<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7826" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7826?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-05T14:28:03+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18239">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/156f51ace53365c818f7b9f11ff30a77.pdf</src>
      <authentication>dc9657ba2f57831c0adf509b5ac6b1e2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="25427">
                  <text>--

.••
..•"

•

••• Da • 6••N~ 11imrt ·fHntintl

•f

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaunt, WV

..•."

'

tomized !Jeauty products and
exclnsive images services.
.
Image services include complimentary skin condition analysis
with patented skin sensors, professional
color
analysis
and
makeovers. BeautiControl Image
consultants also offer customized
skin care and nutritional supplements, revolutionary skin repair,
color-coded cosmetics, therapeutic
spa treatments, wellness products
and a vitamin-enriched men's line.

•
~

~
: ' · PO~y - Rocky Hupp,
: .' an agent with Monumental Life
: •·fi:aunnce Co., was recendy recog:
nized as a top~

•

ranking agent
and presented

;

an award.

~
~

He attained
the ranking of
:
11 out of all
~
agents located
in 267 offices
•"~
nation~de. and
j,
qualified for the
~
annual confer:: :once in Orlando in three months
C instead of the !Hual 12 months that
~ ;it usually 12kes.
~ ' Hupp joined Monumental in
1 • · February bringing ~th bim over
,20 yean ofsuccessful customer serr • vice insu1211ce experience.

Moe»rewins
promotion

l

••
.

..

•·

: .Owner of the year
••

· LANCASTER - Bruce Cork,
..' ·!ihaws
Restaurant &amp; Inn in IAn~

NEW BUSINESS OPENS -

Swords Carpet Restoration Service has
recently opened, operated by, from left, Steve Swords, his wife Car·
olyn, son-in-law Sam and daughter Raina. The business restores car·
pets and upholstery. Steve Swords is a longtime area resident, retired
Army ROTC instructor and remains active in veterans affairs. To con·
tact the business, call 245-9742 or 1-888-803-1168.

'• castet, was named Owner/Opera; , tor of the Year by the Central Ohio
chasing Shaw's in 1975.
•r •Restaurant Association.
: .. At a recent meeting, Cork was
!: recognized for his dedication and
~ ·cootributions to his industry as
:- ~ll as his good neighbor service

:. .· tO his community.
a graduate of the Univer:: sity of Illinois, served in various
: .rnanagemertt positions in Chicago,
~ _Cincinnati and Ohio before pur-

·~ . , Cork,

Achieves Unit
VIP level

GALLIPOLIS BeautiControl, a leading direct sales image,
skin care, cosmetics and wellness
company, announced that Kim

Frazier of Gallipolis achieved the
level ofUfiit VIP by demonstrating
uncommon excellence in leadership and selling.
As an independent BeautifulControl Image consultant, Frazier
offen a personalized parties, cus-

GALLIPOLIS ·- Tom Moore of
Gallipolis recendy became materials manager with Holzer Clinic.
A 1983 graduate of Gallia Academy
High
School, Moore
graduated fiom
Winthrop University in 1988
with a bachelor
of
science
degree in marketing
and
finance.
Moore came
to Ho12er Clinic as its staffing coordinator fiom
the U Diversity of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College in
1994. In June 1995, he became
branch manager of Holzer Clinic
Lawrence County at Proctorville.

•--.J

t.~rd

.tH e currendy serves as executive
director for the Greater
uwrence County Chamber of
Commerce. He is also a board
director for the American Cancer
Society, and a member of the Gallipolis Recreational Advisory
~rd and ClifiSide Golf Course.
';Tom is responsible for manag1
ing the purchase and distribution
of several million dollars in medical
and administrative supplies and
equipment to support Holzer
Clinic's seven operating locations;·
said Jim Blevins, the clinic's associate dministrator.
"~ Of" excited to have someone.M-!hTom's knowledge of clinic otJebtions and management skill
in tbi~J&gt;osition~· he_added.
MI!IDle and his wife Beth are the
parents of two sons, Ethan and

MARIETTA Robert W.
"Bob" Price has been elected a
director of Peoples Bancorp Inc.
His term began Sept. 1 and will
continue until April 11, 2001,
when he is expected to be notninated to continue his directorship
for a three-year term at the annual
shareholden meeting on April 12,

2001.
Price, an Athens native, is president of Smith Concrete, Chesterhill Stone Co. and Price Inland
Terminal Co. He has also worked
as a territory manager for Worthington Industries in Columbus.

Evan.,~·,,

·'"'""

~I

Champion reports
eamings

man Joins

· · ATM Plus

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Champion
Industries
Inc.
announced net income of
$452,000, or 5 cen!S per share for
its third quarter.
The total compares to net
income of$256,000, or 3 cents per
share, for the third quarter of 1999.
Net income for the nine months
ended July 31 was S1,644,000, or
17 cel)ts per share, comRared to
$2,248,000, or 23 cents per share,
for the same period in 1999.

GALLIPOLIS - Fred Shockley
of Gallipolis has joined ATM Pl&lt;H
Inc. as director of financial equipment sales and technical support
for the southern Ohio, West Virginia apd Eastern Kentucky
region.
Shocklir brings 21 years of
experience to the position, having
had si~ responsibilities ~th
Standard· rm and Diebold.
Cinci .. ti-based ATM Plus

'·

..

. ,.

~

Money

•

~

•
L•PIIpDI
..••
•
: farmen since 1975. Its team
~

of
;; professional analysts D'ale
:: Durchholz, Dan Zwicker and
: Roger Norem- have more than
: 70 years of combined market
! :.dvisory experience, and their
:; "icpertise is sought around the
::: \Yodd, including Canada, Hong
:: Keng and South Africa.
::
In addition to market informa: tion, AgriVisor helps farmers
: know what the information

I

•'

means, what impact it will have
on the markets and what action
farmers should take to profit fiom
the market .
Because this offer is free to
Ohio Farm Bureau member.
only, please contact our county
Farm Bureau office for a membership application. Our number
is 1-800-777-9226. A $250 value,
AgriVisor access will more than
pay for your membership, and
AgriVisor access is at your finger- l
tips, www.olbf.org.
Smith is OfRanizationa/ Jirec·

.•,

aill

!

•

tor for the Athens, Gallia and
Uwrenct co1mti~s' Farm Bureau.)

.
•
:.*' ----------------------------------------------------Ag news
•'•·.
Pepper producer" If you are
~es
....•
not spraying insecticides every
LChLPIIpDI

::.

quarter of the kernel.
J · :Keep in mind that waiting until
::: bl:lcklayer will almost always
: result in corn being too dry for
: proper paclting and fermentation,
: especially in horizontal and
: upright, top loading silos.
~ For more information, please
: call the Extension Office at 446:: 7007.
11

l

•

.

seven days, you will not l;&gt;e abk to
control European Corn Borer. If'
The former 7- 14 day spray ~
schedule was revised weeks ago
because it does not ·provide adequate control. Please spray every
seven days.

'

ljennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia
CountyJ- Extensio,J agent for agricultur~ and natrmll l'f.'SOIIrces Ohio State
Uniwrsiry.)
1

.
:. --------------------------------~---------------••
Kneen
iJ fnNnPIIpDI
..t

"
I
l::

How are your hay and pasture
~ field yields?
Reports are coming in that this
; will be a great hay quantity year
(five to eight tons per acre); how•
ever, quality may be questionable
due to excess rainfall and difficul11! ties in harvesting. If you are in
need of extra pasture or feed this
winter, consider utilizing your
fescue field 'as winter pasture for
your catde, dry dairy cows or

t

sheep.

4'

il,

High protein feed can be
obtained from properly managed
fescue pastures. In addition,
all~ng livestock to graze ·o utside normally improves their
health condition and helps mini1nize waste management problems fiom continuously penned
up animals.
Now is the time to apply fifty
pounds of actual nitrogen per acre
to fescue grass pastur;e that will be
allowed to grow on as stockpiled
grass for · late fall or winter grazing. Ohio State University
research has shown that late
August or early September appli cation of nitrogen returns the best
investment per dollar return due
to increased yields, higher crude
protein levels in fes cue, and
greater digestibility. In the fact
sheet, "Stockpiling TaU Fesc ue for
Winter Grazing" by C. Penrose,
H. Bartholomew and R.M . Sulc,
they suggest using urea only if a
half-inch of rain or more is
expected within hour.; of u·rea

E

t
~
~

:
~
~
~
~

:
:
:

••
•

t

l•

application .
Urea-based fertilizers, if not
incorporated, will have their
nitrogen volatilize off when ~
applied on surface of a field . If 1
unable to time your application ~
with a forthcotning rain front,
ammonium nitrate is suggested,
due to its lower surface applied
nitrogen volatilization losses.
Avoid applying urea to fields that
had surface applied lime within
the past three months.
For information please contact
the Meigs County extension
office at 992-6696.

'.

•••

-

.....

·- . . .. ... .. ..
~

"'

'

- ~

...

.'

.-

r -- .

Tuesday

September s. 2000

Hometown News,.per
'

Ohio•
.aga1n

•

CAMPAIGN 2000

rman
talks labor
in Tol o

a pfized
state
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio l"ill be a classic battleground for the presidential
campaign, with two independent political analysts giving
Republican George W. Bush a
slight edge over Democrat AI
Gore as the race enters its final
two months.
Bush's Ohio support is ahead
of Core's at this point, but
Gore is building momentum
he carried from the Democratic National Convention last
month, they said.
However, Bush could be
helped by other factor., especially the GOP's lock on state
government, said John Green,
dir,·ctor of the nonpartisan
Ray C. Uliss Institute for
Applied Politi cs at the University of Akron. Gore will need a
big boost from organized labor
to make up for it, said Herb
Asher, a political science professor at Ohio State Univer.ity
for 30 years.
Bush wa.• favored by 4-to-6
percentage points in polls conducted just before the GOP
convention, but that was down
from the 8- to- 12-point leac4
he held in previous polls.
Starting with 1976, when
Democrat Jimmy Carter won
Ohio over Republican Gerald
Ford by 11,1 16 votes, Ohioans
have voted three times for
Democrats and three times for
Republicans. No Republican
has won the presidency without Ohio and in the last century, Democrats won the White
House without carrying the
state just twice.
It means that once again
Ohio, along with other swing
states like Michigan, Illinois
and Pennsylvania, will weigh
heavily in the travel plans of
Bush and Gore down the
stretch . Each ca ndidate has
been in . Ohio 'eight times this
year and Gore returns this
week with a trip through
Columbu s and C leveland.
" I think it 's going tO be very
close. This is one of these elections that th ere will not be a
breakaway winner," said Brian
Hicks , chief of staff for Republi can Gov. tlob Taft and his
campaign manager in 1998.
"Probal&gt;ly in this state we're in
for a Gerald Ford-Jimmy
Carter race where it may be
one vott' a precin ct. Ohio's

DENTAL EVALUA'ttON- Margie lawson, ODS, does 13-15 dental evaluations in the Child Health Dental
Clinic at the Meigs Cou'nty Health Department. Here, she completes an oral health assessment on
Bradley Soulsby. (Contributed photo)

\

Program starts kids.., on good habits
BY ClwiuNE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

P

OMEROY- Did you know that if you
are between the ages of 3 and 21 you can
see a dentist at the Meigs County Health
Department for a minimal charge?
The dental health care program has been in place
for several years using funding provided by the Ohio
Department of Health's Bureau of Child and Fam.ily Health Services.
While Dr. M argie Lawson, the dentist who initiated the program, recently resigned as Meigs County health commissioner, she conti nu es the dentai
program at the local health department.
It consists of cleaning by Rhonda Davis, a dental
hygienist. and an evaluation by Lawson . Payment for

services is provided on a sliding-fee scale, which
means the cost is determined by family income.
Once a child's teeth have been cleaned by the
hygienist and evaluated by the dentist, th en the child
is referred to · a local dentist if restorative work is
needed.
Children are examined initially by Lawson when
they arc about 3 and dental services are available
until they reach age 21. Each month, Lawson sees
13 to 15 children in the dental room at the health
department.
The dental program is a part of the C hild Health
Clinic and iis purpose is to get children started on
good dental health habits early in life.

PIHH SH Denbttl, Pllp AS

Census foot soldiers give way to number crunchers
WASHINGTON (AP) - let the number crunching begin.
With a survey of 314,000 households
near contpletion, the Censm; Burt"'.lu's focus
now shifts from urging people to return
questionnaires and tracking down recalcitrant households, to weaving together the
statistical portrait of America it produc es
once a decade.
Statisticians will sift through data to check
its accu.racy, while demographers analyze
th e numbers to search for trends. Are people still fleeing ci ties for the suburbs? Will
the minority population contmue to grow?

;

The answers will tell new stories about
the Ameri can population, determine the
redistribution of federal dollars and decide
political power among and within the
sutes.
" Probably, the American public doesn't
understand how m assive th e processing
effort is.Th e processing effort over the next
several months really is going to take up
trillions of cal c ulation~," Census Bureau
director Kenneth Prewitt said in an interVlew.

One of the bigger story lines is the
nation 's racial and ethnic make up. Estimates

il Alll~
~\I~
DA~

VVC)C)

1

'.
C hoir members are BecWy Foster, Roberta Young, Gay }'errin,
Dixie Sayre, Kathy Baker,~inda
Bates, Edwina Bell, Tami §Peets,
Paula Gaul, Christi Lync~·:aeri
Fife, Belinda Lane, Sharon N eutzling. Betty Sayre, Ann Lambert,
Theresa
Brown,
C ho,rlotte
McG uire, Ca thy Lentes, ~issy
Wilfong, Mary Bates, Lisa ~ead­
ows, H eidi H ood, Cathy COQper;
Cathy Erwi n, Kathy Johll'son,
Ida Mae Martin, Kathy Wilfon g,
Sue Mai son, Sharon Sayre,.,!!)on ·
Erwin, Des Jeffers) Brian Ho\.ard.
Adam Martin, C had Dodson,
Mike Wilfon g. Mack Stewari;IDill
Brown . Gary Bates, G reg C~1re ll
and Bill N eutzling.
'

released last week showed that growth in
the country's minority population outpaced
that of whit&lt;'S in the 1990s, especially, A'ians
(up 43 percent) and Hispanics (up ~r­
cent) .
The white population, meanwhile, grew
7 percent durin g the decade,
Ce nsus 2000 data is expected to back up
those estimates with actual number.; for the
first time in 111 year..
"It's a very dramatic change in the makeup of the country," Prewitt said. " I think
Ce nsus 200(1 is going to be extremely
important a&lt; -this co untry holds up a mirror

to itself."
The first resull&lt; to be released IJIUst land
on President C linton 's desk by Dec. :11 .The
Supreme Court la.'t year ruled those figure s
must be used to reapportion th e 4:15 seats in
the H o use.
Population figures, adjusted by using a
statistical meth od known as "sampling," are
scheduled for release by April 1. That second popul ation total will be based on the
survey of 314,000 ho use holds.
Sampling h as and wi ll co ntinue to face
political scrutiny in the months to come,
analysts say.

Study: Most Blue Ribbon schools
Sentinel are not academically excellent
Toda(s

1 S1dlans -11 PllpS

~'

PO MEROY Friends in
Faith Community C hoir will present tlrouklyn Tabernacle's "God
is Working"Thursday at 7:30 p.m .
in the Pomeroy Amphitheater.
Directed by Amy Perrin, the
40- member choir composed of
singers from area churches, was
organiz ed earlier this summer and
held its fim conce rt in the Family
Life Center in Middleport.
The choir most recently performed at the Relay for Life held
at Meigs High Sc hool.
In the event of rain, the performance will be moved to Trinity
Congregational Churc h on Second Street in Pomeroy.

MAUMEE (AP) - Looking
Lieberman pledged that he
to energize Democratic voters, and Demodatic presidential
Vice Presidential candidate candidate AI Gore would fight
Joseph Lieberman mixed a little for workers' right.• because th ey
baseball ~th politics Monday.
respect working men and
Lieberman, campaigning in women.
six states in 27 hours, sat
" You can say that the labor
through about three innings of a movement was built on values
minor league baseball game that that come from faith, that 'were
pitted the Toledo Mud Hens enshrined in the .Declaration of
against the Columbus Clippers.
Independence, all of us . are creThe ballpark was filled with ated equal. Where did that
painters, plumbers and pipefit- equality come from? It was an
ters who were treated to a free endowment of our C reator," he
day -of baseball
said .
and hot dogs by
At the balllabor doesn 't
their local labor
game, players on
come out for Gore, the
unions. It was
field
111e're going to be dis- watched
clear that Lieberas
man
was
in
appointed wlretr the Lieberman
friendly territopolls close. We need posed for picry.
. tures and took
to
unite
and
push
"Go Joe Go':
the
attention
lrim over tire top. I
fans chanted as
away from the
the Connecticut
tlritrk it~ goi ng to be game.
senator arrived.
Lieberman,
a close race."
Only the lines at
si tting be hind
first base, didn't
the co~cession
Roy Wllkllljl, •n etectrtc:lan
from Tolado
stands
were
see much of th e
action. but did
longer than the
one formed near Lieberman, a sing .a few lines of ''Take Me
U.S. senator from Connecticut.
Out to the Ballb&gt;amc" during
He autographed baseballs, hats the 7th-inning metch.
More than half of the 10,306
andT-shim.
" It looks just like the rest of fans wore union- made T-s hirts
the ballplayers," Dave Baldonado with their local affiliation.
said as he held up a ball with a
Roy Wilkins, an electrician
semi-legible signature.
from Toledo, sat a few rows
Lieberman didn't make any behind Lieberman.
speeches or talk with reporters
" If labor doesn 't co me ou t
during his quick stop in the for Gore, we're going to be disToledo area . Earlier in Detroit, appointed when th e polls cl me,"
he stopped at an annual Labor
Day festival.
Please see Lllbor, Pllp AS

"if

in amphitheater
FROM STAFF REPORTS

~o Cents

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 5 1. Number 71

Concert set Thursd~y

fruits , co ntainers and unusual -

(Harald K11em is rhe Meigs Cmm·
ry Agricullllral a11d Natural Resources
Agenr, Ohio Srare Uniwrsiry Ex ten·
rio11.)

.,....-

Meigs society news and notes, AS
Rams outgun Broncos on 'MNF', Bl

Plene see Ohio, Pap AJ

Interested in exhibiting your
tallest stalk of corn, longest ear of
corn, largest diameter sunflower,
largest pumpltin or largest squash?
Other horticulture categories
that can be shown include flower.
from your garden , vegetables,
plants. Some growers want to
bring in display baskets of preserves, vegetables. flowers or fruit
to demonstrate how you can
design using items from the garden . Plan on displaying at the fifth
annual Big Bend Town &amp; Country Expo being held Sept. 16- 17
at the Meigs County Fairgrounds
located at the northeast corner of
State Routes 33 and 7. Exhibits
will be taken Sept. I S from noon
to 7:30p.m. and Sept. 16 from B
to 9:30 a.m. at the Senior F•ir
Building. This event is open to
the public to display at no charge.

.

-~"'-

provides ATM repair and maintenance service to financial institutions in the tnidwest.

'••'

•r

~

Details, A3

BUSINESS BRIEFCASEl

...•.,.,

.

Hlch:J:=~

Sunday, September 3, 2000

.,

•'

Calendar
Classified•
Comics
Etlitoriab
ObituariF•
Sports
Weather

AS

BH
85
A3
Bl. 6

A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 3- 1-9; Pick 4: 2..Q..8-0
~ 5: 6- 1!1--2!!-29-36

W:YA,
Doily 3: 5-9--0 Daily 4: 9· K-4- 3
Cl 2fMIIl O lun v~ tl ~

l'tlhh~nn~t

Co.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Only about a fourth of the center, said many of the schools had "decellt
the public schools lauded as u America's most suc- marks," but when com pared to other schools that
cessful" last year by the U.S. Department of Educa- teach students of the same socio-economic backti on earn ed the distin ction throu gh aca demic ground the scores are not outstanding.
achieve ment, according to a study released Tuesday.
Stephen O'Brien, a U.S. Departme nt of EducaNin eteen of th e 70 elementary sc hools designat- tio n offic ial, said a school do esn't " necessarily have
ed Blue Ribbon winners in 1999 scored in th e top · to be the most successful acad emically" to be in the
10 percent academically among si milar sc hools in program .
their respective states, according to a report by the
A school must be at or above the 60th per&lt;·entile
Brown Center at th e Brookings Institution in Wash - to be considered Blue Ribbon quality or mmt show
ington, D.C.
a significant i1nprovcmcnt, meaning ;a least an 11
Of the remainder, 17 finished among the bottom percent increase in rest scores, he s.aid .
50 percent, meaning their students scored lower on
Factors besides academics that are considered in
reading and math tests than the average school. The awarding a Blue Ribbon include student focus and
oth er 34 schools fell so mewhere in between.
support, school organization and culture, challengThe center's analysis stati stically adjusted scores to ing. standards and curriculum , active r,eaching and
compare schools serving students of similar income · learn mg. and leadership and educational vi tality.
levels, unlike the feder.1l pmgram, which holds all
For 18 years, the Department of Education has
schools to the same criteria.
•
Tom Loveless. author of the report and direc tor of
PIHH- Study, Pllp AS

• Dealer Retains AH Rebltes It lncentlv81; Tax, Title &amp; FMs Extra.
•

,•

�.

.

• •

..

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Core wil disa•ss proposals
COLUMBUS (AP) - Democratic preSJdennal nominee AI Gore
has focused his campa1gn on issues sucb as health care, prescription
medicine and educanon.
While Gore IS savtng a speech outlining his major economic propos.Us for a speech Wednesday m Cleveland, he's planned to gtve
Columbus busmess people a prevtew on Tuesday, satd Enn Callahan,
an Ohto spokeswoman for Gore.
Gore pbnned a' bte-morning stop at a business m a fast-developing
area on the north side of downtown . He will talk about new high-tech
buSJnesses.
"There will be some busmess people represennng vanous new economic ventures;' Callahan satd, adding that former U.S. Sen John
Glenn, D-Ohio, also will be on the program.
Gore has scheduled his DlaJOr econonuc speech for Wednesday at
Clevebnd Stare Umversity.
The Columbus stop will be "more like a town meenng;' Callahan
sat d.

Jackpot goes to S6 lllillon
CLEVELAND (AP) - The Ohto Lottery's Super Lotto Plus Jackpot IS gmwmg to SO million for the ne-xt drawmg Wednt:sdty mght
There were no Super Lotto Plus game tickets with the correct combmauon for the S5 nulhon drawing Saturd.1y mght.
The Super Lotto Plus combmallon: 1-4-17-21-22-26
Bonus l:lall -l9
In Kicker. sales totaled S392,Hb9 and wnmers can share S1J 1,950
Super Lotto sales totaled $2,176,0 I 2 and wmners ca11 share $37 4.115.
There were 53 Super Lotto Plus tickets \vtth five of the numbe~.
and each ts worth $1,500. There were no nckets with five numbers
plus the bonus ball The 2,515 Super Lotto Plus nckets with four of
the numbers are each worth $100 and the 65 nckets wtth four numbers and the bonus ball are worth $500.There were 2,123 Super Lotto
Plus nckets wtth three numbers plus the bonus ball
In Kicker, no game ticket had all stx numbers, so no one c.m clatm
the $100,000 top prtze.
The three Kicker llckets wtth the first five numbers are each worth
S5,000.The 44 wtth the first four numbers are each worth Sl,OOO.The
378 \vtth the first three digits are each worth $100 and the 3.515 wtth
the first two numbers are each worth S10

Test set for abortion ban
DAYTON (AP) -The con&lt;lln.tionality of a new Ohio law banning a late-term abortion procedure was headed for a test m federal
court Tuesday.
The procedure, known medically as dilanon and extraction, mvolves
dr;urung the skull of a fetus before the fetus IS fully remOved from the
uterus. Opponents refer to the procedure as parnal-btrth abornon.
Gov. Bob Taft signed the bill in May that declared the abornon procedure a cnme, wtth penalttes of up to etght years tn prison and a
maximum fine of$15,000
Dr. Marnn Haskell, owner ofWomen 's Medical Professional Corp.,
filed a lawsmt challengmg that law tn July. Haskell's corporation opecotes clinics m Cmcinnall, Dayton and Akron
The law had been scheduled to go tnto effect Aug 18, but U.S. Distrtct Court Judge Walter Rice ISSued a temporary restraining order
blocking tts enforcement. On Friday, Rice extended Iris order until
Sept. 19
Haskell persuaded Rice m 1995 to reJect Oh10's first ban as unconsnrunonal.The 6th U.S. Ctrcutt Court of Appeals upheld that decmon,
and the U.S. Supreme Court declmed to hear the case.
State offictals say the latest ban was deSigned to satisfy state and federal courts and to comply wHh cnonsms from vartous federal courts
that sinuJar laws were too vague.
Hash~U's lawsuit says the law ts unconstmltlonal bc:-cause 1t Imposes
an undue burden On the nght of women to choO'\t' abornon

Fatal fire cause unknown
VERMILION (AP) - A coroner sa~ d he probJbl) will need to u&lt;c·
dental recotds to tdcnttfy three peopl•• who \Vl'rt' kilkd m a fire that
swept through J rural home Momi.ty.
The house was engulfed when firefighters re spo nded to the 2 35
a.m . call. the Ene Cou nty shenff's otlie&lt; mil m a """ s release They
found the bodtes wlule Slftmg through the d,·bns, the shenff\ office
s;ud.
'The fire's cause was not unmediatcly deter nunt'd
Of!inals would not release the names of the vtCnms Monday tught.
Autopstes were planned for Tuesday, Ene County Coroner Thomas
Nesgoda srud.
"Everybody's JUst numb," satd ne~ ghborTnc ta M cCu rdy "We're st•ll
trymg to figure out what happened "
Another netghbor, D~ana Ftchtd , satd1that only a shell of the house,
mcluding a swne foundanon, remamcd.
· The sheriff's department and the state fire marshal's office were
mvesttgattng fire's cause.
Vermihon IS along Lake Ene, 35 miles west of Cleveland.

Cincinnati man dies in jump
CLEVELAND (AP) - A 24-year-old CmcmnatJ man Jumped
from the Veterans Memonal Bndge and died Monday. JUSt as the
Clevelanil Indians' baseball game was starling at Jacobs Fteld at the
bndge's eastern end
The man fell about 1 p.m. m an mdmtnal section lightly used durmg the Labor Day holiday
Police said an officer tned to talk the man to safety, but he qmckly
JUmped. The man's name was bemg Wtthheld as poltce tned to reach
htS family.

16 cars jump tracks
C INC INNATI (AP) - Stxteen cars of a train derruled near a CSX
fre1ght yard north of downtown Cmcinnan M onday mornmg, backmg up traffic on Interstate 7) fur :1lmost four hours
One deraJled ca r contamcd sodmm hydrox1de. a corrosive chenucal.
D1stn ct Frrr C hteffom Lakamp sa1el otliculs w:m ted to nukt• sure th:lt
c.u and others were not leaking bdorc n.~openmg tht.· free\\ JY shortly
.lfter noon

Fourteen of the L.US larnt.•d nc\\ atJWil Hlb Jl es. Labmp &lt;iiaJd No
!llJlll"lt.''i Wt.'rt.• rcportt.•d .md th L' (.1m..: of tht..· !.. h: r.ulmt.'lll lud not b~:.·cn
dt.'t!..'rllllllL'd

Asian ~pulation booms
I

-

COLU MBUS (A P) - (\·,"us li~urc• ;ho" tlut the• A11.111 popul.o Fr,mkhn ( "ounry lll".lrl' do11blcd 111 the p.to;;t 10 yt.',JT"'
Th\..' tou nty Ius 2~Ui\1 A~1.111 rt:&lt;iitd~.·nt:\, up 47 4 peru.· nt tiHill t h ..·
1990 tot.ll o f 19.550. the Ccn~u . . Bmt_'.lll li,lld
The coun ty g.u nt•d !lltm: A~1111 lt''tdt·JJt' chu111g tht.· !'Nils tlun .my
of Oh1o's oth ~,.· r K7 lOlllltl!..'" M . 111~ ,If tho..,~· p~.-·opk h ,t\ 'C t.1lllh.' to Yt.•e
I 111 t Lull'\, \it.lrt• COtlld ln nn1 of A" 111 - AmnH .11 \ u HJIIllllllll\' o.,cn'll:l'&lt;ii.
t lo11 111

" I" I]' \ 1th k ,H flil l:· r
\hL' .1bo rnCJ\ 111g HI
1

~~: ·li · h 11 1
I! hi t.

I !n ll hll ;,.:

1 ~ !1! ).! I H illl h ,_,

lh· wd · l! d.Joh\
ol lllqUIIIL'~ fl tHll IJo..,p!t.ll..,

hn lll t•

,md courts fi,r A&lt;ii ian unapn•tt'l'

- -

Tuesday, September 5, 2000

Tuesday, September 5, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 2 o The Dally Sentinel

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Family ·showed no signs of violence
AVA (AP) -A fannly of seven found dead 12 The bodtes of the twms 'a nd rhctr brothers
in their burned out tratler, vtctims of an Brett, 10, and Derek, 7, were found in rhe
apparent murder-suictde,dtdn't show any out- trailer's two bedrooms.
Srmth said a fire accelerant was found
ward s1gns of domestic v10lence, ne1ghbors
mSide.
"This fire was defimtely set,': he md.
and shenff's offictals satd.
Depllty shenffs had never answered any
Noble County Sheriff Landon T. Smtth
wouldn'tsay who he beheves JS responSible for calls of domestic vwlence at the Pangle horne,
the deaths of Rtchard Pangle, 37, hJS wtfe Smith satd. He added that, whtle the couple
Sheryl, 29, and thetr five chtldren. But nobody was reportedly discussing a divorce, he had
outside the famtly members found 111 the seen them driving together Sunday durmg a
tratler Monday is bemg constdered a suspe ct, town celc:branon
''I've known the Pangle fannly forever;'
he satd
Theu bodies were found after a report of a Smith satd, addmg that he's known Rtchard
Pangle smce he was a small boy and that none
fire at the house around 3 a m
Preliminary au1opsy n;ports showed the of them had ever had any legal troubles
Pangle worked at the Gretf Brothers factotwo Y.OUng~st chtldren, 5-ycar-old twtns Tnna
and Trinda, dted of smgle gunshot wounds ry m Caldwell, where he made aneta! barrels,
and not of injuries suffered in the fire, Smtth the sheriff said.
Lloyd Anderson, Sheryl Pangle's brother,
said.
"Because of where we found the bodies , said that Richard Pangle doted on hts chtldren
they dtdn't a)&gt;pear to dte ofsnwkc mhalanon ," and that the f:m11ly spent a lot of tllne together
he s.ud
.. Those \'{~trc R1chu: 's garden~ ," Anderson
Snuth s.ud four guns and spent shells were
found tn the hvmg room near the bod1cs of sa1d, pomtmg to the lll'ilt rows of corn. pumptjte pa~ents and thetr eldest daughter, Kayla . kms. flowt.·rs .md w.\tamdon growmg nc:ar

Friends to meet
George A. Ziegler
POMEROY - George A . Ziegler, 90, of Pomeroy, died on Monday, September 4, 2000 at his restdence, foUowmg a bnef tllness.
He was born on February 10, 1910 m Bedford Township, near Darwtn, the son of the late
Geotge H . Z1egler and Manue Kappel Zteglcr
He was a rettred farmer and a ret1red employee of Colutubia Gas of Ohw
He was a member of the Bunker H1ll
Church, a 72-year member of Modern Woodmen of America, Burhngham Camp 7230, and
was a me mber of the Columbta Gas Quarter
Century Club.
Surv1vmg are hiS loving wife of 60 years,
Mildred Thoma Ztegler of Pomeroy,a son and
daughter-m-law, Roger and Jann Ztegler of
P~;&gt;meroy; a daughter and sister-m-law, Lola and Robert Signom of
Dayton; two brothers- m-law and a sister-m-law, Wilham Hart of
Shade, and Glenn and Grace Tho rna of Chester; ·three grandchildren,
Meaga n (Matthew West) Turner of Dayton, Rob S1gmon of Dayton,
and Chnstopher Judge of Wtlrnington, North Carolina; and many
meces and nephews .
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his brothers,
Errett, Lowell and Avery; a sister, Ethel Hart, and two nephews, Wayne
Ziegler and George G. Hart.
Servtces Will beThursday, September 7, 2000 at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home, wtth Roger Watson officiating.
Friends may caD Jr the funeral home on Wednesday evenmg, September 6, 2000 from 4-8 p.m .
M emonal contnbutaons may be made to Hospice or other chantable orgamzattons.

gare1dge satd . " Everybody knows t•verybody

clst:", whiCh makes u that much hardn when
some dun g hh· tlus l1.1ppens "
IS

.1bout 73 nuk~ t.'.lst of Columbus

Hospitals makin~ changes Donation boxes becoming
to attract maternity pat1ents places for stashing trash
AKRON (AP) Christi County reSidents had 1,791
Philltp recently gave bmh to her babu~s . n1eaning nuny mothl'rs
son, Alexander, in a 3 112-foot- left the area for matermty care.
"Women were shoppmg for a
deep tub destgned to rehevc pam
and promote relaxation durmg more pleasa nt envJmnmcnt than
before we had thJS umt," Nancy
la~or
·
The expen~nce at Akron Ctty Wtand, a cltmcal nurse spectahst at
Hospital was so positive that if she Robinson, told the Akron Beacon
or her fanuly needs medtcal atten- Journal for a story Monday.
tion, she satd she'll return to that
Like Robmson, many hospttals
ho&gt;pttal
are marketing themselves as the
Phillip's amrude IS tlte reason place that gtves expectant mothers
why the hospttal mvested m the n1ore opt1ons for theu matermty
$10,000 tub and why many other experience.
Ohio hospttals are gomg out of
Just Within the last year or so,
thetr way to ftx up matermty Medina General Hospttal opened
wards or offer more btrthmg tts new umt wtth oak woodwork
options for women. Hospitals are and a homey atmosphere and
discovering that catermg to preg- Akron General Medtcal Center
nant women can drum up future mstalled a $60,000 wtreless mombusmess
tonng umt that allows women 111
"If a woman IS' comfortable tn labor to get out of bed and walk
an OB umt, she'll bnng her chtl- the halls
dren back to a pcdiatnc umt
Labor and dehvenes can be
there, or her parents back to the profitable ventures for hospitals.
ER,'' md Barbara Wmnen , dtrec- It's w1dely known that women
tor ofWnmen 's and Family Health make the vast maJOnty of h~alth
Servtces at R ob111so n Memonal care deCISIO n s for then fam1hes,
Hospttal tn Portage Coun'ty
sa1d Mary Ann e Graf, prestde n t of
Thts week, Robmson IS opcn- Health Care lnnovattons and I~C l
tng a S1.6 nnllton btrth center, Market Researc h Group, a Salt
complett' wtth 11 pnvate, one- L1ke C ny he.tlt h c.nc consultmg
stop rooms tlut offer labor, dehv- firm "P~cuhz111g 111 women's
c-ry. rccov~JY and postp.t rtum sc r- h~.·.tlth planmng
Unhkt._• many lll.IJOr h t.•,,lth
vJccs
With the new umt. tht.~ hosp1tJI ~,·,·ems m .1 wom.m\ hf~ . rh~..· birth
IS hopm g to .utr.Kt .1s m:mv .1s of J d11ld IS typtc.•lly .1 h.&lt;ppy o ne
1,300 b1rt hs .1 yt.'.ll , W nlll l'll s.uJ
HospH.Jl " see It .ts .1 pertl·t t oppmIn 19'JH. th.: rnmr n:t..:l'llt yc :ar tunlty to m.th• .1 gond ti rst
av.ulabk\ 92() b;'ll·u es \\t.'rt' bm n at unprt.'liSJon and Lll2,Jtl' J hfl'tlllll' ot
Robm son That ~car, Portage l U StOllH.' I htplty

COLUMBUS (AP) -

Cen-

tral Ohto chantu:" arc re-consad~

ering thetr use of donatton
boxes be.cause too many peopl e
seem to be nustakmg th~m for
trash contamt:rs.

In recent months, workers for
the Volunteer. of Amertca have
found a dead goose, dead cats
and other unwelcome surprises
m the steel boxes, whtc~ typically are placed outside retatlers .
The Salvatton Army has
found blown automobtle ttrcs.
old totlets and dirty diapers in tts
boxes.
"Once we got a pet ferret
that was donated by mtstake ,''
M1nnda Stone, supervisor of the
orgamzatton's thrift stores, told
The Columbus DISpatch for a
story Monday. "We 've even
unlocked boxes and fo und
(homeless) people in them "
The growmg number of
unsuttable g1fts h as led to
mount:lng bllls for trash rentoval,
causmg the agcnctes to either
n..•duce the number of boxes or
hm.~ people to momtm them

The

Sa lvation Army has
reduced the number of us drop
boxc~ from 7 1 to SJ dHs ye ar 111
Fr:m klm Coumy .1nd m1ght
clumnJt t.' them .&amp;lto~t·ther, StOJh.'
!'\,JJd
Two \'t.'.ll" :.go. tht: Volunteers
of An Kilt. .! lu d 1(Jj) don .Jtlon

boxc&lt;.;

111

t hl' u nt!H\' Tht.• agt'tKy

now h.t~ I .14 bi.Jxe~ .md lll.l)'
r~:.·d uc( t ht.• numbt' r to .1bout HO

by ne-xt summer, satd rhnft

~tore

Ohio

Lon TJ!h s
Donations largely pay for the
agenues' program s, whtch help
home the homeless, feed the
poor and rehabihtate drug
addtcts
But wuh fewer boxes, they
wall have- to do more home
ptckups. mak111g It more costly
for the age nctes to recetve donations.
So far thiS year, the Salva non
Army ha s patd $171.000 to
remove trash left tn tts drop
boxes, Stone sat d.The Volunteers
of AmeriCa has spent $75,000,
compared w1th $60,000 last
year
Pohce 111 suburban Upper
Arhngton , where the Volunteers
of Amenca had some problems
earher thts year, have a theory
about why people use the boxes
for ttems other than donattons .
"People are JUSt cheap,"
pohce Lt. Mt cha el Bnmng sa~d
" They don't want to go to the
landfill or usc J pnvate hauler"
Upper Arltng ton rc·S&lt;dmts
h ave to p1y weekl y co lu vt.• thL·ar
trash hJuled Jw.ov. ~cneJJ!l y
$2 10 for ew1 y 50 pounds. s.ud
Rt ck Mc.ugc. the wv ·,, soltdw.l~tc sup t.·nntt.·nde Jit
Bllnlllg .md h1 , p.lltol of1ilt.J\
st.1kt.·d out ,J don.ltHJ\1 box Ill J
slwpp111g u·me1 111 M .l\' md
wen~ surpn!iied at wh,n [hey &lt;.; 1\V

answer IS yes
The study wJs pre sented at
the Am encan Psyc hologt cal
A ssoc1a t10n 's annual meeung
earlier this summ er and at the
Amt.'riCJII
Polat1 cal
Suence

from Page AI
gomg to deternune the next presIder)t."

The Repubh ca ns have loc ked
up thetr core supporters and the
Democrats have some catching up
to do, Green satd.
"AI Gore has been trymg to
combmc the vanous Democratic

cons t1tuen caes The Democratic
Leaderslup Counctl umted w1th
labor um ons and nunortttes and
there are stJ U liberal Democrats
around," Green satd. "The Ohio
Repu bhcan Party IS better orgamzed and has more resources than

the Democrats by virtue of all
theor statewtcje officeholders.''
Repubhca1ls hold all statewtde
nonJudlCial offices and control
both houses of the LegiSlature.
How the Democrats make up for
that dommance hmges on their
most reliable support: org•mzed
la bor, Asher satd. Labor tradltlonally has worked at get-out-the' vote dnves and 1ts membership
usually votes for Democrats.
"The Democrats had a good
l onventiOn, bu i I tlunk orgamzed
labor IS a key component I tlunk
the leadersh1p of labor IS pretry
much on board, but there ts work
to do," Asher sa~ d

How the camp;ugns perfOrm
down th e stretch also wtll be a
factor Ohtoans can expect to see
plenry of both candtdates through
V!Sl[S and tClcVISto n ads.
Green s.ud he was surpnsed that

a candadat e

Fnday
Among
findtngs

- Desp ite a percetved cv musm about po litics, people hold
out opt1m1sm for potential n ew
c.l nd1d.at t'S

-

other

Fast unpt essw ns co unt
stron gly 111 how vo ters deCLdc o n

Pu bli shed every afternoon , Monday through
Imlay Ill Cn urt Sl , Pomeroy, Oh 1o, b~ the
01110 Valley Pubh ~h~r-.g Co mpa ny Scwnd
cl1,;s po1il2gc paid at Pomeroy Oh1o
M~mbt-1' ' The As,;01.:1Bied Prts5, and cllc Oh1o
Newspaper A~MX:1&lt;tl 1 un
POSTMASTER Send ~ddrcss curr c~ 11 ons to
The Da ily Scn1 me l, 111 C'ourt Sl, Pomeroy,

NOTICE OF
FIRST PUBLIC HEARING

"The mmutc you 've got a ca n -

, Jc;roo;mck and colkagucs from
Prmtt:ton , Northwe stern Untvewty and the Untvcrsaty of
C l11 cagu studied data from US
prt.·~ldt"ntiJI

electJuns collent•d
from 1972 to 19HH by the
National Elt•cr aon Study
Tht.: s unt·y~ IrH.!tJdt:d fJ L~o-'~to~
fau: liH t.' fVI L' \\o ~ wtth 111or~.-· than
j.(){)() votn~ The N.HIO!l.l l Ek·c twn Stud~ l h~,.·&lt;.- kt•d ll.llllt.'' at
local t.•kcunn bo.trds to \'~o-· nf:

\\ ht·th c r l!ldl\ Jdl! ,do; \'\ltl'd
l ht .UI.d } ~~~ \)j \'Ott.' I tl\1\llll\(
\\.1.., p.l rt nt .1 Luger 'tudv th.1t
.appht.·d p..,u hologJt.ll tht.'OJ\' ro
\1• Itt.' r

d et I ~ It lll- 111,1 k 111 g

. , upport for .1 'i( t of
pnnupl c~ rh.H \\&lt;.' rhcu t...ll'llt.' d
111to .1 wo1 ld uf puhtll 'i .. K ro~­
lll f k !i,JI&lt;.I '' Is H p(h&lt;.;lbk pt'l)pl....
" We

!i:l\\'

L'\ ,Jiu .Jt&lt;.' 1

nltlll l ltl'~ tlw ' ' n

l'\.1illlt l

hl t.lkll~l

pcHt' l1ti .ll

\ ',\l .ltlo\1

I It ~~ ~

~opot,;

Oh10 45769
SUBSCRIPTION RATES

B) Currier or Mutor Routf
One Week
SZ DO
One Mom h
S8 70
OncYc:u
510400
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Da1ly
'iO Ccnls
Subsln hcrs no1d~~1nng 10 r~Y the camc r may
rcm11 m 8dvam:c dm::~ t to The Da1ly Sl.'nlmd
011 a Jhrel.', m: or 12 nmnlh 1Ja~1s Cre..l11 "dl be

The Meigs County Commissioners will hold the first of two public
hearings at the Office of the Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio on September 18, 2000 at 10:15 a.m. for the purpose of
providing the public information and receiving comments as to the
availability of grant funds from the Ohio Department of Development
Small Cities CDBG Water and Sanitary Program grant funds for Meigs
County.
The CDBG Water and Sewer Sanitary Program provides funding to
lo~al ~overnment.s to .provide water and sanitary sewer services to
pnmariiy 60% residential areas and to benefit low to moderate income
households.
.
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on September 18 2000
to make suggestions and to provide public Input on various activities
which may be undertaken In this program.
If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter brailled or taped
material, assistive listening device, other) due to a' disability please
~ontact Gloria Kloes, Clerk, prior to September 18, 2000 at 740-992·2895
m order to ensure ~hat your needs will be accommodated. The Meigs
County Courthouse IS handicapped accessible.
Written comments will be accepted until 10:15 a.m., September 18
2000 and may be mailed to the Meigs County Commissioners Meig~
County Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
'
Janet Howard, President
Meigs County Commission
)

dtdate you do n 't hke , th e poSSIbtlay of them wmmng IS a thrt"at
and that nwuvates you ro get
out of the house"

til l \'

\11d
I he

•

Ohio,ms can t•xpcct to
st·e plmty of IJotii candi-

dates rlzro11gl• visits and
television ad$,
the Republican National Committee has begun ru nmng an ad
attackmg Gore's credibilt ty on
ca mpatgn finan ce reform and ridtcuhng Gore for saymg he took the
initiative 10 creatmg the Intern et
"I think that " the openmg
salvo of a negat1ve campatgn and
It 's commg mu ch earlier than I
thought," Green sa1d . "It's a lmle
btt jocular. The Gore campatgn
Will cast 1t as negattve. I'm not sure
a casual VIewer will .p
James Ruvolo, a Toledo consultant who is a co-chattman of
Gore's Ohto campatgn, ;:ud the
Democrat flounshed at last

POMEROY - Meigs County
Counctl on Agmg is selling faU
mums m yellow, rusr, white, pmk
and red an stx-mch pots for $3
each. Orders must be placed by
Fnday and can be ptcked up ar
the ce nter on Sept. 12 from 9
a.m .-5 p.m. Orders for mums
may be placed at 992-2161.

Trustees to meet
SHADE - Bedford Township
Trustees w1ll meet on Tuesday at

i,•Wen earner Citl.:h week

No

sul1scu p110n hy mall p~1m111ed m areas
wh~rc home c~rtlcr scr\ 1ce 1~ ~Y.IIIai:Jic
Publisher reserves the 11gh1 10 adJUSI ra1e s
durm s the s u b~cr1p\1 0n penoJ Suhscnp 11o n
r~ l c l'hangcs lnO) be 1mplemen1ed hY ~hang1ng
lhr d ur,IIIOO Ol lh~ ~Uh~cflp11011
MAILSlJUS( RIPTIONS

lmidt&gt; 1\feigs ruunty

~2

S tO~ 'ifl
Rat~ Outside 1\ft·l ~~ Count'
11 we~h
S29 25
l b Weeks
$~6 6A
52 Week!&gt;
S 101) 12
Weeks

Reader Services
Our main co ncern In 1111 ~torte,; I~ lfl be
11ct uute. lr } ou k11ow or an error In a ' lnl'),
call th e news1oom at (7 40 ~ 992 -2 1~ 5 We
~ill chl' ck yuur lnrurm11tlun 11nd m11ke 1
~.orn.'ftlon II warran ted.

Ntws Depnnmenl5
lltf m.11ln number Is 992·..!1~5 . IJt·punmt nl
e:drnslons an':
F.tr:l. 1101
Genenl Man.11a:er ...
Nt•WS

•

I

........... .

11 02
...... or E.11t. 11 06
•

•

E111l

AEP - 351,

Gannett -

Akzo-44~

AmTech/SBC - 42,,
Ashland Inc - 35,,
AT&amp;T - 31 '),
Bank One -

•

•

57~4

General Electric - "!.
Harley Davidson- 49~,

Kroger - 221.

Wai-Mart- 48'Y•

Lands End - 25~.

34 "·

Bob Evans - 17\

Wendy's - 18~.

Ud. ~ 201,

2J~

Charm&lt;ng Shops- 5
C&lt;ty Holding- n
Federal Mogul - 1ol,
Flrstar - 231.

Oak Hltl F1nanclal OVB - 27

Roct&lt;y Boots - 5~
RD Sholl- 62~
Sears-32),

Shoney't-1

Kmart - 6""

16~

BBT - 26')o
Peoples - 15~
Prem 1er- 5"·

Rockwel - 39·,.

Worth01gloo -

1ol,

Dally stod&lt; reports are lhe
4 p.m. eloslng quotes of

lhe previous day's trans·
act&lt;ons, provided by
Advest of Gallipolis

Bush standing by offer
to debate Gore thrice

NAPERVILLE, ILL. (AP) George W ijush stood by his offer
for three prestdential debates,
mcluding one next week, brandmg rival AI Gore's quick rejection
as "Washmgton doublespeak.''
Gore mamtamed hts reststance to
the Texas governor's proposal.
Speaking at a rally before a
Labor Day parade in tim Chicago
suburb, Bush taunted Gore for
not accepting the offer. "My
opponent said he would debate
me anyplace, anytime, anywhere;·
Bush sa~d Monday. "I satd fine.
month's conventton and wilJ be Why don't we JUSt show up ..
carrymg the momentum m the and diScuss our differences.
campatgn's fina l weeks
"All of a sudden the words
"I think Gore, tn a sense, " 'anytime, anywhere' don't ntean
co nung back . Before the conven- anything," he added to cheers
tion, the public wasn't focused on from several thousand supporters.
AI Gore, they were focused on Bill "It's time to get some plam-spoCli nton. They're comfortable wtth ken folks tn Washington.''
Gore's leadership.'' Ruvolo satd.
Gore, meanwh1le, insisted that
H1cks as bettmg that vocers want Bush must first accept the three
c hange after eight yeaiS of a 90-mmute debates proposed by
Democrat m the Whtte House.
the Comnussion on Prestdenttal
"As we get closer to the elec- Debates Gore has ac cepted those
tion, you 'U sec people start to offers, saying they wtll reach the
think about the ca ndtdates on the Widest posstble Vtewmg audience
tssues. Who is the better leader'" and that Bush's proposal would
he satd.
not.

"This is not about what IS best
for George W Bush or what ts
best for AI Gore. It's about what's
best for the American people,"
Gore satd on NBC's "Today" program.
"It's become a trad111on to get
all the networks together and give
all of the Amencan people the
right to see three 90-nunute,
pnme-ttme debates," he added .
Few m etther party expect
Repubhcan Bush's overture to be
the final word on debates as the
campatgns maneuver to arrange
terms that best play to the reij'ecnve strengths · of each candidate
while eKploittng the nval's weaknesses.
After a difficult two weeks that
had seen Gore's poll numbers
rise, Bush strategists sought a way
to steal attentton from the vice
president's 27-hour Labor Day
tour.

They dtd it wtth a hastily
arranged news conference Sunday afternoon m Austm, Texas,
wtth Bush propostng the first
debate next week on Sept 12
during a speetal pnme-tame edttion of NBC's "Meet the Press."

NATIONAL NEWS BRIEFS

Other Senkt!i
Ad,t•r1blnfil .......................... , ... Ex1.1104
Clrtulatlon ..................... ........ t:xt 1\..Q.~
C la ssl fl~d Ads ... ,...................... . ... t:xt II 00

Bush remark overheard
NAPERVILLE , lU (AP) - GcorgeW Bush made
a disparagtng remark Monday about a reporter from
The New York Ttmes that was picked up by a live
miCrophone
As Bush stood on the podium WJttmg for mustc
to finish: he turned 10 runnmg mate Dt ck Cheney
and used an obscemty t o descnbe reporter Adam
Clymer on the nearby press area C heney agree d with
Bush's assessn1ent Both n1cn thought th e1r remarks

were off-nuke.
Karen Hugh es, Bush's spokeswoman, srud the
remarks were "a wlu spered asH.le to his runmng
m ate. It was not mtcnded .1s a pubhc conunent ''

Clymer satd , "I'm d1sappomted in the governor's
language"
C heney refur;;cd to discuss tt. ''The govt·rnor m ade
a pnvare comn1cm to me It was a pnvate conunent.
and I doujt plan to :-illY anythmg about 1t," he told
reporters later 1n Ch1cago

Line dispute clouds merger
WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal ant1trust attorneys are prepared to block the proposed merger of
Amt'IIU Onhne ,md Tunc Warner unless the c ouJ ~
pames Jg;ree to lc:t compctmg service~ u..;e thetr hi ghspt.·ed cable lin es, o;ources f3nuhar wnh the govern-

ment reVI l'W ~ ~ud Munday.
The Ft.•Jer.tl Tr.Jdt· Co nwmston bwycrs

,1rl'

nm-

cern ed that 111 fll,Jrkcts where Tunt.&gt; W;Jrnt'r dperates
cabk systems tht.·re 1s no otht·r way for competmg
com panu:s to get h tgh -~pccd hm~rn ~l :l,·,... c~ . accordmg to ;1 mu ru· w ho lcmtinnrd :1 story first reported

by The

Washtn~,'ton

•

•

Lisa Haggy, HMC;
11:51 p.m ., Pomeroy Police
Department,
Edward Vires,
HMC;
Sunday, 8:04 a.m., shenff's
office, assisted by Pomeroy, Wendy
Miller, treated;
12:05 p.m., Mormng Star,
assisted by Racine, Mildred Ihle,
St. Joseph's Memonal Hospttal;
3:13 p.m., Ohio 124, Nikita
Wood,HMC;
Monday, 8 :30a .m ., Middleport
Police Department, Philltp King,
treated ;
8:46 p.m., Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Shtrley Wolfe, refus&lt;d
treatment;
11:26 p.m., Hartinger Road,
Kathleen Kittle, HMC.

Pbst

Till' source, who lil'n ke only on condition of
anonynnty, s.u&lt;..l. dJscus~ t( •ns .lrl' ongo111g bctwt~en the
govern ment. Ttnlt' \l.'.li!H.' r and AC)L, and will continue tultll a co n1prunu ~e 1!'1 rc.u.:hed
A lipokt.·sm.ln fi,r tht.' connn1sston. En c London,
declmt•d to conlJlll..'llt on the negoti :~tJo no;,

"This tS an early pomt of the process and the dectsmn ts up to the comnusston and obviously these
dJScusstons are part of the process that could lead
eventuaUy to action by the cotrurusston," he said.
AOL spokeswoman Kathy McKternan said the
two compames "are fitlly con111U tted to open access ."
She noted that Tm1e Warner recently reached an
agreement to open tts cable TV hnes to Juno Online
Scrvtces.
New York-based T une Warner " the naoon's second-btggest cable TV operator Together, Tune
Warner and Dulles,Va.-based AOL would control40
percent of the Internet access market and 20 percent
of cable-eqUipped homes
NBC. ABC, and consumer groups have critictzed
the merger, saymg Jt could result tn an unfair concentration of power.
New York-base-: Juno offers both free and patd
Internet access and IS the thud largest Internet se r' 1ce provider after AOL and Earthl111k.

.Sunday, 11 :18 p.m., South Second Avenue, assisted by Middleport, Ronme Holley, HM C;
· Monday, 12 .47 a.m., Lmcoln
Hetghts, Tnste n Garnes, treated.
RACINE
Sunday, 1:24 p.m., Broadway,
Dat~y Sayre, treated.

REEDSVILLE
Saturday,12:12 p.m ,Ohto 681.
Lela Cremeans, treated,
Monday, 3:35 p m . Ohto 124,
Ronald Cowdery, HMC.

RUTLAND
Saturday, 5:48 p.m., Holzer
Medtcal Center Clime, Kenneth
RifDe,HMC;
Monday, 7:08 p.m , Htgley
Road, asmted by Central DISpatch, Mary Smith, PVH.

MIDDLEPORT

TUPPERS PLAINS

Monday, 1:25 a.m., Pearl Street,
Rosa Randolph, treated.
POMEROY

Sunday, 12.18 a.m., Arbaugh
Additton, Rose Peterman, treated.

Dental

ease nanonwide. Among schoolaged children tt ha.&lt; been determined that 45 percent have cones
in their permanent teeth.
"The benefits of good oral
health are substantial;' said Skidmore.
She added thar because dental
diseases are largely preventable,
painful teeth and sore gums and
eKpenstve dental care can often be
avoided with early and repentave
educational and screemng endeavon, which are fanuly centered and
comrnumty based.

LOCAL STOCKS

from PapAl

The program, said Matgie Skidmore, R.N., director of nursing,
provides the educational meansto
achieve adequate dental health and
to mcrease access to oral healthrelated services for cluldren while
augrnennng disease prevennon.
She said statistics from Health
People 2010 show that dental carries are the most preventable dis-

Study

Ribbon school is the best acadermcally.
"[ think scores are cnttcal," he
said. "To label a school a Blue
PapAl
Ribbon school that IS not able to
been operating the Blue -Ribbon demonstrate highest level of stuSchools program to "promote and dent learning nusappltes the
support the improvement of edu- label."
catton."
But Alfie Kohn, a former
Elementary and rmddle schools teacher, author and crittc of
alternate every year wtth sec- statewtde standards, says test
ondary schools for selection in scores are little help in determmthe program. Previously recog- mg what is an excellent school.
nized schoob must wait five years
uGenuine achtevement is noc
to reapply.
reflected in standardtzed test
Christopher Cross, president of scores,'' he said. "We should never
the Council for Baste Educanon, confuse excellence wtth htgh
said the public believes a Blue scores on multtple chotce tests."

from

Labor
from Page AI
Wilkins said. "We need to unite
and push h1m over the top. I think
tt's gomg to be a close race.''
Even though Labor Day is the
traditional start of the polincal
season, some fans sa1d ir was too

early to start watchmg the campaigns.
The election is Nov 7.
"It seems like I'm too busy to
keep a close track o( what"s gomg
on," said George Ferner, a sheet
metal worker from Swanton.
"The umon normally passes
out a sheet wtth who they want
you to vote for," Ferner said.
"That's normally the way I vote."

VALLEY WEATHER

Comfortable weather,stays
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Dry and comfortable ,., cather
will continue across the trl-county area on Wednesday, With htghs
of70-75, about 10 degrees below
normal, the National Weather
Serv1ce satd.
Tomght, readtngs wtll be
downright chiUy, dippmg 111to the
40s.
Unseasonably cool temperatures arrived early Tuesday as
wmds shtfted to the northeast
behind a cold front.
A warmup wtll begin on
Thursday, when the mercury
again cracks rhe 80-degree matk,
forecasters sa1d.
.
Sunset tonight will be at 7.56
and sunnse on Wednesday at 7:05

Weather forecast:
fonight. .Mostly ckar and
cool. Lows from the upper 40s to
the lower 50s. Light wmd
Wednesday.. Mostly
su nny.
Hill'h&lt; in rhe rmd 70s.
Wednesday
mgh t .. Mostl y
clear. Lows 50 to 5S.
~

Exte'nded forecast:
Thursday.. Partly cloudy. Htghs
near 80.
Friday and Saturday.. Partly
cloudy. Low ncar IJO and high
near 80.

a.m.

Shooting kills l, injure$ 4
PRICHARD, Ala. (AP) - A man fatally shot the
dnvcr of a car before openmg fire at a party down
the road With an AK-47 assault nfl c, killing another
pl.'rson and IIIJUrmg four others, pohce scud

Jernco Lindsey, 20, of Pnchard was arrested Monday after turnmg htntSelf m and was c harged with
two counts of murder and four counts of aggravated
.ossa ult, satd Pnchard Police C hief Sammie Brown.
Brown saad the shoot:J.n~ mav have been m retaltanon for a recent robbery, but Jt \vaS unclear which
uf the v actnm had been ta rgeted
Three of the lllJUred were treated for gunshot
wounds to theJr arnts and legs and released. The
fourth was m c nttcal condltlon with multtple gun-

(PG13)
7:20 &amp; 8:20 FRI &amp; SAT
7:20 SUN·THURS

NUTTY PROFESSOR 2:
THE KLUMPS (PG13)
7:10 &amp; 8;1 0 FRI&amp; SAT
7.10 SUN-THURS

THE CELL
7:00 &amp; 9:30 FRI &amp; SAT
3:30 SAT&amp; SUN

shot wounds.

l'ohcc first found Michael Jackson. 29, slumped
owr 111 hi s c 1r after responding w a caU late Sunday.
Jac kson had been s~ot munerous tunes and had

crashed his car tnto a pole.

I

•

POMEROY - Umts of the
Metgs
Emergency
Servtces
answered 21 calls for assistance
over the Labor Day weekend.
Umts responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Saturday, 2:28 a.m., Sumner
Road, assiSted by Tuppers Plains
as Fmt Responder, Leonard
Koemg Jr, St. Joseph's Memonal
!iospttal;
10:17 a.m., Zuspan Hollow.
Norma Stewart, Holzer Medtcal
Center;
12:46 p.m., Forest Run, assisted
by Syracuse, Anna Tucker, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
2:35 p m., Star Mill Park, assisted by Racine, Joyce White, PVH;
5:18 p.m., Mulberry Avenue,

(USPS 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co,

vote m a pres1denual elc ctwn tf

they strongly dJShke one of the
cand1date s.
"In lots of areas o f hfe people
are mu c h more motivated by the
threat of a loss than they are by
the opportumry of a ga m ," s.11d
Jon Krosmck. a professor of psychology and poltt1 ca l •c~e n ce

form down tlte stJ't'tch
also ll'ill be a factor.

The Daily Sentinel

AssoC\aUon 's an nu al co nft&gt;rence

th e study's

How the aunpaigll$ pt•r-

Units log 21 calls

Mums for sale

Champoo -

d~toc tor

7 p.m. at tile Bedford Town Hall.

RACINE Meigs County
Friends of the Ltbrary wtll meet
Monday at 7 p.m. at the Racme
Ltbrary.

BorgWarner- 341/e

Study suggests dislike of candidates motivates voters
COLUMBUS (AP) - Bemg
turned off by a candtdate can
make for more than heated
lunch table talk . A new Ohto
State Umvemty study suggests
that people arc more ltkely to

The Dally Sentinel o Page A 3

LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

hi s sister's home " He figured wtth five luds,
he 'd better have a couple of gardens and the
kid; helped h1m can some of th e vegetables."
The chtldren also had a trampohne and
tree house tn the back yard , and the father had
re cently bought all five chtldren new btcycles;
Anderson satd. Those btkes, along with sever.;
al toys, were scattered around the shell of th t!'
honte.
·:
Trina and Tnnda had just 1tarted kinder~
garten at Shenandoah Elementary School m
nearby Sarahsvtlle
•
"My daughter rode the same bus wtt!!them ," satd Roger Johnson "She sa td the
twms were so exctted to nde the bus They:·
kept talkong about the bus"
::
Johnson's mt~r. Cheryl Morgare 1dge, md·
she saw RIChard Pangle as recently as Fnday,
at the She11.mdoah Zeps h1!lh sc hoo l football
game
" It's a small town and a snull cou nty,'' Mor- ·

Ava

..

•

7:10 &amp; 9·10 FRI &amp;
7:10 SUN-THUAS
MATINEES SAT/SUN 3:10

IIiiiii

�.. '

'

..

..

f

•
''

ly the Bend

_Th_e_D_al~·ly_S_en_t_in_el_________________I~)~J~·~~~i~C)~II~~-------------~~e~u~~~·~~~~~
The Daily Sentinel
'Lst#DSslid in~

~Hu;R

Charlene Hoefllcih
General Manager

at1hlerOfuw.ntl

WILL DO WHATEVER
IT TAKES... AJMNIPUL4fg~..

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

DEAR ABBY: I am a retired 80yea r-old gene ral surgeon . I am writing
beca use I diSagree wnh your re spo nse to
" Grieving in L.A .." whose friend died
of cancer and wa s neve r told that she
wa s terminally ill . The writer felt guilty.
The greatest fa c tor in living. and in
recove ry from any Illn ess o r inJury, is the
patient's determination to live and
recover. It i s more important by far than
the be-st of medi e'a l advice-, supervis ion
:1nd trl'Jtntent . To destroy ho pl' is to seCd
defeat . The foc us at homl" and in the
profc~sio nal e nvironment sho uld b e

WE'RE LOOKrNG
FOR SOMEONE WHO

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

_Th_e_D_a_ily;;;..._Se_n_tin_e_l_ _ _ _ _

ANOTHER RtCMRP~

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

I..MUrs ro 1M ~an wclctmu~. n.~, sM"JJ Jt, ,." tJt.Ir J08 -.ords. AU Wrkn.,. ••lljut
tditi"l allll "'"" Jt, JignrJ ud incluM tlddnss tJifd trWplwnr PIIUJIIMr. No MllliiiNd iltttn will
H publisl.,d. L1nrn shouii/IH ill rood 14SU, 4dllnnilfl isuJrt, n« ,monlllllin

lrJ

Tltr opittiolfl tXprestrd in 1111 coiMMn IHiow tU'f lhr COPISMIMS tifdlr Oltio VtUky PllbUJhill&amp;
Co. '1 nlitorUII IHMrd. audru tlllrcrwilr 11oud.

directed at l'IH; ouragement and a positivt." attitude . An y c:mphasis on " you are
going: to di e" is, tht·rcfore, ro r.1ll y Loun t,·rprodu ctive . -- EUGENE S. KILG0 -

NATIONAL VIEWS

1\.E JR . M D.. TIBURON . CALIF
DEAR DR. KILGORE: lmclli gent
minds can diffe-r. R t·ad on :
DEAR ABBY: ll efore mv first wit&lt;.·
~. hcd of cancer in I IJ(JU, hn d( ;ctor r.llled
IHL' lltto his otTtn: . H~.· sJid Ill· \\'ould tell
her .Ill tht.· fa..-C~ .111d hmY much {I lilt.' ~h e

Ill-tim
Ray reports release disrnpts
campazgn season.

FORT SMITH. ARK ~
DEAR L.L.: You have made a compelling argument . Read on:
DEAR ABBY: My husband was
diagnosed with cancer early last year.
Throughout his treatment, we were
given optimistic scenarios \vhich, on~
by one, proved to be unfounded . I
pleaded with the doctors, hospital perADVICE
sonnel and visiting nurs~s to give nte
honest answers about his chances for
had left. I told him it was my responsi - reco\'ery. No one would .
bility. The doctor said it was her right My greatest sorrow is that we were
- that she might want to say something never given the opportunity to properto the family or have somethi!'g do ne.
ly say goodbye. There was much I wantH e was righ t1 When I gave her the facts, ed to say, and advice I needed to hear.
she to ld m e to get our mmister, as she Th e t nd came suddenly from cardiac
WJII!ed to be baptized .
arrest.
Abby, my wife literally got out of her
PLEASE TELL HEALTH CARE
deathbed en be bJpt iZt•d at the hospital. PERSONNEL
TO TELL THE
Every ~ p e rso n who is d yi ng ha s rhe TRUTH WHEN PATIENTS OR
ngh~ to know. I have never regre-tted. FAMILY ASK FOR IT Sollie people
doing what I did . Please· tl"il your read- may not want to hc:ar tt -- that's theu
ers w ho ar~ wrt"stlin g with this quesuun c hoice --. but when otht·rs seriously ask
not to hold b.1ck the truth . -- L.L. IN t(w it . please rc spond reali sti c.1lly. Had

Dear

Abby

Twin births announced

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, Sept. S, rh e 24'Jth day of2000.There are 117 days
left in the year.
Today's Hi ghli ght in History:
On Se pt. 5. 1774, rh e first Co ntin ental Co ngress assembled 111
Philadelphia.
On this date:
In 1836,Sam Housto n was elected president of rhe R ep ubli c of
Texas.
In 1882. the natwn 's first Labo r Day parade was held in New York .
In 1905, rl1e Treaty of Po rtsmouth . ending the Russo-Japanese
War, was sib'lled in New Harnp&lt;hire. ·
In I '1 14, th e First Battle of the Marne began during' World War I.
In 1 9~9. th e U ni ted States p roclaim ed its neutrality in World War
II.
In 1957, "O n the R oad," by "beat" author Jack Kerouac, was first
publi shed .
In 1972, Arab guerri llas attacked the Israeli delegation at the
Muni ch O lymp ic ga m es; II Israelis, five guerrill as and a poli ce officer Wl' re killed 111 the siege.
In I 975 , Presiden t Fo rd escaped an attempt on his life by Lynette
"S ~u,·aky " Fru mme , a disciple of C harl es Manso n, in Sacrame nto,
C ilif.
In I'J&lt;i7. Mother Teresa di ed in C alcutta , India, at age 87.
In I ~'17. co nductor Sir Georg Solti died in France at age 84.
Ten yea rs ago : Iraqi Pres ide flt Sa ddam Hussein urged Arabs to rise
up lfl a Ho ly War agamst the West and fo rmer allies w ho had turned
against him . In M osc.ow, Soviet President M ikhail S. Gorbachev met
with Iraqi Foreign Ministe r Tariq Aziz.
F1vc yea r"' ago : France ended Jts three-year moratoriun1 on nuclear
te&lt;t&lt;, lett ing off an u nderground blast o n a South Pacific ato ll. OJ.
Sunp&lt;on jur&lt;m heard te&lt;t im ony th at po li ce detec tive M ark
Fuhrman had uttered a raci&lt;t slur, and advocated the killing of
bb cks.

During one session , a surgeon asked tf

they would want to be told if they were
terminal. To her surprise. all the patients

said. "No...
Another reader's mothor asked her,
"Am I dying'" She replied: '" ( don 't
know. But let's do whatev~r \VC n eed to
do as if you were. Let's talk and share;
then if you don't di,•, we'll be all the
rich~:r." When her mmher dted two
years later, her father said , "These were
the happiest s:Jd momems of m y life."
Read on:
DEAR ABBY: My mess Jgl' is l(&gt;r
"Grieving in L.A ." : You ;u~: gum g over

in your mind (a nd heart) a thousand
ways you could have handled your dear
friend's pre-death days. Please stop beat- ·
ing yourself up. Hindsight is always
20120. You were betwee n the proverbial
·:rock and a hard place." You were handlil)g the e nd of you and your friend's
relationship from the perspec tive of her
husband's wishes , her mother's and her
do ctor's. Obviously, you were the best
friend your friend co uld ever have had.
It sounds to me like you did an exemplary JOb of juggling a difficult life &gt;ituatiori . Your letter brought back a thousand mem o ries. -- BEEN THERE IN
, FAIRFIELD. IDAHO
To receive a collection of Abby's
most mentorable -- and most frequently rcquestc:J -- po e ms an d e-ssays. send a
business-sized , sc l f~addressed envelop e',
plu&lt; check or mon ey order for $3.95
($4 . 50 111 Ca nad a) to : Dear Abby's
" Keepl'r&lt; ," 1'.0. Box H7 , M·•U n t Morris, IL 6105.J-O.J.J 7. (Posta ge is nlcluded .)

to be moved into the church because of rain .
Guest speakers included Rev. Ron Hodge from Crab Orchard.
WVa., a missionary to the Appalachian Mountains , Dr. Charles
McNeely, who is the Vice President at Midwestern College in Pontiac, Mich ., Pastor Enc Tharp of the Mountain View Baptist C hurch
in Holyoke, Mass.
Enhancing th e services on evening was music by the Builders
Quartet from Ripley, WVa . Dr. James R. Acre. Sr., pastor of the
church, announced that plans are already underway for next year's
tent meeting to include the return of with the return of Rev. Hodge
and Dr. John Hamblin.

HENTOFF'S VIEW

TODAY IN HISTORY

we been given honest answers, we could
have expressed our heartfelt farewells,
then enjoyed each remaining day as it
came. -- GRIEVING IN NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
DEAR GRIEVING: My h ea rt goes
out to you . Thi,s is a question for which
there is no one right answer. A Washington reader wrote that she and her husband joined a cancer support group.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

'

• The New York Times, on Robert Ray s ill-timed reporr: From th e
moment he succeeded Kenneth Starr as independent counsel,
Robert W. Ray has been aware of the need to conclude the investigations of President and Mrs. Clinton in a fair and timely way, without needlessly disrupting the campaign season. Mr. Ray ha.1 dribbled
out reports on two elements o f a broad inquiry that has lasted more
than five years and cost $50 million . Now, according to a story by
Neil A. Lewis in Tuesday's Times, Mr. Ray plans to deliver the third
and potentially most controversial report in mid-September or
shortly thereafter - in other words, just when the New York senatorial contest between Mrs . Clinton and Representative Rick Lazio
is kicking into high gear.
·
This page has long supported a full investigation ofWhitewater
and all the other unresolved allegations involving Bill and Hillary
Clinton that disappeared fi-om public view during the Lewinsky
scandal. ...
But if the independent counsel had the evidence to bring a criminal indictment against Mrs. Clinton on Whitewater, he should have
and wou ld have done su by now....
In the absence of stunning new information worthy of prosecution , he sho uld stand aside and let the voters decide based on ·the
existing voluminous public record. If Mr. Ray cares at all about his
credibility. and about whether the public sees his report as an objective docu ment or a time bomb lobbed at Mrs . Clinton's campaign,
he will delay it until after the election.
• The Adanta Journal-Constitution, "" vouchers widet1i11g gap·
hrrwem rich a11d poo ~ For the poorest children in the ~vorst public
schools, vouchers rep resent a stopgap measure that offers a few of
them a possible way out. For America n society as a whole, vouchers serve as a permission slip to igno re failing sc hools and, more
importantly, failing communities. The neighborhoods where these
children live have far more impact on their academiC success than
do teachers or sc hools .
Nonetheless, voucher proponents trumpeted a study released this
week that showed improved test scores among African-American
students who participated in voucher programs. The study found no
sta tistically Sigmficant change in scores of white and Latino children
using vouchers .
In explanation, the study's authors sugges t that African-Am erican
students attended worse public sc hools, and therefore benefited
m ost ti-om private sc hools. !Jut It's more than impoverished schools
th at handicap African- Amen can kid s; it's impoverished lives ....
The histo ry of pubhc ed ucation in Am erica reflects both
moments of glory and sham e. The universality of education enabled
th e children of Europea n and Asian immigrants to become doctors
and lawyers. l.lut the fallacy of scpar,ue but equal schools denied
black, Latino and Native American children the same opportunities.
Vou chers may repeat t~at hi story, ultimat~ly guaranteeing children
of means even grea ter advantage whil e leaving th e poo rest and most
at-risk c hildren farth er behind .

Tuesd•y. s.pte.ber 5, 2000

Focus on·death destroys a patient's will to live

~~1t*J

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74o-992-2156 • FIX: 992·2157

Page AS

Documentary explores the power of nonviolence
On Sunday nights, September 18 and 25, the
Public Broadcasting System will air a remarkable, historic documentary, "A Force More
Powerful: A Century of Nonviolent Conflict."
Narrated by Ben Kingsley, who won an Academy A:vard for his portrayal of Mohandas Gandhi in 1982, the program covers the courageous,
perilous careers ofGandln; the Rev.James Lawson, an American civil rights leader and teacher;
and Mkhuseli Jack, a South Afi-ican leader of
nonviolent anti-apartheid actions.
Another part of " A Force More Powerful''
focuses on Polish Solidarity leader Lec h Walesa ;
Sergio Bitar, a key force in Chilean opposition
to the murderous regime of Augusto Pinochet;
and the extraordinarily brave Danish resistance
to Nazi occupation.
I know something about the alien- misun derstood subject of direct-action nonviolence .
It is not passive pacifism, as the examples of
Gandhi and Dr. Martin Luther King have so
compellingly demonstrated . My own knowledge comes fi-om having written a biography
- and edited .We letters - of AJ. Muste, a
C hristian minister who was a key strategist of
the ami- Vietnam- War movement and also
advised Dr. Martin Luther King in his nonviolent but very direct-action campaigns.
Dr. King told me that he became interested in
the strat~gy of nonviolen ce when he heard AJ.
Muste lecture at the Crozer Theological Seminary in Pennsylvania, where King was a student.
As AJ. Muste used to say - and as this television documentary makes dramatically and
reverberatingly clear- "Peaceableness does not
mean trying to disturb nothing or glossing over

Musr c; Dorothy lhy, th L· C •thnli c spcakc-r vi
truth to pmwr ; &lt;u)d other' - I CUIJH11irl l'd t' i\j l
diso bedience in frnnt of ,1 dr.tfi regi.,rrano11 L L'1 ~­
ter, along wirh lltmdrcd" uf orllLT" th .ll d 1\·.
Based on my kn owkdgl' of An w r ic. 1n IL·.Jd,·r, .
n o nviolent direct action 111dLJ d in~ i\.1
Muste and MJrtin Luth n I{ in g - I'L'tt'r •\1 k
t' nllai J. l'ditor of this teh.•vi-;ion ".:r ic'\. 1'- L''\,h rh
right when h~ say'l rh:tt "IL·adcro;; in th L'\t' t nn ·
tli cts tht·msdves .ut' oftl'll n ·lut ' LlTH k .ll kr ~· .111d

Perry reunion held

or

Nat
Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST
realities. It is the mo~t profound kind of d isturbance \Vt' St'ck to achieve. Nonviolence i..; not

apathy or cowardice ur passivity."
Stt:Vt' York . who prudw.T d and wrote this
two-part,·rhrct:- huur J ocument(lr.y, point~ out:
" Nonviolent movemt'n ts often form m
n:.·sponsl" to out~ and-out tyranny: hut rather
than subduing people, repression often energ izes them . It rouses public sentiment from thc
.ce nter, the core. The m od crat!.;' m iddk won 't act
until the extrcmt'S are cast in to dramati c relief.
"The tide turned in Nashvi ll e, for example,"
York goes 011, "when th e: h o m e of J prominent
hlack h wye r was bombed. Such act' fud ed th e
nonviolent r.mks of the civil rights movement,
rallied the African- American LOill llllllli ty,
· engaged the white community. and cau!lht th e
attention of media and govcrnm t.· nt bl·c m st: thc
conrra~r was d evastating."

mort• relu ctmt herne'l.Tiwy'n· nn t ]'t1\\'t '1 .
mad; rhcy'rl' n o t loo kmg f()r glory 'itllll c 1d
thc1n don't !..'S pt·rially \VJI~r ro ht' h·.hkT., tl~t ·\
ju ~ t want to ~ top th l' tyram 1y ur rl1t· 11ll'l) 1JH\ ..
TIH.'re 1S ·tl _c o111pa ui t)~ honk _ri .t rln . . dtu u
lll e llt~tr y. Jlll1) hsh ed by Sr. M .1 rfll h I11"L'""· ll h
titlc.. is thl' san 11.·:''A Forn· M orl' P t)\\tTful." \L' 11
John McC aiJJ , whu 1s Wl' ll - t·xptT l L' Il t"L' tl . 111
tliret:t action that JS nut II UllVtOIL'tll. ~.ty.., n f dt L'
book:'' I n:.•conmtc:nJ It to f.l iiYO il l' wiH l hcllc\·c.,
t'Vt'JJ

/

that power only fl ows frmn th e bJ rrd nt·,, ~Ull...
There are :-~dded val lll"S to a PBS St'l"lt''- hke
thi s onL·.The ~~n progrc~ 111 \\'i ll he di-,tnhmed to libraric:s and ~onls. and \·i dt'l"' c. u1 hL·
purchased fo r home ust'. Morcovl' r, the t\lhn t
Einstein Instituti on will see to worh.h ndt· d1 -.~
semination of v ideocasst·ttes .md o;tu dv c:u ~t k..,
for cl assrooms anJ librJrit.·s.
· ·
In a time when th ere .tre su tCv., · au th t'llti'r
heroes (t10m· of w ho m are L·urrt·mlv. ru nnll l"~
lOr president o n the m ;~ or-p.lrty tid·~eh) . --,\
Force More Powerful" shows :tllnf us - \'l llll lg

J

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

R oadblocks nuy be JU Stitil'd . t(&gt;r

James
Kilpatrick
UPS COLUMNIST

satisfactory answer. Lowe r fed e ral courts are

sh·arply divided on the iss ue .
"
The case at hand comes from lndianJpolis.
where motorists Jam es Edmond ancl Jodi
Palnier brought a class action to enj o in the:
city's checkpoint program. Once 111 th e pm
th ey had been stopped at a checkpoint. They
had not enjoyed the experience. In I 9YH the
c ity set up six pullove rs with the avuwcJ intt·n tio n of catching drug oflenders. Police stopped
1,1 6 1 cars.The inspecti ons resulted in 55 drugrelated arrest~ and 49 arrests for other offenses.
Officers regard such a 9 percent hit rate as
hu gely successful. The yuestiOn before the District Court was wheth er th e program co uld be
continued .
At trial , th e city defended its program as well
w ithin the bo \lnJ,mc~ of Fourth ArncnJmciir
jurisprude nce. U nder Ihe city's proton1l , fixed
c heckpoints Wt'l"l' determin ed by crimL' sratist~c s and by th l" dq;:r~e of inco nve nience ·
imposed upon drivers. Only a predetermined
Illlmber of cars were stopped at one time. Unifor med o ffi ce rs chec ked doc uments and
looked for signs of drunk driving. lf everything
appear ed to b e in orde r, m otorist.:; were
d etain ed fo r no m o re than two tu fi ve minutes,
a rninimaJ intru sion.
U.S. Distri ct Jud ge Sarah Evans J.larker
agreed with th l· ci ty that th e program mer con-

.

First cousins, Willeen Smith, daughter of faye Kalb; Helen Swift
and Jane Kimes, daughters of Amy Ca ldwell ; Randy Perry, son of
Courtney Nicole Lyons and Jordan Ray Lyons
Harlan; and Marilyn LeiSt, daughter of Lucy, represented the next
generation. Flora Mae Osborne, another cousin living in Albany and
REEDSVILLE - C heryl and Tr&gt;vis Lyons announce the birth of
daughter of John and Janie Douglas, was also present.
twins, Courtn ey Nicole Lyons and Jordan Ray Lyons. on July 24 at
Their c hildren and grandchildren alld those of other cousins not
Camden -C lark Memorial Ho spital in Parkersburg. W.Va.
able to be present filled out the third and fourth generations. While
Courtney weighed four pounds, nin e ounces, and Jordan weighed
many came from Chillicothe. Columbus and MacArthur, others
live pounds.
came from California, Georgia, Maryland, N ewYotk and Texas. One
Th eir patcrnJI g randp"·ents are Debra and Kenneth White of
family came from Mexico; another from Poland. '
Lou g Botto m and R ay mond Lyons of P.1rkersburg, WVa . Their
In August, and just before the reunion, the next generation got
Ill ,ItLTll JI gr.m&lt;.lpJTeiHs Jre Edna and Bobby Johnson, Sr., of Coolville.
startt·d wjth the birth of Lu cy's first great grandchi ld and another in
Th eir p.~tc:r n ~l l grt· ;t t-grandparem~ arc Theodore and May Orie
Harlan's. line.
Cl)nnoli y nfTuppcrs PLullS. and paternal grcJt- great g randp:-~rent is
Special guests in clud ed lon g time neighbo rs and friends, Arthur
lkul..h Sc hultz ofTupp ers Pl ai ns .
Crabtree, Wilma Huff and Dwaine Jordan.
Th e SundJy festivities mcluded a formal dinner and program at
Lake Hope State Park hosted Jnd arranged by Helen and Guy Switi
and Willeen Smith. Morning wursh.ip was at Temple Umted
Mt·tltodlsc C hurch . Afternoon vis1~ wert• mad!.' to School Lot
C emetery and thl· farm owned by the Perry's from the early 1900's
to 1969 and the f.1rlll owned by Lucy (Perry) ;md Bill Thomas from
I 'JSH 11 nul the l ~70\ . All lo cations are in Columbia Township. Meigs
County.
.
Through the . following week those people who stayed on
explored tlwr roots, the countryside and pla ces of interest in day
trips to Athens, Chill icothe. Marietta, Nelsonville. Pomeroy and
Roseville.
OIJ and Delbert 's six children, born between 1902 and 1915,
were Frank, Faye, Amy, Alice. Harlan and Lu cy. Frank did not mar ry
and worked the family farm · until his death in 1969, the same year
his mother. Ola, and his sister, Alice, died. Delbert died in I 9.39.

Tent meeting held

Jml o ld alike - pl·opk w ho take prin.c &gt;pk;l
the nonviolt'n ce of detennin l·d resistance to risks fJ r heyond their own \dt:.imcrnt .
thJt hatred.
(Nat Hellft!ff.is d ll!lfit)/1!1/1}' rcll tiiiiHnl ow!tt'Jit y tlll
Durin!( the VietnJm War -- influenced by A.J. .. rite First A lllclld,u'llf t~mlrft f HrH t?( 1-?..l. ~flts.}

A sniff doesn't represent a search, the courts say

.•

''"""Pic. ,;,; ::

intercl·pt ill egal 11l111llgram~ o r to ctr~.: h .1 tkl· -- ·:::
ing ni m inal. but in th l' ~..-ourt ·~ \· i ~.·\\" th e Im il -an;1puli s cherkpo im pro~r:u n co uld nnr he Ill" ..
tilil'd undt~ r :lily c:xception . ·
·
P o'\lll'l' wa'i unwilling to 'i \t gg-t''i£ .lily hn gln :
lin e r u le.;;: " Whl'll urgent con~id n;lri lHl'- dt' r h ~.· . ·:
puhl k q j~·ty rl'quirl' ro tnprwni 'l' \\'ith t h~
norm .\] prwuples c on o;tr ;til11tlg 1.1\\' t.•nfort"l' ~
llll'llt. tlw nornul prinrip]c:, 111;;y h.1w tu }lL'Il d: ·
T :IL' ( :onsrirution is no t :1 "uindL· p.trt". li ~1r tilT ~
\u r h ur~en cy ha.:; bec: n show n h LTe ."
.

Miller- Barton family

Judge Easterbrook toJOk a di tkrem "'''"' Hc ·:

sti tutio nal re qui re ment~. :t nd rt:fu'led to 'i hut it
down . Thc ohjectmg motor ists. supportnl by
the Indta11a Civ il Libc rrie" U n ion. ;1ppeakd
s u cn· s~ fully to rhc U.S. Court o f Appe.ds t(Jr

thc 7th C 1rc uir. Cluef Judge IZ ich ;ud l'os nn
and Judge D l&lt;m t· P Wood voted m l'L'VlT ..,e.
Judg~.· rrank E.IStLTbrook di'i\L'IHCd . Bee\\!'(." o f
th e ron tlicting o pi n 1m1\ 11 1 lowl·r tl·dl' ral
court.:;, the Supn:me Court agrt·ed rn hear th e
case. It pn..·s~.· nts a clast· qul.'stt u n .
As a gc n ~ra.l p roposition. th e Fo u rth Alllend llll'llt reqtmes poli ce to how ( I) "prob.&gt;hle
cau se" or Jt least (2) "an articulabk- ~mpi ri o n ''
b efore th ey stop and o:;earc h .u1yum·. 111 IIJdJ anapolio:; they l'1 ad ncithLT ju:'titlc1tiun t(Jr ra il ing our Rc.Wt'l" th e \lllftlng dol!;.Th l'\· \\"l' I"L' ( O~\ ­
mg &lt;I ll l't .111 d hnpt ng ,l t~·w t!'.,h "o\\",; 111 IIHO H .
Th cJ\' :1 re l'Xt:l'ptinn~ tn tllL· gcnn. tl ru k. ,~..,
Posner ac kn owledged . " We 1 11 .1~: as•Hnnc that it~

th e lmli;uwpn lll poli ce had a cr,·d ible tip th .&gt;t .1

cu loaded with dyna mit e :md ownrow n Indi anapol is, they· wo uld nm be violating the Con stitlltio n if th l·y bloc ked :Ill rh L· roads to the
Jowntow11 ,Jrt'.l eve n thou g h thi'i \\'ou iJ
am ou iH to ~ topp i nf!; riH JII'"'IIILt,., of dri\'L'I"'i with out ~u.:;pcctin g J'l Y l ll lL' of th e m of LTill1111.1l

•

Co n o; t i tuti~..m toleratt''i othn exn•prion ....

·.

r

"obj lTt ivcl y rca sonahl l' g ive n ih 111i n itn ,d · ~
intrmt o ll ami ~ ubsranr ial ~ \Jc cc~ ...." Th e lll\.,l'., io 1;
ofp r ivacv .Jt ~~roadbl ock is ~lil!;ilt . D c t nltHHl 1'

shore th ~ ~L'&lt;trrh ~upertiL·i.1 l. ,;nd th l' u&lt;c ot' .1
dru g- ~ nitlln g d og i ~ not .1 '\l·.trch " ,\1 .tll. 1·.1 ,1- ·
LThroo k protL·~snl to bt· pu n led h\· h, . . tll l-

lc a gu L'~ · roJll"l'l"ll w1th t hL' m n tiut.hnl t~n ,;
Sl'.l rch . Evnyu ll t" agn.'c'i rlut nHtti nl' li t\'11\l' ·
:111 d - rq~istrat wn Llll·c kpoi lm .11\.' ,.,1hd \Vh\· 1, 1l
dilli.Tent If th l' prim ary p u rpmt.· i-, to l hc 1·~-. ti l1

Illicit drugs'
I wo uld ~ iJ e w ith Judge: E;lstl'rh rnok 1m 11 11 -.
one. T here i" .1 vny rt·Jl di'itincrinn h~.·t\\ lTi l
ho m ~.·~ .md .tutomob ik .... If t~· d,· r.tl .1~t'llt . , !t tl~
pm~.·d to ~L'.m· h cvny ll)t!J h ttll..,L' in .11 . 11 1~..\ 1 1 111 ~
ly r hmcn block. rh.eir propn-.,tl wo1dd h._· g ll'L' f~
cd wirh how!... of .lnt\10 11 ,111d '&gt;t"tf ll l. 1\;11 till'
l'Xp~curion of p n v.1L·y j.., IIILIL"h dnnnmlll'd ttl
till' ca"e o f .1 pL'r~un driving .1 c.1r in ,1 dru12:~
intl·., tcd nctghborh ood. In 'i uch cornh.1t 70 11 ~·..,_
l'Vl'fY lOth vc hick c arriL·~ an"artlcul.tbk "li")Hcion" that the drJVlT is p ed dhn~ drut.,~. l wou ld
~l' l \lp th e t·hcckpoinr" .md \\'hi-all' t()r ] t( l\l't
1t1 gt•t on the JOh .

activity."

T ht.•

1~

(},111/('S

J.

Kr'IJ'ct fl'i(k•

f&gt;tTI'S S)'lufiratf.)

1.~

,J (tl /11111/ 1/.1(

,t;l,

r

.II/I'I I ·d'

TUESDAY
POMEROY
Salisbury
Township Trustee s, Tuesday, 6
p.m. at the township hall, Rockspnngs Road.
ALFRED Orange Township Trustees, reg ular · metin g,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m . home of Osie
Follrod.
MIDDLEPORT - OH 570
Pon1eroy TOPS group, Overbrook Center, Middleport, Tuesday, 5 to 7 p.m .
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastt:rn Athletic U~.1ostcrs will llll't't
on Tuesday Jt 7 p.lll. In the hi gh
school li tedia r e-nter. All pJrents
of athletes an:.' urged to attend.
RACINE Racine Village
Council Tue sday. 7 p.m. at the
municipal building.
·
REEDSVII LE
Olive
Township Trustee s, 7:Jv p.m .
Tuesd~y. adt the rownslup offi ce
on Joppa Road.
POMEROY -

Immuni zation

clinic, Meigs County Health
Department, Tuesday, 1 to 7 p.m
at t he office, M e morial Drive,
Pomeroy. Shot records to be presented; children to be accompa nied by parent / legal guardian .
WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE - Snpio Township Trustee meeti n g , 6 :30 p.m .,
Pagevdle town hall.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Th e
Widow's Fellowship wdl meel
Thu rscb y noun t( H ;~ pt cm c
potlu ck at the &lt;.:h,·slme Park .
Takt· coH'rt·d J1 sh . t.1ble ~l·rvice
and wrJppcd w lme ele phants for
game pnz~ ~The Communiry Calendar
is published as a free service
to non-profit groups wishing
to announce meetings and
special events. The calendar
is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed
a specific number of days.

celebrates centennial reunion

r

hc: Ji c Vt.' ~ th ,lt tht• f l Jdiall:Ip oJi~ jWil .~ l" .ll\1

CALENDAR

reumon .

The contrast is between violent hatred and

A large madside sign alerts the driver: Police
checkpoint ahead' Sure enough, th ere are th e
red cones and the bubblegumlights.Th e driver
obediently stops and rearhcs for his driver's
li cense. While this is being produced and
inspected, a dw g-!m itling dog ambles around
the vehicle.
Question : Is this fa miliar procedure consti tu tional'
Answer: Yes, no. and it depends.
During the term that begins Oct. 2, the
Supreme Court will attempt to provide a more

POMEROY - Four generations of descendants of Ola and Delbert Perry of the Carpenter area of Meigs County, gathered recently at Lake Hope State Park for a family reunion.
The l'errys were married in Meigs County in 1901 and 9wned a
farm in Columb ia Township until 1969, the year that Ola ~nd her
eldest son, Frank. died .
I
Lucy (Perry) Thomas, now of Laytonsville, Md ., sole surviving
child of Ola and Delbert, represented the eldest generation at the

GOING UP - An old fa s hioned tent meeting was held at the Hillside
Baptist Church recently. Here church memoers erect the tent. (Con triouted photo I
I'OMLROY -- Th c tirst Mi d- Ohio Vall ey olcl- fashion ,·d tl'llt
lll l't' tlllg: was hl'i d rt· t-c ndy ,lt th t: HtllsH.Ic Bap tist Chu rch.
A l.ugc par.J Lh ut ~- hh· tL' Ilt , ~ymbo li s m of the " Ai rborn t· " (hem e
w.1s ~ rt·ctcd by dwrch m cmb"-·n for thl.:' ~ nvin·s,scvcr:.ll ofwht ch h ad

POMEROY - D escendants of John and Sarah (Haines) Miller
and Austin and Winifred (Grate) Barton gathered at the M eigs Senior
Center on August ' 19, to celebrate their 100 reunion. A total of 126
relatives tTJveled from Georgia, Michigan, West Virginia. Kent!Jcky,
Pennsylvania , Kansas, Indiana. Washington DC, and all over the state
of Ohio to attend the reunion.
Eunice (Miller) Braley, 87 , of Hamilton , daughter of Von and
c;enevi eve (Stansbury) Miller, born at Langsville. was the oldest
descendaut present. She also received recognition for having five
ge nerations present , a sun R ev. Harold Braley of Lynchburg, granddaughter Nancy Young of Langsville, and great granddaughter and
great, great grJnddau ghter Angela a!ld Kati e Allman ofVinton .
Followmg th~ dinnl:'r, the afternoon was spent remini scing, looking at dl·sccndant c harts, taking: pictures, and visiting. Many famili es
spen t .1 three-day weekend in Me igs County traveling through the
county, visiting th e fair, and visitmg acquaintances.

••

PVH Executive Director

Pleasant Valley Hospital
.fi l!tC'IItla~ rf C,/c;tr:rti /?ir;it,/c!:Jrla/1

�. . ..

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September s, 2000

White House releases Bush has plan to provide seniors with prescription drugs
studies to promote
health care for parents

.

..

\

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

-.

-. -

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

·''

Daily Scoreboard, Page B6

•.'·

.'

• I

WASHINGTON - Pressing irs health care agenda, the White
House is presenting two reports Tuesday that support the idea of
expanding government children 's health care programs to parents.
A study from the. nonparti sa n Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities found chat allowing parents to apply for aid under the
programs makes it more likely that their children will be covered.
Separately, a White review of various studies on the subject
concludes that expa nding existing coverage or federal support for
ht·alth care programs. was sup&lt;rior to offering parents rax deductions or credits for health ~are.
Co ng ress is considering .legislation to expand coverage or provide additioml tax breaks for health car&lt; programs . Most iRt·publi cans favor tax breaks. while most Dt&gt;mocrars f.1vor a bill th.1t
would l'xpan d digibility under existing programs.
Most poor ( hildn.·n arc digiblc for health CJTl' through either
Mcdi&lt; aid or tht· Cluldren 's H&lt;·alth lnsurann· l'mgram (CHI I').
( :HIP ·,\ .:IS. creatt•d in 1997 ro llelp kids whose f.unill.:s earn too
!IHh: h to qu~llify for Mc:dil"aid bur ca n 't JtJon.l private msuran ce.
( : ong:r~o.· ss Ius bc . .·n l"onsidc: ring legisi ;Htoll to expand lhes.l' prog r.l ms to othl:t f;muly mt·mbc:rs .
Th~.·re .lfL' :~n ~.·~tlm .ttc:J 7 million children who n.: nuin unin~ur~..·d . .dthollgh rh~..·y ,ITt' ~.·hgibh.- fur health care ass1st.ntn.·.
Lc q;htnn Ku. who \\:rote dlt' Ct•ntt•r's report , saiJ smm: part." ll ts
don '[ bhl\\' Jbnut :fw programs. whilt.• orht·rs don 't ukt• tht• time
tu .tppl y for tht·m
In Oregon. H awaii JIH.l Tcnncssl'l'. which ~;.•xp;mdcd Medi cai d
· co\·crage to parems in 1994, coverage of eligiblt&gt; childn:n &amp;-yearso ld o r you nge r ros&lt; trom 51 percent to 67 percent !rom I '1'10 to
1998. an analysis of C ensus data found . In states that didn't
expa nd their prorrams, the proportion of children insured only
increased 3 percentage points to 54 percent .
" When you make the program broader so the parents can join
ur maybe some older siblings can join then they say it becomes
wo rthwhil~ ," Ku sa id in an interv)Ew.
Since 1998 , the District of CoFumbia and nine states- California. Connecti cut, Maine, Missouri, New Jersey, New York ,
Ohio, Rhode Island and Wisconsin - approved or carried out
expansions to their Medicaid programs to cover more lowincome families, including parents, the report said.
The second report, a summary of various studies compiled and
released by the White House Council of Economic Advisers,
concluded that tax credits would encourage some individuals to
pay for group insurance or even the more expensive individual
insurance. But this is still less of an incentive - and is more
expensive for the government - than expanding existing programs or using a combination of the two, the report concluded.
Republican presidential candidate George W. Bush supports a
tax credit of up to $2,000 per family to help low-income workin g Amer ica ns buy health insurance and an expansion of tax-free
medJ cal savings accounts that can be used to pay for health
l.:'xpenses .

VICe President AI Gore favors expanding coverage for children
'nd pa:e nts and a tax credit so uninsured people can purchase
individual health policies.

ALLENTOWN, P•. (AP)- George W Bush
is unveiling a S158 billion plan to provide
seniors with prescriptio n drug and other
improved benefits. tackling an issue of critical
importance for millions of elderly Americans.
Bush's proposal would strengthen Medicare,
help seniors pay fur all ~r part of Medicare premiums and subsidize prescription drug costs,
with low-income seniors receiving special help.
according to a fact sh&lt;·ct fmm Bush's campaign.
Bush's plan will sharpen the debate over
health care beP.wcn the GOP prcstdenoal
nominee and Vice Pn:sidem AJ Gore. who has
proposed spending an estimated $253 billton
vver 10 years to adJ ;l pn.·scription drug: benefit
to Medicare. the fcdcr.1l health program fo r
elderly and disablt·d Amencans.
About 25 1nillion pt.·opk on Mt.·dicJrL' h:w~..·
pn:.-scription drug Lon·ragc..· of somt· ~on: 12
million people on Mt•di c..::UL' h:l\'l' none.
Bush is proposing to spL'nd S 1 10 billion uvt.·r
10 )'l"Jrs to "modcrmzc" 1\tkJicm..· ,md givL" S ~H

billion to states ov.:r the next four years to help cent of poverry, and subsidize the cost of'preseniors pay for drugs in the short term.
scription drug coverage for seniors with
.. Medicare is an enduring commitment of incomes between 135 percent and 175 pen:ent
our country, but it must be moderniud for our
ofpov.:rty.
times; ' Bush said in prepared remarks. "We will
- ·cover catastrophic Medicare costs in
work to modernize M~care. But we will not
excess of $6,000 annually for all seniors.
wait to help seniors · without ~ription
- Pay 25 percent of premium costs for predrugs."
The '' Immediate Helping Plan.. money for scription drug coverage for all seruors above
states would start to flow as soon as 2001 if Bush 175 percent of poverty
It was not clear whether the government
were elected. It would cov.:r all costs of prescription drugs for seniors earning up to subsidies would gu to seniors who choose to
$11,200 (135 pen:ent of the POI(!'rty level), and purchase drug coverage fiom private insurance
a part of the cost for seniors earning more.
contpanies.
The lo nger-range SilO billion plan would:
The Gore campaign maintains that Bush's
- Guarantee that every senior shall remain
proposed tax cuts would leave no money_in the
entitled to current Medicare benefits.
budget for drug aid .
- Give Medicare recipients a ~hoice of
"Where's he gning to get the money'" asked
modern health plans, including coverage for
Sen. jol' lJebern1an of Conlll"Cticut, Gore's runprescription drugs.
- Cover the full cost of Medicare premiums ning mate , who was c1mpa1gning in Illinois
fin s~ nlors with incomes .lt or below 135 p"c r- Monday.

. '·
'fuFsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Sports

!::'1.~

Gallia Academy at Point Pleasant,
TBA (at Hidden Valley)
Eastern at Miller, 4:30
Meigs at TVC Ohio, 4 :30 (at
Franklin Valley)
·
Wednesday's Matches
Gallia Academy at Walston, 4:30
River Valley at Meigs, 4:00 (at
Pine Hills)

Millions of acres of forests reopening in Montana
HELENA, Mon1. (A I') Mtlltons of
acres of foresrs and g:r;tssl:ll1ds in Mont ;m:~
were reopening ro the public o n Tu~sday
because coo l, rainy \Vc:athc..·r J.lh.l incrca~ing
1
numbers of fi.ndightcrs h.1ve ks~c n~..·d rhl'
danger of w.Jldfires, state and fcder.1l otlicials
announ ced .
Monday's annou~E."ment - by the U .S.
forest Service and 1t&lt;,ov. Marc RKicot means 20 n1il1ion acres m are1s h1t hard es t
by this summers wildfires will again be o pen
to hunting, fishing and other recreational
activities. said Pal Graham, director of the
state Department of fish, Wildlife and Parks.
"I am pleased that with the presence of
additional firefighting capabilities, cooler
weather, some precipitation and enhanced
moisture ... we are able to suspend th e executive orders previously issued concerning
land closures," Racicot said.
There were some exceptions to the
reopening&lt;, and fire-danger restrictions such
as limiting campfires and smoking to desig-

nated areas and restrictions on off-road
vehicles remained in force .
Nationwide, 81 large fires were sull burning on 1.67 million acres Monday in
Arkansas, Califorma, Idaho, Mississippi .
Montana, Nevada , Oklahoma, Oregon,
South Dakota, Texas and Wyoming, according to the National Interagency fire Center
in Boise,ldaho.

"I am Jllcased tltat with tl1e
presence of additiolltd .firefigl1tiug
capabilitirs, cooler W£ather; some
precipitation and enl1a11ced moisture
... we are able to suspend the
executil'l' orders pm•io11sly issued
concerning laud clos11res,"
Gov. Marc Rllclc.ot

To date, 74,571 fires have burned nearly
6 .6 million acres across the nation, the center said.
The announcements in Montana came as
the massive fires in the Bitterroot Valley
were ·on the wane, blunted by cool, rainy
weather, and residents turned the Labor Day
holiday into a Firefighters Appreciation Day.
.. All these people in yellow shirts, they all
walked away from what we have right here
- their wives and kids, their families - and
spent their summer doing everything they
could to save ours," Ravalli County Sheriff
Perry Johnson said at a rally in Hamilton .
"We can never thank you enough."
firefighters were mobilized frem 38
sta tes, Canada. N ew Zealand, Australia and
numerous military units deployed in the valley and elsewhere in Montana. State officials
have said more than 11,000 people helped

~,.-~·

battle the tires, not ClHIIJtiug volunteers.
Feder:al offici:tls !.:tid '!.7 large fires we re
still active in Montana. cove ring nearly
6 70,000 acres .
"The moisture and high humidity have
helped tremendously," said infornmion offin·r Steve Moore of the Bitterroot National
forest. bur " we're cautioning people not to
get too complacent."
Elsewhere on Monday:
- In Wyoming, Devils Tower National
Monument reopened to visitors. Hundreds
of tourists had been evacuated or turned
away over the weekend because of a wildfire
that had spread o\·:r 1 ,550 acres. Firefighters
had the blaze nearly contained.
- A tire in Idaho's Salmon-Challis
National forest, which has burned 200,000
acres the past two -months , is expected tn be
contained by month's end, fire bosses said.
Roughly half an inch of rain fell over the
weekend. On Monday, there were 21 major
fires burning 693,700 acres in Idaho.
-The Texas forest Service issued a fire
safety alert, warning residents to take extra
precautions during the drought as 19 large
fire• burned over 20,000 acres. One fire
northeast of Houston forced the evacuation
of 92 homes in Libaty County, while
another north of Dallas burned nine houses
and three barns.

ST. LOUIS (AP) -The big plays w.ore tloing to us_··
back for the St. Louis Rams' opener, and
All that, and yet they needed to drive 7 5
they needed aU of them.
· yards for the clinching touchdown, a !Kurt Warner threw for a career-high yard run by Robert Holcombe with 2:58
441 yards and three touchdow'l' in a 41 - to go. Then they had 10 stop a Broncos
36 opening victory over the Denver offense 'they hadn't stopped all night by
Broncos on Monday night that lived up to summoning up ·a pass rush.
the pairing of the last three Super Bowl
The Rams finally nailed down the vicchampions.
tory by sacking Brian Griese twice on
The Rams scored on an 86-yard punt Denver's last possession in the final twb
return and receptions of 72 and 80 yards, minutes. Defensive end Grant Wistrom hit
and had three I 00-yard receiven for only Griese just as threw his final pass on
the second time in franchise history.
fourth-and-33 as the ball fluttered away.
"That's the name of our game," Warner
"I don't think we had a real good pass
said. "That's what we do around here, w.o rush until the very end," Wisttom said.
spread it around and get it to everybody "Until wt: decided to gu out there and
and take advantage of what defenses are win this game."

It reminded some of the Rams of their
nail-biting 23-16 Super B~l victory over
the Tennessee Titans, which wasn '1 sec tired
until Mike Jones tackled Kevin Dy.on a
yard-and- a-half short of the goal line on
the game's final play.
"Why are we always so dramatic?"
defensive end Kevin Carter said with a
sigh as he entered the locker room .
Warner, who threw 41 touchdown passes in his MVP season, was 25-for-35 to
easily top his previous best of 353 yards
last December against Carolina. He also
topped his 424-yard Super Bowl effort.
Az- Zahir Hakim caught five passes for
116 yards and an SO-yard score, and also
had an 86-y;trd punt return.

Wood Co. Christian at Ohio valley
Christian, 4:30
Marietta at River Valley, 5:15
South Gallia at Rock Hill, 5:30
Gallia Academy at Fairland, 5:30
Belpre at Southern, 5:55
Vinton County at Eastern, 5:55
Meigs at Trimble. 5:55
~n St. Joe at Ohio Volley
Ctinslian. 7:00

crzzs Lawn and Garden 1ractor

Thuradly'a Matchee
South Gallia at Ohio Valley Christian, 5:00
Gallia Academy at Warren. 5:15
River Valley at Jackson. 5:15
Southern at Miller, 5:55
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 5:55
Belpre at Meigs. 5:55

Prep=~nlly

0\IP SPORTS EDITOR

Saturday'•Me81a
River Valley at Hurricane lnv.. 9:30
Meigs at Warren lnv.• 10:00
Galli a AcadBrT!Y , at Warren lnv..
10:00

NEWS &amp; NOTES

LT133 Lawn Tractor

3Z5 Lawn and Garden ll-ac:f«
• /8-hp V-Twin engine
• AtlfoiMOC rransmlssion ·

• /3-hp

• 48·inch Convertible mower dec/c.

• 38-inch mowing deck

0n1vJ $38per nuldt*

WELLSTON - Meigs defeated Wellston two games to one in
TVC volleyball action last Thursday at Wdlston. The Marauders
will take their 2-0 mark on the
road on Tuesday when they travel
to Trimble.
Meigs won the first contest 156, lost the second 12-15 before
bouncing back to defeat the Lady
Rockets 15-3 in the third.
Kaytee Davis led Meigs with 15
points on 11-of-11 serving and
'eight kills, Mindy Chancey added
nine points on 13-of-13 serving
with two kills and nine assists,
Corrie Hoover added seven
points on 13-ot~ 13 servmg and
one assist.
Katie Jeffers scored six points
on 13-of-13 serving and nine
assist, Sliannon Price added 14
points on 11 -of- 11 serving and
eigh t kills, and Nikki Butcher
added one point on five of five
servi ng. Jaynee Davis added one
kill and two blocks.
Overall as a team Meigs was 75
of76 serving. with 24 kills and 18
assists.

LX255 Lawn 1ractor
• J5 hp • Autoinatic tr.msmissiou
• 42-inc/J Convellib/e mower deck

1

• 5-speed shift-on-/he-go transmi55inn

'r ~,

The lazy days of summer are here and John Deere has the perfect way to make
your summer lawn care easy on you and on your wallet. Visit a John Deere dealer

' JOH N DEE RE

near you and learn how you can beat the heat this summer.

www.deere.com

To Locate A john Deere Dealer Near You, Call:

•

•••••

'

888-MOW-PROS (Toll Free 888-669-7767)
• •'Jifloo

,~n.. fktct... ~1. 2001l &lt;;,t.,.:t ro i'flPI~~ on kfY1 r:.e-Od ~ ~

,..,.., ~

~ ll'ld!ioJM!f y chwge$ ~~ ••rrrrtHv~ ' AI"'~ ~ftiRS rdt&amp;&lt;mS may oe ~. rcldrln&amp;Wmn hawllfld~bco:tm!I'O!I ~ ~ M ~liealen. ,.. ..,; ErtXid! lMIIItie •1111 detlknNill
5000 21

Fax Meigs County sports news
to the Sentinel at 992-2157.
Email local sports news to galtribune@curekanet.com.
Contact sports editor Andrew
Carter at 992-5287. ext. 21.

•

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

BY ANDREW CARTER

River Valley at Gallia Academy
lnv., 5:00 (at URG)
Meigs at Gallia Academy lnv., 5:00
(at URG)

MelD netlers top
wellston

"A few key blocks is all I need," Hakim
said. "I got escorted into the end zone
twice."
Marshall Faulk had his sixth career I 00yard receiving game with four catches for
100 yards and a. 72-yard score, and also
scored on a 5-yard run.
"We had more explosive players than
they did," Faulk said.
Torry Holt added six catches for 1(13
yards for the Rai11S, who last had three
100-yard receivers in the same game in
1951.
"They move around, they shin, they
motion," Broncos
linebacker
Bill

Meigs girls
runnerup at
Ea Bird

Wedi'IMCIIIy'a Matc'Eastem at Hannan, 6:00

• 42-inch CatWfflble mower decJc

S•pta•lr 1r 5, 2000

PREP CROSS COUNTRY

UNDATED- Belpre took a
one point lead over Meigs in the
TVC's Ohio Division Golf race
after a win last Th11rsday at the
Brass Ring Country C lub.
Belpre had a 167, followed by
Meigs with a 173. Wellston came
in second with a 177, followed byVinton Counry (188), Alexander
(2 11 )
and
Nelsonville-York
(233).
Matt Preston of Belpre was
match medalist with a 38.
Carson Midkiff led Meigs with
a 40, Jeremy Banks added a 41,
Nick Dettwiller added a 45, Josh
Napper a 47, Josh Ray ,a 48 and
Thad Bumgardt\er a 50.

• /5 hp • .4utomatic IIaiiSnlisSion

'~Uel~Uy,

.-

Big plays carry St. Louis past Broncos, 41-36

Belpre overtakes Mllp
In 1VC play

U31JGS SabR' Lawn 1ractor
• 145 hp
• 38-inch mower&lt;it'f'k
• 5-speed shifi·On·tfre·go rransm6&gt;ion

Page 81

TOP MARAUDER - Emily Story of Meigs paced the Marauders to a second place finish in the girls team
standings at the River Valley Early Bird Invitational held Saturday at River Valley. (Andrew Carter photo)

REDS BASEBALL

CHESHIRE - Gallia Academy freshman Sara Wiseman
enjoyed a record-setting day at
the River Valley Early Bird Invitational cross country meet Saturday.
The meet featured 11 schools,
including Tri-County teams
from River Valley, Southern,
Meigs and Gallia Academy.
Wiseman outkicked the field,
including junior ..teammate
Kristen Swisher, to capture the
varsity girls individual title and
set the pace for Gallia Academy
to win the girls team crown.
Wiseman's time of 17:42
smashed the event record by 35
seconds. The previous record of
18:07 was held by- Michelle
Schmidt of Wheelersburg and
was set at last year's Early Bird
meet.
Swisher placed second in the
overall standings with a time of
18:07.
Emily Story of Meigs can1e in
third, outpacing Jackson's Star
Emmert down the stretch .
Story's time was 18:29, while
Emmert turned in a time of
18:40.
Bea Morgan of Meigs helped
the Marauder girls finish second
in the girls team table by coming sixth place. Morgan's time
was 19:17.
Gallia Academy's Julie Fisco
and Eva Lyon placed 5-6 in the
race to ensure the Blue Angels'

spot atop the team standings.
fisco's time was 19:24. while
Lyon posted a time of 19:55.
River Valley's Megan ·Godwin
was the top finisher for the
Raiders, placing lOth with a
time of 19:58.
Godwin's teammate Stephani
Johnson was well on her way to
a Top 10 finish, but succumbed
to an asthma attack midway
thtough the race. However,
Johnson recovered to finish
24th with a time of22:27.
Nikki McK.inniss and Laura
Sojka finished 17th and 19th,
respectively, to give Gallia Academy six athletes among the Top
20 finish.ers.
Meigs also had six runners
place in the Top 20. In addition
to Story and Morgan, Marauder
runners Ashley Thomas, Amber
Vining, Brandi Thomas and
Andrea Burdette turned in Top
20 times.
Thomas finished in 20:25 and
Vining turned in a time of
20:35. Thomas completed the
course in 21 :53, while Burdene
crossed the finish line in 22:17.
Southern's Fallon Roush was
the top finisher for the Tornadoes, completing the course in
22:28. Roush finished 25th in
the- individual standings.
Trent Henry led Vinton
·county to victory in the boy.
varsity race. His time of 14:55

Pluse see Me!p, Pip Be

Southem's Hill

Junior rips 37th HR in Reds win wins match medal
CINCINNATI (AP) - When have moved into a first- place tie
AI Leiter gave up a two-run \vith a victory Monday, but fell a
homer to Ken Griffey Jr. in the game behind the idle Braves.
"There still isn't anybody feelfirst inning, he knew the New
- ing sorry for themselves like this
York Mets were in trouble.
Griffey's 37th homer- a rare is some catastrophic thing," manager Bobby Valentine said. "This
left-handed shot off Leiter got the Cincinnati Reds rolling is baseball."
The Mets were swept in St.
to a 6-2 victory Monday that left
Louis,
losing three one-run
the Mets with a four-game losgames in the last at-bat, before
ing streak.
Leiter (14-7) pi cked a bad extending the slump in Cincintime to give up his first homer to nati .
Mike Piazza went 2-for-3
a leli-hander since May 29. The
last thing the Mets needed was with a solo -homer, his 34th, but
another aliernoon of trying to the rest of the Mets' lineup mancome back with a slumping aged only four hits off Elmer
Dessens (7- 5) and two relievers.
offense.
11
"I knew it wasn't a guod posilt's obvious we're pressing as a
tion to be in, down 2- 0 in the team," said Piazza, who turned
first," Leiter said. "It makes their 32 on Monday. "We're really just
pitcher a little more•comfortable trying too hard . We're taking bad
and a lineup that's pressing is swings and helping the pitchers
going to press a little more. It out and that's it."
The Reds have gotten hot
happens to every team and you
when
it no longer maners, winhope it doesn't linger much
ning nine of 12 since falling out
longer."
Since catching Atlanta atop of contention in the NL Central.
the NL East, the Mets have The St. Louis Cardinals beat
dropped five of six , costing them Montreal 4-2 Monday, maintain a chance to open a lead while ing their nine- game lead over
the Braves struggled. They could the Reds.

Leiter, who pitched the Mets
to their wild card playoff will in
Cincinnati last October, couldn 't
end their September slump. Leiter's two-hit, 5-0 shutout last
Oct. 4 at Cinergy Field stands as
the only time Cincinnati has
been blanked in its last 2HO
games.
.,The Mels co uldn't catch up
after he gave up Griffey's tworun homer in the first inning. the
first left- handed homer otl- Letter since May 29. The only other
left-handers to homer off Leiter
this season were Tony Gwynn
(May 23) and Shawn Gree n
(May 29).
The homer came on a 2-2
slider that was up and over the
outside part of the plate. Leiter
second-guessed his decision to
throw Griffey the third slider in
that at- bat instead of a fastball.
Griffey, who missed Sunday's
game because of a sore hip, went
1-for-3 with a walk, raising his
average to a season -high .265.
Dessens gave up one ru11 and
four hit&lt; in 6 2- 3 inni11gs for
only his second victory since the
end of July.

UNDATED - The Southern
golf team placed fourth at forest
Hills gulf club in Glouster with
Trimble (143), Waterford (149),
Federal Hocking ( 178) and
Southern ( 179) posting the top
four scores.
Trimble's Trent ·Patton was
match medalist with a cool 34,
followed by Noah Barrett (34),
Brad Gilders (36) and Jeremy
Faires (39).
Nathan Martin and Jordan
Hill each shot 43s for Southern,
Justin Connolly · shot a 45 and
Matt Warner a 48.
At Arrowhead golf course, host
Waterford posted th e win with a
158 overall, ahead of Trimble at
163 and Southern 1R6. The
lower half the league saw Federal Hocking shoot a 189, Miller a
199 and Eastern a 222.
Match medalist was again Trent
Parton ofTrimble who shot a 35 .
Teammate Noah Barrett shot a
41. Waterford's Adam Conrath
shot a 36, followed by Josh
Arnold (38).
Two Tornado players shot 44s
~ Nathan Martin and Ty Hill .

Matt Warner and Jordan Hill
each shot 49s.
Jason Kimes and Adam Chevalier paced Eastern with a 49 and
52 respectively and Jonathan
Owens had a 54.
Southern's Ty Hill was match
medalist with a 35 in the next
match at Arrowhead , however,
his effort was not enough for the
Tornadoes ( 176) who again fell
to third behind Waterford (156)
and Trimble (162).
federal shot a HIS, Miller a
195 and Eastern a 216.
Hilt shot one under par in
beating his nearest Southern
competitor by six strokes Nate Martin who sbot a 41. Matt
Warner and Justin Con nolly shot
50s and Jordan Hill a 61.
Waterford's Adam Conrath
shot a 35, followed by Josh
Arnold (43), Darin Sampson
(39) , Brandon Brinon (3'1), Chad
Ball (43), and Matt Heiner (46).
Trimble was led by Patton
with a 39, followed by Cory
Dunkle (41), Urad Cil,lm (42) .
Noah Barrett (43) and Jeremy
Faires (40) .

�•

P~ge

B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, September 5 , 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlae

570

Musical
Instruments

TR AN SPOR l ATION

Wah sbllrn Elect c Gu ar Pea vy
Amp 0 storl on Peda Great
Cond ton Only $325 OBO

710 Autos fDI' Sale
$0 DOWN CARS AI low a&amp; $29
mo Pol ce Impounds and epos
se&amp;s ons 24 mas 0 19 9 ~. Fo
1st ngs cat 80 0 719 3001 ex
AO 0

"'-,_IIMIIt.

m....., Loela Found

Yard SliM, and wanted
ToDoAdol
Muat Be Paid In AdvaoTBIWJHE Df!DIINE
2 00 p m tile dey before

Help Wanted

110

II 000 00 WEEKLY

$450 00

Ma 11ng Let ers From. Home No
••per ence neceua y FTI PT
Help Needed lmmed atelv Call
Sundance D st buto s
800

889 3449 EXTENS ON 22 124
hrs)

llleacllatoNn
Sunday a~~onc~.y edition
2:00 p.m Frlcley

1105 WEEKLY GUARANTEED

IENJW'&amp;ef'f'Dt!HE

MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPER ENCE RE

llleac118toNIL

OUIRED 1 800 748 5716 Ext
zt01

1:00 p m

dey before

Sunday a Monday edition
1:00pm Friday
BEGIIJEB Pf'QlJNE.
2 d8ya before tile edla

1Drunby43Dpm

a.turday a -.csay
edition- 4 3D Tllunday
"'DralfflnN auiJject IG

.,,.,.-lo

hoi/dey$"

WORKING FOR THE GOVERN

$125 WEEKLYII Make Money
He p ng People Aece ve Govern
ment Re unds F ee Deta sl (24
hr eco ded menage ) 1- 800

44&amp;-4625 Ext 5700
$98 7 85 WEEKLY P ocess ng
HUO/ FHA Mortgage hetunds No
Ezpenence AeqUI ed Fore FREE
Informal on Cal 1 800 50 6832
8Jd 1300

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

BEAUTIFUL LATIN LADIES
Look ng to s nee e mar age
m nded men Over 3000 lema e
members Group tours 954 838
96U I 'fiW'IIIItJrt. nteJne com
Lovtng Mae Seek ng Lo..,ng Fe

ma e 1 age 25 50 Fo Com pan
IOnshlp and Fun Time Together "
nte es ed W It PO Box U
Vrnton OH 45e88

1883 DR NEWER TRAC
TORS GROWING REG ONAL
CARR EA SEEKING QUALITY
OWNER OPERATORS 85 87
CPM ALSO COMPANY ORIV
ERS HOME WEEKENDS
MOSTLY OROPHOOK CALL
TODAY HCX 800-200-2123
Up to 118 24 hour H r ng to
2000 free cal lor appiK:ationlex
am nat on nto mal on Fade al
H e Fu Benet ta 1 800 698
4504 SJ.Ien&amp;IOn 1516 (8am-4pm

CS T )
ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
PUT IT TP WORKi l500 17500
per month www beeathoml com

30 Announcements

Tovs

Gomg

Out Of But ness Poppy s

Pt Pleas
ant &lt;lO% Off Wood Flowers and
Craft Sl.wile&amp;
New To 'll&gt;u Thrift~
9WosiS,.....,A-.
740-592 1&amp;12
Quail y cloth ng and household
1ema $1 DO bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru Saturday

9 Q0-5 30

40

Giveaway

G ve away Female Beagle to
goo&lt;! nome (7401401 1550

s lOOking lor

people who wou d 1 ke to s a t
the r own bus ness work ing f om

nome

NO INVESTMENT needed
l m ad 1 me only Call BOO 882
7270 email fullefenOaot com
GOVT POSTAL JOBS Up lo
$18 35 hOur Full banal IS No ez
pe 18nce equ ed Fo applicatiOn
and ezam nrorma 10n t 888 726
9083 ert 1701 7am-7pm CST
He p wantec! Sunset Home Con
s ructon cal 740 1•2 34ft be
lore 8:00pm

C1rpet

T1pong Grea Pay CALL 1 1100795-0380 Exl 1 201 124111i)
ATTENTIONII Wo k at home and
ove t $1000 $5000 PT FT
FREE BOOKLET Ca Now
800-31 D-9509 www b gbiJckafrom

hOmo com

ATTENTION Put 'fOur Computer
To Work Ea n $850 $7000
8009341312 Fee Booklet
www choosesuccessatl'lome com
&lt;httpJiwww choosesucces
salhome com&gt;

AVON A I Areas ! To Buy o Se I
Sl\tley Spears 30oWi7S.1429

5 Fam y Yard Sale Tuesday &amp;
Wednesday Sam ? 1 4 M e Out

-Pike

a Upholetery Cte•nlng

Guaranteed Work W th Fabulous
Resunst Fo a Free Eatlmate
Cal (304)67~Thdoyl

4xo4 5 910

eal1y education ol hand capped
valfdat 0!"! Sen&lt;! esume by Sep
lerrtler 8th to
Carleton School

tJto caneton Street
PO Box Xl7

$5 600 OBO 740 992 1506 days

304 937 2018

74Q-949 2644 eve
78 CJ 5 Jeep V 8 standard HO
soli l OP 11 900 OBO (740)
4397atte 5 pm

or lax Ill (7401992-6438

Uag c Yea s Day Ca e P eschoo
Cen11r now accept ng appt ca
hons to Fa 1 Enrollment Mag c
Vea s Day Ca e lo Pa ens Who

Care 20 Years E~~;per l ence Ae
e ences a...a table upon re~ues
L censed by State o WV
(304)675-5847

o

Sell Avon

(740)446 3358
Accounts Manager Full T me
Be~et ts Respons b ties Ac
coun s Payable Acco unts Re
ce vable Payro And Monthly
Ta• P epa rat on Exce lent Op
po un ty Fo Ca ee W th Estab
llst'led Business Exper ence Ae
qu ed Tope Furn tu e 51 Sec
ond Avenue Ga I pol&amp; Fax Re

Pomeroy

80

Oppo tun las Ava lab • W th lm
med ate Pla cemen Fo Those
W sh ng To Become A State
Tested Nu s ng A.ss stant
asa
es Now F 1ng Up At Seen c Hi 11
Nu s ng Cente Stop By In Pe
son To PICk Up An App tcauon for
A Reservation n The Ntxt STNA
Class Seen c H I s NUJ'I ng Cen
e 311 Buckrldge Rd 8 dwell
Oh o (Behind Spr ng Va tey Cine-

c

0 ver 372 DRIVERS NEEDED

colle&lt;:tllles

Auction
and Flea Market

No Expe ence Necessa y
4
Day COL li aln ng No cost tu lion
qual t ed S a t at $3511 S.&amp;Ok
F st Yea Ca oday 1 800 958

2353
Driver EXPANDING FREIGHT
LANES along I 80 NE PA &amp;
baa 32Cim Ia o sta 1 Full bene

ll1s Pacllage Min 24 yrs of age 2
y 1 OTR TIT exp H Ll BROTH
ERS TRANS

Boo-258-4456

OR VERS WANTED OT~ OED
CATEOIAEG DNALJLOCAL
Auch the Summ t ot you 1 nan

c a lilOals wo k lo a company
hal cares about you you fam y
and your utu e lim ted Open

ngc; 29 CPM all rrnle&amp; Unload ng
Pay
Pe so nallzet1 d spatch
Home often Holiday!Vacat on
Pay 401 K Med ca P es Dental
R der P ogram 98% no ouch
e.ght Ass gned T 2000 s Call
Summ t T ansportat on 800 876

0680 or 513 564-6945 EOE

Will Haul Junk or Trash S35 a
load (304)675-8950

FINANC IA L

INOTICEI
OH 0 VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends hat you do bus
ness w lh peop a you know and
NOT o send money th ough he
mall unt you have Invest ga ed
lhe olfe ng

SO

24hrs

Do

~0

S..307

Syracu&amp;e 011 45779
Posit ons open tor day &amp; night
sh Is to care tor the elderly 740

POWER

SEN

Ce led

24x60 3 BeGoom Mobile Home 2
Balh Must Be Moved $25 000
(740)446-0946
Ooublewu:te Set Up In The Coun

lry M&lt;Mt-ln Nowl (740)446-3570
EXCLUSIVE' FHA MH loans
PreOua By Phone (740)446

Call
All real estate adver1 sing In
this newspaper fa sub ect to
the Fede al Fa Hous ng Act
of 1968 which makes n legal
to advert se any p ete ence
mi1atlon or d scnm nation
based on race colo re g on
S8)( faml Ia suuus o nat ona
origin o any ntent100 to
make any such prefe ence
milatiOn o di8Cnm na 10n

Thi1 newapaper Will not
knowingly occopl
advert aements for real eata e
whK:h s n vtO allan of the
law Ou eeders are hereby
Informed that a ( dwel ngs
actven sed n this newspaper
are ava table on an equa

&gt;College Sluclents
*4 gh Schoo G ads

Slamped Envelopo GICO DEPT
5 BOX 1438 ANTIOCH TN
3701 t438 Slar1 mmedoaiA!~

-Htgh Schoo Sen o s

Anyone lOOk ng o ea n $$
Elm up to StSihou
Exce tent expe tence lor
you resume
Fun and fr endly workp ace
B ng you lnends and
ea n extraS$

CALLTOOAYI
1-800-929-5753
CMC Development G oup)
M 1\enn um TeleserviCE!s

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

530

Jackson OhiO

1 Bed oom Apt $395 Mon U I
t 11 Pa df No Pets (740) 446
!M37 or { 7.40}....&amp;46-3437

Wood &amp; Gas Coole S
740)388-8075

550

2 Sedroom Apa ment 76 V ne
S eel Gall pols Oh o (740)

1994 FodTB d 46 VB Load
ed82 KM es Nee A Good

Va ue $4800

(74012~707

t995 Fo d Tau us SHO auto
blue w g
lea ne
nle o I on damage $3 500

av

so ooo m es

OBO 740 992 t506 740 949
2644

aoo 5J7 9528

Wh e m c owave slan d $ 0 00
s onawa e d she s 6 p ece se
$1 0 00 740 446 9429

1997 Dodge In ep d 3 5 V 6
aulo 59 000 m tes bump on efl

ende

16800 080 740 992
o 740 949 2644

1506 days
evenngs

ove

7 40
87 P ymou h Voyage 75 000 Ac
lu a M es E•ce ent Cond on

Bulldmg
Supplies

$2 000 740)388-8075

Motorcycles

1996 Kawasak Vu ca n C ass c
800 7300 m es red/ c eam sad
de bags $3500 OBO 740 992

1506 days o

740 949 2644

evemngs

446-7396 Or (7401367 7886

(740)446-1833 0 (l401446 73 5
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Westwood

Dnve from $289 to $370 Wa k to
shop &amp; moves Cat 740 446
2568 EQUal Housing Qwo&lt;tun 1y

750 Boats &amp; Motors

800-ll"B 5878

5678

for Sale

AMAZING METABILISM B eak
Trough Lose 10 200 Lbs Easy
Qu ck Fast D a mat c Results
100% Natu a Doc o Recom
mended
F ee
Samp as

740144

Need Well And Sep c? No Down
Pay men Requ ed La ge Se ec
on 0 Homes Ca
800 948

560

Pets for Sale

For rent wo b and new 2 bed
oom un IS j ust of SR 43 on
K ngsbu y Rd A so 3 bed oom
basemen apa tmenl w ga age
Ha sonv le a ea .4.1 h ee un Is
has ange and retr ge ator and
has been deslgne 8d as Sen o o
D sab ed Hous ng A HUO ap
proved No pats Oep os ts and
eferences equ ed 740 742

Would you like
tohavea pay
lncraaae
EVERY
year
with no cap?
Pa~d
Holidays
vacal ons 40t K
plan Blue Cross/
Blue Shield Aider

F ench Town Apa tments Now
Accept ng Appl cat ons Fo t BR
FMHA Subs d zed A.pa mens
For Elde
And Hand ca pped
Equal Hous ng Oppo un ty

Program asSigned
tractors d reel depos~ company

(740)446--4839

slock purchase program

sea 928 3426

Need CDL A
Wllh Hazmat 1
year experience
Call
800-431-8450

1

New Bank Repos M~ 2 Pay
ffilient!
menta a Movt i(. 'N
Af e Fou Yea s Oakwod Gall

pols (740)446-3093
JET

AERATION MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Rebu I n S OCk
Cal Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528

Ea n Big The Fundra s ng Way
Innovative P od ucl G eat for
Schools and Spo s G cups Pa t
nered wi1tl Top Fast FOOd Cha ns
Ca I 1 800 561 8388 or v s tour
Web Site at
www scratch
card com
3 Bed ooms 2 1/2 8a hs LA OR
FA W h F ep ace New Oak
K lchen 2 Ca Ga age lmmacu
ate Cond on lmmed ate Pos
sess on S 39 900 740 446

RIO GRANDE Unrverslty Area
Scenic 0 Acres With Pond
$25 ooo Cash o Last 13 Acres
On Deadend $27 000 Cash Nea
Tycoon lake 10 Ac as $12 500
Cash Chesl'l e Hun ers 37 A.Cf
es $47 000 28 Acres $30 000
land Conttect fri.enclty Ridge 15
4c es $9800 Cash Marabe
Road 1 Ac es S18 000 Cash Or
31 Acres W lh Barn $37 000
Ke Road P ope ty open ng

Grac ous 1v ng 1 and 2 bed oom
apa tments at VI age Mano and
poI F om $2731336 Ca 1 740
992 5064 Equa Hous ng Oppo
untes

tuldon reimbursement
Owner Operators &amp; Lease
Operators

DRIVE FOR A TOP
INDUSTRY LEADERI
• 35 000 first year
• ExreUent Benefits, 401K
• All late model Ken worth

9672

Loo k ng To Buy A New Home?
Don 1 Have Land? We Do Hu ry
Onty I 0 Lots Lett 304 736 7295

Company Spocuored Tralnlna
no exp. needed
School Graduates oiTerlnB

RvesdeApalmens nMdde

Now Fo Maps &amp; F nanc ng Info

Ta a Townhouse Apa ments
Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed oo ms 2
Foo s CA
2 Bath Fuly Ca
pe ed Adull Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pat o Start 5365 Mo No Pets
Lease P us Secu y Depos Re
QU M
Day s 740 446 348
Even ngs 74 0 367 0502 740
446 0 0
A.vallable Now
Tw n Towe s now accept ng
app ~ea t ens o BR
HUD sub d zed apt 1o e derly
and handicapped EOH

RENTALS

(304)675 6679

METAL BU ILDING Does you
de a e sh p no wo k or you? We
have co mpe ve p ces &amp; NO
dea e sh p fees Ca o a f ee
brochu e E Do ado Bu ld ng s -,.s
ems 800 279 4300

Conventlonals
Paid on the Job training
Stops Herpes Oulb eaksl
96% Success Rate
Toll Free 1 877 EVERCLR
1nlo www everclr com

Huge Inventory 0 scoun P ces
On II ny Sk ng Doo s W nd
ows An cho s Wa e Heate s
Plumb ng &amp; E ec ca Pa ts Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne ts
Mob e Home Supp v 140 446
94 6 www orvb com/bennen

e~'-~'4J-"'flL
800-333-8595

$$$$ lk1serured LOANS

Be s de C ty Schoo s 422 4th
Ave 3 Bed oom
5 Ba h A C
tng ou d Poo Fen ced Lot Con
s de land Con acl $650 De
pos $650 Rent (740)2 56 9194

510

MERCHANDISE

Household
Goode

Tapp an H E f c en cy 90
Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 see
Hea t P ump 3 A Con d o n ng
Sys ems t= ee 8 Yea Wa an t y
Denne s Hea ng &amp; Cool ng
800 872 5967 www o vb com/ben

nett

0 (7401446-4949

'M

AD D

IGNER

140

O.lllpolla C•ner College
tCa eers ClOse To Home)
Ca TOday 740 446 367
1 800 21 4 0452

• Full Time 40 Hour Work Schedule

• VICitlona

• 401 K

Reg •90 0~ 2748

• Mtdlcal Dental Prescripllon and LHe Insurance
We

wonc •n a Macintosh enVIronment

us ng C reator 2

MuHi Ad QuarkXpress Adobe Photoshop and Typeslyler
Compuler Exper once wrth lh s software s a p us

Sonci-To

The Oelly Trlbune
Atln Fred Hoffman ProducUon Manager
825 Third Avenue

Ohlo45631

I

Business
Training

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
QUICKLY bac he o s Mas e s
Oocto a le by co espo de nce
based upon p o ecJ ca on and
shots udy cou se Fo FREE n
o ma on book e phone CAM
BR OGE STATE UN VERS TY

80Q-964 8316

I

App ences
Re co nd o ed
Wa she s 0 ye s Range s Ael
g a ors Up To 90 Oa)'s Gua
an eed We Se New Maytag Ap
P ances F ench C ty Ma)' ag
740 446 7795

Sa
You Bus ess Today
P me Shopo ng Ce n e Space
A\la Abe A A o dab e Aa e
Sp ng Va ley P aza Ca 740 446

0 0

230

Professional
Services

$$$ NEED CASH

? WE pay
cash o ema n ng pay me s on
P ope y So d Mo gages Annu
es Sefem en s
mmedae
0 o es
Nobody bea s ou p c
es Na ona Cont ac Buye s
{800) 490 073 ext 0 www na
110na con actb'Jye s com

UNSECURED VISA MC NO
UPFRONT FEESI APPROVAL
GUARANTEED! RECEIVE 3 5
CARDS IN 10 14 BUSINESS
OAYSI en 278-:1485

Hou se a 553 Jackson P ke
Mus be Mo ed Ca (7 40 446

Includes
• 2 ¢ per mile quarterly
safely/ performance bonus •Up

YOUR CREDIT PERMA
Sl!lmllediii~II'NITI Ouahly for best Aulo
r-.~1 - IILO!Ins. Mortgages Credit Cards
gel turned down aga•n'
Credit mproved or money
=·~c~ ~'- 1 800 535 1255 elCI 10

$$$NEED A LOAN ? Consol dale
Debts Bad Cred t OK
NO APPL CATION FEES
1 800 863 9006 ElCI 854

6306
NO DOWN PAYMENT I

420

No Down Paymen Aequ ed W
Gove nmen Sponso ed loan
GOOd C ed S eady nco me Re
qu ed Ca Today Mo e n o ma
o To Oua v ndependence
Mo gage Se v ces 26
Mad
son Lakewood
O H 44 07

MB 679 027

CASH LOANS!
• Bad Cred t OK
• Easy Qual fy ~g
• Fasl Serv1ce
• Low Paymenls
• Conf denI a

1-800 332 2411

80()-845 0036

Re ge a o Au o Del os t Exce
en Cone! on (740 446-1288

•

wltb ad!
Get yours

Ulall who smt
/Jrrthtlay tards vmtJ

today...

also ukpho•e cal/s
&amp;tth ""' was vtry

11!:1 sp.~i41' so 111nad.for

The Daily
Sentinel

fiW80th Brrthtlizy
Cbuln "Chobby",t:l

THE HEAT S ON Amana $400
Reba e got Gas Fu naces 80 000
S 995 $400
S 695 nc ud es
No me
sa a on o e)( s 1 ng
Clue wo k ca 740 446 6308 o

(800 29 009!!

Top CompensatiOn Package
Load or Empty +

2 week Paid
Truck Driver
Training
No Expenence Needed
$32 000/lst year

w/Full benefits
call Today
1·877·230.6002
1n ch~eago call
1·877·230.6003
Sun-Fri 9 am 10 s pm

FUEL SURCHARGE &amp;
BONUSES I
Equipment 5 years old or newer

1-800.727-2868

cFI

Truck Orivets 5c:n001

to 5 5 ¢1m le monthly fuel
lncenti"' •Dry van. 80% nO'
touch • Your own dispatcher
Ass1gned trucks • 40lk • No
forced NYC • Paid Vacation

14 Day COL Training
Full Training Program
America a 11 Opportunity
$650 $800 Per Week
21 Years or 0 der
Mae/Female
Full Benefits 401 K
Major Med cal
Tuition Reimbursement

Box
701
AM
Dallas

Maritet~Jiace

Owner Operalors and
Company Dnvers lor over the
road Musl be 23 yrs old
Class A CDL 2 years OTR
expenence Clean MVR
Call Us For More De1a1ls'
800 669 3066 E•t 5308
Subs1d ary of
Dean Foods
Company
Employer

nvers

All late model conventlonals
Lease purchase avail
Plus Much Morel
1 yr. OTR (flat)

1·800-457· 2349

You are not JUSt a number at
O&amp;S OWn• OP«olor $ B1 lo
$ B5 loadod/emply (PC M Iori)
tollo paid home o~en (no k d
ding) much more Comp•ny
on.... up 10 $ 32/mlle pad
vac:allon 401(k) health/dental
(lomlly coverage fo $30 per
- I I ) Now ass gned t actors
(nlcel) Ortver Quais 2 yrs OTR
no DWI o good MVR and Safely
record
Don 1 dolay GALL

Company Drivers
• Earn 32e/mlle
Home Every 10
* Complele Benefits
&amp; 401K

Owner Operators

1-800-C FI-DRIVE

Pay for your experience
+ many pay extras
Pay all miles loaded/empty
Industry leading flatbed
m11es ~heau ea nome
time w/medical Ins 401K
&amp; many more benefits

DON TALL TRUCKING
COMPANIES SOUND
THE SAME?
You ve now found a
company that Ia truly
different!

TRAINING
DRIVIRSI

Singles/Teams

(800)786-4469

has an opening In the
Graphics Department for an

Owner Operators

Student

RESIDENT AL HOME OWNERS

,

All ass1gned 98 or newer
Convent1onals Plus Excellent
Benel1ts Package!
23 With 1 yr OTR expenenca

Company
Owner Operators

any purpose Credl Problems
Considered Also Mortgages &amp;
R&amp;-Fi11811C1ng Apply 24fl
1~796 Extension 36

Void

DENTAL B LLER

GET HOME MOST
WEEKENDS

OTR Drivers

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT

ERS ALMOST EVERYONE AP
PROVED WITH SO DOWN LOW

NO M'PIJCATlON FEE'S

Med cat B ng so ft
wa e com pany needs peop e o
pro cess med ca c a ms om
home T a n ng pr ov ded Mu st
own com pu e 1 800 434 55 8
e)( 667

Dnven!IOwner Operato

NOW HIRING!

MONTHLY PAYMEN T S t 800
617 3476 EXT 330

LEGALLY SLA SH YOUR TAXES
and benet t f om he ns de s se
c e s to wea lh c eat10n and pes
e val on L sen to (850)6 54 7727
ex 2005 Then c a 800 572
7702 0 v Sl

Sill

Summer
Driver Recruitment
Directory
Start up 1o 36 cpm w~h
bonuses .All M1les Pa1d
Avg 2500 per week and

Soon Many More Avai able- CaM

Aleo tile follOwing lando
ad tontmonta altuoted In
tho Vlll111 County State
and Frocllon oloreaald
Beginning at the ~~~
comer of the lot Which J..J
llcCanhy fOI'IIIIrly l'lllded
which 11 tile Nma pNmiHI
conveyed by J P eradbury
and wile to oold J J
McCarrty by dMd doted
December
10
1 U4
I'ICCirdod In Volume 7t ot
Page 115 ol the Recorda ot
Dllda. llllgo County Ohio
thence NOI'IIIWIIterly along
, ... E11t line ol lllld Lot to
tho cemetery line thence
E1111torly 110111 tile CIIMIIry
Una to a point from Which a
Uno drown parallol with lhl
Ealllrly IIIII of Nld lot IOid
to J J McCorty will be 20
IHt lrom Nld -orly line
thence par1lltl tllerewttll to

FREE
YARD

IIIII of 1 road thet oiClandl
pool tho rooldonco of J J
llcCirty Wlloro II lntlfHCtl
a prolongotlon of
tho
Southerly line of oold lot
1lllkl to J..J McCarty thonoe
torly
along
tho
Northweatorly line of oold
road to the ploce of
blllnnlng excepting tho
coal and other mlnerala
lhertUnder with the right to
mine 01111 Nml and all wayo
and rlghte of weya along
any mineral uoed In mining
coal
The above real aetata Ia
aub)ect to all leaa . .
1111mento and rlghlo ol
way or record
Prior
lnatrument Reference No
otnclel Record Volume 43 at
Page875
Current Owner s Name
Nancy J
Clark and
Thruman R Haning
Property .Addreaa 301
Wright St Pomeroy Ohio
457ee
.Auditor a Parcel Number
Parcel No o 16 01197
Parcel No 2 16-01198
APPRAISED
.AT
13000000
TERMS OF SALE
$1 000 DO down at time of
aalt bllanco due 3D dayo
alter Nlo
Jamea M Soulaby Sherin
Melga County Ohio
Milton A. Puckan
Supremo County No 021690
Attomay lor Plaintiff
155 Wilt Main Street Suite
2000
Columbuo Ohio 43215
224 2795
8 15 22 29

w..

tiWIIbyrlllrved

COURT Of COMMON

Company Drivers

Ac e La lee W th stand M o b Ia
Home W th Add On $99 500

BRUNER LANO
(7C0)401 1492

Public Notice

a point In tho Nonhwaeterty

~ilenMoore

v

(7401388-8678

NOT ep ac ng Long c aclcs In
W ndah etds F ee v deo t 800
820 8523 US/Canada www g ass
mechanlxcom

~anti)

Public Notice
betlnnlng Being 1 lot 10
teet wide lrontlng on aald
roacl 01111 tlCt.ndlng kcll to
tile cemtiWf IIIII tile Nma
width, exotptlng tho cool
end Diller mlllll'llla with tile
right ID mint tile Nrnt and
all waya end rtohta 01 wayo
along any mlnor~l -m• Ia

t982

3033

Need to Sa e t6 Ft Wide $500
Down Ta ke Over Payment t

HOME BASED BUS NESS PIT o
FIT Work on o off your compu e
w th an n ernat ona company Se
you own hours Exce lent ncome
Ful
support
www BeBoss
Free com

Mad cal lnsu ance B II ng As! s
ance Needed 1mmec1 ate y Use
your Home compule gel FREE
n e ne Webs&amp; te E Ma t Call
Now 800-291 4683 Dep • 109

(304)937 20 8

080 (7401256-1427

ATTENTION DEVELOPERS 32
Ac es M L Approz mately 0

Sec wanted heavy phone must
be aD e o take 30 wo ds per
m n must be compute lte a e
w
an 30.4 675 4599 o 877
925 996

EARN $25 000 IO $50 000 YR

w a e 1 ne Spec a
$21 95 Po t OO
$37 00 Pe 00 A B ass Com
p 8SSIOn F U ngs In Sloek

(New) 644 New Ho and Round
Ba e Net W ap w lh Bale Com
man d 4)(5 bates
3 900 Hay
Teode Hesson 11 5 ft $1700
L ke New Oeu z Rake 750 42
hay co n eleva o PTO $400 42
g an auge PTO $400 Ca l

091""Unlly baS 0

REAL ESTATE

5694

I on damage $2 150 080 740
992 506 740 949-2644

2000 Yahama ITA125L 0 r B ke
Pu chased New 2 Months Ago

F om Ren To Own Low Down
Payment Low Mon hly Payment

Art And Morel

HATE YOUR JOB? Wo k at
home Be you own boss Set you
own hou s Exeat ant pa 1me or
fuU tme Fnd ou how 1 BD0-813-

993 Saab 900 S 16 valve 4

door 78 605 mUss !5 speed moo

I 888 582 3345

Pa (740)37 9 9887

EARN $90 000 YEARLY epa ng

0 down Past
C ed P obems OK Even t
umed down be o e Reestabl sh
You Cred I I 800 659-0359

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W n

ReductiOn (304)736-3409

CATALOG ( 800 826 82281 or
BLACKSTONE SCHOOL OF

Meogs Counly Boarcl ol MFWD
3tO Calle on Street

menlo (304)1894 o (304)277
3394

F na Days Nahonwida lrwen ory

ULUM Approved home study
Alto dab e S nee 1890 FREE

0

1 and 2 bed oom apartments lu
n shed and un u n shed sacu ty
dapos t equ red no pe s 740
992 2218

lies (740)-446-2957
1996 OakWOod 14x80 3 br 2 ba
c/a on renled lot Take over pay

Now h ng No l)(par ence Paid
a n ng G ee be n ells Call 7
davs ~429-3660 e)(t J 566

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

b ochu eat Salis fact on Qua
anteet11 Postage &amp; Supples pro
v ded Rush Sell Add essed

Deck l18000(740)44t t602

3583

CAREER OPPORTUNITY
MEDICAL BILLERS Ea n Up To
$451V yr! Fu I ~a n ngl PC Reo d
(8881600 6693 Exl 4002

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

GY We F nance

740)44H782

R&amp;D s Used Fu n tu e &amp; Ap
pi ances Ant ques G ea Se ec
on P ced To Se I Come Anti
8 owse Co ne 01 Ro u e 7 &amp;
Add son Pke We Buv Fun u e
740..367.0280

1989 Ho lypa k 14x70 w th 8x24
Remolded House W nd
ows Unde P nn ng Central A r

SATIONAL RESULTS

210

606

93 F 50 4x4 VB 64K M les Au
oma c 2 ton Black/ G ay $6500

E~tpando

Psyen cs et s you tn ngs you may
not even want to know even po
ce of ce s use these psyc h cs
Cat
900 378 1 66 3 o
800
559 2492 S 98/m n 18

For lntorma on And To See Ou
Beaut tut Po ery Cand es Frame

Pe sonal care a d to wort&lt; 33
hou a pe week Nurses a d Ira n
ng preferred
Send resume by September 12th

New and Used Fu n u e Slo e
below Ho day Inn Kanauga 8 g
sav ngs on new co uches New
daybeds compete S t60 00

740 992

days or 740.949-2644 even ng s

1973 Model 2 BA Needs Some

304 882 3339 0 304 675-7367

UNEXP~INEO

mlcksl Ca

mont AM Dalla&amp; TX 7537Q-1449

Two bed oom mob le home n
coun 'i ele ences and depos
equlred 740-9.49-2833

1983 Nausha 4x70 3 b cia gas
lu n lu n shed or un turn shed

limala&amp; (304)675-3243

PARALEGAL GRADED CURRIC

LAW PO Box 701449 O.part

2675

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO

.

N.AHCV J CLARK, It II

PL£A8 MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
In purouance of an Order
01 8alllo 1111 directed from
aald Court In tho abova
lflllllld action I will IMpoM
790
Campers &amp;
to Nit a1 public auotiOn at
MolorHomes
tho allpe of tho Court
Houaa 1DO l!aet Hoond
Streat Pomeroy Ohio on
1\IIOdey September 11
2000 at 10 00 am of Nld
drf the 1o11ow1111 daacrlbacl
reallllall
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
The toli-ng real aetate
altuatad In tho VIllage ol
Pomaray County of Molga
and • - of Ohio and more
panlcularly daacrlllld aa
lollawa to wit
In Fraction No
25
SERVICES
betlnnl119 at a atako In tile
Northwoatorty Uno of tho
810
Home
roed that Nna !rom Sugar
Run Street Northeaaterly
Improvements
poet the realdenca of
BASEMENT
William 0 Wrlghland .Albert
WATERPROOFING
Hullton which atake Ia 75
Uncond ona I fe me gua antee
feat from tho Southaaat
loca reUuences lu n shed Es
corner
of the lot on which
lab shed 1975 Cal 24 H s 1740)
Nld Hazelton realdea and
«6 0870 1 800 287 0576 Rog
which atake Ia the
e s Wale pmol ng
Bouthoaat cornar or 1 lot
aold to aald Hazelton by
ATTENTION HOMEOWNERS J P Bradbury
thence
0 spay Homes Wanted fo V ny
Northwoatorly along tho
S d ng Rep acemenl W ndows
Eoatorty line ot aald 111111
Enctosu es No Payment Unli
named lot to tho cematary
200
Paymen s Start ng at
$89 00 pe month .4.11 Cred t line thence along tho
Ollal11es Cal t BOO 25 Hl843
oametary
line
Nonhoaetwardly to a point
C&amp;C General Home Me n
from which a Una drawn to
enence Pa nl ng v nyt s d ng
the road llrat above
a pent y doo s w ndows ba hs
mtnUonad will be par1llel to
mob le nome repa and more Fo
I ee as mate call Chet 740 992
and !10 1111 from the flrat
6323
lint of tho preml- hereby
conveyed t ...nco lrom Nld
840 Electrical and
point to Nld Northwealtrly
Refrigeration
Una of Nld road to a otaki
10 feet from the place of
Resident al or commercia wi ng
btglnnlng
thanoa
new service or epa rs Maste L
censed elec c an Ridenour Bouthwoatarly alonr the
Norlhwaaterly Una o aald
Elect ce WV000306 304 8 75
786
road to the place of

971 Chevy one to n u ck w h
18 racks 53 000 actual m es
gooct cond on S soa 740 742

RC!()a r $2500 (7401256-9347

POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 YR

Absolute Top Do ~r U S Silver
God Co ns Prootsets 0 amonds
Gold R nga
U 5 Cu ency
M T S Con Shop 5 Second
Avenue Gal~ s 74()...446.2842

$2000 WEEKLYI Mailing

80 DAYS 1 888

Roof ng Sid ng Guile Pant ng
Decks Cone ete Wo k Free Es

mal

Poatll Job• $48 323 00 yr Now
hir ng No e•perlence paid train
ng g eat benet ts ce ll 7 days
800-429-3660 ox1 J 365

Wanted to Buy

Help Wanted

RATING 90
8 0902

740992 57):)

Tr1ple AM Roofing

You Like Beaut lui llems To
Decorate You Home ' Would
You L ke To Buy Them Who e
aale7 Then Th s Is Fa You
Home And Ga den Party A 0
eel Sales Company Is Seek ng
lndependen Reps In Your A ea
lillie Or No Investment No G m

992 5023

110

LAWSU TS JUDGMENTS AAA

1973 Bar on mob le home has
expando th ee bedrooms $4000

Pets

H lis econom.ca ull es AJC w
D Hook Up $279 00 P us U

ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE

Thursday Fr day gn &amp; 9 a 8,0
t.tap e St M dd epo t cloth ng
(boy&amp; g rls jun.,rs) dishes 10yS
OOOkS furniture miSe an tques &amp;

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS L CENSEO
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY

No

1 Bedroom Near Arbo s &amp; SceniC

Down Nets $50K Work 7 hrs
Candy
VENDING
rte
n
a ea Toll F ee 1 877 494 8695

so.

ga

1399 Buy Sell '"""

320 Mobile Homas
for Sale

Mowers Lawn Tracto s T lie s
A epa &amp;d Free P ck Up Oel very
Wth n 10M es 01 Ga pots 20
Years Expe ence Reasonab e
Aa es Gua enteed M kt 740
«6 760&lt;

9000

Need 7 Lades

sewe and

.AIBOCIATII I'IHANCIAL
IIIMCQ CORPORATION
(Pialnllll)

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

ana T ansmlsson fo Pa 1 $150
(7401 388 8075

ca

aks ng 15500

L ve n n gtll person for Mason
mole ca t lo nterv!IW 304 773
Local Company seek ng Oatil
Entry Clerk w h ~nowledge of
bas c account ng p ocedurea
computer ski Is offlr.e machine
8 C encv &amp; 81'1JOYS work ng w lh
o he s Send esume c/o Pont
P easant Reg ster ML34 200
Ma n St eet Pt Pleasant wv
25550

e

SHI!RIFI"I IALI!

RI!AL ESTATE
CAll! NO 00 CV 013

85 Sky a k Cullom Excel Mota

$300

Twm wh te bed w desk &amp; hulch
baby bed d ess ng tab e &amp; pay
pen ca sea t304 675 280

New &amp; Used Furrvture
New 2 P ece l v ngroom Su es

3 oo 2112 miles off Aoute 7 s
ward&amp; Ridge Rd

FluUand Oh o Lots of m sc Sep
tember srn 9 00-7

nc udes wa

760

1990 Cad lla c Sedan OeV e
47 421 ac ua m tes ma oon w h
tea he n e o V 8 ve y n ce

W I Power Wash Homes ffra Iars
740 4•6 01 !51 Ask For Ron 0
l.oaYe Message

~01145779

sume (740)406-2600

Porch sa e beh nd g ade schoo

2 br mob le home located beh nd
Fo• s P zza on Sandt'l 1 Ad en

lmrned ate open ng for part lime
tJ days per seek specie! educe
lion preSGhOO eaeher Must

ha,. cur en1 Ollio Deportment Of
Educal on Cen 1 catlon/Ltcann
and ba'Je or be et g ble 10 obtain

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

~

Sea RAy 988 2 It optn bow
'205 hp Ira te 1 owner $15500

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Houaehold
Goods

l&gt;age pldc up 304 675-3423

Septembe &lt;t 5 Ya d Sale 8 00

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

310 Homes for Sale

230

1990 4~t70 B eezewood 3BR
Ve y good cond 1 on $12 000
(304)675 6355 May leave Mea
sage

Jewelry Wood Sew ng

easyl Tan ng p ov ded MUST
own PC CAll NOW 1 888 565
5197 ext 642

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

FULLER BRUSH CO

ASSEIIBLY AT HOMEII C a s

CLAIMS PROCESSOR $2 $40
h potent at P ocess ng cia ms s

Yard Sale

70

EXPERIENCED HEAVY EOUIP
IIENT IIECHANICIWELDER
Kl~mt·a 91 In Eleclrtcal And Air
Coo diOIChiQ Proleuod 5oMoe
1luc:lcl Tool&amp; Also PrelorCorr(&gt;IINO wages Goocl Benefits &lt;!poly AI Sands HI Cool
Gorrc&gt;anY 3870 SlaiO Rou1e 160
ONo Or Call (740)384«!lt To RQrool An Application
Form To Be Mailed Re&amp;umes
Con Be Mailed lli&lt;octly To PO
Box 650 ONo 45634

180 Wanted To Do

FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS

START DATING TONIGHT
HaWII tun meeting eltgible atngles
n your a 11 Cafl lo more nfor
mat on I 800 ROMANCE e•t
9735

Place 1201 VIand 51

HtlpWan1ed

110

510

for Sale

m lea au om C/0 4 door hardtOp
m nor ell tron1 damage runs

740)446-266t Afte 5pm

611. .... _ ...

750 Boats &amp; Motors

71 0 Autos for Sale
1998 GEO Tra ckt

A 1 ey cia ne1 pu,chased new
used par ol .one yea ca y ng
case w h shou de atrap $300
740 992 6529

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

•

Ohio

Drivers
'Rlslona( oTR, 'FCar6ti

• Earn 81 1/2eimlle
• Home 7 10 days
* Pa1d permits &amp;
fuel tax
M1n 24 yrs of age
2 yrs OTR TIT exp or
1 yr OTR alter sch

800-258-4456

_1~L¥1lE..M ,_
I • ' 1 "'

•~

'1fo,.. Wee'-nis §reat
'M1Ce"8' &amp;' 'Percenr"Be Pay
'Prosram
Tandem Tran•port Corp
Michigan Clly IN

800-551-9057

We have lre1ghl to pull
$500 s gn on bonus
Midwest &amp; Southeast runs

Sl\1ppcr
Transportation Inc.
(800) 45(; 7 54 7

Th1s Dfrectory 1s o product of Amencan Commuml)c for more
mfomwtiOn concemmg

lhfs

promotion

1ts rates

run

dates and

publications please call Beth or Debbte ot I 800-906-3364

�'·

•

"

••

.- .

I

.

• •

.

-.

[.

'

..

'

'

Page 8 4 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September

s, 2000.

r~·_sday, September 5, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Middleport, Ohio

IT'S

C~ ING

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

UP.'

WE. M!&amp;SE.O OUR CHANCE..'

'

nd£.
AANT.S.'

ooQ. QUfii.A.RV'S IN

I'D ' BET

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Ag.ent
Box 189
Middleport, .Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

Advertise your
. message

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
.
~
Major Medical • Nursing Home.
- ..... ~-·

tJJ

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$1 0.00 column inch Sundays

Public Notice

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

Public Notice

1916foniU•

1.ag Togota mR2

198' Cadillac fleetwood
1ggo ford Tbundellllrd
1990 fordllerostar Uon
1992 Ford Explorer
1993 ford Taurus
1994 ford Rilnger P/U

fOR mORE IOfO. PlERSE CRll

140-992-1506

~~~
High 81. Dry

Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
PommJy, Ohio

740-992-5232

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

SECURITY·

PRODUCTS

"THE MOST TRUS'T"ED NAME IN SECURITY"
Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and
I co,llections, legal papers, investment records, nhr11&lt;oi.i
~~~:~nt.alcameras,
household
inventory
items will be safe.
For more information call

l

Nort

•ITmppll
llepDpr
Bulldooer &amp; Backhoe
Se"'ice,
House &amp; Trailer Sites

• 7 3 2

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System• &amp;

CARPENTER SERVICE
• R- o4di11Hs .&amp;Romodolln'
·•·
· : •.

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yr8. Locf~~

17401 992·3131

South

BARNEY
HOW DO YOU
YORE NEW

· ·

2 NT

LIKE

GIVE ME SOME

..........
....."'··-

HANING's
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-6735
LINDA'S
PAINTING
"1ake the pain out
of paintingLet me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. ·
Leave Message
Aher 6pm· 740-985-4180

WANTED
Standing timbe r ·large
o1· s mall t racks. Top
pric&lt;•s paid a lso.
Dozer work.

Free Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
aft~r 8:00pm
740-992-5050
!Hanoi y)
'

DEPOYSAG
PARft
AD Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Pa11s
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Pa11s
Dealers.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South

CoolvUie, OH 45723

740887-8181

... ~ 1

mo. 4/ 11100

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
•
Pomeroyj'f)H
Paying $80.00
per gall)ll
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
ProgreBBivelop line.
Lie. 1 D0-50 nnl!lln

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL ond RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Hill'S
SELF STORACE
29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio

45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8

PM

1f01/QO 1

IUER HG

mo.....

ICE

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% SWeet feed- 15.25/50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle feed 16.75/100 lbs.
e 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 16.75/50 lbs.

• fall fertilizers

740-985-3831

~;::;;:;··;·A;B:e~tt;e~r;;~=:=:::=~~

7 North

AMOS?

Advertise in ··
this space for ·
s100 per
month.

I'LL

·~
~i ~
.

~

SHOW YOU

.

/

Tt4t

GAM~

OF L.lff

YeA'-f AGo.

I'IOVI .l JUST

•

'·"''""·'.

TrY T9 ~ftP
Tt4E POINT
SP'-f At&gt; \&gt;OVI N •

S1mmglon ·. ·• I'

Local Contractor

1

Reasonable Prices . ·

FREE Estimates .
D. R. Bisse ll
30 Yrs Experience
740-378-6349

~WICK'S

THE BORN LOSER
P"

1-liTf\ N.L Y~fiM'.l'IW:&gt;OO Tl\t

fl .

HfiOLIHCi qnd
EXCfiVfiTIHCi

~

:&gt;TP\Ff MlOUT 001-16 T~ PLP\'1'~
.[ MU~T :A'(, YOU'RE. 1'10\ Jo\1.!0\ Of
Of P\ Ta.M PLI\Yt.R.,

~

~

YOU'~ "'::OW\EL.'I I':!Gf\T,
T~li'I'U&gt;l',..._ ~~ 1\ "IUM.
MYE\?.. 1N-ID OOYOU 1IJ'l,()W \o.Jf\'(7

YOU~f 1 ,.._-~ '

Hauling • Limeslone e. ·
Grovel• Sand • Topsoil•

Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992·3470

BIG NATE

·············--.
•
'illUR

:• concRETE

.: connECTion :
: Quality Driveways.
: Patios, Sidewalks
: 25 years Experi ence
: FREE ESTIMATES

'

:
.;
:
(

.PEANUTS

:' 740·742·8015 or ·:'
: 1·877·353·7022 : .

~EYER

................ .

West
Pass

Nortll

East

3 NT

2•
All pass

SEEN AN'&lt;800'( CARR'(

8¥ PHILLIP ALDER
Deciding that slam doubles
had had their time in the daylight,
I hunted out a deal for this column
-- and promptly spotted this one.
Look only at the West hand.
What would you lead against six
hearts?
North's four clubs was Namy ats, showing a strong four-heart
opening. Four no-trump was
Roman Key Card Blackwood.
Five spades announced the trump
queen. and either two aces or one
ace and the trump king. (In
answer to RKCii, the replier
shows how many of the five key
cards -- the four aces and the
trump king -- he holds, and can
also admit to the trump queen ,
. e ither directly-- as here-- or after
a further inquiry from partner.
Nowadays all tournament players
use RKCB .)
Again st a small slam, it usually pays to make an aggress ive
opening lead. And short suits
te nd to be more aggressive than
long suits. So, I would select
e ither a spade or a diamond . Yet
as partner didn't make a leaddirec ting double of five spades, I
would opt forthe diamond I 0 . As
you can see, th.at would have been
my one winning lead this year.
West, though, selected fourth h ig hest from hi s longest a nd
· s trongest : the club five . What a
di saster -- ~eclarer won trick one
with dummy's club six! That
a ll owed him to draw trumps and
claim 13 tricks from two spades,
seven hearts and four clubs (via
the marked ruffing finesse) .
Strangely, due to the bad heart
and club splits , leading any club
higher than the five defeats the
slam (as does a. spade). Decl~rer
wi 11 ruff a club to try to get mto
the dummy to draw trumps, but
East will overruff.

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

JONES'

!

·(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

[Ill

WANTED

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING

1outheaeterly corner of Lot

2o loet wldt convoyed by
Earl McCarty and Nanny
McCarty to J.J . McCarty by
dttd dated December 18,

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

CLASSIFIEDSI

- Pick-up &amp; delivery - Tires

740-992-9636
Ask for Jim

Detail

Shri37Actor
Brynner

GA,LUPOILIS., OHIO 456:h • CHESHIRE, OHIO
• TOP
."fr\tn
1
s\umtl
• f'elllov&amp;
• Gtll'dll'&lt;l
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

Mason, WV
304-773-5300 or 740 992-24(131
Reserve a spot lor you , your team, or your teague.
Churches, Schools, Organizations are WELCOME .
Food, Snacks, No Bar, Just Lots ol Fun

Advertise
your business
on this page for one month
for as lo~ as 25
one

8 Oeclmal unit
7 Happen again
8 Mine pasllfll
9 Folkolnger
Seeger

champion
Jacoby
23 Trade
24 Pepper
beverage

25 Nlwo article
27 Actraaa Pitta
28 Unique
paroon
29 Gumbo
vagglo
31 Behaved
coldly
toward
33 Faworitlam
38 -Vagal

41 Muolcloon
Shankar
42 That dam
agcy.l
43 Garment lor
Scalia
44 "Now - ma down to

Lead to disaster

.I. GAVf UP TrYII'I6 TO ¥liN

~ Uletime Warrani'} 1

' '' _

&amp;

22 Bridge

11 Tranoponed
12 Moro
humoroua
13 - Molneo
18 Type ol bran
20 Want
21 Ravine

5 Guided

40 Courl!l

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Replacement ·
Windows ·

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC. '

Dhotographar

hk:hard3S One who IIIII
35 Tonnle plaY'r

2 "Auntie-"
3 Eternal
4 Mae West role

Opening lead: .; 6

CORN ON
TH' COl AN'

TEETH,

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

Woob -

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

992·6215

Utilitieo

34 Fllhlon

• AKa 5

• Roof!ng &amp; Got!KS
• Vlllyl ~ &amp; Palotlng
• Pallo &amp; Ponh Dod!s
Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG Ill

56 Obllnled

23 One who 90" 57 Socc« or
toAapan
rugby
26 "-the

A Q J 10 54
9

AniWW to PrltiiD'W Puzzle

10 Curlier
t2 Worked In 1
garden
14 Mro . Marcos
115 Goad
-c'-&lt;!loo
16 Fronchll8
51 Journey
17 Cook'o nalld 54 leOHnld
19South-m 55 -clllll
Indiana
root

J 8 5

• 9 3 2

• 6 .2
•
• Q 2
•
• Q J 10 8 4
•
Soutb
• AK7
• K 8 7
• 6 3

YOUNG'S

1 Odor
8 Pltloll

...aan ..."
DOWN
27 MOMgerle
1 Do the
30 Sprays
dog-piddle
32 FootbiU coach

East

Weal
• J 10 8 5

39 Gene Tierney
r&lt;&gt;la
.
40 Actor J11on 42 Tile Dixie
Chlckt, e.g.
45 Youth org.
46 U-toba
49 Part olan

ACROS::

20Pootu-

• 9 3
t A K 10 9 7 4

CHESTER

•NowG.~
• Dodtkol &amp; Pluntng

OHS-OO

• Q4

BAUMLUMBIR

ST.RT.248

!lee••

Candle ShoP

The

ALDER

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

The CountrY

J

PHILLIP.

..

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL . 11101; than.. nonhwaatarly
• New Homes
, along the aaatarly Uno of
ESTATE
State Route 7,
CASE NUMBER 111-(:V-117
aald daalgnatld lot to tha
• Garages
.Tuppers Plains has
North-t S.nk Mlnnnota, comatery llno; thanco
openings, all shifts.
• Complete
Natto1111 Auoclallon, u
aaatwordly along tho
Open
7
days,
24
Tru- under the Pooling
Clllltllory Uno 125 foot 8
Remodeling
hours . Certified In
and Servicing Ag,..,.nt,
Inches; thence In a
Stop &amp; Compare
Melgs IY. Athens
Ml• •• ol January t, 1118t, eouthoaatarly direction to
FREE
Option One Mongaga Loan the aald road; thanco In a
Counties.
Truat I 8tlti-A Auat Backed woaterly direction along
Plenty ofTLC
ESTIMATES
Cartlllcataa Sarlaa 1999-A,
oald road 110 laat to the
740-667-6329
74().992·1671
whhout racounaa, Plaintiff
placo of beginning
7122/TFN
-vacontaining 52/100 acro1,
Darln D. Roach oko Darin
mora orion.
Roach, at at., Detendanll
Alao HVI and IXCoptlng
Court or Common PINI,
that part of nld real elllte
Malga County, Ohio
aold to H.E. eon1y. Alao
In pursuance or an Order n~ and axclpt a parcel of
ol Sale In tha above entitled roal ootato now ownld by
Canpuitr~ed CusiOm Embrlidety
" 1oee 're bat:k to our
action, I will offer for 1111 at Manning D. Webater
public auction In the abcva daacrtbod In Deed Book
regular hou,.. ••
Auto Upholstery
county, on tha 20th day of 172, Pago 377, Malga
Tues-Frl 1o-a
Company Logos
Saptambar, 2000 at 1 0:00 County Dead Recorda,
Sat. 1().4
t.m. It the door or the ralaronco to which Ia
Hats
courthouaa the following hereby made lor dallnlto
•
Candle
making
Jackets
de.crlblld raalaatata:
doaorlptlon or thll
supplies
i School Mascots
SEE
LEGAL noaarvetlon.
• Wooden crafts
DESCRIPTION ATTACHED
Said pramtaoa alto
Carmeli ta &amp; Kenny Osborne
• Baskets
HERETO AS EXHIBIT "A".
known 11 311 Wright Strtll,
33869 Blackwood Road · Otr St Rt ~ 4 3
EXHIBIT "A"
740·992-4559
Pomeroy, Ohio 457119.
Phone 740-742·2377
Situated In the Township
PPN'o: 16-01435 &amp; 16·
9/1!00 1 ino pd
Fax 740-742·6103
ol Sallabury, VIllage of 014311.
Pomeroy, Ohio, County ol
Appro!- at: $40,000.00
Malga, and being part of and cannot be aold for '"'
Section 2S ol the Ohio than two-thlrdo (213) ol that
CRAFTY,
Company'• Purchaaa and amounL
bounded and deacrlbad •• JIIIMII M. Souloby
BLIND SPOT
loll-a:
Sherin cl Molgo County
(Factory Outlet)
Beginning at a point In Jolin D. Clunk ~78
AU vertical blinds are
the northweat Una ol the Andrew A. Palaaly 1100425t5
rood that leads from Sugar Attomoya for Plalnllfl
made to order at our
Run SlrHI In uld village 75 Milford Drlvt
location
port the raaldanca ol what Hudoon, Ohio 44236
UPTO
70% OFF
waa formerly W.J, Wright (330) 342-8203
• Verticals • Wood
and Albert Hazahon In an (8)22,28
aaatarly dlractlon to Ianda (9)5 3TC
• Minis • Etc
formerly owned by J.P.
144
Tltlnl An. Galpols
Bredbury, which point Ia
446·4995
Identical
with
the
Public Notice
aouthaaatarly comer of a lot
50 r111 wide conveyed by
J.P. Bradbury and Emma
SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
Bradbury to Earl McCarty
by dead dated December - CASE NUMBER 1111-CV-115
18, 1104, and recorded In
Northweet
Bonk
Volumt1 91, Page 488, of tha Mlnnuota,
National
racoraa o1 a11aa lor aaoa Aaaoclotlon, 11 Truataa
county ol Malga; thence without racouraa, Plaintiff,
northwaaterly along the ve., Roger H1rt, •t al.,
eaotlrly line of aald lut Defendanto.
Court of
daalgnatad lot to the Common Plou, Melga 11
aoutharly line ol Beach County Ohio.
Grove Cemetery; thence
In purouanoa of on Ordor
aaatarly along the line or of S.la In the abcva entitled
oatd cemetery about 80 '"t action, I will oflar for aalo at
to 1 poet; thence aaat 54 public auction In the abcva
deg. north 87 felt along county, on the 20th day of
Hid camatary Una to en elm S.ptember, 2000 at 10:1S
lrH; thenca lilt 32 t/2 dag. a.m . at tho door of the
north along aald cemetery courthouoa th.o following
line 82 fMI to an elm trM; d...rtblldraal-:
Stop In And See
SEE
LEGAL
thence north 2 dag. weat
DESCRIPTION
ATTACHED
along aald camata,Y line
Steve Riffle
S84 !ell to a poet In the HERETO AS EXHIBIT "A"
EXHIBIT
"A"
aouth Una of lando formerly
Sales Representative
Situate In tho VIllage of
owned by Mloo Emma
:.{/-~~,;_
In
lha
County
of
.
Pomeroy
Jacoba; thence aouth 84
'~
Larry Schey
dog . ooat 277 laat to o poll; Malga and lha s- of Ohio.
Lot
Nc.
45
ae
dtolgnated
thenco about 17 dog. 1111
332 fall to a poet; thence on a map of Lincoln
lOUth 26 1/2 dog . 1111 Helghto, mada by Braaca &amp;
about 145 leal to the Carper, Regtatered Civil
•
northweatarly line ol aald Englnetro, Huntington, 750 East State Street
Phone (740) 593-6671
VIrginia, dated
roed (to a gaa pipe ollke); Waat
thence aouth 53 dog. weal October 17, 1142, • copy of Athens, Ohio 45701
552 l•t olong aald road to a
of the
of .
poet; thence along oald oHice
which map
w11Recorder
flied In tha
road 80 laat to tho piece of Malg1 County, Ohio,
A
baglnnlng contolnlng abcut Dacambor 17, 1142, In Plat
Book No. 3, at Paga1 43 ond
5.68 ICFII Of land,
excepting the cool and 44, and being more
other mlnorala thereunder, partlculerly bounded ond
Truck seats, car se.a ts, headliners,
together ·with tho right tom dttcrlblld ao followo:
Beginning at a point In
truck tarps . convertible &amp; VInyl tops,
mine tho Hme and all waya
and rights -ol -way along all the lOUth line or Lincoln 1Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
mineral aooma to tronoport Road at the cornor batwaan
boat covers, carpets, etc.
coal and material uaod In Lola 44 end 45, aa ehown
on aald map; thence with
mining cool.
Mon • Frl 8:30 - s:oo
Save and excepting out ol the oald line of Lincoln
Over
40 yre experience
Road,
South
83°
51'
oaot
50
tho laat doacrlbod tract of
land, a email lot dtacrlbed 1111; thence with tho line '
aa rollowo: a.gtnnlng at a bttwoan Lola 45 and 48,
gao plpo atakt In the South 28' 09' well 200 feat;
northweaterly Una ol a road thence north 83' 51 ' wall 50
which leads from Sugar loot; thence with the lint
Run Street In aald village; botwoan Loto 44 and 45,
thence south 53 deg. weat north 26' 09' Waat 200 fall
JIL INSULAJIOIII
121 teat; thence N. 26 1/2 to the point ol beginning;
POPLAR LOGS
dog. waet125faat; thence N reserving, however, the co1l
CONSJIUCnON
53 deg. E 121 raat thence S. and ell othor minerals In
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
28 1/2 dag. E. 1251111 to the and underlying the abovo
B" diame te r to 2 7''
Replacement Windows,
plape of beginning baing a d11crlbed property together
Seam
less
Gutters
&amp;
I B' Ion q ~ $~0 I Ton
part of a tract of 5.66 acres with the right to mine the
Downspout, Garage room
purchaaad by W.H. Jobea same without encumbrence
1\l$0 WI\NTED
!rom J.P. Bradbury and wilt to the outface, and to an
additions, Pole Building,
easement
for
eawoga
filter
CHIPWOOD
byo dead dated Jan. 5, 1910,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener, ·
and recorded In Volume ditch ol leaching ditch aa
~ "to 25"
Decks, Boat Docks,
1~. page 4, of the recorda 111 forth and dtecrtbad In
Concrete
&amp;
Block
Wmk,
ll
'
lo
20" 1n le nqlh
ol deldo ol Metgo County, that lnotrument boorlng
Blown Insulation
•Poplar
• Maple
data
November
28,
1943,
Ohio.
992-2772
• Occch • Sycamore
Alto , uvlng and and recorded In oald
For All Your Home
excepting tho following racorder'o oltlco December
S 19 !Ton
lm
rovement Needs
3,
11143,
In
Datd
Book
151,
doacrlbad real eatato:
Pege178.
North or Goll1p oltS on
The following root ttlato
Said prtmleeo aloo
SR 7. 611 0 or a mol e
altuatod In the County ol known ao 1835 Lincoln Hill
Advertise In
above
Rood Stde Re st
Molga, In tho alate ol Ohio Rood, Pomeroy, Ohio 4578ll.
and In tho Vlllago of
on
n q ht .
this space for
PPN: 11-01870.000
Pomeroy, and baln11 a part
Appro!- ot: $1S,OOO.OO
7~0 - 985 - ~~65
ol Fraction 25 of the Ohio and connot be eold tor ltaa
$25
per
or7 ~0 - 4~1 - 9262
Company'o Purchaoe and than two-thlrdo (213) ol that
bounded and deacrlbod ao amount.
month.
lollowo: Certain Ianda and John D. Clunk 110005378
tonomonto no. 25 In tho Andrew A. Pololoy 10042515
VIllage of Pomeroy, County AHornayo lor Plaintiff
ol Molgo and State ol Ohio, 75 Milford Orlvt
dtiCrlbad ao IOIIOWI , to-wit: Hudoon, Ohio 44238
Beginning at a point In (330) 342-8203
tho northwaatorty II no of a
(8)22,29
road that loado from Sugar {9)5 JTC
Run Stroot of oald VIllage
p111 tho roaldanco ol J .J .
MeCartW In •n ••tterfy
&amp;
dlroctton'l which point 11
ldontlcal
with
the

tormelilo'~ treolio~~

now PARTinG OUT

~

lllellp"

46 Texao city

47Sea-

subetance
46 Denoml1111don

50Ciub-

52Pholo- (plctunetaklng
aeaalona)
53 Oppoahl of ·

by Luis Campos
~

'

Cipher cryptograms ,,. created lrom quotations by lamous people, past and
pmenl. Each letlef In 1M cipher stands lor another.
Today's cluB: H equals K

' TAVMNR
· At

BNIVAVGV

HINTAIJ

YDGAROGS
MN

GN

TPOG
OV

IN G
GN

AI

l'\ JJL'n"e o f arwthe r. Bl'

0.1

join er.

GPS

TPOG

'::~:~:~' S©\"t~1A-LG£trs·
IOI1o4
ClAY I. POlLAN

WOlD
lAIII

~y

O four
Rearrange letters of
Krambl.d words

the
be·

low to form four simple words.

I

0 XT R E P

I

N .O GAL

I I' I

I·

,. .-R--:0--'-D-W_L_...,I~
I 1 1......

"' You should remember ,"
~-n:,......,
..,...--.~':' granny told us . "'we should have
.
.
.
"' goals , but the sides of the moun L.....--L-J..........L_JL....-J tain sustain life , - - - the -- -."

I

HIRTTF

r:-1I0

t.,,....-r,-,,.......,,-.,,-...
_

_

_

_

_

_

c omp l•'•

_

.

!he chuckle quoled

b y f1ll ing in tt-le missing words

'--....L--''--'--L-.L.....J yov de velop from step No. 3 below .

.:11. PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
~
THESE SQUARES

I

f t UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
V GET ANSWER
.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Client· Usurp - Da twn ~ Rashly - UPSTAIRS
"Wh
go on your honeymoon ?" th e newly
weds sked th elderly couple Sm1 hn g the man said
simpl ·uPST I

SEPTEMBER 5

The Greek Olympic Games
were discontinued by the end of
rhe founh ce ntury. but they were

rev ived in Athens in 1896.

AI

PNNZSU
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Critlca can't even make music by rubbing their back
legs together." - Mel Brooks

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Treat your family with the same
respect and to lerance as you do
your friend s today. Uti lize that
patience for which you ' re so
famou s, no matter what a family
member does that bu gs you.
GEMINI (May 2·1-June 20) If
you're no t a careful lis tenertoday.
you could bung le a j ob ass ig ned
to you. Take in struc ti o ns we ll , and
don't atte mpt ·to do things your
way .
CANCER tJune 2 1-Ju lv 22) It
could be qu ite easy for yo~ today
to go to ext remes in your soc ial
invo l vemen1S: Have a good lime.
but don ' t overindulge in anyth ing
that has a price tag attached to it.
LEO ilul y ~ J - Aug . 22)
Dcm•H ' Jing to have every thing
done your way today wi ll get you,,
in ho t water before you kn ow it.
Talk 10 others and Iis ten to what
1hcy ha ve to say about thing s
before g i1 1ng· out di c tates.

.

MN

PSUXSUG

----------~~~---------no t a sc lf- :" erv ing a ntilgoni s t.
SAG ITTAR IUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
2 1) Suc.:ess cou ld be deni ed you
today if you're unabk to foc us
ex clusi ve ly ,on your prime o bjec tives . Don ' t allow pe riphera l
deve lopme nts to distract you .
CAP RI CO RN (Dec 22 -Ja n .
19) Do not pe rmit yourself to ge t
drawn into a si lly debate today
with a close friend who is always
ch alle ngin g others. This kind of
exe n; ise never produces a winne r.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fe b . 19)
You could be subjected to a forceful assoc iate today who may want
to int imidate you into be lievi ng
what you th in)&lt;. is wrong. Stand by
your gu ns.
PISC ES (Feb. 2 0-Marc h 20)
Sc hedu le you r time prudently
today. because you' re not lik e ly to
fun c ti o n well under pre ssure .
Stand by you r game plan and
don ' t be led off trac k.
ARIES (March 2 1-Apri l 19)
The costs o f your soc ial mvolvemenl s today co uld far exceed
you r budget if you don't put li m- '·
itat ions o n yo ur spending . Know
when w close your wa ll et and go
ho me.

RYBP

V N

HINTAIJ

ISEG .'

TUESDAY

The entrance of a dynamic new
friend that co mes on the scene in
the year a head cou ld d o wonder s
for your frame of mind . She or he
wi II he lp you see othe rs from a
more positi ve, fresh pe rspec ti ve.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22 )
Co mmuni cmion cha nne ls will be
open to yo u today fo r wiping ou t
an o ld g rudge that need s c learing
up . By ge lli ng past e pi sodes out of
the way. you can ge t o n with pre se nt happeni ngs . Virg o. treat
yourself to a birthday g ift. Send
for your As tro-Graph predicti o ns
for th e year ahead by m a ihn g $2
and SASE to A s tro~Graph . c/o thi s
newspaper. P.O . Box 1758. Murray Hill Stat ion. Ne w York. NY
10156. Be s ure to s tate your
Zodiac sign.
LIBRA (Se pt. 23-0c i. 23 )
Large cro wds and g athcnng s
cou ld hug yo u today. 'o ) ou
mig ht he wise to plan in advance
to do so methin g qui et wi th j ust a
few of your good fri e nd s .
SCOR PI O (Oct. 24 - Nov. 22)
Th~r~ ·, nothin g \vrong wrt h sa lisfy in g a self-intc rc.st today. so
lo ng a s yo u tlon ·l do sn at the

n-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

BasebaH. Anzooa

O~amoncl:!acts

at AIIM!ta Braves·

�1'·

.I

Page 8 6 • Th• !)ally Sentinel

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
Wldl 11 ... a.m.
Ballimoro (P&lt;&gt;noon 7-10) at Min....,.
(RdoiG-141, 1:05p.m.

Anaheim (sa-iOwoio 8· 7) ot Dotnth

boO.
W L Pet.
80 57 .514

T-

At- ..···············...........

Now Yod&lt; ...................... ...111 58
.....
..............67 118
Moolteol ...•.•......... .....:.....58 78
Philadelphia
......•... 58 80
Cenlnl
Sl:. Louis....... ... ·········· .......7'8
Cinamati ........................ 70
t.fitwaukee ........ ............ ..eo
Chicago ..... ..................... 58
Pillst&gt;ulgh ················ ......57
Houoton .......................... 57

(Spolb 11-21, 7:05 p.m.
, . , . Boy ~ s-5} .,
(Finloy
lll-HJI, 7:05p.m.
Sootllo (Holomo 11 ·7) Ill Toronlo (T!Khlel
7· 12), 7:05p.m.
Ooldlnd ~ 7-10) at (Anqo 910), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. ......... (Hemandaz 11 ·10, atl&lt;8nul
City (UiadDWI3-2), 8:05p.m.
.
t - (Hott;ng 14-10) at Chicago Whitt SOx
(Lowe 3-1), 8:05p.m.

c-

08

.5n
1
·12 1/2
.418 22 1/2
.412 23 1/2

58 .571
87 .511

n ...aa

8

19
78 .423
21
78 .41821 1/2
80 .418
22

_.. _

F -..................

San
80 58 .588
Arizona ......... .................. 74 61 .SoU 51!1
Loo~ ......... ............ 73 85 .528
8

AfC
EMt
TWLT-Pf M
Bulalo ........................... . 0 01 .00 18 13
h danapalil ................... 1 0 0 1.CIO 27 14
......................... .. .. 0 01.00 23
0

ColoradO .........................10 07 .511 10 1fl
San Olego ........................IIB 72 :478
15

Cinoinnoti e, N.Y. Mols 2
· St. LOuis 4, Montreal 2

N.Y. -

Florida 5 , - 2

~ado

Los-

Cindmoti ......................0
08\ . . d ............ ..........0
f'lllburgll ..................... .0
T•• 11 ... .....................0

-

6-6). 7:05p.m.
Arizona ~Johnson 17·51 at Altanta (Giavine
16·6), 7:&lt;0 p.m.
Florida (Cornelius 3·7) at (Mel&lt;·
night 0-1) , 8:05p.m.
Montreal (Santana 0-4) at St. L.ouil
(Reames 0-1), 8:10p.m .
Chicago Cubs (Amold ll-1) at Colorado
(Tavares 9-2), 9:05p.m.
Milwa..oe (Rigdon 2·2) at San Diogo (Woasici&lt; 2-1), 10:05 p .m.
Pit1sbutgh (Silva 8-11) 01 t.os ~ (Perez
5-7), 10:10 p.m.
PllllaOelphia {Boll- 1·2) .. San Ffon.
cis&lt;:o (Ruetor 8-8), 10:15 p.m.

-

N.Y. Glara ............... ..... .1 0
Plllladolpllia .................. 1 0
~ .................. . 1 0
... ....................... 0 1
DaiM ............................ 0 1
Cenlnl
CMiro't .•..•.••.................. .1 0
Mltw- ..................... ! 0
, . , . Boy ........... .......... . 0
alicogo ............... ..........0 ,

wood B-10), 7:&lt;0 p.m.

Florida (Sanc;hoz 8-11) 111 Houston (Limo 8-

15), 8:05p.m.

Montreol (Homlanson 10.12) at St l.olis
(St.,.,.,._ 15-7), 8:10p.m.
Pi"sburgh (Serolinl 1·3) at LOs ~
(VOIOes 2-8), 10:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (SnydO&lt; 3· 7) at San Diogo
(Wiltlams 8-5), 10:o5 p.m.
Plliladelplia (Wolf 10.7) .. San Froncis&lt;:o
(Gardner 10-6), 10:15 p.m.

-..,·.-

27. C. Aloe, 1/intcn Coon1y (22:39)·

28. Moby Rodg.... Gallla (22.52)
29. Coul1ney L -. Gal1ia (22:57)
30. Savollllllh CfOssen. AJexoooe&lt; (23:&lt;2)
31 . Melia Gotbooi, Gal1ia (23:46)
32. Jonnilw Uming, AleKandet (23:58)

0
7
0
21
,6
US

33. Shelli 'Mlile, Chespoako (23:59)
34. 8rinany Erickson, Alexander (24 :38)
35. TIWC)' Oomy, Jockscn (24:50)
36. Stephania CirCle, River valley (25:03)
37. N. Barton. Vonton County (25:26)
38. Arny Lee, Soulhem (25:44)
39. K-o Staton. Root&lt; Hill (25:58)
.eo. Heatl'ler Moore, Jackson (26:32)
41 . -Marshall. So.Ahem (26:53)
42. IlOilO, Rhl• Valley (27:36)
43. E. Koany, v..on Courdy (27:59)
44. Emily StiYot&gt;, Soutntwn (28,53)
45. Jessica Jordan, Alexander (29:16)
46. Musgrave, ClleMpeOko (29:39)
47. Be111any Amberger. Soulhem (30:12)

ar-Boy ......................o

........................... 1
Sl. l,U ......................... I
.........................0
-0...0 ..................0
San nw ......... ................o

0
0
,
,
1

01.00
01.00
0 .000
0.000

o.ooo

21
41
20
18
14

18
14
17
21
41

Bop T..m
1. Vinton County-25
2. Gollia Academy-«!
3. Alexand•---84
4. Soulhorn-94

14 10
30 27

v

21
11

16
30
20

36
41
11
10
28

26
36
20
14
38

1.

fklndor, 8opt. 10
looilnof&gt;olia, 1 p.m.
GraM Boy at I!Uiolo, I p.m.

Oakland ot

Anaheim .........................88 et .488

8

Toxos ..............................61 78 .445

13 ·

'

Cl8'11'eland 5, Tampa Bay 1
Baltimore 3, MiMesota 2
Texas 5, Chicago 'Nhite Sox 4
Delroit 5 Anaheim 0
N.Y. Y.ankees 4, Kansas City 3
Anal'leim (Wiso 3-2) at Dotroii{Moel11er II ·
7). 7:05 p.m.

\

RES
We will meet or beat any
competitor's advertised
price on the same tire.

/ - Boyo lndlvtduol Rooutt.
y,.,.
Horwy, Vlntoo eo. (14:55)

EMtr Bird ero. Country ...... lbitloutlll
-Vallo\' H i g h - • C-lro
CllrlaT.... A..utia

I . ~Academy--21
2. 'Higl 40
3. Rock Hlll-78
4. Valo\'--104
5 . •lara del 111

(*)-New Early Bird Invitational record

e. ScMhom---140

URNPIKE
OF GALLIPOLIS
Quick Lube

G4~ Multi-Point

1~5/65115

.)

Rotation and
Brake Inspection

82295

quarta of Motorcraft
and new Motorcreft oil
flltor. Dlnel veltlctoe
may be extra.

Wheel Alignment Cooling System
Service

I!

WEDNESD~Y, SEPTEMBER 20, 2000
'

·

2·wheel .

aa•
-.... ...
.......
.......... . ...
-..,...,._
...............--,
.....
..,..;_
... _...,.,
__
__
--· -,
........

oinlplcllldillor far lib. Click
lmes, clnps 1111 bell of'l1lln
system far lelb -llrlln , .
•Includes If to Igab ol COllin

.....

•'-•·-

• 71 . . . . . .

-~
__
CIIoi .......

~

lflllo;CIIoiWo0111 _ _ _

.............

.,

.....

The Daily Sentinel
Phone 992-2155

jC::....Oilf'-illl

Winter Maintenance Autom~ic Transmission
Package
Oil

~lillltij

CALt MATT OR DAVE

and ilpect llils dllllgl and proper
qlllilall ' Pdie llllils!lecllliles
oDJII r~~lhltl Vllllcltl m

~aiWIW-.. .......
...

..........-0'1 ......

ADVE~TISING DEADLINE IS

l:tllidll~~bnletor
dnge and ~ operalioo•Rotal!

M

required on some veliea

Reserve Vour Advertising Space Today!

. . bnltfmlon llllllrill,.
oplllion.- drums, hoses and

Service lncludeo up to

Check and adjust cdellll toe.
Addffional pat1s and liar may be

T.R. Edwards was the top
River Valley runner on Satun!ay,
completing his home cour.;e in
16:}2, a time good tor ninth
pia«~!. Teammate Mike Macomber

26. Ryan Maddy, Rock Hill (17:58)
29. AniOn Mohammed, Alexander (1 8:03)
30. C l i f f - · Gallia (18:07)
31. Mll&lt;e Campbell, Alexandtw (18:06)
32. Detrick Johosoo, Meigs (18:11)
33. Joromy F'oshef, Soulhom (18:36)
34. Aaron Trent, Alexander {1 8:37)
35. Ben Smilh, Fairland (18:42)
36. Garret Kaiser, SOuthom (18:54)
37. Mecy R005, Sou1nom (19:10)
38. Danny Hum, Vinton eo. (19:13)
311. S1eve Antu, Alexand8f (19:30)
40. casey Taylor, Gallia (19:411)
41 . Nate Hal, Vinton CO. (19:51)
42. Miko Moccmbef, Rhler Valley (20:10)
43. Leslie Hoffman, Rock Hil (20:21)
44. Ricl&lt;ia McOonie, Rock Hil (20:29)
45. Collman, Southern (20:46)
46. CIYis Dodson, Meigs (20:53)
47. Derek Jenkina, Jackson (21 :35)
48. Ttavis Grat, GaJtia (21 :59)
49. Joe Cornell, Southern (22:02)
!50. Steptwn Patrick, Jackson (24:25)
51 . Nathania Thrlken, Jackson (28:37)

-.llopt.11
· 8 p.m.

Tampa Boy (Wi- ll-2) ot C1eYeland (Bore
4-2), 7:05p.m.
Seattle (Sele 13-10) at Toronto (HamiftCn 10), 7:05p.m.
Oakland (-12·10) at Boston(~
2-9), 7 05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Cone 4·11) Ill Kansas City
(Suppan 7-8). 8:05p.m.
SaHimore {Mussina 8·13) at MIMMOta
(Romero 2-4), 8:05p.m.
T"'"'s (ClOver 2-8} ot Cnloogo White SOx
(Siootka 13-10), 8 :05 p.m.

ings.

placed 42nd with a time of20:10.
Derrick Bolin was the top fin isher for Meig;, taki ng 21st place
with a time oi 17:27. Teammate
Derrick Johnson placed 32nd
with a time of 18:11.
In junior high action, Gallia
Academy's Jackie Wamsley ran
away with the girls race. Wanuley's time of 8 :46 set a new race
recotd for junior high girls and
outpaced the number two finisher by 25 seconds.
Chespeake's Aaron Brewster
captured the junior high boys title
with a time of7:58.

Brian Cumt.cte, Galli&amp; (17:38)
25. Sam s..tlivlwl, Galtia (17:38.1)
26. Derrick Rowe, Fa/tlond (17:47)
27. Joe Futv, Rock HMI (17:50)

Nitw Englond ot N.Y. -

TGMy'a-

took top honors.
Teammate
Nate
Emmert
placed third to help the Vikings'
cause. His time was 15:10.
Gallia Academy placed second
in the overall team table, led by
Daniel Roush, who finished the
course in 15:22. The Blue Devils
placed six athletes in the Top 20
altogether.
Ryan Hudson placed lOth with

Details, A3

The R.tnu went ahead 35-20 In
the thitd quarter on two inne)cent-looking sideline patteqlS
that went a total or 152 yatds for
Faulk and Hakim .
W arner went to thJt well onee
too often, though ,Ao hand die
BroncO. the lead in the fourth
quarter.
Warner had to rally after Terrell
Buckley stepped in front of a
quick out to Holt and returned
the interception 32 yards to put
Denver in front 36-35 with 6 :35
left.

24.

CleYEUnd at ClncinriJti, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Gionls a1 l'l1ilodelplia, 1 p.m.
l&lt;anlas City Ill T&amp;i I
M , 1 p.m.
Cnloogo Bl T - Boy, 1 p.m.
t.laml at t.llw..,., 1 p.m.
JliiCbc:JfWile at Baftlmore, 1 p.m.
Allonlo Ill ow-, 4:15p.m.
St.l.Duilat Seeale, 4:15p.m.
Carolina at San Francisco, 4:15 p.m,
W8lhinQtOn Ill Dltroll, 4:15 p.m.
NowOtioMs .. San Diego, 4:15p.m.
llollao ot AriZona. 8:20 p.m.
OPEN: Pittsburgh

Boston 5, Sealtle 1

f1umPipBI

..

w-

IIoiMiat'a QlmM

............................ 74 83 .540

Meigs

a time of 16:17. Andrew Woodyatd (16:37); Antti Tapola (16:41)
and Nick Fisco (16: 4~) took
places 14 through 16, respectively,
and David Miller (16:56) placed
18th.
Southern's Jeff Circle came in
eighth place with a time of
16tCfl7.1, pacing the Tornadoes to
fo'ifith place in the team stand-

..

work on.

"'lck

St l.U 41 ' Oomw 38

22

R..utte

Rams

Griese w.~s 19-for-29 for 307
yards and two touchdowns, hitting Rod Smith from 25 yards
fnNft Pip 81
and Desmond Ct.rk for 7. He
·. also scored on an 8-yatd bootleg
Romano\\lski said. "They've for the game's fir.;t score.
got every shilft known to man."
" I'm telling you, that ain't the
The Broncos kept up because _same dude from last year," Smith
their offense exploited huge gaps said. "Totally different guy, totally
in the Rams' secondary, and , more focused."
because they took advantage of ·. The Rams said they helped out
an uncharacteristic throwaway by being predictable on defense.
from Warner.
' "Denver got us in a couple sit"This was a game that if you uations where they knew exactly
like offense, it was fun to watch," what we were doing and just
Broncos coach Mike Shanahan attaclced the weakness," cornersaid. "If you like defense, you ~ck Todd Lyght said. "Obviously,
picked the wrong one to go to."
we have a lot of things we have to

Hlch:IOs;~:&amp;OI

.....

, e -__ _

I POLIS
Quality..........
Care

Public Notice

Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 00-CV-003

Kibble, end Herbert
Wlllltme end on the North
line ol Lot No. 1185 (thla

Chase Bank or Texaa, N.A.

eame point b..ng 72 rode

lka TOKaa Commerce Benk,
National Aooocletlon; 11
· Cuatodlan, Plelntlll

Weal ol the North Weal
cornor ol Lot No. 11115);
thance South 31 Weal o

-v•Jerome N. McKenzie, et al.,

dlatance of 38.5 rode; more
or 1111, along tl'le W11t line

Delendanto
Court or Common Pleao,
Meigs County, Ohio
In purauance ol en Ordor
of Sale In lho above ent!tlod
action, ! will oHar lor oole ot
public auction In thio abovo
county, on tho 20th dey ol
September, 2000 at 10:30
a.m. at the door ol tho
courthouoo tho following
described real oo181e:
Situated In the Stale ol
Ohio, County or Melgo end
In tho Townohlp ol Oliver:
Being 2.23 ocroa, mare or
looo, out or tho Northweot
corner or Lot No . 1165,
Section 9, To\'ln 4, Range 11
and bounded end deacrlbod
ae lollowo:
S EE
LE GAL
DESCRIPTION ATTACHED
HERETO AS EXHIBIT "A". '
EXHIBIT • A"
Beginning 8.00 rode Waot

ol Lot awnod by Herbert
Wllllame, to the center of
Stele Route No. 880; thence
North epproxlmetely 38'
Woet 18 rodo, more or teet,
to Soutlleell corner of lind
owned by or formerly
ownod by lrl Kibble; thence
North 21 .8 roda, more or
leeo,to the North line ol Lot
No. 1185; thence Eeat tlong
North line of Lot No. 1185, o
dlatance of12.8 roda to tito
place ol beginning.
AUDITORS PARCEL NO.
0&amp;-00577.000.
AppraiHd et: $20,000.00
end cennof be eold lor leoa
than two-thlrdo. (213) olthe1
1moum.
Jomeo M. Soulobv
Sherfll of Melgo County
.John D. Clunk 110005378
Andrew A. PeiHiy f0042S15
Altomeye lor P!elntlll
75 Milford Drlvo

of the common corner of Hud10n, Ohio 44238

lando owned by K.W. (330)342-1203
Emrick T. Kibble, Sareh M. 1
- ·-- -

r&gt;ubllc Notlc.e

Public Notice

(8)22,29

(V)53TC

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE ~REAL
ESTATE
CASE NUMBER: 99CV036
. BANKERS TRUST
COMPANY .OF CAUFORNIA,
N.A. AS CUSTODIAN OR
TRUSTEE, Plolntill VI.
GREGORY MEDLEY, II al,
Oolandam
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
In purauance of an Order

ol Sele to mo dlroctod from
aold Court In tho above
entitled action, l will expose
to 1111 at public auction 11

the

Court

House

on

Septtmber 2'11, 2000 at 10:00
A.M . ol oald day, tho
following deacrlbod rool
Hilla:

Situated In the State of
Ohio, County or Motgs, and
Townohlp of Sutton and
doocrlbod aolollowa:
' Boglnnlng at the
Southweat corner of A.T.
Chapman'• lot, In 160 Acre

Lot No. 1223, Townahlp 3,
Rongo 13, ol tho Ohio
Company••

Thorico North 33 dog. West
58 leal; Thence North 80
dog. East 158 1/2 feet;
Thence South 33 dog. E11t
58 feat; Thence South 60
dog. Waot 158 1/2 lett to tho
place of beginning. And
fronting 58 feet on the road
or atree1 and running back

ot that width to tho rear or
said Lot 158 112 lett.
Saving and excepting the
coal and other minerals
unda~ylng

oald lot.

Prior

Instrument

Reference :

Page 271

Volume 77,

Current Owners Name:

Gregory Medley
Property Addroao: 43270
State Route 124, Recine ,

Ohio 45771
·
Appraised At $15,000.00
Terms ol Solo · 10% Ceoh
the dav altho Sale • balance
duo within 30 dayo.
James Souloby, Shorlll
Molgo County, Ohio
Larry Rothenberg
323 W. Lakooldo Ava Sullo
200

Clovtland, Ohio 44113
(216) 685· 1000
(8)29, 2000
(9)5 ,12, 2000

Purchllli

September 6, 2000

•
Melp County's ·
Vulum&lt;' 51. Nurnb.-r

n

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so

Ce nt s

Jury finds former patrolman .blameless
BY BRIAN

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT - A former patrolman for the Middleport Police Department W35 exonerated of wrongdoing by
the jury in a civil trial on Friday.
Thomas Wilson Sr. of Pomeroy filed
the civil suit against Phillip J. Richmond
of Middleport, charging him with personal injury and punitive damages following the arrest ofWilson and hi~ son,

Thomas Wilson Jr., by Richmond in back of a police cruiser to the MiddleThe men were arrested outside of the
1997.
.
port Police Department, despite Wilson bar on disorderly conduct charges and
The suit was filed in Meigs County telling him of a pre-existing spinal taken to the Middleport Police DepartCommon Pleas Court, and sought injury.
ment - Wilson Jr. on foot and Wilson
$200,000 in compensatory and punitive
The Wilsons had just left Wayne's Sr. by car.
damages. The jury deliberated until Fri- Place in Middleport when they were
Witnesses, other than Wilson and
day evening before determining that arrested. The younger Wilson had R-ichmond, included Shirley Tyree and
Richmond was not at fault .
allegedly pulled a gun during a dispute Bruce Swift, dispatcher and police chief
Wilson Sr., in his complaint and in tes- . on Coal Street ear]ier in the evening, for rhe Middleport Police Department,
timony offered Thursday and Friday, said and police were looking for him when respectively, who reviewed police
Richmond forced him to ride in the he and his father le ft the bar.
records and testified to the nature of the

calls made to the department during th e
20-minute incidenl.
Richmond said that both Wilsons had
initially resisted arrest, and that mace had
been used to subdue the younger Wilson"and that Wilson Sr. climbed into the
police cruiser voluntarily.
Although no judgment entry has been
filed in the ca.&lt;e,jury forms which reflect
the verdict were available for viewing on
Tuesday.

Radne queen candidates

Pomeroy
Council
eyes new
_ equipment

Gallia
residents
cope with
slaying

BY ToNY M. LEAcH

FROM STAFF REPORTS

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

BIDWELL - Students and
staff at Bidwell- Porter Elementary School have begun
the healing process in the waktof a murder-suicide invo lving
a school employee and her
estranged husband .
Classes were canceled at B-P
Tuesday after Linda J. Shoemaker, 52, was ·shot and killed
by her husband Frank Shoemaker, 66, in the school parking lot around 6 :25 a.m ..
authorities said.
Frank Shoemaker was found
dead
shortly
afterward,
slumped in a lawn chair in the
fiunt yard of his Story's Run
Road residence near Cheshire.
Dr. Daniel Whiteley, Gallia
County coro ner, said he used
the same gun to shoot himself
in the head.
No students or teachers wen·
present when Linda Shoemaker was killed, authorities said.
Shots were heard by another
cook, who called authorities .
She was head cook at D-P
and had been a full - time Gallia
County
Local
Schools
employee since August 1992,
Superintendent Robert Larlr
ning said. She had bee n on the
diliitrict's substitute staff sinn·
the 1984-85 school ye ar. he
added .
The school day at B- P was
delayed by an hour this morning as the district launched its
crisis management plan to deal
with grief and shock over the
incident.
Lanning said a tea m of psychologists, counselors and
resource individuals worked
with sc hool staffTuesday afternoon .
"We feel that it is important
for students to return to lhc ir
normal routine as soon as pos-

POMEROY Pomeroy
Village Co un cil discussed purchasing new equipment for the
fire department during its regular meeting Tuesday.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Chris
Shank asl&lt;'cd counci l to consider bidding for new extraction
equipment because the equipment that the department uses
now is o utdated and worn.
Item s included in Shank's
req1test was a new spreader,
cutter, power units, chains, stabilizer blocks, and hydraulic
rants.
"We really need this new
equipment," Shank said. "With
car designs changing every day,
the old eqllipment that we use
is starting to become old and
obsolete."
"The quicker that we can
extricate someo ne fron1 a
wreck, the better chance we
have of saving their life," added
Sll'ank .
Shank informed co uncil the
old equipment would not be
sold and that it' would, in fact,
be use d for emergency b ackup
if n eeded .
Coun cil agreed to Shank's
request and informed him to
beg:i n contacting extrication
equipment dealers for ·v arious
b1ds.
Shank asked council to consider th e purchase of 20 new
pa gers that would replace the
old ones that the department
cu rrently uses because of a
new poli cy that was set by the
"EMS Board o fTrustees .
"Our old pagers run on a
low band and high band frequency, " saj d Shank . "The new
policy, which will begin on
January 1, 2001, will o nly permit the use of hi gh band frequencY pagers. "
"The re ason for this is that
klwcr band frequencies seem
t o draw power away from
hi gher band frequencies,"
added Sha nk.
Coun cil con sid~red the situ ation and agreed to purchase
th e page rs for the fire department at a cost of $300-$400
per pager.
Shank delivered his fire
report for th e month of
August. Th e report indi cated
that there- was one structure
fire, fom mutual aids, three
auto accidents, o ne auto fire,
on e brush fire. o ne electric lin e
down, and two false alarms .
In o th er matters, Mayor John
lllacttnar inform ed council
that the • n ew ly constructed
water well in Syracuse is perfor ming as well as expected
and that . according to Village
Administrator Jo hn Anderson,
thL" construction of a new
water t reatment plant co uld
possibl y be in th e village's
future .

Ple111 see Vlll•l•· Pip Al
j

Wednesday

Meigs society news and notes, AS
Local cross country results, Bl

Thund~

•

2. Chris E-. Jocksof1 (15:07)
3. Nate Emmert, Vlmon Co. (15:10)
4. DlllieiRousll, Galia (15:22)
5.
Scholl, Alex...... (15:38)
8. Eddie N.... Chesapeake (16:03)
7. Hoolh Eldlidge, Vinton Co. (18:07)
8. Jell Citdo, Sou1nom (16:07.1)
a. T.R. Edwallls, Rive&lt; VaHey (16:12)
10. Ryan Hudson, Gollia (16:17)
11 . Sam Fife, VInton Co. (16:21)
12. Bnld McNally, Vinton Co. (18:22)
.13. B.J. Alman, AJ.....-.der (16:33)
14. /WJIIJW WOodyanl, Galia (16:37)
15. Anlll Topola, Golla (18:41)
18. Nick FUoo, Gallia (16:43)
11. Jail Jackson,
(16:53)
18. DIMd Miller, Gallia (16:58)
19. George Atmann, AJoxaooor (17:V2)
20. Sc:otl Wellma.n, ChBSBpeoke (17:06)
21 . Chris~- . Chesapeake (17:14)
22. Detrick Bolin, Meigs (11:27)
23. Chris Dinwiddie. Fa/naoo (17:36)

Ooldlnd a. San Diogo e
8uffllo te, T•11uue 13
OPEN: C -

Oakland ............. ............. 72 64 .528 1 1/2

Qakland 10, Toronto 0

25. F-. Roush, _ , (22:26)
28. Christ"' Baltd. River v.ney !22:35)

Mini23,s.tlo0
N.Y. - 20, GraM Boy 18

Chiqogo ..........................&amp;:! 55 .5911
C l - ........................13 61 .545 71/2
Detroit ............................. 118 67 .!507 12 1/2
Kansas City ..................... 85 72 .474
17

-

24. Stephani Johnson, River V8Hey (22:271

JM:bomrille 27, O..elaud 7
Phillldelphil .., ' Oelal 14

G8

.575
.530
8
.518 7 1/2
.453 us 112
.431 19 112

.438

23. Mlnrdo E-s. Aod&lt; Hii(_B2:28)

~­

~

n

- ··Meigs

N.V. Giono21,Arlmnal8
lltUI........ 20. c.oMnl17
-36.SanF-28
Dotroil 1 4 , - 0...0 10
1-lllf'Ob 27, City 14
T - Bay 21, Now England 16
= : 1 o. - . . - . o
30, alicogo 27

.._,.._

Miooesota ....................... 60

01 .00
0 I .00
01 .00
0 .000
0 .000

DUX)
01.00
01 .00
0 .000
1 o .ooo

-

Arizona (Anderson Ill-S) at Monlo (Mill·

-

Mo-.-..

g
8
0 .000 36 41
o .ooo 14 27
o .ooo e v
0 .000 0 23

,
KanouCity ................... .o 1
San 01ogo .........:............o 1
.... .......................0 ,
NfC

ot Colorado

Pet.

2. Krill.. Swiohor, Gallla (18:07)
3. Emily Stoly, Meigs (18:211)
4. Star Emnott. Jacbon (18:40)
5. Cl1eiSM Wlb, Failtand (18:53)
e. - Mo&lt;gM, Meigs (ttt.17) ,
7. Julie Fltcx&gt;, Gallia (1U4)
8. Eva Lyon, Gallia (I 9:55)
8. Aehley
(19:57)
10. Mogon Godwin, A'- llaley (19:58)
11 . Aol1ley Thomas, Meigs (20:25)
12. ~ Vlfing. Meigs (20:35)
I 3. Rachel Hanwig , Rock HiD (20:35. I)
14. COosy Chollins, Root&lt; Hil (20:46)
15. Jeri Ellingsworth, Fairtand C21 :00}
18. S . Losh, lllnton Counly (21:00.1)
17. Nildd Mcl&lt;lnnlss, Gonia (21 :15)
18. Thomas. MeigS (21:53)
19. I.Mn Sojka. Gallia (22:08)
(22'17)
20. 21 . .......... Gites, Rock Hil (22:18)
22. Loonant, Jaettson (22:25)

18
21

te

0 0.000 0
1 0 .000 1
1 0 .000 0
1 _0 .000 13

ow- ..........................0

01 Cincinnati (Sol 8-

L
57
53
118
75
78

Glrle lndlwld ... RMultl
1. Sono Wllomon, Gallla (17:42)'

o.tdand .. ....................... 1 0 01 .00

__.._

T.m
W
Now Yotl&lt; .......... ............... n
Boston ............................ 71
Toronto ........................ ....71
Baltimore .......................82
Tampa Bay .......................sa

0 01.00 20

l!ollitnono ............. .......... 1 0 01 .00 18
.JadclorMia ................... 1 0 0 1.00 27

r.-y·ocN.Y. Mots {Reed 11-4) 01 CincinnOii (Hamltch

7) , 12:35 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Nood 8-7)
( - 12-8), 3 :05 p.m.

-

.........................1

NowEnglond ..................o 1 · o.ooo

6, Chicago CIA 2
San Franciaco 3. Philadelphia 0
San Diego 4. ,...,..... 3
Pittsburgh 12,
1

N.Y. Mol&gt; (Jones 8-5)

Tuesday, September 5, 2000;

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Several Southern High School students declared their candidacy this
week for Saturday's Racine Fall Festival Queen contest. They are, from
left, Kenda Smith, daughter of Becky Dudding and Terry Smith of Racine;
Brl!fldi Codner, daughter of Mike and Lee Codner of Racine; Macyn Ervin,
daughter of Herb and T.C. Ervin of Racine: Courtney Hill, daughter of Den-

nie and Janet Hill of Racine; Emily Stivers, daughter of Don Stivers and
Betsy Jones of Racine; Sarah Ball, daughter of Tom and Debbie Ball of
Syracuse. The festival will be from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Star Mill Park in
Racine and will include a parade, pumpkin-growing contest, crafts, food,
a puppet show, and various live entertainment. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Gore prepares to outline economic goals
CLEVELAND (AP) - Vice President AI
Gore emphasized economic issues during a
two-day campaign swing through Ohio.
.The Democratic presidential nominee highlighted
technology training in a
speech Tuesday in Columbus
and chose Cleveland for a
keynote -;4iscu5sion of his
economi~ proposals today.
Gore
preparing to
spell out • 10 goals to be
reached \!)· his administraQore
tion, incl~C:Iing cutting the
poverty
and increasing
the nation's saving; and honl!t'&gt;wnership rates .
In Cleveland on Tuesday, Gore also showed

was
'

·*

'".

that he knows where to find a crowd. H e greeted fans at a beer garden near Jacobs Field as
people streamed into a Cleveland Indians baseball game one block away.
"You going to the game?'' Gore asked p~opie at Panini's, where sandwiches are served
with the french fries between the bread and the
televisions are tuned to sports.
Gore spent about 10 minutes at the restau rant. He left with a con e-shaped plastic bag of
cinnamon masted cashews .
"It's going to be an exiting race,'' said Ari
Sherwin, 30, of Cleveland, who had his photo
taken with Gore.
A registered Democrat and Gore supporter,
Sherwin said the campaign stop was important.
" It definitely makes a difference when you

Meigs receives
newH D

··-:·

meet the person in person;! he said.
About a dozen Democratic leaders met Gore
at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport ,
including U.S. R eps. Dennis Kucinich of
Cleveland and Sherrod Brown of Lorain and
Brook Park Mayor Thomas Coyne.
Gore flew to Cleveland fium Columbus,
where he spoke at an Internet marketing company on the importance of technology and
learning to the economy.
" The excitem ent I've felt in this mom is
what we need to make o ur economy what it
needs to be," he told about 100 e mployees and
visitors at Resource Marketing lnc.The company is a 19-year-old business that studies and
offers consulting on online marketing and communications.

lbday's

Sentinel

g

,

PiuH- Gillie, Pip Al

White House set to press
for its spending demands

2 SedlooiS - 12 Pips
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics

FROM STAFF REPORTS
Share" Section 8 renta1 assistance
' I
POMEROY - Funding from vouchers were awarded competithe Department of Housing and tively, based on community needs.
Urban Development will make Almost 700 housing authorities
rental assistance possible for very- submitted applications for the prolow . income families in Meigs gram.
"The demand for atfotdable
County.
Rental assistance vouchers for housing continu es to skyrocket,"
60,000 of these fam ilies wen: Cuomo said. "'Rents are rising
awarded by HUD Secreta~y faster than inflation, waiting lists
Andrew C uomo to about 500 for assisted housing are getting
housing autho rities' in the U.S. and longer and, every month, more
than 5 million American families
its territories.
The Meigs County Metropoli- who do not receive fed eral houstan Housing Authoriry will mg assistance must choose
receive $35,037 in voucher a~sis­ between paying their rent o r pay. ing other bills.
tance for nine families .
PluM IH HUD, Pip A3
T he $3 47 million m "Fair

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS
B2- 4

B5
A4
A3

B1.6
A3

Lotteries
owo
Pick J: 9- 1-R; Pick 4: 2-5-7-9
Bu~ S: 12- 15-18-21-27

WYA.
Dally J: 4-il-4 Daily 4: 2-o-9-9

•

WASHINGTON
(AP)
White H ouse and Congress are up
While congressional Republicans for grabs.
are eager to wrap up legislative
But first, the 11 re maining
business for the year and hit the spending bills for fi scal 2001 ,
campaign trail, White House offi- which stam O ct. 1, must become
cials say they are in no hurry to cut law. Only two spending measure:;
budget deals unless President C lin- have been signed.
ton's spending demands are met.
The unfinished bills cowr the
"It's not the calendar" that gives budgets of 13 C:tbinet- level agt"nth e White House leverage in Con- cies from the Agriteulture D epartgress' waning weeks, White House . ment to Vt·terans' Affairs. plus
budget chiefJack Lew said."lt's the spending fo r Congress, the courts
substance th at giVCS us the ability and foreign aid. C linton wantli
to h old our ground ."
about S20 billio n m ore than lawLawmakers began returning to makers h aw been ready 'to spend,
the C apitol on Tuesday after their and the two sides also differ over
August recess hoping to adjo urn in local co ntrol over e ducation profiv~ or six weeks . M ost are yearn- grams, mining arid other environ ing to gel home for this fall 's elec - mental issues, and o ther policy dis·
ti ons, in which control of the , ·p utes.

..

..

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="443">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9882">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="25429">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="25428">
              <text>September 5, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1111">
      <name>ziegler</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
