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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Cincinnati
shuts out
Dodgers

Super Lotto:
1344·17-25-26-34
Kicker:
B-9-2-()-3-4
Pick 3:
9-9-3
Pick 4:

Sports on Page 4

3-4-9-8

Mostly clear tonight
until midnight, then fog
develbJ!Ing. Lows near 60.
Tuesday, sunny. Highs
near 80. ·

•

en tine
~.41,NO. M

I

2 Sections, 12 Pages, 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 18, 1997

c1 1117•0hlo vaa~ey Publt~ttano campany

---New to the fair-----. Recess dashes hopes

for deal in UPS strike

-

~

~--

..

By KEVIN GALVIN
Associated Pres• Writer
WASHINGTON - The Team·
sters and United Parcel Service
recessed intensive talks until later
today. apparently contradicting Pres·
ident Clinton's prediction of an immi·
nentdealtoend the union's IS-day·
old strike.
Labor Secretary 'Alexis Herman
canceled a planned trip to California
60 she could continue to monitor the
negotiations.
.
But there was a sense that momentum had been lost when, at midnight
Sunday. Herman and all the parties
left the hotel where federal mediators
had guided 76 hours of talks over
four days.
Hours after he urged them to .
"redouble their efforts" to reach a
deal, Clinton, who was briefed on the
status of the talks, predicted an agreement was near .as he arrived Sunday
night for a vacation on . Martha"s
Vineyard. off the Massachusetts
.coast.
"It's my gut feeling they"ll settle."'
the president told reporters. He held
out his thumb and forefinger and said,
"lbey"re that close.lt"s a good deal.
It will set a precedent for unions."'
But Matt Witt. Teamsters com·
munication director. said late Sunday
that Clinton 's optimism was unwar·
ranted.
"It's unclear whethetreal progress
:•

will be made," Witt said before the
sides broke for the nigh1.
A Labor Department spokesman
said the talks rccessed'about midnight
and were se1to resume at noon EDT
today. Herman canceled plans to
address the. American Federation of
Government Employees convention
in Anaheim. Calif.
It was unclear whether in his comments Clinton was being optimistic
or was trying to prod negoti ators to
end the nation's largest strike in more
than two decades.
But there were.signs ear\ic·r in the
day that a deal was nat a sure thin'g.
Teamsters President Ron Carey
look a break from the talks for a teleconference to give union locals a status reporl.
He credited Teamsters pickets
with forcing the company to bcgi~
serious bargaining. but added that
many issues were under discussion
and no agreements had been reached,
according to union officials who ·
heard (he call .
Carey also urged them to continue plans for strike rallies in 30 cities
on Thursday.
The walkout has revolved aro~nd
the union 's demand that more part·
time workers be given full-time jobs
and the company's desire to have it s
own pension plan with the Teamsters,
replacing the current multiemployer
one .

'

A company spokeswoman, Kristen Petrella, said "UPS" position is
that since talks arc ongoing, that's a
good sign ," but another company
official said " no real progress" had
been rc?oncd .
Yet leaders from both sides agr.cd
Sunday thatthcrc had been more bar-·
gain ing over the weekend than there
had been in previous face-to-face ses-

sions.

·

"There has been movef!lent:"
Carey. said on NB C's "Meet the
Press'' UPS Chairman.James Kelly
said on the same show, " The fact that
we're continuing to talk is encouraging."

'"We were at a make-or-break
poi nt last week, perhaps we arc at
another one right now," Kell y said on
CNN 's " Late Edition ."
The strike by 185.000 workers has
greatly inconvenienced small businesses that usc UPS li' . their own
shipping departments .
On a normal business day, the
company delivers 12 million letters
and packages. The strike is costing
UPS up to $300 million weekly. and
the Teamsters owe picketers $10
million in strike benefits.
The government said it lacked the
legal authority to intervene and end
the .strike , and the -Clinton ildministrati ~ n was relyi ng on Hcnnan to
keep the pani cs talk ing. Two earlier
rounds of mediation ended inconciiJsivcly.

New licensing 'procedure wins
support from state's educators
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio
teachers are supportive of pilot pro·
grams that are preparing them for a
statewide licensing to replace the current system of certification. a state
official said.
The state has paid $7.5 million for
the programs since 1994. Another
$2.4 million is included in the department"s budget for '1998, along with
$4 million in federal money for
1997-98 for 18 additionaltrial pro·
jects around the state.
The Legislature approved licensing last November. It will replace the
current certification system for teachers by 2002. . .
''I'm not getting complaints.""
said C. Mark Ealy. an Ohio Depart·
ment of Education official in charge
of coordinating the programs.
"Everyone is saying this is the greatest thing we' vc ever seen. It's going
to raise the bar.
"As· one principal put it. it"s
something that ha.&lt; given them a com. mon page in the hymnal that they can

,.

all sing from ."
The new rules require five-year
renewable licenses, and teacher.; must
take courses to retain them . A teacher

Ms. Silverstein · said the training
will hring. consistency to teaching.
One of the new teachers she has
· ah~crYcd

is Carrie Ross. a

s~.: icncc

Last year, a~othc r science teacher

years.

The new system will require firstyear teachers to pass pencil-andpaper tests similar to those currently
given, then pass tests of classroom
proficiency lhat will he administered
through observati on hy specially
trained peers.
To prcparc.tcachers and uniVersity educators arc practicing watching
and listening to one another and talking about' tcachmg.
One of those training to he a classroom obsCrvcr is Linda Silverstein. a
sixth-grade science teacher in the
Columbus suburb of Hilliard. She
said last Week that the training ha.•
mnde her pay attention to the skills
needed to work with sludcnts of varying abilities.

at the same sc hool served as her mchtor and offered suggestions for
improvement. includin'g u few tips on ·
soliciting classroom participation
from rcticcfll students..
"Som etimes when I was quostinning students . if they didn 't know
the answer I'd say. 'Why docsn"t
somebody help him ou.t '!' " Ms.
Russ sai d.
.
Ms. Ross said the mentor helped
her learn dincrcnt ways 10 get the students to answer the questions wilhout
,losing face.
&amp;ly s ai~ .,many details of the
Iicon sing · process still must he
worked nul.
,
·
Among the i ssue.~. cJctcnnining
what the score should he In pass the
ohscrvation test ·

Reserve champion
da~ =~h':d::e~:~h~h~e~~!,~ ~~~~==~:r:fj~~~!~~YM:!~~ ~~u~f~~=~::~dF~~~:

Gallipolis, left. 1'ollowing the competition; he presented plaques to the winners. Taking grand
· champion with a Maine Angus cross was the Lucas Family of Amesville, shown here by Jodie
Day. Winner of reserve champion was Robbie Calaway of Wendy Hills, Cheater area, with a Maine
Anjoy shorthorn. Taking third In the show was the Joe Lucas Family of Amesville, with Mike
Hansley of Guysville placing fourth, and the Raccoon Creek Club Calves of Gallipolis, fifth;

Storms prompt flooding in area counties
By The Associated Preas
Some Ohio residents battled rising
water levels as a second straight day
of severe weaihcr downed power
lines, damaged buildings and flood·
ed out roads.
Flash flooding created problems
late Sunday in areas of Athens, Hock·
ing. Morgan. Perry and Washington
counties in eastern and southeastern
Ohio.
Authorities reported flooding in
low-lying areas forced the closing of
several ronds. including some state
routes. Several remained.closed this
morning in Hocking and Perry counties.
In Perry County, high water force,d
a few people from their homes in the
villages of Coming and Moxahala,
Chief Deputy Randy Wilson said
today. He said the water wa~ three

feet deep in some spots.
Deputy Dcrriok Key lor said New
Lc&lt;ington and Maxville also had
some flooding problems. and se veral homes had water damage .

had not confirmed the sightings.
High winds damaged at least orie
home and a · bam in southern
Delaware County near Columbus. In
Licking Couniy, gusts damaged · at
least two hoJTleS and blew off a barn
roof.

The Hocking County sheriff's
department said a few residents of
The storms also brought heavy
Greendale and Murray · City were
evacuated, along with some in outly- rain, strong winds and hail 10 south·
em Ohio. The Hamilton County shering areas.
iff"s office receiYed reports of street
flooding
an.d electrical wires and trees
In the village of Tarlton. which
down
.
.straddles the Fairfield-Pickaway
Kathy Meinke. a spokeswoman
county line in central Ohio, high
for
Cinergy Corp .• said between
water flooded some basements and
25.000
and 30,000 electricity cuslow-lying areas, the Fairfield Countomers
in Hamilton and Clermont
ty sheriff"s office reported.
counties
were without power during
There were at least four funnel
the
peak
of the storms. By late Suncloud sightings in northwestern and
day,
7,000
customers remained withcentral Ohio, the National Weather
Service said. Authorities. 'however. out power.

••

J
'

'

·

who enters the Work force in 2002 teacher at Thoma.' Worthington High
will have to earn a master's degree by School in Worthington , another
the time he or she has taught for I 0 . Columhus suhurh.

DAIRY DIALOGUE - As a general rule, the
mora familiar the animel is with ill handler, the
batter It will behave in the show ring - some.times. Above, 11-.year-year-old Alyssa Holler

seems to be conversing with her Heifetr IH!fo1re
last week's Meigs County Junior Fair Dairy
Show.

�•

•
....

Commentary
i·
'I

Contractors write the

The Daily Sentinel
'Lsturr.sMa in 1948
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992-2156 • Fu 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

GaM111IM.,ager
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:·congress struggles
:with D. c. ·problems

•·.

.I

,I

•
I

lland.y, Augutt 18, 1997

By WALTER R. MEARS
' AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Congress always has had trouble deahng with its
home base in America's only constitutional city Now it is overriding elected government in the District of Columbia. and appointed managers will be
in charge of major operations, all in the name of refonn.
It is needed, but somewhat embarrassmg, effectively overruhng voters in
the scat of democratic government.
Republicans say they had to do it, to clean up the mess.
President Clinton said he wanted to aid the city, and Congress insisted on
imposing new management as a condition of the financial rescue, at least
. $928 million over five years.
Clinton says he wants the new system to mesh with home rule, but it is
difficult to see how, since somebody has to be in command, and Congress
• has decided it won' t be Mayor Marion Barry or his successor, for at least
' four years.
Actually. home rule always had been constrained, since Congress never
• yielded its power to review and force changes in local legislation.
And the path to appointed control of major city agencies really began two
years ago, in the law that created a financt~l control board to oversee operations. That board ts taking direct control o(them under the new law.
The latest step is the most drasuc since Congress granted the District self
; rule, within limtts, more than 20 years ago.The place is a financial mess, services have suffered, and Barry was an easy target, given the cronyism and
: bloated bureaucracy of his tenure.
Four agencies were tn coun-ordered receivership, and the control board
already had taken charge of schools and police.
"If you want home rule, rule," Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District del• egate to Congress, said at first, when she called !he law a wm for. the dtstrtcl.
She later reversed (losition in the political outcry against the takeover of
power.
She has smce called the law shameful, likening it to the actions of totalitarian regimes.
&lt;;:linton paid his respects to home rule, then stressed the financial package that went with the transfer of power. It includes federal assumption of
$4.9 btllion m pens10n llabtllttes, and federal payment for coutts, prisons.
and a higher share of Medicare costs. all-expenses that elsewhere arc patd by
states. not cities.
There: also arc tax breaks to cncourog.c invcstoni in lower income sections
of the ctty.
'
"Something spec tal for the District of Columbia... House Speaker Newt
: Gingrich called it all. He said no bill ever passed by Congress "provtdcs
• more opportunity for the rebtrth and the renewal of the District. "
_ It was too spectal for home rule advocates "Democracy tn Washington
wus raped.'' satd Barry. mayor in two installments. with a six-month pil
tcnn for r.:rack cocaine usc in between.
- - Gingm.:h sa1d nc1thcr Barry nor the c1ty council wa.s duing the joh needed.
·
He said that's why " we arc temporartly turning a great deal ol power over
to arrointcd •111icials in order to clean ur the mess which the city government allowed to evolve ...
Barry is trying to mohtlizc 1t political and ctvtl rtghts backlash. hut
beyond his rhetoric nnp local protests. that seems unlikely.
Thts one is really instde the beltway. a so-what ' ituation elsewhere.
The symbolism ts at least awkward. the Dtstnct ol Columbia IS a carital
city with 543.000 residents , two-thirds of them black. Home rule. and at one
point statehood. have been liberal Democratic causes.
Congress did approve a constitutional ~mcndmcnt for statehood in I978.
hut it died unrattlicd seven years later. The DIStnct has no votes tn the Congress that oversees it. under a constttultonal clause maktng the scat of
, na11onal government suhJcct to congrcsstonal power " to cxcrc•sc cxciU!iiVC
legislation tn al\ cases whatsoever."
A constitutional amendment granted District ctltzcns the rtght to vote for
president in I961.
The ctty was run by a board of commts~toncrs . under the tight rem ol
Congress and us Distnct of Columbta commtttccs. unttl a home rule charter
was passed in 1973 and an elected mayor took office in 1975.
, .... EDITOR'S NOTE -Walter R. Mears, vi&lt;e president and columnist
for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and national pol.. Uics for 010!"' than 30 years.
.

WASHINGTON -- A bold
attempt to refonn the way contracts
are issued at the Department of
Energy has apparently been shortcircuited by the contractors themselves.
Earlier thi s month we described
the mess that ensued when the DOt
tried .its hand at "fixed-price" contracting. This new policy was supposed to he the wave of the future,
as contractors were only to be paid if
the job was done correctly and on
ttme. But.the policy hit a snag in
Idaho, where the cleanup of a contaminated nuclear waste pit has cost
the government at least $56 million - without a single shovel of din
being moved. The cleanup was originally slated to cost $179 million,
but !he contractors now believe the
cost could be as high as $600 million
before the work is complete -- if it

bonuses were on the table. In a gross
undenratemen~ !he report's aulhors
found that !he contractor, Westinghouse Hanford Co., did not "always
make the best use of incentive dollars."
According to the report, Westinghou se received $225 ,000 for
installing a ventilation fan, when the
project only cost the company

ever js ,

$24,766. The company also was
paid $410,870 for projects that
weren't finished by the company's
self-imposed deadlines. Westinghouse offictals wen: also happy to
accept a $100,000 bonus for
installing a software program !hat
was already up and runntng before
the incenti~e deal was cut.
According to the repott, Westing-

We have now learned that yet
another contracting "innovation" at
the DOE has failed to live up to its
lofty promtse The new Perfonnance
Based Incentives program is riddled
with loopholes and presents an invitation for abuse.
The PBI system was devised with
good intentions, after·DOE officials
grew tired of contractors who constantly overcharged the government.
Government audits have found that
contractors often submit expenses
that aren't legitimate. Deadlines routmely go unmet, and costs often soar
far above original projections. Yet
the government keeps paying the
bills.
·
PB!s were supposed to change
that by offering tncenuve bonuses
for work completed on ttme or
ahead of schedule, while docking
contractors who fell behind or failed
to complete their work.
Great tdea, e~cept the DOE
allowed the contractors themselves
to write the rule -- and therefore
decide for themselves what kind of
bonuses they deserved .
Our assoctate Kathryn Wallace
has revtewed an internal DOE repott
examining a pilot program at the
DOE'~ Hanford Site in soulheastern
Washington state. There, 34 projects
were being conducted using the POI
melhod and $14 million in incentive

Moller and Anderson

rul~s

for the DOE

house officials set up several "easi- PB!s may be bad business: "A conly achieved" objectives that "repre- tractor worth his salt doesn't need
sented Jinle challenge to the contnle- incentives," he told us. "(Contractor" but carried a steep. price tag for tors) set the bar knowing full well
taxpayers.
they can go under."
The repott's authors also found
Similar complaints can be heard
that $910,870 was improperly paid frnm Capitol Hill. where the chairto !he company, and that $950,000 man of the House Commerce Comwas due the government for penal- mittee, Rep. Tom Bliley, R-Va.,
ties and incomplete work. In all, !he wan_ts to know why PBis were
repon alleges that Westinghouse established "without any specific
owes the government at least $3 mil- written policies or procedures." He
lion in misplaced incentives
has written letters to Energy SecreOne might think that the top brass tary Frederico Pena requesting
at the DOE would be outraged by copies of all DOE materials related
these abuses and eager to punish the to the program.
miscreants. Not quite. Energy
All the new contracting proceDepattment officials acknowledge dures in the world won' t make a bit
that mistakes were made, and say of difference. Fine says, unless the
they' re revtewmg other PBI projects depattment itself gets more mvolved
to make sure the pattern doesn't con- in overseeing lis contractors. "The
tinue. But they stand by !he program real problem at DOE." he says, '·is
nonetheless, and say that the new that the contractors run the show and
process has saved the government have for years. PBI\; are just another
nearly $6 million -- or twice the way of stealing money faster and
amount that's been questioned by more legally."
auditors
Westtnghousc officials dtd not
The DOE plans to reclaim return our calls for comment. Tl)c
$410,870 from Westinghouse. but it · company is no longer working on
has not done so yet.
the projects mentioned in the report.
A fonner inspector general at the
Jack Andenon and Jm Moller
DOE, H.R. Fine, gave us a simple are . writers for United Feature
explanation for why the new-wave Syndicate, Inc.

MORE eAD
NREWS, SIR...
t '"'r
PA EPt.ACEMENT

SIU~W:J
~

Burning newspapers at Cornell University
By Nat Hentoff
.
.
Several years ago. an eptdemtc of
steahng and somettmes bumtpg college newspapers look place at a
number of college ca!'lpuses. At
Penn State. two femtntsts were
charged wtth that fonn of rebuttal.
Both h~d been ~ecently graduated
majors m JOurnahsm.
.
A wtdcly pubhctzed thelt of the
Ftrst Amendment nghts of a newsraper -- and tts readers -- was the
co~fi scauon by black students at the
Un1vcrs1ty of Pcnnsylvama of
14.000 coptcs of the Datly Pennsylva?tan .. The then-preSident of the
untvcrsny. Sheldon Hackney. dtd
not take any actmn agatnst the
enraged students
It w~s an cq~al contlict -- Hackney s:ud astoniS~tngly -- between
dtvers.ny on campus _and the news~
parers open ex~rcsston Indeed, the
only person puntshcd wa.&lt; a untvcrslly museum officer who had trocd to
stop a group of students. hands full
of stolen papers, frum running away.
Hts ?,fficml offense was "ovcrrcacuon.
.
Thts snnng. an angry ~~nd of st.udents, led by:blacks. avatlcd themselves of cortes of the conservative
Cornell Review an,d burned about
200 of them What.had tnfurtatcd the
students was !I parody: a dcscrirtion.
tn ebomcs language. of course offertngs for the Afncana Studies and

Resource Center.
For example. "Ractsm m Amencan Society " begms: "Da while man
be evil and he tryin' to keep da
brothennan down. We 's got Sharpton and Farrakhan, so who da man
now. white boyT'
Obv10usJy this parody wa.&lt;
meant to offend,
and it certainly
succeeded. But as
Vtrgonia Federal
Districl · Judge
Claud Hilton had
said on rultng on a
fraternity skit at
Hentoff
George Mason
University thm
struck black students there a.s ractst:
"The First Amendment docs no! rccognt7.C exceptions for higotry.
ractsm, and religious intolerance. or
tdcas or matters some may deem
trivial . vulgar. or profane."
As a rrivate university. Cornel Its
not bound by the First Amendment
But "' rrcsttgious a umversity. with
frec-cxpresSton scholars in ots law
school , fllt~ht have been expected to
tell the reve"tlcful students that the
. hest antidote to had spccch is more
speech -- not a match.
Eventually. Cornell President
Hunter Rawltngs ISsued a statement
deploring incivtllty on all sides But
he displayed parttcular contempt l(lf

the Cornell Review and its rarody.
He menttoncd nothing about penalozing those who had set the ncwspapers on fire. He dtd. tn rasStng ,
come down against "the illegal
blocking of public streets."
In rcaclton to the parody. some
200 Cornell students had storped
access to the tnterscctinn at Ea.&lt;t and
Untvcrsity Avenues I rom 4:30 p.m.
to 9 r.m
Said one organizer during the
rally: "Black and Latino students
who arc not here w1th us arc cncnucs
of our people."
Also rrescnt. as rerortcd by the
Syracuse Pnst-Standard. w;ts Ying
Ma. a hoard member and former
rrcsidcnt of the Cornell Review
Trying to address the protesters. she
was phystcally prevented, and a haskct of the burning Cornell Rcvoews
wa.&lt; tossed in her face. Her silencing
at the rally appeared to he part of the
rrotcsters' convtcllon that the other
side had no right to speak.
Fnr annthcr perspective. I called
John Ford. the ·dca~ of students.
Ford hcgan hy ""ying he had no cvidcncc that any copy ol the Cornell
Rcvtcw had been burned. But I told
him I had rhotographs of the newspapers hcing burned in a trash can at
the rally. I also had eyewllncss
rcrons
The suhJCCt was changed .. Dean
Ford kert rcpcating. like a mantm.

that Cor~cll beltcvcs tn "freedom
with responsibility. freedom within
limits.'' I asked him to define both
"freedom" and "limtts." Where did
stealing and hurmng ncwsrapers fit
in ·~ Were those actions protected at
Cornell'! He changed the subject
agaon.
In a Jetter to the Cornell Daily
Sun, the mainstream student paper.
-organizers nl the protest agamst the.
Cornell Revtcw declared: "We woll
nnt apolo~i'e li&gt;ranything we dod ...
II uur voii.:C:-i amJ opinions were val· .
ucd on thts campus. our actions
would not have heen n.'qutred "
They missed the )'l&lt;&gt;int. Cornell •.
rather than attending their capacities
for intellectual independenc~ and
due rrnccss -- IS indulging them m
tts hclicf that they arc not ur to the
challenges nfheing fully resJKmsiblc
citi,cns of the university. The
admonistrallon proudly constdcrs
itself racially enlightened, hut would
11 have treated white students ..
committin~ arson and blockong the
streets-- the same way'! These ahandoned students ought to get a tuition
refund because they have received a
dtmtniShcd , patrontzing cducatton at
Cornell
Nat Hc11toff is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the
Bill of Ri~ht&lt;.

.

Toda-y in history Go ahead, ask the dogs of the media
By The Associated Press

•

Monday, August 18, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

OHIO Weather
1\Jeadly, Aug. 19

II

I

Plge2

Today is Monday, Aug. I8. the 230th day of 1997. There arc 135 days left
in the year.
Today 's Higlthght in History:
t ·
On Aug. 18, 1587. Virginia Dare became the first child of English parents
to l)c born on American soil . on what is now Roanoke Island. N.C.
On this date;
In J 227, the Mongol conqueror Gcnghis Khan died.
In 1846. U . ~ . forces Jed by Gen. Stephen W. Kearney captured Santa Fe.
N.M.
In 189-t. Co~ttress established the Bureau of lmmJgrattOn. .
In 191't. Pre1ident Wilson tss~~d hts Pr~clamatton ofNcutrahty. atmcd at
keeping l~e Unjted States out ol World War I.
fn 192&lt;). Te~nessee became the 36th state to ratify the 19th Amendment
'to tftc Constituuon. which guaranteed the nght of all Amcncan wome_n to
votq.
.
-In 193~. Prejjdent Roosevelt dedicated the Thousand Islands Bridge conneCfing lhf Un~pd States and Canada.
· In 19.51, AssjStant Secretary of Labor James E. Wilkms became the first
'btaqk to atlcnd j~mecting of a prc•idcnfs Cabinet as he sat in, for Labor Sec..-elary Ja"l"s P: , uchell.
' In 196~. Jam s Meredith became the first black to graduate from the Univel'llily ofMissi lsippi.
: In J98l, HurJicane Ahcia slammed into the Texas coast. leavmg 22 dead
and·causillg more than $1 billion damage.
.
.
In 199 1, Sovtet hard-liners launched a coup atmcd at topphng Prestdent
'Miilbail S. Gorhj,chev, who was vacationing tn the Crimea. (Gorbachev and
meiJlbers of his 'family remained effectively imprisoned until the coup collapsed three d&amp;)S later.)

By Joseph Spear
It's 'Ask the Cunnudgcon ttmc.
and what better way to begin a dogday cdttton than with q'u'erics about
the dogs ol the mcdta·•
Dear Cunnudgcon: I see that
CBS news anchor
Dan Rather ts
exp~rulmg
hts
reach .
He is now doing a
weekly newspaper
column. What ts it
Wtth swellheads
like Hillary ClinSPEAR
ton and Hurri cane Dan Rather that they thtnk'their
big names gtve them a divine nghi
to displace legitimate columnists?-Joe m Washmgton
Dear Joe: Perchance Dan needs
some pocket change. His contract
runs through 1999, and he only
makes $5.mtllion a year. I am thinktog of retallatmg by hinng out as a
news reader. I probably should
explain your reference to Hurrtcane
Oan ....!je-p&lt;ides himself on being a
"hard news " repotter, while his
competitors do "news lite." This
prompted a sarcasttc rejomder froni
NBC's Tom Brokaw: "Whenever

there IS the ftrst l&gt;int of a counterclock· isc symbol un a weather map
that a hurricane might hit land, Mr.
Hard News IS down there wrapped
around a lamppost. •·
Dear Curmudgeon. Is it my imagInation , or' is there a definite media

trend toward mushy news? -- Bill tn
Billings
Dear Boll tn Btll: As a reader of
the Washington Post, the raper that
brought down a prestdent, I kccr
track of the stuff tho cdtto..,; deem of
front -page tmportance.
Two samples: "GE1TING
AWAY FROM IT ALL. AT HOME:
People Are Takmg Backyard
Respites Over Faraway Tnps"; and
"RETURN OF THE COLD WAR
In Area Offices, Heated Differences
Rage Over At r Conditioner Scthngs "
Dear Curmudgeon Is there any
truth to the rumor that Sherry Rowlands, the erstwhile prostitute who
went publtc wtth naughty stones
about fonn cr prestdenual consultant
Dick Moms. may be getttng a talk
show? c. Rush in Radioland
Dear Rush: Ms. Rowlands hired a
hterary agent to help her find a publisher for a book about her advcn-

tures (working title: "If You Think
You Know Moms. You Don't Know
Dick''). Aller she has made her contribution to Ameroca 's literary heritage, she hopes to do stand-ur comedy. And, she says. ''I'd hkc to have
my own radio talk show." A romp to
riches story. wouldn't you say·•
. Dear, Curmudgeon: I' vc been
hcanng ahout somclhing new in
aulomatk teller mach1ncs called
"biometric idcnti fication.. that ts
allegedly even more foolproof than
lingcrpnnts.
Can you lell us what 11 is'! ·Porter tn Portland
Dear Port tn Port:.Whcn you oren
the bank account ol the future. you
will be rhotograrhcd and your lcatures digitized
Then when you visit the ATM. its
compute rs wtll idcntoly you by the
freckles on your nose and the furrows in your brow.
Dear Cunnudgcon. Is the rumor
true that federal employees spend a
lot of time rlaytng comrutcr games?
-- Sal,tn Salem
' Dear Sal in Sal : The most credible studocs estimate that the government has 2.5 millioh computers and
that 1.7 million of them arc lo~ded

wtth games. Sen. Lauch Faircloth,
R-N.C., who ha.s the arproximatc
crcdthihty of a horseshoe crah. says
cnmrutcr games arc costmg the taxpayers $1 0 billion a year in lost time.
Others say the damage is closer to
$40 mtlhon.
In any case, ll 's not a frgurc that's
fun. to think about while lilhng out
tax returns.
Worse: It would cost moi-c than
it's worth to purge the machines. I
have an idea:
Any hurcaucrat caught rlaytng a
computer game on the taxpayer's
ttmc IS summartly fired
Fmally. an item from the No ,
Comment file:
Shortly hclorc Pat Rohcrtstm
agreed to sell half ol his Family
Channel to Rupcrt "Marrtcd Woth
Chtldren " Murdoch, the Parson
made this comment on hts rclig1ous
talk show: "God has little ohhgatton
at the rrcscnt time to srarc Amcroca,
hecause we arc )'l&lt;tlluting the world
wtth our tclcvtston programs."
Joseph Spear Is a 'lyndkated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

AccuWeather• fo~t for

Charles R. Aeiker Sr.

e!Columbus!7s•

Charles Roy Aeiker Sr., 48, of Lincoln Heights in Pomeroy, died on Sunday, August 17, 1997 at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital m Parkersburg,
W.Va., following an extended illness.
Son of Delores M. Neville Aeiker of Pomeroy, and !he late Ketth G. Aeiker Sr.. he was a deckhand and a construction worker.
He attended !he Church of the Nazarene, was a softball league player, an
. umpire and a member of the NRA.
Surviving in addition to his mother are a daughter, Carla Jean Thmer of
Albany; two sons, Charles Roy Aeiker and Lester Gordon Aeiker, both of
Pomeroy; his grandmother, Leona Kay Roach of Pomeroy; lhree brolhers,
John Franklin Aeiker Sr. of Syracuse, Keilh Gordon Aeiker Jr. of Chester,
and Pat Aeiker pf Pomeroy; a-sister, Keitha Whitlatch ~f Chester; a special
friend, Faye Aeiker of Pomeroy; a granddaughter; and several nieces and
nephews.
He was also j!receded in dealh by a Stster.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in !he Ewing Funeral Home, wilh the
Rev. Sharon Hausman officiating. Burial will be in the Meigs Memory Gardens. Friends may call at !he funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.

I

W.VA.

A

DAIRY _MARKET FEEDER - Rachel Chapman won grand
champion In the dairy market Ieeder cla11 It the Melga County
Junior Fair Dairy Show. From left are Fair King and Queen Alban
SalHf and Krlatl Warner, Chapman and Dairy Princess KatherIne Beaumier.

Dorothy F. Roller

Cooler, less humid weather
predicted in region this week
By The Associated Pre11
Sktes are expected to clear m Ohto tonight, after several days of somettmes heavy ram.
·
· It wtll be cooler, with lows dropping into the upper 40s in east central
Ohio and into the lower 60s in the far south.
Dry and plell58nl conditions are expected Tuesday. Highs will be in the
lower 70s in the nottheast to the lower 80s in the south.
The record high temperature for this date at the Columbus wealher station was 96 in 1940. The record low was 48 set in 1962.
Sunset today will be at8.25 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at6:47 ~.m .
Weather forecast:
Tomght...Mostly clear until midnight, then areas of dense fog developing. Lows near 60. Calm wind.
.
Tuesday...Areas of dense fog until mtd-moming., then mostly sunny. Htghs
near 80.
Tuesday night. .. Mostly clear. Lows around 60.
E~tended forecut:
Wednesday... Moslly clear. Ht,hs in the lower 80s.
Thursday ... Pattly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstonns.
Lows in the mid 60s and highs in the lo.wer 80s.
· Fnday.. A chance of showers and thunderstonn~ during the day, otherwise
partly cloudy. Lows m the lower 60s and highs,in the upper 70s.

Dorothy F. Roller

Dorothy F. Roller, 93, long-t~e Middleport restdent and fonner businesswoman. died on Saturday, August 16, 1997 at Veterans Memorial HosPital in Pomeroy.
She was born on November 9, 1903 in Syracuse to the late Frank and
Anna_ Turley Holmes. She was a
graduate &lt;5f the Columbus Business
School, a charter member of the
Middleport Garden Club, and a
member of the Heath United
Methodist Church, and for many
years was active in community
affatrs.
After the death of her husband,
she continued the business of Roller
Pharmacy for several years.
She tS survtved by two daughters and a son-in-law, Nancy Cale:
and Martha and Richard Gress, all of
,
Moddlepon; two sons and daughters-inlaw. Richard and Loretta Roller of Belpre, and James and Ida Roller of Waldorf, Maryland; 10 grandchildren, Mtehael Gress, Patrick Gress, Marcia
Amngton. Megan Andrews, Mcllissa Conde, Cathy Jacks, James Roller.
John Roller, Lora Eddy and Captaon Bradley Roller; 19 great-grandchildren ;
and three meccs. Kathryn Crow, Paul me Gebler and Margaret Quisenberry.
Besides her parents. she was preceded in death by her husband, M.C.
(Ma~) Roller; stx"brothers and ststers, and a son-m-law, Kenneth Cale.
Services wtll be held at II a.m. on Tuesday, August 19. 1997, at the Heath
Umtcd McthodlSt Church. Middleport Officiating at the service will be the
Rev. Vcrnagayc Sullivan. the Rev. Robert Robinson, and Richard Nease.
Burial wtll be tn the Rivcrvocw Cemetery, Mtddleport. Friends may call on
Monday, August 18, 1997 at the Mtddlcport Chapel of the Ftsher Funeral
Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

Dorolhy F. Roller, 93, of Middleport, dted Saturday,Aug. 16, 1997 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
· Born November9, 1903 in Syracuse, she was the daughter of the late Frank
and Anna Turley Holmes.
She was a graduate of the Columbus Business School, a chatter member
of !he Middleport Garden Club, and a member of !he Healh United Melhodist
Church, and for many years was aclive in community affairs.
Following the death of her husband, M.C. "Max" Roller, she continued
the business of Roller Pharmacy for several years.
She is survived by two daughters and a son-in-law, Nancy Cale, and .
Marlha and Richard Gress, all of Middleport; t.wo sons and dl!ughters-in-law,
Richard and Loretta Roller of Belpre, and James and Ida Roller of Waldorf,
Md.; JO grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren; and three nieces.
She was also _preceded in death by six brothers and sisters; and a son-inlaw, Kenneth Cale.
Services will be II a.m. Tuesday tn !he Heath Untted Methodist Church
Officiating will be the Rev. Vernagaye Sullivan, the Rev. Robett Robinson
and Richard Nease. Burial will be in the Rtverview Cemetery, Mtddli:pon.
Friends may call at the Middleport Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Ho19e from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.

Lee Roy Simpkins Sr.
Lee Roy Simpkins Sr., 65, Rutland, died Sunday, Aug. 17, 1997 at the
home of his daughter, Kimberly Gil ben.
Born MBFch 19, 1932 in Letatt, W.Va., son of the late Rdy and Iva
Killingsworth Simpkins, he was a retired iron worke~. a me1J!ber of Iron
Workers Local 787 of Parkersbut:g, W.Va., the Loyal Order of tbe Moose of
Hallendale, Fla., and !he National Rifle Association.
He was also preceded in death by two sisters, Thelma Carr and Edna Rood.
. Sumvmg are two daughters and sons-in-Jaw, Pam and Chuck Hoschar
of West Columbia, W.Va., and Kimberly and Joe Gilbert of Rutland; six sons
and daughters-in-law, Lee Roy Simpkins Jr. of West Columbia, Dave W. and
Anna Simpkins of Glouster, John M. and Vic.kie Simpkins of Orlando. Fla ..
James R. and Laura Simpkins of Atwotth, Calif., Robett W. and Janet Stmpkins of Davie, Fla , and Jeffery A. and Jodi Simpkins of Kenosha, Wts.; stx
sisters. Minnie Honaker and Opal Hughes, both of Mason. W.Va., Hilda
McCausland, Clara Sayre and Terssa Turner, all of Point Pleasant, W.Va., and
Helen Bonecutter of Wellston; a brother. Wesley Stmpktns of Poont Pleasant; and 14 grandchildren.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, with the Rev. John Han offictatmg. Bunal will be tn the Kirkland
Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Tuesday.

-Local News ·in Brief:--:..
Heavy rains spur power outages
Heavy winds and rain downed trees and caused power outages throughout Metgs County on Sunday afternoon.
According to Clarence Robson o{Arnerican Electric Power, approximately
600 customers, scattered lhroughout AEP's Meigs County service area, were
without power from about 2:30p.m. Saturday, due to htgh winds and downed
trees. Power was restored in stages~ding at about 7:30a.m. this morning.
Customers in the AEP service areas were effected, Robson satd.
·Trees were reponed down throughout the area as well, mcludtng trees in
Carpenter, Mtddlcport, Point Rock, Pomeroy and Syracuse .
·
The sheriffs department. and Middleport and Pomeroy police, reported
no serious injuries or damage due to the downed trees, although traffic in
the effected areas was rerouted unto) the limb• could be removed from the
roadways.

One-car crash injures area woman

A Reedsville woman was InJured in a one-car accident Saturday on Sutton Township Road I05 (Hog Hollow), the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Htghway Patrol reported.
Kathy A. Barringer, 35. 53075 Hudson Road, was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Metgs EMS, where she was later treated and
released, a hosptlal spokesperson said.
Trooper said Barringer was southbound, three-tenths of a mile north of
State Route 124, at8:20 p.m. when she lost control of the car she drove tn
a right-hand curve.
The car went off the left Stde ofthc road. struck an embankment and overturned, coming to rest on its top, according to the repott.
Barringer told troopers she had swerved to avoid collision wtth a deer
crossing
the road . Damage to the car was severe.
tng or cooking. Work is being done
on a water line on .the hill. according
to John Anderson, village admims- Reunion scheduled for Aug. 30
The Guthrie/Story reunton will be ~eld althe Athens County Fmrgrounds
lrator.
4-H
butlding on Aug. 30. A covered dish dinner will be served at noon. Those
Residents will be adv tsed when
attendtng
are to take a covered dish, beverages, table service. lawn chairs
the boo) order is lifted.
and memorabilia.

Po.meroy issues boil advisory
ReSidents of Lincoln Hill arc
asked to boil for three minutes all
water whtch wtll be used for dnnk-

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS lll-...1
Publtshcd ucrr afternoon, M{lftday through

Fmlay. Ill C'ourl St , Pomeroy, Ohto. by the

Ohio \l;dl~y Pubh1hmg C'ompany/GanACit Co ,

Pomeroy Oh10 .J57M. Ph 992·l l'ift Second

Stocks

class poS111¥C p~ud at Pomeroy, Oh1o

Am Ele Power .....................42''!.

Me•brr: The Auocintcd Prus. 1tnd tM Ohto

AmrTech ...............................65'4
Ashland 011 .........................49').
ATIT ..................................... 39~.

Nc:wsjMpcr A n OCUIIIOO .

POSTMASTER: Send address corrections to
The Da•ly Senltnel, Ill C'oun St , Pomeroy.

Ohto 457!19

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
B' Carritr or Moklr Relllt
o~ Wtck ... • . •. . •. • .. ..
. S2 un

One Mon11\ , .. . .
.. .. SK 711
OAt Year
. .... ........ . • ....... . $1flo4 110
SINGLE COP\' PRICE

Darly .•
SubKr1bcn

not

:t5 Cen11

dcmmJIO pAY the carJII!f may

remtl rn adYancc direct to The Oatly Sentinel
on alhree , stx or 12 momh has1s Credit w11l be
JIVCn camereach week.
N(l subscr•puon by mail perm111cd tn arus
where home c.-rrtcr Kf\'JCC tS IVItlftble.
Putoltsher rnervea 1M risht 10 •djust ntcs dur
1ns: the subKnption pcrtod Subscnpt1on r11e
ch~nges m~y be 1mplemcnled by clllnclnlthe
dlltAIIon ollhe iubscnption.

MAILSUBSCRIP"MONS
Inside Meicl CnRI)'
11 W«ks ., .... , ....................... $27.3U
2ft Weeki ... ... • •. . .. .... . .. . .
. $53 H2
S2 Weeks .. .
. .. . .................. $1US .S6
R1tt1 Otltlidt Melp c ....,
IJ Weeks . , .... .... ... ... .. ......... $29.25
26 Wttks . ..
........................$56.6tl
'2 W..b ......... . - ........... .............$10!1.72

Akzo ...................................... 77~

Bank One.............................52"1..
Bob Evans .............................17h

Borg-Warner .......................51°1.
Champion ............................. 19),
Chann Shpa ............................ 5'o
City Holding ............................39
Fllderal Mogul .......................33'4
Gannett .................................96l.
Goodyear ..............................62~
Kmart ...................................12"!.
Lande Elld ............................ 2Bh
Lld ......................................... 22'!.

Oak Hill Flnl ..............:...........20'1.
OVB .........................................39
One Valley ............................. 41'1.
Peoples ................................. 38~

Prtm Flnl ...............................19\
RockMII ...............................&amp;o'RDIShell ...............................50'Shoney'e..................................s\
Star Bank .............................44.,.
Wendy's ................................ 22\
Worthington ........................ 1B"!.

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotee provided by Advaat
of Gallipolis.

Pomeroy police report accident
I

The Pomeroy Pollee Department reported one weekend accident, resulting m no citations and no injuries.
• On Saturday. Patrick Simpkin~. 40, of Mason. W.Va., struck a 1994 Cadillac driven by Wilham Dunn, 60. of Raleigh, I'! C., while Bunn was stopped
at the red light on the Pomeroy-Mason Bndge
No serious damage or inJuries were reported in either incident.

.....

CHAMPION HOLSTEINS- Trlcla Davia and Ben Holter's Hoi·
steins received grand and reserve champion honora, respectively,
In lhe Meigs County Junior Fair Dairy Show. From left are Dairy
Princess Katherine Beaumier, Davis, Hollar and Fair King Alban
Salser.

· WINNING JERSEYS- Chris Parker and Rachel Chapman won
grand and reaerve C:hamplon Jersey In lhe Melge County Junior
Fair Dairy Show. From left are Fair Queen Krlatl Warner, Parker,
Fair King Alban Salser, Chapman and Dairy Princess Katherine
Beaumier.

EMS units answer 18 calls
Units of Meigs County Emergency Services answered 18 calls for
asststance over the weekend.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
II: 17 a.m. Saturday, Rockspnngs
Rehabilitation Center, Frank Doone
to Veterans Mcmonal Hospttal;
2:16 p.m., to Thtrd Street. John
Beck, treated;
6:08 p.m., to State Route 124,
Steve Shuler, treated.
12:50 a.m. Monday, Chester
Road. Lewis Wtlliams to Veterans
Memorial.
COLUMBIA TWP. VFD
I: 15 p.m. Sunday. Carpenter Hill
Road, utihty hncs down, no injuries.
5:14 p.m.. Salem School Lot
Road , utlllly lmcs down. no injuncs.

MIDDLEPORT
5 pin., Ovcrbr&lt;x&gt;k Center, Sadtc
Carr 10 Veterans Mcmonal Hosrllal.
POMEROY
3:27 r .m.. Saturday. Children's
Home Road. Alll:C: Brown lo Veterans
Memorial.
10. 18 r .m . Rockspnngs Road.
Charles Actkcr. Veterans Memorial.
3: 15 r .m. Sunday, Mulberry
Avenue . Chester Stewart. Veterans
Mcmonal.
RACINE
9:57 r .m Saturday. Township
Road 105. Kathy Barringer to Veterans Memonal Hosptlal.

Hospital news

Bailey's awards
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
question IS. what will jockey Jerry
Batley do for an encore this year''
When the ~urious polls arc taken·
al Lhis year 's c.1'd. cun Bailey come

close to 1996! Jerry w:ts voted the
Eclipse Award a.s hcst Jockey ol the
year tn I996 He was named No I
tn a JKtll ol racing fans taken hy 'the
Racmg Fonn. And he grot the Btg
S)'l&lt;trt ol Turldnm trophy -lrom the
Turf Puhlictsh
Bailey ~lsu rode the great Cigar tn
all hiS races, whtch earned the horse

Veterans Memorial
top honors lor lhc year.
Saturday admtssions - none.
Saturday discharges -Ada Morris .
Sunday admissions - none
Sunday
discharges - Keith
Hog market trend for ~(\nday:
Musser.
steady.
Holzer Medical Center
Summary of last week's auc·
Discharges Aug. IS - Kenneth
tlons at Hillsboro, Eaton, FarmerOurs,
Donald Nail, Mary Mowrey,
slown, Lancaster, Wapakoneta,
Wolham
Thompson.
Mount Vernon, Bucyrus, Creston,
Discharges
Aug. 16 - Voola
Caldwell and Gallipolis:
Sayres,
Mrs.
James
Zerkle and son,
Hogs. 2.00 lower to htgher.
Mark
Glover.
Butcher hogs: 38.00-60.00.
Discharges Aug. 17 - Worley
Cattle: steady to I.00 lower.
Rtfe,
Charles Hunter.
Slaughter •steers· chotec 60 00.
(Published
with permission)
69.35; select 57.00-65.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 60.0068.00; select 55.00-64.00.
Cows: steady to 2.00 lower: all
Robbie Weddle was the reserve
cows 57.00 and down
champion
winner in the turkey dtviBulls. steady to 2.00 lower; all
sion
in
the
Meigs County Juntor Fatr
bulls 56.00 and down .
Poultry
Show
Monday He was UIC,OrVeal calves: steady; choice 125.00
rectly identified in a photo tn
and down.
Wednesday's newspaper.

Today's livestoc-k report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Monday as provided
by 1the U.S. Depattmenl of Agnculture Market News·
Barrows and gilts: steady; demand
and movement moderate.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
points 55.00-56.00, some 54.50 and
56.50. plants 55.50-57.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs . .50.0054.00: 210-230 lbs. 45.00-50.00.
Sows: mostly steady.
U.S. 1-3 300-400 lbs. 41..5043.50; 400-500 lbs. 43.00-45.00;
500-600 lbs. 45.00-47.50, few over
600 Jbs. 47 50-48.50
Boars. 39.00-41.00.
· Estimated receopts: 31 ,000. ,
Prices from Producers Livestock Aasoclatlon:

REEDSVILLE
4:05 p.m. Sunday, Forked Run
State Park, Mel iss a Kidd, Veterans
Mcmonal.
RUTLAND
4·18 a.m. Sunday, to Depot Street,
Lee Simpkms. dead on am val,
7 26 a.m.. Main Street, utility
pole ftre at Ctvic Center.
SCIPIO TWP. VFD
5.13 p m., Kmgsbury Road. tree
fire, no mjurics
SYRACUSE
.
5.24 p.m., SR 124, Chad Diddle,
treated
3:26 p.m., Rock Srrings Fairgrounds, Ja.son Autherson to Veterans
Memorial,
8:28 p.m , Rock Springs Fairgrounds, Dorothy and Jason Bogge~s.
treated

Correction

�,.
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Sp~rts

Blue Jays down Indians 10-5

Reds shut out Dodgers 5-0
By BETH HARRIS
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Brett
Tomko had never faced the Los
Angeles Dodgers befOill. By the.time
he was through , the Dodgers were
wishing they'd never heard of the
Cincinnati Reds rookie.
Pitching in a place he visite4
often as a child, Tomko tossed seven scoreless innings as the Reds
defeated the Dodgers 5-0 Sunday.
About 80 family members and
friends came out to see Tomko, making their presence known by shouiing out his nicknames during
·wannups. He · grew up in nearby
Orange County.
"It was almost like a home game
for me," he said.

I
I

•'
..

~~ My

knees were

shaking a little bit."
Tomko (8-4) scattered seven hits,
struck out two ·and walked none in
his 12th start of the season.
"I struck out Otis Nixon in the
first and it kick-started me," he said.
"When you gel ahead with two
strikes, yo\J have a lot more power
than the hitters. After that, I uied to
stay relaxed."
He pitcheCI out of a bases-loaded
jam in the seventh, getting Nixon to
·ground into a force play at the plate
. · and retiring Roger Cedeno on a line
drive to second .
Tomko also dodged ttouble in the
botiom of the sixth. With two outs,
he gave up, consecutive singles to
Mike Piazza and Eric Karros before

into a fielder's choice that scored
getting Raul Mondesi to fly oot to
right.
..
.
Stynes as Piazza mishandled Nomo 's
"Early on he was in the shadows · throw to the plate for an error:
"We just seemed a little bit dead
and it ·was a little tough to pick the
ball up. " Dodgers third baseman the last few days of this homestand .
Todd Zeile said. " He was throwing and at the end of that last road uip,"
fastballs on both sides of the plate:. Zeile said. "So I don't know if we're
He's a good pitcher. It's no fluke that dragging a little bit here in the dog
he's won some games and he's days of August, but that's not going
to last."
.
become one of their best pitchers."
"Throwing strikes and staying
The Dodgers open a nine-day
road trip Tuesday against the New
ahead of the hitters. That was
Tomko's key," Cincinnati manager York Mets~
Jack McKeon said. "I saw the kid
Notes: Dodgers outfielder Todd
pitch a beckuya game."
Hollandsworth was reinstated from
Stan Belinda pitched the final two the I5-day disabled list. He was
innings for Cincinnati and struck out briefly iri the lineup until he comfour of the seven batters he faced.
plained of soreness in his right
Dodgers starter Hideo Nomo ( 1'1 - elbow and was replaced by Roger
10) was erratic early. He . ga•e up Cedeno. Outfielder Wayne Kirby
three runs in the first inning, includ- was optioned to Triple-A Albu. ing a wild pitch that led to one run. querque .... The Reds optioned rightThe right-hander allowed fi•e runs hander Richie Lewis to Triple-A
on eight hits in seven innings, strik- Indianapolis. Lewi~ pitched two
ing out 10 and walking four:
· innings Saturday night, giving up
Willie Greene's two-out single to consecutive homers. to Cedeno and
right scored Jon Nunnally and Mike Piazza .... Reese stole second
Eduardo Perez, and Nomo's wild in the fifth in.ning, gi•ing him 22
pitch to Brook Fordyce scored Reg- stolen bases and the Reds a leaguegie Sanders from third.
leading total of 165 . ... Nomo lost to
"My rhythm wasn't that bad, it's the Reds for the first time in five
just that the pitch to Greene was a career decisions, lea•ing Atlanta and
bad pitch, and I ga•e up a lot of Colorado as the only NL teams be's
walks, " Nomo said.
never lost to . ... Tomko graduated
The Reds increased their lead to from high school in Orange County
4-0 in the fifth on an RBI single ·by and briefly attended college there
Chris Stynes. They added a run in· before uansferring to Florida South. the seventh when Sanders grounded ern.

BATTLES FOR YARDAGE -Meigs Ht'llor tallblck Matt WHilame
(75, with only the 7 vlelble) goee down, but 1101 before puehlng *-d
far a little more yardlge In Saturclav'• Krlllllllllg8 balwwn Melp
and Rock Hill. The Ma111udere and the Rtldrnen blttled tel a 1·1 tie.
(Sentinel photo by Dave H1rrl1)
.
.
'

Meigs takes Rock ·
Hill to 1-1 deadlock
in football scrimmage
GOTCHAI - Los Angelee catchf!' Mike Piazza Pl!t&amp; the tag on ~ Cincinnati Reds' Jon Nunnally 81 the plate In the fltth Inning of S\lnday

•

..

career, to put Florida ahead 6-0 in the
third . He also had a twO-run single
in the first
"I should have more," he said of
his hoine run total. "I've played seven years. It took me a long time."
At Miami, Kevin Brown ( 11-8)
allowed two runs and nine hits in
eight in'nings.
By The.A11oci-"«1 Prell
"In most scenarios, if you get
The way the Marlins are playing, nine or 10 runs with Kevin Brown
Allanta's sixth division title of the pitching, you're going to win," Mar1990s may not be a done deal.
lins manager Jim Leyland said.
Florida closed within 3 112 games
Steve Cooke (8-12) allowed six
or the NL East leaders, heating the runs and seven hits in five innings.
Pittsburgh Ph·ates 10-2 Sunday
In other. games, Colorado beat
behind Moises Alou. who drove in New York 6-4. Houston beat
five. ,u_ns. Later in the day, the Philadelphia 11-6. Chicago beat San
Braves lost 3-1 at St. Louis.
Diego ~5 'and San Francisco beat
"We're going ·after the Braves," Montreal 8-6.
Alou said. "I think that's easier
Cardinals 3, Braves I
because we're only chasing one
Denny Neagle ( 16-3) lost for the
team. If we go after the wild card, first time since July 6 at Montreal,
we're in a race with four learns. I'd allowing a two-run double to Oanny
mtlier concentrate on the Braves. I Sheaffer that broke an eighth-inning
think we can beat them."
- lie at-Busch Stadium.
Alou hit a three-run homer, his
Neagle had been 4-0 ~ith a 1.81
16th of the season and 1OOth of his ERA in seven stans since losing to

Pitt5burp, .. ....... 60
St. Loui ~ ............. 56
CINCINNATI... ... 54
Chica{tt'l .................. .'iO

AL standings
Eutun DMsion

:rl!
B:tldmort ............... 76
¥

I. I'&lt;L.

4 .~

6-"1
. ~'.lK

Iii

New Ynrk .... ~-· ·· .. --7~ 49
80rJton ............... ..... 62 0.\
Tnroltlo ................. ~9 62

.oi'.IO
.:.IRK

4'.
17
IK

Dctroit .................... 57 66

46J

21

Milwnvkft ............. 59

62

Chit:a,o.................. w 6J
k~Wa~Chy ........... !ll 69
Mionnot&gt;l .............. !\1 72

.4MH

..uw
.42!1
..JI !I

T~UI ......

I

. .... .. .w 64

O.khtnd .................~

~~

.&amp;

1
•

.\

12
0 ':

.&amp;Hfl

10

20

gmnt. J!Pd .. ntin

Bo1ton 12. Mim~c:solu 4
KnnNW Cit)' 2. De1roit I
Bilhimon: 10. Anaheim 1J
Milwom~ 6. OaklnRLI ~

Otil-al!o Cubs (Gonz:ila ll·.'i) m Aori -

Toronro 10. CLEVELAND~
Boatdn 10, Minn.:ulta ~
DH: Senltle 5. C'tlictl£0 Whil~ SIU J:
ChiC!llO Whit~ So-. 4, Sealllt 2
81d1i~ ~ - Anaheim 4 (10)
N.Y. Yonkees II. Tr:•u 0

MilwauW ~ . Oakland 2

1reo1l (Pm:z II ·RI. 7 : J~ r .m.
Los

Toclay's cames

Torontt'l (~illinnu 7- IO )' :u CU!.Vf1:0.'1 p.m.
OH: Milw~ukte (Knr17-10 unll A.d:ml·
1\.lfl J- 1) al Tell.u iSilwtu ()..I ;md Hdlin~
0-0). 6:0~ p.m.
An~im (Sp~nfL."'' K-~) 111 Bultimort:
IMUIIIII:I 1:1·5), 7.3. p.m.
Scanle (Lirm ~-7) a1 Cllil:IJ.D Wlutt:
SoA &lt;Eyh! 1-2). ti :O~ p.m.
LAND(HmbtBCr..J ().~).

Tueaday~o ·pmes

Minm:1otn (Hnwkins 4-71 ut Detrnil
(81:\ir 12-!1). 7:0~ p.m.
Torofllo (Carptttter ()..~ nnd ANtjar ()..
~~ '" Chit'IIJO White So• (undecided). 2.

.~ :05p. m.

B:lllimort (Komluiecki g . ~ and Van
al Kan1n1 City Ukldter II - II und
Bonn 2-4), l . 6~ p.m.
. Milwau•tt (Mm:cdca -1 -7) al Tn iU
(SalltAna 3-4). 8:3!' p.m.
1
N.Y. Yankee• (Well• 14 - ~l 111 AM·
hrim (Dicboa II -~). 10:0~ p.m.
.
._
Bo:ilton (Avtl)' ~3) at oa•tand (LOr·
nine 1-0). 10:0.~ p.m.
•
CIZVF.LIIND (Smiley 1·21 a1 S..nk
(Ctoude l · IJ. IO:OJp.m.
Q.())

NL standings
-DII&gt;-.J.
r..
l!Lmlil
.................... ,.... 76 49 .6011

~ss ..m

... ................66

(ftmundcz: l!i-H). 7:&lt;r.i Jl.R\,
San Oiegu (Smilh 4-J) :11 Pin!!tluqth
ILkbcr 7-121. 7:J5 p.m.
Colorotdo (Wright 6-H) :u CINCI~ ·
NATI (MorJan + 10), 7::\:'i J1.1ll.
San IT:mdsco IEst~s 1~--1) m Phil atk-1 ·
(lb1a rM. ~ircrS-121. 7:.1.'1 r.m.
S1. Louis tS1ot11tmyre Il -K) at M1lft ·
d.1

lkeroit R, KMII15 City 4

-

PittsburJ!.h (Ltl:m:a H-11 ) nl Fluri1l:t
tOjal;t (~)). 7 :0~ p.111.
S:1n Fr:tn..:i scn (G Mdn~r 12 · fi) :11
Philntklphia (B,:a.:h 1·7l. 7:J.'i p.m.

Tuesday's gu.mn

Sunday's Kores

.500
,)67

9' ,

Tonight's games

H. N.Y. Y :mk~1 ~ (10)

w-m.J .............til 61
l'loilodelplrio ......... ... 76

t~
11 1 ~

Houston II , Phil-lphi:t 6
Coloratk• 6. N.Y. Mcts 4
Chkt~~o Cubs 6, San Oiegn 5
Si.m FrnrK:i~n . H. Monlreal6
Fk,Oda 10. Pit~nurflh 2
St. Louis l Allilntn I
CINCINNATI.'i . L,, An~tel~·s 0

I

AOO

Fbldo ................. 71 s• .m
HrwYC!d ..............67 56 .545

AOO

Sund1y's scores

DH : Sc11ttlt' II. Whitt: Su-. fl ; 2nll

'

.443

Atlillllil .'i . StLouis J
Phil:tdclphia 5, Hnu ~ lcm)
Munu-cal tl. S&gt;~n Fmm:i1'n .'i
Pin ~ burJh
Flnnda ~
ColorJdu 7. N_Y Mcts .'i
Snn Ditto-!. C1lic.1J!.n) ( IU)
l.Ms An~ll·s .'i . CINCINNA 'n J

Saturday's scores

•

..1!'~

Saturday's Jeons

ClEVll.AND M.T(lWIItll4
Tt:~tu

.4!111

ro.

Wfltrm Dirisieri
ScPitle ·········"·-·······69 54 ..'if:. I
Anftim ................ IIH 55 .55J

I

O.l
67
611
7.'i

WHicm Diwi!Non
SanFrnnciM.:o . ...... 70 !'~ .~
Uu AR{I.t.!~ ......... 07 ~7 ..'i~
Cnlnmdu ...... .. ..... 60 64 .4JW
SanDicgo ......... ,. ... fiO M ..pt.J

Ct~onlral DIYlslun
CUVELAND '....... 6.~ ~7 . ~ 2!1

.

night's National League game In Loa Angeles,
·
,,
wliere the Rade won 5-0. (AP)

·I

,

.

Marlins blast Pirates 10-2 to continue division title chase

Baseball

.1~
ti
1~ \

29,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

I

AnJt:I~J !V a hJ~ s 7 - 10)

J. I ). 1.40 I•.IM.
tSmnh:t: 11 · 101 :11

al N.Y.

Ml:'t!l. (81..1:1111111
Arlanl&lt;~

Hm1 ~ 111 11

(~ : llliJ"Illl 1().1-J. )1; : 0~ Jl.l,ll

AL leaders
8i\1TING: F Thllfll:t~ . ('hkt~ll . .J .J(I:
O ' N!.'Lil. 'New Ymk , .H1 : R:lllllh' l,
CLEVELAND. J.H : JusiLcc . CLEVE.
LAND . .. .l.l l ; W. Clark, T~·J\:~s , ..l.H : M.
Vnu~hn . Btl~UIIl. JN : E. Manint!1.. SI.':U·
!lc . .J21.

RUNS : Gan:iaparra. Btl!I.Hlll. 91'1 ,
KMblauch, Minncsofa, 9~ : GriiT~y . Scat·
tit!. 112· Jet~. Nrw York. H9; E. Manilll"z.
Seutrl~ . IlK : B.L Hunl ~ r . D~lmil. Kti:
C11rn. Se1t1le.
RBI : T . ~brlincz: , N~w Ynrk . ) Ill:
Griffey. Seattle. 114: St~IITKln . An :1~im .
IJK: F. Thomas. C'hicnJn, 91'1 : Juan G(111z:akz. Tua1. 97: O' Neill. New York . 96:
TOfly Clotrk. Oetm~l. ,90.
HITS : Garciuparru . Bn ~ lnn . 162 ;
G~r. Tuu, 148: Jeter. New Ytlfk. 147:
G.. A11deuon . An nheim. 14~ : Juhn
Vakmtin . Bo~tofl , 14.'i; Curu, ~alllc . 14~ :
J, Rodri~ltt"l . Tela~. 144.
DOUBLES: Jnhn Vnl!mtin. Boston.
JIJ: Cirillu. Milw:mkee. Jb: A. Rtlllril!uez.
Seanle, .1.111: CurQ. ScBtiJe . .l~ ; O ' Nrill.
New Yort••'\4: Gan:ll1parm. Bu!wn. J.l : .'i
arc lied witb ~.
TRIPLES : Garci apnrr o. B&lt;mon . 9:
Knoblou..:h . Minnc:1ora. 9: Jeter. New
York, 7; Ali..:e1 , AnAheim. 7; Damon.
Ka111Bs Ciry. 6: Bumitz:. Milwaukee. 6:
Offerman. K.tnu• Ciry, 6; Vilquel,
CIZVF.LIINO. 6: Brady ~-. Ball;.
more, b.
HOME RUNS: Gri!T.ey. St:ant.t. 40: T.
Mw-tinc:z. New YMk. 39; Mc(iwire. Oak·

".1

the Expos.
Rookie reliever Cunis King (2-0)
got the last two outs in the eighth and
Dennis Eckersley pitched a perfect
ninth for his 29th save. ~
Rockies 6, Mots 4 .
Dante Bichelle's bases-clearing
double highlighted a four-run sixth at
Coors Field and Colorado completed a three-game sweep.
·
John Thomson (5-7) allowed four
runs and seven hits in six innings.
beating New York for the second
time in II days. Jerry Diwto pitched
lbe ninth for his eighth save, sending
the Mets to their seventh loss in nine
games.
Dave Mlicki (5-10), who has one
win in his last I 0 starts, gave up five
runs and eight hits in five innings.
. Astros H, PIIDIIes 6
Billy Brewer walked in the tying
and go-ahead runs injh_e seventh at
the A•lr9\'olne as Houslon slopped
the Phila(lelphia's six-game winning streak.
Derek Bell had four hits, including two d,oubles, in s.ending the

ImAll. J4 : Thumt; CLEVELAND. H :
Buhhl:l'. Sc:ank. ~ F. Thoon&lt;~. O.kagu,
2K: Junn &lt;iufltak.oz. Te1.:•. 2K
STOLEN BASES. B.L., Hun1er. De·
noil ,, 6 I; K!iobl&lt;~uch , Minn~sotn, 4K :
Ni110n, Tumnlo. 47: TGn.-Jwin. Te•n~ .
40: ViUJU&lt;I. CLEVELAND, .U: Durlmm ,
OliL'il,:_o. 26: A. R&lt;ldriJuet. Sc:anl~. 22.
PITCHING ( 14 dl!clth'IRA): Clernetas. .
Turnnto. 19·"· ."26. 1.7tt Rhndy Juhnmn.
Se:~nlc. 16-.( .t!QO. 2.-10; Moyer . SL•attlc.
t ~- 4 . .7!i0. 4.26: Eri&amp;:kMm. Rnlrimor~ . 14·
.'i .. 7.17 ..\..19:·0 . Welk. New Yufk. 14-.111.
7.17. J.60 ; Mus):ina.' Daltirnnrc. 1.\ . 'i.
.722 . .l2H: Blair. lktrnil. 12-;t .106. 4.12
STRikOOUTS: Ritnlly ,Jahn~un . Scar~
lie. 2.li6; Chnrens. Turnnto, -226 : C11nc.
New York. 21~ : Munina. Bnhimore. !61 :
Afll'it!r. Kumas Ci1y, 1~2 : C. Fin.ky. Anu·
hcim. I ~2 : FasM.Tl.J. Seaide. 149
SAVES: M. Ri~~ra , New York, JK:
Randy M)'\.'1'1. Bnllimurc , .16: R. Hnnan·
del. Chk a~n . 21: Wettlt'lnnd. Tc~11s. 211:
l&gt;uu~ Jnfles. Milw01.ult:L-.:. H : TuJonc~ .
Ol!lruir. P : T:~ylt'lr. 03klilllll. 2I .

Phillies to just their founh loss in 15
games. ·
Trailing 6-5, the Astros loaded the
hases in the seventh off Wayne
Gomes (2-1 ). Brewer retired Luis
Gonzalez on a popup; then walked
Ricky Gutierrez on a 3-2 pitch and
lim Bogar on four pitches.
Tom Martin (5-3) won despite
allowing a two-run single to· Mike

"a,

4.22.
. .
.STRIKEOUTS : ~chillina. Phllodel·
llhlil. 242 : P.J. Mnrnrrz. Molll~a/ , 219:
Nomo. Los Anaelcs, 187: Smoltz. AI ·
lanla. 171; KJ. Brown. Aoricht, 171 ; Kilt,
H011s1on. 162: AIM Benes. St. Louis. 160.
SAVES: Beck, San FnnciJco, J4 :
:10: Jobn Franco, New York .
San OitJO, 29; Wohlcn ,

Cubs6,~5

Mark Clark (I 0-7). :ill owed four
runs and live hi1s in seven innings,
improving to 2-0 ·•ince Chicago
a&lt;'quired .him from the Mcts on Aug.
8.
'
Murk opec hit a twp-run triple to

.,

cup the l'our-run f1 fth and Sammy
Sosa added a bloop RBI triple li&gt;r the '
visiting Cubs, who avoided a three:'
, game ~weep. ·
"' ·
·~.
Tony Gwynn went 0-hK'-4, drnJl1'
ping his average to .379, its lowest.
since May 21. ·
.•
Paul Mcnhart (0-1) allowed eight ·
hits nnd four runs in 4 2/J innings .

Orioles top Angels 5-4 in 1o;
Mariners &amp; ChiSox split DH

-

American
League
roundup
By TOM WITHERS
AP Sparta .Writer

Lately, additional innings have
only meant additional wins for the
Baltimore Orioles.
Backup catcher Lenny Webster
singled home ihe winning run in the
bottom of the IOth Sunday as the
Orioles once again rallied to beat the
Anaheim Angels 5-4.
It was Baltimore's seven straight
win in extra-inning games. and kept
the dub 4 112 games uhcad ul' the

Albntll, 29: Todd Worri:ll . U.JJ A11~ek.'!l.
29: Ed.enlt:y. St. U.JUill . 21J. ·

Transactions

Basketball
El~tcm CunftnntC:

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HIIU~Inn

... 17
.. 16

NeW Y11rk .
llmrlnttc ............... I]
CLEVIl.ANrl .... IJ

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H .6K0
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LV!&gt; A11r,clt-L ....... i I
S!k.Tanlt:nln .: ............ IJ

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Ch:rlonc KO. HtJUslnn 71
IA l~ An(:elc:~ 74. Urah b-1

Hmulntt 71l. New Yurk S.'i
{'JLVIi.LfiNIJ HI . l1Lotrl1 111~· -1\1
l1111i!!llh 71. UwhldC01'J

'l'unldat's J{ames
l.11s 1\nj!i!lcs. IlL\() p.m.

Tui!sd11y's e;ames
: I

('Hit'ACl O WHITt; SO" :' I:ircd Bill
lludmcr. htti iR)! ~u;w.:h N:m11.'ll Hun Jnck.·
M ill htlllll ~ L
'll&lt;llh ;md llry:m l.inlc fin t
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l'urd~od 11~

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Utah.

•

"

..

Nalionall..n••e

I.OS 1\NGI~ I..t:S UOIXii:RS : At:~i ·
\';LICtl or: Tndd Hullantbwunh rlllm lhc
1~ -d:t)' di~ll'lk.'tlli s t. OJlliut)..'\1 OF Wayne
Ktrhy Itt AlhmjucnJtk' nflhc Par.:ili~· l'ua.~ t
lca~u~· .

SAN FW:ANCISl'O OIANTS · OJ•·
11111"-'tl RHI' Po11 R:•1•1, lu Ph1~ni.1. uf 1hc
l'iidlia: l'ua~l 1-~.·ut!UC Rcc:tlbl Ot: J :~~.:utl
Crll7. tn~tn l1hucni1 .

'· '

u...ketb•ll

N:MklnaiRLINkrll•lllh.~t.odalitm
UI ·:TfWI'I' I'ISTONS : Si1wctJ l '·l'
llritut Williams h) a !LlVl'tt·}'COII' runlr:ll.'t .
HOUS:t'ON KOCKii.TS : Sf~ 1 1cU (i
Malt M:tbMIC)' lo :t uttc ·)'l'ar cnmr:~l .
!.OS ANGELES l'UI'I'ERS: Sit=-IICJ
G JmLII,')l KuNnsou.

MINNESOTf\ 'I'WINS . (lp l ill l l~d
RHI' SIH\Ill' llnwcr s hl S:tll l.:! k\: uf lh\:
l'acilir CoaM l ..ca~ue . A~·livatl' d RHI' lluh
Tcwhtlury lmm lhc I ~·U:ty \Jisahktllisl. ·
NEW. YOR)( YANK ITS · Aeqotrcd
INF RCy Sundll'~ . li'lltll !he Chicn)!n Cub .~
lm MHI' Fri ~~: u P.:trnuc. Pl:ll.'l'II 1R fl:u
K ~: tly 1111 tht• l .~ · llay d t ~uhlctl list
SEJ\TI'I.I ·: MARINERS : Rccalk1l n:
tinily Sbect ~ !rum Tt~~:nm:~ ul lho,: Jla\:ilk '
Cu:ISI 1.1.':1/!IIC. Oplimtell or: R;lll) lhancJ.
luT:.coma.

FootbMII
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Clllrk. G Rnhcrt llcntnn. 1' lirbn E~tcs,
WR M:1rlnn Ev:an~ . I' Brian Gra~tcn . T
Tudd HuniL"r. DE lhynu Jurcwk i&gt;'., LIJ
Myr11n Ncwsume, IJE Jell O,::tr1l. 1.11
Mllch~· lll'aln~~.:r. S Naki;~ RL·Lictick ;ml) ( 'II
Tim Sl'IISil'Y · l'l:11.:c d S Eric Viln~·c un .tl11.·
WiliYcll·injurcll bs1.
IMI.I.fiS COWBOY~ . W:1 ivl'd S
' ~~~~er H~U:I~r. ,Oil Mall K•~•kc. I.B K~,.'l'ry
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W t llt:LII l~ !UkllliJ MntHrdl Willi:tms.

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By NANCY ARMOUR
Hawkins. Nevada; .Pierce Holt,
SO!ITH BEND, Ind. (AP)- Joe · Angelo State; Gary Johnson, GramDudek· set an NCAA record for bling; Ken O'Brien, Cal-Davis;
career touchdowns. He was on Jhe Bruce Taylor, Boston; Lynn Thorncover of Spons Illustrated. He fin- sen, Augustana; coach Jim Butter'
ished higher than any Division III field, Ithaca; and coach Paul Hoerneplayer ever in voting for the Heisman mann, Heidelberg.
Trophy.
The inductees from Division I
Still, nothing compares to bei'ng schools were: Bob Ferguson, Ohio
inducted into the College Football State; Hugh Green, Pittsburgh; Frank
Hall of Fame.
Merritt, Anny; John Michels, Ten-•
. "I've just been blown away by the nessee; Bob Pellegrini, Maryland;
whole experience," the running back Pill ~ichter, Wisconsin; Jerry Robinfrom Plymouth State said Saturday. son, UC!:A; James Saxton, Texas;
"This is truly the greatest honor I've Jerry Tubbs, Oklahoma; Charles
ever achieved in my lifetime, and I'll White, Southern California; Marc
be forever grateful."
Wilson, Brigham Young; and coach
t; Two years ago, Dudek wouldn-'t ' Red Sanders, Vanderbill and UCLA.
£n have been eligible for the hall
"Playing in the days of leather
ause he didn't go to a major helmets.and punting on third downs,
rchool. But beginning in 1996, the (Grinnell) always felt tbe players
~an added a Divisional class, bon- from small schools should be hont&gt;ring players from Division 1-AA, ored for their accomplishments,"
J&gt;ivision II, Division Ill and the · William E. Grinnell said in reprel'lAIA. ,
'
scnting his father, who died inJun~ .
1 Inductees from the second Oivi"(Being inducted) was one of his
tional class were: Joe Cichy. North last brigh_t moments in a wonderful
Dakota State; Joe Delaney, North- life. and we know he took it with
!-'estern State; Fred Dr)'cr. San Diego him."
State: William Grinnell, Tufts; Frank
.

8y DOUG FERGUSON
: MAMARONECK. N.Y. (AP)pavis Love Ill always thought tbe
9&gt;ughestthing ahout winning his first
major championship would he the
~ressure of having to hit the perfect
•wing on the critical shots.
: That turned out be tbe easy part.
: It was when Love threatened to
O:Un away from Justin Leonard. twice
building a five-stroke lead in tbe
linal round of the PGA Champior,sbip, that he toiled to ke.ep his
mind off thc·memories of his father
aad to follow the advice the forn•cr
gl)lf professional had given son:
:.;Follow your dreams and enjoy the

Oj

Fair "Thank You" Ads
2 Columns x 5 inchesSolid Line ·Box

College Football
HOF inducts Dudek,
Johnson &amp; Ferguson

Love
rallies to win
•
PGA Championship

11f RHI' Jeri D:uwin frnm Na.~hvdle

llutmii.I.':I)!IA'.

Sunday's scor~

:11

Lc: t~\IC

ulliN.' Ank'rit::nl As'lnciatinn .
UI ·~I'ROIT TIGERS: Sent OF Curti .~
l'ri~ mllril!ltl lu Tnlcdn ur the ln tcrna·

Saturday's Kores

l'hnc11il

Amrrkufl b'a~t
AN(\HEIM ANGELS: Acllvalcd OF
Jim l :~.tmtmds lnlln ·1he 1:'-d:ty !li~ u blcd
li ~ t. Scm I.HP Grcf.! C:td:•M !u Vanctlu v~·r
uf lho l' aCifi c 9101 ~1 Lclll!UC .
JJAI.TIMURE ORIOI.ES Pla ced
RHI' Sh:~wn llnsk.ic uu the 1~ -d:ay tli s·
·nhlc1l ~~ -~ • - H:ccnlt~:tl KHI1 E~tchmt Y :~ n
hum Rul'l•~·~ tl·r uf the lniCIIIUIIIIIt:tl

-·

second-place New York Yankees iri '
1
the AL East.
fRookic Aaron Ledc.•m.a hit his
lirst major league homer and Rafael .
Palmciro hit his 25th this seuson·as
the Orioles moved a season-high 33
games over .500 with their 15th win
in 20 games.
"Everybody is ''contribullng:.
That's been the trddemark of this

.

Baseball

WNBA standings

NL leaders
BATfiNO: L W:tlkr.. Columdu. J MO:
Gwynn, S.Ul OleJCI • .J79: Pii1U'.a. l..n.~ An·
l!cb .. .1411: Lorcun. Allantu• . J-1;\: Jnylk.'f,
San 1Ji~J11• .3J2~ Al[unzn . New Yurk .
..122; l..nnUurd.St. Looi~. . JIIJ .
RUNSt BiJ~iu. ·HnusloLI . I JO : L.
Wnlkt"''. Culnrndo. · 110: Bnntls. Sun fr:tn ci,,co. Ill; Gulnmte.rl Culorado. tc7: Bar·
well. Huu~tun. M: Erk Young. CulumUu,
7M: Kcm. Snn FmndM.·o. 7~.
RBI: G :~ larrnllm, C(ikmldu, II .\ ; Ra~ ­
wtll, Hua1 ~I • M1 , l&lt;r.'i: L Wnlkt'f. CulutnUn.
101 : Gwynn . San Oie[ltl, 99: Kent,_Som
l:mnd :ocn. 1.16: CbiJ"P(.-r lllf'l(). fll~anl&lt;~. !.!~ :
AI1M1 . AuriU:1. \1,\ ,
HITS : Gwy11n. San Dief tl, 17.1; L.
W;tlkcr. Culunldlt, 1M: Bij~Lit, Huustnr1.
1:'1 ; 1-'iat.za. l.t1~ An~ki. 146: G:ahtmt![a.
Cultlr:tdo. 146; Muntlesi, l.ns An~clcs,
J.t'i: OliJlll&lt;r ~•. Allnnl:·. t4-1: Wnm·
td. Piusburp;h. I._..
IJOUDL.~.. G~ud~:M:Ian ! • .. Mna.lrq11,
"-': Mnrnndtm. Phtl:kk-lrflia Jb: L . W1A;·
!.'r. C~llorudu, .16; Gwynn. ~ :111 Diettn. J~ :
Ums'"f· Mnmr~:d , J4: Bcl'lilln, Fluridu,
M: Otipper Jones. Allan In ] I: Ba~wull ,
. Hou~ttm. .\1 : Bigio. Hous11 n, .H .
. TRIPLES: lkShiellh, :i1. Louis. I 1..
w_. Guerrero, l.o1 A.ngelei ~ Woma!:k,
Ptii~ Durgh . 9: Randa. Pill: burgh , 1\: D
Snmlers. CINCINNATI, 7: Daullon, Flul'i·
7; Tuckt:r , All11111a . 6: Eric Youn, .
Culumdu, 6; McRae . New York . t.: L.
Juhnwn. Chica,n, 6.
HOME RUNS : L. Walker. Cetloradu,
.~: BaJ,well. Houslon, J J; Cas1ill11, Cul u r ;~ do . Jl : GalarulJII , Colorudo. J I:
Bondi. Stan Fmncillco. JO: Pinna, loll
Angelct , 27 : Hundley . New York . 26;
Sosa.. Otieugo. 26.
STOLEN BASES : D. Sundcu .
CINCINNA11. ~6; Woma~:k , Pinsbui'Rh,
44 ; OeSbiekb, St. Louis. 4J: Eric YWIIJ.
Colorado, J2; Q. Veras. San Diego. 29 ;
HcOOerson, San Di~&amp;o. 29; Bigio. Hous·
lOR, 27.
PITCHING (14 !b:i1iuna): NmJic, AI·
~wnra. 16-.\ .. 341'2.84; KUe, Huutlon, 16... &amp;41, 2..12; G. MadduA, Atlanltl. 16-J.
.K42. 2.J8: E&amp;1e,, S11n F'rnndsco, 1$·4,
.789, 2.9/l: J. Hamilkln 1 Sort Dicao. 10-4,
.714. 4.06: P.J. Martirr~:, Montreal , 14-6,
.700, 1.70; ludcn, M(lnlrtal. II-~. Ml7

Lieberthal in the seventh thai wast ed a 5-4 ·tcad. Russ Springer got six
outs for his second save.

"I

Meigs battled a talented Rock lhree yard line. Williams scored on
Hill team to a 1-1 tie in a controlled the next play.
Jootball scrimmage before a large
Marauder coach 'Mike Chancey
crowd al Bob ' Roberts Field in was pleased with his team's perforPomeroy.
mance. "This was a good first scrimMeigs s~ored its touchdown on a mage for us against a very good footthree yard run by senior tailback · ball team . I was very pleased wilh
Matt Williams. That score was set up how hard our we played. We have a
by a long run by sophomore fullback chance to be a good football team,
Justin Roush.
but we have to continue to improve:"
The Marauders were pinned
Meigs, which will play Southern
down inside their 20-yard line when in a preview this weekend, will open
Roush found a hole and cut 10 his left the season at home Friday, August 29
down the sideline before being against Gallia Academy.
caught from behind at the Redman

"
'.'

"
1 Col. x 21nDotted Line Box

'

'

$10 .
...
.. i

..·,

.

•· "I was choking up a lot of t•mcs
mit there," Love said. "I was very,
vC!ry comfortable with my golf game,
bY! my emotions were getting to me.
E~ery time I thought al&gt;out winning,
I ;1hought about what it , would
mpan."
· Not until his 1-iron pierced
through a steady rain 10 the sunsp1ashed 18th fairway on Winged
Foot did Love allow himself to
eQ,ioy the trip.
. .
And when his 12-foot b1rd1e putt
feU' into the cup with a gorgeo.us minbqw on the horizon, Love had also
realized his dream.
' Love shot a 4-under-par 66 for a
269 at Winged · Foot, winning the
PGA Championship by five strokes
overLeonard and lifting the label of
being one of the hest players with-'
oul a major.
Jeff Maggert closed with a course
record-tying 65 and was third at 276,
earning enough points 10 qualify for
the u.s..Ryder Cup team. Lee
Janzen was at 279. And· Tom Kite,
making a·case to select himself as a

captain's choice for the Ryder Cup
team , finished at 280.
liger Woods shot a 75 to finish
tied for 29th at 286.
. "Davis played extremely well,"
said Leonard, who was trying 10
become the first player since Nick
Price in 1994 to close out a -season
hy wi'nning the British Open and the
PGA. "And he_never, never let up."

By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - Jaret
Wright wu 10 years old when Roger
Clemens won his first Cy Young
Award.
On Sunday, the Oeveland rookie was jusl another victim in The
Rocket's bid for his fourth.
Clemens struck out II in his
major league-leading 19th victory as
the Toronto Blue Jays snapped
Cleveland's four-game winning
streak with a lO-S win over the Indians:·
It was Clemens' third straight
double-digit strikeout game, lith
this season and 79th of his great
career. His ERA went from 1.66 to
I.78, still tops in the AL but second
in the majors to Montreal"s Pedro
Martinez (1.70)
·
The scary thing ·was, Clemens
wasn't at his best. He was disapPointed with falling behind on Sandy
Alomar's three-run double in the
second and failing to pitch a complete game for the ftrsttime in three
starts. He allowed four runs and six
hits with three walks in seven
innings.
"I went to the dugout and let off
some steam," said Clemens, referring to Alomar's rocket to right that
put Cleveland up 3-0. "I knew I
made a mistake and put us in a
hole."
' The Blue Jays rescued him with
a seven-run fourth against Wright,
21, and·reliever Jason Jacome.
Clemens (19-4) moved one victory away from his fourth' 20-win
season and first since . 1990. Only
Sieve Carlton and Greg Maddux
have won four Cy Yoongs,
With all his milestones; Clemens

earned his first victory at Jacobs
Field, where he came in 0-2 with a
7:01 ERA. He improved to 21-6 i.n
h~t career againsl the Indi811s, his
second-biggest victim afler the
Angels (25).
"The whole ballpark is a Green
Monster here," said Clemens, cornparing Jacobs F-.eld to his longtime
home park, Fenway. "This is definilely a hitter's park."
Wright (3-2), a hot prospect billed
as Clemens-like, might have learned
something from Thc Rocket in this
one: Once he had a. lead, Clemens
smelled victory and slammed the
door. After Alomar's double, be
retired I4 of 16 with seven strikeoots
until Alomar singled with one out in
the seventh.
"I saw Clemens' eyes after we
got that lead. and it was sometliing,"
said Toronto's Jose Cruz Jr.. who
capped the se•en-run rally with a
three-run homer. "When I saw his
detennination, it pumped me up."
Wright, clocked as high as 98
mph this season, admitted getting
hyped up for a duel with Clemens.
"You want to have your A-game
when· you go against someone like
Clemens," said Wright, tagged for
six runs and seven hits in 3 213
innings in his ninth big lea11ue start.
"I don't care who was pitching, I
didn't get it done."
The Blue Jays started the founh
with four runs on five straight hits
and an enor by Brian Giles in left.
The switch-hitting Cruz, turning
around to bat righly.againsl Jacome,
hit the firsl pitch for a lhree-run
homer 10 make it 1-3.
Toronto added three runs in the
sixth. Charlie O'Brien douhled and

scored when Jacob Brumfield 's
grOunder went put third baseman
Matt Williams for an error, and Joe
Carter added a two-run ~ingle .
Carter started the fourth-inning
rally with a dooble. Carlos Delgado
drove hit an RBI single, and the Blue
Jays loaded the bases with singles by
Ed Sprague and Shawn Green.
O' Brien singled to right, scoring
Delgado, and Sprague came home ·
with the tying run when Gile~ overran the ball. Tomas Perez drove in
the go-ahead run with a groundout.
and Cruz hit his 17th hoiner and third
right-handed off Jacome.
Giles drove in Cleveland's fourth
run with asingle in the seventh.1bc
Indians added one in the ninth on
Marquis Grissom's RBI double .
Notes: There are conflicting stories as to how close Indians manager Mike Hargrove .came to gelling
fired. Several reports said general
manager John Hart met with team
owner Dick Jacobs Sunday and .
Monday and was close to mak-.ng a
change. Hart said Tuesday that Hargrove's job is safe forthe rest of tbe
season, and later added that firing
him was "never an option." Hargrove, hired in 1991 , signed a two-·
year contract extension in May. ·'·
Clemens'last win in Cleveland came
on Aug. 13, 1992. He is two wins
away from tying Jack Morris' club
record of 21 in a sea:mn.... Williams
left in tbe sixth with a jammed shoulder he suflcred diving for halt.. It
is not thought to he serious. ...
Cle•eland's Jim Thome recorded his
IOOth walk in the second, and is the
first player in club history with 100
walks in con!lcculivc season~ .
Thome walked 123 times in '96.

a

AL games ..•_&lt;c_on_r_in_ue_d_fr_o_m_P_•g_e_4..,J_ _......_...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
ballclub," Orioles manager Davey the shoulder, but no vascular abnor- first off Jaime Navarro (9-10) and
Johnson said. "We don't have any- mality relating to the right-hander's added a solo homer in the ninth oiT
one who's going to win the MVP, but surgery.
Chuck McElroy. Griffey has seven
collectively this club is as good as
Tim Raines went 3-for-5 with homers in I0 games apd leads tbe
any in baseball."
three RBis and Paul O'Neill drove in majors with one. more homer than
"Everyone does his share to win three runs for the Yankees.
lino Martinez nf the New York Yanthe game here," Webster said. •
Bobby Witt ( 11-9) took the loss. kees.
Slarter Jeff Fasscro ( 12-7) wa.•
lim Salmon had three hits and an
Marlnen 5, While Sox 3
Seattle's winner in the opener.
RBI and Rickey Henderson drove in
White Sox 4, Marlnen Z
two runs for Anaheim, which blew
In the second game. Sirotku held
At Chicago, Ken Griffey Jr.
·leads of 3-1 and 4-3 less than 24 homered twice in lhe opener to the Mariners to five hits in 5 1-3
hours after blowing a six-run cush- reach 40 for the fourth time in his innings.
Omar Olivares (6-8Hook tbe Ins.•.
ion in a 10-9 loss.
career as Seattle and Chicago split
Red Sox 10, Twim S
In the lOth, Palmeiro walked their double~eader.
.
At Boston, shortstop Nomar GarIn the second game, rookie Mike
leading off against Shigetoshi
Hasegawa (2-6) and moved up on a Sirotka won his season debut as the ciapaml extended his hitting streak
balk. After Brady Anderson was White Sox stopped a four-game los- to 20, tying Fred Lynn's team rookie record a• Boston sent the Twins in
walked intentionally with one out, ing streak.
their ninth consecutive loss.
Griffey,
who
went4-for-5
in
the
Webster pulled a single just inside
opener,
hit
a
two-run
homer
in
the
the third-base bag. •
'
"If you catch 10 innings and it's
hot as beck, you want to get the
game-winning hit so we can go
home," Webster said. "I felt that if
I did gei a chance to win il, I'd try
my best to get a hit just to end th!s
thing."
Annando Benitez (3-3) pitched
the lOth to earn the win.
Baltimore's Cal Ripkon, playing
in his 2,500th major league game.
went 1-for-3 with a sacrifice fly. His
first-inning. double' gave him 922
extra-base hits, lifting him past
Goose Goslin into sole possession of
33rd place on the career list.
Elsewhere in the American
League, it was: New York 8. Texas
0; Seattle and Chicago split a doubleheader, Boston 10, Minnesota 5;
, Detroit 8, Kansa.• City 5; and Milwaukee 5, Oakland 2.
Yankees 8, Ranaen 0
At New York, after David Cone
removed himself in the second
inning with a tight right shoulder,
Ramiro Mendoza (5-S) pitched six
innings of two-hit relief and combined with Kenny Rogers on a threehitter.
Cone, who missed most of last
season after surgery to repair an
aneurysm in the same shoulder,
threw 21 pitches in the first. He left
after throwing several warmup losses before the second.
A preliminary evaluation indicated muscle tightness and tendinilis in

You are cordially irzvited
to attend a reception for
94tfi 'District State 'Representative
Jofin Carry ..
witfi Special 9uest
4tfi 'District State 'Representative
'Randy sardner
Majority Leader
Ofiio Jfouse of'Representatives
rr'fiursday, Yfugust 21, 1997 TOO p.m.
:Meigs county Senior Citizens Center
rTicRets are $ro.oo per person.
You can rt&lt;rivt a tu crrdit for all)' contribution up lo Sso.oo ptr ptrson on
your Ofiio Incomt tax.

:Mait clitt£s payoblt lo Ciliuns fo; Carry.

MARK MARTIN

Martin wins
DeVilbiss 400
By HARRY ATKINS
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP)- Little favors frcq~cntly help NASCAR
drivers win races.
It happened again ·sunday as
Mark Manin beat Winston Cup
points leader Jeff Gordon iq the
DeVilbiss 400 at Michigan Speedway.
Martin, notching his third. victory of the season. clearly had the
superior car. Yet a flat tire early in the
race set him bock two laps. and Martin might not have won without help
frOm a teammate.
·
Martin, who unveiled his biography, "Mark Martin: Driven to Race··
at a news conference three hours
before the green llag waved, moved
up one 111(1 Vl(hen Rnusb Raci11g
teammate Burton slowed noticeably
and Martin beal him back to the
stripe before the field went under
caution.
"That's par1 of being a team,''
Bunon said. "To sec him cut a tire
and take himself out uf position,
that's racing luck. But if we can
change that racing luck, that's what
we're going to do."
Caution came out for the thin!
and last time on lap 162. because
Wally Dallenbach had mechanical
trouble on the backsuctch. It la.•ted
for five laps. ·
As Ted Musgrave and Gunkm
hauled for the lead, Manin pa.•scd
both with 31 laps to go. He was not
seriously challenged thereafter. finishing 2.009 seconds ahead of Gordon.
The victory left ·Martin' second in
lhe series standings with 3,095 points
.....: 99 behind Gordon.

Football Edition
Is ·Coming August 2·s th

The

1997

Read all about the:
• southern Tornadoes
• Meigs Marauders
• wahama White Falcons
• Eastern Eagles
• ohio University Bobcats
• Ohio ~ate Buckeyes
And Much More
·

Advertising Deadline Is August 21st
Call992·2155 for more 'lnfonnatlon
'

Dave Harris, Ext. 104
Don Riffle, Ext. I OS

Clllzilno fof Caroy Donald Wllllon, T,__
tll80ok AldgeAddltlon - · O H -

The Daily Sentinel

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

The· Daily Sentinel
.

Page&amp;

Monclly, Auguat 18, 1997

•

M·G-M Boy Scout golf-scramble to raise money for local units

'I
·I

'

The 1997 M-G-M District Boy
StoUIS of America Golf Scramble
will beheld at Cliffside Golf Club in
Gallipolis on Thursday, August 21.
Tee off times begin at 12:30 p.m.
· The tournament is sponsored by
the Tri • State Area Council to raise
money for the Mason • Gallia •
Meigs Boy Scout program. Funds
raised go for such projeciS as camp
improvement at Kiashuta in Meigs
County, camper 'scholarships for
needy boys, equipment, supplies,
and eve,nts such as camporees
according to tournament chair
Randy Finney.
Committee members include:
Tom Meadows, from . D &amp; W
Homes; Bob Hennesy, Ohio Valley
Bank; Terry Lloyd, Burlile Oil; and
Amy Leach, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
. Featured tbis year will be a new
ear to be given away by the New
Gallipolis Car Dealers Association.
The player who makes a hole in one
on hole number four will select a
new car from one of the following
car dealers -Gene Johnson Chevy Olds - Geo; Norris Northup Dodge;
Tumpike Ford - Lincoln - Mercury ;
or Smith Buick - Pontiac.
•· . · 'Prizes will be given for the five

winning team. Other hole in one
prizes include SS,OOO cash sponsored by Saunders Insurance;
$10,000 shopping spree sponsored
by Empire Furniture. ~ny eagle on
hole number one or hole number
two will win one day 's interest on a
$1,000,000 CD, sponsored by Home
National Bank, Racine; Ohio Valley
Bank; Peoples Bank, Point Pleasant;
and Star Bank. The player coming
closest to the pin on second shot on
hole number two will win a year's
membership to the Pleasant Valley
Hospital Wellness and Rehabilita, lion.
M • G- M Scouting District Exec'utive Barry Hamm praised the community support for this year's tournament. "We've really seen area
business and community leaders
come forward to help our scouting
program by becoming involved with
this golf lournllment. Scouting in the
M - G- M area will get a boost from
the funds we're raising with the golf
scramble."
Entry fees are $55.00 per person,
or $4S.OO for Cliffside members.
Teams will be drawn based on handtcaps.
Entries can be made by calling
· 446-GOLF for more details.

·
Members of the New Gallipolis

·Car Dealers Association join Boy

Scout members and Cliffside
Golt'Ciub pro, Bobby Kincaid, to
plan for the new car to be given .
away during the M-G-M golf
scramble. Pictured left to right:

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

l

I

'

~

, I
I

I' .

Aloohol and Water:
There is reason to be guardedly
A·deadly
optil'listic about the survival of
sumpwertime mixture
drowning victims who are rescued
Question: My family and I boat, alive. In one study, eight of II adult
ski and swim in the river every sum- victims who were· comatose upon
mer. I'm always worried about some- arrival to the emergency room sur- ·
Qne drowning. Do you have any . vived with apparently normal'brain
advice to help us minimize that risk? function. If you don't know basic
· Answer: ·Drowning is the., third CPR, I'd suggest you contact your
leading cause of accidental death in local American Heart Association
the United States. Each year, about chapter for information about cours8,000 Americans drown. The cir- es in your area. The area Red Cross
cumstances of these deaths vary con- can direct you io swimming less01is.
siderably, but certain types of acciOne of the more serious waterdeniS occur frequently. Included in related injuries · paralysis due to
this category are the deaths of y()URg injury of the spinal cord and neck children in backyard swimming . is seen in' people ~ho di\&gt;e into sltalpools, inauentive swimmers who get low water. The eastest way to prevent
in the way of boaiS, and experienced- Ibis tragedy is 10 familiarize yourself
· swimmers who take in too much air ·with ihe area you're diving in. Its a
. by hyperventilation before attempting ~ood idea to carefully go feet first
underwater long-distance swims.
tnto the water before your first dtve.
· One of the biggest risks for your That way, you'll know the water levfamily may be alcohol. Thirty-eight el and you'll find out about any danpercent of men and II percent of gerous objects underlhe surface that
women involved in water-related can't be seen from the shore. Also, ,
accidents, including drowning. had remember that the ~ater levels in
been drinking alcoholic beverages. familiar lakes, streams and riv.ers can
While the quantities they consumed change from day to day and from seawere often enough to make them son to season.
legally drunk. you should know that
Accidents.at water slides account
even a small quantity of alcohol for the largest share of amusement
slows your renexcs and mildly park injuries. About 3,000 water
impairs your ability to make critical slide injuries are seen in hospital
decisions. This is why I think it's emergency departments each year.
· foolish to have any alcohol before While most of these are bruises and
skiing or operating a boat because of laceration.s, a IOOle number of more
the potentially severe consequences serious accideniS have been reported.
of an error in judgment.
Some slides now require helmets,
. You can reduce your family's risk which reduces the risk of head
of a drowning accident by insisting injuries. Still, many of the injuries are
that each family mem\Jer receive suf- caused by pcltlple landing on their
ficient instruction to become a com- bacJc.s or bullocks or being thrown
petent swimmer. This includes adults against the walls of the slide. ,
that may have missed the opportuniTh~ best way to avoid water accity to master this skill when they were dents of all types is through the use
children. An additional and equally of simple common sense. Don't horse
important area of train in~ is car- ·around on a water slide. Don't ven' dibpulmonary resuscitatio~ (CPR). ture into unfamiliar water alone.
My medical dictionary defines resus- Don't take chances. and never·drink
citation as, "The restoration to life of alcohol before gomg tnlo the boat or
one who is apparently dead." That the water.
says prelly well why CPR is so
"FamUy Medicine" is a weekly
important, and it's more likely to coluDIJl. To submit quesdons, write
"restore life" to a drowning victim the to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Unisooner it is started. If you have the verslty College of Osteopathic
training, you might save a life by M~lclne, Grosvenor HaD, Athens,
· starting CPR before !lMS personnel Ohto 45701.
'
arrive on the s.cene.

RESERVE POULTRY - The reserve cham(il·

on 1*1 af market chickens, shown by Odie Kerr,

went to Dottle Turner Realty and the Blue Tartan Tavern, represented here by Alan Caatar.
Also pictured are 1997 Little Ml,a s end Mlater

Chevy Olds; Dwight Stevers,
Norris Northup Dodge; Randy

Kristi Warner and Alban Salser, Wool Princess
Melody Roberts, and Robert and Sheila Eastman and Claudine Muscat of Foodland. fT·S
Photo by Julie Dillon) .

Scout Executive Barry Hamm;
John Sang, Turnpike Ford; and
Brett Epling, Smith Buick Pontiac

Community calendar
The (:ommunily Calendar is Items are printed as space permits
published as a free service to non; and cannot be guaranteed to run 11
profit 1roupo wilbiu1 to announce specific number of clays.
meedn1 and special events. The
calendar is not deSigned 10 promo"' MONDAY
sales or fund l'llisen of any type.
LETART -- Letart Township

trustees, Monday 6 p.m. at the office
building.

at municipal building.

RACINE-- Racine Village Council, recessed session, Monday, 7 p.m.

TUFSDAY
POMEROY -- Eagles Auxiliary
2171, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.

RESERVE CHAMPION STEER • Chance Wet·

Queen Ktistl Warner, Beef Prlncass Jessica

son showed the ......,. champion steer, which Barringer, King Alben Salaar, and Little Miss
and Mister, Andrea Buckley and James Thomas
Willi purcllaaad by Rutlllnd Bottle Gu. Pictured,
along with Watson, are buyera Herbert Grata N Evans. fT·S Photo b!f Brian J. Reed)

and H8rb Grata of Rutland Bottle. Gaa, Fair
BEST OF SHOW • Best of Show honora at
the rabbit ahow went to Alban Salsar and
Pamela Neece, who was not available for a photo. Pictured, besides S!llaer, are Rabbit Prince

Odie Kerr, Princess runnerup Andrea Nautzllng,
Princess Bethany Cooke and Fair Queen Krlall
Warner.

.

RESERVE CHAMPION HOG • Pictured
Beth Farley and her reserve Cha!1'1plon hog are
Suun, Kevin and Reid Eastman, representing
Ellsl.m an's FOodland atoras. Also shown are

Andree
lie Miss and
' Meigs County, Fair Queen
Krlatl Warner and King Alben Salser, Swine
Princess Kim Mayle, 11nd Swine Prince Chris
Barringer. fT·S Photo by Julie Dillon)

RE~~~~~E RAI~_Bnrs • City Ice and Fuel and
Riverside
Marl of Pomeroy bought the
reserve champion rabbits at Frida!( nlghrs
Junior Fair Livestock Sale. Pictured with
Rebekah Kerr are Little Mill and Mister Andrea
!iuckley and James Thomas Evans, Fair Queen

Princess and Prince Bethany
Karr, Barb Johnson of River·
Cooke and
side Food Marl, Randy Ha!fe&amp;, Farmers Bank,
Trace, Greg and Marlee Hartle!( of City Ice and
Fuel, and Fair King Alban Salser. fT·S Photo by .
Brian J. Reed)

97 RANGER
HEIFERS DONATED • Rachel Chapman and
Ra!(mond Colwell w- this year's reclplenta of
clalry heifers, donated b!f the Farmere Bank and
Savings Company. The program Ia open to

firat·tlme dairy showmen. Also pictured are
Dairy Princess Jessica Beaumier, Meigs County Fair Queen Krlati Warner, and Paul Reed, rapresenting Farmers Bank.

·&gt;

'1'·;7/lii!JI

Payments Starting
·As Low As

Payments Starting
AsLowAs

s

s

97 CONTOUR
OR
MYSTIQUE·

Beat of the Bend... _c_o"_·ti_nu_e_ar_ro_m,...p_a_g•-6---------------'

permo*

mo*

97 EXPLORER
OR
MOUNTA

by Bob Hoeflich

8

•

Jon)

RESERVE LAMB· Krietlna Kenned!f sold her
reserve champion lamb to Eaabnan's Food land.
Pictured with Kennedy are 1997 Little Mlater
James Thomaa Evana, Fair Queen and King

side pro, Bobby Kincaid; District

•

97TAURUS
OR SABLE

IIIl A aii If

'

GRAND AND RESERVE • John Krawsczyn
and Rebekah Kerr, front, showed the grand and
reaerve champion rabbita altha Meigs County Fair•. Also pictured are Rabbit Princess

Beat of the Bend ...
, The Rock Springs Fairgrounds al years ago and are pui into place
will soon be returning to its serenity each year at fair time and then
following a hectic week of activity as removed in order to avoid any vanthe annual Meigs County Fair unfold- dalism which might· take place
between fairs . .
ed.
.
'
Keeping the grounds neat during
Of course, the grounds are expect·
the
fair is quite a chore. After all,
ed to take on more action in Sepmost
of us just throw trash to the
tember when Expo '97 is presented so
ground--a
bad habit--. Four Jobs
we will all look forward to that.
Training
Partnership
Act workers
This year's fair appears to have
this
year
joine~
the
regular
fair board .
been quite Juccessful--lots of visitors.
workers
10
help
keep
the
grounds
and the weather cooperated well for
clean. Needless to say, all hands were
the most part.
·
certainly
needed.
Fair visitors in the heat of the days .
And
those
three canopies placed at
really appreciated the cold water
intervals
around
the grounds this year
coming from three fountains on the
providing
a
resting
spot and some
fairgrounds. The fountains were
donated by the Farmers Bank severContlouecl oa Page 7

Andrea Buckley and Jamea Thomas Evans, Fair
Qu"" Krlstl Warner, Poultry Prlnceaa Jenn!f
Smallwood, Runner-up Melissa Houser, and
Fair King Alben Salser. fT·S Photo by Julie Dll· '

Finney, tournament chair; Cliff-

Ohio University
Collese of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine

·

Gene Johnson, Gene Johnson

1500 Cash Back

8

1000 Cash Back

or

· or

. 4.8°/0APR 48 Mos.

48mos.

4.8°/oAPR 48 Mos.
:P5·1AI~t:::l

WINNERS· Winners
Dairy Sweepstakes were announced Friday
evening In the show arena. Pictured, front, are
Chrletopher. Colwell, R!fan Chapman, Ross
Holter, Carson Yost, Chrl• Parker, Ben Holter,
Trlcla Davia, and Kelsey Holler. Back, 1-r, are

Eiethan!f Cooke, princess runnerup Andrea
Neutzllng, Fair King Alban Salser, Rabbit
Prince Odie Karr, and Fair Queen Kriatl Warn·
er.

shade for visitors were provided free
of charge by the Ozark Canopies Co.,
Parkersburg, W. Va.
A tip of the hat goes to Ed Hupp
who added extra attractiveness here
and there at lhe fair. A landscaping
specialist, Ed, among other special
displays, prepared two anractive settings , both featuring water falls over
· natural rock surrounded by colorful
plant material and thes~ were )ocated in the caule bam. ·
And, a nice gesture by the Athens
Landmark whtch moved to the Meigs
Fair on Sunday . afternoon to serve
food. 10 hundreds of junior fait particip~nts, and thelr parents and
friends who were assisting the young
people in getting ready for the fair. ·
The food was free of charge. One of
the Landmark workers pointed out
that Landmark makes the gesture
each year to show its appreciation to
all the girls and boys and youth orga. nizations as well as the adults on
hand lending support.
Somehow some numbers and
names apparently got transposed and
the bottom line is that Dale Hoffman
of Racine won several blue ribbons
instead of the earlier reponed six for
his·canning and baking exhibits. ·He
also took best of show honors in
ceramics, a part ot the domesuc·ans
division, and besides winning the
rosette and premium, was presented

a $25 gift certificate from Bonnie
Unruh of Countryside Ceramics.

The historic log.cabin on lhe fair- and third place went to th~ New Kids
gr!)unds was ·a busy spot again thi s 'on the Farm Club. Perhaps, the fair
year with demonstrations of yester~ board win be able to install new strip
year arts and crafts underway all ll ghtmg'" I he senior fair building for
week long by members of the Meigs next year's fair so !hat exhibits there
Counly Historical Society, Of par- arc just a tad easier to see. The new
ticular interest was tbc "1akmg of per- lighting in the junior fair building this
sonalized quilt blocks using fabric ycpr certainly made a difference. Oh
paints. Plans are now to ·make the ·
bloc ks into aquilt and have it read for yes, speaking of junior fair awards .
display in the cabin at next year's fair. Lind~ay Bolin won the grand chamThe 4-H booth displays were great pion award for her arrangement in the
this year, enhanced by new lighting. 4-H nower show.
And now the junior and senior fair
The Lakeside Leaders took first
board
can start planning for the 1998
place; the Kountry Kidz wun second
fair. Sume..j.Qhl Do keep smiling.

Meigs County Humane Society
'

THRIFT SHOPPE
Middleport, Ohio ·
Open every Wednesday through Saturday

BAG SALE
August 22 and 23

Atte~tion Elementary Teachers· FREE
Educational material will be available at Thrift
Shoppe on August 21st thru August 23rd.

•

�Monday, August 18, 1997

The O.lly Sentinel • Page-9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

All , •• " ' " ...... Pold "'
Acl....... OoodiiM: 1 :OOpnl till
4tr ltttort tht Ill 11 to ru•,

IIUIPOLIS, OliO
•Software

· •Parts
•Printers

w

oCus1om Orders

D-

Easy
Flnandng
Air Ca1iliii111111S lmtaled '21" omonth
Ileal Pumps htsiAci 138"
·(Pavmonllbuld·on I!II&gt;Md ....., I

•Financing
•WI Recherge Laser Cartridge•
•We Refill Ink Jet Cartridge•
•We Re-lnk Dot Matrix

•Free 5 Year Parta warranty

1-61

'

TROPHY WINNERS • Dally wlnners'of the kiddie trac:tor pull
competed against each other Friday night for trophlea. In the 35..
to 55 pound weight clll11, the winners were, left to right, Jeeob
Hunter, fil'8l; Bradley Brown, second; Josh Hupp, lhlrd; Zachary
Hendrix, f~, and Jeffery Milhoan, fifth. Brent Rose was lhe
fair bcMird member in charge of jhe contest

CHAMPION SIMMENTAL • Jo11h Ervin Is
shown her displaying his grand champion Slm-

'MORE WINNERS • Felr board member Bn1nt Rose, pielluntd
back, presented trophies to the winners In the 56 to
pound
w.lght clll11 of kiddie treetor pulla. Taking flret piece In the wlnners-eplnst-wlnners competition F~lday night - e left to right,
Ryan Donlldaon, Andrew Everett, Jenna Hupp, Melt White, and.
leek Newell • .

mental cow at the Junior Feeder Call Show st
the Meigs County Fair Tuesday.

reapec:tively, 16 and up, Myca
lfajnes and Chriatlna Westfoll;
age 13 to 15, Mendy Guess
and Kristina Kennedy; age 9 to
112, Maghan Haynes and Ash·
1fY ttagar. Caah premiums and
dbllona ware awarded to the
wln11tr1 In each class.
In the under-eight class
tveryone was a winne.r - Tina
Drake, Nathan Cook, Alyssa
Baker, Brittany Faeamyer, Clinton Kennedy, and Joanna
Eaatman, plcturacl right, with
her
lamb.

•

..

Remodeling

742·2925

-·-

X...,"

•TOP

."...,o"•'

· Public Notice
llonda.............. 1,4&amp;5,000DO
Proc. Fm. Sole a loll ol
- ' -....................4,321.17
Procoeda lrom Sell of
Nolel...............1,4511 000.00
Oporlllng
l'l'wn"-ln ........ l50,755.57
Advoncee ·In ........ 5,831.111
Refund of Prior Yltrl
Expend ................... 2,873.33
Opel'llllng Tre,.,_
Oul ..................... (59,743.1l6)
Advoncoa • Out ... (5,83U8)
Refund of prior Yoora
RICiipto .............. (3,518.18)
Totel Othor Fln.Sourcoo

=-~~33
Ovw/(Undor)
~·Other

·U-'Iol ......... 1,288,132.80
· Blglo•llng lund Ctth
811anco .............. 11110,511.37
Ending Fund Caah
.....,_,_ ..... 2,17t,644.17

Frank Vaughln
Mayor

Aua:vtid for
Encuntbr8nce8 •• :•••••••: ........
•....... _,.............8,344.513.13

·unrnorwct Fund ·
8111nce........ (6,165.818.111)
PROPRIETARY
FUNDS
FoodSII'Yifta

Saln .................. 102,388.09
~lor
~ ................4,118.28

Cl-ltaterflla a

FNa..................... 13,714.84

Iliac. RICIIpto ..4115,401.111
Totol Rocelpll
(Oporlllng) ........ 58e,571.20
OPERAnNG
DISBURSEMENTS
Emplo,.ea a

w...-.. . .. . . . . .
Employsee Rlllrement

81,120.20

Bentttta................ 53, 159.14

Public Notlca
.EamJngeon
ln•e-oll....... 117,181.112
Food SlrvlcH
........................ 102,311.01
Extrac:urrlcul&lt;

ihrcc places; Grand champion longhom -- Valley View: reserve ch.ampion longhorn •• Valley View;
Chinnia spring heifer calf-- Wal.nu~Lane Beef; grand ~b;unpion chinnia -- Walnut Lane Beef.

Meigs Co. Humane Society

THRIFT SHOPPE
Middleport, Oh
Open Wednesday thru Saturday

·1/2 price sale on clothing this week
I

and next.
A good time to get school clothes.
Blue jeans only $1.00

"Build Your DNa111"

F-.................... .25,tll1.14

ltlac. RICiipto ...ole5,533.21
OrentolnAid
State

•

Sourcoo.......... .2,85t,IMI7.Ill
Fodorol
•Sowceil ............. 230,11141.11
Totel Rlcelpto
(Optrlling) .... 4,180,157.41
OPERATING
DISBURSEMENTS
lnatrucllon ...... 2,082.52t.21
Su(IIIOrllng
Slr'vl-.......... 1,524,1811.54
Community

Servlcel.-............ 11,381.40

..

KINGS'

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• REMODELING

LEWIS TIRE

614-742-3080
814-742-3324
614-742·30711

742·2792

Acquloltlon ........ 388,074.70

Debt
Sorvlcll .......... 1,547,502.34

Employsee Sllarlll &amp;
.................. 81,881.14
Employell.Rlllremord
8 1 -................ 53,1115.1S '
Purcholld
·
W~gt~

SIMcea ............. 441,7117.52

Suppllll&amp;
Mlllrlolo ............ 1113,873.tl2 .
Copllll Outfly........ 1,459.113
Copltlll ClutleyReplleement ......... 2,0111.32
Other Objocta ........ 2,33V.OD

Total Dllbu-

(Opor) ............. 8,3110,ll57.14

Exc. Rcpll Dvwi(Underl
Dlab...........-.(1,7211,111M1.73)
NON-OPEIIAnNG
RECEIPTS
(DISBURSEMENTS)

John ltuuor P u Prellldont ol Council SIMcea............. 418,799.110
Contribullona •
.
CERTIFICATE OF COPY
SUpplill&amp;
Donallona ............ 111,5118.82 .
ltlllrlale ............ 145,lliiii.OD
Steto of Ohio
Proc. Fm. Sole of
Village of Pomeroy SS
Copltal 0UIIIy...........91D.54
llondo ............. 1,455,000.00
County Molgo
Capilli OUtlay·
Procoodolrom Sale &amp;Looa
I, Kllhy Hy11ll, at Clork Replleement ......... 1,825.85
of-'-................4,32t.17
of tho Vlllego of Pomeroy, Other Objeto ........... l80.37
Proctldalrom Sole of
Ohio, do horoby certify !hot Tolel Dlabu"""enta
Nolel............... 1,458,000.00
tho foregoing Ia a true and 10por)'; ................880,222.00
Stoto Sourcoo........t,843.11
correct copy of ordinance Exc. Repta. Ovor/(U(Idlr)
Fodlrel
ldopltd by the Leglolotlvo Dlab ....................(13,11110.10)
Sourcoo.............. 111,1121.M
Authority of the sold Vllllge
NON-OPERATINO
Oporetlng
Of the 4th day of Augull,
•
RECEIPTS
Trll)lllra-ln ........ M,134.68
111117; 1hll tht publlclllona s - Sourcea.......8,843.81
Advoncft.• In ........ 5.631.111
of8UCII ordlntnel hu beon F-..
•
Rolund of P~or YHra
made- certlflod of rooord Sourcoo ..............111,1128.111
Expond ...................2,704.33
according to law; ·thot no Optrlling TranlllroOporellng
proctldlnge looking 10 1 ln .......................... 14,000.00
Trenof..out .... (66,134M)
referendum upon ouch Refund o1 Prior Yoora
Advoncoa Out ..... (&amp;,831.111)
ordinance 1111 been token; Expencl........................31.00
Rolund of Prior Yeora
and that auch ordinance Optrlllng TranlllreRoctlpte .............. (3.520.11)
ond
cerllflcau of Out.:..................... (4,310.59)
Total Olhor Fin. Sourcoo
publication llltreol oro of . Totol Othor Fin. 8owcei1
(Uaoa) .............. 3,053,882.1111
record In Ordinance Record (UIM) ................. 131,483.26
ExCOII.RICIIpii/Soui'COI
No. 848, Pill' 020.
Excou Roc:elpii/Sourcoo
Ovor/(Underl
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I Ovor/(Under)
'
Public Notice
Dllbu- &amp; Othor
have hlrounto ouboc~btd Dlebu,_,_ &amp;Other
UHI/Nel ......... 1,323,1183.26
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
my name ond affixed my UIIU/NII .............. 37,142.4e · Beginning Fund Cllh
·
Blda will be rocolvod by olflclll _,, lhla 4th doy of Beginning Fund Cllh
• ·811once........... 1,320,201.$6
the Bedford Townlhlp Augu11,11197.
'
811ance.............. 414,487.H
Ending Fund Cllh
Truota01, 41220 Wllllamo
llellnce ........... 2,644,084.82
Kathy
Ending
Fund Celh
Rd., Shldo, Ohio 4577t lor
llllance .............. 452,330.15
Raoervld lor
allp rtpolr/ombonkmont
.Vllloge of Porniroy, Ohio RIHrvtd lor
Encumbroncee .................... '
falluro on Townahlp Rd.
The 'aforogolng Ia Encumbrl-......... 2011.o5
...........:.............8,345,547.81
T88- Bunklr HUI.
accapted ao e boale lor un,...rvtcl Fund
Unraurvod Fund
Bid requlromonto oro In proceodlng with tha 8111nce .............. 452,124.10
Blllnce........ (5,701 ,5112.111)
occordonce with tho Improvement herein
AGENCY FUND
Colh In Blllko
apoclflcatlone proporld by. deacrlbed.
OPERAnNG RECEIPTS
(NII) ....................122,835.83
the Federal Emergency
For the Vlllog• of Extrlcurrtcular
lnvo-te
....2,521 ,248.1111
ltonagemont Agency.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Actlvltln..............311,221.31
Totel
Fund
To view the looatlon or (8) 11, lUte
Totol RICIIptallllonce .......... 2,644.084.82
bid opoclllcatlono p11111 - - - - - - - - , (Operetlng) .......... 311,221.31
MEMORANDA DATA
notify tho Bodford Townthlp
OPI;RATING
AoPublic Notice
Clerk II (614) 882·5345.
DISBURSEMENTS .
VIIuodon ............33.3Q0,380
Bldo will bt rocelvod until
sTATEMENT S •
Employeoo Sllarlaa &amp;
Property Tu Lovill
SlpL 2, 111117, at 7:00 p.m. Combined Financial Report Woooo ....................... 11111.114
lnoldo 10 Mllt ..:......... 4.0000
All tilled tnvelopu of the Boord of Education
EmployiH Rlllrement
Outolde
10 Mlll ....... 20.5500
conlllnlng bide aro to bo FQI' the Fl- Yeor Ended
a.nertta. ......................28.G4 ADII.........,_._,.........et.ID
marked clearly on the
June30, 111117
outalde. The Iedford GOVERNMENTA~FUNDS
Slrvleel ••••••••••••.•• 24.'1t7.62
Townlhlp Trulllll rooervao
Buppllel&amp;
RECEIPTS
tho right to reject any/or oil
ltlllrllla .............. t8.587.tl2
.770,1)111.30
blda.
&amp;opltlll 0Utlay...........489.311
Bodlord Townohlp Tru1111a
Copltlll 0Utlay41220 Wllllama Rd.
Replleement ............ 175.47
Shade, Ohio 45778
Other Objlclo ........ t ,87t.63
8111nce Beginning of
C/o Undl Schoeppner,
Totll DJabu,..menta
Perlod...................20,ooo.oo
Clark
(Opor) ..................40, 115.71
New " - • During Flocol
(814) 992-5345
Exc. Rcpta.
Perlod.............. t,455,ooo.oo
(B) 18,:25, 2 tc
·
OVor/(Under) ....... (8,894.40)
RodHmod-Ou~ng FIICII
NON OPERATING
Porlod................... tO,OOO.OO
Public Notice
RECEIPTS
lllllnce
·
(DISBURSEMENTS)
8/30187
.............
1
,485,000.00
ORDINANCE NO. 848
Contrlbullona &amp;
SUMMARY INDEBTEDNESS
NAME OF STREET EAST
Doftlllono
..............
5,1i05.12
NOTES LONG &amp; SHORT
MAIN (FRONT)
Opol'llllng Trona!.,._
TERM
ROUTE NO. US ROUTE
ln ............................ I ,3711.12 Bllonce Beginning or
DATE OF ENACTMENT
Oporlllng TranlforePtrlod................. 174,3tl2.117
• 814187
·OUt ....................... (2,080.54)
Now loauoo-Ourlng "'-'
An emergency ordinance
Ralund of ~rtor Yeare
Period .............. I ,455.000.00
onocted by the Vllloge of
1,524,SKJD.54
Rocllpta ..................... (2.110) Rldllmod-Ourlng FIICII
P_..y, ltolgo County,
Totel D1her Fin. Sourcoo
Period ............~1,474.359.01
Ohio, In· the matter of tho
{11111) ..................... 4,1102.40 Sollnco 8/30187.1115,1103.111
herolnaflor deacrlbod
ExCIII R!IC01pta$0Urcoo
I certify tha following
Improvement, ond to
102,123.17
OVOri(Und..,Diaburaornenta
report
to be correct end
roqulll cooporlllon by the
• Other
true, to the bell or my
Director of Tnlnaporlltlon.
UHI/N11 ............. (2,082.00) knoWitdOI.
·
WHEREAS, the Village
Beginning lund C_,
·
uu lt. Ritchie
Identified the nlld for
Bollnce ................ IS,202.50
TI'NIIIrar of tho botrd of
.. lhl (Oper) ...............~ ...................
Ending Fund Cooh
Educlllon .
• porUon of ......................... 5,884,818.43
Balonce ................ 13,110.50
. (814) 985-4331
hlghwoy which 11 Exc. RICipll Ovw/(Undor)
RtllrVod for
.
IS 1 TC
•
Ide~lbedalldo
u followo:
Dlba ................ 1,821,454.53)
Encumbre.-. ......... m.63 t;;:..!:f1ti;i;;_i;~-on us Route
un....rvod fund
OTHER FINANCING
ltoln Slnll) along
SOURCES (USES)
a. ..nce ................ 12,231.17
River beginning Contribullonl •
TOTALS
Will ol Still Oonlltlonl ........... 13,011.00
TuN ......,,,,,, ..,,,,770,011.30
rn
124 and andlng Pracudllrom BIN ol
TUttlon .......................440.00

3

.

tht CIRssi/itrl Section I

\1

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Public Notice
NOnCE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DE... -..ENT OF
"""PORTA
"" nON
TRANS
corumbuo, Ohio
0111 01 of Contrscll
Llgltl Copy Number 97-142
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
MIMing
ITIII8/8/'l7
Nl!-7(14)
Soolld propoula will be
acceplld from all prequalified Dlddaro 11 the
Olllce of Contrecta, Room
118 ollht Ohio Deportment
T renoportlllon,
01
Columbua, Ohio, until 10:00

..uva OFFiCE AT 992•2·155

FAMILY NIGHT EVERY
TUESDAY NIGHT
Buy 1, Ge11 FREE After 4 P.M.
2 Large Pizzas w/1 i1em $12.99
DOMINO'S PIZZA
Pomeroy Location Only

ALZHEIMER'S
WARNING SIGN #1:
Difficulty performing
familiar tasks-- People
with Alzheimer's disease
could prepare a meal,
forget to serve it, and
even forget they made it.
For more information on
~" .. Alzheimer's Disease call
.,
SCENIC HILLS
NURSING CENTER's
Specialized Alzheimer's
. Unit 446-7150
f

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
20 Yrs. E&gt;&lt;p. • tns. Owner: Aiel&lt; Johnoon

FMe E11ima1e1

Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis.

D'a Auto Parll. Bujlng sal·

' ~;~~·· ~ ...-.s-om"' 30 4- •

•Garages
•Complete

. wantod: Straight Truck With
i Knuckle Boom To Move Pino •
LogUtHse.e,n

~Remodeling .

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

ESTIMATEES

985-4473
7/22/tln

110

Help Wanted

==::-::---::--..
AVON I All Areas I Shirley :
Spe11s, :.K)4-675-1429.
•

ACCESS To Human Re1ource::
Development /ACCESS Head
Start 111 Accepting Application ..
For The FoUowing Posl•on:
,.

PART-TIME HOME VISITOR :_
MEIGS COUNTY: Appllcanll· :

Must Have A High School Oiplo·
ma, Child Dwelopmanl Asaociate
Credential, Associale Oegt_tt In
Ear~ Chi~hood Education Or Related Field. Experience Working
In A Pre-School Sening Pre- - .
fBJrad. Beg;nning Rate Of Pay Is .
$7.00 /Hr.

.

614·742·2566
-,........ . ,_.......,...........,.....;r-------.,.cense School Bus Classili· .:
(LimeStonecltlan And A Clean Drivlnt· ·:
DDLIIII . I''
J(
Low Rates)
IICIIIftR i I
CONSTRUaiON
Pay II
Umeetone It Gravel
MOBILE UNIT .DRIVER • MEIGS :
COUNTY: Applicanta Mull Havt. ,
AHigh School Diploma Or Equiv· :
aiont, Commercial Driver'sli· . ;

Septic Systen\a

Trailer &amp; '·' .
.. . HoueeSitet
.

With

.
'' l

R_,.ble Rlftea
· Joe N. Sayre

Sayre Truddnt Co•.
814-742-2138

0127117 ...

•'

Record . Experience WOfking In A. ·•
Pre-School Sening Prelerred. Be-' •
$8.1!5/lif.
'
giMng RaOI 01

WICKS

.,

HAULING

''

Uc. WV 011030
Rooting, Painting
Gutters
Guaranteed

...

I
Umestone,
'I
Gravel., Sand, r
Top Soli, Fill Dlrt
614-992-3470

~

w.r...........
Free Estimates .

992·9057TNI/1

·SUBSTI"UTE BUS DRIVER • :
GALLlA /MEIGS COUNTIES: ..
Applicants Must Have A High ~

School Diploma Or Equivalent, ~
Orlver·s License •

Commer~ial

Wllh School Qus Claasificatlon · ~
And A Clean Driving Record. Ea:~ •
parlance Working In A Pre· •
School Stlting Preferred. Begin~· :
ning RatoOf l'a)o ~ $6.25/Hr.
·

SUBSTIT\JTE HOME VISITOR • '
MEIGS COUNTY: Applicants :

Must Have A High School Olplo- •
rna, Chikl DeoJelopment Assodata :-

FREE ESnMATES

D. Geaey's
Bod3JSfaop
Quality Work at
a Fair ~rice!
,
550 Page St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760 1
Home Ph.

614-992·3120
Don Geary,

o-r
.......

Howard L. Wrltesel

MANLEY'$

ROOFING ·
NEW-REPAIR

HOME IMPROVEM~NT
Rtioftng, Plumbing,
Room Addldons,
Drywall, Siding,

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter CJea11lng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

P.O. Box 220 Bidwell,
Oh 45614

949-2168

. (614) 388-9865

- Concrete, Etc.

3117194/JFN

Credenlial Auociate Degree In ·
Early Childhood Education Or Re- :
lated Fiold. E.r:perienca Working ,

In APro·SCitooi Setting Preferred. ·

Bgginning Rate 01 Pay Is $6.25 I •
Hr.
·
•

Applicants For This Posilion May ·,
Submit A Resume To Jeannie :
Williams, Human Resource Man- .
agar, Access To Human Re- ·
source Development. P.O. Bo.r: ·,
316, Galhpolis, OH 45631.
The Deadline For Accepting Applications Is Monday, Au~us1 18,
191H 5:00 P.M. For Additional Inform;~tion Call €114·,.41 ·3010 8:00

:
,

·
;

·5:00 P.M. Mandai Thru Friday. .
ACCI$1 To Human Resource 0• •.

valopment Is An AAIEEO Em· :

Lo"a·s

CO"STRUCTIO"

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 2o years experience.
Free Estimates
·

&amp;
INSULATION
. 537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
992·2772

8:00 o.m.-3:30

O.ages
leStn Deors &amp;

~=C=a=ll=6=1=4=·8=4=3=·5=4=2=6=·::;~ .:=~;,.d111011,
BISSEll BUILDERS, INt
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
614-992-7643'
(No Sunday Calls)

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1QVQ Modal I Or Newer.

'i""~~~~=~---.·
- ··

Help Wanted

'BUllEIIN BOARD
'7".,c,l..!al~ Inch wHkdays
.,.. column fnch Sunday

Antiques. top prices paid, ~iver­
ine Antiqun , Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Uoore owner, 614 -0&amp;2·
2526.

Porta John Rentals
Septic Tanks Installed
Nsw Aerlator nmers &amp;, Motors

'-f, DH
(6141 992-4279

-·

Get '"' ••••plcrou
·. Witll ADaQy SolltiMI

Antiques, furniture, glan. china,
coins. toys, lamp•, 9uns, tools,
tslates ; also appra1sals, Osby
Mwtin, 814-992·7441,

2000 Gal. Septic Pumping Truck

33051 5133

.

iiiaiiffiiim

AbJolutt Top Ool..r: All U.S. Sll·
vtt And Gold Coins, Proolttlt,
Diamonds, Antlqut Jftflry, Qookl .
Rings, Pre-1030 U.S. Curr•ncy,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewefry
- U.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
AvenJe, Galtipo~s, 614-..a-2a.2.

TRI-COUNTY SANITATION

Wearable Adlmlslng
P.O. ... 215

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

~~~ 8119197ffi·

90 ·Wa11ted to Buy

HOWARD'S

Nomdes
Spedal DcslptS

CELLULAR PHONES

WANTED: .Emergency Relief Workers (Subatllutll)
needed to work with Individuals with MR/DD In the
Gallla and Meigs Counties. Hours are scheduled
as needed; must btl able to work evenings,
weekends and some overnights. High School
dlplomaJGED, valid driver's license, three years
licensed driving experience, good driving record
and adequate automobile coverage required.
Salary: $5.25/hr, to start. Training provided.
Informal aettlng. 5end resume to: P.O. Box 604,
Jackson, OH 45640; ATTN: Cecilia. Deadline lor

713-618f0r 304·713-5-441.

•New Homes

992·5535

~

2/f YEARS IN BUSINESS

=-::.P=u:=bl:::lc:..:N;:o:::;tlc:.:•:..._.J.I .
~b'hio Deportment of 110 Colirt St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
.....,-4119
WV1023477
1~91-58GO
Tronaporlatlon hereby
..A
notlflea oil pre·quollfled
blddere thll dludvontegld
bullnou ~~~· WID be
ollordtd lull opportunity to
aubmlt bide In reapon11 to .
thla Invitation and will not
be dlocrlmlnatod ••
....olnll on
tho groundo of roce, color,
~60° Communications
or nallonol origin In
co~ lor on IIWird.
Minimum wage lor
lllle project have boon
prodotormlned •• roqulrod
by low ond aro oil , _ In
the bid propoaol. "Tho dote
113 W. 2ND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
•·;~nttdoy, Saptamber lll ' for completion of thla
1o, 111117 lor lmprovamanla -rk aholl bo •• aol forth In
614-992~5479
In:
the bidding prop-r.•
Molga county, Ohio lor
Plana and Spoclflclllone ......... : . ·-: . .
Improving llctlon MEG-7· oro on lllo ot tho
111.38, Stole Routo 7 In Deportment
of
Cheater Townohlp, by Tronoportlllon.
JERRYWRAY
draining end povlng with
DIRECTOR OF
aapholt concreta and by
TRANSPORTAnDN
roploclng approach alibi (B) !8, 2!1·, 2TC
and concrete do;;c:;::k~o;;,;n..:..._ _ _ __
110

• SIDING '

custoxtl_

"FAl:TOBY
DIBEl:T
PRI(JES"
Quality Window Systems

Actlvttlel ............ 102,123.17
FIOIIIIIW

Rici. Ptarton Auc1ion Companr,
full tlmt auc1loneer, complete
auction
atrvlct_. lictnltd
166,0hio &amp; Wtst VIrginia, 304-

r--...._.__....;_~·., J l

• DECKS
• ROOFING

992·2753

817/97 pd.

Extracurrtcullr

antlquH, rading eardt, furniture,

1·614·742·2925

"Stop puttuag off those much nef!ded
home improvements. " CaU Today!

Brakes " Shocks
Struts - Tune-ups

Call Us For A Free EsUmare

Hondo&lt;·

"''·-lot!·~.e15-54Dol.

10 in .......... $10.00
12 in ........ :.$11.00
14 in .......... $12.00
16 in .......... $14.00
20 in .......... $16.00

•GARAGES

•Exhaust•

3351 Happy Hollow Rood
Mldd!oport, Ol!lo 45768
New Homea, Addltlona,
Roofing, Siding, ·
Pole Barna,
Decka, Painting

Marlolt

aon. wv.· E~eryday e-s. Crafts,

SMITH'S CONSTRUCTION ~~~~~:~~:~~ :::~.:::~8:~~~::·:.::.

· CUSTOM

Home lmproveme~~ts

"'"""'9

r------------------,

Po rn! PleCiscmt

Actlvltln .....................31

Cloao........,.&amp;

(614) 367-0266 .'tf\111
1-800-950 -3359 Gc\"4\C\\l

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

Joe Wli1CH1

1998 r.tartln Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

Crowlortfa FIM

DREHEL'S
SAW CHAIN

GAWPOUS, OHIO 45831

Auction

and Flea Market

Pomeroy, O~lo 45769
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc.
Pllone: 1!14: 992-2406
Fax: 304-773·5861

JOlES'

• Mowers • Chain Sews • Weedsetsra • Aulhot !zed
Dealer for:
-Brlgp &amp; Strl!tton • MTD- Murray- McCollough •
EchO- Ryobl· Roper • Rally- Hydro Gear
AND OTHERSII
..... &amp; Slnlt• .... Sonb Ta I I Ia
Driltr Pow• I; I; Ill Alwclallua: c.tlllitl2
• State Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohio

80

250 Condor S1reet

"W.,_.T...

Partt and SertJke!!

1:00pm FrWoy.

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine.&amp; Welding Shop

2 ml. ·off Rl7
Leading Creek Rd.

c,.

M&amp;J

=

~ ~[::!:~::~~e~~~~~

The following exhibitors placed in
thi: open class beef show at the Meigs
C9unty: ·
. Charlois junior yearling heifer -Walnut Lane Beef;
Shorthorn junior heifer calf ..
Windy Hills Caule;
Hereford junior yearling heifer -Cheryl Jewell;
.
Non-registered spring heifer calf- Windy Hills Cattle, Rankins Club
Cal~es, Lakeview Fanns; Non-registered junior heifer calf -- Walnul
Lane; Non-regisrered summer yearling heifer .. Jenny Clifford; Grand
champion non-registered •• Windy
Hills Cattle; Reserve champion non,
resistered -- Jenny Clifford;
. ·
Maine Anjou junior calf·· Walnut
Lane, Lakeview Farms; Maine Anjou
summer yearling heifer -- Jamie
Drake; Maine Anjou spring yearling
heifer - Windy Hills; Grand cham- .
pion Maine Anjou •• Windy Hills;

Custom Homes

Ctert

NOTICE T.O BIDDERS
Notice Ia hereby glvon
that the Boord of Education
of the Eutem locll School
Dlatrlcl, 3agoo SR · 7,•
Rllldlvllla, OhiO 45772,
will olllr for ule by 111ltd
bid at 12:00 noon on
llondly, September a, 111111,
• 11183lnllmltlonal bua.
All Silled onvolop01
contelnlng 1 bid aro to be
mor-ad clllrly on the
outoldo and aent to the
Treuu,.,•a Office. Terme of
sole will be colh or money
ord«. Sold Board rtllrvtl
tho right to wolve
lnlormalltloa, to occept or
reject any ond all, or porta
of ony · and all blda.
Queatlono con beon•by Mra. Llaa Ritchie,
Traaourer llll85-4331'.
(8) 4, 11, 18,25 4 tc

entertaining guys and
,gals le8CI clas- at the Meigs
.COunty' Fair showed for falrgoen lha change from that
,Which Is aheared off 11 sheep's
back to that used In creating
fashionable wool clothing.
·• Wearl11g garments macie
from wool,· the particlpanta
•tared the show arena leadIng Iambe. They ware judged
on the baela of outfits worn, 50
polnta; pclse and appearance, .
25 pointe; and control and
prwentatlon of the animal, 25
pointe.
First and aeeond place wlnIIBfSiin their respective class-

show results

- ~ ===

CROWD FAVORITE • Deeplle the heel end humidity the Demolition Del'by had the usual packed house Ssturdey afternoon st
the 133rd Melga County Fair. The derby'a reaulte-. not available it p. .l time. SENTINEL PHOTO BY DA'fE HARRIS

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Nollco lo hereby glvon
Include uolng dump
that the Boord of Educ-n
.of the ltolgo Locol School ..-. e.-rng tour p1pea
Dlotr.lct, 320 E01t Main and mlnlmol excavlllon
Street, Pomeroy1 Ohio -tho Ohio-· '
45768, will offer for oale by, Said pilrtJon of lllghwoy
aee!ed bid at 1:00 P.M. within 1111 munlclpll
Tuotday, September 2, 11197, corporation llmlla being
the followtng vehlclel:
· hereinafter referred 10 11
thelmprD\iement,1180 lntomotlonol Buo H
WHEREAS, 1111 Vllllge
11N121ntomollonalluo H
11N121ntornallonolluol13 further dHirea cooporellon
11N121ntomallonal Buo 114 from the Director of
18831ntomlllonal Buo 127 Tranoportollon In the
planning, dulgn and
1884 Chevy 1/an G-10
All 1Hllll envelope• conatrucllon of aold
contolnlng bide ore to be lmprovNOW THEREFORE, 81 H
morkod cl11rly on the
ordolnod
by the council of
I""teldlo: Terme of 1111 wiU the· Vlllege
of Pomeroy,
or money order.
Ohio:
Board reserve• the
to wolve lnlormalllltt, C8-2Rov.4/8N2
Thla ordlnonce Ia hereby
accept or rojocl any or porto of ony and all declared to be on
meaouro by
au..tlono can bo emergency
reaeon of the n11d lor
onewtrtd by Mr. Paul Me· expediting
Elroy, Trenoportellon Supor· lmprovomonta· tohlghwoy
promote
vr.or II (614) 742·29!10.
highway
IMiety,
All bide muot be rocolvod provided It recolvoo and
the
In, ond bid opoclllcotlon alllrmotlvo
vola
of
two·
1h11ta moy bo obtolnod thlrda of the mimboro
from, TREASURER'S OF· elocltd to Council, H oholl
FICE, 320 E. ltoln Stroot,
tlflcl ond be In fclreo
Pomeroy, Ohio 4576t, (614) toke
lmmodlotoly upon Ita
m.seso.
paaoage ond approval by
Cindy J. Rhonomuo,
tllo Mayo~; otherwlae, It
Treaaurer
ohlll toke offici and be In
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD
from ond alter tho
OFEDUCAnDN
oarllost portod allowed by
P.O. Box272
law.
ll Pomtoroy, Ohio 45769
Plllod: Au~, 4, 11187
I, 12, 1B4tc
Alllll: 1&lt;m11y Hvaollorkl
Public Notlea

Reserve champion Maine Anjou ••
Walnut Lane;
· Longhorn spring yearling -- Val ley View Farms; Longhorn cow-calf
-- Valley View. two places; LonghOfl)
two-year old heifer •• Valley View ;
Lon hom cow class .: Valley View,

~· -

· •SIMII Engines
•Liwn llowers .
•Chain Saws
•WHet Eaters

949-2804

Fall festival on ·para

Open class beef

--------

il14 4411411
Rd., Gallipolis, OH

DIIBILI

1050-1-888 441·1050

HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING .
Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
1-800-672·5111171391

oComputer Sya1ema
•Repairs
•AI;ceesorles
•90 Day Same As Cash

....., • •·••or odlll••·
Complete MIIChlne Shop Se~ Fabrication
Steel Salea, Weldlnc Supplies, Illdustrlal GIIS
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday - 8:00 a. m.~ 4:30p.m.
Saturday - 8:00a.m. - 12 noon

· - .,......,.. 1

Will Your Utilities Put You
In The Poor House?
Consider:

CORPORAL ELEaRIC
Dally Rd., Racine

61 4-949-3060
John Wllllama, Owner
Licensed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Frse Eltlmatea
Providing Quality
Realdentlal 5ervlce.

24 Hr. Emerg1111cy
Service

;:::~FRII~:::::
Local Area Pick Up
Dlacardad Applloncaa
&amp; Meny Metala.
814-1182-4025

Cell 8 am-a pm

'*yer.

HoT PRESSURE (LEANING
House • Mobile Homes •
Privacy fences • Patio
Decks, Driveways • Farm &amp;

Heavy Equipment • Remove
unwanted dirt, mold and
mildew • Restore the clean

natural look ·

We can W11Sh anything
Free Estima1e
Resitlenllal &amp;Cammertiol

ANNOUNCEMENTS

.1

ATTENTION

S300·$500AWeek
AvBfage Earninga
Branch· Outlet Hu Numerous
005
Personals
Openi;-.gs. No Experience Neceslive Girloi Call Nowi 1·800·255- sary. Call Monday &amp; Tuesday, 81
0700 eJII. 2962. $~.99 per min. 1811\ &amp; 8119tlt. 9-5.
Must bt 18)'rl. Ser11-U 61JH54561 ..... .S-7441
8434.
A~ton S8 -$1 8 IHr, No Door ·To · :
Reduce safe and faat with Go· Door. Quick Cash. Fun &amp; Relax- ·
Besetablala and E·.V8P Diuretic ing,t-800-136.Qt681ndislstrep.
availabla Fruth Pharmacy, Uid·
dleport.
AVON - $8 ·St8 /Hr. No Door To
= = - - - - - - · 1 Door. Quick Cash! ·eonuset~
Share Vour Thoughts With Girls funlt -B00- 827-4640 lndlslstrep.
1 On 1 Uvelll ·t-900 -255-0700
E11.1 2963 $'3.99 Min, 18+, Serv-U,

Babysiuor needed in. my home •

6u1o:;:9·6ol:::;5;:.;·84::;34:::·: - - - - - - l for 9mo. old, part-time, day shift :

R. L. HOLLOtf.
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone • 'Gravel
Dir1• Sand

985-4422
Chester, Ohio
10125/961lln

"':""

40

304·773-5878torTracy.

Giveaway

=:'-::--:-:::--::::-;:;:o::;:-;7.:-;::-::-1
1990 Red Toyota Pick -Up Stan·
dard, 4 tp. good enid. $2,995.
~my

(61,.)-379·2887

2 K1ttens: 3 Months Old, 1 Blactl
&amp; White &amp; 1 Calico, 614-H&amp;3479.

.

Babysiner Needed In My Home ·.
In The U•Hcervide·Area, Belote&amp;'
Alter S:hool Refer&amp;nces Re~
quired, C;all AlterS P.M. 61~· 256·
6577.

~

CAREER
OPPORT\JNITIES

4 Puppies To A Good Home : 2 ·Rapicly Growing Home Appliance
Males Black With Some White; 2 And Furr iture Rental Company ...
Females t Black, 1 Bu'ff Color, Has ImMediate Full- Time Posl·
614·38B·16t4.
Uons Avuilable For High, t.lotivat·
Cur1a1n Rod For A PiciUre Wind- ed, Careor·Minded Individuals In: .
rNI614 -446-3:J75.

60

Lost and Found

ACCC•UN111 MANAGEMENT
CI\STOMER SERVICE
DELIVERY
·

Found : 3 K~s On Secctnd Ave- We Will Train People With Good
nue, Calllo Identify, 614-446- Communication Skills And A
:co70_5..,
. c-.:----:--:----:-"":"~:- I Clean Driving Record For These ~·
Found: 'female Beagle On John- Poaitions.
son RidQo Rood, 614 -446-2896 ·
Exc;ellent Compensallon And ·

F..OUNP: Female, medium &amp;ized Benefits Package.
·
red wfsome white dog on Viand
St Call304-675·2910 or 304·67~ ApplicadonsAccepted:
0056.
IN PERSON ONLY
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
Reward : Red Cocker Spani•l.
RENTWAV
·
lost in 1st St. area, Pt Pleasant.
5 OHIO RIVER PLAZA

30...075·5932.

70

.,

Yard Sale

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

DIRECTORS OF OPERAnONS

======::;:=:1
Gallla Uelga CAA is seeking a'
Gallipolis
dlrer:tor of Opentdona. Rasponsl-,

.

biUtles lnc:lude overstelng the II• .
&amp; VIcinity
cal operations and grant manag•·
---:-:,..,--:-::-:-~:----1 menllwrillng . Degree in Flnanc:e ~ ·
AI.L Yard Sales Must
or related field or 6 veers ••periBe Paklln Advance.
ence working r8qulrad . Send n~
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
sume with 3 professional refer~ ·
the day ~elore thlld
ences to Gaflla Meigs CAA, P.O.•
is to run. Sundl)'
Bol 272, Cheshire, Ohio 45820.
t41Uon ·2:00p.m.
Application Deadline 08122187 '
Frktay. Monday edition
E.O.E.
• 10:00 J ,n\. Soi!Urdl)'.

�'

Page10 • The Dally Sentinel

The Da!ly Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

Mondly, August 18, 1fKil

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crosswo.r d Puzzle

•
'

....., to Pawwl alll Puate

PHILLIP

ALDER

720 ltucks for Sale
Compvttr Ultrl Ntodod . Work
own houra. UOk to tsoklyr 1·
81lQ.So1&amp;.11811 11501.
Compultr Uoora Ho,dod. Work
own Hra., tZOK To ssoK /Yr. ·, .
8llQ.Sol&amp;. 71811 X 1113.

FIN AN CIA L

21 0
Business
Eam ... ,. moner without ....,.
Opportunity
lng h~me. lnvlle your lriendl
over lor a profeaslonal glamour
IHOTICEI
portrait pirty. Salillilc:tion guar·
VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
antetd. For information call I· OHIO
recommends that ~au do bu1i·
1100-081-5787 Of 1-8011-4211-11383.
neu with peoplt you know, and
E-loncod Halr Styllll Noiodod NOT to aend money lhn:~u$1h She
For Buay. New Salon, 014·4•1 · mail until you .have lnnattgaled
tho on.ro.
1880,814-258-83311.
Home 8uslne11 S.A.S.E. $1 .00
M.O. Only, S.P.F. lnf. P.O. Box 230 ProfessiOnal
347358. San Francisco, CA
Services
84t34.
HARTS IIASONARY • Block,
UGHT DELIVERY
Caah paid weekly, need small brick &amp; atone work. 3D years excar &amp; know area well. Call 0 perktnce, rea10nable 11111. 304885-3581 altor e:oopm, no job to
304.07S.Sta7.
small or • BIG. W\4121llll8 .

Tn...... .
Opportunities Abound At Llnle
lln• .

•

Caeaarsl All Levell 01 Exp,
Hooded. Groot Growth Potential.
flex Sc111dultt. Bonuo Plant AI&gt;
pfy At Stora Or Send Resume To:
P.O. Box 10, Barboursville, WV
25504.
Offlct Peraonnet. needed, Pomllt'·
ay area, patt-time, possibly full·
time. General of1ict dut111: tetephone aklll-1, lime c:arda, invoicll·payable and receivable, cotrespondence, computer experi·
enc:e, drafting skills a plu1, minor
tn work. Only malure, eJCperl. trtcod I1Hd lt&gt;pli. Send rosumo,
r~fertncta and wage requltementl 10: Box GU·12 rJo Point
Plo11ant Register 200 Main SL
Pt Ploallll\ wv 25550.
Ptrt dmo racoptlonlatlblllng &lt;lork
noodod lor local phyalclan·a of·
flee. Computer taperiance and
knowledge of.ICD·I coding and
managed cart tnsuranct billing
htlpfut. Quallflod lt&gt;plicanta mar
submit r11ume1 to P.O. 458,
Raclna, 01145771 . No tolophone
lnqulroa ptouo.

Pair-rima Dletar~ AidetCook
opening. Competitive salary. Appl~ In petaon. Point Pleasant
Nur~lng &amp; Rehai:IUltadon Cenler,
Slate Route 02. Roule 1. Boa
321, Polnl Ple11an1. WV 25550.

EOE

Uvin,aton'l bailment water·
prootmg, all batement repairs
done, lrM eatimalaa, llletime
guar1n1ee. 10yra on jolt e•perlonct. 30&lt;-ol'S-2145.

All r o l l - -*'"II In

thiS - - Ia Nrject to
the FICieral Fair HO\fllng Act
of 1968 which makn k.ltlogal
lO advertise ~any ptefeie1a:e,
limitation Of ~scrimlnatlon
baled
religion,
IQ)C 1amiflal stalus or national
origin, or atty tr•enllon to
make any such peelete1a:e,
hmitatlon or c:hcrlmination.•

on race."'*"·

TNt illhi paper will not
-I&lt;~ accept
8dvefllsemenlllorraaf ......
which Is In violation of tho
law. Our readers are Mreby

• - lillian dweltlnQS
adv8r11Sedlnthlsare avaNable pn an equal
. opporlooily basis.

Part-Time Position Available For
Medical Transcriptionist - Can·
didata Mu11 Be High School
REAL ESTATE
GradUate Or Equivalent Whh
· Compfehensive KnowledGe Of
Medical Terminology. llust Pot·
oeaa Good Typing Skills And 310 Homes for Sale
Knowledge Of Grammar And 3 Btdroom houao .w2 car lllflgl. . .
SpalllrO.
112 to 314 acre, In good location,
wlclt1 water In Letart 3~-ags.
Please Send Resume' To Hollef' :&amp;1.
'
Clinic; HUman Relations Deparlmont: uo Jackson Pike, Golllpotlo, 4 Split l.tYe1 With 5400
Ohio 45831·1562 Or Fu To at,_ S9. FL Including Full Buement
848·5532. Equal Opportunity Em- Wotll 2 Car Garaoe. Gat Hoe~ 2
Mllol From Galipolla on Bulavilt
"-·
Pike, On 1 112 Aero Flit lo~ City
Part· Time position available Scltoola. 1115,000 Or Boat Otter.
Sale• 1 Clerical Duties Retail 814-e48.o:IOO.
Furniture Sloro, Apply .Tope's
A111EHS IIOATOAOE
Furniture, 151 Second Avenue,
COIIPANY
Gallipoll1., 10 a.m. Jtill 1 p.m. No
Wholrlho lllrll.- no, lot
PhoneCol\1
Athonlll&lt;l'tgago "'r-oll lot
Ploaoant VttUif Huratng' &amp; Raha· , our ataH help you get the k8'l ~u
bllilltlon C.nrer Ia looking Jar an
Wo apac:lolzoln :
Admission Coordinalor. Uu1t be
Flnandng
..,...,_ ..d..,.
· · lieenled nurtt or IIUt"'Hd sodal
.
worker, with a minimum or nve
StiHmptoyod· roftnonclogyean experience in long term
care. Expirlence ln akllledlaub-- Ho. .
BUt Con·
eaU..Uan-lnvHtnllnl Proper·
acute, rehabilitation and acute
ty. Coahout lor ony nood.
..,. 11 pra- Send roaumo 10
No application foe. Afllovolo of
P•rsonnel at Pleasant Vallej
Hoapltol 2520 Valley Dr., Pt.
~ t
cot 10dtli br a 1ree ana~lls
PIN..,._ WV. 25550. AAIEOE.
-929-1402/8f..st2-.
REHAB SPECIAUST
FOR SAlE BY OWNER
Galllo Molga CAA Ia tooklng a
Aehobllltotlan Speclollll for lht 2 Story. 2 Satlla. 2 Or 3 Bocroom
Gallla County are to work on a Home, For Sale Nice Size Lot,
FQNCIFIUII bM!II .dlng property Uason, WV. 304-773-5019, Call
Inspection. Experience In con- Only Between 8 A.M. To 7 P.M.
ltructJonlhausing tradea, pt'tftr· Ptoa...
ably HUO or ~•ernmont lundld
FOR SALE BY OWNER:
programl. AbiUiy to proce11 pa·
111 Vinton Court. In Gallipolis. 1
penrork and screen contractort. Floor
Plan, 3 Bedrooma, 1 Car
Mual ·pouen valid driver• II·
cenat. High School diploma or Garage, LOI 60x90, Call 814-3792720 For Appointment Only AI·
aqulvaltnl Appllcatlonllr81umes ,.,.
P.M.
wllh reterencet accepted al
Chlahlre on;ce throuoh 08-22·87. Houat and property, apprax. •a·
E.O.E.
c:res. kleal 118rler home. Beech
Scenic Hills Nursing Center 11 St., PomoroyOH. 304-882·2!l77.
Now Offering Part·Time Nuraing
Acres. 4 bedro9m1, 3
Poaltlono With SHIFT D.,fEA· Rolling
botht, •lamlly room, living toOfll, 2
EHTIAL. LPN'S And Rko En· garages,
3 112rrilu out Sandhill.
couragtd To Applr In Person At 304-875-540(1.
3tt &amp;ckrldge Rd., a;ctwo~, Ott
bedroom, two balh, on
TELEPHONE TALKERS NEEO· Three
corner lot, loc:•led 33184
ED: Cuh poid weekly. No ex- large
Now Limo Rd.. RuUand. $35,000
perience nece11ary call 0 304· 080,
g41 ·357·2854 ovontnga
a75-5187.
orly.

_

......

.

...
lntp"'-"'

--.....

WANTED: Emorgon&lt;r Rollo!
Worklra (SubatltutOII Ntoded
·To Work Wilh Individuals With
MRIDO In Tho Galllo And Molga
Counllea. Hours Are Scheduled
AI Nttdod: llull Bt Able To
Work Evenings, Weekends And
Some .Ovornlghta. High School
Diploma IGED, Valid Drlvoft ll·
cenat. Thrtl Years Licenatd
OrMng Exparienc:e, Good Driving
Record And Adequate Automobile Coverage Required. Sal•r~:
15.25 /llr, To Start. Training Provldlcl. tnlormol Setting. Sond Rooumo To: P.O. Box 804, Jackson.
OH 45640; ATTN: Cecilia. Dead·
tlno For Applicants: 8/18107.
Equal OppotW~~ Emplayor.

180 . Wanted To Do ·

·N-tlll7 14 -~ bolll,down, 11 Slllmo, with approved
uiCII. Cll1....,~m.
1817 doublowldo 11445 down,
$22Wmo. Froo dollvtlf &amp;11tup.
t-HI777.

7112.

Large Hltctlan of used home. 2

Nlco, Ctrttlll Air, 1281/Mo., +
Utllltloa, Dopoalt Roq. No Poll,
114-WI-21157.

tacllititl. dolt 1D

IChoolln 1DWn.

or 3 bodroomL Starting 11 $3485. Appllcattomt anMablo at vti&lt;toe

Ovlck dollvory. Coli t-100-837· Or- ApiL 148 or call at4-882·
323IL
37tt. EC»l
Now 111117 14x70 ttvao bldroom.
lndudoo a montha FREE lot ronL
Only $181.81 per month with
tt050 down. Call 1•800·837·
323IL
Now lonk Aopo'al Ontr, S lef~

Furriohod Efftcioncy Shllo Sam.
$115/llo., Utllltloa Paid, 807 Soc·
ond Av.rllt, Gallpolls, atH48-.Aflir7P.M.
~~~~--~--~
Furnished Efficiency 2 Rooms I
Bllh. S22!illlo., Utilitlel l'lld, gzo

755-71~1 .

ua 384o. Allor 1 P.M.

owna, financing availab t. 304- Fourth. Avenue, Gallipolis, Cl1_.·

new home S1,000tdown. Furnllhad Apartrnan1,. 1 Bedroom,
no payments after 7 year1. 304- 930 Second Avenue, Galllpollt,
755-5566.
$2tli/llo., UWitioa l'lld, 814-44&amp;330 Fannl for Sale
- · Anor 7P.u.
Apartment for Rtrtt: 322 Third
94 Acre farm, 4 bodloome, 2 112 -.... at4-258-tll03.
baths. great room, Of• klr huntera. Ca~ Homotlotd Bend Brok· BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
er. 304·812·2405 or 304·882· BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
2221.
ESTATES, 52 Weatwood Drlvo
kom $2110 to $334. Walk to ahop
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
&amp; movioo. Call 814·448·2588.
EquotHouttlnQOpportunlty.
1.2 acre lot In Syracu ... $15,000,
·
814-8112-4561 .
Convenient to PVH, 2bedroom;
klll:hon, bath, lR No pats. S300I
2 acre toll on Bethel Rd, emtltl mo.l300 dapoJIL 304-675-57118.
from PI Pleasant No single
wtdes. l15,000oa. Call bolore furnlohod 3 Roomo &amp; Sam, No
9pm 304-675-7&amp;48.
Pota, Raforonco And Dopoolt Roqulrod. 814-WI-1518.
For Sale Or Trade: 32 acres 5 · =.:=..:.:.::..:.;:..;::.:::~-----'Miles From G,_llipo'lis, on Slate Furnished Apanmenr, One Bed·
Route 211. Will Sell All or Pans. room. Upatairl. All Utilities Paid,
S25,000, 814-258-G574
No Pels. as. Second Ave., Galli·
Apple .Gran-Scenic Valley. potit. 614-448-tSZJ
Beautilul 2acre loll, public water. Gradoua living. 1 and 2 bedroom
C. Bowen Jr. 304-578-2338 or apartmenll al Village MaNM and
Wedat Roaitr 304·675-2722.
Riverside Apart,..nta In Middle·
port. From $238·$304 . Call 814·
BRUPER LAMI
892·5064. Equal Housing Oppor·
Own a

tunltlel.

114-775-1173

Oalll• Co. : GaiUpoU., Neighborhood Rd., Lasl Twol 22 Acrll
124,000 Or 10 Ac;re1 $10,000.
Friend~ Ridge. 10 Acru $14,000.
8.6 Acres $7,600 Or 18 Acrll
••8.000. Teena Run Rd: (2) 10
Acre Parcels, $10.000 •·
llolf• Co .; N~ar Albany. Cheapor han lot Rant • 5 Acres
$7,500 - $t,OOO Down • $138
Mo., For 1 Fiwe Yeara. Alexander
Schools
·
J•ck•an Co.: Jackton, 2 Mll11
Out Beaver p;ke, Going Quick...
Woodoct, Pn.ato Bvildl~oto on
SA Cfll $17,000. HIgh Int 0 n
This 15 Blv11 Great Velwa
127,000. Start A Stable BulinOn 58 Acres Wllh Largt Barns
Bcrdering Hammerrown Lake
l87.000. BIO Farm Home (4·2 +
Sun Room, On S Acres Wilh
Pond. S70,000.
Call for Ftee Maps + OWner Fi':'"
nancing lolfo. Take 10% Off Lilled
Pricet On Cosh Purchalllt
Bullding Iota on Mid Waw Drive
in NBW Havvn.. 304-882·2904.

360

Real Estate
wanted

Cash Paid for Land In Gallia
Counly. Send Price, Location &amp;
Description to Blackburn Realty,·
P.O. Box 783, Gaillpollo,OH .,
45631 . or COl: (614)..411-llootl
Farm 100 Acrea More Or Less,
House And Farm-Equipment, 15
Miles Of Rio Grande; 937· 773-

I Bedroom HOUIO In Mason, Uti~
ities, Rent $300/Mo., + Deposit
No Prt~. 914·256-1489.

01

BuJ or 1111. Riverlnt' Antiqull,
1124 E. lloln Stroo~ on Rt. 120,
Pomeroy. Hours : U.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 10 e:oo p.m., Sundlly 1:00 JD
a:oo p.m. 114·1D2·2528 , Run

--·

The Ch11hkt Cat On Route 7,
Choahlro, O~lo lnvttel You To
SH Ita Hlca Stloction Of Antiquo
ICoHedble ~rnlture ,IQIJsaware.
Wedn11day Thru Salurday
10 :00·4:00, Tvtaday 1:00· 7:00
For The Wofklng Gal. Call 814·
387-7999.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1 Pair Of 10 Inch YTX Truck
Spukef'l, s1oo: Almo 1r New 10
Spood Bike, Rode Once, $80,
at&lt;-Z4H75e.
1815 ChiVy pick-up. 14ft. John
boat Oulllda -1/wood turnece.
40fL .. ttnlian laddtl. 24• wincf.
ow lin. 16" ltlocliiWhitt TV. Glrll
dothoa 5-e&gt;L304-67S. 1180.
2 ----~ 11+3711--17
~ ..... -~
•• ·
4 Sola 01 American Racing
WhHII, 1 Year Old, Paid $600,
Aaklng$275,at•·2llll-82t5.

Anlquo Olk flad.ll...-256.
Are you buylno ·now furniture?
Sol your uaod furrituro to tho Po·
rtJ0r0r Ttvift Shop. Thoro i1 a root
nfed lor bruklatt and dining
n;,om aela. We also buy baby
itM\1, good uNCI IOOJL Must be 1n
txcelltrn condilion. Good enough
lew Christmas gifts. Call 614·GI82·
3725 TuHdly lhru Frida~. 10af11·
4Pf'l 11 220 East Main Streel. Pa·
1~mor::.:;f1i:;·---------------Baby bed, droning table, high
chair, awing, car teat, stroller.
304-a7S..548.

'

410 Houses for Rent

House in Pomeroy tor sale
renl, 614·992-30QQ.

AnlquoOik

P
.
ICI.
•

RENTALS

Ton, Runo Good Bod' In Goot •
Shape, UOO, Phone a14-388:: "

em.

t

•

Ht
• K 7 54
.. J 8 5

• A
• 10

1 Year Old Billy &amp; Nanny Miniature Goal $t20, 614-258-'8504,
81H56-9:J67.
112 Aus1ralian Shephard, 112 Col-

lie pupp,ies, 6wkt, $25ea. 30•·
882·21!86.

2 Female Jock Russell; Puppiet.

12!0,00 each. Call : (814)·441·
0553

A Groom Shop -Pel Grooming.
Fn1urlng Hydro Bath. Don
Sholto. 373 Georges C1oek Rd.
814-44«Z11.
1
AKC Be~tgle puppie:s, trl·color,
champion blood linea , male
I tOO, fomalos ··125. 300·875·
8746.
AKC Mint Dachohundo, a WHks
Old, Had Sllots I Wormed, $250,
814-31111·1180.
AKC Poonerantan Pupo. Sholl a
Wormoct, 814-·8253.
AKC

Airedal• Pup·
a Tan Read)' AI·
25, 1997, 614·388·

8892.
AKC
Registered German
SheJ)herd Puppies , Avai)able
Now. 814·388-0442.

1830 Ford Vlckv Con•ortlbla SB
TH400, 114,000. 30...75·

t989 Ford -XLT Automatic, Air, e•
302 Engine, Runs Good, Look&amp; •

1971 Cadillac Coupe, Excel11nt
Condition. $1,800 000, ·et4·250e181.
1ga3 Mercury Grand Marquis,
price negotiable, call 1114·8025518, lea_we meaaage, will call
back.

.

1884 Oklo Clo"a· I4,DOO ·mtioa,
oxcollont condition, colll14·742·
2187-Spm.
1815 Dodge Arloa, Naodl Work
$400 0.8.0. (8101~532 c;att
Af11r•p.m
1188 BIIW K75, Mini c;cndUion,
13,500, e14-2811-82\ s.
t98a Dodge Colt 1100 D.B.O.
614-258-t482.
1088 llonta carlo ss 82.000
milts, tilt, ac, c:rulse, exira nlc:e.
304-675-7894.
t 988 cadillac Brougham, 12,000
miles. exc&amp;lleont condition, garage
kat&gt;\ $6685, 814-RII!i-3374.
1988 Dodao 0·50 414 4 Cylinder,
5 Spaad. Now AIC, $0,200; 1988
T·Bird. loadad.l2,850, 814-44117818.

AKC Roglatorod lab Pupploo,
Ptov.n K""dng Stook Chomplon 1888 Flreblrd 54,000 lliloo, Ex·
BloodUnt Yellaw I Bilek $250, ctllent Condition 14,500
lt-2288.
•.
(814~1
Golden Retriever Pupp)ll, 5
Wtekt"Oid, $76, 4 flmalet, 1
Wale, 8t43B8 0213.
HAPPY JACkS SKIN II&amp;LII
c:o::.::&amp;:.:•;........kretlh.~!hot•
apot..nd Irritated lkln.wlthout
llerold• PromoteaheelinQand
'haW~ on doQtand Cllll
· AoooHabloO·T-CJDNORfH
PRODUCE81,.4411-103:1.
Jack Ru11ell terrier pupplet, 7
ok ld
we • o , 11 ralaholl, wormed
and taito dod&lt;td. 1300 each. et4098-1066
=::.:;:.:;:.·______________
Miniature Collie (Sheltio), malo
1
1o s 25
2
pupPf or n • 1 • 81 .-. 74 •
-21l:::50::;.;
. --:--':'-:-:--:-~=-:
:
Rabbits lor sale. 30•·875·1234

·----M. . -

t 888 Buick Ctnlltry, 4 door, IV·
tomatic, etulse, till, eleciJic wl~
owa and seats. body eltctllenL
kept in garage, runa ptrfecl,
100'!'&gt; dopandoble, 11850 OBO.
make ma an affet, ·814·7•2·2370
or 814·388-8248.
tR88' Piymoutll Sundance, Auto,
Air, Runs GoOd, looks Good
SttiOO (614)-j4o-8552
1990 COftica high nileagt, runs
looks good. $2,000. 304-882·

&amp;

3382.

Goods

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

· 'FAIILY DREAM HOUSE•
Huge 4b(, ~home. futuring
an new~rcf'ugh lireplace. 1
1111e Ol lhe an IICUrll~ SYIIem.
$2.415/down. $~. ~ per month.

61 o Farm Equipment

___

8oullt
It

· 3NT

YOU

1992 tauzu ROdeo, air, new tirn, ~.
75,000 milet, 17000 080, 304· ,

CALL

THAT

8-l..().W.IHJ·TI
14a8 DoWn on otloc:t alnoJo-

1gg3 Chevy 1500 wt, e ely:, with :
1opper, vxcallenl condition; .&amp;1._,,,
992·7285.

Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment,
814-4411-03110.

630

Paas

e.-s-memblra

-

25 s.nct IIDnl
2t ...... . _

Norllt

a•

27~

Paaa

ztAotorS.n30 ......

31 W1nllr lily
37 .,._h
31 Force
40-lllr... an

dull

••c-

411peady

=J-

·18g8 Dodge Oaklto S.L.T. Ea-:
tondod Cob, Short bod, V8, Allto, t
PB Curiel, Tdt 7,575 mUOL 814- t
4-48 830..
t
04 Ford Ranger, low mUes, navy '·
btue, am1m, r1c, 814-902· 7861 .
:

'

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

FRANK &amp; EARNESl'

'85 To,ato llllcil, oxtond cab, 4•4.
uoatod wooden bed, good worl\
Vuck, $800 080, 6IH42·Z050.

AL'S I&gt;INEil

197g ChevJ Van, Window Van,'
8c~l. For more intonnal~n saoo;
0.8.0. (810125Ht108
.

By Phillip Alder
r---1HHHI---I . :
Last June, my wife and I were jog415 -t.toZ
ging and came upon a playing-card,
4 1 5 _ .......
f7 Olnua Ill -•
the club jack. As regular readers will
know, !hat propels me to dive into
" Right Through the Pack" by Robert
Brown
50Dimlnullve
Darvas and Norman de Villiers Han
1111111
(republished by Baron Barclay,
62FOOiad1996). Their deal reminded me of
13~­
Arthur
James Howell's well-known line: .L.....I...;,.j-"-...t.-1....
"All work and no play makes Jack a
dull boy." However, here the club
jack plays a far-from-dull role.
What was Soulh 's line in three noby Lull campos
trump after West led a club and Easl
· Cellbritv Ciphltoowptor••• n~trom QUCitllklnlby flmOul,.._, FIM'
EICtt ...... in tw c:CNr...,. tor anotwt. Toct.y'l t:M: N ..... 0
put up the queen'
.
Let's pass over the bidding. which
liS
•J
has an English flavor where lhe
FXES II J p . CXPSHJJ'SC
weak no-trump and limit raises rule.
P S .F·X X W VXYPRF.'
P R WS C
SISV
South might have succeeded by
winning lhe first trick with the club
liiJYWG
JFJS VRCHRCS, XV
ace, but perhaps Wesl would have
found the spade switch when i.n with
AXYRV
BFRGSY
H s v· v J c
lhe diamond ace. Instead. South
nicked thC club jack onto lhe lable!
JERVJCBEJK.
Understandably, Eas1 relurned a
club, which South won. with the ace.
PReVIOUS SOLUTION: "A 111m lives, becomes alive, because allis shadows,
Now came a diamond loWest's ace.
Its epaces.• -MiChael Cimino.
Equally understandably, Wcsl continued with a third club. However, his
happy thoughts turned to horror when
fiiAt IIAILf '-''""
PUULII
South claimed .nine tricks via two
hearts. five diamonds and two clubs.
At the top level, West mi@ht have
Rearrange '-'ten of
.
IO&lt;tr ocromblod - .
seen through the subtle ruse he&lt;::tuse
low
to lorm fO&lt;tr ttimple
East returned the club two al trick
ltwo, whi.ch shows that he started with
MY L B U0
exactly four clubs. (With two cards
remaining, one returns 1he higher;
with three or more cards remaining.
one returns the original fourth-high·
R0 H I C
est.) So, South had 10 have one club
remaining. And if South had started
with A·J-x, why didn 'I he win the
first trick? But this is much ca'icr to
work out away from the table, once
4Y A NIR I
I think people have a valuone knows the ac1ual distribution.
. •
•
• _
able sense of humor if they
. . - - - - - - - - - . know when it is not safe to

.::::.:...

hr++-ln+--1-+-+-+ltt..-lf--+-+--1-+-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1985 Ford Ranger •x4, wrecked.,
304-875-1837.

-.:t.,.._.

j

t985 Jeep Cherokee 4x4 3'llfl.
New Paint, Nice Wheels &amp; Tires
614 .. 46·11633.
'
1&amp;87 Chovy S.tO 4X4, good con- :

dillon, 814-9112.0737.

1SI87 ·Ford 4 WD, Short Wheel 1
·
HIIB Dodge Ram wagon, 414,
aulo, 31.11, well kept. 614-04g ...
3041. :
8110, N~ Truck. 614-387-7515.

THE BORN

1991 S· tO 414 VB. Altlo. 79K Ex· :
ceflant Condition, NAOA sa. 750 I
Sen Price.: 15,1395, Cook MQ!tor$. 1
814-448-01 03.
I
'
1i93 Chevfolet lumina Van, 7.:
pauenger seating. excellent' *
condition, high mileage. 17195, :

.
o

1995 Honda PassporL Low Miles, 1993 Baja ,180 Islander boa1,11'
115,800,814-046-11330.
Power 2 prop, ski equipment .,
S8500bargain,614·91i12-7102.
' :.
19g5 Pontiac Bonnevllle, 'loaded
wilh leathet seats. and auto moon 90 Pro 1T Bau Trat:ker, 25 hp, '•
rool, like new 46,000 miles Ill lhe eXIfll, $3200;614-Qg2. '
5161.
' :
(614)367-7060
1995 Sarurn SC2, Automatic:, Air, 760 Auto Parts &amp;
'1
Cruise, AMIFM Casseue. Trunk
Accessories
Rotoase. $t 2.000 can Altor s P.M. ~~--~~~~------71
(Serious Inquiries Onl~l) 614· Full line of auto body panels." L
446·4015.
paints and supplies, also glass~ '
light assembly. Oxygen and act· •
For Sale: H~97 Exrendad Cab 1y~ne tar.ks liHed and &amp;~~:changed.~ :
White, 4~~:4 271 -on Road· With 8t4·7•2·2792.
.
,,•
3rd Door 12,000 Miles. Fully OpliOned 350 Vorlel, $26,000; 199" New ou ranks. 1 lon trucli 1
.Pontiac Sunbird Red, College wheels &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; A Auto :
Girls Car, Well Maintained, 4 Cy· R;ptey, WV. 304·372·3933 or t: 1
Iinder, With Air, New Tires Wat 1100-273·9329.
.
I
$8,000 Now $7,5oo: tg78 Chovr
Malibu Arizona Car, Gray, Rust 790
Campers &amp;
Free· 305 V· 8, With Air, Cotvelle
Motor
Homes
Aalfr• 65,000 Miles. Great Condi·
·
tion S3,000 firm, 614·388-8803 ~,.,..,,---,.-----..:....~
1986 Shasta Camper 29 Ft.' AU. _.
Alter 5-f.ll-. Or Leave Me11age New Awning Sleeps G, 14.300, ~
Anihf:. ' .
cu.-.2.-5-5113.
A Need A Car? No Credll, Bad HJQ4 24' camper, air, .microwave:
Crodl\ Bankruptcy? We can H._, TV, full bath, queen bed, couch
Ro-Establllh Craditf Muat Make and chair, awning, $6500, 61• ·
$150 Week Take Home, 15% 985·4418.
Down On· Cash Or Tr1de To
Ouolily For This Sank Financing.
SERV ICES
No Credil Turn Oownsl 014·•41 ·
0607.

.;8~3~~~·-=~~--=------.
.,

Livestock
t 881 Chevrolet 1 ton llllck, 327, 4 840
Electrical and
2 top quality Slmmonttl caws, &amp; speld, ftalbiCI, grain bed, &amp; wood
Refrigeration
Two 40 Gallon Gaa, W.llr. Heel- 18 month Stmmontal bull, 814 . oidtbllardslnetudod. oood condl·
Residential ·or c:oi'Mierclal Wiring ''
ora (114)148-4255 Afltr 5 p.m.
~!B!a..-------1 lion, 131g5, :!Oo-7~5305. •
new ••~Ice Of' repairs. Mal\lr u: Jl
Tr Salt;o ·Sabloa For Solo, Some Hollltln
Bull
Calvoa,
tU72
Ton
4
Whool
Drive,
Good
1
cen11d elec:lriclan. Ridenour
Rare Ones. 814·245·92'Jiloave Also Croaaoa 3 Daya To 3 Rubber, Runo Good, 814·256·
~~~1, WV000308, 304-875- ' .;
•
Montht COl 814-245-6484.
6574.
AIlea-.

·'

O

*

720 · Trucks for Sale

Modern 2 &amp; 3 l:ledroom apart·
menta In Middleport, lie &amp;
equipped khchent, rafe11nctt
and deposit• required. Call 814·
a&amp;2·7831aftar 8:00pm
·

Wea&amp;

Pua

11~

211W:i ...
22 Auwten
cepllal
23 Hevtnga

24

.Opening lead: • 5

A QUILT?

-7~~~~~~~·----~-------- :

•
Home ·
CARS FOR StOOl Trucks, boall. 810
4·whleltrl,
motor
homes,
furnl·
1985 Massey Fe r g~son 1rac1or
Improvements
2•o diesel, axe shape. sa;5oo. ture, electronics, computers etc:.
by
FBI,
IRS.
DEA.
Available
your
BASEMENT
30H78257B.
a11a now. Call .1-800·513·4343
WATERPROOFING
En
&amp;-9388
Farman Cub tractor wllh cultl~a ­
Uncondilionallifatime guarantev. ,
tors and 1ide dresser, new motor;
Local rtfertncll futnlshed. Es- ~ ..
·
1980
·1RRO
Cora
for
1100111
also 25 gallon 1prayen 6U·949rablished 1975. Cell tB14) 448·
S.Ozvd And S&lt;&gt;d
34ZO.
0870 Or 1·800·287.0578. Rogers
locdy Ttis llontlt
WaterprOOF"U.
Trud\1, 41"'1. Etc.
Good Used Farm Wagon On
.
t-800·522·2730,
X
31101.
Rubber S225; 450 Cue Dozer
Good Condillon, SIB,500, 8t4· Ch111y Wonza Drag Car, Jegsler Appliance Parts And Service: All .,
245-~ .
Chuais. 5:13 Dana, Power Glide Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex· '
Transmtulon.
377 e.I.G. Small perience All Work Guaranteed ,
Huaqvarna &amp; Green Machine
French C i t~ Ma~tag, 614 · ~46~ .
trimmers &amp; brush culltlt on 1alt B~ Rollef Motor Runt 0.50 118 7795.
.•
now. Slder'a EqulpmonL 304-875- IIIIo, t .L $8;500 OBO, Turn Key,
814-245-11357.
7421.
C&amp;C General Home · Main· ,
tenence: Painling, vinyl siding . ·
Ma11le Ferguson 1010 4 WO Upton Ulld C.ara Rt. 12-3 Milel car~ntty,
doors, windows, balhs:· .'1
Soulh
of
~eon,
WV.
Financing
Tractor Compacl, With Bolly
mobile home f&amp;Jlllir and more. For 1
Mower. 1,050 Houra, 814·258- Alralla~o. 304..58-10811.
l~ee 8slima te call Chet. &amp;14·892·
1371, 814-256·1538.

Onl~at:

12 SpouN

Dealer: South

I I' I I I
J 1~._:; ,' ·
I
1

~

....,.:.IB;;_;.OI_;:;
•

-II.- ~:~plote

PIINT N\AWIEAED lflfUS IN
THESE SQUARES

•

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lEnERS
TO GET ANSWER

111111

SCRAM-LPS ANSWERS
Artack - Voice - Foyer- Safety - OFF my CAKE
. I've come up with a plan for my birthday. Since I'm
past thirty I'll just take candles OFF my CAKE.

I MONDAY

•VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22) If slanccs today instead of dwelling on
·you ' re too insislent ujlon havin~
what you lack. Gratitude produces ·
peace of mind and happiness.
your own way loday, you could be
quite disappoinled when you discovPISCES · (Feb. 20-March 20)
cr 1here arcn." t any ·troops following
Companions might do lhings today
BERNICE
your banner.
thaulispleasc you. View their bchav23-0ct.
23)
Some·
ior
philosophically and ·everything
LIBRA
(Sept.
BEDE OSOL
will be kept in proper perspective .
one who had helped you in the past
may need your assistance loday.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Today you might have to work in
Allhough you'll he .awarc of his or
her pltght. you mtght he reluctanr.
close .proximity wilh a person whose
SCORPIO
(Oct
24-Nov.
22
)
.
methods annoy and fruslrate you. Do
Tuesday. Aug. 19. 1997
Today
tl
you
encounter
someone
who
·
no1 go in ainicipating 11roblems.
In ,the year ahead. you might he
extremely fonunate in gainin~ a . consl~nlly demeans others, lry to con· • TAURUS (April 20:May 20) Cir·
i:umsta'nces mighl force you to social·
compassionate and understandmg vcn_h1m or her wtlh reason. You ca,n
friend. This will be a special rein· be an mslrument for thts. person s , izc with an individual today whom
you' ve been trying to avoid. Do not
tionship with many mu1udl benefits. good.
SAGITIARIUS
(Nov.
23-Dec,
.display
your bad reeljngs.
· LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Modify .
21) Your reputatton may be fragtlc ·
GEMINI (May 21-Jutte 20) Use
your material motivations today. Do 1
today, so do~ '1 do anytht_ng thai
extreme care in your career relationnot be concerned only about what
s,hips 1oday. Someone whose nose
could weaken. st. Behave as 1f.others
you can gel, also look o~l for the;
you rubbed in the dust might try 10
are watchtng, because t~ey .wdl be.
good will that you can gam : Trymg
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) · even accounts with you.
to patch up a broken rqmanee? The
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Even
Winning a· de~ate today isn't as
Astra-Graph Matchmaker can help
importan! as losmg a. frtemt Do ~ot
if you feel your ideas and suggestions
you understand what 10 do lo make
compromise bchefs, and avmd letttng
are superior to others today, be
the relationship work. Mail $2:75 to
out
o(
harid.
extremely
tactful and polite when
exlremes
gel
Matchmaker, c/o 1his newspaper.
AQUARIUS
(Jan
•
.
20-Feb.
19)
presenting
your
case.
P.O. Box 1758. Murray Hill Stalion. 1
Appreciate your p~ese"'. circumCopyrightl997 by NEA, Inc.
New York, NY !Ot56.

ASTRO-GRAPH

.,

.

I

. G;.,;,N;.:...,;O,...:l=-,,.,.5
rho chuckle quoted .
__
J.---1."--.J..
__
J..__J___
by
fill•ng
in the missing words
L
you develop from !lop No. 3 bekiooo.

l

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

10 llooan'tollet
11 Luau otrl•

Vulnerable: Both

"

Two Bedroom House. Close 10
Galtipalit. new sidin;. New Wind·
ows, All New Ki~. Wil Take or
Trade In 135.000. Phone : 814 ·
367-()403
.

• 7
• QUI 2

t Q J I IS
• A K J

1908 Blazer LT 4 Doors. Two ;
1990 Plymoulh Acclaim, crulll, •Tone
Paint Black Lealhef Lo&amp;ded. '
cold air, lilt. sun rool, auto, great $21,500,
61~246-800&amp;
:
llhlpa, $1985, 814-W2-8824.
1
Grand ~illavan 8 Pa~- :'
tW1 Lincoln Mark VIILSC, 56K or,
22.000
Molts. V·B, Auto. lfWI._
Miles, 814-448-4044
ed, Undet Ma,.,faCtured Warran.,.
:bo:;br:::-•.::9 pm.:.;,;.-:::::-:--:---:~1991· ~ntiac Sunblrd LE, $2,.t00, tr $15,800, O.B.O. 814-258·1252.:
Rat rerriera AKC R-laterod,· fe. 814-448{!437.
1114-258-1618.
.
;
....
~ale,~ Viloea1r21 WD'!!_To•H
avBoo
Putlt
p70
Motorcycles
~••· M&amp;
-• •
or 1RR2 SUbaru legacy, One OWner, 740
No~Smoking .Cat, Ellcelktnl Con160 Each (614)2~1104
dition. 92,000 Miles ss.soo 1982 Honda Goldwing Aspen·:
R
w·
cade Low Ml!I&amp;QI, Loll or Ex- '
eg. e1maraner pups, 11111 (614)388-ll305
tJall814-387-75t5.
'.1
docked, declawl removed, ready
ta go g.a.g7, 2famslll, 4malaa, 1893 Saturn SL·2 aunroof, aulo, ~~~~~~~~~·
leather iilterior, 51,850 miles. 1990 Harley Ultra Clauic Wit.b :
l250ot.30HIIS.38t5.
Malchlng Pull Behind Trailer. 1
$8,990.
3DoO't175-2711.
570
Musical
$1 •• 500. 814-446-8548. .
" 1
tRR4 Chryoler New Yorker leath- 1992 .Harley Davidson 120QJ
lnstNments
er Interior, ~er Locke, Window 'Spo~ster 18.200. 614-448·2422. ,
Sealll, Auto, Air, 113,000, 6U·
I
4&lt;6·2422.
Four wheeler· , WS 'mmaha Tim- ·1
berwolt, $2700, greal condiUop, :
1!~94 P.lymouth Acclaim 15,000;
I
I
1993 Chev Euro Spl 2 Or. Cpa 814-9~·4561 . '
$6,500: tlllla.Ford T-Birlf $3,400:
1993 Buick $4 ,500; tii2 Chi¥ 750 Boats &amp; Motors · :
Silverado PU 16,600; 1Q91 Ponl
for Sale
-·sunbird 12,600; 1111 Chev S·IO
Blazer 4 Or. $8,500; 1ggo Pont. 11il76 TaylorCrah 17ft.. open bow.:
Sunbird S2,500; 1080 Nlnan SlrOhp Johnson mo10r, &amp; lrailtr'. '
Sentra11,ZOO; 191111 Cltov Beret- $1,000 negodable. 304·675•501~ J
;
ta; t98B Cavalier $1,200; t8B8 aller 5:30 or leave ~ssage.
.
I
ChOY Coraica $ t ,000; t 888 Toro· 1988 Ranger 373Y 18'
12 -24V l
ta Celico $ t ,295: B&amp;D Auto Trolling Molor, 150 XP Evinrude ~
Sa~~ Hwy 180 N. 614-448·8865.
Oulboard, $8,800, 614-gg2·2770. 1

Household

6 A J 10 S
.. Q t f 2

•As

Good, $3,500 Firm, 81-4·992, 1
5135. .
. ---'.'
•.:..:.;.;,..;__

304 · 7~5305Bhll'6pm.

Eu&amp;

6182

~

13.200. 151"-245-5834.

••

S.UIIt

___________ ,

710 Autos for Sale

K 10 t 5 f 2

a7 s a

I

Three Bedrooms, ·one Bath, One
Car Garage, On Bulavilll Pike
Road: $58,000 Phone (814)446·
8280 Bolort 5 p.m. Or (814)4&lt;8·
61182 After 5 p.m.

tion.189!1 Down on ooltct ... ~.
E1J)Irienced carpentry and remo· aoctlonL 2-3 or 4 Bldroom modoil IVIIIIItle.Ookwood Homos
dellng. Inside and out•lde,
Nitro. WV, 30.. 75S.5885.
dt&lt;kl, •lnyl aiding. add-on addl·
Ilona, cal:linet rttacino or newly
1171
King mobile homo, eox12,
11bulll. Aeferenct1-Fr1t Esd·
nice condl1ion, must ••• 10 ..IP·
t11111L Jim Shul 304-875-I 272.
pr.ci1te, 014·.002·312Q or 61•·
GooroH Portable SawmiU, don't 992·220:=3·- ---------haul jOur logo to the mil 1•11 ooll
1872 Vlctorll.n, 14x70, niW car304-171i'1g57.
pel throughOur, new furnace and
Ptoflaalonll TrM Sorvlco, Stump heat pump, good ...., and rofrlg·
Removal, Fr" Esdmatttl In· orator, $7500, 8t4-w.!·2217,
auraneo, Bldwon, Ohio. 11,_31111ga7 Stornne 14x70, 31&gt;r, 2ba. all
11&amp;48, 81o4-387-70t0.
tlecttlc. range, rlfrlgeraiOr, dllh·
To Core For Elderly Pt&lt;lon fn waaher, porch. I underpinning.
Thtro Homo 5 Dar• JWook, 24 304-57&amp;-2201 altar lpm
HouraiOoro et..-8183.
108• 14x80 3 Bedrooms, 2 full
Wlllllaltfolt"ln My Home, Agoa 3 Balha, Deckt, C Air, Extras.
And Up, Ra!tron&lt;oo A•allablo, lluatllovel ~10 -441 · 0155. 814·
• , ..311-00011,
448·2701•

6 Q I
.. X. 10 7 3

Wood and Coal Burning Stove Mixed hay. oquario balll. ~.25
1a11 Chovr 112 Ton cau Atllr e1 J
USed IWO 1e11on1 t•OO 0 .8.0 . ,., ltolo.3Q4.075-1825.
!
P.M.I14-446·3243.
'
1
(014)381H1532 Col 4 ~ m.
Zenith Century 11 console color Square l:lales of hay: Timothy I 11178 F3!0, &lt;60, PS, auto, tong,k
TV.I300. 304-67S.t 272.
Orchord gran mi x. 304-882· whHI ·base, 10' 1teel ~!Jd with 1
2888.
too1b0xtl, radials, excellent me- 1
$3995 OBO. 814·992·o
Building ·
550
Square Bales Of Soy Bean Hay cJ11nlcals,
3Q81 .
'
12.00 ABall, at4-246-11122.
Supplies
1g11 GIIC holt Ton Pick Up ,
Block, brick, sewer plptt, wind~~~·~·~====~7
ows, linlels. etc. Claude Winttrl.
Ale Grande, OH Call 814 ·245·
UIR Dodge Dokoto 412 Au · 1
T RAN S P ORTATIO~I
5121.
tomatlc, AC, Btdllner. Tool 8;)X, 1
Good Tlt11, Will Maintained, E•- 1
~~-=~-----------­
c:ellent Condition lnsld• &amp; Out, 1
Pets
for
Sale
560

MERCHAND ISE

510

... IU7

1173 lnttmldonal Piak· Up S/6. :

'

530

One bedroom apartmenl in Pt Bear Whir• Tail cOmpound bow,
Pleasant. Furnfthed. Vtry clnn llkt new. 170: Quadraflex com·
I rica. No peta.304-675-1388.
pound bow, a· ovlf draw, slghll,
range finder, stabilizer, etc., $140;
Tarl Townhouae APIIrlmenlt, '86 Mazda pickup, ·ru.ns good,
Verr Spacloua, 2 Bedrooma, 2 $R50;caUBt 4.992.. , 33.
floora, CA. 1 112 Bolt, Fully Car·
pttod, Adull Pool &amp; Saby Pool, Boota By Rodwlng, Chippewa,
Pario, Slltl $360/Mo. No Pert, Rocky; Tony Lama. Guaranteed
loa.. Plua Socuritr Dapoolt Ro- Lowall Prlcet AI Shoe Cafe, Gol·
qulrtd, 814·448·3&lt;81, 114·448· ipotiL
0101,
Buck ttcve, frH standing, woad
Twin RMn TCJWW, now a':tting burner. brill lege, window on
•
~. -• n~ce,• 1 ._- 2 .,8
.ppllcatlona for 1br. HUD
ald """"'•
·v
~., 1.
lzod opt. lor tldorly and handl·
8
1
cappod.EOH304-87UIN.
"1 "11 oportocanlol
lwillburanyEIItesorntwOia·
Two b1dcoom apartmenr In Mkl· monel l&lt;ingL II you have cardlto
cllport.no
11+1112.·5858.
sell, let me know. Call 814-~9·
3011 8
·
Two Bedroom ApL 1385 Month
$100 ()epolit AIIIJiiidM Paid. No Clean Canning Jars $1 .50 Doz.
Ptta, Alone (1141448 3437
About zo Doz. at4-24S.5t13.
Upllalri Apaf(menl For Rent • Complele King Size Walerbe.d;
$300.00 Month· Mull Pay for BH-379·27ZOAFTER6P.M.
Gu &amp; P1tono • Nllll Kitchen 0rto
Large Bedroom - Living Room Concrete I Plastic: Septic Tanks,
And Balh • Excellent CondiUon. 300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
No 'Pill. Oepoall Raquirec:l. Can Evans Enterprises. Jackson, OH
Bt Sun Al1403 Eastern Ave- 1':..-800-:.::..:53::7:.:-9::528=-·- - - - - - - l
nuo, Gallpollo, Coll814-448-4514
For Appoir1tnR
.
Et~&lt;tri&lt; hospital bed, good shapa,
.400. 814·&amp;85-3833.
~0
Furnished
" ......i 1111 chair. $100; Nordic
Rooms
lreadmill, like new,
614·0•9-2328 alter

3208.

2bl housg in Hartford. 30•·882·
ZOI8 alter 5pm.

able. Morgan Forma Rt 35. ~
1137·2018.

1 Bedroom Ntar Holzer Extra

1887 Fleetwood. 14X52. 2 BR. 2 Btdroom APirtment At Rio
· (8t4)-1112·5428
Orondo, All Utllltleo Furnlahod
I30QIUo. Plua Dopoal~ 814-li88Doultlowldo ro-po novar Nvecl In, 111141.
""" 1111. no rooaonalllo ol1or ro- ~~-------,-.,.--,.--­
fuMd. 3Q4.7&amp;5-7UI1 .
2bdrm. apiL. ra•l eleclllc, apptllncoa lumiohod, loundlf room

1TIME ONLYI

'

..,__.,_In

lliddltpo ~ 8t...e2-217a.

Lb -

ANY DDP JOBS: Exterior paint·
lng, shrubs I weeds trimmed,
1and1c1plng, 1idewalka edged,
lawn cora, etc. Call Bill 304-87~Child Care in my home Cheahlf•
...., .. houro.(614) 387-784g

1-

Alll.lfa hay rolls In Urn, From
I I 5. Storage &amp; lltKvory IYilt·

AUGUST18I

•

�Ohio Lottery

.

49ers losers
1n preseason
play Monday

Pick 3:
7-6-8
Pick 4:

'

o-s-9-1

Showers likely tonight,
with a chance of thunder- ·
storms, lows In the 60s.
Wednesday, showers and
storms. Highs near 80~

Buckeye 5:
16-18-23-36-37

Sports on Page 4

•

en tine
llot. 41, NO.If7
C11t17, Ohio Valley Publishing Company

2 Sections, 12 Pages, 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

PomeroyCMtddleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 19, 1997

Teamster vote on tentative
aCcord may be made tonight

AWAITING WORD- Striking United Parcel Service employee,
Linda Carpenter threw a piece of wood onto a tire urly today on
the Teamsters picket line in Ashland, Ky. Carpenter, a pamime
presQrter, and her fellow Teamsters were still. on the picket line
before dawn, awaiting word that a tentative agreement had been
reached between the Teamsters and UPS. (AP)

By EUN-KYUNG KIM
most operations of the nation's largest American ,dream ,'' Tcamslcrs Prcsi·
Associated Prell Writer
package carrier, may come as early as dent Ron Carey said. "This is not just
WASHINGTON - Fleets of tonight
a Teamster victory, this is a victory
familiar brown delivery trucks may
The two sides agreed late Monday for all working people."
be back on the streets in a few days night to a five-year deal that includes
Teamsters leaders from around the
after the United Parcel Service and the creation of 10,000 new fulltime country and members of the barthe Teamsters union announced a ten- jobs from existing part-time posi- gaining committee were flying to
tative agreement today to end a 15- lions. The company also will raise Washington today to consider ratifiday .strike.
pay for fulltime workers by $3.10 an caiion. Murray, who appeared with
"We 'realize that our customers hour over the life of the contract and Labor Secretary Alexis Herman and
have suffered many inconveniences, agreed to keep a multi-employer Carey, added that the company hopes
and I want to assure them that our pension plan.
to welcome back the ,striking employgreat service is going to be available
Before the strike, an average full - ees quickly.
to them very soon," the company's · · time driver for UPS wa.&lt; paid $19.95
UPS officials would not detail the
chief negotiator, David Murray, said an hour.
concessions they ·wOn from the Team·
at an early morning news conference.
After years of "taking it on the sters, but Carey acknow ledged the
Approval of the deal, ending a chin, work,ing families are telling big five -year plan was longer than he
strike that idled 185,000 workers and companies that we will fight for the wanted.

Levy to support
county home set
for Nov..4 .ballot
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A half-mill levy for the ·operation of the Meigs County Home will be on '
the November general election ballot, and will give the voters "the privilege
to decide" the fate of the facility, according to Janet Howard, president of
the Meigs County Board of County Commissioners.
'
The board authorized placing the levy on the ballot at its regular weekly
meeting on Monday afternoon.
The future of the ,county home became an issue in late 1995 and early
1996, when fmanciaf concerns promptOit the commissioners to consider cfos, ing the facility, which houses thMe considered indigent, mostly elderly res ..
idents who require no special medical care.
··
The facility, adjacent'to Veterans Memorial Hospital. presently houses 12
people, ranging in age from 4 t' to 74. According to records at the commissioners' office, most of these individuals are considered "homeless," and suffer from . various emotional disorders such a.• depression.
All residents of the home are ambulatory, and staff members are not permitted .to administer medications due to state law, the commissioners said.
The budget for the county home for the current year is $132,000. $84,200
comes directly from the general fund and $47,800 comes from resident contributions, either SSI, Social Security or other entitlement fund~. or from cash,
contributions from family members of the residents, according to Commissioner Fred Hoffman.
'
In some cases. residents have no fatnily members who arc w)Uing to take
them in. although in several cases, family members make cash paymenis to
the county for rcsid~nt care.
The budget for the facility includes the following line items: offic1al salary
- for the matron, or superintendent -:-- $21.000; employee salaries $40,000; and supplies- $30.000.
.
That supplies account pays for &lt;leaning supplies and food for the residents, most of which are purchased at local retail outlets. The home employs
four full-time employees, and provides a full apartment for the superintendent, Sharon Bailey.
Those employees, according to Howard, are responsible for preparing
meals at the facility. cleaning residents' rooms and common areas, and pro·
viding primary care for some of the residents .
Howard and Hoffman said that the budget for the home is currently pro·
jecting a deficit. However. both Hoffman and Howard stopped short of saying that the facility would be closed if the levy failed.
Howard said her decision to support the levy proposal was a promise she
made last year when the issue became hotly debated.
"I made a promise that we would allow the people to decide.'' Howard
said. "With this levy, they will have the privilege of deciding the issue."
The proposed_ five.Jyear, half-mill levy would generate a total of $11 0,000
for the operation of the facility.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton abstained from the vote on the proposal after
(Continued on Page 3)
·

On Martha's Vineyard, a vacationing President Clinton praised

·both sides for coming together.
"The issues that were at the heart
of their negotiations arc important to
our nation's economic strength and to
all Americans,'' he said in a writlen
statement.

"This was nip and tuck until the
last momcms, " chief mediator Jot:m

Calhoun Wells said today on ABC's
"Good Morning America." "It was
about five minutes before we
announced the agreement that the

handshake took placo."
Hcrnwn said the agreement is significant for the whole country

(Continued on Page ~)

Acting
police
chief
name·d
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
James Webster, an 11-ycar member of the Pomeroy Police Department, was appointed acting chief of
police when Pomeroy Village Council met in regular session on Monday
evening.

..

Webster, who currently holds the
rank of captain in the force, will
assume the position on Aug. 22. and
·will replace, at least temporarily,
Chief Gerald Rought. who has
retired.

Mayor Frank Vaughan said th'l'
Webster's appointment could be 1n
effect for as long as 90 days. and that
he might ,he considered for the per. manent appointment after interviews

FIRE SCENE- Fire struck the large two-story 1rame home of the CUrry family at the Inter. section of Spring Avenue and Condor Street in
Pomeroy this morning. Both the Pomeroy and

Middleport fire departments were on the scene.
Firefighters were called about 9 a.m. No details ·
were available at presstime.

lage.

Committee splits over probable
causes behind Gulf War illness
NEW YORK (AP) - A government committee reviewing Gulf War
illnesses is divided over whether to
declare that. Iraqi chemical weapons
contributed to veterans' health problems, The New Yoik Times reported
today.
Some members say the panel
sh6uld reverse an earlier conclusion
citing wartime stress as the main
cause of illnesses reported by Gulf
War veterans.

with all applicants ha'c been completed.
, Webster's father, Jed Webster. was
a long-time chiCf nfpnlice for the vil-

The Presidential Advisory Com- ther than originally reponed across
mittee on Gulf War Veterans' Ill- the battlefield in 1991.
"This i~ worth righting for,·· snid
nesses issued an iinerim report to
President Clinton in January. It stat-. committee mcmhcr Thomas P. Cross,
ed that chemical weapons were a Gulf War veteran. "I sui I think that
"unlikely" to have caused illnesses there 's no one sing le ca use or the
reported by thousands of returning health problems. hut we now know
'that chemicals were scattered across
dulf War troops.
But five of the II panel members the battlefield."
The Pentagon report said that one
said in interviews with the Times that
a new Pentagon report showed that or C\ICT)' seven Americans who served
clouds from the gases of chemical in the region ·- about 98.000 troopsweapons may have wafted much far- may have been affected.

Council tabled action on necessary
repairs to the fire

department'~

Pumper No. 2. An estimate submitted by the dcpartmcn! quote,; the
·price of replacing a faulty waterless
pump· at $30,000, and rebuilding the
pump at $7,500. The manufacturer of
the truck, FMC, is no l'ongcr in husi'
ness. according to Clerk . Kathy
HyselL
Council C.'i timaied the ~.:ust of
replacing the truck at $300,000, hut
Council President John Muss~r noted that the IYKB truck should have a
· 40-ycar life.
In other business, Musser said that
a dedication ceremony for the new
riverfront amphitheater has been ten -

tatively set for Oct. 4, dunng the Big
(Continued on Page 3)

Fed will map next step on interest rates'

Eastern High School, which Is also undergoing
major renovation. w-m Conatruction Co.,
Pomaroy, Is general contractor on the $7 million project.

CONSTRUCTION CONTINUES - Eastern
Elementary School Is beginning to take shape.
The naw b1,1ildlng, to houea kindergarten
through eighth grade, Is being built ldjacent to

·I

'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Unem·
ployment is at a 24-year low and
inflation is rising at the slowest pace
in more than three decades. But that
doesn't mean the folks at the Feder·
al Reserve have stopped worrying.
The roller-coaster stock market,
recent weakness in the dollar and
potential inflation from the United
Parcel Service strike settlement all
loom as threats to the current good
times.
Those developments and others
were under discussion today as Federal Reserve Chairm.an Alan
Greenspan and · his colleagues met
behind closed doors to map their next
steps on interest rates.
As the Fed meeting was getting
under way, the government reported
·that construction of new homes and
apartments was unchanged in July at
a seasonally adjusted annual rate of
1.45 million units, indicating continued strength in the housing sector.

•

Pnvatc ~.:~.:onomists were

wide-

consumer prices so far this year arc

spread agreement that there was littic chance the central bank would

rising at an annual rate ofjust 1.5 percent, less than hall laM year's gain.

raise interest rates now.
Wall Street was also opt imis.tic

The Fed nudged interest rates up

tn

one-quarter point in March. At subthatthc Fed will not push rates high- sequent meetings in May and July,
er. In early morning trading . the Dow Fed policy-makers were contem 10
Jones mdustriat average was up leave rates unchanged even though
slightl y, ex tending , Monday's big unempl oy ment is more than a perrebound.
ccntage point below the level once
"The fact that the Pcd won ' t do thought to signal the danger zone for
anything was pretty well telegraphed inflation .
·
by Mr. Greenspan in hi s appearance · · "The combination of low uncmlast month before Congress, " said ploymcnt and low inflation almost
David Wys s, economist at DR!- seems too good to be true," said
McGraw Hill Inc. "Things look pret- David Jones. economist at Aubrey G.
ty good nght now The question is Lanston &amp; Co. in New York. " Wnh
how long that will last"
growth on track and inflati on under
A sizzling economy has pushed fOntro L there IS no reason for the Fed
the unemployment rate down to a 24~ ~'to rock the boat." ·
year low of 4.8 percent. but the tight
Fed watGhers note that Greenspan
job market has not triggered inna- himself called the economy's current
tionary pressures. Prices at the whole- performance "c.ceptional" in his
sale level have fallen for an unprece- midyear report to Congress last
dented seven straight months and month.

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