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http://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b6b7c6547217cbb698a17608cc413341.pdf
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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
hge 10 • The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday
Monday, September 20, 1999
~Social
W~ys . to
Security Q&A
:ay ED PETERSON
:social Security Manager
;In Athens
: Q. I always thought that a pec;on has to be o;everely disabled to be eli.gible for Social Security disability benefits. but I know omcone who looks
:normal and receives benefits.
• A. A person who is do sa bled for Social Security do..'!rlmt have to have
•a disability which is visible to other~ . To be considered for Sociai,Sccu:rity disability benc!its. a person is considered disabled 1f he/she cannot
,do lhe work he/she did before, and Social Security decides that hel>he can•not adjust to other work because of his/her medical condition(s). The dis:p.bility also must last or be expected to last for at least a year or to result
death.
·
"
: Q. I have difficulty walking and my doctor has told me I must usc a
·wheelchair. Will Medicare pay for the cost of a wheelch~ir'
A. Medicare Part B medical insurance helps pay for durable mediql
:on
,equipment such as wheelchairs. walkers and other equipment prescribed
·by a doctor for home usc. Your Medicare carrier in Ohio is Nationwide
:Insurance. Call them at 800-282-05:10 for more information.
•
Q. Do -you automatically get Medicare benefits -if you're eligible fo~
:disability benefits?
,
. A. You have to ret:civc Soc ial SccuriLy disability bene tits for 24 months.
. then· you will automatically get Medicare benefits.
. Q i My mother receives Supplemental Security Income <SSI) be nefits.
: She may ha\'e Ln ente r a nursing home to get 1hc prOper care she nl!cds.
-How does this affect her SSI benefits' ·
. A. If a SSI beneficiary enters or leaves a residenti al institution.'s killed
• nursing facil.ity. nursing home or any other kind of institution. Social S!.!C U·
· rity mus"t be nut iried . A pcr~on us.ually cannot get SSl while man insti·
: tution_Call Soti;ll Security's tnll -free numhcr. 1-800-772- 12 13. if you need
more infonnation.
Q. ·I get Supplemental Secunt' lnc01nc ·(SSI) because I am elderly and
have no income. My brother rc~:~:ntly d1cJ and left me the money he had
' in a sai ngs account. Will 1h1s c\lra monl'y affcc1 my SS l benefits '~ \Viii
my SSI payments stop '
A. TI1c money inh~.·r i tcJ from your brother is ~o: o nsidcrcd i n com ~ for
· the month r nu rcl:Ci\l' it anJ t.:ould make· you ineligible for that Jl)onth,
depending on the a nw Unt pf the inhcrilam.: c. If you keep the money into
the ricxt nionth. it 1h cn.t~cn rn cs a part of your rcsoul-ccs. An indi vidual .
cannot have more tha n $:!.000 in .rcsources to remain c lig ihlc . Call Socia l .
. Sec urity and report the in heri tance . They will tell yo u ho" your eligibil. ity wiii ·Oc affec ted and .what yDu can do to remain eligible .,
Don't be a viciim of
misleading advertising
Do n't bl! vu..:ttlll tt.l!d hy m1sleadi ng advertis~rs wbo toss arou nd the
term s "Sm.: ml Sccunty" or " Mcdi~.:"arc " to pique your interest. I warn people that of!cn tht.•sc c b mp~tn"i es offer a Social Srcuri~y service for a fee .
, You shou ld he aware that scrvi~:es from Soc;ial Security are generally pro· vided free of charge .
·
Services that are ofte n targeted in these ads include obtaining one of
the foll owi ng:
··
.
• a Social Security card to replace a lost card:
• a revised Sociai ,Scc urity card to show a bride's married name:
• a Personal Earnings a nd Benefi t EstimJte Statement: and.
• a Social Sec urity nunlber for a c hild o r a newborn baby.
1..
In addition, other marketers prey upon the public 's fears by suggesting that Social Secutity or Medicare is in dire financial shape. 'fhey may
· request a contr ibulion o r m embership fee to help "protect your
be nefit~ . "
These marketing practices clearly-are !Jlisle ading and dece iv ing. They
prey on people's ignorance of the Social Security -program and the concern they have abo ut it s future. They cannot provide better infonnatipn
than you can get free. or more safeguards tha·n now ex ist or are being developed in the Congress. Moreover. they violate the law when they give the
impression they arc part of the governmenl e r the Social Security Admin istration.
identify pet owners
who are caring, responsible
By ALDEN WAITT, Pr..idont
County Hum- Society
So you have the opportunity to
renr an apanmenl to a nice young
Meigs
couple who have JUSt moved to the
'area. Tirey have a pet'' The following
is a list of questions to usc when
interviewing prospective tc;nants with
pets . These quesuons will assist yo~
in ge~ti n g to know a tenant and his or
her commitment to providing respon. sible pet care .
It is an excellent idea that you
m~et the -pet. especially dogs - a
we ll-groomed, well - behav~d pet is
one of the best signs of a responsible
pel ow~er. How long have they had
Jhe pet'' Who is the vet ? Can the couple provide references from the last
places they lived-with the pet''
. Give them a questionnaire ' 1o fill
uul. The queslionnairc could lis1
smhc ·or all of the following questi ons :
-
• What type of pet do you have'
• Hnw long have you
pel '.' .
own~d
your
• Do you have a leiter of recommendarion from yuur \ etennarian
>taung that each pet is in good health
anJ up-to-date on his or her \'acc..ma·
tions?
• Han~ there been any c omplamiJo.
ah.ml ! our pet at your c urn.•m
adJress '.' lf so. did you pay) uvr la~d
''"d for all the damage done '!
• Docs your pet have any medical
nr heha\ ioral proh lems'! If so, what
tTl"atrncnL or training is he or she
rcc~i,ing ! Would you object to my
\' isi ting you and your pet after yo u
mml.' in to sc~ how your pet is adjusting•! \VIw will care for your pet when
you ar~? on vacarion ·?
Specific questions for Cat Owners
• Has your cat been spayed or
move in will eliminate a great deal of
misunderstandings later. In addition.
neutered?
you will be helping to assure that ihe
• Do you keep-your cat_indoors? animals are well·cared for by rcspo_n·
.
• Does .your cat use the litter box sible owners. You are within your
I hal you· provide'!
· . righlS tO ask for a pet fee, to cover any
• DOes your cat wear an identifi- damage but remember that children
cation tag and license tag?
cause a lot more damage than mosl
· • How often do you treat your cat
animals.
New Miss America ·pledges help
for .nation's homeless veterans
''"'' shot in the wrist - early in his
By JOHN CURRAN
· four-year ·birch .
Associated Press Writer
He saiJ he believes hi s daughter
ATLANTIC CITY. N.J. - The
will
niakc a diffe rence as a high-pronew Miss America, whose father is a
til
e
spokeswoman
for vctCrafls.
disabled Vietnam veteran, says she
''I' ve already heard from six or
hopes to use her crow n to spotlight
scvt;n (veterans)jusl Si ncc ." lasl ni ght .
homelessness among veterans.
Mi ss America 2000 Heather The y sa1d they 're reall y grateful that
Renee French. 24. of Maysv ille, Ky.. someone like her can he a spokespera graduate design student who has son for them. It's about time the vetdone volunteer work for the Vete rans cr;.ms had a spokesperson.··
French had dreamed of becoming
Administration, will campai gn for
M
iss
America since she was about 9
ine.reased govcmmCnt assistanc e for
years
old, her mother said.
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down -and-out veterans during her
She
pursued
it
doggedly.
entering
reign .
" We have over 250,000 homele ss the Miss Ohio pageant once and comveterans. spread ·nationwide ,.'' she peting in the Miss Kentucky pag~ant
said Sunday. "A large population, of three times before winning it on her
fourth and qualifying for a shot at
co~rse , are in Washington, D.C. , and
Miss
America.
in large cities. You find they congreOn Saturday, she sang "As If We
gate in the larger areas be<ause that 's
where the fal:ilities are that treat those Never Said Goodbye" for her talent
offering during the nationally-teleneeds."
Her father, Ron French, 52. served vised 79th annual pageant. She won
in the US . Marine Corps in Vietnam a $40.000 scholarship and became
and was wounded in combat - he the first Miss Kentucky ever to win
Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 40s
the Miss ~erica Pageant from that
·state.
The scholarship money, together
with the pageant's decision to drop a
50-year-old ban on abortion and
divorce, made for comic fodder during the telecast .
Prior to French's coronation. cohost Marie Osmond joke(( that the
new Miss America would split the
scholarship money. "She's going to
share it ·with her ex-husband."
Osmond quipped.
French ducked questions about
her opinion of the rules change Sun- .
day.
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She has never been married, but
she has a 38-year-old boyfriend.
Tracey Morris, who is an 'investor.
StiU, it wasn 't Morris who kissed
her for the cameras Sunday.
In an unexpected twi st on' an old
Miss Ameri ca 1radition , a s urfer
approached French as she frolicked in
the ·surf for photog~aphcrs.
with 2~7 whipping of
AUanta
4
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Meigs CoUJ}.ty's
Volume
• Is your dog housctrained?
• How much time does your dog
Raising these questions and talking them out H.cfore your tenants
Sports
Dallas stays unllaaten
Reds win, gain on Astros, Page 5
Ann weighs in on size, Page 6
Time Out For Tips, Page 10
Toct.y: Showers
High: 80s; Low: 40s
for neas and ticks?
Specific questions for dog owner.;:
• Has your dog been spayed or
neutered?
• Is your dog licensed and wearing an identification tag'
• DO you keep your dog on a leash
when you go for walks?
• Do you always make a point of
immediately cleaning up after your
dog?
spend alone each day'
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• How often do you treat your dog
for neas and ticks?
SapHmber 21, 11811
Weather
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
Single Copy- 35 Cents
.County's insurance plan in dire straits
Completes
R.N. training
Geoffrey Thomas Watson of
Reedsville , a 1995 grad~atc <if Eastern Hi gh School. has completed his
R.N. training at Hocki ng College., ,
While completing his course, he
worked part-time at Mid -Ohio
Ambulance and Transpon Service.
He is the son Of Jeanie Watson of
Reedsv ille . arid Tom Watson of Fair- '
plain. w_ Va. He is the grandson o(o
Dorothy Cashdollar and Donna:
Brooks.
Audit targets Rose
Bowl and parade
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - All-:
annual audit of the organization that
puts on the Rose Bowl and New
Year's Day Rose Parade has found
$60,000 missing from the coffers,
officials said.
Tournament of ·Roses official s
declined comment, but eonf1rmed
that chief financial officer Richard
Quattropane resigned on July 30,
after the audit.
" When they did the audit this
year, they discovered ~ lot of money
was missing. and there were a lot of'
inconsistencies in ~hat he was wnt-
ing down or ledgering." police Lt.
Keith Jones said Friday. No arrests
have been made.
·
Auditors have now ~egun taki~g
another look at previous years'
'records to see if there arc other di screpancies, Jones said .
Quattropane is not listed in di rectory assistance and could not be,
located for comment.
so. Number 73
Hometown Newspaper
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aga•n
By BRIAN J. REED
and take turns on Saturdays.
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Sentinel New. Stltff
"If you're making a wage from the county taxpayers, you shouid be will·Meigs County's employee heal !It insurance .plan requires a. 33 percent
ing to make this sacrifice," Wright said. "I see this as a duty. "
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increase in funding if it is to remain solvent, according to an actuary meetCommissioner Jeffrey Thornton said that the board supported opelling
ing with the Meigs County Commissioners on Monday afternoon.
the courthouse for busiiu:ss on Saturday, but noted that hours in each office
David Rubadue meets with the commissioners once a year after examinare ~t by individual officeholders.
·
ing the financial condition of the self-funded insurance plan.
Thornton suggested a public meeting with officeholders to discuss the
Onder the plan, premiums are paid into an insurance fund which is then
used to pay claims. Medical Qaims Services of Ravenswood, W.Va. serves
Jean Trussell, the county's granlS administrator, conducted two. public
as a third-party administrator for the plan, processing claim payments.
hearings on grant applicatio_ns which she plans to tile.
In t~e past, the commissioners, who oversee the plan, have been forced
A New Horiwns fair housing grant application will be tiled to further fair
· to bail out the fund by making general fund contributions and taking other
housing efforts in the county. The funds will be used to purchase billboard
measures necessary to pay premiums. The commissioners have also considadvertising and photocopier accessories to further the distribution of fair
_ered going with a private insurance carrier and abandoning the self-funded
housing information.
, program completely.
A total of $!5,000 is available through the program, and a portion of the
Yesterday, Rubadue estimated that the fund would fall short by $232,000
county's fair housing formula funds through the Community Development
in the next year· unless additional funding is provided. He estimated
Block Grant .-fund program will be used as a match.
$712,000 in premiums and other."inflow" and $944,000 in claims.;uring the
. The commissioners also authorized Trussell to see!< up to $50,000 in
funding' to continue the Microenterprise Loan program.
upi:oming 12 months.
.
.
. While Rubadt,~e did not specifically recommend a premiUm increase to
The program offers"mini -loans" to low -income applicants who wish to
employees, he did stress the need to increase contributions to the fund.
aciiMiry, dlecu- ihe county'a . .11-funded
during yu- start and expand small business enterprises. Loans of up to $10,000 are
Total costS for premiums are $575 for a family policy per month, and teray'e meeting ol the Melgt County Commlaelonera. Alao pictured . made at various payback schedules, with payments going back into a revolv- .
$227 for a single policy, with employees paying $200 and $30 per month, ,,. Melga County Auditor Nancy Parker .Campbell, and VIckie Morrow, ing loan fund so that other loans can be made._
respectively. Implementing a premium increase in keeping with Rubadue's who Ia reeponelble lor prcetulng Insurance claims lor Campbell's
Trussell noted that the loan program is high-risk for defaults and slow
recommendation would result in employee costs increasing to $265.20 and olflce,
payments, but Perry Varnadoe, ·economic development director for the coun·
$39.78.
on Saturday would not only provide additional service to taxpayers, but ty, said that he has seen many success stories as a result of the progr'!"' Rubadue noted that the problems experienced by Meigs County were, for , could also help benefit local merchants.
According to Trussell, seven loans, two of which have defaulted, have
Wright said that he, personally, feels that evening hours on a weekday, been made through the last round of funding.
a change, not unique. The entire health care and health insurance industry is
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seeing an increase in _co5ts, and employees in all areas are seeing significant which have been suggested by some county officials, would not be as effecCounty Engineer Robert Eason and members .of his staff -met with the
premium increases.
tive, noting that many people work 12 hour shifts during the week.
,
board to present a memorandum relating to the new round of Issue Two
Although Wright did not mention Wai-Man by name, he noted that addi- _funding,
County Auditor Nancy Parker punpbell estimated the fund balance for
,
the insurance fund at $39,000.
tional retail competition will place an additional strain on the retail business
Last week, Eason and the commissioners discussed allowing township
trustees to join in the county's Issue Two application for the upcoming year,
In other business, the botird met with George Wrigh~ P<!meroy Council- climate in Pomeroy, Middleport and beyond.
•
man, who prese!lted a letter on behalf of the mayor and members of
"I would think that these officeholders \VOUid see the handwriting on the and while the commissioners supported the proposal, Eason said that townPomeroy Village Council.
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wall," Wright said. "I think this is vital, not only to Pomeroy and Middle- ship-roads which would. have subject to repair under the program were not.
. The letter asks the rom missioners to consider opening the courthouse for port, but also to Rutland, Syraeuse, _and other communities in the county."
ready fpr hot-mix paving. .
,
a half-day on Saturday.
Wright said he had heard negative rumbli-ngs from the courthouse about
"Due to round 14 timeline constraints"of October 5, it has been deterWright said that the village officials believe that opening the courthouse proposed Saturday hours, but he noted that employees could stagger hours
.
Continued In •tnsurance Plan • on page 3
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CAC pares down consulting firm list
By JIM FREEMAN
was removed from the group Rter she said she would be
Sentinel Newa Staff
·
unable to vote on matters considered by the committee.
A list of 10 engineering consulting firms applying to
Initial discussion focuSed on w'hat niles, if any, the
review '!"ork done so far on a new highway from Athens committee would follow In its ~liberations. ODOT
10 Darwin was· narrowed down to four firms Monda~- '"'alief of Staff David Celona, chairman of the group,
afternoon. .
said adopting formal rules Qf order may hamper the
A citizens advisory committee formed by the Ohio ' group in _ its purpose of providing information to
Department of Transportation to consider the new high- ODOT's TranspQrtation ·Review Advisory Council, the
way trimmed the list Of consultants based on recom- group that will ultimately decide the future of the conmend,tions from an ODOT engineer lind an engineer- troversial highway project. ·
Celona eventually conceded in adopting Robert's
ing professor at Ohio University who serves on .the
CAc;;.
Rules of Order after a 4-4 vote._ In a twist from tradiThe proposed new highway, which would replace tio~al rules of order, however, Celona will remain a votU.S. 33 from Athens to,Darwin with a modem, two-lane ing member of the committee.
road, is the subject of debate between highway supportODOT's Tim Hill reviewed 10 proposals from C!Jn- .
ers and opponents, namely the Coalition Against Super- sultants seeking the job of evaluating documer\lS both
fluous Highways which earlier filed a lawsuit against supponing and opposed to the proposed highway. The
ODOTalleging violations of Ohio's open meetings law. project is opposed by an Athens-based group which
The I !-member CAC met at Ohio University Inn in - funded a study suppo'!ing upgrades to the existing U.S.
Athens and welcomed one new member, Pomeroy attor· 33.
·
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ney Linda Warner. One committee member, Debbie ·
The 10 proposals were first whittled down to five
Schinieding, representing the League of Women Voters, firms and then to four firms. Representatives of the four
R·e gional Briefs
Thief takes food, leaves.mone
EUCLID (AP) - ' A burglar who broke into a neighborhood tavern
passed up cash, cigarettes and booze for cheese and cold cuts.
.
'The thief sneaked into Stevenson's Bar in this Cleveland suburb early
Sunday and escaped with meat and cheese, Euclid police said.
"I guess they were really hungry," owner Bruce Cerne said Monday.
"'11le police said there really wasn't much they could ~o. They're not
going .to find ll!lything that was taken because whoever took it probablY.
ate it."
Ceme said that when he arrived at his bar Sunday, the only thing -he
found odd was a broken window, which he chalked up to vandals.
A tip jar containing about $50 from the previous night was still on the
bar, untouched. So was aCD'player, acigarette rack and the bar's alcohol.
Cerne started getting suspicious when he noticed that a container in
which he kopt sliced meat was depleted.
.
"Then I started looking around and discovered that 5 pounds of American cheese and 5 pounds of bacon were missing, along with a pound each
of turkey, salami and ham," Cerne said.
. The thief also swiped mustard and salt and pepper shakers.
firms will come in for oral interviews Oct. 4 at the Ohio
University Inn.
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Celona said he is impressed that a committee consisting of people with different views con~ming the
highway could quickly narrow down the list of. consul·
tants.
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"We arc looking fQr a company that is technically
sound that no one can ·say is biased coming into this,"
Celona said.
·
Other members of the committee include George
Collins, ODOT District 10 deputy director; Todd Acheson, Coalition Against Superfluous Highways; Roger
· Radcliff, OU professor of engineering; Edward ·Baum,
OU professor of political science; Steve Story, SouthRULES _ Pomeroy AHorney
east Ohio Regional Council/Route 33 Committee; Tim Steve Story, center, nanked by Dabble Schmied·
Foran, Southeast Ohio Legal Services; Matt Peters, lng and ODOrs David Celona, discu-s . the
Buckeye Forest Council:
establishment of meeting rulea during Monday
Meigs Countians attending the meeting included aft
,
tl
f th Ath
Cltl·
0
1
Meigs County _commissi_oners Janet Howard, Jeff a~:=~!,ry~o~~~ee. eThe g~~~p '!::.ually
Thornton and Mock Davenport, Pomeroy Mayor Frank z
,
Vaughan and Pomeroy Councilman George Wright, adopted Robert 8 Rules of Ordar.
Economic Development Director Perry Varnadoe, high- way advocate Bill Childs and Gene Triplett.
America's trade deficit swells to $25.2 ·m illion in July·
By JEANNINE AVERSA
As10CI8led Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - America's trade
'deficit ballooned to another monthly record high
of $25.2 billion in July as a flood of foreign cars,
machinery and consumer goods pushed imports
to an all-time high. The U.S. de,ficit with Japan,
China and Western Europe all set records.
The Commerce. Department reported today
that the trade deficit grew by 2.4 percent in July,
surpaSsing the June imbalance of $24.6 billion.
America's trade imbalailce has climbed to new
highs for seven straight months, pushing the gap
between imports and exports to an ·annual rate of
$247 billion, far above last year's record deficit of
$164.3 billion.
i
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American manufacturers and farmers have
been struggling to cope with the loss of markets
caused by the Asian financial crisis, while U.S.
Clinton vows to help stricken Carolina as rain falls again
By ESTES THOMPSON
Associated Press Writer
.
Man pleads guilty to racketeering charges
TARBORO, N:C. (AP) - More rain fell on
YOUNGSTOWN (AP) - A businessman haS pleaded guilty to rackeNoith Carolina. today, a dismal and unwelcome '
teering charges stemming from his
sight to Isabelle Baker and other owners of m<;>re
financing of a motorcycle gang.
than 30,000 bomes damaged from the floods fol Tom S. Hakaim, 40, of ~uth
lowing Hurricane Floyd. ·
Lorain, entered the plea in U.S. DisBaker did find comfort in the words of Presitrict Court on Monday to charges of
dent Qinton, who said during a visit to Tarboro
racketeering and attemptfng to comon Monday thai the government would stand by
mit
a
vielent
crime
on
behalf
of
an
those displaced by the deluge through federal aid.
1.Section • 10. Pages
enterprise.
"It was a blessing for him to come here," said
Prosecutors agreed to drop· four
Baker,
whose home is· submerged in nearby
Calendar
10
charges against Hakaim in exchange
Princeville. "I really believe he will get all he can .
7&8
Classlftec!s
for the guilty plea and testimony
to 1\elp us."
·
9
·against other members of the
Comics
Between a half-inch and I 112 inches of rain
Avengers Motorcycle Oub.
had fallen before dawn today. and forecasterS said
f:ditodals
2
Hakaim faces a maximum of 23 · up to 4 inches were possible from a passing cold
· I.ocal
3
years in prison, but because of his
front and moisture from Tropical Storm Harvey. It
Sports ·
4&5
cooperation, is expected to receive a
could cause 'more nooding in a region that was
3
Weather
lighter sentence.
soaked by 20 inches of rain last week as. Floyd
He was one of 16 members of th'e
raised rivers to record levels, submerging roads,
Avenger)'
who
were
indicted
in
May
homes, businesses - and people.
Lotteries
on racketeering and related charges
More than 60 people were killed from the
OHIO
after a 2 1/2-year undercover investiBabamas into New England when Floyd charged
Pick 3: 9-8-7; Pick 4: 1-5-6-7
gation .
up the East Coast, and flooding continues to
The FBI said the arrests broke up a
BuckeyeS: 16-24-27-29-30
plague parts of New Jersey and New York. But
five-state drug, gambling and · theft
W.VA.
the aftermath appears worst in North Carolina,
ring.
The
alleged
racketeering
crimes
D•lly 3: 9-7-8; Dally 4: 9-6-6-7
where at least 35 people have died.
were commiued in Ohio, Michigan,
The governor's office said at least 1,600
C 1999 Ohio V.pey Publishins. Co.
West Virginia, Indiana and Illinois.
homes are damaged bey-ond repair. An estimated
Good Afternoon
Today's Sentinel
•
consumers, bolstered by the lowest unemploy: exports of U.S. goods and se":ices to $79 billion,
ment level in three decades, have been snapping their highest level since last November.
up foreign products.
The growth in the deficit in July was unex· The soaring trade deficit is the only blot on an peeled. Many analysts had been forecastmg a
otherwise stellar economic performance as Amer- slight narrowing after a string of record monthly
icans enjoy the longest economic expansion .in highs.
.
peacetime history.
·
The politically sensitive deficits with Japan
The trade deficit hJIS created major political climbed 8 percent in July to a record high of $6.8
headaches for the Clinton .administration, which billion, while the gap with China r9se an even
has had to deal with rising cries in· Congress for larger I I .4 percent to a record $6.3 billion.
·
protectionist legislation to help U.S. industries, _ ~resident Clinton met last week ~ith Chinese
including steeL Congress has created a 12-mem- PreSident J1ang Zemtn as both countnes agreed to
ber panel of prominent trade experts to look at the restart negotiations ~ve~ China's entry into the .
causes of the deficit and recommend solutions.
World- Trade Orgamzatlon, a membershop the ·
Imports in July rose by I percent to an all-time Umted States·says Chma wtll not be granted unlll
high of$104.21;>illion as U.S. demand for foreign it agrees to do more to remove high barriers to
autos, capital goods and consumer goods all set sales of American manufactured goods in China.
monthly records.
.
.
The deficit . with Western Europe ~lso set a
·This· surge swamped a ·0.5 percent rise •'" record h1gh, soanng by 38.2 percent m July to
'
1,500 people were still stranded. but most were as members of the American family to help you
net in life-threatening situations. Some 10,000 are get back on your feet again."
already in shelters.
·
Gov. Jim Hunt made a nationwide appeal for
. Preliminary damage figures estimate the price donations to a relief fund for the state, saying "we
'
tag for damage_at $1.3 billion, but it may exceed ·have been hit by a terrible blow."
officials
are
also
grappling
with the
State
the $6 billion total for Hurricane Fran in 1996, the
.state's costliest _natural disaster in which 24 P\'O· health menace caused by rotting farm animals and
sewage washed into the floodwaters. The state is
pie <lied.
"It has become painfully clear that Hurricane seeking incinerators to _deal with an estimated
Floyd, combined with Hurricane Dennis. is shap- 100.000 hogs. 2.4 million chickens and 500,000
ing up to be the worst disaster North Carolina has turkeys killed in the flooding.
Interstate 95 _reopened Monday i~ North Carever seen, and I hope we ' II ever see again, " state
olina for the first lime since Thursday, but about
public ·safety secretary Richard Moore said.
Thousands of people remain unable to return 300 other roads remained closed.
In northeastern Sl>uth Carolina, scores of peohome because of flOodwaters that have ·virtually ,
shut down the coastal plain east of Raleigh, an ple have _fled low-lying areas around Conway in
area spanning 'l8,000 square miles and containing anticipation of the worst nooding in n_oore than 70
_years along the Waccamaw River. The highesl
2.1 million people.
Clinton toured Tarboro, one of the hardest hit water is e1<pected next week.
·
"It-'s surely enough to make you age a couple
towns in an area drenched by more than 2_feet of
rain from two hurricanes in two weeks.
··
of years," Mary Roberts ·said Monday as she wait" I urge you to keep your spirits up and know ed for some friends with a boat to take her back
we're going to 'be with you every step of the into the nooded Savannah Bluffs area just cast of
•
way," Ointon told several hundred people. He Conway.
announced emergency food stamps and unem"I have lived down here for 40 years and I
ployment paymenlS for families in need, the hir- have never seen the water this high," she said.
ing of temporary workers for the cleanup and - ' On Monday, workers piled up sandbags to pro·low-interest loans for farmers.
tect sewage pump stations, yellow graders shored
"When things like th is happen to some of us," up a main highway and Gov. Jim Hooges ask_ed
the president said, "we ~now they could happen the president to declare South Carohna a maJOr
to all of us. :.. We know w_e have a responsibility disaster area.
•
\
�•
~
Tuesday, September 21, 1999
'•
Commentary
,·
'••
Death Notices
• •
Franklin Edward Gleason
.. .. ~--------------------------~
The Daily Sentinel The right to privacy and the Internet
.'
•
•
•
By Jack Andereon
and Dougtaa Cohn
'£st46fisfld in 1948
.-
111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
740 H2·2150 • Fax: H2·2157
.
'
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
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I
....
CHA~LES
W. GOVEY
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manag«
n..Sentinel
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Bltort ..,..,.
DIANE HILL
Controller
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ID" Uftln: 1o , . edlrot; The Sentin•l. ffl r:o..t St,
AlhM OJ, Oltlo - - ; «, FAX M 1•112 ~1ST.
'
l:Educati.on is more
•
'
'
·than test scores
'
· • By Joan Ryan
:
My son looked up from his Oleerios one morning last week as I made his
' lunch at the kitchen counter.
" We _get grades this year," he sa1d H•s tone was unnaturally even, the
way 11 gets when he's trying to cover a nsing pan1c. I understood his worry.
Sometimes the classwork is a challenge, but he is heart-breakingly tenacious
and, against all odds, loves school.
I thought about h1m as I read that the Denver teachers' union approved a
pilot program that ties men! ra1ses to students' test scores. The premise is
that the higher a class's test scores, the better the teacher must be.
I can think of a few other ways to interpret JUmps m test soores
The higher a class's test sco~<:s, the better the teacher might be at teaching test-taking
Or: The h1gher a class's test scores. the better the teacher might be at
· directing learning-disabled, low-scoring kids into other classes or other
schools.
The goal of the Denver experiment, of oourse, JS laudable. They 'rc trying
to find a way -- as most public school distncts in America are •• to improve
education. Test scores provide a tangible accounting of student performance
and thus seem a logical measurement by which to rank teachers.
But have we produced better students SJmply because they are more adept
at filling in multiple-ch01ce bubbles With a No 2 pencil ?
If one believes that part of the problem with public education is unmoti·
, nted teachers -- and clearly that's the message behmd th1s Penver propos·
al '-- then let's motivate them. Let's treat them like professionals Let's not
, ask them to use their master's degrees to monitor food fights in the cafete' ria and to wear neon traffic vests and wave stop signs in the cross walks.
' Let's gJVe them the resources to keep up on the latest educatiOnal research.
; . And let's pay teachers as if our children's futures depended on them.
Retired teacher Frank McCourt, author of "Angela's Ashes" and the
•upcoming sequel "Tis," got 11 right m the New York Times last Sunday
"It's my dream that teachmg become the glamorous profession," he sa1d.
"The ones who arc in the pubhc-school system are heroic There should be
a Teacher Hall of Fame. It should be the biggest event, bigger than the
Oscars-- 'Ms. Smith of P.S. 13 has just made a breakthrough in teaching the
: dangling participle. She gets Teacher of the Year"-- w1lh everybody josthng
• · to get near Ms. Smith to shake her hand. "
:
As my son finished his Cheerios, I told him I didn't care about grades.
' "You know what we care about? How hard you work. That's the only grade
that matters to us."
I know grades can 'l truly reHect my son's performance any more than test
-scores can truly reHect his teacher's. No test can measure the creeping smile
on a child's face when a teacher unlocks the mystery of hew a clock works
or opens his mmd to the possibility that "Charlotte's Web" is aiJOut more
, than a pig and a sp1dcr.
Judging a teacher's worth by students' test scpres is hke judging a preach~ cr by how well h1s flock quotes Scripture. You m1ght find yourself Hush with
• orators, but there might not be a holy man in the bunch
'• Capyrlght1IIIMI NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
• Joan Ryan Ia a columnlat for the Sen FrancltM:o Chronicle. Send
~
corn!MIIt8 to her In care or thla newspaper or Hnd her a-mall at joanry~~1181gate.com.
Today In History
By The Aalloclated Pr•a
Today is Tuesday, Sept. 21, the 264th day of 1999. There are 101 days
left in the year.
Today's H1ghbght in History.
On SepL 21, 1949, the People's Republic of China was proclaimed by
its Communist leaders
On this date:
In 1792, the French National ConventiOn voted to abohsh the monarchy.
In 1897, the New York Sun ran its famous editorial that declared, "Yes,
Virginia, there is a Santa Claus."
In 1931, Britain went off the gold standard.
In 1937, :'The Hobbit," by J.R.R. Tolkien, was published.
~;
In 1938, a hurricane struck parts of New York and New England, caus~ ing widespread damage and k1 lhng mor~ than 600.
~
In 1948, M11ton Berle made his debut as full -ti me host of "The Texaco
•:Star Theater" on NB<!:-TV.
~~ In 1973, the US. Senate confirmed Henry K1ssinger to be Secretary of
~-State.
~ '
'
In 1977, after weeks ~f controversy over past business and banking
~ practices, President Carter's embattled budget director, Bert Lance,
~ resigned.
• : In 1983, in a speech to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Interior Secre: tary James G. Watt jokmgly described a special advisory panel as consist; ·ing of "a black ... a woman, two Jews and a cripple." Although Watt later
; apologized, he later res1gned.
~,
hr 1996, John F. Kennedy Jr married Carolyn Bessette in a secret cer~ cmony on Cumberland Island, Ga.
:
Ten years ago· Hurricane Hugo, packing winds of up to 135 mph,
• 'crashed into Charleston, S.C. In Alton, Texas, 21 students d1ed when thc1r
: ,school bus colli<led w1th a truck and careered into a water-filled pit.
: • Five years ago Prosecutors from Los Angeles and Santa Barbara coun·
• ties announced that Michael Jackson would not face ch1Id molestation
~ 'charges; however, the case would remain open until 1999
:. One year ago: President Clinton's videotaped grand jury testimony was
: .publicly br?adc~t; in. it, Clin!on tuss!ed with prosecutors over "the truth
c of my rclattonshtp" Wtth Momca Lewmsky. Olympic gold medal track star
: ,Florence Griff1th Joyner was f'?und dead at her home in Mission Viejc
: Calif.; she was 38. Humcane Georges roared through Puerto Rico and the
; .northeast Caribbean.
• ' Today's Birthdays: Cartoon animator Chuck Jones is 87 Actor Rand
I Brooks is 81 Actor Larry Hagman IS 68. Poet-songwriter Leonard Cohen
: is 65. Actor-comedian Henry Gibson is 64. Author-corned tan Fannie Flagg
• is 55. Author Stephen King JS 52. Mus1cian Don Felder (The Eagles) is 52.
l 'Actor-comedian Bill Murray is 49. Rock mus1cian Philthy Animal (ex' Motorliead) IS 45 Movie producer-writer Ethan Coen is 4 I. Actor-come: Clian Dave Coulier is 40. Actor Dav1d James Elliott is 39. Actress Nancy
: Travis is 38. Actor Rob Morrow is 37. Country singer Fa1th Hill is 32.
~ Rock musician Tyler Stewart (Barenaked Lad1e~) is 32 Actress-talk show
~ host Ricki Lake is 31. Rapper "('rugoy the Dove (De La Soul) is 31. Actor
, :.,Alfonso Ribeiro is 28.
Thought for 'roday. "I never thmk of the ~· It comes soon
enough." -Albert Einstein' (1889-1955).
~
I ~
the ind•vidual arc once again being threatened.
The solution hes m an expansion of the Bill
. WASHINGTON --Walt Kelly's com1c char- of Rights, mcluding·
acter Pogo s&Jd, "We have met the enemy and
A Right to Privacy
he IS US'"
The U.S. Supreme Court has occasionally
He was paraphrasing James Madison, who found such a nght in other amendments, particput it somewhat differently 1n No. 10 ofthe Fed- ularly the 14th, but the concept has been applied
eralist Papers: "Extend the sphere and you take narrowly and withoyt uniformity.
in a greater variety of part1es and interests; you
Interestingly, most Americans assume they
make 11 less probable that a majonty of the have such a nght They do not. The public's
• whole will have a common motive to 1nvade the- (majonty's) right to know has superseded an
rights of other c1tizens; or if such a common individual's presumed, but nonexistent, right to
motive exists, it will be more difficult to all who privacy.
feeLit to discover their own strength and to act
Here are some examples (though some stales
in un1son wtth each other."
have passed mhibitmg laws):
Two points: He feared the tyranny of the
.. lndivjduals are regularly compelled to promajority, but he found security m the knowl- vide "confide'ntial" tax returns in civil lawsuits.
edge that such a majority would have d1fficulty
-- Individuals (even the prestdent) may be
discovering its own
strength in a large
nation.
Franklin Edward Gleason, 75, Pomt Pleasant, W.Va., died Monday, Sept.
20, 1999, at Cabeii-Huntmgton Hosp1tal1n Huntington. W.Va.
Born Dec. 4, 1923, 1n Point Pleasant. son of the late John Lew1s and
Laura Alice Jones Gleason, he was a retired employee of Fulton and Thompson Company in Pomeroy where he worked as a fabncator
He JS surv1ved by h•s w1fe, Marclyn Ramey Gleason; a daughter, Pamela
Holcomb, four sons and daughters-m-law. Herman and Donna Gleason,
John A. and Teresa Gleason, R•ck and M~tilda Gleason and M1chael R. and
Teresa Gleason, all of Point Pleasant , a brother, Paul Gleason of Columbus,
a SISler, Gladys Jones of Poml Pleasant; 10 grandchildren; several nieces and
nephews.
He was preceded 10 death by a son, Larry F Gleason , two brothers,
Charles and Leo Gleason, and three Sisters, M1ldred Burkhan, Geneva Stahl
and Garnet Jones.
Serv~ces w•ll be held Thursday, 2 p m at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home,
Pmnt Pleasant, with the Rev Herman Jordan and Brother lsa1ah'Crump offi,
cJall ng. Burial will follow m Beech H1ll Cemetery, Southsrde, WVa.
Fnends may call Wednesday, 7-9 p m at the funeral home.
ol Columbuo j3r1a5• I
\
•
'
0
Millard 'Tubby• Greenlee
WVA.
•
One problem: The
Internet has changed
all that.
Mad1son based
his theory upon the
difficulty of widely
separated people of
like minds to rapidly
communicate
taped in the "privacy" of their own homes
.. Individuals' buy1ng habits are gleaned
from credit cards and other cards and then used
or disseminated by the collectmg company at
Will,
A historical footnote . The FederaliSt Papers
were wntten by Alexander Hamilton, John Jay
and Madison to sell the new Conshtution to the
public dunng the debates of 1787 and 1788. The
primary p01nt in the debates was that a republican form of government could work for a large
nation, whereas conventional wisdom maintained that 'republics and democracies were fit
only for smaller city-states.
But Mad1son argued that the shear size -- by.
geography and later by populatiOn -- would
inhibit the formation of tyrannical majorities
HJS theory was pro1•ed regionally when Western
M1llard "Tubby' L Greenlee, 78, of Leon d1ed Sunday, September 19•
1999, ~t Overbrook Nursmg Home, M1ddleport, Oh1o.
Born January 20. 1921 1n Leon, he was a son of the late Dwight and Pearl
(Thomas) Greenlee. He was a rellred first mate wnh the MI SSISSIPPI Valley
Bargeline and was retired from the Teamsters Un1on m St. Loms, MO.
In additiOn to his parents, he was also preceded 1n death by a brother,
Charles Greenlee.
Suv1vors mclude a son, M1llard Luther Greenlee Jr of Lean; two daughters, Sharon Lane of Gallipolis and Karen Blake; a sister, Vada Cottnll of
Leon; a brother, Dw1ght Eugene Greenlee of Kentucky , several grandchildren, great-grandchildren, meces and nephews
Graveside service will be I p m Wednesday, September 22. at Leon
Cemetery w1th Rev. Herb Capehart offJclal•ng Bunal will follow.
Fnends may call at the Deal Funeral Home, Pomt Pleasant, Tuesday from
6to 8 p.m.
Inc.
· o ~~~~-.,~~
~ Pl. ClcMJdy
Goudy
Showefs
T·storrnt
R111r1
Fluma
$nQW
Ice
approaching 40
expected for tonight
Wllh
each other or even
find each other, but
he didn't count on
the Internet.
This ubiquitous
medium provides for
The Aaaoclated Preas
temperatures w1ll be 10-15 degrees below normal again on
1-\\ledlni:s,da~ as cool northerly breezes contmue to buffet Ohio.
Highs will be 60-65; normals are 70-75.
Frost could ck;cur tomght as some Oh1o locations have lows m the 30s.
Condllions wJII remain dry through the end of the week as high' pressure bUilds over the region, the National Weather Service sa1d. Tempera"tures should begm to moderate by the end of the week
The record-h•gh temperature for th1s date at the Columbus weather stahon was 96 degrees in 1895 while the record low was 31 in 1962 Sunset
tomght Will be at 7.31 p.m. and sunnse Wednesday at 7 19 a.m.
Weather•fol'l'cast:
Tomght...Ciear and cool. Lows around 40. L1ght north wmd.
Wednesday... Sunny. Highs in the upper 60s.
Wednesday mght·... Mostly clear Lows near 40.
Extended forecast:
Thursday ... Mostly clear. Highs near 70.
Fnday... Partly cloudy. Lows m the upper 40s and highs in the mid 70s.
Saturday...Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s and highs in the upper
mass communicahon
on a scale not even
approached by newspapers, radio and
television It can be
passive or inlerac-
tJve, and 11 is nearly
cost-free, making it
accessible for virtually everyone to get
their messages out.
Madison's theory
of safety through diffusion seems to have
been replaced by the
Sunshine Theory:
truth emerges under
the glare of lights. In
other words, more
information is better mformation Let the odd
and unusual groups be heard Therr arguments
are self-defeating. But what about the arguments of the majonty?
The mherenl ~onfl1ct between the eternal
minority (the individual) and the maJOnty represented by the state was thought to have been
resolved by the first 10 amendments to the Constitution, the Bill of Rights.
Now, w1th the likelihood of majont1es rapidly formmg on a variety of issues, the nghts of
CINCINNATI (AP) - Police
and city officials are looking for
·ways to guard people's safety Without destroying the flavor of street
festrvals such as Oktoberfest-
states were added to the umon and acted as a
buffer to the North-South hostilities which
lwJce erupted into confrontation. The New England states voted for secession in 181·4 when the
South held sway during the War of 1812, tit•
end of wh1ch ended the controversy.
Then, a few decades later, when the North
became dominant, the South seceded in 1860-,61
and civil war ensued.
Copyright 1888, Anderson & Cohn
Dlatrlbuted by United F..ture Syndicate, Inc.
"''Zinzinnati.
Most say the fest1vals should
' continue desp1te Sunday mght's
'incident m wh1ch a man with a
blood-aloohol level of 0 209 drove
~is car through a barncade and
struck 27 people - includmg three
police officers - before colliding
"tilh a taxicab.
• "QUJte frankly, Jt's a real safe
event," sa1d police Capt. Vmce
Demas1. " It was a freak accident,
' lt's like any other random act of VIO·
lence."
, The dnver, Michael Cowperth·
,waite, 25, of Un1on Townshap m
Clennont County, was scheduled for
arraignment today on charges of
.aggravated vehicular assault, driving
under the influence, leaving the
scene of an accJdent, d1sregarding a
pollee officer's s•gnal and dnvmg
the wrong way on a one-way street.
' Altogether, 29 people - including Cowperthwaite and the taxi driver - were taken to hosp1tals for
'treatment of injunes and were
The 'not-quite drunken driving' option
By PAUL SOUHRADA
.AUOclated Pr- Writer
COLUMBUS (AP) - You're
driving home after a night out on the
town.
Halfway there, you realize you
shouldn't be behind the wheel, so
you pull into the nearest roadside
rest stop, turn on the radio and
decide to nap.
Along comes a police cruiser, and
the officer determmes you've been
drinking and charges you.
With what?
Under current law, driving under
the influence - the same as if you
had conti.nued driving down the
mterstate.
But under an extens1ve ~<:write of
the state's traffic laws now pending
in the Legislature, the offense would
be less severe - a not-quite drunken drivmg chatge
"We want to encourage people to
do the right thing," David Diroll,
chaJrman of the Ohio Criminal Sentencing CommiSSIOn, told lawmakers last week.
Modeled after some local ordinances, the state's new "physical
control of a motor veh1cle wh1le
under the inHuence" statute would '
carry a maximum sentence of six
months in Jail and a $1,000 fine. A
judge also could suspend a driver's
license.
But while the max1mum penalty
ts the same as the current DUI, the
new law wouldn't carry the same
minimum penalt1es.
Now, a first·time drunken driver trooper sees a car heading toward
faces a mandatory three-day jaJI him driving left of center. By the
term and $250 fine. A 90-day·license time the trooper turns around and
suspension IS automatic, and the sus- catches up, the driver may have
pension is one year for those who pulled into a parking lot and be j~st
refuse to take a blood-alcohol test.
sitting there.
The State Highway Patrol hales
"This just muddies the waters
the idea of a watered-down drunken and creates a new offense that's not
drivmg law.
necessary," Born added.
The patrol - which tallied ,
In some cases, drivers could be
24,667 drunken driving arrests last charged with the Jesser offense in
year - doesn't keep track of how situations where they might get off
many people were just sitting in scot-free under the current Jaw, he
their cars when a trooper carne upon added
them, but spokesman Lt. John Botn
Born also worries about the mesdoesn 't think the number is very sage· the new offense would send to
the public.
hi~h.
Still, he said he can think of cases
"You have the chance to make
where the new law could make a the right decision before you get into
conviction more difficult. Say a the car, n he said
The Daily Sentinel
(USPS liJ·960)
Community Newspaper lloldinp., Inc.
Could Buchanan beat Bush? Probably not
By Morton Kondr1cke
"I can't believe that Pat .Buchanan will allow
his ego to get the better of his consc1ence," former Republican National Committee Chairman
Haley Barbour sa1d this week, hopefully. But 11
looks as though that's exactly what is gomg to
happen
Faced with humiliating rejection on his third
try for the Republican nommation, Buchanan is
lhrowmg sour grapes at the GOP and getting set
to bolt to the Refom1 Party.
He charged on NBC's "Meet the Press" on
Sunday that the GOP nominating process is
"rigged,'' that the GOP had suddenly become a
"Xerox copy" of the DemocratiC Party, and that
he is "strongly" leanmg toward running for the
Reform nomination.
You can understand why he'd be tempted to
bolt: the Reform Party is en hUed to $13 million m
federal matchmg funds, mstead of obliv10n, 11
offers Buchanan a new national podium, and
there's a chance he might force his way into next
fall's presidential debates
In other circumstances, the anti-establishment
Buchanan might oppose the idea of taxpayerfunded federal hand-outs to politicJans, but he's
not complainmg now
That m~y be hypocntical, but in other respects
Buchanan is totally sincere: He genuinely
believes that his nat1vist, Jsolalionist, "Amenca
First" ideas are right for the country and capable
of winning majority support, even though every
ev1dence md1cates he's wrong on both counts.
Unless a Vietnam -like fore1gn policy d1saster
befalls the country, it's likely that a majonty will
continue to support the world leadership role
that's been U.S. policy since World War II.
A11d the defeat of Republicans m Cahforma
after their leaders adopted a m•htanl anh-JmmJ·
grant stance indicates that this aspect · of
Buchanan's case won't sell either, especially in an
expandmg job market
Even more self-deludedly, Buchanan also
I
Delbert R. Yost
Delbert R. Yost, 72, Lancaster, died Monday, Sept. 20, 1999, at Fairf1eld
Medical Center.
He was retJred from Columbia Gas Transmission after 37 years of service. He was a member of the Sugar Grove Umted MethodiSt Church. Lancaster Mason1c Lodge 57 F&AM, all York R1te Bod1es, Mt. Pleasant Shnne,
Aladdm Temple and a past member of Amanda Lions Club and Alfred
Grange.
He is sumved by h•s wrfe, Maxme Guthne Yost of Lancaster: three sons
and daughters-m-law, Russell and Manha Yost of BaltJmore, Richard and
Pam Yost of Coolv1lle and Charles and Connie Yost of Lancaster; a daughter and son-in-law, Beth and John Cavmee of Rockbndge; seven grandchJ1·.
dren , two s•sters-m-law, Zame Yost of Smithville, W.Va., and Julia Yost of
Parkersburg, W.Va.; many nieces and nephews.
He .was preceded '" death by h•s parents, Thomas and Ella Yost; four
brothers, Denver, Earl, James and W1lham Yost.
Services will be held Thursday, I p.m. at the Alfred Umted MethodiSt
Church with the Rev. Sharon Hausman off1c1atmg Bunal will follow m
Mound Cemetery.
Friends may call Wednesday; 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. at the Halteman-Feu &
Dyer Funeral Home where Masonic"semccs w1ll be held at 7 p.m.
review
questioned in court about consensual sexual
behav10r.
-- Individuals are susceptible to the dissem•·
nat1on of cred1t mformation based upon hearsay,
rather than public records.
-- Individuals' employers regularly prov1de
hearsay informahon about them on a confidential and, therefore, unrefutable basis.
-- Individuals' cellular telephone conversations are overheard and occasionally taped.
-- IndJVJduals are suseeptible to being video-
believes that, with him at the
helm, the Reform Party could
replace the GOP or the
Democrats as one of the
natwn 's two dominant part1es.
Such a thing hasn 'I happened since Republicans displaced the Whigs over slavery
in the 1850s, and "globalism"
1sn 't a nation-defining issue
like that.
'
Moreover, it just isn't true that Republicans
and Democrats are carbon copies of each other.
They are rhetorically centrist at the presidential
level, but the likely gridlock in Congress over tax
cuts, Medicm and Social Security reform, guns
and health care will produce plenty of debates in
2000.
Whether' Buchanan can even get the Reform
nomination is not clear. Buchanan has the support
of Reform founder Ross Perot's 1996 running
mate, Pat Choate, but Perot's own preference is
shll unknown
Buchanan apparently will have to fight the
reigning Reform superstar, Minnesota Gov. Jesse
Ventura, who opposes having an anti-abortion
social conservative as the nominee when the
party 's dominant culture has been libertarian.
But 1f Buchanan does gel the nominallon, how
much damage can he do? Republicans are naturally worried. Buchanan has had a strong following on the nghl fringe of the GOP, and polls mdJcate that he would draw far more votes from
1 ex as Gov. George W Bush (R) than from Vice
Pres1clent AI Gore.
According to a Schroth and Assoc1ates poll, m'
fact, Buchanan's entry wipes out Bush's current
16-pomt lead over Gore. In a Luntz Research poll,
Buchanan gets 6.6 percent .. enough to bring
Bush down from 54 percent to 47 percent of the
vote, but leaving h1m with a 14-pomt lead over
Gore.
There's reason to think Buchanan's pull will be
...
considerably smaller than Perot's was in 1992,
when Perot drew 19 percent and arguably cost
Bush's father the election, throwing it to Bill
Ointon.
That was a year when the country was just
coming out of recession, when the government
was facing huge deficits, and the public was
deeply dissatisfied with the incumbent president's
handling of domestic economic policy and dubious about Clinton's character.
Though Perot carried not a single state, his
vote arguably switched the majonty from thenPresident George Bush to Clinton in 20 states
with 198 electoral votes, enough to swing the
election.
But in 1996, Perot got only 8.4 percent and
may have made the difference in f1ve states. Even
1f Republican Bob Dole had carried them, Ointon
would have won.
'
Buchanan is a better speaker than Perot, but he
JS<:urrently pulling only 3 percent of the GOP primary vote. If Bush offends backers of Gary
Bauer, Dan Quayle, Alan Keyes and Steve
Forbes, Buchanan might pull I 0 percent ,of lhe
GOP vote away. Bush will be at pains to nominate
an anti-abortion running mate.
But Buchanan will lose some of Perot's support because of his soc1al views, h1s attacks on
Jewish mHuence over U.S. f~reign policy .. he
once declared that l:J S mvolvement in the 1991
Gulf War was the work of the Israeli Defense
Mimstry and Jts "Amen comer" in the U.S . .. and
a historical take that blames World War II on
Britain, not Adolf Hitler.
In a very close race between Bush and a
Democrat -- say, former New Jersey Sen . Bill
Bradley .. Buchanan would be a threat to the
Republican. Bush's JOb 1s to keep a b1g lead and
remmd Republicans that the next president probably will name three new Supreme Court justices.
(Morton Kondracke Ia executive editor ol
Roll Call, the newapapar of Capitol Hill .)
" 45769
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Reader Services
Corractlon Polley
Pur main concern In all stories is to be
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story, call tbe newsroom •• (740) 99221!!1. We will check your !•formation
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News Departments
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released.
"Wh1le we are alanned and saddened and our prayers are out for all
those mjured .. there's nothing in my
mind that could have been done,"
said City Councilman '!Yrone Yates.
"We ought to take the v•ew of not
bemg overly reacllve. Closing down
Oktoberfesl just won't happen."
Organizers say up to 500,000 people attend the yearly celebration during its two-day run, although most
had left by the lime the acc1denl
occurred at 8·20 p.m., about 40 minutes before the event was to end.
Oktoberfest-Zinzinnati is patterned after the traditional Oktoberfest celebratio~ 1n Mumch, Germany.
For 11 and several other street fesh·
vals each year, five blocks of a
downtown street are closed to vehicles to make room for food and beer
stands. bands and pedestrians.
"It's a 24-year-old event w1th a
wonderful safety record,'' sa1d Ten
Gasper, v1ce pres•dent of the Greater
CincmnatJ Area Chamber of Commerce in charge of the Downtown
Counc1l, which sponsors Oktoberfest. "But we need to say, 'How can
we work contmually to make it
.
- --
-
-----
--
-
--~-
~
Minor injury reported in two-car crash
A two-car acc•dent on State Route 7 near Tuppers Plains Monday left
the two dnvers slightly IOJured, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Not treated at the scene of the 3·35 p m crash were Alan B. Sheppard,
33, Parkersburg, W.Va . and Sabnna R Congo, 22, 51783 Bald KnobStJversv•lle Road. Long Bonom, accordmg to the patrol.
Troopers sa1d Sheppard was northbound when he stopped 1n traffic.
Another northbound car dnven by Congo was unable to slop m lime and
struck the rear of the car dnven by Sheppard
,
Damage was slight to Congo's car and the vehicle driven by Sheppard,
owned by Ikon Office Solullons, P1ttsburgh, Pa. Congo was cited for
assured clear distance.
Apprecmtionpknkwbeh~~
The Rutl and Brcentenmal Comm1llee will host a cookout on Saturday at
6 30 p.m. for those who ass1sted m the commumty's B1centenmal celebrahon th1s summer. The cookout w1ll be held al the Rutland C.vtc Center.
Those anendmg are asked to brmg a dessert
Vessels to perform
The Olrisl18n band Eanhen Vessels w1ll perform Sunday, 10:30 am. at
Carpenter Bapllst Church off state Route 143 and at 6 30 p.m. at Poplar
Ridge Freewill Bapt1sl Church, state Route 554 Pastor John Elswick mvites
all to allend.
Hayman reunion slated
Descendants of H. A Fred Hayman and Garnet F Polk Hayman will have
their 27th reumon Sunday, 10 a.m. at the home of th eir eldest son, C. E. Hayman Sr., AntiqUity. Dmner w1ll be at noon wnh games to follow. All relatives
and fnends welcome C E Hayman Sr., president, wJII d~rect the busin":"'
meetmg.
Gun shoot planned
Gun shoots Will be held every Fnday mght begmnmg th1s Fnday at 7 p.m.
at the Forked Run Sponsmen's Club.
·
Church homecoming to be held
Homecommg at the Eagle R1dge Commumty Olurch wdl be held Sunday w1th mommg service at 10 am. followed by a carry-in dmner at noon
and afternoon serv1ces at I p.m. There w1ll be spec1al smgmg by the B1ssell
Brothers and Harvest Time Everyone welcome.
,
Caring & Sharing group meeting planned
The Canng & Shanng Support Group w1ll meet Thursday, I p m at the
Me1gs Mulllpurpose Semor Center w1th Daren Hayes speakmg on congestive heart fmlure and card1ac rehabJillatlon.
Round and square dance to be held
There will be a round and squale dance at the Senior Cillzcns Center Friday, 8-11 p m w1th mus1c by Willie and the Crabgrass Boys With An Conant
caller for the square dances. AdmiSSIOn $3 per person or $5 a couple Bnng
snacks for the refreshment table. Public 1nv1led.
'
Southern yearbooks ready
Southern High School yearbooks are '" P1ck up dunng regular school
hours.
'
Card shower planned
Martha While Clonch will celebrate her 80th birthday at Rockspnngs
Rehabilitation Center. Cards may be sent to her '" care of the fac1hty, at
36759 Rockspnngs ~d., Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769
Mqrtgage lender, universities
work to improve minority credit Township meeting slated
By JANELLE CARTER
Assoclatid Preas Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -Almost
half of blacks have bad cred1t, nearly
twice the rate of wh1tes, mortgage
lender Fredd1e Mac reported today 10
announc1ng a JOIDt Initiative wuh
black colleges to teach minonties
good spendmg pracllces.
"Our goal IS to ensure that as
many famll1es as poss1ble have the
opportunity to own a home," sa1d
Leland C. Brendsel, cha1rman and
ch1ef executive officer of Fredd1e
Mac
"lncreasmg the pool of quahfied
mmonty hom e buyers will play an
imponant role in future expansiOn of
the home mortgage mdustry,' ' Brend-
had bad credit.
Bad credit is defined as those consumers who have been either 90 days
late on a payment m the last two years
or 30 days late on a payment more
than once in the last two years or have
a J<:Cord of delinquent liens, public
records or bankruptcy
The schools and Fredd1e Mac are
analyzmg the results to develop an
Jmllative to help consumers obtain
and maintain good credit.
The National Urban League and
the NAACP have agreed to help
Implement the project, which will
mclude distnbuting an educauonal
curriculum for teen-agers and young
adults.
sel satd "Thts mthattve 1s not only
looking at ways to incorporate the
spendmg lessons m students' curricula.
Arthur Washmgton, dean of the
College of Ans and Sciences at Flonda A&M UmversJty, said the school
plans to offer a course m Jts economICS department and busmess school
"We want to start m the fall. If not
the fall, we 'II definitely try to stan '"
January," Washington sa1d.
Washmgton sa1d the problem
extends across all income brackets
and solvmg 11 will require lessons to
help people nol only oblam cred1t but
manage thelf money w1sely
" It's not JUSt simply a poor person
without money trying to get what
they see as the Anterican dream It's
one who has mel the Arnencan dream
but cannot manage money," Washington said.
good for our nation but makes good
business sense."
The mortgage lender in January
awarded $1.3 m1llion to five black
colleges to conduct a national credil
survey. The colteges pan•c•pat1ng are
Benedict College m Columbia, S.C.,
Clark Atlan(a Umvers1ty m Atlanta,
Flonda A&M Umversuy in Tallahassee. Howard Umversuy m Washmgton and Saml Augustme's College m
Rale•gh, N.C.
The study found that wh1le bad
credit crosses racial and economic
lines, 1t JS especJally pervasJve.among
blacks
Among all respondents, 30 percent
had bad cred1t records.
About 47 percent of blacks and 34
percent of H1spamcs had bad credJl
Among wh1tes surveyed, 27 percent
safer?,.,
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
992-2156
Some umverstl1es are already
Insurance Plan ...
Stocks
mmed that almost all of the townshipS do not have the histoncal and
pertmenl data ava1lable to properly
prepare a packet," the memorandum
stales. "The county comm•ss1oncrs
and the county engineer have unam"
mously dec1ded that a plan of action
to assist the townsh1ps 1n mecllng
the req uirements should be Imple-
Am Ele Power ..................... 35'i.
Akzo ..................................... .42 ~
Amerltech .............................64,_
Ashland Oi1 ...........................35'!.
AT&T .....................................45'1.
Bank One .............................36).
Bob Evans ............................ 2D'i•
Borg-Warner ....................... 43'~•
Champion ............................... &'/,
Charm Shps .........................5 n!.
City Holding .......................... 19'/,
Federal Mogul... .................. 26'/•
mented ."
Accordmg io the memora ndum.
Flrstar ......................................23
Gannett ................................69'!.
Kmart ..................................... 12'!.
1he comm1ssroners :md the h1ghway
department will woi'k with the
trustees to fmd alternatJvc fundmg
Kroger ................................... 25'1.
Lands End .............................62'1.
Limited ................................. 38'1.
Oak Hill Fin I .......................... t7 ~
OVB ...................................... 31 1.
One Valley ............................ 35'i.
Peoples ................................. 27 ~
Prem Flnl............................... 11 ~
Rockwell ........................... 51 '!.
RO/Shell ...................... :....... 59),
Sears ..................................... 32 ),
Shoney's ... ............................... 2
Wendy's ......................... .... 26'1•
Worthlnglon ....................... 14 ~•
measures and w11l formulate a coun-
ty-township plan for asS ISting townshipS with road ma1nlcnance.
Continued from
page 1
The comm•ssJOners approved
several funds transfers and appropn·
at10ns requests, including the appro·
priallon of $2,289 into the off1ce of
the prosecut1ng attorney, $400 111
transfers lor probate court, a $700
advance for probate court; and the
appropriation of $2,298.70 for the
Buckeye Hills/Hockmg Valley
Rcg•onal Development Authonty
The
co mmi ss1oners
also
approved payment of b1IIs in the
amount of $482,557.85.
Present, m add1t1on to Thornlon,
were eommisstoners Mtck Davenport and Janet Howard and Clerk
Glona Kloes.
The Lebanon Township Trustees will hold their regular meetmg on Saturday at7 a.m. at th e townsh1p bu1ldmg.
SUV meeting to be held
Sons of Union Veterans WJII meet at the annex of the Hope Baphst
Church in Middlepon on Tuesday at7 15 p.m A meehng wtll be held at the
same time and place for women mterested m formmg the Ladies of the
Grand Anny of the Republic.
SARmeeting
Ewing Olapter of Sons of the Amencan Revolution will meet on Thursday at 6 30 p.m. at the Chesler Counhouse.
Coin Club meeting
Oh-Kan Com Club w1ll meet on Monday al th e Trolley House, located
behind the Dairy Queen '" M1ddleport Refreshments w1ll be served.
Meigs EMS logs
Umts of the Me1gs County Emergency Med1cal Serv1ce recorded
e1ght calls for assistance Monday.
Umts respondmg mcluded_.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2.12 a.m., Ebenezer Street.
Pomeroy, Margaret Wh1lc, Veterans
Memonal Hosp1tal;
11 :55 a m., state Route 124.
Rac me, Hazel Webb, refused treatment ;
3 34 p m . Bailey Run Road,
Pomeroy, Charles Napper, Hol zer
Med1cal Ce nter,
5 56 p m , Greenwood Road ,
Saturda)
Night Lhe has
spa'Wncd 14 mm\Cs fcarunng us
a calls
Racme, Larry Willis, VMH, Racine
squad asSisted;
8:44 p.m , Gold R1dge Road,
Ruby Castile, O'Bieness Memonal
Hespll al, Pomeroy squad assiSted
MIDDLEPORT
9 51 p m , volunteer fire department to Cook Road. structure fire,
Marg1e Peck owner.
POMEROY
9·33 p m., Wetzgall Street,
Dustin Fellure , treated at the scene
R'IITLAND
10·21 p m , s(ate Route 143.
Lmda Pridemore, HMC.
char,l(.; ters. lncludmg Cone
ltt•adl WCrHit' 1 World and Tlte
Blun Brothers
MON 9/20 • THURS 9/23199
lOX OfFta Will OPEN AT
6:30 PM FOR IVENIN6 SHOWS
THE SIXTH SENSE (PG13)
7 10 DAILY
STIR OF
Doon !Jpa AI fi.jll PM M01. ,,.. Fri.
**'1t-ue~**
Rlllllllf II !lUll ,.."18:45, 8:30
~) Klli1 Cos~
Ke!t PI!SIIX\ .lenall.lla>
lll.IIE STREAII "''~ 7:45, 10:00
(Comedy/Act~) Martill1wretn luke llllsoo
nsi'ECTOO GADGET
RUNAWAY BRIDE (PG)
7 00 DAILY
ll<l
7:00
Mill. Dab'~! ()lmr,M!t lki
)ldili-)-
DlllllfY IIIHUGHT "' 7:00, 9:00
)Ccirody) &mn FI!SIIIl'~ Mli\1 Sallh m PWI
SIXTH SENSE "''~ 7:00, 9:30
FOR CUSTOMER APPRECIATION,
PRESENT TICKET STUB ANO
RECEIVE A FREE POPCORN,
(MON -THURS ONLY)
BEAUTY, QUALITY, CRAFTSMANSHI
}l'a1cl) 1!111:e Wll.llai<t Jiei~Metl, TOl r.tefte ()m WM
IIICKEY BUJE EYES '""' 7:16, 9:30
ICcillaf!1i1191 GIWI\ ""'1~ .orr.s t.al\ llull YOJJ
BOWFNIR
7:15,9:46
,,.,~
ICaNdy) ~.. ilalllo,Elllie ~!fll. llolliel Glaham
STIGMAlA ~I
7:15, 9:45
[Mer) Pm- GalliO ll;me,.wt.n ~Ill lCIII
Rlf4AWAY BRIIE "' 7:30 9:45
)Cailily)IJhi &M lil:l'im \lall'e:lor Ei1coll_6; Cus.ll
Enduring Memorials Priced
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520 W Mam St - Pomeroy, 0
Phone 992-2588
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Stock reports are the 1 0:30
a.m. quotes provided
by Advest of Gallipolis.
7:30, 10:00
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The Daily Sentinel• Page 3
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
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�~~Sports ·
The Daily Sentinel
Page4
icowboys notch 24-7 win -over Falcons
. Anderson
IS
thtrd play of the thtrd quarter,
Graztam fumbled dunng a scramble,
settmg up the score that put Dallas
ahead 17-0.
"We just couldn 't get into a
groove." ~raztam satd.
Atlanta's defense kept the game
close, but the Falcons stmply couldn' t sustam dnves
Part of the problem was Byron
Hanspard not bemg able to convert
on thtrd -and-short the way Anderson
usually does Atlanta failed to convert three of them whtle trathng 100, tncludtng once when Hanspard
was stopped for no gaon.
Danny Kane II replaced Graztani.
but wasn' I able to work the same
magtc as tn 1997 when he beat
Dallas twice whtle wnh the New
York Gtants
He had some htghhghts, such as
throwmg a 45-yard touchdown pass
to Tim Dwtght wtth four mmutes left
and htttmg another long pass to set
up first -and-goal from the four
But after two incompleuons,
Kane II threw a pass directly to defenstve end Greg Ellis. who returned it
87 yards for the Cowboys' fmal
pomts
"] l ooke.~ up and ~~~re was 80
yards to go. Eilts satd I wanted t~
hopeful he can rcwrn goal hy R1ch1c Cunn ingham On the pttch to someone It was a long. harO
run and 1 didn 't thtnk 1 was gomg to
make it..,
Dallas had three mtercepttons.
two off Kane II, and returned them for
154 yards. That was more than the
Cowboys had rushmg ( 133) or passmg (98 )
Atlatua outgatned Dallas 316231 , but !68 of the Falcons' yards
came 10 the fourth quarter when they
were forced to play catchup
Emmttt Smtth led the Cowboys
offense with 108 yards rushmg and
two touchdowns. Hts second stratght
tOO-yard 0411 ng sent him past Tony
Dorsett for fourth on the NFL's
career rushmg list at 12,783 yards
Dorsett was at the game 10 take pan
10 a halfttme celebration hononn g
the Cowboys • 40th anm versary
As good as the Dallas defense
was, It'll he better soon
After a bye thiS week , the
Cowboys expect 10 get back comerbacks Deton Sanders, and posstbly
Kevm Smtth
"I told our guys before the g.1me
w<> can ' t be worrymg about who ts
not here ," defenstve coordmator
Dave Campo satd "However we do
u, we' ve got to make some plays
We ' ve got to w1n wuh who we
have "
'
PRESSURED _ Dallas defensive back Darren Woodson (left)
puis pressure on Atlanta quarterback Dan~y Kanell in the, fourth
quarter ol Monday night's NFC game in Irving, Texas, where the
Cowboys won 24-7. On this play, Kanell 's pass. was intercepted b¥
the Cowboys' Greg Ellis and returned for a touchdown. (AP)
,
Bengals to give Smith first start at quarterback vs. Panthers
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (A Pl - Sooner or
'later thts season. Aktl! Smith was
•gomg to start a game for the
worst-case scenano Smtth. the thtrd
ove rall ptck tn the draft. miSsed virtually all of trat~tng camp In a contract tmpasse. He stgned a sevenCmcmnatl Bengals
year deal on Aug 24 and began a
· Coach Bruce Cmtlct w1shes It was crash course m learning tile X's and
much later than th1s week
O's
"Not th1s way Nol under these
He ' ll be called upon to run an
c'Ondtt!Ons," he satd Monday
offense he hasn ' t yet learned
The B'engals don't have much
"He needs more pracllce snaps,·
chmce
,
Cos let satd "He needs to be m game
The rookte quarterback wtll take condtttons more and we don't have
most of the snaps '" pracuce thts that luxury "
week, prepanng to make hts first
Even Smith acknowledges tt's a
NFL start Sunday '" Carolina bad sltuauon.
Meanwhtle. Jeff Blake wtll get treat"It's gomg to be tough, defmttement on hts sore passmg shoulder ly," Smith satd Monday "We're dbsand hope that he can be ready for the perate for a 'wm But thts ts the reason they drafted me "
game
The Bengals cleared the decks of
· As they started ' ftgunng out 1
game plan for Carolina, the Bengals quarterbacks after they chose Smtth
knew they'd probably wmd up chart- They dumped Netl O' Donnell, Paul
ing plays for Smtth, who sttll hasn ' t Justm and Enc Kresser. leavmg only
two rooktes backing up Blake learned the enttre offense
- "Jeff ts very questionable ," Smith and seventh-round choice
Coslet satd "There's a 25 percent Scott Covmgton
1:hance that he wtll play - that's tf
It was a nsky gamble by the front
everythmg would go perfect "
office, whoch was dependmg upon
That leaves the 0-2 Bengals m a Blake to stay healthy unttl Smtth
learned enough to run the offense.
The gamble backfired tmmediately
Blake was forced to leave a season openmg game agatnst Tennessee
because of leg cramps, and the
Bengals fatled to get a first down
wtth Smtth and Covmgton runnmg
the offense for three consecut•ve
senes The Titans took advantage
and rallied tor a 36-3 5 wm
Blake was htt hard by hnebacker
Juntor Scau late tn the ftrst half
Sunday and lost a fumble that was
returned for a touchdown that put the
Chargers ahead 28-7 Blake landed
hard on hts nght shoulder and was
out for the rest of the game .
With Smtth runntng the offense to
the second half, the Bengals tnan aged only two first downs and 21 net
yards tn what turned out to be the
most lopstded home-opening loss tn
franchtse htstory.
"It's real tough when you come
mto a game down 20-some pomts,"
Smtth satd "The fans want you to
bnng the team back mstantly It was
tough out there The de!enstve linemen know we're not runnmg the
football; they JUSt get after you I
took some pretty good shots yester·
day"
'
Blake wants to stan Sunday and
Coslet would accommodate htm if he can throw the ball well enough
"I know what Jeff's pam threshold ts - extremely htgh." Coslet
sa•d "But I don ' t know how effec-
' We've got to keep the runnmg thtrd-and-long ro keep the
goong and keep htm out ol oil of htm.'
pre~su~e
gam~
Ex-UD quarterback Ernst dies at 26
DAYTON.Ohto(APl - Anthony
Cause of de ath has not been deter'Tony" Ernst who quarterbacked mmcd
'
the Umversuy ot Dayton to PIOneer
"ThiS ts a shock to all of us." satd
Football League champtOnshtps 10 Dayton roac h Mtke Kelly
,1993 and 199~ d!Cd after co llapsmg
Ernst quarterbacked Flyer teams
t1ve he can be So we ' re JUSt guess mg m a resiJuranl He was 26
that comptled a 17-3 record He comm the wmd "
Ernst , a home budder '" panner- pleted 61 5 percent of ht s passes,
If Smnh has to start, the best , shtp with lm lather, was slrlckcn thtrd htghest among Dayton quarterguess ts that he'll be handmg off a lot Saturday nt ght at a restaurant m backs
and throwmg short passes
Bellbrook, where he ltved. He was
Ernst ts survtved• by hts wtfe.
"The offensive line and the run- pron ounced dead at Soutll\'lew Angela, hts parents. Jtm and Dtane
nmg backs and the receivers are Hospttal on Sunday morntng, Ernst. and a stsler, J4he. Funeral
gomg to have to pick up the pace for accordtng to the Mont go mery arrangements are pendmg
him, " tackle Wtllte Anderson ~atd County coroner'' offtce
.----...,;...,;___._______..;._~__________._...;.___________,
Today's games
DH Montttal (Vazquez 8-? and Powell 3·6) at
Flor1da (Spnnger S l.S and Comeltus 0-0) 4 05 p m
Houli ton (Elarton 1!·4) at Ptttsburgh (Benson II·
13> 7 05 p m
•
New York (Reed 10.4) at, AIIanta (Smo hz 9 8),
740 pm
St Louts (Bonenfield 17 7} at Ch1cago {Lorrame
l-l l,805p m
Phdadelplna {Schumaker 0-2 ) at Mtlwaukee
{Pubtpher 4-6) B 05 p m
An zona (Anderson 6 1) at Colorado <Bohanon
1
l l·I IIROSpm
CINC INNATI !Guzmon 6 Zl :n San Otego
AL standings
E•stern Dn,tston
Jwn
,.
62
1'<1.
:!II L
New York.
Boston
'lO
81
Toronto
77
Balumore
72
, Tampa Bay
65
!ill
604
5&4
"8676
511
486
410
I,,'
17'
26
Central Dtlltston
11
90 60
CLEVELAND
Ctncago
Derron
Mmnes01a
Kan~a~
Cuv
68
61
,,
600
61
60
91
88
-«l9
456
81
..-·
.., ''''10'
409
St louts (Ste phl!nson 6 It al
Wntun Dll iston
Oakland
Seattle
''
Annilt"tm
.11.
591
550
491
411
89 61
82 67
74 76
K9
Texas
clinched dl\monmk-
Anzona (Benes II 121 at Colorado {Ktl c 8
6
II
Montreal (Thurman 7 II J :u Flond.t (Nuncr fl.
"-
917 0~pm
Houston IL1n1n 20.8t nt Pmsburgh tRtt... h u~ I \
9170 ~pm
Monday's scores
"lew Y9rk (Hershtscr 11 IOJ at Atlanta (Qia\lue
II
11)
Football
735pm
Cht ca&o (8 aldv.1 n 10 12) at New York (Petuue
1111) 735pm
:
•
~
'
020000
(Milton 7-IIJ at Oakland (Hudson I().
Central
\2) \05pm
Toronto (Escobar
'
'r ~OS:pm
12-11) at
CLEVELAND (J
Wnght 7-9) at Detrou
l
(Moehlf:r9-15) 705pm
Balumo~
'
Chtcago(K Wells 3· 1l •tNewYorkllrabu II 6)
:7 \Spm
,
BalufllOft: <Enckson 14-11) at Texas (Helling I~
' 9)8rupm
I
CINCINNATI
CLEVELAND
I
•
Tampa Ba)' (Wheeler 0-2) at bnahe tm (WashbUrn
'2·4),10JS:pm
r
'
Kan1a1 Cuy (Wtta.~tck B II) at Seanle (Halam01
.1!:
93
92
70
• !thtladelphta
i Montreal
~
61
l8
Flor1da
1:
I CIUl::lgO
•
•
··•······· ·· ·······
4 Snn Ottgo
1 Los Angeles
1 Colorado
I
•••
~
~
t
l
60
"
9Q
400
Wrslrrn Dnistun
: A.rtzon:a
0 01000
9Q
60
66
"
Monday's scores
St Lnuu 7 ChJ uago l
Colornd o I2 Anzona 7
M1lwaukte 5 Phlladelptna 4
Pmsburgh II Houston :"i
C INCINNA11 11 San Otego I
I o~ Angeks 6 Son Frnm:1s ~o ~
44
0 01000 34
7
1 I 0 500 4:\
~0
I I 0 500
0 2 0 000
41
64
14
~1
2 0 01 000 65 42
I
23
29'~
~4 '~
I I 0 500 41
I I 0 500 ~8
4\
63
Anzona •• ,. ·'·
NY Gtanu
Washmgton
1105008562
Phtla~lphta
0200002944
Central Divlnon
1'
Green Bay
21
Tmtp.t Rny
lU
"
8
19
20
2
Detroit
Chi cago
16'
600
68 <47
80 470
70 80 467
68
4'0
82
71
Hockey
.l!:Lifi.Let:rA
1'<1.
620
l8 611
80 467
86 421
91 189
l7
92 60 ' 605
89 62 \89
74 7l 497
71
41'
67 82 4l0
i Som Frnnctsc: o .. ,..... , .
•
L
Crntral Olvts10n
I Houston
, :CINCINNATI
, Pmsburgh
I St loUIS
• Milwaukee
Nahonal Hnekey Lugue:
E1stern DMsion
Easlem Division
~ Htw YOfk
21
-•NATIONAL CONFERENCE
: NL standings
Atlanta
61
"
11050046H
• 11·7), 1035pm
1
"
Wutem Ot\'iston
1
••Jwn
l7
2 0 OJ 000 62
Tennesstt
Q
I I
I• I
I I
I I
~ltnne SOt ol
01000 ll
0 500 11
0 lOO 41 47
0 lOO •• 16
0 500 12 22
Wtstrrn Dt\ISllln
11'
l~
.
" "
Monday's score
D.1llas
""
0 01000 27 10
I I 0 "'0 40
I I 0 ,00
0 I 0 poo 21 41
0 l 0 000 1() 41
I
St Loms
New Orleans
San I ranmco
At lnnt n
(fnrohna
coordmalur of lommumc au on5
56
14
45
4)
l7
20
020000 •o 50
0 2 0000 42 70
020000 9 69
2
Pmsbtfrgh
c
Di~agon
2 0 01000
lacksonvtlle
Boston (Rapp 6·6)
0 01 000
2 0 01000 61
I I 0 500
I I 0 500 5~
lndtanapohs
NY Jets
Wednesday's games
Muu~esota
•
2
Buffalo
National Bas!.\elball AssodatHm
DETROIT PISTONS S1~ned F Terry M•lls
PH ILADELPHIA 76ERS Named Chn'ltopher
CLEVELAND BROWNS W;uved G Alex
Bemstetn Stgned OT Oms Ruhman
JACKSONVILLE, JAGUARS Placed S Mtke
Logan on mJured rTServe Stgned S Rayna Sle)llan
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS Placed RB Kimble
Anders on IRJured re.erve
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS Clatmed RB
Tremayne Stephens off wa1ver~ Released G
Regmald Nelson from the practice 1-q uad
.l!:Lifi.Let: rA
Mtanu
New England
BHSketball
FootbaU
Eutem Dh•lsion
IWn
exccuuvc ~•ce prestdem chtef operaung olficer and
Bob Vmu v ~~.: e prestdenHp!:Ctal cou nS<l
National Football Lu1ue
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Tampa Bay (Rupe 8-9) at Anaheim (Ort1z I ~)
1005 pm
Pwhnnesota (Radke 12 14) at Oakland IOqu1st 910) 1005 pm
Kanlli5 Ctty (Suppan 10-9) at Seaule (Garm, 15
8) IOOSpm
'.
SAN DIEG O PADRES Named Jack McGrory
Wall a~e
NFL standings
Johnson 6· 7) at leus (LolUza 8·4)
8 05 pm
,
tWoll 6 8)at Milwaukee (Wood;:u-d
11 -1} 805p m
S;m Fr01nttsco (Nathan 7 ~) at Los Artgelcs
( Vnldc~ 9 14) 10 l:'i p m
CINCINNATI (Vtll one B 71 :u San Otego
{Ashby 14-9), 10 l"i p m
Tnmghfs games
Amerinm League
TEXAS RANGERS Extended !he wn tracu of
Doug Mehm , general manager and Johnny Oates
manager for two yea"
National League
CULORADO ,ROCKIES Nanlt!d Dan 0 Do.,.d
general mnnager
PH ILADELPH IA PHtLUES Agreed lo tt:ml5
'>lt lh OF Roh Ducey on a two )C"ar ~: onlmll c~ten
MOll
740pm
Phtladdplu ;~
CLEVELAND (Bu rha 14- ~J ~~ fktrou
(Borkowski I 4) 7 05 p m
Toronto (Hentgen 10-1 1) at Boston (Martmez 21·
~
I~ )
5 05 p m
4 CLEVELAND ' I IOl
Mm l\t§OI~ 4 Orrld;:md 0
Anahei m 10 lampa Bay~
Kansas Cuy I 0 Seottle ~
Balhmo~T (J
Ch~~;·a gu !lrr~~.hs e l
617)220p m
Detroit
4)
Transactions
Baseball
Wednesday's games
At lam,, 7
Week 3 slale
Sunday. Sepl. l6
at St L1•m ~ I p m
CINClNNAl l tl Carnltna I r 111
CLI:VII o\ND 11 B thtnw•~ It• Ill
•BUFFALO SABRES Asstgned G Mtka
Noront:n LW Enc Boulton and LW Dcnu Hamel co
Rochester of the AHL
CALGARY rLAMES Ass1gned G Antlre1
Trefilov 10 the Chrcago of the IHL
DALLAS STARS Asitgned LW Mel Ange lstad
G M'1ke Bales RW Grtgor Baumgnrtner LW Ryan
Chnsue. C Kelly Faut:htld, LW Sce'e Oatney, 1 C
Roman Lyuh~nko D Jeff M3cMIIIan, D Mall
Mamn 0 Jeff McKercher LW Brenden Morrow D
Evguem Ts)lbuk and D Mark Wotton 10 Mtchtgan of
che IHL Released G Danny Lorentz and D Rtck
Mroztk Retw.med RW Tyler Bouck D John Eulcine
and D Kenton Snulh to thetr JUmor teams
DETROIT RED WL~GS Ai!Ngned C Alexandre
J~cques RW B J Young D Shane Hmdy and G Aren
M1ller to Ctnctnnau oflhe AHL Asstgned RW lot' o
Suuno lo Malmo of thr: Swedtsh Ellie League
FLORIDA PANTHERS Autgned C Em
Bogunteckt and RW Crn~g Retcherl to Louasv11le of
theAHL
NASHVILI.,.E PREDATORS Ass1gned F B~Tnl
Peterson F Danny Rt va P Mark Mowen. F Davtd
Gossd m, D Ale.~ander Ootkov I) Marc Moro D
Andy Berenzwetg and G Chrcs Mason 10 Mtlwaukee
of the 1HL
PHOENI X COYOTES Asstgned D Da' td
Cu llen G Putrt~:k DesRochers R\\ Steve n Ktng D
Franmt'i l..crou11. D Robert Schnabel RW l ean Ou)l
Trudel and RW Shay ne Toporowsk.i 10 Spnngfteld of
!he AHI As ~tg n.:d D K.Jnll Safrono' 10 Quebec of
the QMJH L
fORONT.O MAPLI I EAfS As5tg ned F Ryan
Peppern ll F J:J.son Sessa F Aaron Bmnd F Vlitdtnnt
Anttpov FFmnlt sek Mrazek I Bobby House FS)I
1\pps f Jacque~ Lartvtere F Dcnms Maxwell D
JJJ ~!I n Hockmg D Chm Hogas U Peter Re yn o ld~ D
l:fugo Marchnnd G M ar~ Robnntllc and G I ranm
L.m,cc to St Johu ~ o1the /\ HI
WAS HI NGTON CAPilAI S Amgnl·tJ IJ R11ss
1 up t3dwk tn l'nu ~c Albert t'l the WHL anJ C
(harltl" Skphl"ns tn liudph n it he OHI
A tl~nw
/
'
National League
roundup
By The Associated Press
Mark McGwtre had perfect ttmmg. Jon Lteher dtdn 't
Lteber rettred 20 consecuttve bat·
ters Monday mght. leavmg htm JUSt
seven straight outs from the second
perfect game of the season. Up came
McGwtre, who ended the btd wtth
hts 59th homer and sparked the St.
Louts Cardmals to a 7-2 vtctory over
the Chtcago Cubs
" It's very tough. But that's base·
ball I could think about this for the
rest of my hfe I could go home and
ktck myself to death and stay up all
mght , but I don 't believe mall that I
made mtstakes when I shouldn't
have "
McGwtre , who went 1-for-4,
moved wtthm two homers of Sammy
Sosa. who as 1-for-3 wtth a smgle
and a walk m the opener of a threegame senes.
Lteber (8-11) struck out nine of
the first 17 batters. After McGwtre's
' homer. he allowed two smgles and
-
American League
roundup
: move up m the wild-card race, losmg
4-0 at home to M1 nnesota on
Monday, Sept.l7
San Francasco at An zona 9 p m
San Franctsco {Rue.:er 14 8) m Los r\nge les
(W•lhamsOOI IO!Opm
.
smgle m lhe mmng. as d1d Sean
Casey '
"The etghth was ugly - one of
the ughest for us thiS year,'' Padres
manager Bruce Bochy satd " We
dtdn ' t play well The game started
off badly and JUSt got worse "
Neagle (8 -5) won hts ftfth stratght
stan. allowmg one run. str1kmg out
s1:.: and "''alkmg three
" II was JUst one of those ntghts
were bastcally I had all four pttches
workmg," Neagle satd
Stan Behnda pitched the mnth tn
the combmed three·httter.
Tony Gwynn stngled tn the thtrd •
mnmg for hts 3,054th htt. movmg
htm past Rod Carew for sole possesston of 18th on jhe career hst He
also extended hts,.ittmg streak 10 15
games
The Padres had won seve n of II
commg in, includmg two games each
agamst NL East leader Atlanta and
San Franctsco
Reggoc Sanders , traded from
CmcmnatJ to San D1ego 10 the
Vaughn deal , hil a solo homer wnh
two outs m the first, ht s 25 th thts seaso n and the I50th of ht s career
After that. 11 was all Reds,
Taubensee homered off Carlyle with
one out m the second. and Casey
doubled for a run '" the thtrd. also
Wllh
tWO
OUI S
McGwire hits 59th HR in Cardinals' 7-2 win
two-run homers to Thomas Howard
and ) D Drew m a stx-puch span
Bog Mac's dnve was the first of etght
consecuuve hits
" I can't remember. but how can
you see someone have a perfect
game and then all of the sudden etghtJ
stratght hus ?" satd McGwtre who
struck out m hts first two at-hats
" He was llat-out nasty. He had tt
gomg and then we JUSt got some htts.
11e was throwtng some of the best
shders I've seen all year..
At Wngley Fteld Lteber (8-11)
was hfted after a stngle by Marcus
Jensen, and St LouiS scored two
more runs on an RBI stngle by
Eduardo Perez and a run-sconng
double by Edgar Rentcna
"I tned to get that thtrd out, and I
JUSt couldn't do it." satd Lteber, wmless m 13 starts since July 10
Mark Thompson ( l-2) allowed
JUSt
four htts m
SIX
scoreless m'-mgs
to get his first vtctory smce Aprtl 4,
1998, when he was with Colorado.
In other NL games, tt was
Pittsburgh II, Houston 5; Colorado
12, Anzona 7, Los Angeles 6. San
Francisco 5, and Mtlwaukee 5,
Philadelphta 4
51, mnmgs m a 4-3, 10-mntng loss to
Detrott.
"I don't feel like I'm audtttonmg
or anythmg like that," Gooden sa td.
"If I don't pttch m the postseaso~ . l
have nobody to blame but myself"
Gooden ts 3-4 with a 6 22 ERA
: By BEN WALKER
· AP Baseball Writer
· At thiS rate, Dwtght Gooden th1s year He's never won a game m
: mtght well mtss the playoffs. Same postseason play, gomg 0-4 m mne
· goes for the Oakland Athlettcs
. starts
· The Athlettcs nttssed a chance to
Denver at Tampa 84y. I p m
~ron at Kansas Cny I p m
Ptuladelphta at Buffalo, I p m
~attle at Pittsburgh I p m
Washmglon at New York lets I p m
Ten!W!ssee at JacksonV1lle 4 0~ p m
lmitan11poh s at San Diego 4 05 p m
Chtcago at Oakland 4 I 5 p m
Mmnesocl\ -at Green Bay 4 15 p m
New York Gtants at New England, B 20 p m
OPEN Dallas Muam1 New Orleans
(Ckment9·12) 1005pm
21
runs and scored three Urnes
Mtchael Tucker hn a two-run
tnple m the etghth . gtvmg htm three
RBi s Barry Lark m walked four
ttmes, scored once and stole hts 30th
base Larkin left the game wtth a sore
left elbow after the seventh tnntng
Ctnctnnall roughed up rookoes
Buddy Carlyle, Heath Murray,
Dommgo Guzman and Almanzar A
fifth Padres pitcher Matt Whnestde,
p11ched a perfect mnth
Carlyle ( 1·3), a former Red s
farmhand, started and took the loss
after giving up four runs on SIX hits
m five innmgs He st ruck out seven
and walked three
The Reds sent II batters to the
plate m the etghth, gettmg etght htts
off two pitchers Neagle htl an RBI
Pirates II, Astros 5
Brant Brow n hn a three -run
homer and drove '" four runs at
Ptttsbureh . cutttng Houston's load m
the NL Central was to 2 ' · gumes over
second-plac e Cmctnnau
Brown's three- run shot .off Shane
Reynolds (16-12) came tn a rammterrupted SIX-fun thtrd mnmg that
saw the Ptrates rally from a 4-2
deficit
Pete Schourek (4-7) won for the
ftrst ttme stnce July 24 agamst
Montreal. pttcht ng 3'' mn mgs of one
run reltef
Rockies 12, Diamondbacks 7
Demck Gtbson h11 the first two
homers of hts maJOr league career,
doubled and drove tn stx run s at
Coors Fteld
Desptte the loss, Anzona's magtc
number for clmchmg the NL West
was cut to five over second-place
-
VAUGHN SCORES - The Cincinnati Reds ' Greg Vaughn (left)
bounces up after eluding the tag ol San Diego catcher Bet;~ Davis
one out m 1hc mnth and drove m fou r and scoring tn the Reds' eight-run etghth mn ing of Monday night'a
runs at Dodger Stad1um
National League game in San Diego, where the Reds won 12-1. (AI!)
Alan Embree (3- 1) walked Ertc
Young wllh one out m the mnth,
Mark Grudnelanek greeted Jerry
Spradlm wtth a h11 -and- run smgle.
and Gary Sheffteld wa s walked
mtenll ona lly to load \he bases.
Karros ltned the next pttch to lett
field
Pedro Borbon (4-2) pttched a perfect nmth for the vtctory
Grudz1elanek and Enc Young got
mto a dugout argument after they
both fat led to cover seco nd ,on a steal
attempt
Brewers 5, Phillies 4
Jeromy Burnnz hit hts I OOth
home run for Mtlwaukee, and Alex
Ochoa had a go-ahead. two-run stngle tn the seventh.
San Francisco, whtch IS c1ght games
Rooky Coppmger (4-3) allowed
back
,
three htts m two tnntngs at County
Jamey Wnght (4-2) gave up five Stadium for the vtctory. and Bob
runs and mne hits tn seven mnings Wtckman pttched the moth for htS
Omar Daal (15-9) was tagged for 34th save m 41 chances After
etght runs and mne htts m 4'1. mnings Phtladelph1a loaded the bases wtth
Dodgers 6, Giants 5
one out, Alex Anas grounded mto a
Enc Karras h•t an RBI smgle wtth game end tng double play
:A's·lose 4-0, slip behind in wild card race
Scoreboard
Baseball
Cincinnati cuts Houston's NL Centra/lead to 2'12 games
By BERNIE WILSON
wm and I beheve the numbers will
: SAN DIEGO (API - The SJn take Cat< of themselves, and they
Diego Padres had no trouble recog- are."
itiztng Greg Vaughn 's home run
Vaughn was 1-for-4 before the
~wmg
homer, mcludmg a smgle to open the
• Vaughn sent No 41,. flymg over etghth.
the 370-foot sogn tn left-center field
"At least I dtdn 't g•ve the at-bat
~uring the Ctnctnnau Reds' 12· 1 away, " said Vaughn , who has I 07
rout, pulhng them wuhin 2 ~ games RBis and has scored 96 runs
of the Houston Astros in the NL
And the Reds gamed a game on
Central
Houston, whoch lost 11 -5 to
Vaughn hu 50 homers in helping Pittsburgh.
the Padres to the World Senes last
" It"s mce to see us wtn a game
year. But then the Padres traded htm when they lose," manager Jack
to the Reds, reasomng that there was McKeon said. "It's been ntp and
no way the slugger would hit SO tuck. When we wm, they wm, when
homers agam And 1f he did. he'd we lose, they lose. It puts us withm
hkely ask for "(ay more money than reach. We 've just got to keep wmthe Padres could afford.
nmg."
So even though Vaughn 's threeThe Reds also moved wnhm 3 ',
run homer off Carlos Almanzar had games of the New York Mets m lhe
no bearmg on the outcome - tt wtld-card race
capped an etght-run etghth- u sull
Denny Neagle pllched two-htt
meant somethmg to the slugger
ball for e1ght mnmgs Eddie
" The baseball e.ecutives satd Taubensee led Cmcmnall's assault
{here's no way I was going to have a on four rookte pitchers, matchmg hiS
$Ood year, like I was over the htll or career hogh by gomg 4-for-4, mclud something," Vaughn said " I play to mg hts 20th homer He drove m t;vo
••
by Sunday. Dttto for Chandler.
although coach Dan Reeves satd tt's
too early to tell on etther player.
,Reeves tsn't buymg the tnjury
ahbt
" I was embanassed by our play,"
Reeves said. " The way we went out
there was nol what I expect."
Once Anderson went down. the
Cowboys were able to focus on quarterback · Tony Graztam. Defenstve
coordinator Dave Campo tested htm
wtth a vanety of blitzes , and he
fat led mtserably
"I beheve. th1s IS an InJUry
league," Campo satd "When they
lose a great player, you've got to get
after hts backup "
Dallas held Graztant to 7-of-16
passing for 90 yards m two quarters,
plus two possess10ns. That was
s mewhat of a mtlestone for htm
nstdenng he was benched at halftme of hts other two career starts.
e left-hander almost burned the
Cow boys on hiS first play A flea
Otck~r turned mtO a bomb to a wtdeopen Chns Calloway. but he dropped
what would've been a sure touchdown. and thmgs we re neve r that
good agam.
Gr,aztam's next pass was tnterccpteil. leadmg to a 23-yard field
The Daily Sentinel • Page 5
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
•
·.E ight-run riot drives Reds past S.D. 12-1
•
~!l!ly JAIME ARON
·:. IRVING, Texas (AP) - Walking
,'Gff the field after a season-opemng
:tictory in Washmgton, the Dallas
::Eowboys defense dtdn ' t feel hke a
:·wmner
; · They knew thtm offense had
~itatled them out and vowed to repay
~-4he favor-qUickly.
Dallas' defense did that Monday
:~ight, rattling Atlanta 's backup-filled
·"fiffense into mistake after miStake
~nd overcoming a bad night for the
::-Dffense in a 24-7 Cowboys vtctory
~: "It was really omportant to get off
' !ln the nght step and play wtth confi:~nee," s31 d defenstve end ,Chad
;o~:~enmngs, who, had two of Dallas'
1~x sacks "We ~ot after them early
~llus ts a b1g momentum-booster."
~: The Cowboys are 2.0 for the first
~me smee 1995, their last Super
::Bowl season. The Falcons are 0·2, as
··4re the Denver Broncos. marking the
~ftrst time both defendmg conference
: champions have been won less after
two garnes.
Atlanta has an excuse mJunes
·The Falcons started the game w1th<f')ut quarter~ack Chr1s Chandler. and
~" mmutes after luckoff, they losl
·.Pro Bowl runmng back Jamal
Anderson
'
:Tuesday, September 21,1999
•
ear1n
•
1re
our ear
our
eeve?
For Painless.Job Opportunities-See The Classifieds
The Daily Sentinel
Phone: 992-2155
"I'm not go mg to throw out
names ,.. Indtans manager Mtke
Hargrove satd "Doc's tn the mtx,
JUSt like everybody el>e ts •
In other AL games, Anahetm be at
Tampa Bay I0-5 and Kan sas Cny
defeated Seattle 10-9.
'•
Angels 10, Devil Rays 5
Tampa Bay's Wtls0n Alvarez got
hn hard, then tnggered an argument
when hts fmal pitch htt plate umpue
John Shulock tn the mask
Walbeck got past catcher Mtke Mmnesota stopped Oakland.
DtFehce and sq uarely stru ck
Ryan (1-2) outpttched Kevm
Shulock
Appter ( 15-1~). who matched hiS
Shu lock, an AL umptre smce career htgh for losses
1979 was not hurt He straightened
up and slowly headed tov.ard the
Ron Coomer drove m three runs
as the Twms won consecul!ve gmnes
mound, and D•Feltce caught up to
htm Devtl Rays manager Larry
Rothschtld came out of the dugout
arid , after Shu lock and Alvarez
br,teny argued. brought m reliever
Rtck Whttc
'' I can't prove he dtd 11 on purpose. but the more I thtnk about 11.
1 m sure he dtd tt mtcnttonally.''
Shulock satd
Satd AhatCl ' Mtkc ,ailed lor a
fast hall away. and I threw one nght
down the middle It htt hnn Those
thtngs happen I dtdn't try to htt
lor the first ttme .smce Sept 5-6
agam st Tampa Bay Mmncsota ts 514 m September
Royals 10, Mariners 9
Ken Gnffey Jr htt ht s AL- Iead mg
46th homer and drove m four runs
lor Seattle m a loss at Safeco Fteld
Mark Qumn had hiS second multthomer game smcc maktng hts major
lc.1gue debut for Kansas Ct ty on
· Sept 14 Carlos Beltran and Joe
Vtlt cllo also homered for the Royal s
Rev Sanchez went 4-for·4 and
scored four t11nes for the Royals and
hun
M1ke Sweeney hH a run- s~.;onng smTwins 4, Athletics 0
glc lor hts tOOth RBI
Jason Ryan pit ched shutout hall ... Gnffey had three htt s .md scmcd
: Monday n•ght A crowd ol only
' 6,5 12 sa"" Oakland fall five games
: behmd tdle Boston
. " It was dtsappomung , very dtsap. potnung," Athletics manager Art
Howe. " There wasn't a .whole lot ot
energy m the stand s, but n 's up to us
to get n gomg We have to mouvate
ourselves "
Gooden. meanwhile. put hnn se ll
Alvarez wa~ tagged for seven runs
m further Jeopardy of hcmg ldt out
m 2',, tnnmgs at Anahctm H1 s .n1ght 1nto lhc se venth 1nnmg and ca111Cd lhJcc runs
of Cleveland's pltchmg plans. lastmg ended when hts 1- 1 fastball to Matt his llrst maJor league VI Ciory as
'
ball-earner. "I know I was I dtdn ' t
feel like I won That ts abouuhe onl y
ume I ever felt that the on ly thmg we
accomphshed was , a wm. I don 't
thmk we accomplished anythmg and
I don't thmk we got an} beucr "
But head coach John Cooper
stayed on the postttve Stdc at hts
weekly news conference Monday
"We dtd not play very good m the
first half,' ' he satd, "but I'm happy
wtth the way we took over in the second half "
Cooper
was
reheved
the
Buckeyes weren't one ot the many
upset
VICtims
around the natton One
By HARRY ATKINS
DETROIT (A PI -
catc her atoned tn thr<Hvinl! out
Whtk th e Lofton \\hen he tOok a v./ld~ tur_n
Cle"weland lnd~an s arc contcnl JUst l l) around the bag
rune up for the playoffs. th e Detron
Jt v. a~ a re a(.: tJ ~m play.· Ausmus
T1gcrs feel ltke they arc fi ghung for 'atd The ball got by me and hea\1their hvcs
ed lor the hackstop I ;e seen Kenny
That seemed evtdent Monday try to take two bases before . so 1t was
ntght as Cle,eland let Davtd RISke tn the back ol mv mmd
"When I sa.,; htm go by the bas~.
p1tch the I Oth mntng Rtske made a
fteldmg error then ytelded Juan I thrc" the ball II probably was a btg
EncarnaciOn ' s ga me w1nn1n g RBI pia} hccJusc Kenny 1s nne of the
stngle as the T1gers beat the lnd J.tns hcst basl!· ru nners m baseball .,
4-l
Lol ton ~ ITIJ ~takc cost the lnd1aps
Dean Palmer htt a two-run homer
off Dwtght Gooden lor the Ttgcrs
Rtske ( 1-1 ). whose co ntract was
purchased from Tnplc-A Buffalo on
Aug 9. was Cleveland's stx th ptt<;her He walked Tony Clark to open the
Detrott lOth . then field ed Palme rs
a run because Robert o Alomar follo\\C d '-"!th a long lly to ce nter that
alm ost cenat nlv wo uld have allo\1\<,d
Loft on to scnre from rimd
'That thr o\1 by Au smus wa s
probahlv the btggest pi a) of the
game
Detro tl manage r Larry
Pam sh ~atd That was JUS I huge ",
error
Gooden (f\ mg to prove he
"It was unfortunate that he ~..:ost de scnes to pttch m the pos tseason,
htmself a ballgame, because I lasted 5 ' mnmgsF He gave up three
thought he threw well ,' Clc•>land run s on fi,e hns and three walks. and
manager M1ke Hargrove Sclld 'But also htl two batters whtle lostng ht.>
you JUS! saw a young ktd On ii>C second stratg lll start
'\
mound. JUSt ltkc m spnng: trammg
Hamro'c wa' noncom mittal
One our later. Enc arnacton lincJ a
J';j, not gmng to thr ow O
SJ
1-1 piiL:h to nght. sconn£ rmc.:h -run - name... . Hargro\C satd · Doc's 111
ncr Gregg Jcll cncs
the nux .J uo,;tlik e C\lcryhod~ else Js.;
bunt, but threw h1 gh to set.: om! I01 .m
Th e AL Ce nt r.11
ch.tm r ~t> nlnJtan s
Ill ~cv~n ~ .unc s
CJ
Nllk<>\\skt
pitched
lme ot defense When you stc~rl
W\lnt w lei th at happen .tg<Hn ,
IList
Mmtcr satd Monday
Dtggs vented hts leehngs m scvelal other areas pcttatntng to the
Buckeyes
For tnstance , he satd tt v,asn't dtl -
ustng your last ltne of defense a lot,
that's not good"
The 6-foot·4. 235-pound JUnt or
also satd that the Buckeyes should be
able to overcome the loss of 1998
IH.:ull to see what C11tC1 1111 ~\t1 ' s
offen se would t1y to do
~l~mdouts
such
as
And)'
Kat zcnmoye1. Antomc Wmltcld and
" If I was UC , I would defmttely Damon Moore
say the 'cutback lan es are weak lor
''I'm not saymg I'm the smartest
us ," he satd. "] thtnk that was what guy on the fteld or thmk that I m the
Ohto U and UCLA saw, that we arc be st guy on the held ,'' Dtggs satd,
overaggresstve. We JU St want 10 run " but we have guys ftlltng those postto the ball and we're not really betng ttons
and there 's no doubt tn my
composed and rclaXI'd and watchmg mmd that they can make the same
the ball the whol e t1m e We JUst run plays that the others made. It 's about
where we thtnk the ball's g01ng '"o ttttude and .knowmg where you
end up "
•
have to be on that certam play '
' He also satd t\ wasn't a good st n
Dtggs sa td he was hopeful that the
that Oh10 State's leadmg tackler ts problems could corrected wtth hard
free safety Gary Berry
work tn practice and m the film
" It docs fnghten me he's our room. But tt would have to !)c done
,
lcadmg tackler. I don ' t care how soon
" It 's defmltely gomg to happen
good he " · he shou ld not have that
many tackles," Dt ggs satd " It qutck or we ' re gomg to have a real
means that the front seven guys tough begmnmg of the confercn,e. '
of those he referred to was fellow
Big Ten member Wisconsm. which
dropped from the No. 8 spot tn the
nation and the ranks of the unbeaten
with a 17-12 loss at Ctncmnatt The
Buckeyes host the Bearcats Saturday
time .
Ctncinnatt coach Rtck Mmter
"The coaches mentally were tak- acknowledged that Oh1o State's mefmg 11 like we had lost agamst a bad fecllve forst half agamst the Bobcats
team ," Dtggs sa1d after totaling stx works agamst his t ~am th1s week
unassisted tackles, mcludmg one Jut , "They had a wakeup call from aren't stoppmg the run and mak1ng he saad , lookmg ahead to next week's
that almost dtsmembered a Bobcat Oh10 U and they ' re not gomg to plays He 's a tree safety - he 's our Btg Ten opener ag_amst WtSconstn
Carr prods Michigan offense 'to wake up vs. W~sconsin
a] h)\\ mg tw o run" on toWtJ
to tall a half-game hchtnd tdlc NC\\ hitS and fl\C ".llks r~1f DetrOit
:
York 111 the race tor the league s hco,;t
Au . . mu ... IC..tL: hcd n n Jn Infield ~m
record
~!c Jn the first and P:t lmcr h11 hL'i
But the T1gcrs arc at the other end 35th home run a . . hul 1nt o the second
of th e food cham They need to "m deck 111 lett
two of 1he1r rc!ll.11111 ng I"' g.tmcs to
3\IOid thc1r sc~..onJ 100 - l os~ season 111
th1cc vca1s
Lu1 s Po lnn t.t lnrl..·d m 1hc th1rd
and scored on Cl arl.. s 2:roundnut for
J 3-0 Detroit lcdd
'
Todd Jones (4-41 hlc\1 hiS fifth
1tknwsk1 \~htl \\llrl..cd llUI <l f t.t
~ave chance 1; 1\ Ill£ up I he tymg run h.tscs ll>ilt..lcd J·llll 111 the lourth
m the CJc,cl~md n1nth when Om.u \'al~ct..l the 111 . , 1 I\\O h:.~Jtcis m the
Vuquc! led ott v.Jth J ~ 1n g l c :ltH..l C IC\c land
.md hDih Slnrcd J1~1
'cn1cd 1111 K cnn\ Lo ll u n·s ptn ch ~ h tl fh nmc •nnglcd hom L Ro hcrHJ
dnuhi ..·\l um.u .md l t.t\1 .., F-ryman hit .1 s uiL nlwn tonk thud llll B1.1d ~.; k th.H ... U\Il'J ~l.tnll\ R ,\l lli1C/
r\u..,mu.., pas"L'd h.ill hu1 Jill' ll ~l'h
,.,,h
Mason to host catfish tourney Saturday ·
The Bend Arc.t CARE Foil Catltsli Tc'Ul il.tll1enl "ill he h<IJ Sept 25 at
the M,tson. W V.1. lc\ \'
A$1 OOOpursC\\Jii"bc,gi'Cil.t\\ UyiO thctnp 14 .11l glcr ... (bJscdon 100
l1~hcrmcn) The IOurnamcMt con~1st... of onc-pcrsmJ le arn$'' 1th nn hmtt on
lhc number of l! ~hcnn cn pel' h<1.1t Only one La lli!'.h pc1 ;., ng lcJ will he
\\ t.:ighcd
Fishlllg houi s .Ire R ,\111 t\ l 'rIll \\llh L:hed. Ill .md IC f! IStr.ll\on tJnm
6-7 45 am En tr) lee 1s $20 per pc1snn bel nrc Sept 2~ .md 5"25 ,Jtt cr Sept
22 F(lr lmlrC l ll fllllll .llt unLO. II l.tsnn R11ush <11 ( ~{W) 77'·6166
' - - - - - - - - - ~--- - - - - - -
Protect. the .imggrtant
people m your life.
. , numm h,l\ e the nptkln 111 prntcctmg yuur humly mcmhcr,
1·1
'~
or .1
htl'>l11C~.., p-.1tn1cr v.1 th ltw.-u "~St
10· pr 20 \l.',11 IL'H'Itcnn hll'
ln... uranu.· C. llllftl11\ Call u:-. lllf rm tfl'
. ANN ARBOR , Mtch (AP) - Syracuse to mmus- 17 yards of total delcn sc w.ts go mg to put the nail m because so!Tic games the y w•ll hlt us
Standmg 3-0 .md lourth m the rank- offenst:: m the first quarler and JU St 59 the wall '.tg.unsl Sytac'U sc. Jcfl up as we hit t~.cm up othe r ga mes It s
mgs, Mtch1 gan opens 1ts B1g Ten season Saturday at No 20 W1sconsm nnt
worrymg so niuch about the
Wo\vcnne s' defense
In Mtch1 gan's t.:a mp ~ 1t's the
t eam·~ offense lhdt \ wornso mc
"We've gol to ge t bcllcr or e lse
sutter the co nsequence s'' Wolvcnncs
cu.1ch Lloyd Ct~rr !ol d rcpUI IC rs
Munday. two days allcT M1eh1g.m s
defense proved JliVOt.tl 111 . 111 1~ · I '
VICto ry at Syracuse
Never lcumg th e Orange men lind
.tn
offenstve rh ythm . Mtch1g.m held
yards rushm g I Overall , .1ho ut 200
he low 1ts average 111 Ihe "I m;t two
games when tt tall1 cd K2 po1111s
Mu.:higan al so cam e up With lwo
mtcrcr.:pl!on s. lOlli sa~.:ks. lt:: ~.:mdcd .1
cn lic.ll satety partially ltppcd .u1
cxt1a-pmnt dltcmpl th at ~~cnt Wide
and lorced " had sn.1p on .1 puh:n11.11
go-ahead 52 y.ud l1dd go.11 11\iJW.l)
throu gh the llll.tl \)CIIOd
Sm:h delcnsJ \IC <.lomtn.lllCL' h. 1s
-so me Wnlvcnne!'i hell~' 111g 1l rna)
have lull ~d MJ~,;htgan ~ oflcnsc
" Mayhc our olknsL' th ought out
Backus said · We L: an t keep thmk·
in g. 'our dclen sc ts domg a he ck of a
1oh sn lets go \) UI thc1c .wd uy to
~lO ll' SOlllC pomts hut 1! \\C dlln't ClU I
dc!cnsc 1s !.!O IIh! to 1.1kc c.uc of 11 \Vc
a team effort
Added lan Gold .1 sen tor 11111.>
h.tt kc r
·w e ,~ .1111 g.11ncs to h ~
dependent upon U ~ 1 hdl S wh ,l{ the
MH..:h1g.m dclr.:n~l' ~~all ahout
~.:.ul 1 dt l th~H ~
" ll \\C" rc l1lnw111g a IC.ll11 nut .md
\Vc Jdmacl y h ,l \C Ill get m11 we don t IM\C hl h\.': on th o.: f1 c iJ. 1h.11
ollc nsc <101111! •
I C'J II v doc ~n t tlo 11 l<'f us. hl' ....mJ
O lhc~ \Vnhc tm c dckn dcJ ' .tppc.u
Wt• ,~.tnt lito hc . _. ,tlt1ng \\ ~,. · ~.~.u11
Jc., s Ullk ctn cd
li' ID h.l\ c tu I lin t 1l th o,; l 1dd <trh l h ,l\ 1.'
Jl \~C" h.I\ C to shut out .lll nppo ~ 111 m.1h .\ b1g' 'I''P .lt th1. 1. 1\d 111 th ~.·
ncnt th.lt ·, ,,h.tt "c h,,, c In do. ..a1J ~.U l\\.' I ](l\ c 111.11 I ItI\ c ll~o.• Jn!.! (Ill the
DcW,a)nc P.umnn ,, JUnior ,,lid)
i tdd. b1t1nt:! mv n.1 1hi. IHl\l!h! lh..: I.Hh
\Vc dtm t fc~o.• l .my .tddcd ptt•,surc ~ 1tt111g on til.: t1 dgc l' l lhC11 ~c.l t-. ,
.Auto-Owners lnsul"rlll«
Lt fe HomP. Cttr B/~sm ess
7lt 'No PdJJ.,., IWir •
(it)
ROGAN~ -=.l-
1
RNER .....:~
Insuranc• Services
I
(
\
~
tnmng ~
lost lor the s1xth lime
,-----~·--
Diggs vents frustration with OSU defense
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP) , Forty-etght hou ~ after Ohto State
· overcame an awful first half to lash
: ohto Umverstty 40- 16. linebacker
: Na ' tl Dtggs was sull angry over the
: defense's play
The Buckeyes have won thetr last
: two games and are ranked 12th tn the
· natton But Dtggs IS far from satiS. fied because hts team tratled Ohto
. I0-3 late m the first half and were
tied 10-10 at hal fume.
"Everybody knows OU wasn't as
. great a team as we are, " Dtggs satd
:Monday "The fact we went out there
and actually played at thetr level , that
ktnd of took me by surpnse. It It eked
me off''
Apparently defenstve coordmator
Fred Pagac felt the same way. He put
hts fist through a blackboard at half-
Tigers beat Indian~
4-3 in 10 innings ~
214 f:ast Mam
Pomeroy
992-6687
1
�By The Bend
The Daily Sentinel
,.
Tuesday, September 21, 1999
nJ-5785 Or 3'J4. n3-5447
Stop In And See
·.Reader suggests obese people should fly first class for comfort
'Ahh:h IS 285 pound~ .
Fnr the lon~ tl1g:ht frum Cali ·
torma to N~.·" Yl,rk. \h' bou~ht
Jllhn ..1 ltr:-.1 das~ ticket so h.:
V!:'Huld ha'c pll·nty vf room
; Dear Ann Landers: After
reading your column abo ut obese
people traveli n g o n airplanes. I
•knew I had to write .
· Our second son . n ow 18. ha s
always been large not obese. JUSt
·large. Wh en " J(>hn" trted to sign
ilp for football. we were told he
,90uldn 't play be cause he was too
-big. ( How ca n one be too bi g fo r
tootball')
He wasn ' t fat. but he was a
head taller than most of hi s class-
Public Notice
males a nd
w~1gh~d
mor.: .
The lcaguo h.HI a 'fl"dal Ji, isio n for unJcrs11cd ~.:IH idrL·n . hut
WJS
Mayt'l~ all obese I"J('Opk
~..·nn,tdcr ~oin\! fir~t -da!<o!'>
gr'-·at.
wasn't allowCd h l nw\c int o an
ol~er ~• gc cah:gory b'-•c.IU!-1..' :-l: hoo l
officia ls said it· wasn't safe.
Public Notice
~..·r,lp .
And
"')w.
af he (Jn
Public Notice
LP.A.
By: Dennis Reimer
(Rag. 10031109, Adam L
Groso (Reg. 101155392),
Anorneyo fQr Plaintiff
P.O. Box 968, 9806
RaY11nna Rd. , Twinsburg,
OH 44087
(330) 425--4201
(9) 7, 14,21 3TC
the , right tO prospect,
explore and drill for,
mine, excavate and
remove such other
minerals as may be
hereaher determined to
be under s'ald real
estate, by deep mining
methods ,
without
encumbrance to the
surface . .
Deed References :
Volu!'lo 198, Page ·605
and Volumi 229, page
979, Motga County 0 Rocorda.
Prior
Instrument
references: Volume 306,
Page545.
Property addrasa:
36694 Poteraon Hollow
Road, Rutland, Ohio
45775
Apprataed
at
$30,000.00
.
Terms of Sale : 10%
caoh day of aato and
balance by Confirmation
of Sale.
Jamao II . Soutsby,
SheriN, Metga County
Heather E. Petara
Lerner, Sampson &
Rothluao
120 E. Fourth Street, 8th
Floor, Cincinnati , Ohio
45202
(5131241·3100
OH Sup. CL 10069144
(9) 1,4, 21, 28 3T
Pub!lc Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 98CV112
HOMESIDE LENDING,
INC., PLAINTIFF, VS .
DONALD
R.
RICHMAOND, at at ,
DEFENDANTS
COURT OF · COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In pursuance of an
Order of Solo to me
dlreclad from aald Court
In the above enlltled
action, I wilt expose tq
aata at public ouctlo~ at
the courthouse on 10.15,
1999 at 10:00 a.m. of
aatd doy, the following
described real estate:
Tho
following
described premises,
alllllllld In tho Township
of Rutland , County of
Metgo and Stall of Ohto;
The following real
estate situate In the
Townohtp of Rutland,
County or Meigs, and
State or Ohio, and being
o port of Froctton No. 3,
Town No. 6,. and Range
No. 14 of the Ohio
Company'a Purchase
and
bounded and
described ao follows:
· Beginning at~ rodo
north of the northeast
corner of said Fraction
No. 3; thence Wast forty
eight roda and lllteen
llnka; the~ce South
aavanty nine rode and
fifty links; thence East
five rods: thence <South
forty eight rods and lilly
links to the center of the
public road ; thence
easterly along said road
to th~ east line of said
fraction; thence North
about one hundred and
twenty one rods to the
place of beginning,
containing thirty live
acres, more or leas:
EXCEPT, however, !rom
the above described
premtaea, a right of way
through trio same,
heretofore conveyed by
one Luman Brine to one
John E. Stanabury.
FURTHER EXCEPTING
all coal, oil, gao & ather
minerals now known to
be under the real estate,
or hereafter determined
to be under said real
estate, together with the
right to mine and remove
aatd
coal
by
underground mining
processes (otrtpmtntng
not Included) and the
right and privilege. of
mining, removing and
tranaporttng
underground and under
· the surface of the above
doacrtbod promises, coal
from other Ianda now
owned or hareaf1er
acquired by the said
Grantors, or their
auccea•ora, heirs and
aaalgnna, the Grantees
hereby waiving lor
themselvee,
their
successors,
rights
above aetlorth ; together
with tho right to enter
upon the aurfae of said
real estate to explore or
toot drill lor said coat.
provided that the
Grantorl hareii'J shall not
do
unneceasary
damages In said teat
drilling.
RESERVING
FURTHER, tho right to
enter
upon
said
premises, proepect ,
explore and drill lor,
develop, produce, store
and remove oil and gas,
or either of them, use all
machinery, structure
derricks, tanka, plpo
lines,
equipment,
fixtures, machtnery, and
other appll.a ncos and
thing• necessary or
convenient therefore and
the right to uoo eo much
of the aurface as may be
nece11ary tor the
purpoooo aloroaatd.
RESERVING FUTHER
daugluer ~md She has been
skepong in the same bCd with her'
hoyfricnd. but is. nol havmg sex
ln .August uf I'I'IX . I p:itd $4511
to rcsa\'C a rcl."\:ption hall h•r 1lUT
w1t h hm1.
You seemed to hell eve th is was
impossible a nd ~aid su. Well, Ann ,
111~ indeed possihlc to sleep in the
same bed and not have sex. I
know. hel:ausc l have done thi s
wtth four sep arate men in the pas t
three. years . and ca' h one respec t·
'cd my wish to wa11 until marriage
hcforc having intercourse.-- VIRGIN IN VIRGINIA
DEAR VIRGINIA : Yo u 've
been in bed wtth four men in the
last thre e years' If I were yo u. I'd
keep this to myself. but thank s for
wnung .
,weren't s ur~ what could he done
pronu ~cd 10
Wee k!< passod. and I heard
nolhmg , so I sen t a letter. They
then ca lled and sa 1d tithe hall wa.
rented hy someone el se on that
day. I might be alrle to ~ct my
And ge t it tn writing.-- MAXINE
IN B U RNSVILLE . MINN .
DEAR MAXINE: H ere's your
lcucr. wi1h my tha nks for yo ur
help in cdu..:~\t1ng 111illion s o f
rcad t: rs. In my opm10n, you were
no t trc3:t cd very ge nerously.
P.S.: At last cou nt, there are
about 1.800 co4ples in the United
States and CanW a who are sleeping together but are not having
sex. and I h3\•e heard from all of
them .
h alcohol ruining your life o r
the ltfe of a loved one? " Alcoholism : H ow to Recognoze It,
H ow to Deal With lt. How to Conquer It" can turn t hongs around.
Se nd a sci f addre ssed. l o ng.
busmc ss s 1ze envcl npe and a
check or mo ney order for $3 .75
( thts i ncludes postage and handhng) to: Alcohol , c/o Ann Landers. p.O . Box 11562. Chicago.
Ill. 60611-0562 . ( In Canada. send
$4.55 .)
To find out m ore about f\nn
Landers and r ead her past
cOlumn s. visit the Creators Syndicate
web
page
at
www.creators .com .
Steve Riffle
Sales Repre se ntative _
Larry ,Schey
.~ .
750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
WILLIS'
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Hourly Rates
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992-9178
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7 40·985·3813
Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock
8" Grovelless Leo<h .
100'- 1000' Rolls! " & 3/4" 2001Woler Una
Full line of Gos Pipe & Regulators Water Storage Tonks
~
Mon.· Fri. 9:00 to 4:30
Sst. 9:00 to 12:00 ·
..
Mrl Delivery Service
We deliver ALMOST anything
Call for details
740-992-0038
Pomeroy
.
Don't get •iung by htgh pr~w
Shop rht clossj(~td sea,on
==
$$Auto Loans, Personal Loans, Debt
Credit Problems
l g~:~:~,~~~~a· ~~Financial
1(800)247-51 :!5
Ext. 1197. Void OH, KS
&
1740) 992-3831
Know where you're going . ..
1
CREDIT
Got an 18" Mini-dish?
Want 320 channels? Call Direct
Wholesale . (A Canadian Company)
1-204-992-2841
P.UG~iLt ~~GWITH BI~LS?
CONSOLIDATE INTO ONE LOW
PAYMENT!!
Reduce or Wa1ve lnteresl
Stop Late Fees
Stop Collector Calls Avoid Bankruptcy
CONTINENTAL CREDIT
Card ofThanks
The Family of
Thorn Nice
WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment...
You 're Treated with Respect!
!11 Luumg .7\-(mrnry
oj our
Call Now lor Instant Approvalll..
dmr .w11. 11rrJ. brotlia,
CALL Mi. nBD ·
'1'Jilli I'P :K.
S'Ri'FTI.Y,
lt.fio dcparlt:il 1f11s fife 011
.Septc.mber 11, I ~J_96.
'rfnihp n•m a l1tu'
bfes~m.9 tv
(740) 441 8880 u
I
High &Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Personals
DISCOVER THE MEANING OF
'r'OUR
DREAMS !
htlp II
www dreamW1zard net 1·877-422·
1234 (Toll Free)
START
DATING
TONIGHT !
Have Fun Mee11ng El1g1ble S1n·
gles In Your Area . Ca ll For More
Information 1 ,soc - ROMANCE .
Ext 9735
8/24/99 t
Henderson, WV
We Do•••
• Parking Lots
• Basketball Courts
• Driveways
• Grading Work
• Hauling Stone
(304) 675·2457 Ollko i
(304) 674·3311 ce~m.
FREE ESTIMATES
9 West Slimson. Athens
740-592· 1842
Q uality clo thing and household
1teins . $1 00 bag sale every
Thursday. Mond iiY thru Saturday
9.Q0-5.30
Now Open· Poppy's Place, Gilt &
Crall Shop 326 Ma1n Street.
Po int Plea sant. WV Across from
Post Otlice
40
New Roofs • Repairs •
Coating • Gutlers •
Siding • Drywall •
Painting • Plumbing
Free· estimates
Joseph Jacks
740-992·2068
KCB
EXCAVATING
011 1
Backhoe
& Bulldozer
Sen·ices
bt•Jor:gottrrr.
So <adly misse,<l b)•li"
lo1•mg fa moly,
Site Preparation
Septic System~
Black ana whlfe dog, one year
had all ShOTS. 740·669·4902
985·395~
Four ca 1s ro g1veaway not while .
7 40·992-9937 •
2mo
70
Be Paid In Advance .
QEAQLINE: 2:00p.m .'
the day berore lhe ad
Ia to run . Sunday
edlllon ·2:00p.m.
Friday. Monday edition
• 10:00 a.m. Saturday.
800-368-3541
Ext.l500
745 East Markel St., Harrisonburg, VA
. Pomeroy,
Middleport
& VIcinity
Fq11>lillno~<lnr, Op('OOI1nily
~~i~~sl:£:·
placing who
18-23
i ~ ind1v1duafs
are sharp,
tree to
l
1
entire U.S. We guaranlee 2w·eel< , all-expense-paid training, includround-trip lransportation ahd lodglf
are 18+, adventurous, and
~;;:l:..:;to:day, call 1-877-802-4 795.PII!!"'!!'!
is not
content. Please
to t:ontact our salesJer.mn at the phone
listed above
(
AU. Yard S81es Must
po
-.trl-tlmesh...eom
STONE
HAULED
For Sale
M~ms $2 .00
Pumpkins $1.00-$2.00
Pau l H 1ll Greenhouses
Corner of 388 &
Buck Town Rd .
m-m;m
rnmitiiiiffiiiifmm
Limestone
Gravel
Top Soli
MODERN.
SANITATION SERVICE
740-992-3954
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, DH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.!>0 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. # 00-50
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
•Replacement Windows
•Rocm Add1t1ons
•Roofing
COMMIROAI and RESIDINTIAI
FREE ESTIMATES
740·992·7643
(No
Sunday Calls)
All Yard Sales Mu&l Be Paid In
Advahce . Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad Is to run ,
Sunday & Monday edltlon1 :OOpm Friday.
bO
Auction
and Flea Market
6111 M9od1spaugti AuctLOneenng
Complele Au Ct1oneenng Ser..,tc es Cons1gnment auct1on - M1ll
· Street Midd lepo rt Thursdays
Oh10 L1cens e 117693 740·989 ·
2623
Wer1emeyer s Au c tio n Serv1ce .
Ga llipolis Oh1o 740-379-2720
i
.,
AVON! All Area s! To Buy or Sell.
Shlf'ley Spears. 304·675·1429.
Babys 1lter needed 1n my hOme
tor 6yr oLd and 4yr old. Frida ys
only Must have references
(304)675-2819
4051
Computer Users Needeel Work
Own Hrs. $25K · S80KI Yr 1·800·
536·0486 X 7777. www 1cwpcom
DENTAL BILLER Up to $15 ·$45
· JHr Dental 81111ng Software Com·
pany Nee~s ~eQp l e To Pro cess
Medi cal Claims. Tramlng Provi d·
ed . Must Own Computer. 1·800·
223·1149 Ed. 460 .
Yard Sale
G;~llipolis
& Vicinity
limeslum,. 11r n1-...t in roor 6fetyl<
Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
2222
Lost and Found
1·740·985·3949-
TRI-Tlmeshares
Ann · LPNS, RNs EMTs And Par·
amedicsl Become An AN Or BSN
Graduate And Increase Your In·
come W•1h out Going ~a ck To
School! To Schedule Your lnler·
v1ew In Hunllngl on . Call Angela
Copeland By Oct 7 1-600· 7~7 ·
O ~reclof ot Per1ormance Improve·
ment and R1sk Management
Pla n. 1mptemen1 and ma nage the
performance tmprovemen t anti
risk management program de ·
Two Boxers . male and lema le .
si gned to en hance the Qua lity of
7 40·992·9178
pahent care, reduce patient lnJU·
nes. and prevent patient c1a1ms
Yard Sale IIams Must Take All.
tor an 80-bed acute care faclllly
740·386·9524
Th iS position atso provides dt·
rect 1on to the ut111zai1Dn revie w
. 60
and soc1al serv1ce f uncltons
Oual if1 ed canel1ates will possess
Fouod .' Ba sselt Mund pup. Horse
a Bachelor ot Sc!~..Q£.! 1n Nursmg
Cave Ad . area, 740-949 2915
(Masters Degree m, appropnate
t1e lel preferred ) previOus exper~·
Found Black/While/ Brown Pup·
ence In clm1cal heal th ca re tn·
py, near entrance of Old Town
cluelmg direct experience in
Campground Road (304)675·
qu ality as surance. and familiar ity
7878.
w1th JCHAO standards. Please
LOst . Black Chmese Sharpa
submit resume and salar y reLos t In the SandHill Area
QUirements to · H uman Aesourc·
{304 )675 · 3822 . AnsWil ~ S
IO es JacksofJ General Hosp1tal,
. PO Box 720. Ripley, WV, 25271
"Bear.· $25 reward
EOE
Owner/ Operator
1
AnENnON:
Have A Computer?
Put II To Work l
'$25 ·$75/Hr PT/FT
1·886·890· 3481
www.pc·tncome com
Free Kittens 6 Weeks Old. To
G oo d Home Call Afte r 5 PM
740-44, -Q391 .
Loans
Bill Consolidation
Home Equity,
Credit Counseling. ,
Travel U.S.A.
p.>,,vuu and up.
publication sales company 1-877-663-9269 Ext. 389 . .
old.
Couch & chair; bedspnngs , 740·
RODNEY KELLER
road ('Emes l9rifJin),
Bmllm:; (;.:.. Si5lt'15.
795-0380 Ext t20 t (24 Hl5)
Care For Elderly Gentlema n .
Room. Board & Salary, 740·446·
Giveaway
C lothe s Drye r Works. t1mer bro-.
ken _ Red E lec tri c Range . Ha s
good ove n. burners not trustwor·
JACKS ROOFING
& CONSTRUCTION
ASSEMBLY AT HONE!! Crafts.
Toys Je welry. Wood. Sew mg .
Typing , Great Pay! CALL 1-800-
Announcements
30
mo. pd
MYERS PAVING
ACCOUNTING
CLERK
We
Have A Full-Time Opemng In Our
~ cco untmg Depa r tment For An
Individual T hat Has A Strong
Com puter SktUs And An Ae·
counting Background Or Degree
In AecounTJng Or Related Fteld .
Expenence In M1crosoll Off1ce
Would Be Very Helpful Successful Cand1 date Must Have Good
CommunlcatJon SkJIIi And En10Y
Work 1ng W1th Pe ople tn A Team
Atm osph ere Benelns ,Inclu de
Health. Dental. Vision . & llfe In·
surance · 401 k. And Vacation
We Are A lQng Established Gallipolis Are a Bus iness. For Int er·
vtew ConSideratiOn, Please Send
Your Anume W1th A Cover Let·
ter Slating Why You Are T he.
Pe rson For This Posltton To . Box
OH -24 cl o Gall1p0! 1S Daily Tr 1b·
une. 625 T hir~ Avenue . Gallipolis,
OH45631 .
Star t Oa tmg Tonight! Ha ve fun
playing the OhiO Oalmg Game , 1·
BOO· ROMANCE . extensiOn 9681 .
lnrk'fli'Nkln~r nirnort and npr.rntnd
PROBLEMS STOP HERE!
3 People Needed For satellite In·
stallat•on. Exper1ence Not Need ·
ed., S7 00 Hr. Plus Excellent CommJSSIDn. 740·446·7451 , Or 614·
271·1688
740-992-5232
~~
toucfit'd, and u~tl nt'Pa
~~
'DANCERS'
Top Dollar· (1'40]992-<;387
·Buy, Sell or Trade
005
Now Renting
1......7NI78.
fim11ly
and .to l'/Jery !ifi: fie
BUY RESALE AND SAVE
1·800-966·3599 En 2601 $34 00
lhy.!304)882-2741<1182-2582.
In Memory
Beaches, Tropical Isles,
Mountains, Skiing ·
1·888-645·3657
Help Wanted
Ameflcan General Fmance ,_
leildef In The f~MRCI.I:I Set •IIIOeS
ln0U61ry Wdh CNef $11 8illi0111n
A"ets AM Uore Than 1.3p0
813nehes Naoonwlde. Has An lmm.ed,ate Need For A 8ra11ch
Management l'ra.nee In OtJ"
.-.onOihc<t
Driver /Owner Operator · Ch1cago
Area Truck Company Need s
Owner Operators To Oper ate
East Of Rock1es Great Pay, New
Tra ilers. Maximum M11es . Small
Fleet Owner Welcome . Call 888·
782·5400 Ext 207 .
Omers · Hornady Truck L1ne
Starts Vou Up To . 3 4 ~/Mi. Plus
Bonuses. , AaJses. Tarp & Up To
$1.200 Or~ent Pay. Top Fla tbed
1 Miles · All Patd l Assigned Conv .
Vou Take Home. BC/BS Ins .. Rid·
er. Fam ily Support Prgms .. Vaca·
lion & More. 24 Hr. Turn · Around
On Phone Apps. 1· 800·441·427 1
Ext ET292 Or www hornady·
truck com .
.
lr.dtvtduai$. Wtll PartiC4Jate In API
lntl!ns•v~iln -Tne -Job Tramll'l~
Program "'15"esl gned To Prep.-re
You Fo1 Bran c:h Manager Res.oon5tbl li tte& The 18 Uonth
Modular Tra 1nmo Prog ram Uf.
S1rUCI5 You 1n A ll A.spe-t:IS ·df
Manag1ng Credll EKlen!.tOn. Ac ·
count AdJUStment. .Bu&tnes.s De·
velopment And Personnel Stair,
'"'l
'
Applicants For ThJs Entry Leve l
Opp(lrtun 1ty Snoul a Have Four
Years Post H1gh Sc:hool Educ•·
11on . Tra lnmg Or Work Expefl·
en ce (Sales E•penen ce Pre·
lerreel ). Slrong Wntten "n" ,\/&r·
bal Commun1eanon Siulis , AM i'.
Va lid Dm•er s License Mus1 Be
Open To Re loe atJon And Have
The Desue To Assume Manage·
nal Aesponsbtlrty
A.mencan General F1na~ Offef6
A Compehhve Senetrts Package.
lnclu~mg Medtcal. Dental And lA
401 (k) Plan F01 Immediate Con·
s10eranon Pleas.e Send Your At·
sume To. Ame11can Gener.a !
F1nance . PO Box 702, Jackson,
OH 45640.0702 Please V151t Our
Web S1te At www agftnance com
Equal Oppo<OuMy E _ .
l •llt e Caesa r' s t s LOOkJng For
MOTI'o'ated lnd1v1dual s For Tne
FoUow1ng Posmonr. A.ll levels Of
Management. Oe11very Onvers &
In S1ore Personnel Please Apoly
At Th'e Galhpohs L1ttle Caesa r' s,
861 Second A\llltnue. Gafi«''IS.
RefunaableFee
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Cont. IIWI/003506
No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Olvorded
Hauling
Bulldozer & Backhoe
.Seroices
House & '(hiler Si les
Septic Sy$tems &
Utilities
1800 WEEKLY POTENTIAL
Complete S1mple Goverrrment
Fo rm s A t Home. No Expeuence
Necessary. CALL TOLL FREE ·
·New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop & Compare
New To You Thnrt Shoppe
tte.~"~"!~ 24-Hr. Taxi
WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS
6469 Ext S046
985-4473
(740) 592-5025 Athens
Beginning Sept. 26th
1-800-730-7772, ext. 8010
ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
Agricultural Lime,
William Safranek. Attorney
.G&W Plastics and Supply
$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN·
MENT "REFUNDS_ NO EX.PE'RI·
ENCE NECE SSA RY 1-800·854-
ESTIMATES
We Deliver
Bankruptcy contact:
Dealers.
,,,.,...."!totmn
•
1:00 P.M.
F,REE .
WICKS
ttfiOLinG InC.
Help Wanted
S2.000 W£EKL.Y I Ma1lmg 400
Brochures J Sat JSiac tJo n Guar·
·anteed! Postage & SupplieS Pro·
'olided 1 Rush S91t·Addresseo .
Stamped Enveklpel GICO.' DEPT
5 Box 1438. ANTIOCH. TN
37011·1438. Stan 111'1f'flE1odoately
7rnff'N
Mulch, Top Soil
(LOw Rates)
For information regarding
8:30am. 8 pm
Sun 1 pm-6pm
Land Clearing
. Grading
110
Fac t ory Authorized
Co. Rd 19
WHOLESALE CLUB. EARN
$25,000/YEAR WORKING FROM
HOMEI NO SET-UP FEE!
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
·Slug and Shot
Matches
Every Sutiday
'
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168
SMITH'S
wan1mg Free 0Jrt; 7ol0·37929111l
CLASSIFIEDS!
New Store Hours
For Deer Season
Mon-Sat
Low or 0 down I Gov't and bank
repo's being sold NOWI
Financing_ Available.Call Nowl
304-<;7!;-5965
Rutland, Ohio
Anlerk• Legion
Post467
Beech Grove Rood
Gun Shoot
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
ADV,&,HCEO DRAINAGE SYSTEIJ.S INC
CASH LOANS!
• Bad Credit OK
• Easy Qualifying
•Fast Service
• Low Payments
'
Sand, Fill Dirr,
111 11 1
HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
Wanted .To Buy Used Mob1le
Homes. CaU 740...46-0175 Of 1·
indude o ror, oh""", dolhts, ond household goads. You sltauld diroct any
questiom 1egooding bank1uptry loan attorney belort pro<eeding.
.'"' ...'' A.
MEDICAL BILLER
Up to $15-$45/hr
Process medical claims from home.
' Training provided
MUST own computer.
Used 18" DSS Satelll1e D1Sh &
Rece •..,.er Will' Pay Casn . 800·
982-2327 Utenson 15871
pooperty, known os · exempt' property, for ho oo her penonalll!l. This may
Tr.uck seats, car seats, headliners.
truck tarps, convertible & vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats.
boat covers, carpets, etc .
Mon • Frl 8:30 · 5:00
63033.
Wr~esel'
Clean Late MMe! Cars Or
Tructs . Low Mile&, 1995 Models
01 Newer. Sm1th' Butck Pont&at:.
1900 Eastern Aven..oe, Galp"+s.
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00 ri'M - 8:00 PM
Equipment Parts
Rutland, Ohio
PMB 101!,
A-.enoe. Gallpoks, 740-446-2842.
740--949-2217
in the
CDII
A & D Auto Upholstery - Plus, Inc
Debt Solut1ons
Consolidate All Bills.
Borrowing Made Easier.
Cash Available. Call Nowl
No Upfront Fees.
1-877-861-9106.
Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1
29670 Bashan
• Roofing & Seamless Gutter
Liines!one, Gravel,
Case- IH
MONDAY-FRIDAY
7amTONOON
SATURDAY
UNIQUE
Absolute Top Oottar All US Sd·
..,.., AM Gold COII'IS , PrGDfsets
Oll!lmondS, Anttque Jewelry. GOld
Rmgs. Pre-1930 US Cvuency,
Sterhng. Etc AcQuiSitiOnS .JeweWy
· M T S Com Shop 151 Second
osse~ among ued~oo. Apenon going through bankruptcy may roloin rntuin
DILIVIIY AVIIL&ILI
ext. 7833
s•••..
20 Yrs Exp. • Ins. Owner : Ronnie Jones
A11ytime-Anywhere
$$$OVERDUE BILLS!!!
PROBLEMS? Consolidate
Debts!
Same Day Approval . Cui Payments
50%!!! NO APPLICATION FEESII
1-8Q0-863-9006 Ext. 854.
&
Wanted to Buy
90
HILL'S
SELF STORACE
pc1
V.C. YOUNG Ill
HOlliS: 7am THRU 4pm
~-n2-747D,
."trl"'
o;\\)"'~
• ., - d\1\9
Gr\1\
Free EsiJnules
1
J & LIIIHhlliH
ROOFING
NEW· REPAIR
OHI045631
experience
Gas-A&C-Mig
Aluminum
Holzer Clinic ... Keeping the Promise!
3/11199 TFN
TREE SERVICE
Sidewalks, Patios
ACCEPTED
SHERIFF'S SALE, REAL
ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 98CV087
NORWEST
BANK'
MINNESOTA, NATIONAL
ASSOCIAT I 0 N ,
AS
TRUSTEE, PLAINTIFF
VS. PAUL J. HATFIELD,
alai, DEFENDANTS
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEijlS COUNTY,
OHIO
In pureuance of an
Order of Sate to me
dlracted from said Court
In tho above entitled
octton, I will expooe to
sale at public auction at
tho Courthouse on Oct.
15, 1999 at10:30 a.m. o1
oatd day, the following
described real eotlla:
LEGAL DESCRIPTION:
Situated In tho
Township of Salem ,
County of Matgo, ond
Slate of Ohio:
Beginning 401 loot
South ol a corner etone
one loot North of the
Northwest corner of Lot
No. 20, aa · des~rtbed In
the plat of Longstreths
Addition to Martinsburg;
thence East 99 feat;
thence South 100 feel,
West 99 foot; thence
North 100 feet to tho
place of beginning .
Being an of Lata Nos. 28
and 29 as described In
Longatretha Addition to
Martinsburg.
Prior
lnatrument
references: Volume 19
Page 903
Property Addroaa:
31435 Bowles Rd .,
Doxlor, OH 45726
Appralald at $5,000.00
Torma olaate: Cash
Jamea M. Soulaby,
SheriN, Matga County
Sara M. Petersmann
Lerner, Sampson &
Rothluu
120 E. Fourth "Stroot, 8th
Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 241-3100
OH Sup Ct. 101155402
(9) 14, 21, 2B 3T
992-1717
.
740·742·2131
JONES'
Portable
Welding Senlces
124 Wellston, Ohio
740-384-6212
LUMP AID STOIII COIL
H.l.A.P. VOUCHERS
Honda's,
Toyota's, Chevys, Jeeps and
Sport Utilities. Fee Required .
Call Now!
ST. RT. 7
10 X 10$40
10 X20 $60
Hauling
Limestone & Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N_
. Sayre
CONNEaiON
Sr.
IMI3 01JNID .
SAYRE
TRUCKING
toua CONCRETE
7127199 2 mo pd.
: -Room additions & Remodeling
If the 992 Exchange is a Free Part of Your
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis
Toll Freel
Phone (740) 593-6671
HARfWEIL
SfORAGE
Howard L.
YOUNG'S
CARPENJER SERVICE
money hack ,
· IJ IS now three mon t ll s past the
dale. a nd I. have no t been co ntac ted hy anyone . so I g uess that
means 1 won ' t be getting a refund
Plea s~ \\'arn yo ur readers who
reserve mo nths in ad vam:c to as k.
"\Vhat happens m case o f death'.' "
Public Notice
woulcl.like to tluwk
everyo11e rvllo sent
c<~rds, food, flower&
& pmyers or lrelped
i11 anyway in our
lime of need.
Your gellerosity will
never be fo•gotlerr
by me or my famUy.
God Bless .4U
Laura Mae &
FamUy
\lrangcly
who~c
in case. of death. They
ge l hac k tn ml' .
·Public Notice
1~
pcn~.·d .)'
just made their ma ximum weight
"ov.:r"iii.'J ." He-
Burn,,_.tJic .
ro mral'l!-- . I wtsh ..;nmconc had
warnod mo . This is what hap-
\lf the
1h~
ln\\n .
of your
apprnpnatc .
Dear Ann Landers: I have a
hnnc to p1rk ahout your response
1<, "ConCern e d Mom in Anzona."
Joh n played high "L: h lltil font ball and did woll Last Juno. he
was accepted by the W<st Potnt
Milit ary Acad~..~my In New York .
where he will ro ntinuo to play H e
nothing for
M c:mwhtk. the name
Dear Ann Landers: I'm""'·
ing to "'arn other~ ahout un ... i}!ncd
... twuld
50th "'cdJing anni\'Cr"ary. "hi t' h
h '!o chcapa 1ha..n 1~0 Scats in . \loa~ inJun~ 1999.
"-,,adl. .1ml. the~ and t~dr ~ca t · On Jan . 20. 1999. my hu,hanJ
111ah.'' "Il l h~..· a lol more ~..·om fort · passt.'d away . I phoned ·I he recepahk . -- SAN JOSE. CALIF.
tion hall immedtatcly and to ld
DE .-\R SAN JOSE : Lucky them what had happen ed and
)llhn . hut no t l" \t.:ryonc ca n afford
rcqunled a rclund . Tl11~ was a
fm. t l'Lt:o.!'> . And ...·,mgrawlalions l•n good s ix. months before the dat~ .
The y tol d me the y normally do
ha' i ng a !'-on '' ho made 11 l u Wc~l
Pomt Tht·y ta~l' o nl) lhc nca m no t refund down_... paymcn1s . a nd
northeaat quarter of the
. SHERIFF'S SALE, REAL
northeast quarter of
-- ESTATE, CASE NUMBER
99 CV007
Soctlon 3;
· CHASE . MORTGAGE
Thence along the
' SERVICES , INC .. A
south lint of tho
Delaware Corporati on
northeast quarter of the Ike· CHASE MANHATTAN
northeall quartar, North
. MORTGAGE
84' 26'38" Wt I I
I
CORPORATION, Platnttn
distance ol391.91 IHIIo
·va- DENNY R.· RUNYON,
a Iron aplke .. t (60
et al., Defendants
penny aptka) In tho
COURT OF COMMON
centllf' of Pagevllle Road
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
(Township Road No.
OHIO ·
142);
In pursuance of an
Then~e leaving the
Order of Sale to me
south fino of tho
directed from aald Court
northeast quarter of the
- In the above entitled
northeast quarter and
action, I will expose to
along the canter of
aale at public auction on
Pogovllle Road tho
the front steps of the
following three courua:.
Melgo County Court
I) North 42' 37'05"
Houae on Friday Oct. 29,
W011 a distance of 20.99
1999 at 10:00 A.M. of
IHI to a point;
- •. oatd day, tho following
2) Nor.t h 48'33'17 "
deacrlbed real estate;
Weal a distance ol37.76
The east half of the
IHIIO a point;
north half of the
3) North 51'01 '54"
northeast quarter of
Wast a distance of 49.36
Section 3, Township 7,
IHI to an Iron spike oet,
- Range
14 ,
Ohio • bolng tho principal place
" " Company'a purchase,
of beginning of tho tract
Scipio Townahtp, Molgo
herein described; ·
.':County, Ohio, containing
Thence continuing
. 40 acres, more or less.
along the center of
Deed
Reference :
Pagovlllo Road tho
- Volume 136, Page 407,
following lour coura..:
Meigs County Deed
1) North 55'26'53"
Records
West a dlotanco.ol51 .13
SAVE ..,NO EXCEPT
'"'to a point;
the following described
2) Norlh 56'48'05"
real estate:
Weot a distance of
Be'tng 0 .974 acre ,
122.89 IN! to a point;
situated tn Stctton 4,
3) North 58'22'28"
Township 7, Range 14,
Weot a distance of 73.62
Scipio Townohlp, Meigs
IHI to I point; lnd
County,
0 h Io .
4) North 47'21'21"
Commencing at the
West a dlatanco of 12.11
eoutheast corner of
'"'to an Iron oplko HI;
Section 4; thtnco north 4
Thence leaving the
dog. 42'10" eaot along
ca~tor of Pagevlllo Rood
tho Uno betwaon Scipio
ond with a line through
and Bodford Townohlpo,
the Grantor's property
1396.00 foot to the
tho following throe
northeast corner of 7
courus;
acre tract preaently
1) North 54'11'17"
awned by Weber Wood;
Eaat, paoatng a 5/8" Iron
thence along the north
pin with a ploollc
. tina of utd 7 ocre tract
Identification cap sot II
north 84 deg. 4'50" west
50 loot, going a total
593.6 feet to a point In
dtotanco ol485.88 fHtto ·
_the cent8rllne of the
a 5/8" Iron pin with a
-public road; thence
plastic ldantlltcatlon cap
along the centerline of
set;
2) South 35'48'43"
said public road south
·: 13 dog. 45'50" : east
Eaat a distance of 245
. 3B8.60 feet to a spike;
loot t!l a SIB" Iron pin
thence south 25 deg.
with
a
plaatlc
,, 29'50" east 155.68 feet
ldantlllcatlon cap oat;
• to an Iron pin and the
and
true point of beginning
3) South 54 ' 11'17"
'for
the
following
Woof, pautng a 518" Iron
: described r:eal estate;
pin with a plastic
'~ thence continuing alOng
ldontlltcatton cap oat at
.. the centerline of -tho
350 loot, going a total
public road aoulh 25
distance of 400 feet to
deg. 29'50" east 346.00
tho principal place of
"' feet to an Iron pin:
beginning , contolntng
' thence aouth 8 de g.
2.5022 acrea more or
'37'50" east119.40 laotto
loll and being oublect to
in Iron pin; thence
tho right of way or
leaving the public road
Pagavlllt
.Road
,north 48 dog. 55' wast
(Townohlp Road No. 142)
along tho middle of the
and all other oaoomonta
creak, 339.27 feel to an • of record. ,
Iron
pin
on
the
NOTE: On October 12,
·southwest bank of tho
1995 Pagovllto Road
Creak; thence north 23
(Townahlp Road No. 142)
dog. 10'40" east along
became landaker Road
..the middle of the creek
(Townohlp Road 256), ao
225.69 loot to the point
found In Record Journal
of beginning, containing
20, Pogo 226 or tho
'0.974 acrea. Being part
Commissioner's Journal
of
33·acre
tract
of Mllgo County. All SIB"
-:described In Volume 125,
Iron pint with plaotlc ·
P.ago 475, Meigs County
ldentlltcatlon capo oat
Deed
Records. ·
are stamped " Seymour
-surveyed . March 17,
and Aoooctatet".
1 '9 71, by Harold D .
The bearings used In
tho above doacrlbad
,Whaley, License No.
tract were based upon
:.'II)B6.
. Last prior conveyance:
aouth Uno of tho
northeaet quarter of the
. Volume 253, Pa9e 997,
northout quarter of
' Meigs County Dood
Section 3 bearing, North
Records.
84'26'38" Wool and are
EXCEPTING
lor tho dotormtnatlon of
THEREFROM
THE
angloo only. Tha abovo
fOLLOWING
doecrlbed tract wao
liESCRIBED
REAL
ourvoyed by Goorgo F.
ESTATE, BEING 2.5022
Seymour,
0 hIa
... CRES , MORE OR
Proloeslonal Surveyor
LESS.
No .. 6044, October 11,
. Being a part of a tract
ol land that Ia now or
1995.
Current Ownere Name:
•ormerly In the name of
George V. Mclain and
Denny R. Runyon and
Claudia Shephard Mclain
Julio M. Runyon
fta recorded In Deed
Property
Address:
\fl>lumo 319, Pages 69
37406 Vance Road ,
•nd 70 of tho Molga
Pomeroy, OH 45769
County
Re'corder'a
Permanent Petcel No.
ONica, said tract being ·
17.00285.001
oltuated In the Northeaat
TERMS OF SALE :
Quarter of the Northeast
Caah, Cannot be sold lor
leu than 2/3rda of tho
Quarter of Section 3, T-7appraloed
value .
N, R·14 •W, Scipio
T!iwnahlp, Malgo County,
$1,000.00 down on day
of tale, caoh or cortlllod
~tate of Ohio and being
chock, balanco due upon
more
,pa rti cularly
confirmation of sale.
described as !ottawa:
·Beginning
for
Jamoo M. Souleby,
reference at what Is
Shtr!N, Motga County,
taken
to
bo tho
Ohio
so_utheaat qu•rter of the
DENf!IIS REIMER CO.,
1
•
\V'-· figurcJ tl wa~ 1hc lcasl wcl't\uld Jn . s m ..:c \\C \\Ill nnl havL'
10 pay tor,,., l'ducauon . H(• satd H
help Wc~t Pomt beat AnnJ.polt ... .
that will be a -.; upcr al'hlc\ rm~nl
110
RK:i ~•rson AuebOn Comp~nyo
lull t1me auertonte' cotnpiett
auction
nrvtee
licensed
t66 Oh.:~ & Wett v..-~.," · 304·
'
aiiO \\ J.O('C.
Daily Sentinel • Page 7
Auction
and FIN Market
80
Page8
Tuesday, September 21, 1999
1
Ann Landers
The
MACHINIST TRAiNEE
Open1ngs For H1gt1 Schoo! Grads
Ages 17·30. Must Be In Good
Phys1cal Condthon And W•lhrig
To Relocate AI Our Expense
Good Pay /Benefits For lntervl8w.
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McOor.alds Now H1r.ng All ShiftS
Pa td vacaTions And Holiaays
F le1uble Hours . Ins Ava1lable
Apply AI A10 Grande locatiOn .
MEDICAL SlUING Ea ~n heel·
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PT Excellent Pay PC Reg Call I·
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GallipoliS, OH
Monday September 201h
Tuesday. September 21st
Wednesday, September 22nd
3 00 PM T1\l6 00 PM ONLY
Ask For Ms. Hammond
Now taking appiJ catJons lor Cla!js
B COL dt 1 ~ers Send resume i. O
Baum Lumber. PO B ox 67 .
Ches ter . OhiO or call 740·985
3J()t
Now Talo: mg ApphcaiJo ns lior
OIIVers For Ga111~ohs & Pomeroy
Only Dom1no s P1zza
Olllce ASSIStant ICash Jer Jobr.
son Supermarket 85 'VIne Street
Gall1poiJS . Resume 's A n9 Apf' ll·
callOns Be1ng Accepted Beiwee r.
8 A.M. ·2 PM. For A Respo ns1blc
Person 21 Years Or Older To
Work Some Evenmgs And Wee
kends No PhOne Ca lls Please
Pr ev1ous Applicants Need ~'J ot
Apply.
OFFICE MANAGER
A Progress1ve Long Te rm Care
Company Is Currently Takmg Ap
PIICaiiOns For An QlfJCe ManagPr
We Are Seek1ng A Cha llenge Dn
ven lndtvidual W1t h Supe rvisO r)
Expenence . T he App li cant MU s•
Ha'o'e At Lea st T hr ee Yea rs E•
penence We Offer An E... ceptton
al Compensation Package. 11 In ·
lere sted In A Challengmg Pos1
lion Send Your Resume And Sal
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ager. 321 1/2 West State Street
Athen.s, Oh10 45701
'
Pari· Time Help Needed For Loca.
Re tail Store, Se nd Resumes To
P_O 801( 141 , Gall lpo..\IS , OH
45631 .
~
Part -T1me Wo r ke r~ Neerted Ap
ply In Pe rson 220 Foullh Ave
nue At A&A Auto Deta1l
Posit1on Opemng . Chmcal Assn.
tan! For Cns 1s ln!e rvant1on Un1t
Gallipolis. Oh1 0 Shift Work H1Qh
SchOpl Graduate f Eq u1vale'1: .
Valid Drl\'er s L1cense Aeq u1rM
Parlicipat10n ~n F1 rs t A1d An d
CPR Tra 1n 1ng W!ll Be Requ•ri'd
Upon Employment Res •denllal
Experien ce W1!h Emo11ona11y DIS·
1urbed Adults Prel erred $6 67
Per Hour Send Re sume To M9-o·
ager Of Hu man Res o urces .
Woodland Center. 3086 State Re ·
ute 160. Galltpolts, Oh10 4563t
'
P\)STAL JOB S To $18 35 ~Hf>
INC BENEFITS NO EXPt:~l ·
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EXT ' I42t 0 8 AM · 9 PM 7
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Pa1d Tramee Program limi ted
Open ings Must Pass Physical
Ages 17 30 Wtth High School OJ·
ploma Excellent Pay /8enet1t5
Pa1d Ae locahon . Ca ll ~ ·600·533·
PreveniiOI"' Pos1t1 o n - An Alcohol
And Otner Drug Couse hng /Pr(
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Ana Jackson Count1es. Is See\·
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Person Will Work W1tn All Age
GrotJps In Both Commun111es Ae,
spons1b1111ies Include Co ordm a•
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Educa t1on Programs. Tram1ng
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1657
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FIREFIGHTERS
�.
Tuesday, September 21, 1999
'P omeroy • Middleport, Ohio
+
;-Pftltion
Or n lllno
Resic*tr As
for Carr Streel Apan·
~ . - . . . 01101. S l j l l ~ Sc:hool Gr~te IEqutval~; Valid Oriftr's Ltcense Re~•ltl•nla
~-~lnF•sl
,.....,. CPR Tr••ning Wtll Be Re
~ Uoon ~rhent Res...
··~ Eapef•ra With EmobOn~ •lly Disturbed Adult5 Preferred
j 'le 61 P1f Houf: Send Resume To:
~r 01 Human Flesourees,
land Centers 3086 Slate
· .,..1eo. c r1 " . ono -'563'
StJel People Wanlect At Don
T... Mo10rs Inc:: Pomeroy, Oht0
tmmed•ale Opamng No Expenenct Necessary Apply In Per-
c.*Jn At Don Tate Molors, 308
'East L11m Street Pomeroy, Ohto
.fJ)E.
Scenic Hilts NLWsmg Cenler Now
Taktng ApplicatiOns For Depend
& Caring LPN s & AN s Pan·
Time Apply In Person Monday
Thru Fndar 8 430 PM 311
BucllliOgo Road. O!'oO
SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY. CaN Now Toll Free 1·
.800-~204 Of 1-800-469-8164
For AppOintment To Come To
Nastwttte, Tennessee And Al..id•·
liOn For Mator Record Producers
lnlemet www wanac
STNA tramlng cl ass bemg
scheduled tor 100 bed sk1lled
tacllily Seekrng candidates who
are car.ng , compassiOnate and
want to be a member ol a great
team lntereSied candtdates
should appty to RocksprtngS Re
hall Center. 36159 Rocksp11ngs
Ad, Pomeroy, Otno 45769 Equal
O!>pomJnity
~
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WANTED:
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--netlleelgood
WILDLIFE JOBS To S21 60 /HA
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7 DAYS Ids, H"'C Fee
140
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CBIITodayf ?4CJ-446.;4J67
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Reg 190.0S 12748
150
Schools
Instruction
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REAL ESTATE
310 Homes for Sale
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AEGISTRATJONI
1 800 434
2434 EXT 3205 (NO FEE)
3 Bedroom House W/3 Acres
land Few Fru1t Trees 2 Bedrooms. Bath Upsta1rs 1 Bedroom
Front Room Ommg Roo m Ut1hty
Room Kitchen, Bath Downs1a1rs
Sits On Slorys Run Road ' 011 Ro
ure 7, Information (740)-3677576 Alter Noon, $47,500 oo
060
Brick
Ranch
3Bedrooms
2Baths 2 Car Garage I 2Acre 1
Year Old Pt Pleasant $125 000
(304)675·8959
For Lean One Bedroom. AC
API Cor,_ Of Second And PN
$2~ . Plus Utillti8S Secunly
And Koy Oopo54 Rolofencos Rtqwod No 740--441H42S.
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350 Lots & Acreage
Gr8CIOU5 lfv.ng 1 and 2 be&oom
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2 44 Acres. HomeSite Greeo
Township Gaily County Scene.
.OUISI CkJM To GaillpoiiS. Some
RestnctiOnS 740-2•5-;5776
Modern 1 Bedroom Ap•rtm4!1nt.
740 446 0190
Rough Moslly · - d Already Cui In land Contracl
Available Only $27,000, t-800-
One Dedroom lurmshed apart nart. \ cal7<40-992-9191
21~
Nice Ground Floor 28A. W/0
Hook-up Relerence DepoSit No
(304)675 5162
360
Real Estate
Wanted
3 Surveyed And Deeded Acres
Secluded Wooded Wrth Mare
Land Avatla~Me Must Have Burld
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7C0-446-2317
Buy Hon-es From 110 000
1 3 Bedroom local Government
Ill
n72. £It 8040
HOME FORECLOSURES • NO
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House and garage on 160 x50
lol call740-992 2610
House and lot tor sale by owner
Ray Prrddy nex t to Bradbury
sd>Qol 7<10-992 3362
House located m Mmersv1lle tout
bedroom LA FA uflhly room
batt! basement wrth bath arr. Water sortener. newer root. beautiful
vieW ol &he r~Yer 74D-992 9012 lor
appomtment
Re ntal Property A 2 Apartment
Duple• In Galltpolls City Limits &
2 Acres Wttt't Trailer & 2nd Tra•l·
er Hook-Up Near Holzel"'5 740·
441 0720
Three bedroom 1 & 1f2 story ce·
da1 and stone home stone chrm
ney large windo ws two OathS
basement, CO\Iered deck la rge
garage. 18 1/2 acres pmate
near Pomerov 74Q-992-6176
""'""""" lAnd Co
REN TAL S
410 Houses for Rent
"Condo ·Ltkt" llv•ng Wrthout
Havrng To Purchase Over 2000
Sq Ft Unfurnished 2nd Floor
Apartment With Chair ·Lift 2 Bedrooms 2 Baths Laundry -Room
With Elecl{tC Washer /Dryer
Kitchen Wtth Electnc Range Refngerator 0 1shwasller, 01sposat
Ceontral Gas Heat Wtlh EleclfiC AI
C Ott Street Partt:k'lg Vrew Of City
Park And OhiO Rrver $600 I
Montn Plus l.:lt.tlti18S· DepoSit Ae
qu~red Drscount FOf Lease 740
4-<6-9636
1- Bedroom House. No Pets! 28
lmcotn Ave 5275 00 month
(7<10)-446 9342
2 Bedrooms $350/Mo + Uttlltles
and Oeposrt No Pe ts • 740-446·
4313
3 Bedrooms $4001Mo Depostl +
Ut~rlles. No Pets• 740-446-4313
Older 2 Story, 3 Bedroom, Home
1n Aro Grande ~ m1tes from the
co!ege (304)675 7624
Pomeroy- three bedroom house.
two bedroom apartment, referenc
es se<:Uflty partly furnished 740
992-6886 after 5pm
420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1 - 1999 Fleetwood 141(72. 28R.
2BA Air Skubng on Rental Lot
2 · 1995 Skyline 14K70 38A
2BA Vrnyl S1dtng Shrngle s
Roof 6" walls
3 · 1996 Redmond 16x70 3BA
2B A 6" wall s Nr cel l Frnanc1ng
Available (3041675-6055
1978 Mobile Hon1e 14x70 3 Bed
rooms 2 Baths $5 500 740 446
6251
1982 Wtndsor 2 BOrms 2 Full
Baths Wrth Add On 112 Acre or
Land
Nerghborhooa
Rd
$28 000 00 740~ 0785
1985 14 Ft "70 Ft 2 Bedrooms 1
Owner 74Q-256 6011
• 14~~:65 2 BedrOOIT)S Located On
Skidmore Road 740-446-3697
Between Athens and Pomeroy, 2
& 3 bedroom mobile hOmes a1r
conditioned, $260-$300, sewer.
water and trash Included, 740·
992 2167
2 Bedroom Central Air & Heat 1
M1le On Hannan Trace Road Oil
Route 218 Call740·256·6202
2 Bedroom Mob1le Ho me Yo~
Pay UtilitieS , & DePOSit In Portttr
Area 740.388-9162
2 Bedroom Natural Gas Furnace
Atr Very Nrce In Galhp OIIS 740
446-2003.740 446-1409
2 Bedrooms 2 Full Size Bath Gl
A $250fMo Deposit, References , 5 Mrles From Rio Grande.
1
740-245-56n
1986 2 Bedrooms 1 Bath Gfr
port Stoarge Bwldrng Etc On
Rented Lot Must See t 740·446 8617 For Apporntmenl
3 Bedroom Tra11er For Rent In Rro
Grande References No Pet s In
srde 740 379-2720 No Calls
Until After 7 PM
1988 Clayton Claiborne All Elec
trrc 2 Bedrooms 2 Baths. EKtras
$10000 7402566938
3 Bedrooms $250 00 Per Mont h
Plus Deposit, 740-367·061 1
1990 Danv•lle 14K70 2 Bedrooms
2 Baths 2 Porches And Hea t
Pump EKcellent Condnron 740
446·1778
199 1 141tK7211 2 Bedrooms. 2
Baths Shingle Rool Vmyl Siding,
ERcellent Cond1t ro n $16 000 00
(740)4468113
1993 Clayton 16xQO Very Nrce
Super Clean 3 aedrooms 2
Baths Wtt h Btg Round Ba th tub
Heat Pump ElectriC $21 000
740 256 6382
1993 Flemmmg 14x70 2BR 1
bath Central Air Co\lered Porc.h
10K16 8:.8 De ck $12 500
{304) 773 5064
Want A Home Don t Hcwe Land ?
We Do Hurry Only 10 lots Le ft
aoo 383-6862
Doublew•de s Free Decor & Furnr
'"'"
HURRY, HURRY HURRY!
OAKWOOD HOMES
BARBOURSVILLE WV
800·383 6862
Brg Seieclt on Used 10 Ft 12 Ft
14 Ft Wide Kanauga Mol:ttle
Homes. 740-446·9662
Brand New 80's 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths Just $239/Month Free
Delivery and Set Upl only one at
thiS Price! Hurl)'! Oakwood, Galli
pohs {740)·446·3093
Brand New Ooublewtde 3 BeO
rooms 2 Baths, only $340/month
Free Delivery and Set-Up Limited
Ofler wont last • Onl y at Oak
wood GallipoliS, Oh {740) 446·
3093
Ideal Star ter Home 14 x70 1979
Fnendshlp Mobrle Home Excellent Cond rtta n Brand New Wind·
ows Copper Plumbmg Askmg
$10 000 OBO, Call740-388 89 15,
MOVING OUT OF AREA· Mu st
Sell At Sacraflce, 1998 SW Uke
New 304· 733·91 02
New 3BR 2 Bath 14 Wide $500
Down S21 0 per mo, Free Air I
800 69t 6777
New 4BA 16 wide, $500 Down
$245 pe r mo Free Arr 1 BOO
691-6777
Specral 28x 80 3 or 4ai.' $1000
Down $34~ per mo Free Oe hv·
ery & Setup 1·800-691 6777
330 Farms for Sale
26 Acres MIL Wrth 6 Stall Horse
Barn, County Wate r 3 Bedroom
House 740·388-8504
Mobtle home lor rent in Pomeroy
area. no pets, 74o-992-S858
Mob1le Home lor Rent Call (740)·
446 1279
Two bedroom mob•le hom e with
two baths, rn Racine S325 month
740·992-5039
Furmshed two bedroom a1r conQttloned no pets $150 deposit
$3251mo also spaces for rent,
$901mo , S90 daposn. Atver Park
Pomeroy (formerly Brown s) 740
949 2093
440
Apartments
for Rent
I and 2 t:tedroqm apartments fur
nrshed and unfurnis hed secunty
deposrl reqUi reO , no pet s, 740·
992·2218
I bedroom apartment rn M•dOie·
porr, all uttlllles pard $270 per
month 5100 depos rl 740 992
7806
'
1 Bedroom Apartment Call Alter
5 00 PM 740 446 1765
1 Bedroom AIC WID Hook Up
Near Arbors Nursmg Home No
Pets Ouun locatrons $279/Mo
+ Utrbtres 74Q-446-2957
1 Bedroom All Uthlles Included,
$385/Mo, 740-441.0720
2 br apt m New Haven for more
mfo, call 304-895 2937
2 br kit appliances& AJC & car
pet furmshed 304 675 4302
2bdrm apts total electric appliances lurmsheO laundry room
lacrllt1es dose to school In town
Applrca tlon s avatlable at Village
Green Apts 1149 or call 740·992·
3711 EOH
Apartment lor ren t In Pomeroy no
pets 740·992·5858
Applica tions Now Accepted Far
Small But Elltre Special One Bedroo m, Very Clea n Stove, Frlg ,
Washer Dryer Tota l ElectliC fAC
No n Smoker s On ly No Pet s
$300 Depostt S3501Mo 140 446
2205 740-446-9585 , Ask For
Vlrgrnra
poaroO.
7~525
Hardy
ta1n1ess Steel Wood
Burnm Sorter Outside $\ ,200,
740-3118 8
HUSTLER Commerc•al Mower, 5
Dod<. 18 HP Engone Good Conilion' S3 500. Includes Trallet
Snow Plow. & Chal(tS Also. Con-
net. 7-t0-~1216
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repalf8CI. New & Aebulh In Stock
Cal Ron Evans 1-800-537·9528
Now Talung Apphcahons- 3.5
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartme nts. Include& water
Sewage Trash $3t5/Mo 740
LOSE WEIGHT FAST! Melabotne 1000 2 Monlh Supply St5 95
Suy 2, Get 1 FREE• Extra
Strength Sa~ By Nabonal Dla·
betes Research Council COO/CC
610 Farm Equipment
'Ono OWnof 11180 400 John Dee<e
Lawn And Garden TractOr Hydrosialic Drive, With so· Mower
Deck 2 600 Hrs. Excenent Condition . 7>1CH<46-3277
UHd Lift T'IICI< Fo<k $75 To $125
Per Sel Fuewood Any Ouamty
740-379 27S7
630
METABOUF'E 356TM II Works•
Burns Fatt Increases Me tabo
hsm Ra1ses Energy Level Call
For Pats Pn ce Toll Free 877
1 DIET ¥astercard 1V1sa i
OiSIOOV<I' /Amex MetaboUfe "" Independent Oistnbutor
Bath Clean No PelS! References
& DepOSil Requ ired 740-446
1519
Val~ey V~e Apartments R1o
Grande,
Now Accepting appl lcaltons r Immediate occ u
pancy t & 2 Bedroom Apts Arr
Condttron.ng, KllcMn apphances.
Fenced m Playground Laundry
On S1ght Management Water,
Sew<!Qe and Trash Paid Full trme
Stucktnls must meet Ohio Housmg Ftnan ce Agen cy Ouahhca t•ons Senior Citizens Welcome
EHO For more lntorma!IOn call
(74 0)·245- 91 70 Monday thru
Thursday 9 00 12 00 noon
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Furnaces Installed ~ s Low As
S28 00 A Month Wtth Approved
Cred •t, Easy Over The Phone
Bank Financmg Huge lnvtntorv
Of lntertherm Mtller & Coleman
Furnaces Heat Pumps And
Parts Vmyl Sk~rttng KIIS $299 95,
Doors & Wmdows . Water Heaters Anchors, Plumbmg & E19Ctrt
cal Parts Bennetts Mobile Home
HTG & CLG 740·4:.6-9416 Or 1·
800-872 5967 GaHipol~ OH
460 Space for Rent
Nrce Glass Jewelry1Display Calie
7<t0 245 9315
Sand Fork Coun, Gallipolis Fer.
ry, New Moone Home Lois. single wtde, double w1de mcludmg
80 It mod els Takmg apphc atiOI'Is Gall (304)675-6908
PR1MESTAR·
ln!o
OirecTV Summer PromotiOn Call
now 1·888·265-2123
For Lease
READY TO LOSE THOSE UN·
WANTED POUNDS? FREE IN·
FORMATION
log
Onto
www provenptan corrVIOse
Pomeroy. SA 124. 600 square h ,
customer park1ng carpet a1r con
dltroned, C8fllng tan, modern, $350
per month. $350 depos tl, 74094!1-2093
Household
Goods
3 LIVIng Room Tables, New Futon
Bed Rocker, Mrcrowave Ottoman
& M1sc Items 740 256 6753
Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers , Dryers Range s Rein
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!
Hench Crly Maytag. 740·446·
7795
Antiques
I
~n t iques
E Main Street orf At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 1o 00
am to 6 00 p m Sunday 1 00 to
6 00 p m 740-992-2526 Russ
Moore owner
B
Waterline Spec ial 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Per tOO 1" , 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 1 All Brass Com
P'" "'n Fmlngs In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Oh1o 1 800 537 -9528
www dramondsellers net WE SELL
DIAMONDS FOR LESS! THE IN
TERNETS BEST PRICES! NO
COMPUTER NEEDED LICEN SE
INSURED BONDED CALL 877·
726 3753
54,0 Miscellaneous
550
Merchandise
Building
Supplies
112 Carat Diamond Sohta1re Ring
VS-2 Clarity, 14K Yellow Gold, 6
Prong Tlllany Band. Apprai sed At
•$2 000 Less Than One Year Old
$1 100 OBO 7<10·446-4648,
Block br ick sewer pr p~s wrnd·
ows, lintels, etc Claude Wmters.
Alo Granoe OH Ca ll 740·.2455121
15 Ft 8 tnch Insulated Chimney
Ptpe With Fittings Goo~t Condition, $50 740.25&-1216
STEE L BUILDIN GS • Ove rslockedl!' Mus t Lrqutdate Now!
25x30, 40x50, 45x72 SO•t 00 Wtll
Deliver Callt-800-211·9594 )(51
20 Gatton Copper Kettle Library
Table Milk Can, Mise Iron Items
Horse Collar, Vtctor~an Picture
Frames, 740-446-0639
560
condrtlon. 32• storm' door sian
dard boy s bikt no gears 740742·2931
Bassett crib so lid maple. with
mauress 51 25 304·675·3440 atter4pm
Bedroom Suilt Hardwood Dark
F1n1sh, 9 Drawer Dresser 5 Draw
er Chest 2 Draw Nlg ht stan d
Queen Size Bookcase, Waterbed
$800 For Entrre Set $600 Wtlhout
Waterbed 740 38 8- 9445 After
6 30 PM
Black sectional co uch w•lh end
tables, co lfee table to match very
good condition, $300, 740·992·
2906
BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 lbs, 30 DAY MONEY
BACK GUARANTEE• Natural Or
Recommended 740 44 1-1g82
Free Samples
Collectors Item German 35 MM
Plat e Camera World War II,
lloyd E Esque, Phone 304-773·
5479, Mason WV
BEAUTIFU L APARTMENT S AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 We stw ood Dnve
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
& movtes Ca ll 740- 44 6-2568
Equal Hous1ng Oppoltunll)l
COMPUTERS - SO Down low
Monthly Payments Y2K Compliant Almost Everyone Approved
Call Fl ROC OM Ad\/ anced Tech·
nologres 1-900-617·3476
Christy s Family ll\ltng , apart·
ments, home a traile r rentals .
740·992-4514 apartments avar!
able lurn1shed & unfurnished
Firewood lor sale All Hardwoods
Full S•ze 3/4 Ton Truckload. De
livered & Stacked $45 (304)882
2555
I
1983 Olcti 2 Doors Cutlass Supreme Brougham Black One
Owner Full Power, AfT 50 Uter
V-8 Motor Good Cond1tron. 7.f0·
446-3277
Pets for Sale
6 Full Blooded Boston Terrier
Pups $75 Each Father AKC
Registered Mother Full Blooded.
740 388 8743
AKC Bassett Hound Puppies
Red & Whrte Tri-Color 1st Shots
& Wormed $200 740 2.56-1688
AKC
Bol(er
1304)675-5786
Pups,
$275
AKC German Shepherd Pups ,
Wh1te, Ano Stiver Ava tll ble.
Snow Cloud & German Ltnes
740 245·92 13
AKC Lab Puppres For Sale, Cho·
colate . And Black F.rst Shols
GIVen 5200 Each 740 3B8 9398
At<C Lab Poppies Cha mp 1on
Btoodhne Proven Huntmg Stock ,
Black Chocolate Colors. Males &
Fe111Hles 740-643 2288
AKC Mrmature Co lhe 10 Weeks
Very Small Crate Tra ined $150,
740 256 6162
AKC Reg iste red German Short
Haired Pornter Pups Ready To
Go$200 Each 740 256 1105
German shepherd puppies tor
sale, call 304
5810 ,
na
Registered English Coon Hound
Pups 740-256-1517
570
Musical
Instruments
For Sale Yamaha Alto Saxo
phone
E~~:cellent Condlnon
$500 {304)882 3338
1991 Mercury Tracer 5 dr •
967 miles auto air amlfm stereo whrte with blue intenor, minor
left front lender damage runs &
dnves asking $1 450 740-992·
t506 days 740-949-2644 eves:
1992 Ford Tempo Auto /Air. Runs
Great Good Work Car $1 750
740-446-4782
1992 Oldsmobile Ach leva V-6
Auto 58 000 Miles, 54 295 1990
Berella. GT 52,495 1990 S 10
$2 ,795 Cook Motors 740 4460103
1993 Ford Escort GT 5 sp, 2 dr,
air IIQt'lt blue/gray Interior. 90,000
miles clean $~.400 OBO 7AO·
992 1506 days 740·949·2644
1996 Jeep Cherokee 4WD Autb
Arr, 4'dr 49,000 miles S12 500
304·937-2805
1996 Jeep Cherokee Auto transmission 49 ooo mrles $12 500
304·937·2805
1996 Pontiac Grand Am SE 4 ,
door ale, amlfm casse tte, great
car. $5995
1995 Pontrac Grand Am SE two
door coupe , ale, amlfm casse!t e
nice car. $4995
1994 Bwck Skylark Custom, one
owner, ale amlfm cassetle , 72
000 mites, very clean $4995
1993 Ford Escort Wagon ale
amlfm cassene n1ce car $2395
1992 Olds Cutlas s Supreme two
door sport, red ale am/lm cas
sene, loaded, nice lide, $3995
1989 Pont1ac Lemans good work
car $995
Rutland Car SaiEjs
740-742·3311 or 740-742·1400
1997 Ford Ta urus GL. 4 dr se
dan 3 0 V 6 auto 27 000 mrles
black with camel leather rnterlor
ale. CO player sunrool, ps . alloy
wheels ask rng $10 ,200 1 740 992·
1506 days 740 949 2644 eves
1999 FORD EXPLORER $100 I
090. Seized And ~ .. lltl'liJ Locally
Fee 1·800·409·751 1 Ell! 9935
Fee
'
1987 Bronco II, V 6 automatic,
au 4x4 , excellent Shape, $4100,
call 74o-7>12·8709 -*'gs
199 t Dodge Grand Caravan. ~x
cellenl CondUton, Must See 'fQ
Appreclilte•740-24s--5Gt3
~
..
1992 Chevy van. 314 too 350 llflglne, 52.000 miles, extra clean ,
nons good, 740-992·3343
1997 GMC Jrmmy SLT Gotd Eidi·
tiOn , loaded only 16,000 mies 11
mont~s or factory warranty rt·
malnmg , 520,000 calr"740·8•7·
q;z.l
T~AVEf
THE BORN LOSER
'fat: YOU 00, ~"$.. T~~N'f'U:""'1
r=.-'-. fV>..IJ(;; /1-1'\IC.E Df>..'(
~TM'<W<.KI l M\OCn\2
F\~T
,..
""1
TO K.\UN..l.'< C£T II- T\c.KE.T
F~ 00\t-\G% It<
fa501'\,
1\SS MPI-\ ZO!>.IE- 1
IN 1-\IS\0~'1' ..
1998 Yamaha Blaster Ltke New
$2200 or Trade for Truck
(304)675·11 05
Moton:yclea
tfo-
198t Honda CX500 Cuatom
to rcycle tuw Tires, Banery
Plugs, & Brakas t.tilllul 21 ,700
$800 Includes 2 Full Face Helmets Call 304-773-5723 Ask For
Rusty
,.·BIG NATE
FOR FAR TOO LONG
750 Boats & Moto"
rHt5 SCHOOL HAS ,
SEEN RUN WITHOUT
EVEN THE BAREST
TIAL\ 50 VITAL
for Sale
!SSI..
18 112 Ft 1995 Bass Hawk Wtth
200 HP Mercury Hydraulic Japk
Plate Galvanized Tra•ler 74,D·
379-2835
1995 17' Hydra Sport, 90 hp
Johnson tltt trim, trolling motor 1
«aMer, ready to go $7 BOO
1997 18' Bass Tracker Pro Tea1n,
60 hp marfner wrth trolling motor
trailer. $6,700
1998 18' BOO Serres Nitro 120 1):1
Mercury Dual Console, built Jn
bantry charger, trailer S8,900
1998 24' Sweelwaler pontoon 90
hp Johnson, tandem a~ele wllh
b<akes, $13,700. 740-992-6520
10 ITS SIUDENTS
VERY SURVIVAL.!
a
Nortb
Pass
2•
4NT
Pass
2,.
Pass
2•
Pass
Pass
Pass
8 Grlllulty
9 Nahoor •he$
10 Make irate .
11 Actor Nlel_,
12 Worrlea
19 Gor1llo, e.g. ·
22 Charlera
Borgnlne
28 Devaslate
East
Pass
28 "Toodle-co"
30 M-aface
34 Bring about "
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
(labor)
35 Useaenoven
36 Volvo, e.g.
38 Author
Jacqueline -
.....
39 Hypno11c
By Phillip.Aider
On June 4 and 5, lhe Amencan
Contracl Bndge League ran lhe Mlllenmum Games, Instant matchpoml
even IS played across North Amenca
After each dea l, the competilors
looked at the score sheet and tmmedlaleiy learned thelf score oul of 100
The East· WeSI Winners Fnday
were Sue and Tom Grue, from Mmneapohs, wtth a s~.:ore of 1655 nearly 65 percenl
, After Tom (Norlh) was allowed to
open two clubs. strong. arttfictal and '
forcmg , Sue's two dtamonds guaran~
teed an ace or a kmg by partnershtp
agreemenl Ne.t, Sue wok co ntrol
w1th Roman Key Card Blackwood
Ftve dtamonds showed either four
aces or, as here, three aces and the
heart kmg F1ve no-1rump asked for
kmgs Havmg all four, I thmk North
should have JUmped stra1 ght1 o sev.en no trump. how could he have
more? Yet when Tom settled for SIX
d1amonds, prom1 smg three kmgs outSide heariS, Sue guessed well to b1d
seven no-trump Pa1rs m seven heans
rece1ved 62 matchpo mls (and EastWe st 38). whereas pius 2.220 1n seven no-trump was wonh ~8 matchpomls.
Nolc !hat t! Norlh has one more
SP:ade and orie fewer mmor-suH card,
all grand slams are anlt perce ntage
How would you play No rth's A-K-2
oppo>~le South's J-9 8 3 lor no
lose rs 1
Start wtth the ace plannmg to con~
1mue w1th lhe kmg, hopmg Wesl
drops lhe queen ailowmg you 10
fme sse South 's ntnc on the rh1rd
round If East drops the queen on lhe
f~rst round (unless ydu 1hmk he
would do thai from doubielon Q- 10),
enler lhe SoUih hand, 1hen finesse the
mne 1hrough Wcsl
''
40 Producer
Spelling
"'
42 Personnel
44 Famed
49 Make Ieee
so Chemical
sufllx
52 Inlet
53 Did the
mer1thon
·'
CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from Quotations l;ly tamous people past and
present Each lener 1n the Cipher stands for another
Today's clue K 9Quals D
'T
LZFTB
UZRD
RWF
M RIB
YFFW
I G R Z B
IEXVDT~XFZ
LZTU ' I
X TI
WTDF
LFZOTW
URZDVMT
KZPJFZ
"ZTMU
MTDFWBPWL
IBFUUP
ZFBPZFDFWB .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Acts of hate agamst •ndi vtduals are acts of hate~
agatnst our values and our enttre natton " - 8111 Cltnton
'~~:t~~, S©\\..(}1-A-c!&t.trs·
- - - - - - 141to4
WOlD
lAM I
~, CLAY l. POUAN _;;__ _ __
Rtorrange lettert of
0 '"'"
ocrambltd -d•
- looN to
I
the
be-
form four simple words
NA T I 0 Y
I
I· I I I
LEHWI
"
IR YtNII 0J 1..-N~,
._
I
r --:H-:-::E~L-:G::-::N~T-...,
l_S
I.
rI
_
•
I_ I_
last summer I concluded
that 1f dandelions were hard to
grow , they would be most weicome • - any----
10
Complele lhe clouckle quoled
bf
ftll1ng in
the m•ss•ng
words
L-....IL-...L-..1.-.L.-I......J you develop from step No 3 below
SOMEONE SAID
THE SUN SETS
IN THE WEST..
WE DIDN'T
THINK OF THAT ..
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
•
Auto Parts &
Accessorlea
I
.'
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
t
Gloomy - Bnsk - Rodeo · Nutmeg - BEING TOLD
o. .
New Replacement Gas Tanks 0
& A Auto, Ripley, WV (304)37,2·
3933 or 1·800-273-9329
Campers &
Motor Homes
5+
6•
Pass
6 MUH <if
poetry
7 Outflow
24 Actor
PEANUTS
1995 Pro era It 17 112 It bass
boat w/1 998 mercury 100 hp 50
thrusl dual battery trolling motor
$10,000 or trade 304 · 882~3652
Budget Pnced Transmissions
and Engines, All Types, Access
To
er 10,000 Transmissions ,
eve Jo•nts, 74o-24S..5677
1995 Monte Carlo one owner,
look s and runs like new, Carroll
Johnson. 740.992·5949
hotshot
More winners
oap
790
s D.C
Opemng lead • J
•••
'•
West
7NT
!•
~
South
5NT
1987 Astro Van 4 3 V·6, AC/
Good cond•tron $2700
(304)675-5909
1994 Grand Am GT 64,000 Actual Miles, All Po wer Exce llent
Condrtlon 740-446-4604
1995 Monte Ca rlo Z~4 70,000
m1les e•c co nd red wl trnted
wmdaws 304 675 2714 or 304·
675 2092
CARROT SEEDS
ALL PLANTED
1980 Toyota 4x4, S1 200 OBO
Runs Ellcellent Greet Truck ~r
Thrs Commg Wmterl 740· 3888461. 740-992-6976
.....
1995 Escort LX Automatic, With
Au Condrtton1ng, AM I FM Cassette, W1th Only 8 700 M1te s,
o¥1m'lg $1 500 740 379--2766
TH' RABBITS DON'T
KNOW THAT!!
•
760
1994 Pontiac Sonnevtlle Color
Red , ExeCutive Car E"cellenl
Condition New Trres, Battery, AI ·
ternator $4,995,740-446:1 969
, BARNEY
THAI II l GOT MY
730 Vans & 4-WD•
199' F 350 -4x4, tully ~aGed, 4
new t1res, chrome wheels, tot~ of
extras 740-992 5532
n
4 Ending lor
Vulnerable Both
Dealer East
't-2.1
Must Ste 1980 Chevy 1 Ton
Factory Rebm 350 Engine. N•w
Tires $3,000080740-256-1727.
1986 Burck Regal L1m1ted AC
Fully Loaded Automatic Very
Clean 740 245 5991
1991 Mercury c"ougar Black New
Pamt, AIC, PW, PS Pl Crutse
Ttlt Low Miles, $6 500 740 4461619
"lnOd"
• Q 7
• Q 9
1
F250 - P.A
4ll4 • Dteset Well Maintained
(304)675-4243
I 993 Honda 300 4 Wheeler l!x·
cetlent
Condrtlon
S24QO
(304)576-2485
1286
"glob'" or
3 BeautHul
• J 9 8 3
For Sale 1987 fofd
198.5 Chevy Cetebrrly slatlon
wagon runs good, S450 740992·1493
t986 Chevy Cavalrer. AS . 2 0
Au to AC T1U Crutse, 76 000
onglnal miles Call (30.C)4581997,After6PM
10 8 7 6
South
eon
1986 Ford F150 plci&:UII $1200
7.0.992-311M
1991 Cadillac Se\lllle Loaded
$5 900 OBO {304)675 5571
Wash1ng Mac hme , 6 yrs old
$100 Klngslze Waterbed wtttl
Frame $75 Gtrls Hidden Treas·
ures Bike $2 5 Chtld Hockey
1
Table $20 Call (304 )675·2927 ,
after 6PM
-;;ji7.7,:ii:"~;;i;;;i;;;tiQ;;;;&: .,
v-e,
•
Unleuj2wdal
2Nooaed
1
'fA8 765
Orivt
c-
Two cemetery lots, Metgs Memory Gardens. Veterans sec11on
wrltl two volts 740 378 6347
Don t Call Us W9 Both Los9l
Wheel
1983 Chevy Blazer, New Paint I
llfes, &x&, AulomaDC, AIC, $2,300
Of Will Tt:ade On LaW 4K4 1tuck
740
~u
QUICK CASH
R& D's Used
Furnlture Buymg Partia l Or
WhOle Estate 740 367-0280
1993 Chevrolet Lumma. 4 dr sa·
dan 3 1
auto ale new t1res
non smok er 53 000 m1les, pas
seng er door damage (runs &
drives) asl<mg $3 000. 740-9921506 days, 741)-949-2644 eves
• 8 3
• J 53 2
.. 4 2
Net-
1989 Dodge Caravan 161 000
miles
runs
good ,
good
co nd $900 a good buy& 1986
Dodge VIsta wagon 4 wheel dr .
good cond needs c arbu re tor
work S500
304 67.5-46e9
740 446-6308 1 800 291-0098
New And Used Furntlure Store
Below Holiday Inn Kan~;~uga Stop
And See us 74Q-446-4782
&
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Clatm Oen~ed? We Specialize tn
Appea l s And Hearings FREE
CONSUllATION Benel tt Team
Services, Inc Toll-Free 1· 888·
836-4052
WARM UP
92% Gas Furnaces, Heat Pumps,
Duct Systems Free Estimates If
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers, refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vme Street Call 740 446 7398
1 888 818 0128
CARS S100 SSOO & UP POLICE
IMPOUNDS Honda's Toyota s
Chevys Jeeps, And Sperl Utili
tteS Fee Aequ1red Call Now! 8€»
n2 7470 EXT 7832
tJI09654
•Q10 642
~1740-.44&-B780
3226-7pm
WANT A CO MPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?) MMX TECHNOLP
GY We Frnance ·o· Down! Past
Cred1t Problems OK1! Even 11
Turned Down Belorell Reestablish
Your Cred1tl! 1-800-659-0359
For Sale Aecondllloned wash·
ers dryers and refngerators
Thomp Sons Appliance 3407
Jackson Avenue. (304~675-7388
SSOO CARS FROM 1500111 Buy
Pollee Impounds & Repos Fee
CALL NOW For Llshn gst 1-800319-3323 x2156
East
au_,.,
1988 Mercury Sable Station
Wagon Needs Trensm Jss lon
Work And Minimal Body Wo rk.
Fully Loaded . S375. 740 4.C6
Seasoned locust Post s wrth
Several end Posts! (740) 2566512
MERCHANDISE
71 0 Autos for Sale
West
• ? 5
.. J
~len! S!oapo, I Ou1, Sl.- Ouoll1y, lolusl SOt To
1982 Chevy S-10, e~ecellenl
diliOn $2300 (:JOol)675-15®
1000 lbs or roun d ba les ot oat
straw With m1ud hay asktng $10
a bale. 740-992-5072
6AK4
1978 Dodge SlOp Sklo 4 W0. NJtomatlc. 3J6, Red Wllh Chroma
• H /FFA Club Calt Chi Maine
Angus Cross Broke To Lead,
Good Hair Coat 740-867-5494
Days Or 740 867 8535 Even
Hay & Grain
• K Q 10 9 3
720 Trucks for Sale
1978 Ford
oo 21 99
• A K 2
TMnagt. Driver? 1983 Plymouth
Ath•nt, 1011 ot n•• 11uft; We ll
maintained.
$1 ,000
080
(304)675-3909
ShOrtbe<l Truck: .\ 4 Speed, 4 Inch
urt.
rtntS, 740-245-5991
TRAN SPORTATION
LOSE WEIGHT! As Seen On
TV 112 The COsl Of MIH Brands
All Natural 01etary We iQhllo,ss
SuppJement lose Fal Gain Energy FREE SAMPLE Call I 800·
613-Q790
Upsta~rs Furnished. 3 Rooms.
-=:;~~~~~;::-;~;jj;;;j
~shley wood stove
Livestock
North
• AK
Cittn, nenr used c•r•. good
varrery, ceasonable rates 740
742-3311 Of 740-742-1400
2 8 Year old Mares and 1 one
Ho<w T<~~llr.I7<10~367-72Zl"
1 -800-~
Two one bedroom unit&. ava•lable
1mmedrately newly remDdeled
HUO approved. no pets $250 a
month plus secur1ty depostl, call
614-449-9469
530
& LIVESTOCK
640
Ta ra Townhouse Apartments ,
Very Spac•ou&, 2 Bedrooms. 2
Aoors. CA 1 112 Batll Fulty Carpetet:3 . Adult Pool & Baby Pool,
Pat1o, Starl $350/Mo No Pe ts,
Lease Plus: Seeunry Oeposrt Re·
qutred. After 5 74,0-446-0101.
Before s. 74Q..4.46-:M81
510
Fee
FARr., SUPPLIES
ongs
446-0008
-Cer-
FH 1-800-4017511 E11t H36
'
Format O•esset Short & Long
Sue$ I To 9. 740-379-2311
Ntee two bedroom apartment 1n
SyraCuse $27.5 month rrM:IUd es
trasll 740-667-3516
490
080.- Mil s..ov ~
"'-YI'On i304J675.280 1
........
23ACRES
2 Mils Off SR 7 I SA 218, Sot*"
Of Gai"'P<*s S.ngte des Alowed,
we Buy Land 30 ~ 500 Acres.
We .Pay ,Casll t -800 2t3 8365.
310 Homes for Sale
FORECLOSED HOMES Low
0
Down! Gov•t And Bank Repo s
Betng Sold NOWi Ftnanc.ng
Avarlabte Call Now! 1-800· 73o-
CREDIT PROBLEM S Stop Here
We Cen Help Loa ns Avetlable
$3,000 And Up No Fee 1- 877 ·
663 9269 Ext 221
Will P•lnt Houttt {lntenor/E11te
nor) Barna +Tin Roofs Expert
encecl References + Free Es ti·
ma~s (304)895·3981
This new pape will not
VENDING Lazy Persons Dream
Few Hrs = Gi'eat Income Pnced
To Sell Free 8roci1Ufe 800 820
6782
Openlrrg For 2 Elderly Or Handt·
ca pped Persons In Country
Home Prlvare Rooms Call Bet ween 9 A M 6 PM 740·388·
0118
Wilt Do Brush Hogg 1n g Please
Cal 7'40 245- 5560
~
& Bank Foreclosures f r na~rng
POSSible For L1511ngs Call 800
319 3323 Ex1 1709
Mother of 4 w111 babysit 1n her
ttome , reasonable ra tes . IQ.r: mDre
Into, cal\ Angela 740 985-9806
Wrll Oo Baby s•ttmg In My Home
Day Or Ntght Shift Btdwell & Ad·
dav1Ue School Drstncts Aelerenc
85 740-446-6373
""""""" 0<
based on race eobr, re1iQiCWt
sex tamikal staflJ5 or national
cn;,r.. or ar'IJ dention to
make any SUCh pete+ eo tee
limitatiOn or OI5Cni'DIAaii(Jit •
START YOUR OWN VENDIN G
dusmess Fm As Little As $10001
All CASH BUSINESSII 1-800
220-298$ 24 Hrs
CONS OL IDATE DEBT' Reo uced
Monthly Payments 20 ·50% Save
Thousands 01 Dollars In Interest
Non Prollt TCC 800-758·3844
We do lrarle r demol1ltan&so me
homes& trash pick up 304 7736167
AI real estlte ad¥er1i5log 11"1
thts I te 5papr IS SI.A:!f8a 10
the federal Farr Housing Nl
Of 1968 which makes i16!gal
to advemse ~_, poehweou
STEEL SUILOINGS Ntw MuU
SeN 4 12 P1lch. 16K24a10 Was
$7 500 Sell $3.990 2411241110
was $8,500 S.tl $41.990 1-800406-5t26
Don t g<l slung by h1gh P"'"l
Shop the clon•litd stet lOll
SEPTEMBER 21
!TUESDAY
ROBOTMAN
'
'lmltallve ' lhe boss told h1s new employee, "1s when
you do the nght th1ng w1lhout BEING TOLD "
,,
I
'.
1981 Ht Lo Camper In Excellent
Condition Call 740 388 9869 ~f
ter4PM
1992 Coleman Pop -up CampS,
Sleeps 6 $2 000 or Trade
{304)675-1105
1993, 35 rt lnnsbruck Travpl
Trailer. wfth E•pando Excelleol
Cond~lon $9,500, 740-367· 7755 •
SERVICE S
810
Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional tllalime guarantee:
local references furnished Eatabllshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446·0870, 1·800-287·0576 Rog·
ers Wate rproofing
Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Experience All Wo rk Guaranteed
French C ity Maytag 740 4'6·
7795
C&C General Home Maintenence- Pamtmg vi nyl siding,
carpentry doors, whldows, Oaths,
mobile home repair and more For
free esumate call Chet. 740·992·
6323
livingston's Basement Water
Prooll ng , all basement repairs
done tree estimates IHelim e
guarantee 12yrs on rob expenence (304)895 3887
840
Electrical and
Refrigeration
Res1dent1a1 or commerc1al wlrmg
new servtce or repairs Master Ll·
censed electrtclan Ridenour
Electrt ca 1, WV000306 304 675
1786
ASTRO-ORAI'H
VVednesday,Sepl. 22,1999
Dame Fortune mtght be making 11
easier for you in lhe year ahead 10
operate on a much grander scale than
you've previOusly expenenc::ed both
soc1ally and commercially II' II be a
sood year
·
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22J Somethmg propihous being engmeered or
negotiated by an ally m11h1 besi~ .
stirring now that would be excep-
tionally good for both you and lh1s
person. You could learn of illoday
VitJo. 1rea1 yourself 1o a birthday sill.
Send lhe rcquued refund form and for
' your Aslro-Graph predicuons for lhe
yeu ahead by maihnJ $2 and selfaddressed stamped envelope toAstroGraph, clo Ibis nc:wspaper. ~0 Box
17S8, Mwtay Hill S1a1ion. New
York, NY IOIS6 Be sure 1o slalc
your Zodaa~ s1gn
LIBRA(Sept 23-0c1 23)There"s
a strong p osslbthty you could get
mvotved m a situation today where
you would be actmg as an agent on
behal[o[anolher You'll make a good
deal that w1ll benefit you also
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov 22) Ride
the lime and be hopefulloday mslead
of 1ryins to preJudse people or
events There's a strong indication
everything wtll work out better than
you C9Uid enJIIIeer.
SAGmARIUS (Nov 23-Dec.
21) Greater remuneration from some~
thmg you've been contracted to do
mtght come your way today because
you ever wanted to trust your
msttncts to gu•de you as to where the
goose m1gh1 have laid her golden
eiJS, lhiS may be !he day IO do SO
Think bog and act boldly '" money
matters.
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Npw
Is not the day to gave up on your
dreams or des1res In fact, somelhmg
oflhc "little exlraS" you d1d on lhe
Job. You've earned it, enjoy it
'
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-San. 19)
An e~citmg new romance could be
for which you 've bi:en hoptnJ rrughl
suddenly become a realuy for you
loday
GEMINI (May 21 -Junc 20)
on the horizon today for those of you
who are unattached Your attractiveness to members of the opposite sen~
der m1ght be grealer than you
Because you'll be equally as concerned about furthenng the mterests
of others today as you w11l be your
own, your behavaor will qu1c kly and
eisily win you the approval of your
peers.
lhoUJhl
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19) Be
careful not to tip your hand prema-
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Valu·
lurely loday 1f you're nesouaung
able fnendsh1ps can be made today 1f
you get mvolved tn new acuvtttes
something of matenal value
Wa11
unlil you're ready to close and you'll
gellhe deal
PISCES (Feb ~0-March 20) Your
optimistic and expectant attitude w1ll
smooth out your path today The ease
w1th which you make things for those
who walk by your stde 1s what w1ll
do !he Irick .
ARIES (March 21-Aprii i 9) if
...
·'
Ch&longeol
..
where you'll have ample opportum Many bene-
,.
ty to meet new people
fits could result
LEO (July 23-Aug
22) An
endeavor tn w htc h you re rnvo/ved
wtth others could posstbly take a btg
tum for lhe better today. It mtght
come from oUt o f nowhere and develop into some thm g qmte large
league Baseball New Vork Mets
!
�....
~P~age---1~0~·~T~h=e=D_a=i-ly~S;e~n~·t~in:e-I;:~~~~-=--~---;:::::::::::::::P:o:m:~:ro:y::•:M:Id:d:l:ep:o:rt:,:O:h:l:o:::::::::::::::::::::::T:u:e~s=day.September21,1999
~
Time Out
Becky Baer
Meigs County
Extension
Agent,
Family and Con·
sumerScieilces
/Community
development
•
•
: . I have had . questions about the
Wisdom of betng on low-carbohyt!Tate, high:piotein diets . High-pro~in diets do not build muscle and
tiurn off fat as some people pro.,laim. .
.
·
: By eating onl y protein foods , the
~rSon is mi ssi ng out m1 man) vitamins.• minerals, carhohydrJtt.•s and
fiber that are found in fruits. v~!!cta ·
tiles a nd whole grains. B~inl! Jcfi~
~ient in these fo;ds will pn:v~nt. thc
tlody from havmg the l'ncrg~ it
needs anti the nutrients that nrc cru·
cialto fun cti on P•'operly.
• Nutritioni sts caution · atlainst tlu.::
. lO w ~ c arboh ydratc' , high-pr otein di~t s
[or several qthcr rl·asnns . as w...-11.
:I;'he hody' s use "u f insuhn is v n~:
~aj or oppositi on Lo thr u~c nf high QTOtein di ets.
In sulin is ·csscmial in dcposiun~
(at in fat ce lls. The fat mav ...·o m~..·
(tom the foods we cat or m;.uic in the
liver. Insulin l"Un also reduce tht> lat
fCJeascd from the fat l'~.-·lb. \Vhcn
there is a rcductioh in the consump·
tion of carbOhydrates. the hody docs
hot release as mud1 i1isulm .. Thl!~uses more movement of f:u rwm·
· the fat cells.
, · Within ~ short tunc , th e Cells
W:ljust to thi s vcrv ln w level or
insulin , If the dieter. overeats on l'arbohydratcs at some point. there will
be. an in crease in e~· l U(:osc "lJing fmm
t.jle blood into the cell s. Potass ium is
also taken into the ce.lls "ith the •lu-
~.?..~~'~.~~..,, """' L. .
with sodium and powssium . lndtviduals arc •omctimcs encouraged to
ta~e P<llasS~um supp leme nts W
co unteract the mtneral deficiency
that resu lts.
In .tddi tton 10 causing und ue
slrain on the liver and de pleting the
body uf energy. high-protein diets
ca n affect the kidneys. The kidneys
have to work clVertimc to break
down the execs~ prm~ins · t hal arc
excre ted in the urine . This can he
quite . inconvcn ic.nt and dangerous
lor athlete >. The '"1°Y will not onl y
Th..'rd to urinal~ more frcque mly. but
with the mhlctc"s already large l osscs of WJII.::r thrinJgh perspiration.
Llchydrminn ma~ al~o dl!vclop .
1 "-" 0 "
pcopll'
wh' 1
>J:rc •amng
ad\ ocate~ of thl..'~c dtcb Thcv. havl'
gr.Hn ,.;.
~hou iJ
L
-
.
~ w~~ ~""'~~~~~rr,?~!~E.~?K~~ "'"'' ...:~. '"' '"~""" "' .J
Mary Ju Barringer led the pledge
service, '" Respo nding 10 God 's
Word", when Alfred Unt teJ
Methodist Women met at the church
on Sept. 14. Worship center featured
a cross; Bible . and candles. Service
opened with group singing of "How
Great Thou Art " and prayer.
Barringer read Daniel 6 and led
.. Our Rcspons~ " anti ''Pl edge Scrvtcc" with all taking part. Plcdg,,.
WL' fl' made tn cnnll!luc ,1ur \~ork in
sc rvtcc and contri but ions.
The husincss meeting was
opened wilh prayer by Nina Robinson and re<tlli ng ofJhc Purpose. Sec-
'"'
pastors
to the present-day 40,000
paslOrs.
Shara h Caldwell had the prayer
calendar and chose Joce lyn Roper,
deaconess in lai)y, West Ohio Conlcrcrn:c. Worthington. The society
>igncd a birthday card for her.
Pasto r Sharon Hausman then
jomed the group and gave the grace
hcr,1rc the refreshments se rved by
Nellie Parker.
The nc:xt meeting will be Oct. 12
ntthl: ~:hur...:h . Florence Ann Spencer
wllllc·ad the program. Refrelhmt nts
,.,,ill he pot luck.
- ---
rctarv Martha Ponlc and Treasurer
Osk. MJe Follrod gave the ir reports.
T he
Adu lt fe males age 19-24
h;n't' 46 grams: 25 years and
oh.k r should haYe 50 gram s. Pregnant woml.!n ~hou ld ha\'C 60 gram s
of protein dail y; nurs ing mothers
:-.hLJuld ha' c 6;i grains for ·the first
:. ix mnnth~ anU (12 grams fnr th t! set: mld six months.
Athlete:-; ~mly need a litt le more
protein tha n no n athlet es. One more
sen 1ng from the Jnl'aL fish, poultry,
· dn~d bl!an ~ <.J. nd nuts group or the
da iry ~roup wil j he sufficien t. Extra
oose.
• This s udd en decrease in hlood protl'ln doC:. not huild more muscle ·
onl y rc~ular physical activity and
~otassi um can damage the heart. If a
dieter dec ides to cat carbohyd rates train ing builds mu s~k stre ngth and
again, they must be i nt rudu n~d slow· SII.C .
ly into the diet in order to pre ve nt
. One last worJ ag:unsl the hight.\lis imbalan ~e from occurring .
prntt:in di ets. Tlic ex tra prote in is not
Another problem thlll ca ri be storcJ in the hody for fu ture usc as
caused by low-carbohydrate. htgh- protein . It may he used for energy
protein diets is a cond itinn called (but not as efficiently 'as carbohyl{etosis: Weakness. nausea and dehy - drates) or stored as body fat. Mun y
dration result when fat (instead of times hi gh-protein foods arc also
carbohydrates) becomes the major foods that lrC high in fat . so it
fuel for the liver. Substances ca lled Ucfcats the p urpo~e o.f try in g to lose
ketone bodies result from the incom- weight by only eating protein foods.
P-lete ox idation of fauy ac ids. They
~
u- .......
·
f ncn
· d shtp
· ca 1Is were
Twcnty -nme
1\ lSI wci.c:
ht
hc~.:auso,;
they
h;n
t'
·
oc~.:.·n
.
rq10ncd. Bu ~ m .:ss Lli~cu s~ 1 o n s were
d 11 ~ ...·1y \\ •11 "-~ hing what thL"y . ~. at. on . . - hOllsing people for fivt• -star·
r! l t') would llbl' \\c•ght 0 11 a \\ell gi' ing. raisin~ annual dues. · suhhalanc~d d l ~l . t~Hl. If 111 ~~ raid that snipt inns for UMW magaLi ncs : ·and
much ~mcntidll hl i1. \Vith a well -hal ·
F
ancCd
diet tile) \v.ouiJ h.: .).!cllill.l! tht~ . do n:.Jt ion s ID l'st i\al ofS hari.ng .
Thelm~ Hc nt.il'rslm gave a repop
n.lHnt· nto; the~ nerd insll:aLI tlf ta~in g on the difkrt~ n ,,:~s hct\·WC n thl· first
num'unnal ~upplc lllc·ms. The n1p id • a1inua l Ml' th oJis"l Confcrcm:c hdd
Wl.!n!IH
. Inss is in lh~ form
· 1792 .and lljc pn:~
, ·o f water an Bal1in10rc Ill
l o~s. nnt hod"'
1".11 .
J
:-;c nt·duy ccmfcrcrh:c : more dch:H-
Kcum11nc ndcd
D ic t ~; ry
Al!~nva n cc-: gi\t' n hy tnc National
A~.1dl·my 1.1f St:ll' n(r.:S suggests that
adu lt male.; .t~c 19 -2-l should con~u m.: 5X grams uf pnl!t:m c;ll'h day:
25 y.:~tr-• and older slw uld have 63
Wednesday
-~==========~
Nciglcr reuhion held
The ann ual reunion of the Ralph
and ks~-.· Ncigler famil y was heiQ
"Sept. 12 :ll the Star Mill Park in
Raci ne.
Prayer wa~ g iven hy Dorothy
Yate s preceding the potluck dinner.
All~IH.Iing from Racine were:
Ralph and Ed na Nciglcr; .Bru...: e ,Nciglc_r: Kenn y and Ivanna Nci gler and
· Curtis and Jarchildrr:.n Manhcw.
Cummins; Sarah and Rodney Nci glcr; Bob and Dorothy Harden:J.i!n
and Pam Foreman and ctiiidr~
Amanda and Erin from Portland:
Dorothy Yates. Don and Angie
Harden, Mike and Beth Harden, D.
J. and Stacy Harden and children
Wesley and Michaela from Oak
Hill : Wanda Neigler of Syracuse;
Mark and Nola Proffiu and daughter
Liz from Ponwroy; Linda Davi s of
Gallipolis: Matt and Joy Matthews
and children Tim. Sarah and Madison from Grove City: John and
Tammy Nelson and children Jljhn
William and Heath from Mi ddle pod: Bri an and P3ge Harden and
sc ripture Galations 6:1-5 which
Dorothy Jeffers read to open the
recent meeting of the Rock Springs
United Methodist Women.
The group sang "Open My Eyes "
and "Love Lifted Me." The Purpose
was read in unison. Leah Ord gave
the treasurer 's report and Pandora
Collins. tile sccf~tary ·s report .
Prayer for the sick was by Dee ·
c hildren Andrea. Ashley and Alysha
d onati o n tor blankets to the fe stival.
Jayne from Point Pleasant , W.Va.,
Drusi lla Hou se. Jitn and Louise
Smith. Meli ssa Bader and c hildren
Matt , Mills and Mason frOm Ha it i ~
mo re , 10hio.
Oct. 10 was de signated as Blanket
..1.
Rock · Springs United Methodi~t
\\'omen
Reagan associates.
"As long as he .levels w'ith the
reader, I don't think it 's a problem. "
·said David McCullough , Pulit Ler
Pri ze winner for his book on Harry
Truman.
"Dutch'" was commi ssio ned in
the mid- 1980s, when R.eagan was
pre~idcnt, and Morris was given ·
exte nsive access for an au1horized
biography. His approach is highly
unu sual for hiography. but it 's com-.
mon for fi ction:
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middl eport
Neig hb or hood Watch meeting
Tuesday. 7 p.m_at the Middleport
·
Church of Christ.
a
Meigs volleyballers win two, Page 8
.Ann on family issues, Page 9
Family Medicine, Page 10
Today: Sunny
High: 60s; Low: 40s
Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 70s; Low: 50s
downReds~2
---:-Page 7
•
The Fcsuval or Shan ng will be~~
Pl'aiil"s United Meth od ist
Church on Oct. 14' beginning at 7
p.m. Severa l memhe rs plan to
auenJ anJ will take hea lth kits .
baby quil t ~ . sc.:hoo l supplies 5nd a
Sunday to gi~c all ch urch all endants
a ch<:~ncc to rarti<:ipatc if they
dcs1rc . The hlankcts cost $5 each ·
and are much-need ed in tlood and
earthquake areas.
L<..'nor;~ Lcilhcit sh ow~d ~ fill!l
and .gave .a tulk oil Althcinicr~.
....
The clo~ in g prayer wois by · Virg"i.ni a Wear~. follom.nl," by refresh :
mcnt s.
·
phy.
" ll's such a beautiful afternoon
here on Mnrtha"s Vineya rd that I
.thoug l11 I'd go help John Adams
mQW hay."' he said With a laugh.
will in"ce t, 8 tun . Meet at tile
hoinc of Jan e Walton to car pool
for lhc Dresd en trip .
Bl' Iil
WEDNESDAY
COOLVILLE ;- Revival se rvjces at White's Chapel Wc s·
leyan Church. Coolville. Wedne sREEDSVILLE - RLvcrview
day through Sunday, 7 p.m. each Garden Club meeting. 8 p.m. at
POM EROY - Auxiliary of .eve ning with Sunday services al the home of Mar y Alice Bi sc .
the Eagles. Tuesday. 7:30 p.m. at 10. a.m. and 7 p.m . Dr. John F. In stallati on of office rs will 'be
th e hall.
·
Hay will be the evange li st. Pastor held .
Phillip Ridenour , pastor, invites
· CHESTER -'-' Chester Council the public .
POM EROY
and
323. Daughters of America, TuesCou ntry Expo Com mittee meet day. 7:30p.m. at the hall . Silent
RACINE -,- Special mc ettn g in g, 7:30 p 111. at the Meigs
auction. quarterly birthdays to be of the Pomeroy -Racine Masoni c . County Fairgrou nd s. All perso n ~
obse rved .
. Lodge 164 F&AM will b~ held int cre stc.d in th e Expo are invited
·
Wednesday. 7 :30 p.m. with work to attend .
MIDDLEPORT - State Rep . in the third degree. Food and
John Carey, R-Well ston , will con- refreshments \': ill be se rved.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tup·
duct an open door sess ion at the ·
pers Plains Veterans of Foreig n
Middl eport Village Hall from 2 to THURSDAY
Wars Po st 9053 meeti ng. 7:3 0
· 3 p.m. o n Tuesday.
POMEROY - Pre ce ptor Bet a p .m . Name dr~wing w he held .
~· ~own
'
Meigs County's
·Hometown Newspaper
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
Volum e 50, Number 74
Single Copy- 35 cents
New community forms. on 620 acres in Scipio Township
Wisteria
to include nature preserveI campground
.
.
By BRIAN J . REED
In addition, the group also plans to put the land Jo
Sen~nel News Staff
work. Many of the members of Wisteria have interest and
. Rtght of~ State Route 684 and just over a hill in Sci· background in the area of medicinal plants and native
pto Townshtp IS a untque communtly, or at the very least, . herbs, and Suggs said that a "cottage industry" of cultithe begmntngs of a umque commumty.
·vating these plants will eventually be started, and that the
Its name, ~tstena, e.mbodtes the love of nature and land will also be used to grow food for the community.
It sounds like a commune, but Suggs said that there is
the gentle envtronmcnt .that members of the community
hope to foster on .620 acres in Scipio Township. ·
an impcrtant distinction between a commune and the
Wisteria is loca~ed between Harrisonville and "intenjional community" that is being established at Wis~ageville on a hilly terrain created by years of strip min·
teria: members of Wisteria do not share income, as memtng. Now reclaimed and green with trees and native bers of a commune do.
Sitting in a cool and shady clearing on the property
plants, the land is being developed into a combined
nature preserve, residential community and campground, known as "Hickory Grove," one of several such areas on
for use by like.-minded groups who wish to join in the the property which have been developed as refuge areas
Wisteria mission of loving the land and caring for the . for ,meetings, classes, and even more social gatherings ·
·
.
·
' such as weddings, Suggs said last week that the underearth.
·
. The land was purchased in 1996 by a group of friends taking is nothing unusual, really.
\(This is just a community," S~ggs said. "If you think
who had met through various otganizations, music festivals and other gatherings. 10 households now occupy the about i~ it 's a lot like how people used to fonn a town.
land - some pennanently, others on weekends and hoi - We have organized, and now we are pl.anning how to ·use
idays.
the land, how we will generate income, where the memThe group hopes to generate enough revenue from the bers of the community will live, and how we will use the
campground operation, which is licensed by the slate, to common areas of the property."
pay the expenses of building .construction and other
The group's board meets once a month ·and oversees
improvements.
the financial operations and the future planning of the
Wisteria member Charlene Suggs said that the camp· community.
ground is designed more for groups than for ind,ividuals . "We 're all involved on several levels,". Suggs said.
or families who wish to spend a weekend in aJent The "We're involved on an emotion~) level, an ideolog[cal
group hopes to attract workshops, classes, gatherings of level, and an organizational level, so you have to put
lant11cvers and musical festivals to the area. .
them all together and try to make. it work."
"It's an e?ucation in h~n.esty,"
.
·
, ~uggs satd thatthts s~tnt ofcooperalion, often lack-
Equally i~pcrtant 10 the me~bers of the ~steria
commumty ts a good relalionshtp wtth the ne•ghbors.
She said that those who live around the property have
been eager to help, and that the owner.; of Wi steria have
been just · ~ anxious to. be good neighbors, not only to
those living around them , but to the count~ in general.
·"We want to be part of. the business fabric of the coun,
ty," Suggs said. "We want to be valuable to the neighbors
and to our communi ty.''
tng m modem commumttes, ts 1mpcrtant to the success
of Wistena.
"Peop!e haven't learned to cooperate very well,"
~uggs srud, "and that's pan of the problem . We' re worktng here·so that we can have the time we need and the
stuff that we want. It's that simple."
Yulia Sulo, a native of Bavarian Germany, has built
the first permanent home at Wisteria. She r;::-;:-----:-c-r----::;:--;~;r:,!li
is proud of her rustic cabin, surrounded
"' '
~
by a g(een meadow which will one day be
planted in gardens.
'
She is, she said, happy at Wisteria. She
shares respcnsibility for the project with
other member.; of the com munity, but
als<i enjoys the privacy and solitude that
her home affords her.
Last week, the first child, a little girl,
was born on the property, and will join
eight other children who belong to the
community.
Workers with the reclamation and
forestry departments are working closely
with the group so that the land can con·
tinue to heal from its bout with strip min- t--:c======:-!:.-;,~~~5_\~:::,~~~,-=-:::_·_.:.:~
ing, and plans are underway for a watershed project.
VISIT WISTERIA - Students participating In "Living with
Watching the'land recover, and seeing the Earth," a survival akills courae, visited the rolling hills of
more vegetation and other woodland life the Wisteria campgrounds this past weekend , Here, Trenton
return to the site have been rewarding for Harper of Elkins, W.Va. helps John Dittrich with his flre-bulldthese lovers of the earth.
lng s .kllla.
.... ~¢1Cefe!lerf!u~f!~s~plan. to No Pomeroy Police Auxiliary this year
;·shore
un
m1ners ·.benefitS
',
•
·fW:
'
..
By JIM FREEMAN
In other law ·enforcement business, Miller
Vaughan read a letter from Village Admin istra·
Sentinel Newa Staff
introduced new part-time dispatchers J"!!te Hoi- tor John Anderson referring to comments about
By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
of money in August, t.hey're going to
. Pomeroy Vill~g.e Council prob~bly won't c~n- man ~nd Tammy Smith to council.
Pomeroy water in an earlier newspaper >tory
Auoclllttld Press Writer
have a hard time explaining that, if stder the pcsstbthty of reestabhshtng a police
Mtller also requested the purchase of three about Middlepcrt's water problems.
ST. ALBANS, W.Va. -Sen. lay thty're running for president, or department auxiliary - at least until the begi,n- radios for about $300 each with money to come
Pomeroy is able to supply water to Midd lepcrt
nmg of next year.
·
from law enforcement trust fund or safety fund . and hooking onto Pomeroy water will not require
Rockefeller says he will pressure the whatever," Rockefeller said.
Clinton administration and Congress
The Combined Benefit Fund, ~reJoe Kirby, Joe Kirby Jr. and Shannon Walker Council approved the request.
additional treatment faci lities for Middl eport, he
to support a plan ·to resolve the ated by federal law . in .1!!92,_pays met with council and Mayor Frank Vaughan MonDuring open discussion, Councilman Larry said.
financial woes of. a fund that pays h~alth costs for approltimately day nigh\ conecmlnfl t~e projlosed auxiliary Wehru~g asked for a report on the riverbank
Tbe bottom line is t~l Pomeroy water is high·
health benefits .to retired coal min- 70,000 retired members of the Unit- force. The subject of a police department auxil: cleanup and said he has received complaintS cori- ly reliable and th at plans call fo r adding a new
ers.
ed Mine ·workers and their depen· iary to augment the regular police force has cerning broken parking meters.
well. and treatment fa cili ties to the Pom eroy water
Rockefeller, D-W,Va., met Tues- dents.·
sprung .up occasionally in recent years, with no
Councilman George Wright also discussed system, he said.
day with ·retired miners and widows .
The law assigned lialiility for the action by council.
·
parking meters, but said council should consider
"Middlepcrt can so lve its water problems by '
lo explain a plan to finance the ben- retirees' care to their last responsible .
Council members ·did not elaborate on their removing them instead of repairing them .
choosing the Pomeroy alterhative," Anderson ·
efits with earnings from the $1.4 bil- employer, and created a separate apparent decision to pass over the auxiliary.
Wright said he attended meeting about com- wrote.
ln. other busi ness, counCi l:
lion Abandoned Mi}1e Lands fund fund to finance "orphans" - former . Vaughan indicated COUI!cil was not interested ·in peting with Wal-Mart and said that parking
administered by the U.S. Depart- miners whose last known employer forming a police auxiliary at this .time, but may meters are a major obstacle to business in town.
-Accepted sole bids of $505 and $551 for th e
ment of the Interior.
has gone ou t o f bus mess
·
- th at use d cons1·der lhe pcsst'b"1l"tly next year when more
"Personally I'm in favor of taking them out," old pel ice cruiser and dump truek, respectively.
The senator said he has discussed interest from the Abandoned Mine funding is available
he said.
-Heard a complaint by Rev. Don Fritz who
the plan with Interior Secretary Land funds.
· Vaughan also said the trio should have gone . • He also asked if the village was making any said people are parking· across his driveway dur!i~~~~o~a~~i~~~dO~~i~~: ~;~:~r!hc~ theBiaut sowmeree 60filedlegbal cha11e,:gest to :•through channels" with Police Chief Jeff Miller progress in getting grant funds to -demolish the ing Meigs High School .home games.
1 ·
w
Y co~1o,...ra or.; Ill makmg lhetr complaml'
· .dilapidated Sugar Run School building. which is
- Met in executive session to discuss personMining. Both were skeptical, Rock- and former operators. The lawsuits
The junior Kirby said the auxiliary would not now owned by the village.
nel matters.
.
efeller said.
upset the fund's actuarial balance, ~ost anything and would provide valuable trainCouncilman David Ballard said the village
Also present were Treasurer Kathy Hysell,
He won 't be afraid to bring polit- which is expected to be $13 million mg to new officerswhile helping to make police needs to do core drilling on sinkholes on Butter- council members Scott Dillon and Gcri Walton
ical pressure to bear on Clinton in debt by Oct. 1. The fund is run- patrols safer for regular officer<.
· nut Avenue before paving begins.
'
and Fire Chief Chris Shank.
'
'
appcintees, the president or the vice ning a deficit of about $50 million a
president, Jl.ockefeller said.
"lfthe(heallhcare)fundrunsout
Continued In
"Miners8eneflts"onpage3
Regional Briefs
Environmental activist sues Athens sheri
ATHENS (AP) -An environmental activist filed a lawsuit accusing an
Athens County sheriff's deputy of punching him in the jaw.
Chad Kister also alleges in the lawsuit filed Tuesday in Athens County
Common Pleas Court that Sheriff David Redecker did not investigate his
complaint thoroughly.
. .
.
Kister said the alleged auack occurred on Dec. 6, 1997, .when he was in
the county jail. after being arrested on charges of attemp(ing to exto1t
money from a United Mine Workers official.
He later was found innocent of those charges.
Kister is asking for at least $25,000 in damages in the suit, which lists
Redecker and Deputy Bill McMillan as defendants.
The sheriff and McMillan could not be reached to comment.
Telephone messages were left for them at ihe sheriff's office Wednesday.
·
Prosecutor Bill Biddlestone said he would have to discuss the suit with
the sheriff and county commissioners before deciding whether it will be
handled by his office or the county's insurance company.
People feel ground trembl~ east of Cleveland
, WILLOUGHBY (AP) - People in •communities east of Cleveland
reported what they believed was a small earthquake today. No damage or
·
injuries were repcrted.
,• Monitors at the U.S. Geological
·
Survey National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colo., did
not indicate a quake, said geophysicist John Minsch .
·
"It's possible something small
3 Sections - 24 Pages
could have occurred," he said.
The Oeveland Museum of Nalur·
10
Calendar
al History has earthquake monitor-~Cdla!!!s~s!!ili!.!teiJ!d!.s_ _ _ _l!,3!.!&!.!!!14
ing equipment. The staff member
Corilics
IS
who checks it was not immediately
Editorials
2
available for comment
Police departments in Willoughby
Local
3
and nearby Wickliffe received a few
Spor1s
7&8
calls from the public about the
shaking at about6 a.m.
3
Weather
"It was no big deal,' ' said Wickliffe
Dispatcher Tracy Cooper.
Lotteries
was shakirig a little bit "
Willou ghby · Police Lt. Dani el
OHIO
·
Ouior
said he was woken up at
Pick 3: 5-8-2; Pil'k 4: 2-7-9-7
home
by
the shaking and· saw his
BuckeyeS: 3-10-18-25-28
lamp moving.
W.VA.
Ohio has had 120 earthquakes in
Daily 3: 4-8-5; Daily 4: 7-1-4· 1
the
pas't 200 years, most of them
C \999 Ohio Valley Puhli~hing Co .
minor.
Good Afternoon
1
Today's
Sentinel
:·u
.
'
.I
San Diego
Th ~
·· Bear Yc One Annthcrs ' Bur-
McCullough, reached Monday hy
phone in hi s Massachusells home,
joked about the oddity of splicing
together elements of .fiction and
nonfiction in presidential biogra-
Septemb« 22, 1Wll
Rader.
New book on Ronald Reagan mixes fiction with .a little history
NEW YORK CAP) - In Edmund
Morris' new biography of Ronald
Reag;m, the Pulitler Prize-\vinning
author uses·~ tl';chnique more in the
spirit of '"Forrest Gump"' than historical sc holarship.
. Morris 'invents a narrator to l1clp
frame the fom1er president 's lire.·
And not just any narrator - it' s a
fe llow named "Edmund Morri s.·· a
ficti onal contemporary of Reagan 's.
So while the author was ))orn
nearl y 30 years after hi s subject. he
places himself alongside Reagan on
the football field, the co llege cam·
pus and at the: Army Air Force's
moti on picture unit.
Few have seen advanced co pies .·
of '" Dutch,"' which will go. on sale
next week. but it has already been
debated hy historian s,· crit1 cs and
.
Weather
La·w wo uId m·and ate t oug. her
.
.
CINCINNATI (AP) - A man accused of driv.ing drunk into a crowd of people at an Oktober·
fest' celebration downtown could have faced a
tougher sentence if a propcsed law had been in
effect. ·
.
The tougher drunken-driving proposal is
.snagged in negotiations over how the state would
compensate local governments for the longer DUI
sentences.
The state Senate has approved the measure,
which awaits final action in the House.
Under the propcsed law, the driver of a car that
plowed into a crowd of people Sunday evening
could be considered a "high·end" DUI offender
and face a more severe jail sent'ence.
Michael Cowperthwaite, 25, of Union Town· ship in Clermont County, pleaded innocent Tuesday ,to felony charges of aggravated vehicular
assault, leaving the scene of an· accident and flee- had a blood-alcohol concentration level in exce.~s
ing and eluding pclice. Bond was set at $225,000. of 0. 15. "
·
If convicted on all charges, he could face more .
It is Cowperthwaite's first DUI charge, pelice
than three years in jail.
said.
Police said Cowperthwaite was driving with a
The House Criminal Ju stice Committee is con.
blood-alcohol limit of 0.209- more than twice sidering Johnson's leg islati on and is negotiating
the legal limit in Ohio- when he drove his car with local governm ents over increased lines that
through barricades and injured 29 people.
could compensate. them for the ir added costs .
, The bill that passed the Senate in April would
"' I definitely think it 's a good bill,." said Nora
categorize drivefs with a blood-alcohol levels of Banks, vice chairwoman of field services for
0.17 percent or higher as "high-end" DUI offend· Mothers Against Drunk Driving's Ohio chapter.
ers.
·
" Anything that can be done to prevent someone
"Drivers with blood-alcohol concentrations of from continually drinking and drivi·ng is good. "
0.15 or rnore are atleast200 times more likely to
John son's legislation would significantly
be in ~olved in fatal crashes than the average non· increase the penalty for second fe lony DUI
drinking driver," said the bill's sponsm, slate Sen. offenses. Judges could se ntence offende rs to up to
Bruce Johnson, R-Columbus. " In 1996, 31 per- ti ~e years in prison, in stead of the current maXI cent of ·all fatally injured ·drivers, ages. 25 to 45, mum 18 months.
Both parties seek ways to protect Social Security surplus
By ALAN FRAM ·
billion.
'
Asaoelated Press Writer
But this goal - which Cl in ton and DemocWASHINGTON (AP) - Both parties are • rats also share- marks an abrupt turnaround.
hunting for ways to avoid raiding , next year's Spending Social Security surpluses has long
Social Securi!y surplus, even though they have · been standard procedure in Washington.
routine·ly spent it for the past five decades and
The last time at least some of it was not used
may end up doing so again in 2000.
to finance general government prog~ams was
With the stm of fiscal 2000 just nine days 1951.
away, Republicans are stepping up their drive
But after two years of partisan maneuvering
to complete many of the new year's spending over ·the huge p~nsion program for the elderly
bills on time .
.
and disabled, the pol itical dynamic has
So far, Congress 1\as.completed just four of changed. Clinton issued a call to "save Social
the l3 bills requ ire d to keep the government Security first," Republican s co untered by pushrunning .
ing a "lock box" plan to prevent th e draining of
Republicans say ·lhe·y will help pay for the Social Security funds, and now each party says
bills with most of next year's projected $14 bil- it will leave the money alone.
lion non -Social Security surplu s, which is
"The surplus has taken o n a' symbolic mean building up reserves to handle the retirements ing that you won ' t erode benefits," said Mar of baby boomers as they begin a decade from shall Wittmann, who is congressional affairs
now.
director at the conservative Heritage Founda· Republicans also .will use budget devices lion . 1
.
, that would shift billions in spending in,to fiscal
Asked to explain the sudden importance of
2001 -thereby easing their fiscal2000 spend- leaving Social Security surpluses alone, Whit e
ing problem .
.
House budget office spokeswo man Linda Ricci
GOP leaders also may declare the $1.4 bil- said Clinton has helped create a cliniale in
li on budgeted next year for hom~· heating aid which protecting the prog ram is a priority,
for the pcor to be a budget "e mergency."
"and that doesn't happen overnight."
That would let them circumvent spending
On Tuesday, House Majority Leader Dick
limits impcsed two years ago as part of a bal- Armey, R-Texas, told reporters that Republi anced-budget agreement with President Clin- cans would not touch SociaL Security s urplu ses
ton .
in 2000 or beyond, calling it " the legislative
Republicans hope ·that in the end, .they will opport unity of a lifetime and a moral responsibe able to claim they did nonpend next year's bility that 's as large as anything I've encoun·
Social Security s urpl us, projected to· be $147 tered in this job."
(
•
o·uI.sent ences .·
,..
' But he. didn't men.tion 1999 or prc;_1 ous
years. Asked later why it has beer all right to
spend Soc.ial Security funds unti l now. he said,
"We 're getting there as qui ckl y as we can . ...
Thi s year suffers a hangover from 40 years of
the wrong policy."
Even ·so. Republican le aders pushing a near
$8 Hill ion emergency relief package for farmers
want to enact the legisl ation quickly. so they
can spend $5.5 bi llion of it in the remaining 10
days offiscal 1999.
That would help them achici'C their promise
to leave next year 's Socia l Security .surplus
alone, but would still reduce the $125 billion
Social Security surplus projected for this year.
Even without the added farm spending, the
White House e.xpecis $24 billion in Soctal
Security surpluses to be used in 1999 for gcn·
eral government purposes.
The nonpartisan Congressional Bu<(get
Office projects that $4 bill io n will be used. .
There are man y claims on the Social Sccuri·
ty money. In a letter last month, the Congres·
sional Budget Office· said House budget pro·
posals, if enacted, would erase the $14 billion
and eat into the Social Security surplus by an
additional $13 billion .
That doesn't include th e billions it will take
to pay for the huge labor, health and ed ucation
bill , which has not yet been written. And it
omits pctential new needs such as U.S. ope.ra·
ti.ons in Kosovo, relief from Hurricane Floyd's
lloods, earthquake aid to Turke y and peacekeeping in East Timor.
·'
•
�
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09. September
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September 21, 1999
gleason
greenlee
yost