlES Purchased the
contract of RHP Joe Grah~ from Scranton W•lk es·
Bam: of the International League Opti oned LHP
Anthony Shumaker to ScrantM
ST LOUIS CARDINALS Purchased the con
1rnct of utP Rick Ankic::l from Mc::mph1 s of tht PCL
Optmne,d RHP R1ck He1serman to Memph1 s

Football

M ontr~a l l I St Lmm 7
Anzona 2 Pmsburgh 1

IEstes 1 71 at

Febles on the 15-day d1sabled hst
TORONTO BLUE JAYS Sent RHP Pot Ly nch
to the Colorado RUJ:;kies to complete the Bnan
McRae tude
'
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES, Placed RHP Rudy Seanez
on the 15 day dt sabled hst, retroao:.:m e 10 Aug 2l
Recalled RHP Davtd Cort~s from R1chmond of the
lnternauonal League Named R1c k AdaJT nunor
league pttchmg coordmator
FLORIDA MARLINS : Recall ed LHP Vtc '
Da~nsbourg from Calgary of the Pactfic Co a ~1
l..ea~ue OptiOned LHP Jesu s Sanchez 10 Calgary
Named J~h o G Rebull -Jr v1CC premknl of ules and

tYos h11

.~

I ~-f:d nt Aflanln

(S nwltz 8-6) 7 -lOp m

Los ,\n_g dt"s Uudd I I J Of Mtlw nukee t.Karl 8

' Baseball
AmrrlCiln League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES Agreed to terms wnh
LHP R1ch.uJ Stahl
1l05 I ON RED SOX Plaad RHP Rt('t
S,lbt"rha~cn on the--15-day d1 sa hl ~ d lm r~lrna t ii\ C to
i\11g 1II '' t u' ~~~·d OF Damon B~ford from 1he I~
J ay thsabled hsl Opuoned RHP Bnan R o~ to
Pawtuc ket ot 1 11~ lnl~ntali O Oal Leagu~ R ~a lled
RHP Tom9 k:tl~ Ohkn from PawiU ckel
KANSAS CITY ROYALS Plac~ 28 CarlM

National Foolball League
ATLANTA FALCONS Cut WR Corey Allen ,
FB En c l ane, K M1k~ Panasuk. , LD Dr~ndon
AyanbadeJO OT Octavmu~ 81 shop RB Steve
Hoo kfin. S Enc llu gpen. OG Ben Nichols and OG
Kenny Watts
BALT IMORE RAVENS Rele3S('d QB Wally
Richardson, OL Brandon Dyso n DT Cory Frnnc1s P
Pau l McCord. T Cleve Robet'ls, WR Ph1\ Savoy F8
Thomas S.eh and LB o\ntron Wnght
CINCINNATI BENGALS S1gncd QD ,Ak•ll
Snuth 10 a ~eve n year con1 r~c1
CLEVELAND BROWNS Wa1ved G-T Jeff
Buckey 111 an tnj ury settlt"men t
IND IANA POLI S COLTS Wa1ved OL Jon
Blockman and DE Mark Campbe ll Placed K Ertc
015en on t he resenedfnulnary hst and KR Vaug hn
Hebron un th~ rtservedlretlred lt st
MIAM I DOLPHINS R~ka~t"d WR Wtlhe
Green Wa1ved DE Shone Bunon and TE R1ckey
Brady
MINNESO rA VI K I:'\IGS (ut I{IJ Leroy
McFadden
NEW
Glt\NTS
Andy
Haru;c.
WRv'ORK
Ray Curry
S Ty Released
i\rdom, CTE
B Cedm
Stcphem C Greg Da v • ~. LB Ch1ke fgbu m" e, 01
Dan Lluta and DT Sl ~\e Konopkn

By JEFFREY BAtR
WILLIAMSPORT. Pa. (AP)
K1ds act out the dream 1n the bac k
yard, m the park down the street and
the livmg room With a hook slide

ncar the coflee \able They dream of
getti ng the b1g htt , maybe even an
pull one out for thctr baseball \cam·
Lot' of kids dream about n Kyle
Tidwell lias done It
Tidwell. for now the most famou s

son of Ph entx C1ty. Ala .. won h1s
team 's prclmunary round g3me over
Brownsburg . lnd . and . cven~d h1 s
team's record at 1- 1 w1th a grand
slam m the bollom of the SIX\h and
las\ mmng Monday at the Lillie
League World Sencs
PheniX Cuy won 5-4. rally1ng
from four runs down Alex Acuff had
a pinch-hit home1 to lead off the fifth
for the other run Also Monday, .
(See WORLD SERIES on Page 5)

Protect tl:te:.inloortant
people m-:yP,u,r -~e.

,.tt

ou now have the qJtiQn_ of pr(l!ectmg your f.:unily membern

}

~::;osu_

.

.

10- or ZO-year level term life

u&gt;Sumnce from Auto-Owners
[ns,irance Company G-ill us for \no"'
details and a compednve prnpc&gt;;al.

v#uto-Ownen Insunmee

quarterback battle ends with Moherman named starter

. .;sy; f!OSTY MILLER

board and wms games. that should be
. ' COLUMBUS. Oh1o (AP) the starter," Bellisan sa1d
While' fans we1ghed m on Internet
The JOb appears
to
be
•' Sites; argued in sports bars and made Moherman 's - for as long as the
, theinhse s 111 leuers to newspapers. Buckeye offense tlounshes
A051llt Mohcrman quoetl y made
"I cannot'tell you right now in my
·poinwwith Oh1o State's coaches.
mmd who I thmk the best quarter·
' ,, 1 Monday, he was declared the back is, but we thmk the one who
• n1ifth'Tanked Buckeyes' starting deserves to start m th1s first ball game
-qoart~bac k
agamst M1am1 m IS Austm," coach John Cooper sa1d
.Sundicy 's Kockoff Classic. Steve Monday at a news conference
.Bcllisan dropped to No 2 on the
Asked 1f Bellisan would defimtedepih;,chart , cndmg Oh10 State 's ly play against the 12th-ranked
most, recent quarterback duel
Humcanes, Cooper sa1d, "! didn ' t
· ~ " It has not been torturous, " say that. We've sa1d we ' re gomg to
Mooelman said " !. went out every start Austin in the ballgame and
, , day and d1d what I could do I tned to we' re gomg to do everythmg we can
· 'sh0w ~he coaches I d1dn 't focus on to wm the football game If we start
the ®&lt;:IS ion-"
Austm and he played fantastic,
· .. Belli san sa1d he doesn't conSider played great - why take him out?"
~ 'baule to be over and thmks the
That 's a change from the 1996
· deasion w11l be made on the field and 1997 seasons when Stanley
&lt;!unng games
Jackson and Joe Germaine were list·
' ·: " Whoever IS making plays, has ed No. I and I·A at quarterback,
good ~roduct!On, puts points on the sharing playing time but no[ a love

·,~bift/e League World Series ...
defendmg champiOn Toms Rover,
N.J., lieat Bmse, Idaho 4-0; Yacuboa,
Puerto R1co beat Victorl3, Bnlish
.Colimib1a 6-4; and Osaka, Japan.
beat -Ramstem Air Force 'Base,
Glll'fl\an y 5•2.
Even if Phemx C1ty does not
advance to Thursday's U.S. championship, T1dwell has a story to tell
wheh·he's got a carie mstead of alu·
m1num bat to carry around For now,

he talks about hiS game-winnmg
home&lt; run off Lance Lynn like 11 was
as si111ple as zappmg alien space
shrp~vn

Bettis. 10oho saJd last week he was· opened.
arriving. He 10oas e.pected blOCk latl:
Mooday
n ' tiOOpercentcertaon!fhe~&lt;ouldbe
Bro"n "as sodehned ~&lt;oth a but·
Coach Chan Gailey 's face and the ready to stan tilt: Sept 12 opener m tocks 1RJIIfl' suffered m a mororcycle
tone of his voice v. hen d1scusstng the Cle&lt;eland. doscarded hJS left knee acc1dent m laoe June Coach JLm
Fassel hopes to play Bro,.·n m
matter mad&lt; It ob&gt;1ous this "asn 't an brace to take pan 1n runnmg dnlls.
cx.cused absence. He ans\\rered four
Da,.son and Bettis InJUred their Saturda) mght 's e&lt;hob!Uon against
straught quest10ns by saymg. "I'll left knees only two days apart shon· the Ne" York Jets
talk to him tomght' when he gets I} after the Steelers opened camp
First-round draft piCk Luke
here ..
July 29, and neither practiced unul Petngout IS bemg moved mto the
Warren 's agent, R1 ck Schaeffer. Monday.
starung lineup, and nght tackle Scou
said the whole thing is a Simple mlsCoach Bill Cowher saJd Betus Gragg m1ght be the odd man.
unde,;tanding
m1ght 'resume full-scale pracucmg
With Peutgout mo••1ng to tack.le,
Dolphins: Rookie defens1ve end later thos week.
Fassel mo\'ed Mike Rosenthal. the
D1mnrius Underwood. wavering
Panthen For the second ume on fifth-round draft cbo1ce, tc guard
between hos fanh and an NR.. career• as
many
days.
Tsh1manga
Colas K1ck returner Vaughn
planned to meet today wnh coach · Bi akabutuka was unable ' to get Hebron was placed on the reserved·
l1mmy Johnson to d1scuss hts future. through a praeuce because of a knee retired hst by lnd1anapohs
It's unlikely Underwood w1ll play 1njury
Hebron. a member o( Denver's
th1s season. sa1d his age nt , Cratg
1be inJUry kepi illakabutuka from Super Bowl champoonsh1p teams the
Domann
fimshmg the mommg 's nearly tw cr past two years. "'as Signed by the
Mmnesota rruode Underwood a hour pracuce. but he sa1d ll "as noth- Colts a week ago He returned two
first-round draft chOice. but he left mg more than a bruise
luckoffs for 45 yard~ m Saturday's
their trammg camp after one prac1be latest problems mvolve the 37-7 e.h1bitoon \'!Ctor~ at New
tice. saymg he was struggling to bal· same knee B1akabutuka injured Orleans
ance football and hiS rehgi ous shortly after the Panther&gt; made 1he
Lions Center M1ke Compton
behefs. The Vikmgs released runmng back thetr 10p drafl cho1ce m mjured h1s knee 1n practice , on
Underwood, and he was claimed off 1996 A torn left antenor cruc1ate hg - Monday when a 1eammate fell on the
wmvers last ~&lt;·eek by the Dolphms.
amen t four games mto h1s rook.1e back of h1s leg
Steelers·
All- Pro
ce nt er year reqUired season-endmg surgei) 1
The e ... tent o f the tnjUf) was nOl
Demmnttt Dawso n reiUrned from a
Giants Halfback Gary Bro" n nnmed1a1eh knm• n Compton. 28, a
threc:weck inJury layoff and runnmg w ho led New York In ru~hmg wnh 1 s.e,enth-) e3r player was take n to
back Jerome BettiS rna) n01 be far I ,063 yards las! season. pracuccd for Henry Ford Hospnal for te sts.
, noo n practice passed Without Warre n behmd_
the first lime smce trammg camp
McNair has not played or practiced smce the Tttans' first exh!bouoo
game Aug 15 at Kans~ity
becauS&lt; of spasms and suff ess 1n
his low&lt;r back.
Backup Neil O'Donnell. 21-of-34
for 166 yards m t"'o games. woll
make h1s second stan of the preseason.
Cardiaals. 'Quarterback Jake
plummer's sprauned right thumb will
keep him out of Arizona's preseason
game Saturday at Seattle.
Plummer was InJured on the third
play of Friday mght 's game agamst
Tennessee when he was sacked by
M1ke Jones. Plummer was tO be
examined by a hand specialist to
make sure the tnjury isn 't more senous
Plummer expects' to be ready for
the .season opener at Philadelphia on
Sept. 12 .
Cowboys: Running back qms
Warren , who le ft tramm g camp early
last week after aski ng pertn!SS,!On to
visit a groi n specialist hc"s been
workmg wnh m Colorado, was s upposed to bacl&lt; a few days later. A
schedule change allowed h1m to be
out unul Monday
But a mornmg meeti ng and after'

a v1deo game

. " I\ was a fal tball nght down the
rilitldle I knew I had to hll It, or
!':each would have been mad at me ,"
said Tidwell. 12, who has a few
freekl~ s on h1s face and a linle more
Kirk ;Gibson m hun !han he d1d
Mfl~&lt;!ly mornmg
', The ball J ~ Sl cleared the fence

for the uncomfo rt able posuto n they

Calif . m"fired on hiS onl y auemp1

were in

m the same game .

Jackson staned all but one game
over those two seasons, but never

rcce1ved the full confidence of the
staff He was almost
always replaced m the seco nd quarter by G"--rmame. who usuall y played
when a g;i)ne hung m the balance
" We 're not gomg into thi s ball coac htng

game saymg, ' Austm , yo u' re going

to play the first two scncs. then Steve
you're gmng m.... Cooper s3ld
" I can tell you there 's probably a
good chance that somewhere during
the game ~teve w1ll go m "
The two have jousted for the JOb
smce the first practice of the spnng
Nenher had established much of a
college. track re cord . Bellisari , a
sophomore from Boca Raton. Fla..
,was 3-for-5 passing in one game last
season, wh1le Moherman (pro·
nounced MOCK-uhr· muhn) , a red·
shin sophomore from Mission V!CJO ,

buster right there," Tony Rasmus
told Monk;,
Farley got Brownsburg started on
its 4-0 lead woth a two-run homer in
the first and an RBI double 10 the
second. But Brownsburg's players
took the lead for granted, King said.
"Yeah, th1s 1s hard We JUSt have
to go out and wm the next one, ''
Farley sa1d
I
The sting should not last, Kmg
said.
,
"They 're kids Th e great thing
about them IS that they ' II be in the
pool in half an hour and havmg fun,"
he said
For tournament favonte Toms

River, Zack Del Vento rallied from a
playoff pitching slump to p1tch 5'1,
inmngs of shutout ball as Toms R1ver
improved to 2-0 . and greatly
Improv ed Its c hances of reachmg

-·---------------.·.;::'ifled$ •••
' At Montreal, Vladimir Guerrero
., hlod. , three hits. mcluding h1s 30th
ll&lt;&gt;mer, to ex tend h1 s h1ttmg streak to
28' games
.
· .: R1ck Ankiel d1dn 't get a deciSIOn
in his maJ or league debut, allowmg
lhroe runs and fiv e h1ts m f1ve -plus
·mmngs. He walked three. and struck
out-six.
· . Trouhng 6-3, the Expos scored
thn!e run s '" the seventh off
.Heathcliff Slocumb and five 10 the
, '«ihth off R1 ck Croushore (3-4).
w1nner Anthony Te lford (4-2)
pilched two 1nnmgs
.
Diamondbacks 2, Porates 1
'
" Rob Ryan homered off Franc1sco
Gord uva (8 -6) for hiS f1rst maJ or
league hit and Anzona won tor the
J 2th tun e 1n 15 ga mes
· Steve Fm lc y doubled in a run off
FranciScO CorJova (R -6) as the
Diamondback&gt; won the fm al three

·---------------J."-,:;,_
214 Ea•t ~fain
Pomeroy
992-6687

'· I am JUSt relieved s9 people
wont be hke. "Who's gmng to start?

But Mohem1a n at lcasl had been a
full-llme qu arterback for hts two

years at Oh10 State and had been able
to learn froh1 GefQlatne who passed

for 3.330 yards wh1le leadmg the
Buckeyes to an ll-1 record a nd a No
2 spot m the fin al polls last year
Belhsan played on special teams
and at defensive bac k last season.
shann g the award for -top special
team 's player and fim shmg lied for
lith on the squad m tackles
·Why did Moherman get the nod
over Belh san ?·~ Cooper repeated
" Well. he's had the nod . He' s been
first -team
quarterback .
our
Normally, when we start out on the
spnng, semority rules and he was of
course a quarterback last year and
started out a·Iittle ahead of Steve."
Several of the Oh10 State players
sa1d they were happy to have the sit·
uat10n clanfied

(Continued from Page 4)

Thursday's U.S. champwn ship
near·•.a cen ter f1e ld monument to game. Toms R1ver plays Brownsburg
l:lo\ll~rd Lamade, the newspaper (0- 1) today . .
Del Vento started only once and
.publisher who gave Little League the
made
JUSt two relief, appearances as
' land,fbr the park
Toms
River went 17-4 in the state
&lt;Dependmg on whom you talk to,
5-focil-8 center lielder Sean Veza and regi onal playoffs, but struck out
, either nearly robbed Tidwell or made mne Monday mght. He threw mne
a valiant but hopeless stab at the 208· balls on 10 warmup p11ches before
foot line dnve HIS man ager, Gary Monday's game. It made manager
King ; smd Veza had a shot, but JUSt M1ke Gaynor think of the Zack of
old
~t turned around the wrong way
" I couldn't use h1m. He couldn ' t
Lef~ fielder Justm Farley, the closest
get
the ball over the plate," Gaynor
·to •VeEa on the field, sa1d 11 cl e_ared
saod.
II1m wnh a few feet to spare.
Then Del Vento began striking out
, ' The same coach that would have
bern 'mad 1f the Alabama Slammer h1s teammates m pract1ce, and
look·a smke mstead of swinging got Gaynor decided to give him another
mad &lt;: when Brandon Monk got chance.
"In the beginnmg, I was nervous,
·thrown out at second by 15 feet after
rwbat rshould have been a smgle off but when the crowd started to cheer I
the ;center-field wall in the first started to get pretty confident," Del
Vento said.
1mung.
B01se batters were patient at the
" You aon't that fast. A ball off the
wull,...hese people Will throw you out plate -too patient. They fell bohmd
eve!')'· time. That's a doggorie rally on the count often and made It easy

.

Li1e Home Car Bus tness
i'lot ~ ll.l&amp;m'/ioo&amp;•

'

level pf complexity that It simply
takes ume to worlt through,'' agent
Leigh Steinberg said
lbe• agreement ends the longest
ompasse between the Bengals and a
quarterback smce Dav1d Klingler
s1gned one week before the season
opener in 1992.
"It would have been nicer if it had
been sooner," general manager Mike
Brown said .. "It's behind us now
We ' ve just got to catch up as best we
can.''
' Buccaneen . Defensive tackle
Warren Sapp, sidelined the past week
by a sore back, had an MRI examination to determine the extent of hos
mjury.
· The Buccaneers said the result
would not be known unlil today after
the test is read by the team's onhope·
d1c specialist, Dr. John Zvijac , in
Miami.
The two-time Pro. Bowler last
practoced on Aug. 17. The Bucs also
held h1m out of last Saturday mght 's
exhibition against Kansas City as a
precaution.
Titans: Quarterback
Steve
McNair will be on the sidelines
Fnday mght when Tennessee plays
its first game in us new home stadi·
urn

much to the delight of a black-shinfor Del Vento.
"Our k1ds like to take a few pitch· ed sea of fans from their small town
es, see what the pttcher 1s up to ," near the Atlantic Ocean .
FranciSco DeJesus drove m five
manager Stan McGra'dy sa1d. " It's
not a strategy that we endorse ':"hole· runs w1th a three-run homer and a
heanedly. but n's up to the mdiv1dual double for Pueno Roco (1-0) , wh1ch
batter."
has beaten its last five opponents by
Casey Gaynor .Jnd Eric Campes1 , a combmed 62- 14, ihcluding a 2'1 -0
the bnly returnees from last year 's wm over a team fr om the iSland of
champwns, each had an RBI single St. Martm
DeJesus doubled wllh the bases
m the s1xth CampeS! got the final
two ·outs m relief of Del Vento for loaded m. the SIXth to make il 6-3
" I felt il was my responsibility.
Toms River (2-0)
''I'm JUSt so proud of Zack and so wnh two men o n, to get 1hose run s
happy for him He 's a great k1d who m.'1 DeJesus sa1d. He said h1 s home
always works hard at pract1 ce,"' the run to the steep h11ls tde m de~d cenelder Gaynor smd " Thanks. Zack. ter field was h1 s longest ever. about·
for makmg me look good...
300 feet.
Masato Ikeda was 2- for-3 with a
The 801 se players dyed thm half
blonde for unny, but Toms R1vcr double and Kazuto Adach1 ' all owed
showed some style as well Ftve two h1ts and s truck o ut seven in ftve
players danced wnh Lillie League's mmngs lor Japan (2-0), wh1ch sc ored
chipmunk mascot before the game. all1t s runs 1n the fo unh tnning

ninth for hiS 22nd save.
Padres 7, Phillies 6
Woody Williams (7-11) struck out
a career-high 12 on · s1x innings,
allowing one run and four hits as San
D1ego stopped a four-game losmg
streak by winmng at Philadelphia.
Alex Anas pulled the Phillies
wllhm a run with a three-run homer
off Scott Aldred m the eighth, but
Trevor Hoffm an got five outs for h1s
2~rd stra~ght save, tymg Houst on's
Bolly Wagner for the NL lead at 32
Chad Ogea (6-12) gave up SIX
runs and I 0 hns m 3'/, mn1ngs
Dodgers 8, Brewers 4
Devon While hll a three -run double to cap a five -run fifth mnmg and
Darren Dre1fort (11 - 12) all owed

Rose may attend World Series
if elected·to All-Century team - Selig
By RONALD BLUM
Star game Rose "'asn't asked JO a
NEW YORK (AP). - Pi cture pregame luncheon Wl lh the others on
th1s Pete R,ose on !he fi eld before the the ballot
World Senes ope ner
" Whoever 1s elected to that team
For a decade. u's been a dream w11l be 111\lted to the World Senes,"
Now il m1ght happen
. Selig sa1d Monday.
Exactly 10 years after Rose was
Fans vote for 25 players, a nd the
kiCked out of baseball for life. com- 30-man AII-Centur) team. mcludmg
miSSIOner Bud Selig sa1d Monday five additions selected by a media
that 1f Rose IS elected to the All· panel , w11l be annqunced before the
Century \earn. the spon's career hits World Senes opener Oct. 23.
Nme outfielde rs w1ll make the
leader would he mvited to the World
Senes.
team. and Rose was nmth in the lat·
Rose was snubbed by baseball est vote totals, wht ch were released
last month when the hvmg players last week Stan Mu Si al and Roberto
among the 100 on the All -Century Clemente weie close behmd.
Updated totals were to be
ballot participated 10 a memorabl e
on-field ceremony before the All· announced today.

BACK·TO·SCHOOL ·

E

m.m ngs. and Matt Mantct pitched the

save .

219 N. SECOND
MIDDLEPORT
992-5627

CONTINUES •••

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(other sizes are available)
Please see Kathy or Dave at the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy
or call 992~2155 for details. Ads must.be paid for in advance.

,..,... ,,..,_,_

.
------------.-----------, r-------.----, ----------.

~

2 col.

I

x 5"

•

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$60.50

1 col. x 2"

'$1'2.10

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1 col. x 3"
$18.15
•

2 col. x 4"
·$48.40
2 col. x 3"
$36.30
2 col. x 2"

V!Slllng Los Angel es
H1d eo Nomo (10-6). who has won
JU SI o nc e m h1 s last stx start s,
allowed SIX run s -

For v. hate,er re&lt;bon. Austin

I'm glad to have thai pan over" nh.'' Stc\..: - pan1cularl} 1n the last coosaid \\"Ide receiver Regg1e Gcm1an} pie of samtmage~ we· vc had 111 the
Cooper satd Moherman also had ~tadt um ·
the e d llc m the team ·s Aueusl work ' Cooper sa1d Sunday 's game
outs 1~ preparatiOns of .;-eetmg 'the would determine tf - or when Hurncanes
Mohcrman staved o n Lhe fie'ld or
"The mam reason that we wi II Bell1sar' replaced h1m . '
start Au stin in th1s ballgame is thai
"A lot of It v.1ll be based on fee l,
we grade them every t.l ay m pracuce. a gut dem1on that ) ou. make dunng
we keep charts on completiOns. mter- the ball game · he sa 1d
ceptions. total yard age and bad

three runs m e ight mnmg s to lead

games o f the four-game sene s. g1vmg them 15 \'oms 111 I g road games

play~

ha&gt; graded ou1 slightly ahead of

MEIGS C&lt;)lJNTY FAIR "TII:\l\1\ Yor~~ An~

(Contmued from Page4)

1~1 or a bw;mess parmer wtth low-cost

Nauonal Hockey League
CHICAGO llLACKHAWK S Rc·Sigricd C Josd
1\l,nlla an,J LW Jt"an· Y\eS Le roux 10 muhi)'Car u1n
ltacts A.qmred G M1 chel I aro.que frt,ll\1 the San
Josl' Sh11rks for a 2000 fifth round dr:lft p1ck,

•

'

Tidwell's grand slam
pushes Phenix City
pa~t Brownsburg 5-4

Hockey

~

aotit&gt;n l'
. •Akili Smoth, a rookie quarterback
from&lt;Xegon. agreed to a seven-year
.co171ract on Monday. ending an
impasse that caused him to miss
tn061&lt;lf traomng camp and two exhl, .b1hml ogames
. · .. -$mith, chosen third overall
·tieload..quarterbacks Ttm Couch and
' .DonoVIIn MeN abb, was the last
.. ~gnod member of the celebrated
·quadefl&gt;ack class of '99.
• ' .'The seven-year deal includes a
SW.8'million Signing bonus and will
pay &gt;Smuh. expected to be Jeff
Blak:eli backup, as much as S56 mil lion · if. he reaches various. perf&lt;&gt;r·
· mance.goals.
' The; deal contams one voadable
yea&lt;, · 111eanmg ll will automatically
shorten to stx years if he 's in for 35
Jll'nrelll of the plays m hiS first year
.• or45 percent any following year.
· . ~· "Conlrac ts are so stall st1cal, espeCially for quarterbacks. and have a

Little League World Series begins

ms1de-the -parker or grand slam !o

t2

Tonight's

73 52 584
l9 520
57 68 456
l6 69 44!
l6 70 444

Snn F rnnc 1 ~co

' games
Wednesday's

'I

lOO

64

CINCINNATI

1 2! 110~p m

-,

Western Division

H ou~t(ln

\lS i -lO'ipm

(Porll.ntal 7-l l I at

50
63
.6t 64
ll 68
52 70

,

IMor@an 12-K)

CLEVELAND IKarsay 10 ll at Oakland
1 Hudson K-1 J 10 0'1 p m
Delrflll II:U;ur 1·':1) at SeaHI~ !Fr Garc1a 12·7)

llo~lon

Pluladclptu 11

!ill

6t4
611
524
411
407

Mtmday's scores

l.. h1cago (Parquc '1 ·9l at Tampa 811)

7 O'i 11m

49
77 49
65 59
5I 73
lO 7.1
78

AnloM
San Franctsco
Los Angeles
San D1ego
Colorado

6) 7 0~pm

Buai&lt;.Jn (M;tru nez 17 4 J at

L 1'&lt;1.

~

Jwn

"' ""

IQ O'i[1m ·

'

Easttm Divlston

6' ·

Toronto-(llcnl gcn. 7· I01 at Anall('lm (Url1 1. 1·0)

I
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.NL standings

7l

~onight's games

tOO'i

·

6 DetrOit S

New Ycrk (Cone II 7t.u

. '.

10,15 pm

Ctnlnd Division
ll

Toronto tJ, Oakland 4
Ch 1 ca~o 10 Tampa H.1y 2
Raltm'lort: 4 Kan s ~~ Cit y 2
Hos1nn 4. Mmne ~1a 1
New YOJk 21, re ~n ~ ~
Seank -'· CLEVE LAI"'\J I

K \'In m

DH San Frmc1sco (Omz: \4-8 and Rueter 11·71
Jt Chtcago(Tapam6-11 an dL~eber8·7). 1205pm
San Otego (Clem~n t 6· 11) at Philadelphia
{Person 7-J). I 05 p m
CINCINNATI (Neagle 3-4) at Atlanta (Giavme
109) liO pm
Los Angeles (Brown 14-6) at Milwaukee
(Pulupher 1-4), 2 05 p m
St LoUi s (Ohver 7-8) at Montreal (Pllwtll I 5).
7 05p m
Anzona (Stottlemyrc:: 4·2) at Aonda (Meadows
10·12) 705 pm
·
Colorado (Kile 7- 11) at Plus burgh (Peters 1·1)
1 05 p m
Houston ( Rey no ld ~ 14-9) at New York (Rogers
2-0) 740pm

AIIRnta
New York

75 II 595
68 11 544
61 61 492

Te~a~

An~e1m

' "
' ' ~·

..

!ill

Dhision
ll

Dt!tmlt
K :uua~

L 1'&lt;1.

76 48 61J
68 57 544
67 60 528
452
&lt;6 68
l l 70 440

New York
Duston
Toron1o
Ba hunor..:
TBmpll Bay

pm

Toromo (HarruhQn 6 7 J at Anahe1m {Ftnlc::y 8- 10)
l0•05pm 1
lXtro1t (M oehkr H·l 'J at Seatt le (l b lama 9-5)

Division
~

l&lt;am

BalllmOI"C (l.intoo 0- 1) at KaMas C11y (Suppan 1·
7).805pm
•
New York (lrnbu 10.&lt;1) at TexiU (LoaiZa 6-l ). 8 3 ~

10), 805 pm

Albert' Belle The Royals sa1d
Reichert bruised h1s nght elbow and
probably w1ll miSs h1_s next start
Angels 6, Togers S
.
Matt Walbeck hila one-out.smgle
off Doug Brocail (4-4) 111 the eoghth
to break a 5-all ue. Tro~ Perc1val (3·
2) blapked v1sotmg Detro!\ for the
final 11, m~mg s.
.
Detroit s Da\'e Borkowski , a
rook1e pi\cher making hiS e1ghth b1g
league start , commmed three errors
in the first two mnmgs, helpmg the
An gels score lhree unearned run s

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

-Sinitl), B.e ngals sign seven-year,. $56M flexible contract
~"'lll ASiociated Pren
' -&lt;Jloe Cincinnati Bengals will final l~ • gct !Osee their No. I draft p1 ck in

Braves

National League
roundup

.

IJ :· L pre-season
: ~am reports

Braves beat Reds 6-2; ·Mets,
Padres, Dodgers·also win

" l

.

The Daily Sentinel

(

•..T-aaaday, August 24, 1999

$24.20

o ne earned -

and four hits tn s1x inn1n gs as
• Am1ando Rey noso (9-2) allowed Milwaukee los tlls fourth strai ght
Jeff Shaw got one out for hi s 26th
the one ru n a nd 1itX hit s rn s nt

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By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
·,!

.

! Tuesday, August 24, 1999

Business Services

Page&amp;

Tueeday,Aug~24,1999

•

Living as a widow or widower can be a lonely experience - so don't judge their rieeds
Ann Landers
'
ltl7,

ond

Dear Aim Landers: Every time I
see a lener in your co1uinn from
someone questioning the remarriage
of a widow or widower. I want to

you had planned to spe nd the res1 of
your life is a major blow.
Now. I am faced with the task of

write. This time. an actuallener goes

ing my world .
My parents 'ha•·e heen blessed
with 55 yean together. When thy
fathers brother d1ed. the famll~
cou ld not understand whr, h1s "1dov.

in the mail.
My won!Jerful husband passed
away I0 yean ago. He lo&lt;t his battle
with brain cancer at the age of 47. I·
was a widow at 42. This is 001 the
way 1 had planned my life. I have a
full-time jub and a pan-time position. which makes it possihle for me
to suppon myself comfortably and

piCking up the pieces and restructur-

said she would like to remarr• I
understood and trie-d to explatn ;I to.
them . hut I"m not at all ~ urc- that the~
got il.
I ha"·e dated some fine- gentlehave some extras.
men~ and if I am e\'Cr fonunale
.·r now kriow I can get along on enough 10 find anOthtr man 111
· my own. which has given me confi· · marrr. it won't bc.hecause 1 hol\e
dence and self esteem. My life is stopped · lm ing my late hushand . It
filled w1th family. church and civic will be because I know how hcauti activities. but I must confess. Ann. ful a marriage can b&lt;'.
this does not fill the void I feel. I
Please cx.plam tht s to ~ o ur read long for someone to love and with ers. I'm -afraid some of my 'l:ue huswhom I can talk. cuddle. laugh and band's familv members don't urn.lerplay.
stand this, -Plea:loe .s ign nw NOT
· 1 miss the companionship and GIVING UP ON HAPPINESS 1!'1
imimacy of marriage and would like PmSBURGH
to have 1ha1 again. This is not an
DEAR PITTSB URGH : Your
insult to my late husband. It is a trib- positive, upbear anitude is sure to
ute to him and our marriage .
sef\·e yoU well in . you~ quest f~r a

Losing the person with whom , ne~ .. life. I wish you all the best.

dear. Please let me know "hen ) ou
lind it·· I mean h1m.
Dear Ann Landers: M) husband
and I ha•e a home on the lal:c "'here
"e go on "ee~ends and "'cations
wit~ our '"o ch1idren. thetr spouses
and our four )Oung grandchildren.
1bc problem is a il year old girl
who ll\cs across the street. This

can "t be al our house all the tim~ .
Our i!rand1.:hildn·n don 't understand
'"hat i~ "'ron~. wuh her. The)' shout.
"Go ho me :· bUI ~he 1gnoresthcm.

C leek. Marjorie Manion was a
guest. After rCfre shmen ts were

served. the group held a silent auC•"
tion.

The next meeting will be held on
Sep tember 9, at which time. Ann
Boso will have the program ·and
Thelma Walton and Edna Knopp
will serve refresh·menls. All area
wpmen are
meeting.

in~ited

to attend the

D of A holds meeting
Chester Council 323. Daughters
oF America, met recently at the hall,
with Laura Mae Nice presiding as

Brown.

1be program was prese nted about
Paul and Lydia. imagining Paul
meeting with the group_of· women

gathered around the water. Scriptu re
was read From Ptrillipians 13. An
anicle . was ·read about Scriptural

Athletes with Willing Hearts, and
spiritual thoughts . over ther" li ves.

Mrs . Yost read. "Chose n for Athletic
Teams in SchcioiT and told of what
spom she played all through high
school. "Being' Fit as an Athlete'·
was also read, about telling Christ
we are ready 10 be on lhe 1eam.
Galatians 3:27-28, Psalm 37:4 were
also read, and each perfonned the
"Washin g of Hands" ritual.
·
A dove Was pinned on e·ac h lady 's ,
shouldCf. saying. "God says you are
·my beloved daughter in ·whom I am
well pleased.
Get- well cards we re sent to ones
in the church that arc hospitalized
and shut-ins. The next meeting wi ll

be held at the home of Mary K. Yost.
and Barbara Gheen will conducl the
program .

Refreshm.ents of ice cream, soda and
cookies were ser~ed fo llowing the

meeting.
Those attendi ng were Mary.
Holter, Esther Smith, Laura Nice,
Charlotte Grant, Mary Jo Barringer.
Thelma White, Opal Hollon, Sandy
While, Julie Curtis, Ruth Sm ith, Ella ·
Osborne. Opal Eichinger, and
Goldie Frederick.
Missionary Society meets

The Bertha M. Sayre Missionary
Society of Raci ne met recently at the
home of Manha Lou Beegle, w~o
served eight members with a brunch.
Mary K. Yost had charge of the
business ·meeting . An invitation was
read to attend a "Retirement Recep- .
lion'' in Dayton for Carrie Bell

Brown, who is retiring due to health
probfems.
Manh Lou Beegle had the Love
Gili program, "Count Your Blessmgs," fol)owed by the singing of the
wng, "Count, Your Many Bles&gt;tngs,
See V,:hat God Has Done." The love

111 ·hefra,
legateea ,
executora, executrlxea,

1 - Ford Bronco II YIN.

admlnlatratrlxe•

and

and ..:om passionate 10 people who
are kss fonun~1e than they. or you.
arc .

· . 750 Eas! State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
· Alhens, Ohio 45701
"A Better Wa , Eve

SenUnel 1nd Mil sald '.real

the Common Plua Court of
Melga County, Ohio, being
CUI No. 18-CY-109 ~gelnat
n"""hv
.......... , D. Jonao •nd llory

sold free and clear ot all
clalma, ttens and Interest or

and Marshaling of Uono tn

PIU

11N&amp;ND11YOGC3Mit7

Shop at home...

Collection

'

Cl) 3
lTC

·

. .. •
· :-

, 31

·

lhe note from October 1,
1118 until paid and tor
toracloau·re of said
Mortgage Deed on the
following deacrlbed reel
estate, of which aeld

Bradford chun:h has picnic
The Bradford Church of Christ Dotendanto, Timothy D.
held its annual ptcnic recently at Jonoa ond MIIJ Uribe and
Lake Alma State Park in Wellston.
; Robert Scott Teylor are the
Prayer was given by Douglas ownoro of:
L£GAL DESCRIPTION
Shamblin.
ATTACHED .HERETO ·AND
The afternoon was spent taking BY REFERENCE MADE A
photographs. bicycling. swimming, PART HEREOF
· and that Oolondanto ,
pl~ying croquet. and singing.
..
Devotions were give n by Sham-; .Timothy D. Jonoa and MaiJ
Uribe and Robert Scot.!
blin ..
Taylor, and If doceosod, all
Special music was presented by heirs, devlaeea, Jegat111,
Shamblin. Matthew Williamson , '
Bethany Amberger and He ather
HyselL .
The closi ng prayer was given by
Ron Hanning.

'

1999 HONDA FORE~N
450 ES 4X4 GIVEAWAY .

. ,
Complete Line of 4-H
Feed &amp; Show Supplies
And Sullivan Show
Supplies

I

Those attendi ng were Jim a'nd

Jackie Reed. Tim. Kristi and Jarrett
Durst. Ron and Chatclotte Hanning;
Don, Sandy and Daylcen Hanning,
Sean and Kim Grueser. Becky, Ryan
and Bethany Amberger, Tracie and .
Amber DaVIdson. Ed and Sabra Ash. ·
Larry and Paula Pickens. Douglas
and Sherry Shamblin, Dave, Cherie,
Matthew. Cai tlin and Jared
\\'ill iamson .. Heather· Hysell ~and
Nancy Murri s.

If the 992 ~change is a Free Part of Your
.Telephone Servie&lt;e, Then You Can Call
Holzer Cl.inic in Gallipolis
Toll Free! ·
DIAL

Holzer Clinic ... Keeping the Promise!

In Recognition Of
Pleasant Valley Hospital's
40th Anniversary...

answer said Complaint on

tOIIOSI. Rt. 7Soulh

CooMI/e, OH 45723

T40 117-GIIJ

ROBERT BISSELL·
CONSTRUCTION .
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop ·&amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

985-4473
7!221TFN

Howard L Writesel

ROOFIN&amp;
NEW· REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
·
FREE ESIIMATES

949-2168
4/2 TFN

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

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

&amp;TC

Call

Sunday October 10, 1999

614·843-~426

...

For More lnrurmalion Calll -740-541-400 1 Local Call
or coulal."t an·y Pomt&gt;roy S qua(l Mf'mlwr'

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

Senior Citizen

JONES'

Discount

• Free To The Public
·. -Thursday
August26,1999

Uev"ns
BuUdooer &amp; Backhoe
SenJicet
House &amp; Trailer Sites

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Syatenu &amp;

··7:30p.m.
• Battle Monument
State Park

Vtilitie•

.

17401 992-3138

Now Renting

•Room addnlons &amp; Remodeling
•New Gontgts
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Rooflng I Guttm
•VInyl Siding &amp;Painting
•PIIIo I Pon:h Dedts
frNEttlmofH

V:C. YOUNG·m ·
992·6215

Pomeroy, ·ohio
22 yN •. Locol

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.0Q Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive tap llile.
. Uc. # 110-50 1.1ntMn

SMITH'S

~~

13attle Mooument "ate Jlark

Remodeling • Sltllng
• Roofs
25 yrs experience

(740) 992-2753
or 992·1101

'

KCB
EXCAVATING
Bac.khoe &amp; Bulldoz~r
Services
Site PreparatioJt
Septic Systems
RODNEY KELLER
Owner/Operator

1-740·985-3949

Self-Storage

Romodetlng-l(ltdlon CobiVinyl Sldlng-ROOII-Oocko-

33795 Hiland Rd.
. Pomeroy, Ohio

Free Est6natet,

'"" ""
A•
I

Tuppers Plains,OH

._

ADVANCED OAAIKAGE SYSTEMS INC.

•

'

INTERIOR
Bef?re 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

740·985·4180

8/2Sth, 8127th, Name Brand Infant,
TodCie r Clothing. Baby Items.
Adult "C iothlng, Furniture, 3 Miles
S.R. 218.

A1J. Ylnl SIIH Mull
Be Paid In Advance.
DEADLINE: 2 :00p.m.
the day belonl the od •
11 to 1'\111. Sunclly
edition • 2:00 p .m.

20 Yrs. Exp . • Ins Owner : Ronnie Jones

Free

740-74?~411

:c·

I

877·353-7022 (toll free)
HAVE DOCTORS, NEED DILILt:M&lt;&gt;.
FIT; PIT Medical Billing. No Experience
Necessary. Earn up to $40k+ working
at home. Must have IBM compatible
PC.
1·800-697-7670.

.,

IIYIRS J!AVIIG

Henders&lt;fl , VI/I/
We Do ••• ·· ~
• Parking Lot4
• Basketball Oaurts
• Driveways ,
• Grading WO#k
- Hauling StCI~e
(304) 675· 57 Oflko

,

· OWN A DOLLAR .S TORE
1~00.227-5314

(304)674-3 11 Col,..

740·992·7643

8111/991 mo . pd.

HUt~uL. Irllu

WITH BILLS?
CONSOLIDATE INTO ONE LOW
PAYMENTII
Reduce or Waive Interest
Stop Late Fees
Stop Collector Calls Avoid Bartkruptc)• I
CONTINENT~L CREDIT
COUNSELING

$
$

fREE EST(MATES
Cont. lwvt03506

(No Sunday Calls)

80

740-742-8015

·\ : .. I

.•

.

All Yard S.let Mutt Be Plld In
Advance. De~tdllne : 1:OOpm the
day before the td It 10 run ,
Sundlly · &amp; Monday edlllon·
1:00pm Frklay._

Sidewalks, Patios
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

•'
.Swan Jl;,eve4

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Quality Driveways,

"Bryar• lt,evett

8/241'd9 I mo. pd

• 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

CONCRETE
CONNEOION

.....

2623.
Rick Pea rson Auction Company,
full time a u ctioneer. complete
au ~ l ion
servi ce.
Licensed
t66 .0hio &amp; Was! Virginia, -304·
773-5785 Or 304-773-5:44;",

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lim,,
· Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

L---------...1

Wedemeyer 's Auction Service,
Gallipolis, Ohio 740·379·2720.

90

'

'

SAYRE
TRUCKING

HILLlS

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

'
SELF STORACE
' Road
29670 Bashfn
.

New Roofs • Repairs •
Coaling • Gullers •
Siding • Drywall •
Painting • Plumbing

,Hauling

Racine,, phlo
. 4577!1

Limestone &amp; Gravel

740·94~i217

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

Sizes 5 ~~ 10'
to 1o•)!,'00'

3/11/99 TFN

PMB 1
MEDICAL BILLER
to $45,000/yr. Process
1Citlims lrom home.
i
own computer. t

tt~~~~ 24 Hr. T~xi
al(l Delivery Ser1ice

.
We deliver ALMOST anyt~ing

Need A Big Oue

Cu ll A Littl• Ouc

DRIVEWAY STONE
Landscape. Matedal,
.'
. , Topsoil &amp; Mushroom
Compost

Call for ·details ~
740-992-0038 : z

Light Hauling
up to 8 ton

••
'•

CREDI,. PROBLEMS???
No Credit • Slow Credit•,Bankrupil:y
.~
. Repo • Dlvorded

..••.....

WORRYINI'''
• •• ·

No Embarrassment. ~
You 're Treated with Res~~ctl
Call Now for ln~tant Approvanl~

,.

..... .,...,. :

The

.

Amerfc:an Communftll
Marlretpfac:e

•

DOZER WORK
Reasonable Rates

~'

Adequate Response On
Ad? No? . Try ;

(748) 44818• •

992·5455

an 18" Mini-dish?
Want 320-channels? Call Direct
Wholesale. (A Canadian Company)
1·204·992·2841
'
.
..
I

..•

ciLL ··~Poll .:1· '
•

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Silver Arld Gold Coins, Proolsets;
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry. G~IC
Rings, Pre - 1930 U.S. Cu rre ncy,
Sterli ng, "Etc . Acquisitions Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin ShOp, 15 1 Second
Avanue, Gallipolis. 740-446·2842.

'"DEBT CONSOLIDATION'"
ONE simple low mont.hly payment
Reduce/Eliminate interest
Save thousands while becoming. debt
free. Programs for renters. homeowners and even people with Oredit
difflcultieil. Specializing in credH
cards, collection accounts, medical
bills and unsecured' loans. Call 1·
800·897·2200, ext. 340. A501 (c)(3)
Not-For·Prolit Organization.
www.cambridgecredit. org

:!tJ

lr ' tll"."i f .'X[Il'l"it ' llf'!'

(740) 388-9686
Low or 0 down! Gov't and.bank
repo's being sold NOWI
Financing Available,Call Nowl
t-aOO· 730-m2, ext. 801 o

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

lOSING WEIGHT IS AS EASY

AS A·B -C. Call Joyce AI 1 · B88 .f
769·7331. Ext. 222
love American Style A Fun Way
T(J Find LOVE 1-900-945-6100
EKt. 7325. S2.99 IM1n . MtJst Be 18
Years Procall Co. 602-954-7402
SABRINA LARABEE A).tAZ lNG
POWER LOVE SPECIALIST! Re ·
unite Lover S, Solves All Pr ob lem&amp; . tOO ~o Guranteecl . Call 1·
617-724-1865

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

pendabte , Neat , GoOd Dr 1vmg
Record . M-F 30 -4 0 Hrs !Week
Company Car Call 740-446-0353

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Help Wanted

"WORK FROM HOME' · Growtng
Company NEEDS HElP. $399 ·
$4.999 PTI Ft . www.j csdesigns.q'm 1-888·283·2372.
$ 2 000 WEEKLYI . Malting 400
Br~chures! Satlslaclion Guar·
a·nteed! Postage &amp; Supplies Provided! Rush Self-.Atddressea
Stamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT
5 ,. Bd:.: 1438 , ANT.IOCH , TN .
37011 -1438. Start Immediately

$800 WEEKLY POTENTIAL
Comp l ete Simple Governme nt
Forms At Home. No Experience
Necessary. CAl.l TOLL FREE • '
1·800·966·3599 Ext. 2£01 .
""'DRIVE THE BIG RIGGS!!! .. ' ·
• Reg . O.T.R. - Truck Driving
Tramlng No E:.:per. Ne cessary!!
21 &amp; Over 1-877-213·130!1 (To ll

Free).'

·

A &amp; A Auto deta1i. Wants A Pari·
Time Worker. 220 Fourth A'le nue. Gall(polis, 740-441-Q177 .
Appl ic ations are being a_
ccep leC
for the poSitiOn of NutritiOn Pro·
gram
Ass 1stanl . Applicants
should have · a high school diplo ma or G.E.D.. retiable transporta ·
liOn, telephone in .the home and
be highly orga01z.ed and setf mot1·
vated. Should have experience In
bast e bookkeeping, oon:puter
data entry, be able to lift up to lilly
(50) pounds ana the ciblllty to accomplish. multiple tasks . ApplicaIIOnS are available. at the Me i'gs
Multipurpose Sen1or Center, Mul·
berry He 1ghts . Pomeroy. OH . ·An
EOE Employer.
Cert ified Nur.se A1des . Rotat ing
shifts lnlermed iate ,care center.
West V1rginia cer1111catlon required . Po int Pleasan t Cente,f
Genes is E!Cercare ,' State Route
62 . Route 1. &amp;ox 328, "Po irit
Pleasant. WI/, 25550 . EOE .

lnterv~ew .

Dommo·s Pizza ot Pt~ P t easant
now h11ing sate drivers· app ly tn
person 304-675-5858 '

OAIVERS -Owner Op_e rators
ManUiaclurers Fleet Neei:Js
Trucks For Growing Busmess
Aay Or Jim 800-534-11 11.

'I

I

Want Babysitter must be 1B yu~ .
&amp; be hnlc. approved&amp; .n ave own
transportat ion available eam -1 1
pm. 304-675-6299 .

~

Dr i ~ers :

Wanted : Lead Guitar. Bass
Player A.nd Keyboard Players .
For More Information, Call 740 388-8801 After 2:00Pm.
WILDliFE JOBS To 521.60 !HR.
INC BENEFITS . GAME WAR 5

'~:~A NcE.s:.,~~R~!~·GER~~~~

Housekeeper For Disabled Prac·
ticlng Co lumbus Allorney. Live-ln .
Some Care Duties, Salary, Room ,
Boarcl, 6) 4-267-5354

KROGER
NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS
FOR NEW GALLIPOLIS STORE

..PART TIME OPENINGS
Interested Candidates Mav Fill
Out Applfcations In Pe rson At
The Kroger Store locateC At The
Silver BriCge Plaza Starling Mon·
day, August 23 · Friday, Aug1Js t
27 Betwee n 9 :00 A.M. ·5 :00 P.M .
We Will Be Accepting Appl ications For All Part· nme Positions .
Eligible Benefits Include:
• Company Pa id Tra ining
• Heahh !life Insurance
• Weeldy Pay Periods
• Aeliremenl Plan.
·._ Stock Ownership Pl an
• Company Pakl Vacations
• Employee Credit UniOn
* New Store Environment

NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
MINORITIES AND FEMAlES
ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY ,

EOE
license e Practical Nurses . Exce llent Opportunity to join tne
tong te rm hea lth care fieiC . AOiat ing shifts. Intermediate care cen·
ter . Wes t Virg inia license r&amp;·
~ulreC . Point Pleasant ~enter/
Genesis EtderCare. Stale Route
62, Route 1. Box 326 , Point
Pte~sant •.wv, 25550.

eoe

EXP NEEDED. F.OR APP. AND
EXAM INFO, CAll 1- 800 -813- ··
3585, EXT. '4211 . 8 A.M . -9 P.M.
7 DAYS Ids. inc.
:..::::::.:~::.::;::;__ _~-­

140

· 'Business
Training

·GalllpoU• Career College.
(Careers Close To Home}
Call Today ! 740-446--4367.
1-800-21 4-()4 52.
Reg IJ90-o5-1274B.

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN . A LEGAL COLLEGE DE~
GAEE QUICKLY, Bachelors .
Master s. D oct orate . By COf're spondence Based Upon Prior Education Ami Short Study Course .
For FREE l nlormatiOI'I Booklet
Pho ne CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1·800-9&amp;4-8316 . ..

I

E~~:cellenl Opportuni-ty - S1Jpple·
ment YoUr Income - Lea rn In come ·Ta• Preparation 15 Wk .
Course , Classes . I Day A Wk. 10
A.M . To 4 P.M. Ca ll DanTax , Inc.
Tuesdays 10 To 4@ t-740-44881780r 1·800-221·8178.

MAO DOGS PALACE
PRO-WRESTLING TRAINING
AND PROMOTIONS
20 Yrs Experience . 800-859-0756 . Trainer, Brett Sawyer, lfl • ..
Memory of Mad Dog "Buzz• · . •
Sawyer . Tra in to be wrestlers ,
•
managers. or ballet. (Male or Fe· ::: ,
male)_
- ~~

-

•

180 Wanted To Do

'

...

:1

Carpentry, Remodeling , Addilions ,
. Porches. Decks. 740·441-1316.
Certified Nurs ing Ass istan. Will
Do- In-Home Care! Call : (1 40 ('
446-3659
ChilCcare In My Home 15 Years
Experience. Refe rences. 7 A.M. ·
5 P.M . Calt Any! ime . 740-245·
5052. '
'
E &amp; S Lawn S.ervice . Oestgn. tmplernenlalion , and
Serv ice
Ava ilable for Spring Clean up.
ferti lizing .iind plant1ng. Free esti·
males. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Greg Milhoan: 3041675-4628.
Georges Portable Sawmill , don't
haul your logs to the m1l1 JUSt can
304·675·1 957

Housecleanmg rom Rio Grande
To Ga lli polis A d Surrounding
Area , ThOrou~h. etiat&gt;te Refer ences. Call 740 45·5104 AE.k
For Diane.

_______ : :

Housecleani ng . Office Cleaning,
'

740·245·5267 .
:.;.:_:_:_

Jims Drywa ll &amp; ,C onstruction.
New Construction &amp; RemMe l/
MOTHERS &amp; OT.HER$ WORK · Drywall . S1d1ng, Roof's. Adcli FROM' HOME! Mail·OrCer. Part
t lons, Painl i n~ . etc . (304 )674Time &amp; Full Time. SS50 ·53 ,600 /
4623 or (304)674-0155.
Mo .. Full Training Provided I For
FREE Booklet Call 1·888-23-4·
Mag 1c Years Day Care pre
9697 www.c.ash-91 t .comlhome
school now accepting app licati Ons for fall enrollment. Mag 1c
Music ta ns · drumme r looktng for
Years Day Care tor parents who
tead guitarist. bass ist and rhy thm
care . 18 yrs ex~er1ence . l t·
gu ltari!;&gt;tf vocalist to do oldies.
censed by the St. of WV 304 rock and country, John, 740-698675·5847 .
6212
Need ChiiC care Defore or atler
Need 7 Laclies To Sell Avon . 7 40.
school at Harrisonvtile Elementa446-3358.
ry? Call Shelly at 740-742-7600.
All day cMd care available also.
NeeC a morning delivery person
lor the Charleston Gazette fpr the
Shrubs Trlmmetl , Mulching .
Point Pleasant , leo\1 . Ripley,
Painting, etc. Call Bill . Leave
Evans areas. 1 ·800·9 82 ·63~7.
Mttssage (304)675-7112.
.
Ext. 1787. &amp; leave Message.
Need someone t o work 4 to t2
~hilt. caring tor the elderly, call
between lhe hours of Sam &amp; 4p m,
Monday thru FriCaY. 740-992·
4410 .
Outside Sales . Growing Satelli te
Installation Company looking For
Sales Pe rson To Make Sates.
Appointments . ·Must Have Car,
Good People Sk 1ils. Part-Time f
Full· Time . Satellite E•per ience
PreferreC , Not Necessary, 740862·3109.
'"
Part-Time Help Neecled For Local
Retail Store. Sene Resume s To
P.O. Box 141, Gallipol is, OH
45831 .
'

We do trai ler demol1tion&amp;some
homes&amp; tra~h pick-up 304· 1ltJ·
6167 .
Will Do Painting &amp; Odd Jobs
$4.00 A Hour, 740-367-0140

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

$300.1&lt; 1St YA, NOT MlM I Mag ·
net1c Savings Care + Term1nat ..
· Pay For Results ACverttstng · SK
tnv. 888·554 -684 7 1(5456 (24
Hrs)

INOTICE I
Satell itS Tech, Growing Sate lli te
Installation Company looking For
Teens . E~~:perler:tcea In Many
Dish Syste ms Or Cable T.V. Ae·
qu ired . Must Have Turck Or Van.
Start A.S .A.P. 74(}-862-3109.

OHIO VALL EY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends tllat you do busi ness with peop le ~ou know. and
NOT to send money through the
malt unfit You have invest igated
the oHerlng.

SECURITY OFACERS

2.Wmln , PHONE CARD rte
Easy$$ MONEY II Few hrsl
Earn SSOO·S5,000/wk.
CASH! FREE sites
1·800·997·9888. 24hrs.

Wac~enhut

is taking applications
lor full /pan t ime positions . Must
submit to clrug screening and
have c;.3ED or H.S. diploma . Pa le
holidays, free unilorn'ts, and more.
Apply : James M, Gavin Power
· Plant, Stale Route 1, Cheshire, Oh
at the Main Guard House (740)·
925-3000. EOE M!FfDN

.

•

2 . g, cents / Min. PHONE CARD
Ate . EASY $$ MONEY!! FEW
Hours ! Earn $500 -55 ,000 / Wk .
CASH! FREE Silas . 1·800-9~7 9888 . 24 Hrs.

'I

• ol; ... ,~
~·

Local Trucking Company Seeking
H."' S. Contracting. RoofinQ , Sheet
O ualilied Tru ck D rivers . Good , Metal. 3-0 Lap Shingles. Paint ing
Pay And Benefits . Send Resume
Over 15 Years Experien ce. Deck
To: Driver·. P.O. Bdx -109 J ack·
Build ing . Free Esiimates. Vmyt
son , Ohio 45640 , Or Call 1-740·
Sidmg. 740 ·441 -0653,\Call Alter
286-1463 To Schedule An Inter6 :00PM

.t

f

~

Truc k OrtVer Needed ; Clan B.
COL Wtth 1-tazmat And Tank Endorsement For Home Heating Oi(
Oehvery Weekends Ofl , In ·
surance. Paid T1me Otl, Send Resume Tq ~ CL~ 481 , clo GallipoU&amp;
Da1 1;i Tribune, 82.5 Third Avenue ,
Ga.tiWJis . OH 45631

Ant1ques. top prices paid, River- , view.
ine Ant iques. Pomeroy, 011 io,
MEDI CAL BILLING . Ea1n E:.:celRuss Moore owner. 740·992·
_lent Income . F ull Trainmg . Com·
2526. '
puter Requ irec . Call Toll -Free ,
800-54Q-6333 Ext. 2361.
• Clean Late M odel Cars Or
Trucks . Low Miles, 1995 MoCels
Office seeking Medical Oala·enlry
Or Newer, Smith Buick font iac.
reps lor Entry-Level Position. FT!
1900 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis .
PT Excenent Pay PC Reg Call: 1·
80().298,8506.

.

Do11 't

_..;.•

Wanted to Buy

740·742·2138

Hour•
7:00AM - ~00 PM

'

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Mood is pa ugh Au clion~ri ng .
Complete Au cUonee ri.ng Services . Co nsign ment auction - M ill .
Street, M iddlepor t , Thursdays .
Oh io License 17693 . .740·989· ·

R. L.HOLLON
TRUCKING

10{25/96 tfn

Courter: Immediate Openmg De·

·sua.

'Free Estimates

•

SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY. Call Now Toll FrH 1·
800·339-4204 Or 1·800-469-816&amp;
For Appomtme.nt To Coma To
Nashv1He. Tenne~see And AuditiOn For Mator Record Producers.
lnt&amp;rnet· www.won.ac

Computer Users Needed work
Own Hrs. S25K -$80KI Yr 1·8QO·
536-0486 X 77Tl , '""" 1cwp com

For

•

pon area . Must be abM lO do of·
fa work and get along well with •
otners Evemng call coverage r•
qwed as part or thts positiOn. Af&gt;plleants may be reqUtred to sub- •
m1t 'lo a poltce cneck .and drug
Jest Send letter of awtH:ation Including ,a brll' history, e~~:perlence
and lhree l3J currenl referencet,
c/o: The Oa1ty -SenuneC f' 0 . Box
729--87 , Pomeroy. Ohto·45769.

Home Business. Work Flextble
HOUfs. Enjoy "Unhmned Earnings .
1-88&amp;-561·2866.

Free 3 -Week · COL
Tra ining Earn $26 -$32 .000 / 1st
Free Puppy. Pa rt Chow. Great ~ Yr . W / Full Bene! tiS. No E~~:p .
WilhKids, 74()..U1-07&amp;i.
Needed _' P_A.M. Transport Spe·
c ial Ca ll Toll F ree 1·877-230Kittens - Wh ite &amp; Siamese Color. 6002 Sun -Fr i. 7 A .M. -7 P.M .
Good Homes Only. (304 )882·
W'N"N.pamtransport:com
2426.
Fast Money.: No se111ng Not MLM .
60 Lost and Found
earn $1 .250 pin Cay. ~-800-5044
101272692 PPR
lost: Greal Dane, large black
male, answers 10 Ma• . reward , Ga ll ipolis · Career College Is
Pageville area. 740-992·5686.
Seeking Part-T1me Instructors In
The Following Disciplines: Com· ·
Lost: "LARGE WHITE Male Dog, . mumcations : colnputar Applica·
l osl Near Rio Grande,
lions (MS Office); Computer Tech
STANTIAL REWARDI 740~2-45Support: And Office Admtntstr a·
0485 After 6:00 P.M.
l ion (Records Management .
Shorthand . . Etc .) Mini mum Of
Lost · white fema le cal , Unlon
Bachelo r's Degree In F ield AeAvenue vtcln lty, family pet, ·snoQuireC Please Submit Resume
wy•, 740-992·5&lt;147 , Judy, 138
And Re ferenc es To . Gallipolis
Butternut. Pomeroy.
Career College , 1176 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis, OH 45631. GalliYard Sale
70
poltS Career College Is An EQual
Oppor1unt1y EfJ1)1oyef. ·

Gt\j\¢-i"'il

Go~

740-992-5232

2 mo. Pd

8' Grovellessleo1h
100' -1000' Rolk 1' &amp; 3/4' 200# Waler line
Full line of Gll5 Pipe &amp;Regulator~ Water Storage Tanks
ldl

reo. twO years

Free Kittens. Call 740-446-2951 .

YOUR

N"" Consl!ue1lon &amp;

Joseph Jacks
740·992-2068 .

. CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes·

Culverts: 4" • 48" in stock ·

ci:

Female Oootrman.

OHIIO 45631
• '{t\!11
• S\u!l\9

Conatraction

. Free Estimates

740-985-3813

Jdnt llleasant M1kt Ser1es

2 ·All Wh ile Tom Kittens . 8
Weeks Old , Partially liner
Traihed , 74()-446-9935

TREE SERVICE

Soaat:Bame

New Homes • Vinyl ·
Siding • New Garages
•Replacement WindoWs
·Room Additions
•Roofing
COMMIROAI ao4 RISIDINTIAI
FREE ESTIMATES

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

llrelented In tooJundlm With The

Giveaway

GallipoHs
&amp; VIcinity

1111171Q.Su.tue&amp;llonut.roin

••

St. Rt. 7

aowrxo..n

"Try SllOppino
Gallipolis And Save!"

1

.

. .HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
,,..,• • ;.rr. rl1

Phona :.7~1-1142

Friday. Molldoy edition

YOUI&amp;'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers . ·

Phone: 7~1-QIS.t .

mo. pd.

Seektng a person to li ve-in ancl

·AvOn ProCiucts: Statt your own In-

Finally, Ttle MHli Mall Has A Variety Of E'tlerything From A To Z
Locatttd At 356 Second Avenue.

t - 800- 813-3515 .

mana~ Elderly Housmg Proj8ct
m the Pomeroy. Racme. Middl~

Stwrley Spears, 304-675-t.-29.

A.l5cl , New T.V Shopp+ng Channel
ClOthing, Featunng Ptus Sizes Lo,cated AI : 314 Second Avenue .

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

Tickets: $1 o.oo Donalion Each/1000 Maximum
Drawing to be held at 12 P• on

1

CALL

EXT U2t0 II AM ·9 P_M , 7
DAYSfdS: R:

.......---.....IIOLblg$

05?2-

40

INFO

AVON! All AreasJ To Buy or Sell.

Has ReturneCI II'S furnJture To
Former LocatiOfl: 241 Hurd Avenue, Gallipolis , Phone· 740 -«6-

Linda's Palntl~g

Sporuored b y lhe
Pomeroy Yolun,reer Elnl!r64Wf=y Squad. III CO?o ra,ted.

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

Business Services .High &amp; Dry

• New Homes ·

992-7834

CaD 985•3831

Said Oelendanto will take
notice that It be requlrod to

(B) 10,1~,24,31

1..-..c50-27M

old. 7&lt;0-~&lt;1288 .

Aural Development I•
entitled.
Slid Defendants are
directed to the Complaint
wherein notice under the
1elr debt collection practice
1ct Is given.

(9) 7,t4

11em,. S1 .00 bag .are •very

THE IIINIIIALL

1·100·311·3391
Free Estimates
Contractors Welcome

ENCE FOR APP ANO EXAIL

Pul tt To Wert!
12S -$75 .til'" PT1FT
1-888-890-3481
www.pc-n::are.com

l&lt;W-5!12-1842
Quality clorh•no and housern,td

•

POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 /HR .
INC BENEFITS, NO EXPEAI·

Groat P ... CAlL 1·800·

ATTEHTIOH:
OWIIA COMPIITE111
PUT fT TO WORKI
$25 .f75 M R. PT/FT

Help Wanted

Plrt·Ttme t.taJn'-nanc:e Po11bon
(304}182·3601l.

ATTEHTIOH:
Hew A COftlijQ Mr?

Oa~~no

.J .

s;tt;,, &amp; s,,,;,

&gt;!

TrflinQ

9;0()-5;30.

·wiLLIS'
SEAMLESS
GOnERS

110

Help Wanted

795-03110 En r.101 (241ftl

Thursday Monday thru Saturday

740-992-3470

7!27199 2

·t he parttea herein,

or before the 12th day of
October, 1999 or Judgment
will
be
rendered
oecordlngly.
USDA Rurol Dovelopmont,
Plolntlff,
Stephan D. lilies, Anomoy

Hire a Vet

R~;~tes)

ASSE118LY AT HOMEII Crahs,
Toys , Jewelry, Woqd, Sewing

New To You Th1ft Shoppl
9 Wesl Slimsotl. Ahl'\5

Albany, Olrio

the proc;eedo from tho
· 1 ·1 h 1
be
Uribe ond Robert Scoff aollo · ool oald premioeo. bo
That hll e g~r s ou d not
con- Taylor proylng for judgment jj~r~~~~~:to the Plaintiff's
side red ·a "' nuisance" when she peers In the amount or $6,661.71
·and for auch
with lntoroot thereon ·
relief to which USDA
aCcording to the terma or

(Low

STAAT DATING TONIGHTI
Have fun Metbng Ehg•ble Si ngtes In '!lour Alea C•ll For Mora
lnforrnallon 1·800-AOMANCE .
En9135

30 Announcements

Lime&amp;rolli', Gravel,
Sand, fill Dirt,
.4 griculrural Lime,
/llulrh, Top Soil

740-742-2566

110

Ton•gMI Han tun
playv-g . . Ofloa Dallng Game. 1·
-ROioiANCE. 9681

We Deliver

Porta Jon rentals
Septic Tanks Pumped

005

Stan

HAOUHG IHC.

1

B_uy from the Classl~eds!

estata, !hot tho premloea be
of

94n
..10. . ' • •
~...
· HolM Natlonall~nk
Georgo ~Uiwroneo,
(8) 17, 20, 24,

500 gal. per day 1200 gal. cap.

WICKS

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats. headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers. carpets, etc.
. Mon .. Fri 8:30 - 5:00

lbDVenameci-~Ht.-iof
to the sele IW&amp;a~IIIAQ 1 .. ••

YIN

Mighty Mac Aeration Systems

A &amp; D Auto Up olst~ry • P'us, lilc

macletol,..,..anvofthlt

f1FIICU14TSGUB4M•
aoolgnees be raqulrod to 1te5 Ford Bronco 11 YIN
ut up 1ny interest they may f1FIICU1'453FUC48&amp;42
h1ve In Nld .preml... or be 1982 CINvrolet camaro YIN
forever . barred, that upon · t1G1FP23EfNL163088
.
fltllure of ukt Defendllnta to
The terms of Nle 1re
pay or to ceuH to be p81ci. cah.
Nld judgment wtthln three
«My1 from Its rendition that
en Order of Sale be Issued

Foreclosure

'.

.. .

To place an ad Call992-2156

HOWARD'S TRI· COUNTY SANITATION

Ons.atunlay.~lr4,
oewn•tM rtjht to NfKI
1-.1110:0DamthaHome' ll!l)'arall~~~to-•o
Netionel_ ,..-llllc~~= foron
::!~~ ~
- the .... 01
••
-·• ~·-parldnglotthatolArrongelMII(I may be

·
admlnlotrators,

Complaint In

drcn _tht: importance of ~ing kind

Larry Schey

The Home ~ Bank

PUBLIC NOT1CE

tngwllhlda:
1981 Nluan

opportunity

teach ~our grandchil -

How "ell informed are you' Write
for Ann Landers' booltk-t "&amp;x and.
the Teenag.,r.• 1
Send a self aildressed.long. business size en•·elope and a cheek or
money order for $3.75 (Chi&lt; 1ndudes
pos1age and handling) t&lt;!: Teens. do
Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chica•o Ill
1 0562

deceaaed ,
devl1111 ,

taka notice thot I'" tho to tho Shorlft of IJio!go
Dec:omber 1, 1998, USDA County, Ohio, to approlu,
Rui-ar Development, ftlod ~~a · advorllae In the Dally

cou ncilor.

The Pledge to the Christian Flag
was given, with Psalms 24: 1-6 being
read, and .the Lord's Prayer being
recited in unison. The Pl~dge to the
American !'lag was given, the first
stanza of the "Star Spangled Banner" was sung and the roll call was
read.
Minutes were read and approved .
A silent auction will be held at
the second meeting in September.
h was noted that State Session
was held recently with some members attending from Chester.
II was noted that Elizabeth Hayes
was home from the hospital and that
Ruth Stethem is residing at Arcadia
Nu.rsing Center in Coolville. The
meeting closed in regular form .

8UPflCudlyctece•Md, Jane

executore, · executrlxea,
Mmfnlllb ,..
admln latratrlxea and
lnlgneea and Jane Doe,
Spouae of Timothy D.
J-a. I f - - · and If

DYER. TENN.
DEAR
DISTRESSED
IN
DYER : Please do not lose this
to

Stop 111 And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative

Public Notice
f~5~~~~~~~E~~~~~~==t=~~~~~~=e1
' =·J~~-~~-~~==
Public Notice

Doe, Unknown Spouu of
nmothy D. Jonea, Robert
Scott Taylor ond Jona· ~~.
UM.nown SpouM ot Robert
I feel bad for the ch1ld. but I hon- Scon ,-.ytor ond If nmotlty
est!~ don't lno \\ ho w to ,dcal 1 \\'ith , D, Jon•• Ia deceaud, aU
the .P·rohlern _
.
halra, devJHea, leg8t...,
axecutora , axecutrlxea,
· Her mother is. t o tal I\· ob]i ..,ious .trniil!Slrlttora.
and nu help at all. \V.il(~ ou pie~ · admlnlatratrlxea and
tell u~ \\hat to do abou1 this nui - aaalgnHa of Timothy 6:
~am:c ·~ 1 ar11 •. DISTRESSED IN Jonea, whoae eddreaaea
Ire unknOwn. will hereby

Society ·Scrapbook
offering will be se nt to the BELL
project in honor of Carrie Bell

Gem cl die Day (credit Will

unin\ited. She is Stmply displaying Rogers)· Th&lt; busi..,ss of govemnatural curiosity, and has no 1dea she m&lt;nt is to keep the govemmeni out
1s 'bothering" anyone.
of business •• that is. unless the busi·You say your grandchildren don't ness needs govemment aid.
under&lt;tand whaJ is "rong with her.
P.S.: This is Ann. Will Rogers
It is up to you to explain to them this said this 50 years ago. I wonder if he
unfortunate child's mental limita- ·had a cryslal ball. ·
tions. I ·hope you' will do so at once.
Feeling pressured to liave sex?

comes
all tbe time.
Public Notice
child i&lt;o•er
mental!'y
handicapped and
She knock!, on our door and looks
in ou.- windows . Every time ¥~o'e lum
NOTlCE OF PUBUCAT10N
around, she as nght under us. If we St.phenD. MI..._Atlut•Nt
tell her to go home. she is hack in
11'--,IIW. -...ment
fi,e 'minutes with the
. ,. same rou1ine1
Avenue, Deyton, Ohkt
4540Z
She doesn 'l understand why she . nmothy D. Jonoo,

'

Sonshine Circle meets
The Sonshine Circle of Bethany
United Methodist Church met
recently at the church.
President Lois Sterrett conducted
the business meeting. The secretary's and treasurer's reportS were
read by Kathryn Han and Melissa
Smith, and were both approved. The.
gropu e&lt;changed names for Secret
Sisters.
·
Kathryn .Han nad devotions For
the meeting, using Scriptures, Ecclesiastes 3: I and Proverb• 25: II. She
also read, "A Time for Everything."
and "Brewing Good Relationships."
from the · book, "Tea Time with
Goo:· Sterreu read a story about the
"Parable of the Teapot" Ruth Simpsop presented a collection of tea sets
that belonged to her and her sister.
the late Mildred Carnahan. when
they were girls,
Refreshments were served by
Lois Sterrett and Kathryn Han to the
above-named and Martha Stutler.
Mildred Hart, Mabel Brace, Blondena Ranier. Josephine Smith, Letha
Proffitt. Thelma Watson and Mary

'

the windows and comes o\Cr

1n

The Daily Sentinel• Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohi9

•
..

�•

'

Tuesday,Auguat24,1999

Pomeroy • Mlddlepor"., Ohio

P8ge 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Pac1e 9

BalDOI:

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER
320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
AftE U LAZY'? I Am And Earn

ApprOYed Master Licensed E'-&lt;:lrlclan WV025956 Estimates
tor
Res•dentlat
Serv1c11

St,OOO A D_~Y. No Selling Not
MLM FfH IWio Package 1·8oo-

1980 14x8~. two bedroom. two
bath new central a1r, great condi·
t1on, $9500, 740-~9-2.S3 leave
message

~. 241nXT27

(304)675-1927

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 ·20 Locations UK · S10K

Beau,trul Cteanmg
In your
home or bu&amp;lneu Carpet and
upholstery to lnterior/extenor
walls, decks and driveways The
complete cleaning service Cell
Cto.ty C - For F- E1111mo•

1985 Modular Home 24x55 ,With
All Appliances. 5 Miles From Rio
Grande, Ma~ lease! $22 500 ,

1304-e15-40&lt;10

thnHl bodtoom 1wo lui ballls, luly
furnished central 11r $12 !500
740-992 2060

$4,000 +IMo • Income • ALL
CAS HI 100% Finance Available

HI00·380-2615 · 24 In
... ulJ S•lon: tor Sale 7 Stallonsl A-1 locaUon Plenty ol
Parking, 4 Tanning a- well Stll
together or Separate Call

367.()612

Mounrs Tree Service "The Tree
Profess•onais" Bucket Truck
Service, Top, Trim, Removal ,
Stump, Gnndlng Free Estimates
Fully Insured, Works Comp Bid·
well, OH Cali And Save. 1·800·
838·8568. 740·388·9648 Owner

(7~)-

Cole&amp;' Poc&gt;sl Phone Cartts

-OCOIIOns. (Local)
- U p To $750 00-1y
Hot

Coli- 1-800-440-2371

Rlct&lt; Mount

IHr Dental Billing Software CornPlAY Needs People To Process
Medtcal Claims From Home
Training Provided Must Own
Computer 1-800· 223-1 149 Ext
460

All real estate advert1s1ng 1n
th•s newspaper IS subject to
the Federal Fa1r Hous1ng Ad
or 1968 whiCh makes It •ltegal
to advertise ·any preference
limitation or dlscnmlnatJOn
based on race color rellgton
sex lam•hal status or natiOnal
orig1n, or any Intention to
make any such preterence
11m1tati0n or dlscnm•natiOn •

""FREE 3 DAY TRIAL PACK""
•• lose Weight, Boost Energy
Make A Fortune From Home 1.

800-762 17ol9 Ask for Tim
FRITO LAY /PEPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE $1,000+
WEEKLY POTENTIAL ALL
CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO
CAL SITES ON GOING SUP
PORT SMALL INVESTMENT I
EKCELLENT PROFITS 1· 800·
731-7233 EXT 34tn

This newspaper will not
kno~ly

TUNITYI Ground Floor Hurry
Lim•ted Time Only! Call Toll Free

800-856-0170
Need A Loan? Try Oebt Consoli·
dation $5 000 · $200 000 Bad
Credll 0 K Fee t-800·770·0092
Ext 215

220 Money to Loan
$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remalnmg Payments
On Property Sold! Mortgages!
Annullles l Settlements! lmme
dlate Ouotesl!l "Nobody Beats
Our Prices • NatiOflal Contract
Buyers 800 490 073t Ext 10 1
www natlonalcontractbuyers com

$$$ OVERDUE BILLSIII $$$ Con·
solldate Debts! Same Day Appro·
val NO APPLICATION FEES11 1
800-863-9006 Ext 936 www helppay-bills com

$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Wealthy Families Unloading Mil·
lions 01 Dollars To Help Minimize
Their Taus Write lmmed•ately
Wu~dralls 847 A SECOND AVE ,

SUITE 1350, NEW YORK, NEW
VOAK 10017
.. Credit Card DEBT"" Debt Con·
so1tdat10n Stop Collect1on Calls
Reduce Payments &amp; Finance
Charges Avoid Bankruptcy 1·

800-270·9894
FREE MONEY I lt s True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500
$50 000 Debt Consolidation Per
sonal Needs Business 1 800
511 2640

BANKRUPTCY $79+ Stops Gar
ntshmentsl Divorce $99+ Also,
Foreclosur$ Avoidance Program
Homeowner Loans FreshStart 1•
888-395-8030 www freshstartu·

sa com
CASH Or LOAN! Farm Cap1tal
Will Purchase Or loan Against
Your Government Farm Pay
ments {CAP/PFC) Call. Farm

Cap1tal 1·886-FARM·ACT (327·
6228)

1

REAL ESTATE

Thousands Of Dollars In Interest
Non-Prof1t TCC 800-758-3844

CREDIT

PROBLEMS? VISA

CARD Guaranteed Appro'o'al
No Credit Check Oo/oAPA Re
qutrements 18.,. US C1tizen Ha\lt
Checking Account Phone Appro·
val 1·800·737 0073 Issued By
MerriCk Bank SLC UT
FREE CASH NOW! Wealthy Fa
mlhes Unloading Millions To Help
Minimize Their Taxes Wrile lm
mediately Fortune ·lP1 PMB
249·1626 North WIICOlC Ave •
Suite 249 Hollvwood CA 90028

GET YOUR CASH NOWI Oldest
Buyers Of Structured Se!Uements
AnnuitieS, And Government Farm
Payments Also Purchasing Lot
• teries And Pnvale Mortgages
Call Setllem~tnt Capital 1 800
959·0006 www settle mentcapi
tal com
Need a Loan? Home, Auto, &amp;
Debt Consolidation Good or Bad
Credit Call toll hee 877·1358·
0551

OVER YOUR HEAD IN DEBT???
Need More Breathing Room ?
Debt Consolidation No Ouallfty

lnglll FREE CONSUULTATION
(800)556·1548 Ext 214 www ane
whortzon org licensed /Bonded,

Non-Profit /National Co
RECEIVING PAYMENTS? In·
vastor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Sellar Financed Mortgage,
Real E5tale Contract Insurance
Annuny Hig hest Prices Free
Quotes Why WSII? Call Rich 1

800-888-6450
erofesslonal
Services

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURitY' /SSI?
No Fee .Unless We Wtnt

1·888-562·3345

31 0 Homes for Sale
$$$0 DOWNI HOMES NO CRED·
IT NEED~DI (GOV'T REPO CON·
DO'S, TOWNHOUSEiS HOMES!)
1-800-434·2434 EXT 32o5
2 Bedroom Bath One Car Ga·
rage I 2 BUildmsl V•llage of Crown

C1ty (740)256-1071
3 Bedrooms 2 BathS With Large
Covered Deck, A 30 By 40 Garage Appro• 4 Miles From A•o
Grande College On State Route
325, South !dear Starter Or Aet1r·
ment Home Askmg $49 900
Phone 740-286-2564
3 br 1 ba house cent heaValr ,
c~ty water w1th 2000 sq loot
bulldmg Leon area owner fl·
nanclng avatlable $39 900 cell

304·!141 2868
Buy Homes From $10 000
1 3 Bedroom Local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Financing
Possible For Ustlngs Call 800
319-3323 EKI 1709
For sale by owner· two bedroom
house wtlh 50JC160 tot in Middle·

poo, call140-992 2810
FORECLOSED HOMES Low 0. 0
Down! Gov't And Bank Aepo s
Being Sold NOWI Financing
Available C;~ll Now! 1 800 730

7712. Ext 8040

1968 Redmond Danv11le 1•h70
Also Has ~xpando Very Nice
New Heal Pump, Asking $14 000

740-388·1133!;

Brand New Doublewtde 3 Bt!1·
rooms 2 ,Baths. onfy S3-401monttl
Free Othvery and set-Up UIT'Hted
Ollar won t Last! Only at Oakwood Galhpohs Oh (740)·446-

3093
Clean affordable previously
owned homes large selechon
available Call t&lt;arena at Riverdale Homes 740-3BH367
Come see our large selection or
used home at Riverdale Homes
Nl!lat clean financing available
Ready for delivery Call Nlklll at
740-385-4367
Cross Lanes Home Center FrH
Set up Delivery AJC Underpin•
ntng &amp; 5500 WaiMart Shopping
Spree wtth each nome pur·
chased Stop &amp; see your tlom~
town housmg specialist Woody
W•llard (304)776 7699 or 1·800·
922 9976 Crosslanes Ex1t of

mon no pelS 301 8196 3603

New 3BR 2 Bath 14 Wide SSOO
Down , $185 l)er mo Free Air t
800 691 6777
New 4BR 16 wide $500 Down
$219 permo Free Air 1·800-691·

6n7
New Bank repos only 2 left we
finance call304-722 7148
Special 28x80 3 or 48A $1000
Down , $322 per mo Free Oehv
el)l &amp; Setl.4) Hl00·69t,.sn7 ~
Double Wide On Lot $250 De1·800·38~62

340

Business and
Buildings

Two Retail Buildings 50x30 One
off1ce sening and one retail, lo·
cated near the New Wai-Mart!Ma·
son Contact Kim (304)773 6000

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
100 Acres More or Less tor Sale!

(740)388-8504
2 44 Acres Homesite Green
Township Gallla County Scemc,
Cu1et Close To Gallipolis. Some
Aestnctlons, 7-40 245 5776

NEW ON MARKET
23 Acres 2 Mil es Off SA 7 &amp; SA
218 Soutn Of Gallipolis Slnglewtdes Allowed Land Contract
Available Only $27 000 1 1·800·
213 8365

BRUNER LAND
740-441•1492

Priced To Sell! 4 Bedrooms 3
Baths, Bnck Ranch On 2 12 Acr
es Cathedral Celltng Panlally
Finished, Full Basement At·
tached 2 Car Garage Pool Beau·
tl lul VIeW $114 900 740·388·

8074
Reno\lated Farmhouse Beautiful
and full of Country Charm 3/4
Acres level tot Paved Road 3
Bedrooms. 2 Baths utility and
Pantry New White Kitchen Cabi·
ne ts Ceiling Fans Throughout
Windows, Ct~rpet &amp; Stove ancl
Frlg Inclu ded Fireplace SWE
School 15 minutes from town
beautiful view from 11 1!2x28
Porch Ava1labe Nowl Asking

MObile home lor rent In Pctmeroy
area. no pots. 740-992 S6S6
Two bedroom mobile nome for
lease, $250 month, security d•
posit of $200, no pets. r9fef'encet
rtQUWed. trun Included 740.992·

2979allof6pm

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur·
nlshed and untum•shad aecurlty
deposit required, no pets 740·
1 bedroom apartment in Mlddla
port, all utilities paid, $270 per
month $100 deposit, 740-9927806

1 Bedroom Apartment Across Rio
Grande College, $290/Mo , All
Utilltiti Paid, 1-888-840-0521
1 Bedroom Upsta•rs Apartment In
Syracuse S2501Mo No Pets. Deposit &amp; 1 Year Lease Required.

Gallle Co , Friendly Ridge Ad
Nice Level10 Acres $15 000 Or
15 Acres $14 000 Water, City

Schools

1 br partly turn apt down town

PI Ploasant 740-44t-On2
port

2bdrm apt&amp; total electric appliances furnished, laundry room
facilities, close to school 1n lown
Applications available at V•llage
Green Apts 149 or call 740.992·

3711 EOH
00 .,... 740-992-S656

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wtttwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk fO ShOp
&amp; movies Call 740-448·2568
Equal Housing Opportunttv

'rn~~k;~~6~:~~~ ~~~ 7o;dr~CC:~!·
W1lh Washer &amp; Dryer Hookup
Water Palcl $279 00 Month Any
Questions Call 740·448·9611
Between tO OOAm And 9 OOPm
Christy s Fam1ly living, apaq
ments. home &amp; trailer rentals
740·992-4514 apartments avail·
able fumlshad &amp;. Wlfurrished
Downtown Gallipolis 1 Bedroom
Upstairs A/C Newly Carpeted
Comp~teKilchen

740-446-0139

First Avenue, Gallipolis, 1 &amp; 2
Bedroom Apartments, $250 &amp;
$300/Mo, Unfurntshed Security
Oep()&amp;ll, Referflnces Required
740·446·1066 or weekencls

740-441--0952
For Lease· B-autllul spacious
two bedroom AC apt L1vmg
Room. On Room at 57 112 Court
Street Totally new, Lots ol Star
age! $600 OOJmonth, plus utilities
Security and key deJ)oslt No
Purs! References Required (7401·

446-4425
Furnisfled Apt Downstairs 3
Rooms, Bath All Utilities Paldl
919 Second Ave $275 00/mon ,

(1401-446-3945

740-44&amp;-0390
New one bedroom apartment,
also ond bedroom house, rcall
740..992·9191

For sate 3 35 acres corner of
Hanging rock &amp; Foglesong ADs
$25 000 304 882 3-460 or 304·

882 2833

446-00011

In Syracusl!l two tots for sale orre
1 2 acres the other 1 5 acres
both for $15,000, call 740 992 ·

For Lease One Bedroom. AC
Apt CDfner Of Second And Pine
S2501Mo , Plus Utllltles SecurJty
And Key Deposit References Re
qulred No Petsl740-448-4.t25

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1974 Spring Manor Mobile Home
2 Bedrooms Total Electric Good
Cond1tion Pnced Low With Lots
Of EJCtrasl 740-446 9573
1975 Nashua 14:.:65 2 br new
central a~r 8:.:20 covered porch!
under pinning exc cond $7: 000
304·-882·2970

AnthOny t.and Co

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent
$350/Month Wttn References
74D-446-1142

(740) 446·8113
1995 Fleetwood 14 Ft x72 Ft 2
Bedrooms 2 Full Baths, CIA, All
Electnc, Payoff Of S24 000 740

256-9382
1999 Fleetwood Win gat• 14:.:72
2 br 2 ba W/A C WI skirting fl.
nanclng available 304..f75..&amp;Q55
89 Clayton 14JC70,2 br ,2 ba sunkin garden tub, central air w/ tire
place 2 1 Ox20 covered porches
prl ~ed to sate 304- 895·3114 1
304·675-3614

B-L·D-W D-IJ.T
5499 Down All Singles $999
Down Doubles Super Low Pay
menta limited Time Oakwood
Homes Barboursvllle, WV 304·

736-3409
Srand New so s 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths Just $239/Month Free
Delivery and Set·Upl only one al
this .Price! Hurry! Oakwood Galli·

poliS (740)446 3093

Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA, 1 112 Bath, Fully Carpeted Aclult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Pallo S1er1 $350/Mo No Pets,
Lease Plus Security Deposit Re·
quired, After 5 740•446·0101,

Bafore 5 740-448·3481
Twin Rivers Tower·now accepllllg
applications tor tBR HUD sub
sldlzed apt for elderly and handk:appod EOH 304-875-8679
Upstairs Furnished, 3 Rooms,
Bath, Clean, No Petsl AeferflrM:&amp;S
&amp; Deposit Required 740-446·

1991 14flx72ft 2
Baths Shingle Roof
Excellent Condition

1519
2 Bedroom Mouse 3 Miles Down
7 Beaur1ful River Vktw $350/Mo ,
74D-441 9501
2 Bedrooms, $325/Mo + Utilities
No Pets, 740.446-4313.
4 br 1 112 ba central atr/heal 1
car garage chain link fence/ !Ire
place app fum 1 yr lease S525
rani + dep 304 875-7873

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14Ftx70Ft 2 Bedrooms For Rent
In Bidwell, Call740-446 96S9
Between Athens and Pomeroy, 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
conditioned. 5260 · 5300 sewer
water and trash included 740·
992 2t67

Washers dryers refngerators
ranges Skaggs ApPliances, 76
Vinl!l Street Call 740..~46-7398,

1 888-818-0128
Mollohan Carpets "Dnve A Little
Save A Lor!" 202 Clark Chapel,

740-448 7444 740-388-0173
R&amp; D s Used

Furniture, Buying Partial Or

2 Dryers for sale 31/2 to 4 yrs

old [304)675-66~3

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Riverine Anttques,
1124 E Main StrMt, on Rt 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm,Sunday10010
6 00 p m 740·992-2526. Russ
Moore owner

540 Mlacellaneous
Merchandise
1f2 Carat Diamond Solitaire Rlng,
Very High Grade Diamond less
Than One Year Old, $1.100 OBO

11• OlrecTV Satellhe Syatems·
$69 oo 3 month free programing

with NFL. Ttcket Purchase Umited
time offer, call 1-1100-179-8194
2 Browns Tickets For Chicago

Game St.!8/99, ?40-256-1267
2· 9x7 wood garage doors $100
each004-675-4435
55 Gal Fish Aquarium w/ whole
set-up Kids Hobby Horse Also,

2 Kings ISland TicKet$ (304)6753765
ARTHRITIC PAIN RELIEF !

Valley View Apartments Rio
Grande Oh Now Accepting ap·
pllcallons tor Immediate occu·
pancy 1 6 2 Sedropm Apta Air
Conditioning Kitchen appliances,
Fenced tn Playground Laundry
On Stght Management Water
Sewage and Trash fald Full tune
Students must meet Ohio Hous·
lng Finance Agency Ouallflca
tions Senior Citizens Welcome,
EOE For more Information call

(740)·245·9110 Monday thruThursday 9:00 ·12:00 nooo

460 Space for Rent
Mobile Home lol Ava•labta Now

740-379-2254.
Mobile homl!l Site available bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy call

t1

Joint And Muscle Dietary Suppll-

rnent In Tho U S Contains Gtueosamine With Herbs 30 Day Money Back Guarantee Send Cfleck
Or Money Order $19 95 (1 Month

Supply) PJL ,Enltrprlsos 6698
West Kenyon Ave , Denver, CO

llntr, 9Dk miles, call 7CO 91!r

aQ

-

now I 888-265-2123
Regular Size Wheelchair Good
Shape. Pair or Crutches, Adult
Size Good Shape, 740-448-&lt;1385

1·800-319-3323 Ext 4420
1985

Lincoln

Continental
$25() 00 Has Salvage Tille. 1989
Otds Cutlau Cltrra, $700 OQ

740-441-0382
1986 Chevy Monti Carto Good

Retired Ty Beanie Sables, S8·
$35, also old ttrKt new Star Wars
1oys, call 740·985·4418 or 740·

Condition
2426

985-3590

1988 Pontiac Grand Pnx two
door automatic, 116.000 miles, air,

Roll TQp DISk 36WX440X240
$300 Table &amp; 4 cnatrs sso

'
Slng&amp;J Sew1ng Machine On Stand
New Cond1tlon $125, Simmons
Coucn, like New, $250 2 Raclln
ers $50 /$75 Er.d Table $25, 2
Lamp Tables $10 Each TV
Stand $10 2 Area Rug 5:.:8 $30
3I5 $15, Exercise Bike $t5 2&lt;1"
Girls Bike $25 Large Kahn Snow
Blower $150 2 Car Seats $10
Each 740-446-7928 Evenings

3 ONLYI

Two sets of concrete steps tor
mobile home S100 each Can
aeen at 167 Layne St , New
'i'8n,WV

WANT A COMPUTER? BUT NO
CASH??? MMX Technology We
Finance,
Down! Past Cred1t
Problems OKII Even If Turned
Down Beforell Reestablish 't'our
Credlttl 1·800-659-0359

·o·

$1,500 (304)882·

$1800,740-992-7689
1988 Pontiac Trans Am V 8
White Damaged left Front Runs
Greatl Good Rubber, 740 446

1928E'""Inga
1989 Dodge Aries K car, 4 dr
sedan auto 67000 miles runs &amp;
kK*s great $2300 304-675-1504
1989 llnt:cln Conllnental Signature Series AIC PS PB, Runs
Good Looks Good! Asking

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

1992 Olds Cutlass Sup{eme
While with blue interior 4DR

What If We Could Look And Feet
The Way We Did 15 Years Ago?
Faster Welgflt ·LOSS, Tight Skin
Call Today
Enhanced Energy

I 800-968-0874 (24 Hr)
www diamond sellers net WE SELL

DIAMONDS FOR LESS! THE IN·
TERNETS BEST PRICES! NO
COMPUTER NEEDED CALL
877·726-3753

550

Building
Supplies

Block brick sewer pipes. wind·
ows lintels, etc Claude Winters,
Ala Grande, OH Call 740·245·
5121

560

Pets for

Sale

AKC Boston Terr ier Pups For
Sale, Also Stud Service 740·

Sharp (304)67!Hl153
1992 Ponliac Sunbird SE One
Owner, Excellent Condition Low

Mies $4,500, 740-388·9416
1992 Shadow, looll:s and runs Nke
new 70K, cold air, automatic
sunroot, 4 cylinder spoiler red
$3650 74().949-ro.5 8\lenlngs
1993 Chevy Corsica, V'·6 98,00
Miles, AutDm Cold A1r New
Tires Brakes &amp; Battery Good

Car 14.200 00 740·388-8803

2644ovos
1993 Mercury Sable 3 0 V-6
Original Owner $4 500, 98,000
MUes, 740·992-7167

B1by be-d I drllltlng .. blal cer
1MI304.a'f5.2M't

AKC Dashounds, Ftoodles and
American Eskimo Spitz shots/
wormed 304-675-3361

~nder

BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 lb&amp;, 30 DAY MONEY
BACK GUARANTEE! Natural, Or
Recommended 740-441·1982
Free Samples
COMPUTERS &amp;0 Down tow
monthly payments V2K Compliant Almost everyone approved
Call FIROCOM Advanced Tectl-

notogles1·(800)-617-3476
COOLOOWN
Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnact Comptete Duct
Systmea &amp; Furnaces Heat
Pumps Certified Installer If You
Don1 Call Us We Both lose! 740.

446 6308 1-800-291-0098
DISABLED?

Find

A

Doctor

FAST www dlsabllltydOcS com
Dlacount Mobile Home

AKC Reg AottweHer pupa, gar·
man blood line, bred for 1am~ly
companion raised with chil dren
males $250 304 565-4402
Beautiful RollweHer Puppies
Wormed And Shots $100 00
Each 74CH46·21 97
Fish Birds. Pond SuppiiU
Sun 1·4PM Mon ·Sat 11AM·

8PM Fish Tank/Pel Shop. 2413
Jackson Avenua/Polnt Pleasant

(304)675-2063
Golden Retriever, AKC Pups,
$300 00 Must Seet (740)·379·

2639
Registered Border Collin Pup's
Working Parents, Imported Blood
Lines Good Marking 1st Shots!

(140)379-9110

570

Parts &amp; Supply
Huge Inventory

V1nyl Skirting Kits $299 95 5 Gal·
ion Aluminum Flbered Aoo1 Paint
$25 21. 5 Oat Wflite Roof Paint
$57 69 Anchors SS Coors &amp;
Windows, Oas a Electf!c Water
Heaters Plumbing a Electrical
Parts, lnlertherm Miller &amp; Cole·
man Air Condilloners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennetts Mobile Home
Supply 740 446 9416 GallipoliS,
OhiO

FULLY

LOADED

Musical
Instruments

Bundy Flute, $200 (304 )6756643 after 5PM

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetable•

Red Raspberries, Now Available,
Taylors Berry Paten Call In Eve·

lngs. 740-245-9047

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

PENTIUM

COMPUTERS Poor Credit 0 Kl

I 800-520-6364

Prism Auto, &amp; Air $1,395 1990
Plymouth Acclaim Automatic
Runs Great, $1 295 B&amp;D Auto
Sales, Hwy: 160 N Gallipolis 740

446-1689 140-448 6865
1996 Plymouth Breeze 51 ooo
miles, wfllte with gray interior
auto cruise air amlfm cass , 4

610 Farm Equipment

Take It! Americas Most Sue·
cesstul Campground And Time
share Resale Clearlnghouu Call
Resor1 Sall!l&amp; International 1 800
423 5967 24 Hours

Cat 215 Hoe $30 00 427 Chev
Motor $650 45 Parts Trailer
$1700. 16' Trench BoJC $3,500 00
3 Arrow Boards $1 200 each
Yard Concrete Bucket $700 00
2 000 Gal Water Tank $650 OQ
Mtscenaneous Steel Beams, Plate
Tamp that fits 416 Backhoe
S4 200 Sandblaster $1 ,300' Mls·
cellaneous hand tools Tar Kettle
$300 00, 40ft extended Trailer
S4 500. Buckets that fit a 215 lloe
Jackflammers air drills, con
slructlon blankets construction
barrels Phone (740) 643 2916
alter 4 00 (740) 643 2644 afler

Grubbs Plano tunlng &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Or 740 446-4525
740·448·

7556
INTERESTED IN WRITING PO•
ETRY? POETRY CONTEST
$48 000 In Prizes Possible Publication Send One Origmal Poem
20 Lines Or Less To lnternation
al Library 01 Poetry, 1 Poetry Plaza, Suite 11835 Ow1ngs Mills MO
21117 Or Enter OnHne At

www poetry com
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1·800-537·9528
King Size Bookcase Waterbed
With Six Drawers Underneath For
Storage, Built In Reading Lights
Heater, Ttlermoatal And Mattress Are In EJCcellent Condttlon
Needs New Mattress Liner $150
Two M1rrors 24'x66" Each, Geld
Frame Goes Around BOth Mlr
rors, $75
740-446-4548

oeo

74().385-4367

Lazy Boy Queen Size HldO·A·Btd
Couch Navy Blue Wltn Mauve
Accents New Condition Only 9

2 Bdrms $225 00 Month lnciud
tng Water $100 00 Deposit No

Reta•l bu•ldlng 1600+ square foot,
corner location 87 Mill Street,
Middleport Key a.t Acquisitions,

dtes 10 Speed Bikes On Yellow
One Blue $30 OBO Rlr Both 740-

Pets! 740-446·3617

91 Mill Str..t, 740-992-625()

446-4548

Months Old S500 080 Two La ·

800

HOS Dozer Recently Rebuilt
$8 soo Firm 400 Gallon Tanks
On Rubber $500 Each, 740-446·
2359
New Idea chopper 709 power
unit 767 super chopper 866 hay
picll-up&amp; 763 3 row corn head

304-675-4308.

630

Llveetock

8 reg•stered mini horses· will sell
together or separately 3 stall1ons
and 5 tnares 740-742 2050
For sale or lrade for hay 6 bllly
goats beautltul markings carefully raised $55 each 304 576 •

2392

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Straw for sale t2 50/ bale, four
miles north of Harrlsorw1lle on SR

143, 740-698 8254

6PM

$2 15() 080 304-875-2443

95 Ford Mustang 3 8 liter

5 sp

loaded 83 000 miles $7100
neg 304·773-5618
98 Bonneville P S/P B/Cruise
AMIFM Cas&amp; nice car must sell

304 875-4843
For sale· 1997 Chevrolet Camara 36,000 miles loaded eJCcellenl condhlon 740-669-0904
Rutland Cer SetH
Clean, newer used cars good
variety reasonable rates, 740·
742 3311 or740-742·1400

•

Ml''

1986 S·10

Short Wheel B, 4

Speed, 4 Cyinde&lt; 740-256-6109
1995 Che'o'y S·10 Blazer LT 4
Coors While Good Condition

$15,000 00 740-446-8120
miles air tilt, crwse deluxe
chrome and wheels, $8500, NO·
992·5578 before 2pm or after
4pm
1999 5·10 Chevrolet P ic k Up
I 500 miles Perf1ct Condition
Take over Payments Senous En·
q'Awf only Great DeaJI (740) 446·

1000
Black 1990,9·10 Sport Sunroof,
Excellenl Condition, $2 895, 1994
Cavalier 2 Doors $3,295, Cook
Mot0f1 740-446-0103

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs
1977 Chevy 4~~:4 Truck New En
glne Trans , &amp; Exhaust Good

•

.

•

••

A~ . .

•••

...,

24ft, Party Batge Pontcon Bo
60HP ,_,ercury trailer $5 50
I

:1

the

ballot
13 Elev

arrow

9 Where to get a

!lero

on

18 Actor Gulager

~~ :;':~;-bee11e

2&amp;

3 ..

Pass

Pass

Db!

All pass

Pass

raze1

33 Babybe.,a
38-- rute
(generally)
40 Honestly

41 Dick and
Jane 1

42 Genetic

43
44
46
47

stuff
(abbr.)
Jerk
Ending for
"novel"
Cell
oceur:nta
Purp
shade

48 Jacob'a

son
50 Legal
matter

52ActrHo
J""nne53 WrHer

Flem(ng

CELEBRITY CIPHER

a rogu1sh sense of humor and a

two-heart bal ~

DUMB Doc;

anctng overcall S hortly, West was
delighted to double three hearts, but
was hornficd when dummy tracked
wtlh the ace-queen of trumps
Chcmla won the firsttnck wtth hts
spade ace over East s Jack From the
btddtng, West was known to have led
a smgleton West surely had ktng·
fourth of hearts for Ius double •. not
fi\e , because he would have b1d the
sutt And West had to have stx or seven dtamond s
Spoumg the wmntng !me , Chern la finessed dummy's heart queen.

MUST BE
PART PIT

clubs West refused to ruff any of

l

;~

~~~~~~~!~~~
BIG NATE

Budget Prtced Transmlssiont
ana Engmes All Types Ace~·
To Over 10 000 Transmisstopt
eve Joints 740..245-5677
Fiberglass truck cap slldt
windows and screen, fits For(l
bed $300 firm 74(}.949-3112 . 11

BULL

by LUIS Campos
Ceiebnty C•pher cryptograms are created from quotat1ons by famous people past and
presenl Eacn let1er 1n the c1pher stands fo1 ano1he1

Today s clue 0 equals Y

PVRGVUYVBX

RWXMB

'K

t:i

hearts. one dtamond and f1ve clubs •
I recommend that you not try 10

em ulate Chemla'

1979 Mlt:las Motor Home Self·
Contalned, Generator New Refrt ,
Carpet and Upholstery Ael)dL·

V R

j(

I K 0

K y y

YVWWYX
J X

BKWEMX
G ME X Y
Z VB P

T X M 0

SDVGD

WOKW

vw

DXMJXMW

RUXBGXM
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ·when I was los1ng they called me nuts When I was
wlnn.ng, they called me eccentnc " - (Coach) AI McGu1re

r~~;t;~' S@\tQ{}lA-"'ttfSe
ld1ted lty CLAY I ,OLLAN
O four
Rearrange le"en of the
scrambled words be·

WOlD
GAM I

low to form four s•mple words

R HU L 0 Y

those wmners, but at tnck nme,

mg hnn nme lncks vra one spade, two

Campers &amp; · ,. 1
• I
Motor Homes ' • :

UXMTKPXR

cashed lhe heart m.:e. and turned to
Chemla calmly e&lt;~ted wtth a trump.
e ndpJaymg West Chern Ia had to wtn
trtck 13 wnh hts dtamond kmg, gtv-

r

My father doesn t ltke new
technology I, on the other
hand bel ieve that machmes
. - - - -......---.,-,were made to make mountatns
5

,,I'o ·,·o~~~~~~-

::;-TI;::-L-r-K..,-1,v-::9_L,

r

1.

;h. chuck!• quo••d

1.

.
.
1. 1.
.
by fJIItng 1n the m1:531ng words
L-I'--.....1..:......1..-.1--'--...J you develop from step No 3 below

'\•

WHEN 't'OU 6RADUATE
FROM ~~6~ SC~OOL .
DOES SOMEONE 61\fE
'(0\1 A 81CI'CLE?

Allegro motor home 36~
miles stove, oven, mlcrowav~
furnace , batf1 canopy outsld!
gas gnll sleeps 8 $10 ,000 740j
1 983

992 2088

P&lt;!SS

3.

made an tmagmatl ve

_~

lor·Y2K (740)-446-6844

2 .. I
Pass

passed around 10 you What would
you do. 11 anythmg'
There ts a natural reacuon not to
let the opponents play at the two-level Yet rather than double, Chemla

1998 Sea-doo GSX Limited r••
and purple. brand new condiNort
130 tlOrsepower. with tranel.
$8395 740-742·3802

3933 or 1·800-273-9329

12 Person

7 Icky
8 Slrllgh1 - -

22C-dtoh
23Chlneoed0g
24 Cry of pain
25 Old
PoriU9118M
money of
account
27 Deoigner
Chane!
28 Music halls
29 l'luloance
31 One who

11 Shaul

East
I a
Pass

wtth

,1

New Replacement Gas TankSJ

Pass

love of good food and wtne
Look at only the South hand The
dealer on your lef1 opens one diamond, !he responder on your nght
b1ds one spade you opt to pass, the

9Dti&gt;

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Rather

opener rebtds lwo d1amonds, and Ills

1

6RAMPA SAl'S
WHEN HE GRADUATED,
SOMEONE 6AVE HIM
A FOUNTAIN PEN ..

HE SAID IT
WAS A RED
FOUNTAIN PEN

1989 Pace- Arrow motor hbrciet
model 37J, 37 long side aisle \
washer &amp; dryer. mtcrowave/con1
vectlon oven. st&amp;eps 6 2,000 ml~
on motor &amp; transm1sston, 40,()0(}
miles on chassis Onan genert\~
tor rear view camera/TV
TV
stereo call 740 949 2111 H 11
answer, leave message &amp; we ytl._l•
calt back
~. - ......

I' 1· I' 1• I' I' 17 I' I' I

A PRINT NUMBfRED
'1:1' LETTERS
•
. , UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
•

I I' I I I I I I I

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Neatly· Noose · Dnft · Wiggle· GIANTS

a.

Don t g&lt;1 !tung by lug~ prow 1
Shop rh• class•fiod ••C!Ion

Have you ever not 1ced ·the Emergency room nurse
satd to a colleague ·that some ttmes emergenctes can
turn us tnto GIANTS?"

ITUESDAY

1993 35 ft lnnsbruck Tr;JII
Trailer, with Expando Excell811f;
CondJt10n (740)-367·7755
•

AUGUST24I

1995 24Ft Gulf Stream Co~
quest Class C MotorHom
19 000 miles $27 500 304 88

3323

SERVICE S

810

Home
Improvements

•'
•

·1

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llfet1me guaran~

Local references furnished Est

ta~lshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (14QI
448·0810, 1-800 287-0576 Bog.

ers Waterproofing

ASTRO·ORAPH

Appliance Parts And Serv1ce ~
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
parience All Work Guaranteed
French City Maylag, 740·446·
7795

Wednesday, August 25 199{.
Small amounts could accumulate
mto s1gmficant sums m the year

ahead tf you follow 1he pracltce of

C&amp;C General Home M~n
tanence· Painting .... tnyl sid~ng
c~n&gt;entry dOOrs windows, baths
mobile home repair and more• For
free estimate call Chet, 740 992

bemg both penny Wise and pound
' cpnsc1ous Pay attcntton to alllhe little expend1t1.1res
' VIRGO (Aug 23 -Sepl 22) A guy

6323

Livingston's Basement Water
Proo11ng, ~all basement repairs
done free estimates, liletlme
guarantee 12yrs on job expert.

once (304)895-3887

Aalnb()w Bulldenl
Build new or repair old, no JOb
too small or large Major cred1t
cards
tWV029582
Call
(304)458·W49 BP t528-8092

Electrical and •
Refrigeration

1977 Chevy 4X4, 350 4 Speed j ;;::::;:::::;::;-:::-=:=:::::::-"':'71986 Chevy 1f2 ton utit van
$1.500 304-875-6693

~.
I •••

, 99{1 17 Nitro bass boaJ
Mercury, 011 Injected 4 blade tUfoo
bo, statniess prop, aerated II~
wells. extra bull seat 42 PL
thrust. Motor Guide trolling mot
2 new batteries, 2 wide angle
flsn finders one owner garag
kept cover, wfllte whfl teal greelli
metal flake showroom condlt101,

Tires, 77 000 Miles $1 500 740 • 840
441 1083
Rough, $850 7-40-446-6962

.,..... . .

1986, 18112 ft Bayliner CW~•
Cabin CB. depth finder Extra
Dock 3 (740) 446 681&lt;4
-·

2198

388-8579

•
?!.

oo ca•

197{1 Ford Runs Goocl 740 379
1978 GMC General 290 13
Speed Travel Oump 18 Alum•·
num Bed New Pa 1nt Job 740·

li'RANK &amp; EARNEST

12 foot Jon Boat tor sale wtltl
Trolling Molar and accesso
$400
(1401·258-6883 • ,

760

Abominable
Snowman
Hindu pooaoant
Japanesemenu vegg1e
5 Aclor Mineo
6 Newsmen

By Phillip Alder
When an expert makes a slrangelooki ng b1d 1ha1 works, il rece1ves
w1de pubhcny But 1f a dtsaster
ensues, the expert !nos hard 1o keep
1t qutet Today's deal occurred some
years ago m Pans The declarer was
Paul Chemla, a co lorful character

•

t.

•'

-ouey

Only wh_en it
works?

11 Fl John Boat Trolling Mot•~
$375 00 74Q....4.46-7SS8

(740)-445 7469

DOWN

dog

• ;:

14().742 3802

North

I t

Pass

TODAY

750 Boats &amp; Moto..._ , :
for Sale

AI -

Openmg lead • 2

New 1999 Honda EX, two ~
old factory warranty $3950,
740-992 2459 days or 304-8
3407 ...,.nlngs
,

1975 Black Chevy 2 WD 350
Brand New Small Black Motor,

$1,000 OBO. 740-256-8134

5HOT

Honda Hl!llix Motor Scootet
250cc Eng1ne Perfect Condlllof\
Make Otter Or Will Trade For.A
Wheeler, Or Farm Wagons 9f
Equal Value, 740-246·04M : ·•

790

91 Cavalier black,AC /CD player
tinted window&amp;, runs good

TAKE IT?

- _.

1998 Pcntlac Trans Am 35.0 V·8
LS·1 Corvene Engine, Automatic
T· Tops, Monsoon Stereo With
12 Disc CO Changer In' Trunk
Dark Navy Metallic With Grey
Leather lnterkn Will Take Pay OH
~~easonable Offer 740 44~
1999 Ford Explorer $100 lOBO
Seized And Selling Locally Fee
1-800-409 751 1 Ext 9025

BOOSTER

HOW DID HE

West
2+

Pass

~

&amp; A Auto Ripley, WV (304J372;

1997 Nlssan XE pickup 36,000

Geh i silage wagon tandem 3
beater &amp; rool call 304·675-4308

•

dr. asKing $7,500, 74D-992·1506
days 740-949-2644 .....

720 Trucks for Sale

GOT A CAMPGROUND MEM·
BERSHIP OR TIMESHARE? Wl'll

Hot Tub $1,200 00

1993 Chev S-1 0 EX Cab 8 Cy·
5 Speed $2 900 1991 Geo

'I'ATER GOT HIS

1998 Honda Foreman ES'~45'
4:.:4 Like New 450 Mile•. Ytflhcf.
shield Pa,dded Rear, Rack St~

$~400

1993 Dodge Stealth auto, amlfm
cassette ate, alloy wheels sun
root silver wllh gray Interior front
lender damage, $3 600 740-949-

-BARNEY

.• 1

$3250 00 (304)882•2964 Alt

M&amp;J Auto SA 160 VInton
Hours Monday lhru Friday 12-8
740 388-9693 or 740-992-8326

South

i

age, $5,200, 740-388-9416

-ure
Hypnotk: atata
llama on 1
chain
Auto racer

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer. West

Motorcycles : :.
(304~-2048

51 AbOminable

langu34 Sedative
35 Ellclto
36 Film direclor
Craven
3711ro Peron
39 Genn1n sub
40 Heir

t K?
aAK962

42
tlniAif
-45 Baby's sitting
01101
... lAS ompk&gt;yee,
j*hapoo
411 Chlroc:1er

12 OU...y !MIIng S4
14 Actor !'Mer 55
15 llu doclors,
56
(2 wds)
16 Peach pert
57
17 llolh abbr
191!au asWI!otar
20 Congeal
23 Aclor Rltchard
1
26 Numero2
27 ,..rson on a
but?
3
30 Wintry
4
32 Put Into I
HCret

.. 4 3 2

1992 Harley Davidson FXS ~T
Springer, SoU tale lmmec~fti!f-

15 5

• 10 5 4

• J 8
South
a A 10 3

eo, Adult Owned S18 000 Flrl"'\
74CH48-752?, After 8
• -

740

aKJ9864

.. 8 6

tAQJ 9832

8, Lockout Hubs New Tlrtl. Sla*

1990 Forcl Crown Vic Wagon A
Beautiful Well Maintained High
Mileage, EJCceftent ConditiOn Onlv
1992 Mercury Topaz GS au·
tomatlc, 4 door runs goo!1. Ice
ccld air S8!50, 1990 Mll&amp;ubtshl
Eclipse 5 speed air cond1I10nlng
sunroof runs gcod $1295, 1989
Ford Tempo automatic runs
good 4 door excellent condition
$700, 1Stl6 Forcl Tempo, 2 door
runs good, automatic, $450 1987
Ntss•n Sentra 4 door automatic,
runs good, $600

East

1996 Bronco XL 25K Mat
Wheels, nnt Glass Auto. 0 o ~

1999 Hond• Recon 3 Month
Old 3Year extended warrant

$1,875,740-388-0894

West

1895 Ford Ranger 4x4, AC,
Speed. AM/FM Stereo S8.00
Mllea, Asking $9,000, 7&lt;408210
T

$2,500, 740-367-7480

Waterline Special 3J4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100, 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Par 100 ~ All Brass Com
presston Fittings In SIOCk

Jackson, Ohio, 1-IIQ0-537-9528

I

.. ro1 5 4 3

1994 S-10 Blazer, 72,000 mll••i
excenent condition PW, PS, PB1
air, 4x4, cruise, V-6, $t3 000, cal
740-992·5025
I

DlrecTV Summer Promotion Cati

1994 Pontiac Grand Am. 2 Coors
5 Speed Runs Good, $2 500

Call ToU Free 1·888·549-7994

• 6

FROM $&amp;00 Police Impounds,
And Tax Repo's For Li&amp;tlngt Call

388-0147

BETTER FEET In One WMI&lt;II
Sweet Silk Foot Care System

EEK&amp;MEEK

bed. amlfm stereo, new tires, bid

PRIMESTAR-

80235

Modern t Bedroom Apartment,

Three bedroom hOusfl for salfl
one and 112 balhs fully lurntshed
nice yard, close to park, 477 Sy·
camore Street Middleport call

We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acres
We Pay Cash 1·800·213·8365,

USED APPLIANCES

0000

1i91 GMC 1500 Sierra 4d,_l'

IMPOUNDS Honcla'a Toyota's,
Chev~s Jeeps And Sport Utililies Call Now! 800·772·7470,

08 24-ill

.. Q 7 5
• A Q1 5

.. 2
• K J 10 9

(304)675-6643 After 5PM

740-448-4Slll

Apartment for rent ln Middleport

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments Includes Water
Sewage Trash $31 5/Mo, 740·

Real Estate
Wanted

Jackson A.....,, (304)675-7388

North

• I~

ovonlngs

1994 S-10 4 wo Loaded, Mu
Sal $7 500. 740-367-7945
'

Must Sell Now 30x5o 45x80
50JC10011 Must Liquidate Will Sell
At lnvolcell FREE OELIVERYII 1·
800·211 ·9594 )!59

800-383-6862

360

For Sate Reconditioned washers drytrl and retrlgerator.J
Thompsons Appliance 3407

oeo.

740·i4i·2~

1110 -1110 HONDA CARS

Sofa &amp; Recliner S20Q 4 Piece
End Table Set $1&amp;0, 7~0-446·
7399

Owner Financing Info Take 10%
Off Ust Plica On C4Sh Buys!

4561

n95

992·150&amp; days or

4124

0047
Appllancn
f'econdillonad
Wa~hera, Dryers Ranges. Refri·
gralora 90 Cay Gueranteel
French City Maytag 740-~~6-

CAR$ $IOQ $500 A UP POLICE

1(mo

EXT 7832

STEEL BUILDINGS

Pilot Program, Renters Needed 1

Wet•r and Electric AeadJ Far
Hook·Up Nice Lot1 15,000 00

A1r Conditioners Used Different
Sius Guaranteed,! 740·816·

Police lmpoundl &amp; Repos Fee
CALL NOW Fdr Lls1lngsl 1-800·

1o Pr-oua
1987 Ford tull size eonvertiOI,\
van 302 automatk:, Ivory Coa!N
Conversion (Houston Texas).
gray vetour InteriOr. front and ,..,.
air all extras. $4700
7,0:,..

FREE Details Log Onto http II
www hbn corn Acceu COde 5298

WhOle Estalt 740-387-0280

Call NOW For Free Maps +

FOR SALE

319-3323 .:!156

1 Bedroom, AJC WID Hook-Up,
N1!18r Arbors Nursing Home No
Pets. Quiet locations $279/Mo ,
+.utilities, 740-446-2957

RI&lt;Jge Ad . ?Acres $13 000

BUILDINO LOTS

Ntce used Appll ances furmturt
freezers Bedroom Sullu Dl·
nettes tots Morel (740)· 446 ·

QUICK CASH

Gracious llv1ng 1 and 2 bedroonl
apartments at V111age Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
port From $249·$373 Call 740·
992·5064 Equal Housing Oppor·
tunltles

Meigs Co · Rutland Whites Hill
Ad 11 Acres $14,000 Or 9 Acres $12 ooo Da.n,..•lle SR 325, 9
Acres $17 000 Water Or Briar

$500 CAlli FIIOII $500111 Buy

OWN A COMPUTER. PUT IT TO
WORK $550 ·$3,500 MO PTJFt

Houaellold
Goods

71 o Autoe for Sale

Yonce

6 Group of two

TRAN SPORTATI ON

-----

Locust Post tor sale 7Ft $2 00
IICfl (304)615-1824

1004 (140)-448-4039 any ....

MERCHANDISE

510

Miscellaneous
Men:handl. .

740-992·7104 After 6 PM

Eoch. Call304-773-51811

Three bedroom tl&amp;, 1/2 story ce
dar and stone home stone chlm
nay targe windows, two baths
basemen!, covered deck, large
garage, 18 1/2 acres , private
near Pomeroy, 74D-992-6176

470 Wantecl to Rent

3 Bedrooms. $2!50 00 Pw Month

7am 9pm

740 367 7000

COII740-9115-98M
Ohio
" " ' - $75,.. - ·

- · (304)17Hal.

Large selection of used homes 2
and 3 bedrooms aveulable Excel
lent condition Great starter
homes Call Cheryl 740·385·

800-383-6862

Mlddlopo&lt;l.

221i

28 Ft Trailer With Awning &amp;
Deck OvtrioOkjng Otuo Rtver Full
Kitchen &amp; Bath Furnished $225/
Mo.. Hl88-840-0521

4367

)n

Went to rent 1m111 farm with

164

posh

liollo&lt; toto 1or ..,,

28 R Mobile Homes, $225
month, in New Haven (SO.. )882·

2 bedroom apar1ment in Middle·
we pay water sewer &amp; trash,
you pay gas &amp; l!llectrl~ $200 per
montl't $100 dtposlt 740·992·
7806

9191 xH5023

,I
I

14x70 electric

New Bank Aepos Only 3 left, 1·

$74 500 Call (740) 379 9000

COI'jSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monthly PaymQ-nls 20 50% Save

230

accept

achterttsements tor real estate
Mlich IS In V!Ofallon Of the
law Our readers are hereby
•nfolmed that all dwellings
advel'tlsed •n thiS newspaper
are ava1lable on an equal
opportunity baSis

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1

c-

ACROSS
s.c of s-

Res idential or commercia l wiring
serv1ce or repair~ Master Lltensed electr ician Aldeno.u r
Electrical, WV00030e 304·675
1788

new

t

or gal who wants your JOb could be
wuhm ear shot 1oday, so be careful
when talk1ng to persons you don't
know too well about thmgs thai

should be kcp1 confidential Vtrgo,
treat yoursclr 10 a btnhday gtft Send
1he requtrcd refund fonn and for your
Aslro--Graph pred1cttons for lhe year

22)

ARIES (March 21 Apnl 19) It's

Attempllng to encourage someone by
compann~ h1m or her to a person
who 1s out of lh1s lnd1v1dual s league
1s not only unfa1r and demeantng but
cou ld generate resentment mstead of
msp1ra11on

SCORPIO (Oct

24-Nov

best not to tdly talk today about an
endeavor you'd like to launc h,
because II could be too premature and
turn off those from whom you may.

SAGITfARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
2 I) Careful phra~mg when you speak
today 1s a must In general. people are
extra sens111ve and you cou ld madvertcntly ulfend a li stener 1f you re
not carefu l
'

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
Unless you're mterestcd m buymg a
rnecc of the Brooklyn Bndge, you
must be leery of any smooth talkmg
prommer uxlay Your sales res1stance

cou ld be al a low ebb
&lt;"-QUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb

need support

Po

all the planntng

first

TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20)
Makmg mountams out of moleh1lls

• w1ll tmpede your progress today
Don ' t let your mind, longue or your
t oes 1np over hnle ms1gn1ficant

reversal could take place today as you
watch others grasp the essence of
thmgs before you do Don ' t be too
embarrassed to say so tn order 10
have 1he facts repented

191

CANCER (June 21 July 221

( 758. Murray H•ll Statton, New
York NY 10156 Be sure to stale

ln!iltcad of Simply betng frustrated
today, let a person who wants to do
your thtnkmg for you know nghl up
front that your mmd IS st11l m fine

your Zcxhac s1gn

working order

Somethmg traumatic could take place
today 1f you arc corele!ils about your
pnzed possessions ll could he the In ·
lie thmgs you II mess up bn • hke a
dtamond

,ahead by mall1ng $2 and selfaddressed stamped envelope toAstroGrsph. c/o th1s newspaper, PO Box

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) You
co uld come off as a faker mstead of
a d oer 1f you talk too much about
your hopeful expectatmns today
StiCk to to p1cs m whu:: h others are
1nvol ved

PISCES {Feb

20 March 20)

Because you m1ght find yourself a ba
more talkauve than usual today 11
won '1be hard for a person wnh ulte nor mouves to pry mformatron out or

yoo that you'd rather keep secret

UndercCNel

1hmgs
GEMINI (May l I -June 20) A role

LEO (lui) 21 Aug 221 Be care-

r

fu I not to allow y nurscl tn Jonunatc
cnn\ crsauons whe n nul w ith c!lhcr r
bus mess assOCi ates 0 1 close pals 1llc \
sound of your vo1ce or 1dca s may not
he sweet muSic tl&gt; thl'm

) MaJOf League Baseball Cl'lcrmah Reds at Atlanta Braves (Live)

�'

Lydia Council of Bradford Church meets
on Al.gust 23 at Columbia Chapel.
The Women 's Retreat w1ll be
held on September 24 and 25 at the
Ohio Valley Cl!nstian Assemhl~ .
A personal brtdal s ho\\er "til be
gtven at the September meeung lor
Diane Bing.
The .September Lydia CounCil
meeting "ill be held on Scple!nhcr
7 at the church. Sherry Shamblin
will be the hostells.
Allcndme were Paula P~rkens.
Carolvn Ni~holson, Brenda Bulm.
Suzte. Will. Charlotte Van Meter.
Charlone
Hanning . ' Cherie
W!lli3mson, and Tra&lt;;1c Davidson .

Sunshine gifts for A~gust will
be given to Wilbur and Tillie Rowley.
Church supplies for July was
dishwashing liquid. and for
August, foam plates and cups. Pack
the pantry items ·for August will be
ca nned fruit , and for September.
sbap products.
.
·
Women's Fellowship will be
held at the Bradford Church on
August 26. Hal Kneen will present
a

program

about recyclin g.
Refreshments will be served. and

e\•cryone is. to bring an item that
has been recycled.
(1
Men's Fellowshtp will be held

D of A Past Councilors meet
Council 323, Daughters of
America, met recently at the
lodge hall with Delores Wolfe
and Mary H. Holter as hostesses .
Esther Smith. president, co nducted the meeting. She read
Psalm II 8. The Lord's Prayer and
the Pledge to the American Flag

. For roll call. each member was
to tell whtch recipe they received,
the name and how to make it.
It was reported that Elizabeth
Hayes was hospitalized at St .
Joseph 's Hospital.
Delores Wolfe gave the sccrc·
tary's report, and Ruth Smith

were given in uni son.

gave the treasurer's repQrt. ·

Members were asked to take a
recipe to the meeting, which were
then placed in a small .basket,
with each member taking a .
recipe .

Readings were given : "Sug·
gestions on How to Harvest Your
Garden," by Esther S~ith ; "H?w
you Tell When You re Gttttng
Older," by Errna Cleland ; "I' m A

Senior Citizen," by Ruth Smitti;
and "Joy is Homemade ," by
Betty Young.
The hostess served refresh·
ments, and games were conduct·
ed by Goldie Frederick and Mar·
garet Amberger. Door prizes were
won by Opal Hollen, Esther
Smit~. and Opal Eichinger.'
Also present were Laura Mae
Nice. lnzy Newell. Thel ma
White, Mary Jo Barringer, . and ,
visitors Sandra White and
Richard White.

Tomorrow: Showers
High: 80s; Low: 80s

cannot be guaranteed to be ·pri ntct.l a

specific number of days .
TUESDAY
'
REEDSVILLE
- Ohio Uni ver·
si ty Co lleg ' of Osteopathic Mcdi ·
cine Chi ldh ood Im muniLation Program will offer free nnmunizati'ons
for area chil&lt;)rcn from birth to 18.
years of age on TU&lt;$day, from 3 to 5
p.m. at Reed 's Store in Reeds vi ii,.

•

RUTLAND - Rutland Village
Co un cil meeting Tuesday, 7:30p.m .
at the civic ce nte r.

1

..-':'

ry, bui said that he had spent most of his life near the

"Old Stories and New Beginnin&amp;'" is the theme for Rutland's Bice.11tenni·
al Celebration, which will be held on Saturday.
The event is designed to bring the community and its friends together to
celebrate Rutland's 200th birthday.
. Th~ day's activities will begin with a parade through town at II a.m. A display of crafts will be set up in the Rutland Civic Center throughout the day. A ·
flower show will be on display at }he fire house, and other groups will set up
booths, incl.uding some businesses.
.
· .
A Goldwing motorcyle display ~nd antique, tractor display are also pl~ed.
The Rulland Department Store will sponsor a beard and miiStache eontest,
, with awards given .to the men wiih the longest beard and miiStach~ . That con·
test will be held at 5:45 p.m.
The U.S. Postal Service, working with Rutland Postmaster Margaret
Edwards, will offer a special "Celebration Station" pictorial cancellation. A
walking tour of the community 's historic homes will be available, and local
. produce growers have been invited to participate in a farmers' market

CHES T ER Shade Ri ver
Lodge , 453, F&amp;AM. spec ial meet·
ing, 6:30 p.'m ,. with wo rk in Master

.

RACINE - Racine Area Com·
munity Organization: Tuesday, Star
Mill Park, 6:30p.m. There will be a
potluck dinner.
POM EROY Immun izat ion
cli'nic, Meig s County Hea lth Department . 9 to II a.m. and I to 7 p.tn'.
Tuesday. Eac h chil(lto he accompanied by a parent or guardian . Immunization fecord to be p rcs~ ntee\.

A Mason tounty, W.Va. teenager has dted as the
result of injuries S'!'tained. in an automobile accident in
Pomeroy on Sunday mor:n·mg.
M :ucm~ Darst, 17, died on Monday at St. Mary's
Hospttal '" Huntington, W.Va . after being transported
there by MedFltght helicopter.
.
Steven L. Darst, 22, Syracuse, Mruune Darst, 17. and
Mtchael Russell, also of Mason , w~re also InJUred when
the 1988 Plymoqth Voyager van dnven by Steven Darst
struck a utility pole on East Main Street i~ Pomeroy.
Accordtng to the acctdent report tssued by the
Pomeroy Police Department, Steven Darst reached
down ~o ptck ~p an object from the vehtcle floor .and
crossed the nght stde of the roadway, sinking a ullhly
pole.
,
Steven Darst and Russell w.ere fransported to Veter.·
ans Memonal 1-fospttal by untts of Me•gs Emergency
Serv•:es,, and Mruune Darst was transported to . SL
Ma_ry s Hosp ttal tn Huntmgton, W:Va . by MedFhght
hehcopter.
:
.
Heav~ damage was sustamed by Darst's vehtcle, and
he was ctted for fat lure to control.

The Rutland Civic Center Committee will sponsor a pie and dec·
orated cake contest, a traditional event for the ,community's ~orne·
coming celebration. The items will be auctioned at S p.m. Napper
Trucking will sponsor prizes for a hog calling contest at 5:15.
Childrens' games will be held throughout the day, and several
organizations will have food available.
Events will center around the Civic Center and Harder Log Cabin,
.
.
.
which will house the art show.
1
Entertainment will be featured thro~ghout the day, including Jane
Wise, the Swing1ng Seniors, the choir from the ChuFCh of the
Nazarene, Big Bend Ooggers, D.avid Stiffler, a barbershop quarte~
Tammy Taylor and Bev Adkins, and Junior and Rita White.
.
The cgmmunity's octogenarians will be honored at 6:30p.m., and
contest winners will be announced at the .end of the day.
'Those interested in participating in any of the events, including the
craft show, art shay; and other contests, should contact Marcia Elliott,
who has led the coordination of the event, at 742-2233, or Mayor Jo
Ann Eads, at 742-3078. .
BICENTENNIAL SOUVENIRS - Mercia Elliott of the
Rutland Civic c.n., Commlttae, and Temmy ~ a
member of the coiilmlttae and a member of Rutland VIllage Council, arw pk:turedwlttl the t-ahlrt and hat dulgned
for the Rutland blcenlfnnlal commlttae. Featuring a apeclal blcentannlal logo, the heme will be avallabla for pur- .
ch . . . at Saturday'• celeb111Uon.

Jud.ge orders aluminum workers back to work

·Orientation for

be ane nding Meigs hi gh. School,
Tuesday. Aug. 24. 7 p.m . in the
sehoul cafe teria.

'99 Blazer® 4-Door

'99 Malibu®
.

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Middle
School orientat ion will be held from
6 to 7 p.m. T~csday at the school.
· ThC program i·s for all incomi ng
sixth graders and nC\v incom ing seve nth and e 1ghthg rade rs.
WEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAIN S - Eastern
Local School Board. 6:30 p.m ..
Eastern Eleme nt ary Sc hool ca fctori ·

. i

um.

POMEROY ~ Wildwood Garden Cl ub, I p.m .. home of Bony ·
"
Milhoan , Flatwoods Rd .

r

•Standard 4-wheel ABS
• Air conditioning
•Theft~deterrent system
•4-speed automatic
· tranSIIllSSIOn

•Standard 4-wheel ABS
•Standard Vorrec·· 4300 V 6
that puts out 190 hp and
250lbrft.oftorque
•Theft-deterrent system

Is the Fed finished raising 'rates or is _a third increase on the way?

•

POMEROY - The Behavioral
Health Care Unit of Veterans Memorial Hospi tal wtll hold an open house
Wednesday, 9 a.m. to II a.m. Tours
·
and door prizes.

s1,500 Cash Back*

BASHAN - Revival Wed ne sday through. Sunday at the Red
Brush Church of Chri st, Basha
Road. Guy Mall ot'y of Florida to be
the spea~er.

s2,000 ·C ash Back*

'· '

/

$IX INJURED- A helicopter fron Cincinnati Children's Hoipita! Medical Center takes off from a houaa In Germa[ltown
Tues~ay following . an expla.lon that Injured six when a
propane tank Ignited.
·

•

Alcoholics

Good Afternoon

Anonymou s. open .discuss1on meeting, 1 p.m . 'I:hursday, Sacred Heart
Ca'tholic Church, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.

Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections • 12 Pages

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta, beginntng meeting , 12 noon.
St. Paul Lutheran Church.

See Your Local Chevrolet" Dealer Today! ·
1-800-950-2438 or www.chevrolet.com

POMEROY - Caring and Sharing Support Group, I p.m .. Multi·
~urposc Senior Center. Rhonda Dai·
ley, guest speaker, Et hi cal Dile mm as
in Health Care.

Calendar

,,

No rnatter how you lo9k at it, you're in the money.

Band completes camp
Eastern High School's marching
band recently _completed march•ng
band camp at the Univers ity of Rio
Grande, algng with its new director,
Scad WoiiC ,
recent graduate of
Oh io University and former member
of the Ohio Un ivcrsiiy Marching
110.
The group spe nt the Week learn ing new perfonnam:c t e~.:hnique s and
drills. ending with a performance on
Friday for parents and friends ..

as· result of ·ace/den
·
.

GERMANrroWN (AP) -A leaky propane tank igni1ted' and caused a
house explosion that injured six people, authorities
Three children and three adults were hospitalized for burns and broken
bones following the blasl, whi.c h occurred about 5 p.m. Tuesday, accord·
ing to Fire ChiefGary Nesslage.
.
·
CHARLESTON, W.VJl, (AP) . A day-long accept.edthecompanyUsargumentthal"diminu· damage, valued at more than $10,000.
"The children were pretty sev~rely banged 'up," Nesslage said. "You
unofficial strike at Century Aluminum Inc. will tion or oom.plete loss" of business would result if
.Marco Trbovich ,' spokesman for the union in
could s~e where they had been thrown clear ·of the house."
cost the company as m~ch as . $6 million, a the strike continues.
Pittsburgh, said the nati o nal office sent a
The explosion sen1 debris up to 25 yards away.
· spokesman says.
, Posti .said' the company plans today to speak telegram to the local ordering members to return
Authorities didn 'I know the source of the leak.
The
losses
stem
from
one
day
of
missed
pro·
with
local USWA representatives about how to to work ·to avoid contempt o f court charges and
1
Housing developer Kurt Reason's family recently moved into the home
duciion, and restart costs after one production handle disciplinary actipns .
·a plant shutdown.
in this area about 10 miles southwe~'of Dayton. Reason wasn't home at · line had to be shut down, Alfred Posti, a
"We will begin discussions on lhat tomorrow,
Local union officials ' were not immediatel y
the time o( the explosion.
.
.
spokesman for the company in Monterey, Calif., because it was clearly an illegal strike,'' he said. available for comment.
·
His wife, Melissa, 35, had called plumbers Darrell Neal and Timothy
said Thursday.
"They not only· violated a labor agree, but
A judge could issue con tempt of court
Blashock to the home because she smelled gas, television station WKEF
"We will lose 25 percent of our metal produc· . they violated a judge's order to return to work." charges if a union refuses to ,follow a back-to ..
in' Dayton reported.
.
·
tion until we can bring it back up, again," Posti
The wildcat strike, a walkout in violation of a work order.
,
Reason 's condition w.S upgraded from critical to serious today at .. said.
'
labor-management contract, began Monday
Employees received a $1.30:an-hour raise
Miami Valley Hospital in Dayton. Neal, 43, and Blashock, 49, remained
, The workers returned to work Thursday night .after Eric Rhodes said he was fired · for over four years in a new·contract reached in. July.
in serious condition.
evening after the company threatened a shut· refusing to ,work where molten aluminum was
The contract also increases accident and sick·
The children were taken to Children's Hospilal'in Cincinnati. Joshua
down if the more than 1,600 wildcat strikers leaki~g from a damaged pot.
ness benefits and includes a 25 percent increase
Scott SlaiJim, 7, and Kenton Reason, 5, were in critical conditi90 Tuesday
failed to report to the plant in Ravenswood .
Rhodes said he refused to help' with a repair in pensions.
night and Kenton's sister, Katie, 7; was in fair condition, a hospjtal .official
A federal judge also ha~ ordered strikers to as aluminum spewed onto the floor. He said he
About 400 unio n members donned masks and
said.
return to work, and United Steelworkers of was fired after the incident two weeks ago., but face paint and set up an unauthorized strike
.America union representatives a~d company was reinstat~d after filing a grievance.
Monday night. State troopers were called in
officials met to end the unauthorized walkout.
He was fired again recently.
·early Tuesday after rock-throwing incidents that
U.S. District Judge Charles H. Haden II
Posti said management blames Rhodes for the shattered 24 car windshields.
·

new st udent s and fres hmen who wi ll

THURSDAY
POM EROY

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Rutland bicentennial agenda finalized

POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden Club, 8 p.m , home of Karen
Werry.

POM EROY -

-Page4

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50. Numb er 55

about Rutland Police Officer Floyd l;lickman's parking
SenUnel News Staff
area in question and is opposed to timbering on the site. o~t of sight when patrolling for speeding in the village .
"I've had too many places in my, lifetime timbered,
Bir~hfield said that he felt it was unfai r to motorists
Rutland Village Council heard from a local man
opposed to timbering on village property on Tuesday and those memories have been lost' forever," Stewart ,for the officer to remain out of sight without parking
evening. '
said.
lights, and said that the village had earned a reputati on
Although the council lacked a quorum to conduct
Stel"art said that he had oollected 120 s.ignatures on . for being a "speed trap."
business, 'members .in attendance decided to hear from the peiitions, although some are from residenJS outside
Dewhurst said that Hickman is expected to "raise
visitors present. Counciltl)an Jay Dewhurst ,cited a of the community, and asked that oouncil reject the pro- bis salary" in fines, and Fetty said that, in his opinion,
recent attorney general's opinion Cl)nceming the Sun· posal to cut timber.on the land.
speeders are guilty whether they can see the patrol car
shine Law, and said that council members could assemDewhurst ·explatned that the proposal was just that or not.
ble ·without a quorum, as long as no official action is - a proposal from a timber company- and that coun·
However, Dewhurst said that Hickman would be
taken .
cil had taken no action to date.
asked to be more visible when patrolling for speeders,
Bob Stewart presented council members with peti·
He also said that council would likely hold public Fetty and other council members commended Hi ck·
lions which had bee11 placed in Rutland bliSinesses, in meetings on the proposal before any action is taken..
man for his overall performance in the job, with Fetty
opposition to timbering behind the village's sewage .
Co~ncil had briefly discussed the financial benefits saying that Hickman was "one ofthe best" officers that
treatment pl ant.
of selhng limber from the land, but Ste-Wart noted last the village has had.
A timber cotl)pany approached council about har· night that any financial benefits would be "short lived."
Council members also had a brief discussion of
vesting timber on the site several months ago, but coun·
Council member Dick Fetty said that no serious con· problems with yo~.ng bicyclers in the village, and discil has taken no a~tion on the proposal.
sideration hl!d been given to the proposal, and Council· cussed . the possibility of holding a bicycle safety
Stewart, a Rutland native who no longer lives in the man Martin Andrew, who presided at the assembly in course for children in an attempt to preve nt bicycle
. village, said thai hC was opposed to timbering the land the absence of Mayor JoAnn Eads, said that he fell the accidents.
.because of the aesthetic value, historic value and senti-, issue had been "blown oul of proportion,"'in that coun·
Present, jn addition to [)ewhurst Fetty and Andrew,
mental value of the trees on the property. ·
cil has held no public discussion on the proposal. '
were Council member Tammy searles, an'd Clerk Rose·
He said that he is. not opposed to timbering in theo·
· Rulland resident James Birchfield spoke to oouncil mary Snowden-Eskew.

an nounce meet -

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Local School District Kindergarten
Orientation Meeting at Eastern Eleme n.tary School Tuesday, 9 a.m . Par·
ents who have not preregi stered
their child for kindergarten should
plan to atiend the meeting .

Atlanta humbles
Cincinnati again with
6-4 victory

Hometown Newspaper

Meigs County.&amp;

ay BRIAN J . REED

ings and special ev.;nts .. The eate n·
dar is· not designed tb promote sa les
nr fund raisers of any type. ltcms arc
printed only &lt;is spal'C pcnmls and

Maso.n degree.

Oakland downs the lndiaAs 11-1 0, Page_4
Ann takes on family problems, Page 7
Time out for tips, Page 7

Rutland Council hears timbering opposition; Lack of quorum prevents actions· Mason teenager dte·

The Community Cale nd ar is pub·
lisheq as a free se rvice to non-profit
to·

Sports

Auguet 25, · -

Today: Showers
High: 80s; Low: 80s

Community
Calendar .
groups wishing

Weather

Tuesday, August 24, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

The Ly\lia Council of Bradford
Church of Christ met recently at
the c h~rch,_ hosted by Cherie
Williamson and ·Tracie Davidson.
Devotions titled "God Knows
My Kitchen Best ," were taken
from the book "Ungrateful Gift,"
and read by Cherie Williamson .
Tracie Davidson had a reading ,
"Only One," from "Coffee Time
with God."
'
Officer reports were given.
A report on Vacation 'Bible
School was given. The VBS was
very successful. A report was also
given on the family picnic at Lake
Alma.

Wednesday

I

Lotteries

a

'

OHIO
Pick 3: 0-8-9; Pick 4: 5- 7-9-0'
BuckeyeS : 4-6-13-16-21

W,YA.
Daily 3: 4-4-2; DaUy 4: 1-1-8-2
C !9W0hiu V1 llry l'ub1i.\ hingCo.

"Gash Back offers available only to residents of FL. GA, NC , SG and select counties in AL, IL, IN, KY. MS , OH,. TN, VA and WV. For more details caii1-B00·951l-CHEV. You must lake retail delivery from ~articipating
dealer stock by 9/30/99. Not available with special !&gt;MAC finance or t:ase offerr The Chevrolet and Maltbu .Emblems .are regtstered trademarks of the GM Corp. IC&gt;199~ GM Corp. Buckle up, Amenca ! II
.

•

·Slaying victim.f!1ay hav•
btitm beaten for testimony
CANTON (AP) -. A man who
feared retribution for testifying at a
gang member 's . assault trial has
been shot to death.
Dallas T. Green. 19, of Canton,
was shot three times early Tuesday
while standing outside a car. There
were no arrests.
Green, w~o was beaten 'Nov, 29,
testified against Victwan Demell
Dorsey last week at his
trial.
.
Dorsey, 25, was convicted and
was sentenced to six months in jail
for the attack, which occurred after
Green ~as· spotted with Dorsey's
ex-girlfriend.
Police Capt. James W. Myers
said detectives are investigating all
angles, including talking to gang
members of a Canton gang. Dorsey
has been in jail since June 6, when
his bond was revoked.

(

Allen Sinai, chief economist at Prim ark Glob- · · On Tuesday, the 'Fed increased its target for
By JEANNINE AVERSA
a1 Economics, also thinks there could be a third the federal funds rate. the interest that banks
Associated Pre11 Writer
charge on ove rn ight loans, by a quarter point to
WASHINGTON (AP) - By nudging up rate hike, possibly in November.
"We think the economy will continue to do 5 .25 percent. l;he r.ate had been bposted - by
interest rates for the second time this summer,
the _Federal Reserve signaled that it may stay on quite well and high er inflation on average will the same amount - for the firSt time in two
• ·
.
the sidelines if there are no new signs of infla- appear and push the Fed into one IJlore dose of years on June 30.
That triggehd a quick quarter-point increase
lightening this year, but it is a close call," said
tion or an overheated economy.
to 8.25 percent by commercial banks in their
But some ecoqomists wonder: Is the Fed Sinai.
High on Fed chairman Alan Greenspan's prime lending rate, the benchmark rate for mil·
through with just two?
The answer lies with what new economic data radar screen is whether the tight labor market lions of consumer and bu si ness loans, ranging
, .fro m home equit y loans 10 some credit card debt.
tells central bankers about the pace of economic could eventually spark inflation.
The Fed's goal is to raise rates that it directly
With the nation 's unemployment rate down to
growth, which has been brisk, and the prospects
its lowest level in three decades, employers for · controls and thus influence those set by financial
for inflation down the road, economists said.
On Tuesday, the Fed boosted two rates 1\y a aging for workers are wooing them with higher markets, such as 30·year mortgage rates, to slow
quarter point, saying its actibns ' 'should wages and benefits. While that's gQOd news for economic activity in such interest-sensitive sec·
markedly diminish the ·risk of rising inflation workers, it•s worrisome lo the Fed because those tors of .the economy as auto and home sales.
At the same time, the Fed raised its largely
increased costs could drive ltp prices.
going fot;ward. " .
Meanwhile, even though the economy has symbolic disco un t rate, the interest it charges on .
Investors hoped that language means the Fed
·will stop with just two rate hikes . Some analysts , slowed in recent months, it is still expected to direct loans to banks, by a quarter point to 4 .75
percenl.
said it reduces the odds of another increase this grow almost 4. percent this year, a robust pace.
The central bank left its policy directive,
Some analysts suggested that central bankers
fall . But others believe a third rate hike could be
in 'the offing this year, possibly as early as the will wait 10 see whether the economy slows on intended to sign al future moves, at neutral.
Analysts said this doesn ' t mean much
Fed's next meeting on Oct. 5, if signs of inflation its Own. '
'I
think
they
'will
move
to
the
sidelines"
and
because the Fed had also moved to a neutral
crop up . .
"The Fed could easily pull the trigger again," evaluate whether their actions are sufficient to stance after its last meeting on June 30, a change
said Paul Kasriel, chief economist for Northern cool off growth, said David Jones, chie f econo· that did not stop the central bank from rtiising
·
·
rates this time around .
Trust Co.
mist at Aubrey G. Lanston &amp; Co.

AEP, Buckeye Power reach services agreement
Officials of AmeriCan Electric Power and
Buckeye Power, Inc., have reached agreement on
a long term arrangement for power and energy

AEP wili assume responsibility for the design,
construction, oP,Cration and maintenance. of ihe
facility. Other services will be provided under an
services_
arrangement similar to the joint arrangement that
Under the arrangement, AEP will develop a ~ AEP and Buckeye established more than 30 years
510 megawatt peaking power plant in Ohio on ago in connection with the operation of the Cardi·
behalf of Buckeye Power. The plant will consist nal Power Plant located near Brilliant, Ohio. Carof three natural gas fired combustion turbines . dirial Pl.ant was the fi~l major generating station
Officials of both . organizations. are working ' in the United States to be jointly owned by an
together to complete details of the agreements. ,investor owned utility and member ·owned rural
Completion of the project is scheduled for 2002.
electric cooperatives.
•

•

'

'

f

(''

f

•

"We're extremely pleased to have completed
this arrangement with Buckeye Power," said E.
Linn Draper Jr., ch~i rman, president and 1 chi ef
exec~tive officer of AEP. "It will provide Buckeye with a reliable source of electricity over the
long term."
"The project will help us e nsure that we can
meet the long term e lectri city needs of Ohio's 25
electric cooperatives and their customers," said
Richard K .. Byrne, president and chief executive
officer of Buckeye Power.
.

.

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