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ffCWII . . . Dl

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and other debris fiom around
growing plant&gt;.
t:Jse natural barriers of sand,
small gravel, coarse sawdust, cinden, diato~ceous euth or lime
to inhibit their travel. These dry,
scratchy or dusty substances
cause the slugs to use their internal water resources to slime their
way to their next meal. This
dehydration process greatly
reduces their visibility.
Collect slugs us.ing a pan full
of beer or ye~t product ~d
destroy them each mortflng.
Some effective slug liaits (e.g .,
meraldehyde, mesoral) can be
used, bur follow label directions
for any restrictions. For more
information request fact sheet
2010 "Slugs and their ·c ontrol."

•

•••

Whether you ore a home gar-

Money

dener or commrrcial vegetable
grower no is the time to clean
up the debris from the summer's
crop. Many growers brush hog
and till into the soil the debm
and then cover crop the1r fields
with rye, barley, w'heat or combination of vetch with a grass.
' Incorporation ..of the plant
material
allows the
soil's
microorganisms co break down
the plant debris and reuse the
nutrients for ~over crop growth.
In a small garden removal and
com posting of the debris may be
more feasible. '
However, cover crops should
still be sown to help improve the
. family garden soil structure. If
you plant an early March garden, until that part of gardenin
late fall with only a few weeks of
cover crop growth to allow early
access for planting.

(Hal Kneen is Mrigs County:S
Exttttsion agent for agriwlrure a11J
natllral resources, Ohio State Univtrsity.)
Very often, the default ~sump­
tions on retirenlent plan agree-

ments offer the le~t fle)&lt;ibi~ty. so
ir pays to know what they are for
01
your plan.
age 70-1/2.
For example, many employer
Most individuals choose to qualified retirement plans (such as
na~e their spouse as the primary 401 (k)s) do not offer an election
beneficiary of their account upon to allow an employee's beneficiadeath. This choJCe offers the most . · ry to take distributions over ~fe
flexibility because generally, a expectancy. It is understandable
spou se h~ the choice of leaving that employers would be burthe account_ mtact and utilll.mg dened to service non-employee
the distnbutJon m.ethods available beneficiaries over such a Ion
to the deceased owner or rolling · period.
g
over the balance into his/ her own
However this lack f d &lt; a]
. a] IRA b.
h
,
o eterr
tra di tlon
. . su ~ect
N to. t eir option forces immediate d1'st n·buown restncnons .
anung a tion and taXation to the heirs. In
spouse as benefic1aty avmds estate • o th er words.. all at once a1ter
~
a
1
taxes
upon
the
owners
death
as
h
lth
r·
b't
R
lli
U
· ea y ax 1 e. o ng over to a
we ·
traditional IRA can restore this
Many other individuals cho'ose valuable flexibilitv.
•
to name beneficiaries oiher than a
•r
Finally. many individuals elect
spouse for various financial conto
participate in such plans, make
tro I reasons ·or to ta ke advantage
of a younger beneficiary's longer beneficiary and .distribution elec&lt;
lite
expectancy. This may include tions , and then leave them
naming a child or grandchild as unchanged as if set in stone.
beneficiary.
Various changes in ~fe, such as
The longer life expecta~cy can the makeup of your family or
both allow for smaller minimum wealth, or changes iri the relevant
distributions after age 70~, as well tax codes, should prompt retireas provi~e a longer payout period ment plan and · traditional• IRA
after the owner's death, usually at participants "to review these
a lower income tax rate.
important choices.
Such a ch oice of younger be'nRemember that for many peoeficiaty seeks to take, advantage of pie, their retirement funds are '
the power of tax deferral, hope- their largest asset. Therefore, it
fully allow the balance to contin- pays to weed through all the
ue compounding and eventually paperwork and make such deciprovide a healthy sum for heirs.
sions carefully.
The choice of method for cal- ·
Of course, this brief discussion
culating required minimum dis- only raises the potential issues
tributions at age 70~ can also have facing plan participant&gt;. Be sure
dramatic effects upon your plan to work with an experienced
balance during your later retire- · financial planner or tax advisor to
ment years and after death.
help you make the best choices
Electing between some form of . for your particular situation.
· recalculation of life expectancy
· (J~ Caldwell, CFP. is branch
and a cons tant decreasi ng life man er ,at Raymond james Finanexpectancy should not be made cia/
vices, 441 Second Ave., Galthrough lack of information or fipolis, 446-2 125, member NASD
default.
and SIPC).

frvmPage

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Sunday, October 1, 2000

Touring the .~nt ~

.

Smith receives award

.... •., --.

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Details, A3

Melcs County's

Huntington Bancshares iss~e · earnings warning
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Stock of Huntington Baneshares Inc. tumbled Friday on
news that profits for the second
half of this year and fo,r 200 I
will be below forecasts.
The company said ea rnings
for the third quarter ending

Saturday now will total 30 forecasts had been for 43 cents
cents per share, down from ana- in the fourth quarter and $1.79
lysts estimates of .41 cents a in 2001.
·
share.
The company said e~rnings ·
for the fourth quarter now will
be 31 cents to 33 cents and
$1.40 to $1.50 for 2001. The

The

Joint Implant
Center

tJ{Jd Casli till Payt/o.g?

&lt;',_,'}$CASH$
~.,.::;

OVAllEY
&amp;lOAN

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer
oftlce hours at 1423 3rd Avenue in the Huntington
Spine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.

'We Can !Jlefpl!
204 W. 2nd Street

· Gallipolis, Ohio
'I• Mile south of
the Sliver Bridge

446-2404
. , . _ CCTOOO'I'I--' 001

Pomeroy, Ohio

Our next clinic date is
Friday, October B.

992.Q461

Call(614) 221-6331

Lk:onu CC7DOO'I'I-GOI
Uc- Cl710041 001

for an appointment.

Joint
Implant
Surgeons, Inc.

UcMM Cl71000.000 IH 011

Get 2,000 Bonus
Minutes for
ewar.
"·~';,:·:,.,

''"

..·-.·, '"''':''.:,
,,

:Riverfest
·concludes
with bang

tour.cou

50 Cents

over weekend
Visit part cf statewid~
(See Ohio First' ~ampaign

BY TONY M; WCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - An explosion of colorful fireworks lit up
Pomeroy's sky Saturday night,
bringing
th e Sternwheel
Riverfest 2000, "Rally by the
River," to a close.
The festival began Thursday
with th e arrival of several
sternwheelers at Pomeroy's
riverfiont and musical entertainment pe rfor~ances that
same eyemng.
Formerly known as the Big
Hend Sternwheel Festival, the
three- day event was organized
under the supervision of a new
committee this year and drew
arge crowBs .
"We could have not planned

(lomerov Mercha11t's Association.

BY ToNY M. lEAcH

The ~~·alking tour concl uded
POMEROY - "Let me tell 1nth a 1·iewing of the Meigs H eryou, Pom eroy Is the place ro be itage Mural , after which the Tafts
today'"
move,d to the stage area for the
Gov. l3ob Taft aod his wife, Stern wheel Riverfest queen's cerHop e, expressed enthusiasm and emony.
Q
excite ment Saturday they toured
Following a cruise and lunt'•omeroy and Middleport as part c heon aboard the Jewel City
of rht· usee l)hio First" cam- sternwheeler, the governor and
paign, sponsored by the Oh10 his entourage traveled to MiddleDivision ofTravel and Tourism.
port where they met Mayor
Th~ gm'ernor was also act:otnSandy
lannarelli
panied
by Jnn
and toured the
Th c J:mrrnw r
Epperson, the state
Ohio River llcar
director of the' arril'cd irr Pomeroy · Co., a recipient of
Division of Travel
the
Gover nor 1S
arottrtd
11
a.m.
anJ To urism. The
Award for ExcelSatllrda}'
aud
li'IIS
lence
in exporting.
purpo&lt;e · of the
c ampa1 g n
IS. to
met II)' se11eral
"It's such a pleahi ghlight touris m
Jrli'III/Jers of tire
su're to get out and
spots in Ohio that
Me((!S Cormty
see all of th e nice
a-re n at well know·n
p eopl e and mterto visitors and to Tourism Board aud esting sights in this
also
encourage
lWa)'OY ]olw Blaet- part of Ohio," said
Ohioans to spend rnar w/10, 011 'behalf Taft, noting he
· their leisure rime in
J. umped
at the
(I t Ire l't'I f age, tl'l' 1SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

•

it better/' said Jon Muss er,
chairman of th e new committee. "The .festival was a complete success.
"Every con1m ent that was
made about the event was positive. We can't wait to start
P.lanning next years event."
The wail of sirens could b e
heard Friday morning as a fire
.. truck parade wound its way
through Pomeroy. Middleport
and Mason , W.Va. A second
parade with a variety of entri es
and featuring candidates for
the Sternwhee l Riverfest
Queen contest kicked off Saturd ay's activities. Entertain m ent ranging from rock and
roll to country was presented
to festival crowds on b ot h Fri day and Saturday.
Ohio Govc. Bob Taft m ade a
special appearance at th e fe stival Saturday,' p arti cipatin g in a
walking tour of the historic
downtown area and enj oying a
cruise and luncheon o n the

Specialized Care for Total Knee
and Hip Replacement

II ...... IIC...CIIIcll

216 Upper River Rd.

Huntington stock fell m
afternoon trading Fri4ay to
$14.81, down $2.81.

Hometown Newspaper :

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51. Number 90

Jill Smith, center, organizational director for the Athen~altia­
Lawrence County Farm Bureau, received the Gold Achievement
Award from the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation for her efforts in the
2000 membership campaign. She was honored for meeting significant membership goals for Gallia County. Congratulating her are
OFBF Executive Vice President Jack Fisher, left, and OFBF VICe
President for Field Services Jeff Watkins.

Odober 2, 2000

.

'

Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative chaperoned a tour to the Cardinal
Power Plant in northeastern Ohio earlier this month. The tour included 36 BREC members and five employees who traveled by bus by
BREC headquarters in Rio Grande to ,Brilliant, Ohio. Reva Walker of
Rutland won the door prize, a $25 Bob Evans gift certificate. The Cardinal Plant is a coaHire generating plant on the Ohio River owned by
Ohio cooperatives. Through the' G&amp;T, Buckeye Power, members own
Units 2 and 3.

Monday

More Sternwheel Riverfest scenes, AS
Browns, Bengals fall Sunday, li~

HIJh: IDs: Low: 50S

r

the state.

The
.1rrived

', governo r
111 PonH.:rQy

opportunity to v:isit

comcd tile got&gt;l'I'II&lt;IY , 0 uth eastern Ohio
aud Iris ~~&gt;Ue to tire ,. ,\,hen the opportu-

around 11 a.m. Satcommutu_·ty.
n.ity was prese nted .
urday and was met
"l cannot thlnk
by sev~ral members
""" ~
of a better way to
of the Me1gs Cou nry Tomi111 1 spend the day."
l:loard ""! M ayor John l3lacttnar
Taft ,1l so co111111C nt cd on the
who. on behalf of the v111agc, wei- impon.1nn• of TR'W road concoml'd rht• govcrrHJr ;m d h i~ wife -; trm:tiotl in J\1..:-it-,~ Coun ty.
11 The

to the commu nity.
Sevt·ral do\.vnrown busines"il''i,

SEEING THE SIGHTS - Gov. Bob Taft strolls down the streets of Pomeroy Saturday during his visit to
Meigs County. (Tony M. Leach photo)

mclttdiiTg Hartwelf Home and
Weavin g~ Stit~hc s Gift Shop, were
visited by the Ohio governor and
tlr&lt;r lady who wq-c th en led
through hisrori (: Pom~:roy by
Annie C h;1pman. prL'sident of the

Athellli - 1) ,t rwlll
U.S.
Route J"l pnlJl'Ct will play a vital
ro le in 'it'cqring emcrprise and
]·ndll "try, J S \\'ell ,1\ v1sitors and
touri-.,t~. w th~ M l'igs County
arel. Once the prOJLTt is complet-

Please see Tour. Page Al

Please see Finale, Page Al

Qualls wins
queen title

•·

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FROM STAFF REPORTS

•
',"'

Rate plans $20.95 and higher include:

i: Saying for.your
t.. ch1ld's education

• can·· fQJVl'~rdjng
e

BY

1ir II ave $100,000 by the
time }'IIUY child is 18
•
DEAR D IANVUJUV ICH: 1
• have d-yea r-old son and would
meam making monthlr
like to begin a college savings inr•estments of $315, if tire
plan' for him. T he problem is,
avera,~e ammal return on
I've heard that there are lots of
tllat investment is 10
difiere nt programs available, but
perceul, '(lr $42 5 per
I don't know what th ey are or
• which is .best. Can you help' - '
· mouth tf the mMrey i.s
Elise, via e-mail.
earniug you 6 percent per
DEAR ELISE: With the cost
year, acwrdin,~ ttl
of co ll ege and tec hni cal schools
American Century.
• on the ri se, the soone r you can

.

·

=~~-

• 3-way Cohferencing

J

•

Call W~iti. ~.g·&lt;:i

DIAN VUJOVICH

NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATION

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begin savin g for ypu r child's
ftw:ore ed ucation, the better.
For example, according to the
figu res on a cardQ.oard calcu lator
from American Cen tur y, if your
child is 5 today, the average cost
of a ' four-year m-state college
education when he or she is 18
'
is projected
to be $88,662. An
out-of-state fo.u r-year college
ed'u cation
is estimated at
$132,143. Private college costs
could average as high as
S L92,22l. Those figures are
based upon a 5 percent annual
increase in the cost~ of tuition's,
fe&lt;•s . room, b&lt;:.ord and oth,•r
cxpcmes over the yc.1r-;;
lo have S I 00,000 by the time
your child is 18 means making
monthly inv.,stments of $315, if

the average annual return on
tfpt investment is 10 percent, or
S425 per month if the money lS
earning you 6 percent per year,
according to American Century.
While making~ $300 to $4dO
per month investment for one
child 's future education might
sound li ke a huge nut to crac k
(it may even sound impossible),
paT!1 cularly when you are young
and JUSt beginning a fam ily,
don't let those figures blow you
away. Instead. think of t~cm as
cmt-of-livong gtnde posts that
shQW, 1.n black ,ond whJte, how
the costs on everything typi cally
rises over tun c.

Audiovox
MVX480
•

COOKING CHILl- Bob Arms,
left, and Bob Workman, right,
prepare for their chili to be
judged during the chili cook-off
contest Saturday on the
Pomeroy Parking Lot. Arms
and Workman were the second-plac!l winners in the indi·
vidual division. (Tony M. Leach
photo)

POMERQY -Tiffany Qualls
was named Sternwheel Riverfest
2000 queen in cerem onies conducted Saturday afternoon on the
riverfront stage.
F!fst runner-up in the contest
sponsored by- the M eigs County
Chamber of Com m erc e was
Sandi Gilkey, and receiving the
Miss Congeniality ·award · wa's
Kristina Ken nedy. Paul Reed
emceed the awards program with
Ohio Gov. Bob Taft announcing the winners while the First Lady
THE WINNERS - Po sing with Gov. and Mrs. Bob Taft at the Sternpresented flowers and· ban ners to
wheel Riverfest Queen's contest were the winners, from the left,
Kristina Kennedy, Miss Congeniality; Sandi Gilkey, first runner-up: and
Please see Queen, Page Al
Tiffilny Quails, queen.

Parade features potpourri of participants.,

Chillicothe
U.S. Cellular

Jackaan

750 Western Ave.

408 E. Huron
17401288-0016

Clanic Pleza

(7401702-4871

Portomouth
Hilltop Center

2736 Scioto Trail
(7401355-0058

Chillicothe
'In-Touch Wireless &amp;More
34 East Water

Naw Baston

17401779-6999

New Boston Shopping Center
4010 Rhodes Ava.

U.S. Cellular

'Gallipolis

USCC Wai·Mart !oosk
2145 Eastern Avenue

1740 1441 ·1066

17401458-8722

...t_
!r

Wovorly
USCC W~·Mort Kiosk
900 West Emmit Avenue

(7401947-0069

Also, UGma and vlaft one of our Wai-Man locado"ns: New Boston, Jackson.
For your convenience we heve 6ver 80 euthorizep ,gent locations.
Out,Jide consultents are available upon request.

•

0MEROY
Hundreds . lined
Pomeroy's Main
Street Sat11rday
morning
to
v1ew the Sternwheel
Riverfest 2000 parade,
which featured everything
from ladies in Victorian
costumes to longhorn cattle. ,
Led by the honor guard of Drew
Webster Post 39, Ameri un
Legion, and the performing Mcib"
M araudef iland, the parade included a few floats, a variety of riding
and walking units, and several
como1Jercial and political entries.
Riaing on open convertibles

were queens Sarah Ball of the
Racine Fall Festival, Tara Rose of
the Meigs County Junior Fai1; and
Tara· Arnott, th e· Young MJSs
Hawaiian Tropic, and Ashley Rose,
Miss Parade of the Hills.
Costum~d characters from the
"Wizard of Oz" were entered by
The Farmers Bank. there were
horses from Long O ak Farm,
groups of scouts, army trucks and
fire engin es, floats fi·om Carleton
School and Beta Sigma Phi and
units from .both the Meigs County
Democrat and Republican parties.
LONGHORNS - Two longhorns
from the Valley View Farm at
Langsville with young riders on their
backs attracted much attention as
they walked the parade route down
Main Street In Pomeroy.

•

THE CONTESTANtS- Sternwheel Festival Queen Tiffany Quails, center. poses with other contestants 111 this year's event. They are from
the left, Brandy Graham, Erica Lemons, Kelly Canan, Sandi Gilkey,
Tiffany Quails , Kristina Kennedy, Theresa .Baker. Britni Bevan, and
Chasidi Biggs.

Ameritech · :
popular
Sentinel
Today's

l Settions - 11 Pages
AS

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sj;!orts
Weather

B2-4
BS
A4
A3
B1, 6
A3

C OLUMBUS (AI') - With all
the

publ·icny

surrouilding
Aml'ritl"ch \., •&gt;~. TV!Ct' and rep;tir
troubh:,, vou wn uld chink lt.., customt'P• '~'o td d he strttmbling to
find .moth ..·r phnnl' company.
You 'd. bl' wrong .
Fl'\HT
thau 2 p.t&gt;rcc nt of
Ohio,m"i in Arnentech's wrvice

,u·e.t usc the lml y other telephone

Lotteries

comp.111y t hJt targets residential
....-u . . tonlt'r'. Cnrecomm h.ts about
711,01111 phone hncs to Ohio cus-.

OHIO
Pick 3: J-fl-0; PiCk 4: 7-R-o-::;
Super lono: 1-1-"'J-.10-.l'-40-IH
Kicker: 3-j&gt;-.2-S-tl-.--,1

W.VA.
Daily 3: 6MH- \ Daily 4: 7-6-4- \

both residt'nnal and busJcomp ~1rc d wirh Amcritech 's

tCIIlll'l"",

!ll'""·

4.1 mi lhon lonl'' · . I

Th e Public Unh tll'~ Commi~­

"Jon of Ohio rccci\•cd more than
1.\HIII
l'ompl amrs
;obout

Please see Phone, Page Al

•

...

�'

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: ·Pa~ A2 • The Deily Sentinel

Land transfers posted by Meigs Ncorder

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Emnch 11 bemg sued .m Stark
County by Donald Harmon, 51.
Harnton says Emnch, who was
Ius Jttorney m the 1995 case,
eJ.-corted a S10',000 bnbe from
hos wtfe and pronused that of
Harmon pleaded b'tnlty. he'd get
110 more than fi\'e to 1S years-111
pmon.
Instead, Harmo n was sentenccd to six tO 30 years for drug
trafficking alld fdomous assault.
Emnch. 44. denies trymg to fix
the case and orht&gt;r chargt"!il that
he to&lt;;&gt;k moq~v Jud ,1ewdry and

LANCASTER (AP) - About
240.000 tires consodered a health
;tnd fire threat are expected to be
· &lt;emo\'ed from an·&lt;lbandoned l:i"'
· dump by December.
The Fairfield County health
board selected Central Ohio
Contractors , a Grove City firm,
to dtsmande Phoerux Recy~lin g
fndu stncs a.t a cost of about
S142,000. The county will later
&lt;~rrange for the ren1oval of an
L'Stintated 500,0CXl shredded rires.
Chervl Km cao(! blames the
.dump. wl11ch IS Jbom: a half-m.ile
li-'--)111 h~o..'r hom.e in the YillagL' of
Balttmor~. tOr thL' death of he--r
· 13-y!..'Jr-old son .
· . Rocky l{jncaoJ di~d Oct.. I.
!l)9t.J. of t•nct&gt;phahri s ..1 mosqUI-

settled a personal 111JllfY cast•
Without H.1 rnwn ·s pt·rn uss~n.

John Juha&lt;t. Emm·h'; Jttorney,
ask~d thJt rbe ct'iL' hL· trJmft"r rt:'d
tu St.uk. Cmm[\ bc..·c.m~L· ht'" ft~.trs
his.t-ht•nt coldJ .not g~r .1 f.ur rr~Jl
111 l\1Jhonm g County J'l .1 n.:sult
nf publonty .ol~mlt Eonm·h\ m: kL'tr.'t'rmg (,l,c..'
y l~ltlllg_1\lll gL' IV
'I ,lr;: ( ·..11.:1t&gt;pp0,

to-~pre.td

\·irus.
Thr.• dump's ow ner, John Abh.·s
or' LKk..tng Cm!IHY. se r\'ed JO
J..ty' ttl j.Hl thts Yt'Jr. for ignormg
Ulli n ordt•n ro cle~m up lu~

.
prop&lt;rt\:

Ltrlumorc is abom 25 nulL's
~.l~t Of Columbus.

Trustee donates

sdr.•crwn bc('Jll\
.
~

Chlorine leak
forces evacuation
CANTON (AI') - A chl orinr.· k·,lk Su nday f~ n:ni lll-.lrb\'
residents fro m thL·ir hon~~ fo.r

to ou project

ATHENS (AP) -

thL' thtrd Jlld~~..· .lpptHmt•d ro rhL·
(In! t.l\t' b,· tht· llh1o SuprL'llll'
Court. \\'111 prr..·,1Jr.· wh1.·n JUry
~

An Oh10

·University i-ru~tee is g iv1n g the
insntution almost half the $1.5
miUion it needs for a new tt&gt;rnunal J. t tts airport.
. C. Davod Snyder. a. l974 grad-

uate of the 'sc hool, sa~d he thmks
!he terminal mll help ' Wl,th the
university and the ecodomy of
the s.urrnundmg so uth~ast Ohoo
;trel .
" I'm trying to loo k 20 years
down the road to say, ' How do
we perpetuate what Ohio Uni,·orsoty has built hero'"' said Snyder. the owner of the Snvder
lnternationa i Brew ing Gr~up.
"Th'L' o nJY \vay you're going w
do that IS to not 1solare the uni
vcrsity but broJdcn access to it."
. " I've flown in and o ur of here
. '"'vera! times, but the weather has

;1bm1 t \C\'t'!l

dl'p.trtm~nt

hour\ and ~e nt ;1 firt·
ofTiLul to thl' hospt-

ta!
\Vorkt·rs were 1n~t.illing J ne\\.
rr.~gubtor on tht:.' chlorine tank at
rlw ory w;uer treatment plant

wHen the gas escaped about -+:45
a.m., s.ud Canton Fire Department Ll ana liorr Chief R.av
Harp I~. C hlorine often is 'med t;
dismt"~·ct public water system s.
Capt. R obert Ccrnc was in fair .
con dmon -Sunday night , at
Timkcn Mercy Mcdocal Center.
Hl'

\\'&lt;1'1

aJmttreJ afi:cr inhaling

fumL's.

"It was so sudden , th ey didn't
have a cha nce

to

rep;ur tt or even

turn off th,· valw before thev
were forced ou t of the roont,:.
Harplc S&lt;ud of the chl o nn c lea k'.
Offocials shut off the valve
, \O be perfect. And my jet is not a about 7 a.m., Harp\e said:
huge J&lt;t. so I'm probably at tho .
1\vo other Canton fircfightcri
"'~l tacx tmtnn ," he s;ud of the air ...
were treated at the hospital for
port.
breathing problems and released.
l.1st month, the umvemty
plans to lengthen tht'

, .tlliJOUncC'd

bnd111g stri p from 4,2()(1 fe,·t to
~ .()1 )I I ft'l't. Jllm\·mg: b tggt•r pi.lne'
il)d \UillC ~111.1Jl 'ClrgO to LOllll'
~

Ill

resttknt~

the
l.llldtng stnp, saymg H \nll 1.Tc:;Ht.'
,,IIOI'lL' probli..·m, .. but ti1L' Fcdcr.Jl
, .A.v1~1non AdtllllliHr,lttnn In'\
, Soq1c

nppu'll..'

.11 ph .~&lt; e

of tht: llll'port . L'xpamion

pmje,t.Thc 1111iwrmy hop&lt;'' the
. t, mpmvl.•d iHrport will lun.• l' 0\11 ~
· lllUt\'r .oirlinc travel, cstablish111H
the a1rpnrt
a o•eginn,ll hub.
The tcrnun;ol Will be bct\WOn

a'

(J ,OOO
\Vludt

7,1!00 ! 'lllll'l' f~ct,
more t!t,IJl twice thl'

.md
IS

almost essential
CO LUMBUS (AI') -· L•w
CL'Il{rJl

1.'1lf0rq:llll'llt .1 gC1H.H.'~ Ill
:ti\.' findin~· u

h.1n.' someon1..· \\:Hh

!ll.'l'l'!!"i.try to
.1

knowh..:dgc

of Sp.1111sh "'';li bbk as th,· ,lfe.o \
Ll t lll ll popul.Jtulll ~rt1\\'&gt;;.

Jpprovt.:d it.
. Tlw t~rmnl.ll is s~&lt;'ll
~\\ ·.o

Officers: Spanish

Oh10

&gt;ize of t h~ currcm tcrmonal. btlllt
Ill 1'171.
· It will have adminiStrative

ufficcs, co nfcrcnct~ roonu,,J rootn
.fo r monlto n ng tht• w~ather and &lt;1
pilot lounge that includes show~ rs. The project IS expected to
begin next year.

Dct~·~o:t iw, ,
, pl'l'tl..'l',

rdy111g on .111 intl'rtnu ld llltl'l'\'it.:w onlv on~!

\\'l..'~·k ~Vhl:"il
Sp.uush-,pe.Jking t~~~~:tH;CI"!I
Wl.."fl'
wnundl.."d 111 a
shomout ncar .111 Jp.lrtnhnlt
colllpl,·x IJ&gt;t week.
Fr.onkJin ·colinty Shcnfl"&gt;
Deputy Steve Mnrtin &lt;aocl it clidn't comPromise the mvcstlg:Jtlotl,
but It clid m.1ke it harder.
"DoL·!! it ~ low u~ Jo~vn ? Ye..,, tr
docs," Martin said of the bnguag'' gap. "We cn n't bnng in
WltllL''' ,Jt ;\ til11L' );t!lt

thn•,•

multiple derecriv~:.~s to qul"stion
10 people at a time, as we might
in a normal situation ."

POMEROY - The following land transfers were recently reported by Meigs Couo•ty
Recorder Judith A. King:
James R Osbama. Connie Osborne, to Columbus
Soulhem Poww, easement. Orange;
Richard Myen;, RU!h M)'efS. to Columbus Southern
Po-. easement, Orange ,
Jarnes E. Roush, Unda L Roush, 10 Columbus Souttiem Power, easement, Orange; ·
Freddie iloggess. Dorothy Boggess. to Columbus
Southern Po-. deed, Scipio;
• John Partlow to Laura Delavalle, deed, Rutland ,
John Partlow 10 Laura Delavalle, deed, Rutland ; .
Rosemary Lyons to John Edward L)'XIS Ill, Tommy
lynn L)'Xls. Linda Lovia Cramer. Bernard Brooks Lyons,
Edwar&lt;l Lee Moler. Jr., deed. Middleport;
John H McCo~. deceased. to Evelyn M. McCoy, ter·
tificate, Letart;

Katheryn Loooan Gom!ll to

c - R Go&lt;rel. allida\lil.

HazoiGeolldinewetlb, i""

Delma C. Tuet&lt;er. - _ Letart,
Oli"";
Conseco Fl11811C8 SeM:&gt;e InC.. Gr- Tree Flflancial
Doma Hil, Oalas Hill, to Tracy Hill Norris Hupp, Ryw1
SeM:&gt;e,
to.Dalroll R Nebon, Linda K. Nelson, deed, SciHill, Courtney Hill ROUSh. easement;
0
Dallas Hil, Donna Hil, 10 Dean \lance Hil, ·Jr., - . .pio ,
Gary
R Yoo1&lt;. Karen K. Yoo1&lt;, to Cdumbus Sou1hem
Letart;
Southern Local School DiSlriCI to Ohio Poww Compa- Power. e85811*11. Bedtord;
Chatles S. R~•. Frances M: Robinelle. to Column~. easement, Sutton;
bus Sou1hem Power, ea_...nt. Scipio ;
Vinas L lee to Frank Babo, deed, Middleport; '
Roy BNens, Rachel I!M!ns. to ColumbUs Sou1hem
Boyd T. Spurtoek, IneZ Spuilock. to T _ , Plains
""-'· easement. Bedtord:
Cheste&lt; Water District. ri!j1t of way, Orange;
,
~ R. Gonetl, dee"asec!, to Michael D. Gorrel,
Rage&lt; L Bissell. Barbara Bissel. to T _ , Plains
'
Jad&lt; ;.._ aorre1. c - H. aorre1. OOIIificate, CINe ;
Chester W- DistriCt, ri!j1t of way, Orange;
Oallid L Adams. Karen I' Adams. to Charles W. Mom·
Kat~-. Bissell Seclunan, Sanuel Seckman, to Tupson.
Jr.. deed, OiiiB;
pers P1ai1s Cheste&lt; Wate&lt; DistriCt, ri!j1t of way, Chesler.
Nancy
Jaspers, Am~ Rize&lt;. Lee Rittge&lt;s. to Tuppers
William CheValier. Alile CheValier, Colin Chevalier, to
Plains Chester Wat81' District, easement, Lebanon ;
Tuppers Plains Chester Wat81' District, righ1 of way, Oliwo;
Jolvl Michael Harkins to 1\Jppers Plains Cheste&lt; Water
Dawna ~to Tuppers Plains Chester Water District.
District, easement. Oli'!8{;
Ronald H. Rildlie, Hazel Ri1chie.

Holmer Grimm to Morequity lncorporaled, deed, Salis·.
bury.

District. right of way, Chester;
Matthew S. Ridenour. Jenny R. Ridenour, to Tuppers

Plains Chester Water Oislrict. easement. Sutton:
Joni L Carrington to .Randail J Hill. RoiPno E Wells

Morequity Incorporated to Lynn J. Ramage. deed. Salisbury,

Plains Chester Water District. right ol way. Chester;
George Morrison, Lois Morrison, to Tuppers Plains

Hill. deed. Scipio;
Mildred M. Morris. dee"ased. to Carle E Morns. certili·

Chester Water District, right of way, Chester.

cate, Meigs;
Georgia Mount to MaK Mount. deed. Oltve .
Glendon Eugene Faulk, deceased. ro Karen Taylor
Myrtle Sincair, certificate. Middleport.
Tony Hutton, Tony M. Hutton. to Mark CoughenOUr.
Oeborah.S. Coughepour, deed, Rulland .
'
John W Munord. Helen L Mui!Qrd. to Randy J Mul·
food. Stephanie Kay Mulford. deed. Sahsbury.
Dolphus Buo1&lt;e, Jr., Wanda C. Burl&lt;e, to Dolphus Daniel ·

C\rroll Sm1th, Barbara Smrth, to Usa

c. Compson .

deed. Rudand;
Mtchael A. Mattea to Bryan Swann. Bryan K. Swann ,
deed, Middlepon;
Mabel Goeglein, Phyllis J. Clark. to Marl&lt; A. Clarl&lt; .
deed, Pomeroy;
James Barber, Jr., tB Doretta M. Brown, Robert C.

Brown. deed, Olive ;
, Richard D. Se)1er. deceased, to Nelia E. Seyler. affidav~ . Pomeroy/Salisbury;
Steven Lee MeGullin, Debra E. McGuffin, to Scott Har·
nson, Paula Harrison, deed, Middleport;
Gene R. Lawr~. Gene Roy Lawrence, to Kenneth
Brad&lt;en McFann. deed. Racine;
Jeanette Lawrence to Kenneth Bracken McFann .

Ralph Trussell, Jean Trussell, to Scott E. Trussell , Toresa M. Tru.ssell. deed, Chester;
Howard N. Bahr, Kimbert~ Lynn Bahr. to Greer B.
Blosser, Unda G. Blosser. deed, Chester;
John Marshall. King. John M. King, Brenda King, to
Benjamin W. Putman. Lena E. Putman, deed, Olive ;
Everen McPherson, Bonnie L McPherson , to Bradley

I. Wiseman, Sharlene M. Wiseman, deed. Salisbury;
Geneva Doris A)'is to Floyd T. Avis, deceased, affidavit.
Orange;
Robert C. Avis, Jacqueline K. Avis, Thomas P. Avis,
Judith N. Avis, Beatrice K. Spencer Larry Spencer, Gene·
va Doris Avis. to Bruner Land Company, deed, Orange;
Addie Luella W. Norris to Carroll A Norrls. affidavit.

to

Tuppers Plains

Chester Wale&lt; District. easement, Chester .
Charles F. Chancey. Donald C Shaffer. to Tuppers

Burl&lt;e, deed. Columbia ;
Nancy Prater to Michael J . Hill, MindyK Hill, deed, Sut·
ton ;
Jeffrey L Lewis to Scipio Township Trustees . deed.
Scipio;
Elza J. Pullins, dee"ased, to Susan K Henderson. affi-

deed. Racine; '
Thomas G. Beegle, deceased, to Raben L. Rrtchie, Jr.,'
Bridget D. Rutchie, deed, Sutton ;
Tonya J. Shaw, Dennis Bryani. to Jon Scott, Tracy

Syracuse ;
Ralph E. Knighl, deceased, to Carol H. Knight. Carol H.

davit, Orange;
Paul D. Whrt~. Patricia Lou Cuckl Whrte, to Harold Ted

Armstrong, affidavit, Chester/Orange;
Carol H. Knight, Carol H. Armstrong, Neil A Armstrong,

Scott, deed, Bedford ;
C.R. Gorrell, Lonon K. Gorrell. Lorean K. Gorrell, lti

to HKGC LLC , deed, Chester/Orange;
.. Carl J. Barnhill, deceased, to HazelL. Barnhill. affidavit,

Gillette. Randi G. Gillette. deed. Bedford;
Helen Blackston, peceased. to Harold H. Blackston.
affidavit. Chester!Salisbury;
Green Tree Financial Corporation to Stephen 0 .

Jack A. Gorrell, Michael D. Gorrell, deed, Qlive;

Tuppers Plains;

Foulkrod. VICki Baker, judge entry.

.

XENIA (AP) . - Louis Botta
moves fron1 disaster to disaster.
His latest stop is this southl¥estern
Ohio city
Botta was closing the Federal
Emergen cy
Management
Agency's disaster f,eld offoce for
floqding in Toledo, when he
received word that Xenia had
been hot Sept. 20 by a powerful

State agencies
-dispute findings
MARION (A I') - The Ohio
llep.mmcnt t&gt;foH,•alth and th&lt;·
OhiD Enviroill11Clltall'rotcction
AHel1l'Y said they disagreed
with an environmental toxil:olo·giSt's finding's coucerniug
health nsks at the l'-iver Valley
schools.
The report by Bru ce Molholt sa1d th e schools should be
relocated. It said about 3,600
gallons
nf
chemical
tri chloroethylene, which was
used in cleaning metal parts,
still arc present on part of the
River Valley campus. ,

CANTON (AP) -A convenience store owner says Ius plan
to sell gas at cost to members of
a fuel club isn't a philanthropic
gesture. As an independent dealer, he's trying to compete with
major oil companies.
Jim Rosetta ts starting
Lindee's All-iii-One Fuel Club
at his store to guarantee mem-

tornado.

Two days after the tornado
bulldozed its · way through · the
community - killing otfe, injuring more than 100 others and
damaging 307 homes and 34
businesses - Botta was in X~nia
with FEMA assessing the damage.
That damage IS now estimated
at more than $40 million.

bers wholesale invoice price on
gas.
, For S75 a year for the fir st
car, members can fuel up at the
posted price Rosetta pays. He
said 'he will still have a street
price for nonmembers.
He hopes to get I ,000 members and make money on the
membership fees, he said.

'

Show off Your ••pumPkin••

In The Review

••pumPkin Patchtt
Deadline: Friday
October 20

Actual Sise!

6.50

17

Ill

·C b-d.md.

:: fh(' (h.Hgt'" .q.~.llll\t

f.llHil h
:oJLiuded ·' " , .H.lll~.utnn llut hr.·
:~\.L'd .1 dntll.kl'll dn\"11 1~ 1 h.n~t·

:f.lH

,Ill .Jv,o&lt; l.ltl' ot 'Ynllll "!'

.~lt)h

ho,,

;;\:l·fl.llll..!l'

·;·

1/!.!

t(\1

! ~...·1 11 1\

\tn !1

lllh[,, I)

il

,., \ ' '\

•

1 1

1

l

·G, •u
:~ I

t\[

yr.'.! I'. ~trollr1 pk.1lkd

'\!:If\

;lJ) 1,\l kcll't' ~J II_l! ,\ JH,[ .tgll't',1 ~ .
Conpcr,tt1.· .\nth tht· ~P\"I.,'l'lllll(·ltt',
111\\'\!"lg,ltlOJ l

which was prmnised

· by Congress in the Federal Communications Act of 1996.
Ta ngren said he's convinced
the only way co inpetition will
flourish in Ohio is .if telephone
u ~e rs pressure th(· Legislature or
the PUCO into doing some_thin g
" It 's goi ng to take customers
fed up and saying, 'I'm sick and
tired of thos. Why do I have to put
up with this from the largest telephon e co mpany'"' Tangren said.
Ameritech is eager to expand
into th e · long-distance service
business . Long-disL111ce providers
such .as AT&amp;T, MCI antj Sprint
want to get into the local phone
business because technology is
making it more profitable. Those
extra lines for faxes and modems ,
pagers, cellpr10nes, caller identification and ln4ernet services add
1
. up.
. All th e companies need the
· state's approval to proceed.
· PUCO
Chairll'lan
Alan

-------------------------,

RAYMOND JAMES
l.
FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
John C. Miller, CFP
Branch Manager
.&gt; II Fnurth S1ree1, Mariena, OH 45750
800-726-8412
Phone 740-376-9
AWard0 RJFS com

need to catch their breath after
passing and implementing gas and
electric deregulation' and aJ&gt;proving two big telephone mergers. ·
However,

the

'· competitors

maintain the longer Ameritech is
free of true competition, the
longer it will behave like a.
monopoly and have no real
incentive to improve~s ervice.
Tangren said that in a more
competitive marker, Ameritech

will have to clean up its service
record ur lose customers.
"That, more than anything
.else, I think, is the motivator for a
customer to say; 'I want another
choice,"' Tangren said.
Schriber agreed.
"The form of competit1on that
will take place at the residential
level will be not price but in
terms of services, quality of ,service. Whoever can offer that ... for
the same amount of money will
win," he said . .

The Daily Sentinel

.

CI icnt Service Manager
Rcgistere,d Representative
Over 15 Years Serving Clienls

lawmakers and regulators may

After his visit in Meigs County,
the governor ventured on to Lake
Hop e .to continue the tourism
campaign .

Correction Policy )

'

the infrastructure to be in place,''
Schriber said.
Th e commission extended
Ameritech 's Advantage Ohio
program, which freezes basic rates
for Ameritech customers for
three years but lets Ameritech
price many new services without
PUCO approval.
Ameritech's Smith said the
Legislature should commit the
changes to law to provide assurance before the company invests
, money that it won't be prevented
by 'regulation from profiting, Two
company-supported bills are
stalled in commi,ttees, leaying
Ameritech at a disadvantage
against competitors whose earn- .
ings aren't regulated, Smith said.
"We should face the same risks
they do," he said. "What they
don 't have is the regulatory
~ncertainty." ·
Corecomm favors a bill that
would authorize the PUCO to
implement the Federal Communications Act.
"We think the structure of the
federal act is a good one. It just
needs to be allowed to work,"
O'Brien said.
It's not likely, however, that the
Legislature will act on any
telecommunications bill during
the current session; which ends
Dec. 31. The wmpanies and legislative leaders, however, predict it
will be taken up again next year.
That's not uncommon. The
Legislature struggled with deregulating the electric power industry for six years before making it
law io1 1999.
Waiting might not be a bad
thing, Tangren said. He said both

: ed, the possibilities for economic
: opportunity arc endless"
. The co nn ec tor project is
: exp ecte d to cost $90 million and

Our main concern in all stories is to

.

companies , in return we expect

from Page~~

Tour

Reader Services

Angela Ward

Schriber believes his commission
can authorize many of the needed changes without the bw
changmg. Ho.wever, he wants
something from the local telephone companies for letting
them into the long-distance
game: a permanent network to
carry wires, optical cables or
.'~hatever technology that may
develop.
"As we are prepared to loosen
up a lot of the restrictions and the
rcsto:aints we have on telephone

will essentially run parallel to the
exisiing . roadway, connectin~
four-lane stretches of 33 tb the
north and south.

•

:o

)ton 111 the
:-" rn ht• -;entL'Il~l'd { hr

co mp ~tition ,

Parent's Name

S500,000 by a pri;on inmate
:-\vho s&gt;~J he bnbed Emrich to fix
·l c:pmin.a l cao;c 111 liJlJ). bur dtd 'r get lw; lll@ncv\ worth
·: Fmn~c h w .l~ nne ot o.,e\'i..' LJ!
:~:ub!tc oiTiua{~ Ull1\ It ted 111 ,J
rot n~r ­
Ym111~tm\·n .11"1..',1. I It

88 installation aqd repair workers
in Ohio, many pulled from other
states in SBC Conununications'
network. The two "Baby Bells"
merged in a multibillion-dollar
deal last year.
Ohio Consumers Counsel
Robert Tongrcn , who represents
residential c u~tomers in rate cases,
said he's frustrated by the lack of

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Child's Name

'Common Pleao.; Court for nearly

:~1/t'd ·n1111~ .1;1J publll

_recendy announced it was adding

'

5

:is to appear thts vvcek J.s the
· defendant 111 a liv d ~u t t.
· l\llartin Enmch, formcrlv a
: Mah~mmg County Court judge,
: 11 being sued in Stark County

OigJ-

Ameritec h service in Augu st
alone, compared with 1,065 complaints for all of 1999. Customers
complained
about
missed
appointments for new service and
weeklong waits for repairs.
The spike in c6mpi:Ums came
one month after th e PUCO
ordered Ame~itech tO spend $8.7
nulloon to satisfy customer ~om­
plaints and gave tbe coo,"tpany 18
months to improve ~ervice or face
- $122 million in penalties.
Both · Ameritech ,
and
' Corecomm acknowledge there
has been little switclung since this
summer'; serviec problems . The
bogger reason, they say, is most
Am eritech competitors are chasing more profitable business custotners.
Corecomm is ready to do business with new customers. However; the company leases from
Ameritech the "last mile" of telephon e line that goes into the customer's home. so it cannot
promise better repair service than
Ameritcch , said Tom O'Brien, a
regulatory lawyer for Corecomm.
The company is working on
developing its own network; but
. •
.
c
Its expensove to catch up with
decades of system-building· that
.Ameritcch has done as a regulated monopoly, O'Bri&lt;;n said.
"We have formed a subsidiary.
to do just that ·an a fiber optic
basis. That's the end game here,"
O'Brien said.
Ameritc ch IS working on
intproving service, said ,James
Smith, the company's vice president for regulatory issues. It

·..'

ontv

taking brihe~ ;md fixing a cao.;e for
J forn1er Youngs town mob boss

llltt )

from~Al

Job continues for EMA .official Owner sells at invoice_price

· CANTON (A P) - A judge
. who pkadcd guilty in AugtiSt to

im·c\tH~.Il!Oll

Phone

-d. to James A. Tuclce&lt;.

Julia Engle to ~oodrow Engle Ill, deed, Salisbury.
right of way, Sutton ;
John E. McGuire, Kalhy 0 . McGuire, to Melissa D •
Michael P. Kloes, AmyL Buckbee, to Tuppers Plains
Tyree. Larry E Leudermitt. Jr., deed. Rudand;
Chester Water District, right of way. Chester;
Palficia A Shane to Knstine Lee Shane. deed. Rutland;
Heather M. Knight 1D Tuppers Plains Chester Water

· Judge to appear
in dvil suit

:..tt·da.t\

,Monday, October 2, 2000

Monday, October 2, 2'oGo

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I
Attach This Coupon To \'our Child's Picture And
I
Mail Or Bring With Your Payment To:
I
I
The Dally Sentinel
I
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.
• I
Child's N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
Parent's Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ II
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Address-------------I
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I

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

be accurate. If you know of" an error in
a story, call lhe newsroom at (740)
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lhrou9h Friday, 111 Court St.,. Pomeroy
Ohio . Second-class postage paid
Pomeroy.
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OnawHk

Abortion proteSt draws
1,000 after priest
charged in clinic attack

$8.70

One vear

S10o1

Dally
SO cents
Subscrrbers n01 de!jiring to pay the carrier may remit in advance direc1 to The Daily
Senlinet Credit will be giVen ea rner each
wrtek No subscnption by mail pormined in
areas whare home carrie r service is a-va~­
able.

Mail subsaiption
Inside Meigs County

$27.30
$53.82
$105.56

Ralts outa lde Meigs County
13 Weeks
$29.25
, 26 Weeks
$56.68
52 Weeks
S109.72

LOCAL BRIEFS
Fair board
membeus election

Meigs County Emergency Services answered 15 calls for assistance over the weekend. Units
responded as follows:

POMEROY Voting for
members to serve on the Meigs
CENTRAL DISPATCH
County Agriculture Society
Saturday, 10:32 p.m., RockROCKFORD, Ill. (AP) sible motive for the clinic attack. Board of Directors will be Nov. 6 spring1 Rehabilitation Center,
Abortion opponents who gath- It came two days after govern- in the grange hall annex on the Donna Smith, Holzer Medical
ered for an ~nnual - protest were ment approval of the RlJc486 Rock Springs Fairgrounds from 5 Center;
Sunday, 11 :25 a.m ., Rockforced to ponder the actions of a abortion pill and was at the office to 9 p.m. There are five three-year
Roman Catholic priest accused of Dr. Richard !Ugsdale, who terms to be filled , said to Debbie springs Rehabilitation Center,
of ramming his car into an abor- successfully challenged llli!lois Watson, board secreta'ry.
Edna Life, HMC;
Members with ~erms expiring
tion clinic and chopping away at abortion laws in the 1980s tlut he
2:45 p.m ., Ann Street, Delores
are
Dan
Smith,
Eil
Holter,
Brent
the building with an ax.
Hysell, HMC;
claimed were so strict theY limit6:23 p.m., County Road , 208,
The rally Sunday at Holy Fam- ed women's ~ccess to the proce- Rose, Jim Watson, and Buddy
Ervin.
ily Church in Rockford was dure.
!Umana Roush, treated.
The 'Diocese of Rockford said , Petitions to run for one of the
scheduled long before the inciPOMEROY ·
been
terms
are
available
from
Watson.
the
priest's
activities
have
dent, but it commanded much
Saturday, 10:34 a.m. , Hysell
conversation among the approxi- restricted while i.t investigat&lt;:S the To be a candtdate, a ~ennon must Street, Ronald Hannina, treated;
aUegations. A message left at the be filed :"tth 10 stgnatures of • II :52 a.m.; East Main Street,
mately 1,000 protesters..
•1 don't agree with his meth- church, ·St. Patrick's Church in members ?f the Agriculture Soci- motor vehicle accident, R;chard
ety. Memberslup tickets may be Coleman, Mark Reitmire, treatods, but I appreciate his heart,'' (lochelle, was !lOt returned.
After Sunday's protest, about purchased at the Sugar Run Flour ed;
.said the Rev. David Broom, 25,
pastor ofthe Faith Center nonde- 100 people attended a meeting at MilL
12:30 p.m., EQgle R;dge, Alice
nominational church . •
Temple Baptist Church in Rock·
Chapman, HMC;
The Rev. John Earl is charged ford where Joseph Scheidler,
4:15 p.m., llrice Hollow, Doris
with burglary and felony criminal director of an ' anti-abortion
Swanson, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
damage to property for the group in Chicago, said Earl's
RACINE
alleged attack Saturday at the attack has damaged the moveSaturday,
10:07 a.m., State
MIDDLEPORT -The Ladies
Northern Illinois Women's Cen- ment.
of the Lord, an interdenomina- Route 338, Ann Boso, rreated;
ter. The clinic wasn't open and
"Ii reflects on all of us; it's not
6:25 p.m., Nease Hollow, grass
tional women's ministry, will
there were no injuries. He was a good thing,'' he said.
fire,
Racin~ Gun Club, no
meet at 10 a.m. Saturday at .Faith
freed after posting $10,000 bail.
The attack drew the ire of an Chapel Church. Speaker will be InJuries;
Earl, 32, a priest at a Catholic Illinois women's organization that
9:39 p.m., Sixth Street, Ruby
Pastor Teresa Davis with Kandi
church 30 miles away, was said the church and anti-abortion
Preston as song leader. Refresh- Kelly, treated.
stopped inside the building by its groups must take respovsibility
REEDSVILLE
ments will be served. for inforowner, who fired' two shotgun for violent acts against clinics and
Saturday, 4:39 p.m., State
mation Contact Betty Johnson,
blasts to scare lum away.
doctors who provide abortions.
Route
124, Collin Chevalier,
441-1415. or Jan Swiger, 992"It's hard to support those
"We've had some victories and 6667.
HMC.
kinds of actions when you stand some losses, but we've never ariRUTLAND
for life, but we definitely do sup- ven J car into a building. I'm
Sunday, 3:02 p.m., Page Street,
port him in standing up for life,'' appalled by the violence," said
Francis Kearns, PVH.
Jeff O'Hara, 37, said at Sunday's Gay Bruhn, president of the IlliSYRACUSE
rally.
nois chapter of the National
Saturday, 1:11 p.m., Twin Oaks,
Police have not disclosed a pos- Organization for Women.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Super Cecilia Spencer, HMC
Saturday at Hickory Hills Church
TUPPERS PLAINS
of Christ. Time maclune, puppets,
Saturday, County Road 28, Jesclasses nursery through adult. sica Newell, treated.
Registation . at 9 a.m. Program ,
ends at 1:30 p.m. Lunch provided. T-heme is Christ's triumphant
entry to Jerusalem and the Last
Supper.
SAN 'FRANCISCO (AP) Both sides say they are fighting
Attorneys for Napster Inc. are hop- for their survival.
POMEORY - Revival sering three federal appeal judges will
"Tius service is causing serious
vice will be at Mt. Hermon Unitlet stand a ruling 'that keeps the injury to songwriters;' said Carey
CHESTER - Trick or treat ed Brethren in Christ Church,
popular Internet · music-sharing Ramos, an attorney for the record- for Chester has been set for 6 to 7 • Friday through Oct. 9, 7:30 p.m.
ing in&lt;;lustry. "It really needs to be p.m . Oct. 30. The firehouse siren Dr. E. R. Moore of central F1oriservice alive -·- at least for now.
The company was spared in July restrained. We urgently need will be sounded to signal the start · da will be the evangelist, and
from a court order !hat would have relief."
and completion of the evening there will be special singing each
shut down the site until the
Napster, started in · a Northeast- events.
service.
Recording Industry Association of ern University dorm room last
The · church is on Wickham
America's lawsuit against the year, pioneered the concept known
Road, just offTexas Rnad, in the
online service is resolved.
as peer-to-peer computing in
Texas Community.
Only hours after a federal judge which people share files from their
POMEROY - Units of the
Robe_rt Sanders is pastor.
issued an injunction against Nap- own computers rather than a censter, saying it was encouraging tral server. In Napster's case, users
"wholesale infringing" against can download music ·from each
sian: Vaughn's Supermarket, Midmusic industry copyrights, the 9th other that is stored in the format
dleport, first; WYVK Radio, secUS. Circuit Court of Appeals known as an MP3 file.
ond; and Mason VFW, Mason,
stayed the order.
The company claims its 22 milW.Vac third. Individual division:
from PapAl
The two sides were headed back lion users are violating no law. It
first place, "The Three Amigos,"
to court Monday, each getting 20 bases its defense on . the Audio Jewel City sternwheeler. Taft also first; Bob Workm,an, Lacy Workminutes to argue their case before Home Recording Act of 1992, assisted in the crowning of the man, Bob Arms, Jeanie Arms, seca three-judge panel of the federal which it says grants immunity Sternwheel Riverfest Queen.
ond; Jan Slater, third.
appeals court.
when music is shared for noncomWinners in the line-throwing
Top winners in the ducky derby
The three-judge panel has merr:ial use.
sp9nsored by the Pomeroy Mer- contest were: Kevin Layne, first;
already expressed concerns about
Another company, MP3.com, chants Association were presented Joe Kincaid, second; John
the injunction and will try to allows usen to listen . to songs savings bonds. Tb'y were Kenny Williams, third.
determine whether it was overly stored on its own computers. It has Utt, first; Danielle Pieckham, secThe local band, "Blitzkrieg,"
broad, said Marcie Mihaila, an setded lawsuits brought by four ond, and Dave Bowen, third.
also performed Saturday night,
appellate lawyer who has follo__:~d record labels and in September lost
Taking top spots in the chili helping to bring the big event to
the case.
a copyright-infringement case cookoff were : Commercial divi- a close.
A decision isn't expected for at brought by Universal Music
~ Group.
least a month.

Ministry
announced

Super Saturday
set

Napster back in court to argue ·
merits of its music-swap service

Revival services
set

Trick or treat

EMS logs 15 calls

Finale

VALLEY WEATHER

vyarm conditions·to linger
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Warm temperatures will continue across the tri-county region
through mid-week as a_high pressure system remains parked over
the southeastern part of the
country, pumping· southerly
.
breezes into the region.
Cooler air will begin foltering
in later this week.
Skies will be mostly cloudy on
Tuesday with highs near 80.
Tonight, lows will be 55-60.
S~nset tonight will be at 7:12
p.m. and ·sunrise on Tuesday' at
7:31 a.m.
Forecast
Today... Partly cloudy. ' Highs

near 80.
Tonight ... Partly to
cloudy. Lows 55 to 60.
Tuesday... Partly ' to
cloudy. Highs near 80.

mostly

Queen·
from PageA1
the winners.
Qualls, daughter of Denise Nitz
of Pomeroy and Gary Lewis o(
Reynoldsburg, was presented a
$1,000 scholarship from .the University of Rio Grande and a

check for $200. The runner-up,
daughter of Earl and Nancy
Gilkey of Pomeroy, received a
$500 scholarship from the University of Rio Grande and a $200
check.
Other participants, all attired in
· period costuming, were Britni
Bevan, Brandy Graham , Eri ca
L~mons, Chasidi Biggs, Kelly
Canan, Theresa Baker.

mostly

Extend.e d forecast
Tuesday night ... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the 50s.
Wednesday... Partly to mostly
cloudy. Highs in the rnid 80s.
Thursday... Chance of showers.
Lows from the upper 40s. Highs
in the lower 70s.
Friday.,. Partly to mostly cloudy.
Chance ·of mainly morning
showers. Lows 35 to 45. Highs in
the 50s.

~2

One month

13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

The Oally Sentinel • Page A3

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7:10 SUN·THUR

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LOCAL ST.OCKS
AEP - 391.

Gannett - 53

Akzo - 42},
AmTech/SBC - 50
Ashland Inc. - 33\

General Electric - 57'-'Hartey Davidson - 47'!.
Kman - sl. ·
Kroger - 221.
Lends End - 2 t
Ltd. - 2t .,.
Oak Hilt' Financial - t 6~
DVB - 26).
BBT - 30l.
Peoples - 13'1.
Premier - 5),
Rockwell - 30l.

AT&amp;T -

29),

Bank One - 381.
Bob Evans - 181,

BorgWarner - 33:•.
Champion - 3,..
Charming Shops - 5'1.
City Holding - 7'1.
Federal Mogul -

Firstar - 22lo

5~..

7:00 SUN·THURS

SPACE COWBOYS (PG13)
7:00 SUN·THUAS

Rocky Boots - 5
RD Shell-60''

WHAT LIES BENEATH (R)

Sears - 32'/,
Shoney's -l.

NUTTY PROFESSOR 2:
THE KLUMPS (PG13)
7:10 SUN-THURS
THE ORIGINAL KINGS OF
COMEDY (R)

Wai-Mart - 48 ~.
Wendy's - 201.
Worthington - 9 ~
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
.. the previous day's trans·
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by
Ad vest at Gallipolis.

7:00 SUN·THURS

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7:t0 SUN·THURS

�'

I

•

: ·Pa~ A2 • The Deily Sentinel

Land transfers posted by Meigs Ncorder

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Emnch 11 bemg sued .m Stark
County by Donald Harmon, 51.
Harnton says Emnch, who was
Ius Jttorney m the 1995 case,
eJ.-corted a S10',000 bnbe from
hos wtfe and pronused that of
Harmon pleaded b'tnlty. he'd get
110 more than fi\'e to 1S years-111
pmon.
Instead, Harmo n was sentenccd to six tO 30 years for drug
trafficking alld fdomous assault.
Emnch. 44. denies trymg to fix
the case and orht&gt;r chargt"!il that
he to&lt;;&gt;k moq~v Jud ,1ewdry and

LANCASTER (AP) - About
240.000 tires consodered a health
;tnd fire threat are expected to be
· &lt;emo\'ed from an·&lt;lbandoned l:i"'
· dump by December.
The Fairfield County health
board selected Central Ohio
Contractors , a Grove City firm,
to dtsmande Phoerux Recy~lin g
fndu stncs a.t a cost of about
S142,000. The county will later
&lt;~rrange for the ren1oval of an
L'Stintated 500,0CXl shredded rires.
Chervl Km cao(! blames the
.dump. wl11ch IS Jbom: a half-m.ile
li-'--)111 h~o..'r hom.e in the YillagL' of
Balttmor~. tOr thL' death of he--r
· 13-y!..'Jr-old son .
· . Rocky l{jncaoJ di~d Oct.. I.
!l)9t.J. of t•nct&gt;phahri s ..1 mosqUI-

settled a personal 111JllfY cast•
Without H.1 rnwn ·s pt·rn uss~n.

John Juha&lt;t. Emm·h'; Jttorney,
ask~d thJt rbe ct'iL' hL· trJmft"r rt:'d
tu St.uk. Cmm[\ bc..·c.m~L· ht'" ft~.trs
his.t-ht•nt coldJ .not g~r .1 f.ur rr~Jl
111 l\1Jhonm g County J'l .1 n.:sult
nf publonty .ol~mlt Eonm·h\ m: kL'tr.'t'rmg (,l,c..'
y l~ltlllg_1\lll gL' IV
'I ,lr;: ( ·..11.:1t&gt;pp0,

to-~pre.td

\·irus.
Thr.• dump's ow ner, John Abh.·s
or' LKk..tng Cm!IHY. se r\'ed JO
J..ty' ttl j.Hl thts Yt'Jr. for ignormg
Ulli n ordt•n ro cle~m up lu~

.
prop&lt;rt\:

Ltrlumorc is abom 25 nulL's
~.l~t Of Columbus.

Trustee donates

sdr.•crwn bc('Jll\
.
~

Chlorine leak
forces evacuation
CANTON (AI') - A chl orinr.· k·,lk Su nday f~ n:ni lll-.lrb\'
residents fro m thL·ir hon~~ fo.r

to ou project

ATHENS (AP) -

thL' thtrd Jlld~~..· .lpptHmt•d ro rhL·
(In! t.l\t' b,· tht· llh1o SuprL'llll'
Court. \\'111 prr..·,1Jr.· wh1.·n JUry
~

An Oh10

·University i-ru~tee is g iv1n g the
insntution almost half the $1.5
miUion it needs for a new tt&gt;rnunal J. t tts airport.
. C. Davod Snyder. a. l974 grad-

uate of the 'sc hool, sa~d he thmks
!he terminal mll help ' Wl,th the
university and the ecodomy of
the s.urrnundmg so uth~ast Ohoo
;trel .
" I'm trying to loo k 20 years
down the road to say, ' How do
we perpetuate what Ohio Uni,·orsoty has built hero'"' said Snyder. the owner of the Snvder
lnternationa i Brew ing Gr~up.
"Th'L' o nJY \vay you're going w
do that IS to not 1solare the uni
vcrsity but broJdcn access to it."
. " I've flown in and o ur of here
. '"'vera! times, but the weather has

;1bm1 t \C\'t'!l

dl'p.trtm~nt

hour\ and ~e nt ;1 firt·
ofTiLul to thl' hospt-

ta!
\Vorkt·rs were 1n~t.illing J ne\\.
rr.~gubtor on tht:.' chlorine tank at
rlw ory w;uer treatment plant

wHen the gas escaped about -+:45
a.m., s.ud Canton Fire Department Ll ana liorr Chief R.av
Harp I~. C hlorine often is 'med t;
dismt"~·ct public water system s.
Capt. R obert Ccrnc was in fair .
con dmon -Sunday night , at
Timkcn Mercy Mcdocal Center.
Hl'

\\'&lt;1'1

aJmttreJ afi:cr inhaling

fumL's.

"It was so sudden , th ey didn't
have a cha nce

to

rep;ur tt or even

turn off th,· valw before thev
were forced ou t of the roont,:.
Harplc S&lt;ud of the chl o nn c lea k'.
Offocials shut off the valve
, \O be perfect. And my jet is not a about 7 a.m., Harp\e said:
huge J&lt;t. so I'm probably at tho .
1\vo other Canton fircfightcri
"'~l tacx tmtnn ," he s;ud of the air ...
were treated at the hospital for
port.
breathing problems and released.
l.1st month, the umvemty
plans to lengthen tht'

, .tlliJOUncC'd

bnd111g stri p from 4,2()(1 fe,·t to
~ .()1 )I I ft'l't. Jllm\·mg: b tggt•r pi.lne'
il)d \UillC ~111.1Jl 'ClrgO to LOllll'
~

Ill

resttknt~

the
l.llldtng stnp, saymg H \nll 1.Tc:;Ht.'
,,IIOI'lL' probli..·m, .. but ti1L' Fcdcr.Jl
, .A.v1~1non AdtllllliHr,lttnn In'\
, Soq1c

nppu'll..'

.11 ph .~&lt; e

of tht: llll'port . L'xpamion

pmje,t.Thc 1111iwrmy hop&lt;'' the
. t, mpmvl.•d iHrport will lun.• l' 0\11 ~
· lllUt\'r .oirlinc travel, cstablish111H
the a1rpnrt
a o•eginn,ll hub.
The tcrnun;ol Will be bct\WOn

a'

(J ,OOO
\Vludt

7,1!00 ! 'lllll'l' f~ct,
more t!t,IJl twice thl'

.md
IS

almost essential
CO LUMBUS (AI') -· L•w
CL'Il{rJl

1.'1lf0rq:llll'llt .1 gC1H.H.'~ Ill
:ti\.' findin~· u

h.1n.' someon1..· \\:Hh

!ll.'l'l'!!"i.try to
.1

knowh..:dgc

of Sp.1111sh "'';li bbk as th,· ,lfe.o \
Ll t lll ll popul.Jtulll ~rt1\\'&gt;;.

Jpprovt.:d it.
. Tlw t~rmnl.ll is s~&lt;'ll
~\\ ·.o

Officers: Spanish

Oh10

&gt;ize of t h~ currcm tcrmonal. btlllt
Ill 1'171.
· It will have adminiStrative

ufficcs, co nfcrcnct~ roonu,,J rootn
.fo r monlto n ng tht• w~ather and &lt;1
pilot lounge that includes show~ rs. The project IS expected to
begin next year.

Dct~·~o:t iw, ,
, pl'l'tl..'l',

rdy111g on .111 intl'rtnu ld llltl'l'\'it.:w onlv on~!

\\'l..'~·k ~Vhl:"il
Sp.uush-,pe.Jking t~~~~:tH;CI"!I
Wl.."fl'
wnundl.."d 111 a
shomout ncar .111 Jp.lrtnhnlt
colllpl,·x IJ&gt;t week.
Fr.onkJin ·colinty Shcnfl"&gt;
Deputy Steve Mnrtin &lt;aocl it clidn't comPromise the mvcstlg:Jtlotl,
but It clid m.1ke it harder.
"DoL·!! it ~ low u~ Jo~vn ? Ye..,, tr
docs," Martin said of the bnguag'' gap. "We cn n't bnng in
WltllL''' ,Jt ;\ til11L' );t!lt

thn•,•

multiple derecriv~:.~s to qul"stion
10 people at a time, as we might
in a normal situation ."

POMEROY - The following land transfers were recently reported by Meigs Couo•ty
Recorder Judith A. King:
James R Osbama. Connie Osborne, to Columbus
Soulhem Poww, easement. Orange;
Richard Myen;, RU!h M)'efS. to Columbus Southern
Po-. easement, Orange ,
Jarnes E. Roush, Unda L Roush, 10 Columbus Souttiem Power, easement, Orange; ·
Freddie iloggess. Dorothy Boggess. to Columbus
Southern Po-. deed, Scipio;
• John Partlow to Laura Delavalle, deed, Rutland ,
John Partlow 10 Laura Delavalle, deed, Rutland ; .
Rosemary Lyons to John Edward L)'XIS Ill, Tommy
lynn L)'Xls. Linda Lovia Cramer. Bernard Brooks Lyons,
Edwar&lt;l Lee Moler. Jr., deed. Middleport;
John H McCo~. deceased. to Evelyn M. McCoy, ter·
tificate, Letart;

Katheryn Loooan Gom!ll to

c - R Go&lt;rel. allida\lil.

HazoiGeolldinewetlb, i""

Delma C. Tuet&lt;er. - _ Letart,
Oli"";
Conseco Fl11811C8 SeM:&gt;e InC.. Gr- Tree Flflancial
Doma Hil, Oalas Hill, to Tracy Hill Norris Hupp, Ryw1
SeM:&gt;e,
to.Dalroll R Nebon, Linda K. Nelson, deed, SciHill, Courtney Hill ROUSh. easement;
0
Dallas Hil, Donna Hil, 10 Dean \lance Hil, ·Jr., - . .pio ,
Gary
R Yoo1&lt;. Karen K. Yoo1&lt;, to Cdumbus Sou1hem
Letart;
Southern Local School DiSlriCI to Ohio Poww Compa- Power. e85811*11. Bedtord;
Chatles S. R~•. Frances M: Robinelle. to Column~. easement, Sutton;
bus Sou1hem Power, ea_...nt. Scipio ;
Vinas L lee to Frank Babo, deed, Middleport; '
Roy BNens, Rachel I!M!ns. to ColumbUs Sou1hem
Boyd T. Spurtoek, IneZ Spuilock. to T _ , Plains
""-'· easement. Bedtord:
Cheste&lt; Water District. ri!j1t of way, Orange;
,
~ R. Gonetl, dee"asec!, to Michael D. Gorrel,
Rage&lt; L Bissell. Barbara Bissel. to T _ , Plains
'
Jad&lt; ;.._ aorre1. c - H. aorre1. OOIIificate, CINe ;
Chester W- DistriCt, ri!j1t of way, Orange;
Oallid L Adams. Karen I' Adams. to Charles W. Mom·
Kat~-. Bissell Seclunan, Sanuel Seckman, to Tupson.
Jr.. deed, OiiiB;
pers P1ai1s Cheste&lt; Wate&lt; DistriCt, ri!j1t of way, Chesler.
Nancy
Jaspers, Am~ Rize&lt;. Lee Rittge&lt;s. to Tuppers
William CheValier. Alile CheValier, Colin Chevalier, to
Plains Chester Wat81' District, easement, Lebanon ;
Tuppers Plains Chester Wat81' District, righ1 of way, Oliwo;
Jolvl Michael Harkins to 1\Jppers Plains Cheste&lt; Water
Dawna ~to Tuppers Plains Chester Water District.
District, easement. Oli'!8{;
Ronald H. Rildlie, Hazel Ri1chie.

Holmer Grimm to Morequity lncorporaled, deed, Salis·.
bury.

District. right of way, Chester;
Matthew S. Ridenour. Jenny R. Ridenour, to Tuppers

Plains Chester Water Oislrict. easement. Sutton:
Joni L Carrington to .Randail J Hill. RoiPno E Wells

Morequity Incorporated to Lynn J. Ramage. deed. Salisbury,

Plains Chester Water District. right ol way. Chester;
George Morrison, Lois Morrison, to Tuppers Plains

Hill. deed. Scipio;
Mildred M. Morris. dee"ased. to Carle E Morns. certili·

Chester Water District, right of way, Chester.

cate, Meigs;
Georgia Mount to MaK Mount. deed. Oltve .
Glendon Eugene Faulk, deceased. ro Karen Taylor
Myrtle Sincair, certificate. Middleport.
Tony Hutton, Tony M. Hutton. to Mark CoughenOUr.
Oeborah.S. Coughepour, deed, Rulland .
'
John W Munord. Helen L Mui!Qrd. to Randy J Mul·
food. Stephanie Kay Mulford. deed. Sahsbury.
Dolphus Buo1&lt;e, Jr., Wanda C. Burl&lt;e, to Dolphus Daniel ·

C\rroll Sm1th, Barbara Smrth, to Usa

c. Compson .

deed. Rudand;
Mtchael A. Mattea to Bryan Swann. Bryan K. Swann ,
deed, Middlepon;
Mabel Goeglein, Phyllis J. Clark. to Marl&lt; A. Clarl&lt; .
deed, Pomeroy;
James Barber, Jr., tB Doretta M. Brown, Robert C.

Brown. deed, Olive ;
, Richard D. Se)1er. deceased, to Nelia E. Seyler. affidav~ . Pomeroy/Salisbury;
Steven Lee MeGullin, Debra E. McGuffin, to Scott Har·
nson, Paula Harrison, deed, Middleport;
Gene R. Lawr~. Gene Roy Lawrence, to Kenneth
Brad&lt;en McFann. deed. Racine;
Jeanette Lawrence to Kenneth Bracken McFann .

Ralph Trussell, Jean Trussell, to Scott E. Trussell , Toresa M. Tru.ssell. deed, Chester;
Howard N. Bahr, Kimbert~ Lynn Bahr. to Greer B.
Blosser, Unda G. Blosser. deed, Chester;
John Marshall. King. John M. King, Brenda King, to
Benjamin W. Putman. Lena E. Putman, deed, Olive ;
Everen McPherson, Bonnie L McPherson , to Bradley

I. Wiseman, Sharlene M. Wiseman, deed. Salisbury;
Geneva Doris A)'is to Floyd T. Avis, deceased, affidavit.
Orange;
Robert C. Avis, Jacqueline K. Avis, Thomas P. Avis,
Judith N. Avis, Beatrice K. Spencer Larry Spencer, Gene·
va Doris Avis. to Bruner Land Company, deed, Orange;
Addie Luella W. Norris to Carroll A Norrls. affidavit.

to

Tuppers Plains

Chester Wale&lt; District. easement, Chester .
Charles F. Chancey. Donald C Shaffer. to Tuppers

Burl&lt;e, deed. Columbia ;
Nancy Prater to Michael J . Hill, MindyK Hill, deed, Sut·
ton ;
Jeffrey L Lewis to Scipio Township Trustees . deed.
Scipio;
Elza J. Pullins, dee"ased, to Susan K Henderson. affi-

deed. Racine; '
Thomas G. Beegle, deceased, to Raben L. Rrtchie, Jr.,'
Bridget D. Rutchie, deed, Sutton ;
Tonya J. Shaw, Dennis Bryani. to Jon Scott, Tracy

Syracuse ;
Ralph E. Knighl, deceased, to Carol H. Knight. Carol H.

davit, Orange;
Paul D. Whrt~. Patricia Lou Cuckl Whrte, to Harold Ted

Armstrong, affidavit, Chester/Orange;
Carol H. Knight, Carol H. Armstrong, Neil A Armstrong,

Scott, deed, Bedford ;
C.R. Gorrell, Lonon K. Gorrell. Lorean K. Gorrell, lti

to HKGC LLC , deed, Chester/Orange;
.. Carl J. Barnhill, deceased, to HazelL. Barnhill. affidavit,

Gillette. Randi G. Gillette. deed. Bedford;
Helen Blackston, peceased. to Harold H. Blackston.
affidavit. Chester!Salisbury;
Green Tree Financial Corporation to Stephen 0 .

Jack A. Gorrell, Michael D. Gorrell, deed, Qlive;

Tuppers Plains;

Foulkrod. VICki Baker, judge entry.

.

XENIA (AP) . - Louis Botta
moves fron1 disaster to disaster.
His latest stop is this southl¥estern
Ohio city
Botta was closing the Federal
Emergen cy
Management
Agency's disaster f,eld offoce for
floqding in Toledo, when he
received word that Xenia had
been hot Sept. 20 by a powerful

State agencies
-dispute findings
MARION (A I') - The Ohio
llep.mmcnt t&gt;foH,•alth and th&lt;·
OhiD Enviroill11Clltall'rotcction
AHel1l'Y said they disagreed
with an environmental toxil:olo·giSt's finding's coucerniug
health nsks at the l'-iver Valley
schools.
The report by Bru ce Molholt sa1d th e schools should be
relocated. It said about 3,600
gallons
nf
chemical
tri chloroethylene, which was
used in cleaning metal parts,
still arc present on part of the
River Valley campus. ,

CANTON (AP) -A convenience store owner says Ius plan
to sell gas at cost to members of
a fuel club isn't a philanthropic
gesture. As an independent dealer, he's trying to compete with
major oil companies.
Jim Rosetta ts starting
Lindee's All-iii-One Fuel Club
at his store to guarantee mem-

tornado.

Two days after the tornado
bulldozed its · way through · the
community - killing otfe, injuring more than 100 others and
damaging 307 homes and 34
businesses - Botta was in X~nia
with FEMA assessing the damage.
That damage IS now estimated
at more than $40 million.

bers wholesale invoice price on
gas.
, For S75 a year for the fir st
car, members can fuel up at the
posted price Rosetta pays. He
said 'he will still have a street
price for nonmembers.
He hopes to get I ,000 members and make money on the
membership fees, he said.

'

Show off Your ••pumPkin••

In The Review

••pumPkin Patchtt
Deadline: Friday
October 20

Actual Sise!

6.50

17

Ill

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Conpcr,tt1.· .\nth tht· ~P\"I.,'l'lllll(·ltt',
111\\'\!"lg,ltlOJ l

which was prmnised

· by Congress in the Federal Communications Act of 1996.
Ta ngren said he's convinced
the only way co inpetition will
flourish in Ohio is .if telephone
u ~e rs pressure th(· Legislature or
the PUCO into doing some_thin g
" It 's goi ng to take customers
fed up and saying, 'I'm sick and
tired of thos. Why do I have to put
up with this from the largest telephon e co mpany'"' Tangren said.
Ameritech is eager to expand
into th e · long-distance service
business . Long-disL111ce providers
such .as AT&amp;T, MCI antj Sprint
want to get into the local phone
business because technology is
making it more profitable. Those
extra lines for faxes and modems ,
pagers, cellpr10nes, caller identification and ln4ernet services add
1
. up.
. All th e companies need the
· state's approval to proceed.
· PUCO
Chairll'lan
Alan

-------------------------,

RAYMOND JAMES
l.
FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
John C. Miller, CFP
Branch Manager
.&gt; II Fnurth S1ree1, Mariena, OH 45750
800-726-8412
Phone 740-376-9
AWard0 RJFS com

need to catch their breath after
passing and implementing gas and
electric deregulation' and aJ&gt;proving two big telephone mergers. ·
However,

the

'· competitors

maintain the longer Ameritech is
free of true competition, the
longer it will behave like a.
monopoly and have no real
incentive to improve~s ervice.
Tangren said that in a more
competitive marker, Ameritech

will have to clean up its service
record ur lose customers.
"That, more than anything
.else, I think, is the motivator for a
customer to say; 'I want another
choice,"' Tangren said.
Schriber agreed.
"The form of competit1on that
will take place at the residential
level will be not price but in
terms of services, quality of ,service. Whoever can offer that ... for
the same amount of money will
win," he said . .

The Daily Sentinel

.

CI icnt Service Manager
Rcgistere,d Representative
Over 15 Years Serving Clienls

lawmakers and regulators may

After his visit in Meigs County,
the governor ventured on to Lake
Hop e .to continue the tourism
campaign .

Correction Policy )

'

the infrastructure to be in place,''
Schriber said.
Th e commission extended
Ameritech 's Advantage Ohio
program, which freezes basic rates
for Ameritech customers for
three years but lets Ameritech
price many new services without
PUCO approval.
Ameritech's Smith said the
Legislature should commit the
changes to law to provide assurance before the company invests
, money that it won't be prevented
by 'regulation from profiting, Two
company-supported bills are
stalled in commi,ttees, leaying
Ameritech at a disadvantage
against competitors whose earn- .
ings aren't regulated, Smith said.
"We should face the same risks
they do," he said. "What they
don 't have is the regulatory
~ncertainty." ·
Corecomm favors a bill that
would authorize the PUCO to
implement the Federal Communications Act.
"We think the structure of the
federal act is a good one. It just
needs to be allowed to work,"
O'Brien said.
It's not likely, however, that the
Legislature will act on any
telecommunications bill during
the current session; which ends
Dec. 31. The wmpanies and legislative leaders, however, predict it
will be taken up again next year.
That's not uncommon. The
Legislature struggled with deregulating the electric power industry for six years before making it
law io1 1999.
Waiting might not be a bad
thing, Tangren said. He said both

: ed, the possibilities for economic
: opportunity arc endless"
. The co nn ec tor project is
: exp ecte d to cost $90 million and

Our main concern in all stories is to

.

companies , in return we expect

from Page~~

Tour

Reader Services

Angela Ward

Schriber believes his commission
can authorize many of the needed changes without the bw
changmg. Ho.wever, he wants
something from the local telephone companies for letting
them into the long-distance
game: a permanent network to
carry wires, optical cables or
.'~hatever technology that may
develop.
"As we are prepared to loosen
up a lot of the restrictions and the
rcsto:aints we have on telephone

will essentially run parallel to the
exisiing . roadway, connectin~
four-lane stretches of 33 tb the
north and south.

•

:o

)ton 111 the
:-" rn ht• -;entL'Il~l'd { hr

co mp ~tition ,

Parent's Name

S500,000 by a pri;on inmate
:-\vho s&gt;~J he bnbed Emrich to fix
·l c:pmin.a l cao;c 111 liJlJ). bur dtd 'r get lw; lll@ncv\ worth
·: Fmn~c h w .l~ nne ot o.,e\'i..' LJ!
:~:ub!tc oiTiua{~ Ull1\ It ted 111 ,J
rot n~r ­
Ym111~tm\·n .11"1..',1. I It

88 installation aqd repair workers
in Ohio, many pulled from other
states in SBC Conununications'
network. The two "Baby Bells"
merged in a multibillion-dollar
deal last year.
Ohio Consumers Counsel
Robert Tongrcn , who represents
residential c u~tomers in rate cases,
said he's frustrated by the lack of

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Child's Name

'Common Pleao.; Court for nearly

:~1/t'd ·n1111~ .1;1J publll

_recendy announced it was adding

'

5

:is to appear thts vvcek J.s the
· defendant 111 a liv d ~u t t.
· l\llartin Enmch, formcrlv a
: Mah~mmg County Court judge,
: 11 being sued in Stark County

OigJ-

Ameritec h service in Augu st
alone, compared with 1,065 complaints for all of 1999. Customers
complained
about
missed
appointments for new service and
weeklong waits for repairs.
The spike in c6mpi:Ums came
one month after th e PUCO
ordered Ame~itech tO spend $8.7
nulloon to satisfy customer ~om­
plaints and gave tbe coo,"tpany 18
months to improve ~ervice or face
- $122 million in penalties.
Both · Ameritech ,
and
' Corecomm acknowledge there
has been little switclung since this
summer'; serviec problems . The
bogger reason, they say, is most
Am eritech competitors are chasing more profitable business custotners.
Corecomm is ready to do business with new customers. However; the company leases from
Ameritech the "last mile" of telephon e line that goes into the customer's home. so it cannot
promise better repair service than
Ameritcch , said Tom O'Brien, a
regulatory lawyer for Corecomm.
The company is working on
developing its own network; but
. •
.
c
Its expensove to catch up with
decades of system-building· that
.Ameritcch has done as a regulated monopoly, O'Bri&lt;;n said.
"We have formed a subsidiary.
to do just that ·an a fiber optic
basis. That's the end game here,"
O'Brien said.
Ameritc ch IS working on
intproving service, said ,James
Smith, the company's vice president for regulatory issues. It

·..'

ontv

taking brihe~ ;md fixing a cao.;e for
J forn1er Youngs town mob boss

llltt )

from~Al

Job continues for EMA .official Owner sells at invoice_price

· CANTON (A P) - A judge
. who pkadcd guilty in AugtiSt to

im·c\tH~.Il!Oll

Phone

-d. to James A. Tuclce&lt;.

Julia Engle to ~oodrow Engle Ill, deed, Salisbury.
right of way, Sutton ;
John E. McGuire, Kalhy 0 . McGuire, to Melissa D •
Michael P. Kloes, AmyL Buckbee, to Tuppers Plains
Tyree. Larry E Leudermitt. Jr., deed. Rudand;
Chester Water District, right of way. Chester;
Palficia A Shane to Knstine Lee Shane. deed. Rutland;
Heather M. Knight 1D Tuppers Plains Chester Water

· Judge to appear
in dvil suit

:..tt·da.t\

,Monday, October 2, 2000

Monday, October 2, 2'oGo

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I
Attach This Coupon To \'our Child's Picture And
I
Mail Or Bring With Your Payment To:
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The Dally Sentinel
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• I
Child's N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
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------------------------~

be accurate. If you know of" an error in
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Ohio . Second-class postage paid
Pomeroy.
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OnawHk

Abortion proteSt draws
1,000 after priest
charged in clinic attack

$8.70

One vear

S10o1

Dally
SO cents
Subscrrbers n01 de!jiring to pay the carrier may remit in advance direc1 to The Daily
Senlinet Credit will be giVen ea rner each
wrtek No subscnption by mail pormined in
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Mail subsaiption
Inside Meigs County

$27.30
$53.82
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Ralts outa lde Meigs County
13 Weeks
$29.25
, 26 Weeks
$56.68
52 Weeks
S109.72

LOCAL BRIEFS
Fair board
membeus election

Meigs County Emergency Services answered 15 calls for assistance over the weekend. Units
responded as follows:

POMEROY Voting for
members to serve on the Meigs
CENTRAL DISPATCH
County Agriculture Society
Saturday, 10:32 p.m., RockROCKFORD, Ill. (AP) sible motive for the clinic attack. Board of Directors will be Nov. 6 spring1 Rehabilitation Center,
Abortion opponents who gath- It came two days after govern- in the grange hall annex on the Donna Smith, Holzer Medical
ered for an ~nnual - protest were ment approval of the RlJc486 Rock Springs Fairgrounds from 5 Center;
Sunday, 11 :25 a.m ., Rockforced to ponder the actions of a abortion pill and was at the office to 9 p.m. There are five three-year
Roman Catholic priest accused of Dr. Richard !Ugsdale, who terms to be filled , said to Debbie springs Rehabilitation Center,
of ramming his car into an abor- successfully challenged llli!lois Watson, board secreta'ry.
Edna Life, HMC;
Members with ~erms expiring
tion clinic and chopping away at abortion laws in the 1980s tlut he
2:45 p.m ., Ann Street, Delores
are
Dan
Smith,
Eil
Holter,
Brent
the building with an ax.
Hysell, HMC;
claimed were so strict theY limit6:23 p.m., County Road , 208,
The rally Sunday at Holy Fam- ed women's ~ccess to the proce- Rose, Jim Watson, and Buddy
Ervin.
ily Church in Rockford was dure.
!Umana Roush, treated.
The 'Diocese of Rockford said , Petitions to run for one of the
scheduled long before the inciPOMEROY ·
been
terms
are
available
from
Watson.
the
priest's
activities
have
dent, but it commanded much
Saturday, 10:34 a.m. , Hysell
conversation among the approxi- restricted while i.t investigat&lt;:S the To be a candtdate, a ~ennon must Street, Ronald Hannina, treated;
aUegations. A message left at the be filed :"tth 10 stgnatures of • II :52 a.m.; East Main Street,
mately 1,000 protesters..
•1 don't agree with his meth- church, ·St. Patrick's Church in members ?f the Agriculture Soci- motor vehicle accident, R;chard
ety. Memberslup tickets may be Coleman, Mark Reitmire, treatods, but I appreciate his heart,'' (lochelle, was !lOt returned.
After Sunday's protest, about purchased at the Sugar Run Flour ed;
.said the Rev. David Broom, 25,
pastor ofthe Faith Center nonde- 100 people attended a meeting at MilL
12:30 p.m., EQgle R;dge, Alice
nominational church . •
Temple Baptist Church in Rock·
Chapman, HMC;
The Rev. John Earl is charged ford where Joseph Scheidler,
4:15 p.m., llrice Hollow, Doris
with burglary and felony criminal director of an ' anti-abortion
Swanson, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
damage to property for the group in Chicago, said Earl's
RACINE
alleged attack Saturday at the attack has damaged the moveSaturday,
10:07 a.m., State
MIDDLEPORT -The Ladies
Northern Illinois Women's Cen- ment.
of the Lord, an interdenomina- Route 338, Ann Boso, rreated;
ter. The clinic wasn't open and
"Ii reflects on all of us; it's not
6:25 p.m., Nease Hollow, grass
tional women's ministry, will
there were no injuries. He was a good thing,'' he said.
fire,
Racin~ Gun Club, no
meet at 10 a.m. Saturday at .Faith
freed after posting $10,000 bail.
The attack drew the ire of an Chapel Church. Speaker will be InJuries;
Earl, 32, a priest at a Catholic Illinois women's organization that
9:39 p.m., Sixth Street, Ruby
Pastor Teresa Davis with Kandi
church 30 miles away, was said the church and anti-abortion
Preston as song leader. Refresh- Kelly, treated.
stopped inside the building by its groups must take respovsibility
REEDSVILLE
ments will be served. for inforowner, who fired' two shotgun for violent acts against clinics and
Saturday, 4:39 p.m., State
mation Contact Betty Johnson,
blasts to scare lum away.
doctors who provide abortions.
Route
124, Collin Chevalier,
441-1415. or Jan Swiger, 992"It's hard to support those
"We've had some victories and 6667.
HMC.
kinds of actions when you stand some losses, but we've never ariRUTLAND
for life, but we definitely do sup- ven J car into a building. I'm
Sunday, 3:02 p.m., Page Street,
port him in standing up for life,'' appalled by the violence," said
Francis Kearns, PVH.
Jeff O'Hara, 37, said at Sunday's Gay Bruhn, president of the IlliSYRACUSE
rally.
nois chapter of the National
Saturday, 1:11 p.m., Twin Oaks,
Police have not disclosed a pos- Organization for Women.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Super Cecilia Spencer, HMC
Saturday at Hickory Hills Church
TUPPERS PLAINS
of Christ. Time maclune, puppets,
Saturday, County Road 28, Jesclasses nursery through adult. sica Newell, treated.
Registation . at 9 a.m. Program ,
ends at 1:30 p.m. Lunch provided. T-heme is Christ's triumphant
entry to Jerusalem and the Last
Supper.
SAN 'FRANCISCO (AP) Both sides say they are fighting
Attorneys for Napster Inc. are hop- for their survival.
POMEORY - Revival sering three federal appeal judges will
"Tius service is causing serious
vice will be at Mt. Hermon Unitlet stand a ruling 'that keeps the injury to songwriters;' said Carey
CHESTER - Trick or treat ed Brethren in Christ Church,
popular Internet · music-sharing Ramos, an attorney for the record- for Chester has been set for 6 to 7 • Friday through Oct. 9, 7:30 p.m.
ing in&lt;;lustry. "It really needs to be p.m . Oct. 30. The firehouse siren Dr. E. R. Moore of central F1oriservice alive -·- at least for now.
The company was spared in July restrained. We urgently need will be sounded to signal the start · da will be the evangelist, and
from a court order !hat would have relief."
and completion of the evening there will be special singing each
shut down the site until the
Napster, started in · a Northeast- events.
service.
Recording Industry Association of ern University dorm room last
The · church is on Wickham
America's lawsuit against the year, pioneered the concept known
Road, just offTexas Rnad, in the
online service is resolved.
as peer-to-peer computing in
Texas Community.
Only hours after a federal judge which people share files from their
POMEROY - Units of the
Robe_rt Sanders is pastor.
issued an injunction against Nap- own computers rather than a censter, saying it was encouraging tral server. In Napster's case, users
"wholesale infringing" against can download music ·from each
sian: Vaughn's Supermarket, Midmusic industry copyrights, the 9th other that is stored in the format
dleport, first; WYVK Radio, secUS. Circuit Court of Appeals known as an MP3 file.
ond; and Mason VFW, Mason,
stayed the order.
The company claims its 22 milW.Vac third. Individual division:
from PapAl
The two sides were headed back lion users are violating no law. It
first place, "The Three Amigos,"
to court Monday, each getting 20 bases its defense on . the Audio Jewel City sternwheeler. Taft also first; Bob Workm,an, Lacy Workminutes to argue their case before Home Recording Act of 1992, assisted in the crowning of the man, Bob Arms, Jeanie Arms, seca three-judge panel of the federal which it says grants immunity Sternwheel Riverfest Queen.
ond; Jan Slater, third.
appeals court.
when music is shared for noncomWinners in the line-throwing
Top winners in the ducky derby
The three-judge panel has merr:ial use.
sp9nsored by the Pomeroy Mer- contest were: Kevin Layne, first;
already expressed concerns about
Another company, MP3.com, chants Association were presented Joe Kincaid, second; John
the injunction and will try to allows usen to listen . to songs savings bonds. Tb'y were Kenny Williams, third.
determine whether it was overly stored on its own computers. It has Utt, first; Danielle Pieckham, secThe local band, "Blitzkrieg,"
broad, said Marcie Mihaila, an setded lawsuits brought by four ond, and Dave Bowen, third.
also performed Saturday night,
appellate lawyer who has follo__:~d record labels and in September lost
Taking top spots in the chili helping to bring the big event to
the case.
a copyright-infringement case cookoff were : Commercial divi- a close.
A decision isn't expected for at brought by Universal Music
~ Group.
least a month.

Ministry
announced

Super Saturday
set

Napster back in court to argue ·
merits of its music-swap service

Revival services
set

Trick or treat

EMS logs 15 calls

Finale

VALLEY WEATHER

vyarm conditions·to linger
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Warm temperatures will continue across the tri-county region
through mid-week as a_high pressure system remains parked over
the southeastern part of the
country, pumping· southerly
.
breezes into the region.
Cooler air will begin foltering
in later this week.
Skies will be mostly cloudy on
Tuesday with highs near 80.
Tonight, lows will be 55-60.
S~nset tonight will be at 7:12
p.m. and ·sunrise on Tuesday' at
7:31 a.m.
Forecast
Today... Partly cloudy. ' Highs

near 80.
Tonight ... Partly to
cloudy. Lows 55 to 60.
Tuesday... Partly ' to
cloudy. Highs near 80.

mostly

Queen·
from PageA1
the winners.
Qualls, daughter of Denise Nitz
of Pomeroy and Gary Lewis o(
Reynoldsburg, was presented a
$1,000 scholarship from .the University of Rio Grande and a

check for $200. The runner-up,
daughter of Earl and Nancy
Gilkey of Pomeroy, received a
$500 scholarship from the University of Rio Grande and a $200
check.
Other participants, all attired in
· period costuming, were Britni
Bevan, Brandy Graham , Eri ca
L~mons, Chasidi Biggs, Kelly
Canan, Theresa Baker.

mostly

Extend.e d forecast
Tuesday night ... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the 50s.
Wednesday... Partly to mostly
cloudy. Highs in the rnid 80s.
Thursday... Chance of showers.
Lows from the upper 40s. Highs
in the lower 70s.
Friday.,. Partly to mostly cloudy.
Chance ·of mainly morning
showers. Lows 35 to 45. Highs in
the 50s.

~2

One month

13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

The Oally Sentinel • Page A3

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7

FRI 9/29100 • THURS 10/5/00

lOX OFF!a Will OPIN AT
6:30 PM FOR IVINJNG SHOWS
2:30 PM FOR MATINIIS
SCARY MOVIE (RJ
7:10 SUN·THUR

BRING IT ON (PG13)

LOCAL ST.OCKS
AEP - 391.

Gannett - 53

Akzo - 42},
AmTech/SBC - 50
Ashland Inc. - 33\

General Electric - 57'-'Hartey Davidson - 47'!.
Kman - sl. ·
Kroger - 221.
Lends End - 2 t
Ltd. - 2t .,.
Oak Hilt' Financial - t 6~
DVB - 26).
BBT - 30l.
Peoples - 13'1.
Premier - 5),
Rockwell - 30l.

AT&amp;T -

29),

Bank One - 381.
Bob Evans - 181,

BorgWarner - 33:•.
Champion - 3,..
Charming Shops - 5'1.
City Holding - 7'1.
Federal Mogul -

Firstar - 22lo

5~..

7:00 SUN·THURS

SPACE COWBOYS (PG13)
7:00 SUN·THUAS

Rocky Boots - 5
RD Shell-60''

WHAT LIES BENEATH (R)

Sears - 32'/,
Shoney's -l.

NUTTY PROFESSOR 2:
THE KLUMPS (PG13)
7:10 SUN-THURS
THE ORIGINAL KINGS OF
COMEDY (R)

Wai-Mart - 48 ~.
Wendy's - 201.
Worthington - 9 ~
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
.. the previous day's trans·
actions, provided
by
Ad vest at Gallipolis.

7:00 SUN·THURS

7:00 SUN· THURS

THE WATCHER (R)
7:t0 SUN·THURS

�•
..

•

•

•

0_P-Inion

Moncl.y. October 2, 1000 _

_Th_e_nail_·;:_YSe_n_ti.....
ne_I_ _ _..,...
_ ____

~m1.948

111 Court St., PolllefOy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

OIL
CO.
W.J. CUNTON

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

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

Dear Ann Landers:You printed a ietter
from "Crushed in California," whose
daughter, " Norma;' had been acting in a
bizarre fashion. She made horrible accusations about her parents, and was irrational when they tried to speak to her.
You said Norma might be mentally ill,
and suggested therapy. I'm afraid Norma
may already be seeing a therapist, who
could be the source of her problem.
Norma's odd behavior and hostile
ac~usations sound a lot like those false
recovered memories that were so popular a few years ago. This now-discredited
type of therapy was based o n the flaky
theory that all adult problems are the
result of some childhood trauma, the
memories of which have been repressed.
The. assumption was that as children,
these patients must have been sexually
abused by their parents in order for the
memories to be so deeply repressed,
Under this so-called "therapy," patients
are taught to recover these non-existent

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor .

Lany Boyer
Advertising Director

Chari- Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Ldten ro 1/u fiii.W ~ w~lcOIJU. TltcJ slw•ld btl fLu INut JOO words. AU letun ~ fMbj«t
to~~~~ IUid •DIN sifrwd 1111111 iltC'IMIIIIdnss Md wkpltoM tfiUfi!Mr: l\'o 11tui«Md WtkrJ •·ill
N l"'llJIQiwiL l...ulrn slrovld 6c Ut food,_,., ~niltf issuc;s;, tK14 P"Jl'IIIJliliLJ.

Tlu opUtiom a,qsSfti U. tlte rol11mt1 &amp;.tlow tJJY 1M con.m rsus of rile Ollia V.U.J f.IIIUiti111
Co.'s UiloriiU IHMrd. IUIItn 01Jt.erwin IIOfftL

NATIONAL ViEWS

.,

Dilemma
Gun buyback program diverts
crime-fighting funds
• American Press, Lake C harles, La., 011 gun buyback pro.~ram:
At fir.;t glance, a federal department'&lt; offer to fork over money tO
h~lp cities buy and destroy firearm&lt; looks great. ... A second glance,
however, "haws r;;tgn~ of J cla~~ir dilemma.
In order to get the tt-dt'r.:l.l gun-buybick mon~y, cities have to
divert their b\Vn anti-drug· money mto the new buyback program.
So, we have the unusual picture of Housing and lJeveloptnent
Sctretary Andrew Cuomo announrmg "in the memory of
Columbine the Buyback America pro~ram" at .the same time that
every city in Columbinr: ·~ home st~al· of Colorado was ,annou_n ci ng
that they wouldn't take pan m rill' progr;1m. ...
·
Under the program, city housing agn1cies operating under HUD
·are- encouraged ,to buy and dcqroy unwanred firearms. The gun
buybacks give c:1sh nr gifr certificue-; ranging from S25 to $1 SO for
e;,.:h tirea~m h.mded o;•er.
A total of H-l Citles have sig~1ed up, accounting tor' about $3 mi llion otthe $15 m.illion pledged by the C linton administration.
Co lunlbinc and m.tny orht·r cirieli art' passmg on the opportunity.
Tht· reason: Local housing agencie1 must spe nd S I00 of their own
arug-fighting money on the buyback program to ge t an ad ditional
$-l3 from HUD tor th r buyback program.
The gun buyback program has generated controversy, but not as
much over gun contra\ as over priorities. Whi\e an initial goal of
buying back 50.000 guns in 84 cities received mu ch attention, critin wen&gt; CJj-Jeltioning whether the program would -produce false
claims inst&lt;,'ad of genuine progress in cutting down crim e.
_That's not the basis for the objection registered by most cities. It's
the necessity of having to choose between two approac hes - b_uying back firearms. or fighting against illi cit drugs ....
• The Daily Oklahoman, Oklahoma City, 011 dismissing
VVI1itewatcr chmges:T he Whitewater investigation officially ended last
week"with the following moral: Som~times , you can get awav with
it.

lndepend&lt;;nt Counsel Roben l~ays 'legal conclusion that there
was insufti cient evi denc e tn indi ct Bill and Hillary Clinton was not
a. declaration of their inn ocence. R ather, it was a tribute to the ClmtOns' abiJiry to stOnewall inve;:&lt;;tigato r'\, o;ilenc~ potential witnesses and
riutlast prosecutors - much of it nn th e taxpayers' dime.
: By nature, corruption and tra ml cases are difficult to prove, and
th e Clinton&gt; proved adept at all the eva&lt;ive maneuvers that can be
~sed to hide their trail. .. .
: Claims of executive privilege bloc ked Investigators. Ev1dence wis
ti1rned ewe r 1lowly, if it was taunt! at all - remen1ber Hillary's miss~
iilg billing records. found I H uwnths after they were subpoen aed ....
, When history remember-; the Cl inton pre.:;idency,Whitewater will
· ~e right there. Perhaps such a stain on his legacy- along with C hiQagate. Monica Lewinsky and othe r umightly blotches- will serve
"' a type of justi ce: As well as Bill and llillary Clinton dodged
Whitewa ter's un;avory truths, the ;lfT:nr 's unanswered questions and
l~nger ing &lt;;uspicions will 'ihadow them fon:vcr.
]

~TODAY

IN HISTORY

fami li ~s. Read

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
memories.
Ask "Crushed" if her daughter is
receiving this type of therapy. If Norma's
" mental illness" is therapy-induced, it can
be corrected through treatment with a
legitimate therapist .who does not practice this nonsense. -- Lloyd in British
Columbia, Canada
Dear Lloyd: You've used some
extremely harsh language, but I go along
with every word you have written.
Thanks for another opportunity to
unmask those charlatans who destroy

on for more about

Norma:
· From Casper, Wyo.: This is for
"Crushed in California," whose daughter
is behaving strangely: Ten years. ago. my
sister-in- law began having memory
flashes. " Maureen" saw a therapist, but it ·
didn't help. One . day, she had a mild
seizure while eating lunch. It would have
gone unnoticed by most people, but her
lunch companion was a nurse who was
able to recognize the possible implica-,
tions. She suggested Maureen see a specialist, who dis~oveted that my siste't-inlaw had a brain tumor. Please tell
"Crushed" to check this out immediately. It could save her daughter's life.
Lancaster, Pa.: Tell "Crushed in Califor.nia" their daughter may be on drugs .
My older sister had a great job and a
bright future. She started abusing drugs,
and has been physically and verbally abusive to my -parents for the past 20 years.
We've tri ed hard to help her, but nothing

•

October 2. 2000'·

works. The entire family is sick over this.
Columbus, Ohio: I'll bet Norma met
a new man who got her invoived with
one of the designer drugs. A frien? of
mine was convicted o( child endangerment because-she left h er young son with
her boyfriend, and the child ended. up in
the hospital with broken bones. Designer drugs ruined my friend's life.
No State: Two years ago, my daughter
and I were very close. Suddenly, her personality changed- so drastically, I could
not believe it was the same penon. She
was fired from her job, disappeared for
hours, forgot to pick up - her children,
stole money. wrote bad checks, and her
car was repossessed. We also discovered
she was using crystal methamphetamine.
She wa~ diagnosed as being bipolar, and
is now being treated for mental illness
and addiction. Tell N orma's parents that
this could be what is really going on .
Dear No State: You , and many other
kind readers, gave Norma"s parents some

MONDAY
Council . 32~, . Daughters of
C OOLVILLE
Whit~ s . Am erica . Tuesday, 7
p.m ..
Chapel Wesleyan Church, Inspection; members to wear·
Coolville, revival services,
white.
Monday through Oct. 8, 7 p.m .
evenings with a 10:30 a.m. serPOMEROY
Salisbury
vice_ on Sunday. R ev. Jim
Hord, evangelist.
Township Trustees, 6 p.m .
Tuesday at the hall.
RACINE - Racine Chapter 134, OES, Monday, at the
REEDSVILLE
· Olive
haiL Officers to be ele cted.
Township Trustees, regular
SYRACUSE
Sutton meeting, 6:30 p. m. on Tuesday
Township Trustees, Monday, at the township office on Joppa.
7:30 p.m., Syracuse Village Road. ·
Hall .

..

HENTOFf'S VIEW

Here~

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4

reasons why Clinton wasn)t convicted.
.

The mo~t Jccurate account of the co ngn:ssiot)al role in the C linton· impeac hm ent has .
been wntten - from the inside - by David
Schippers.
A lifel o ng Chicago Deniocrar, · Sch i pper~
was app ointed by Republican Henry Hyde.
cha irman of the House Judi cia ry Com mi ttee,
as rhicf investigativt co un~el during rhc proceedings that led to the impeachment - but
4' not the conviction - of the president, who
now says that he "saved tl}e Constitution of
the United States" by fighting for his acquit-

'

Nat
Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST

.

t~:

Schippers has voteJ twi ce for C linton. " I'm Trial of Preside nt C linton" {Harvard Univergoing to spend some time in purgatory for sity Press), by Rich ard 1:osncr, chief judge of
that," says Sc hipp ers, a practicing Catholi c.
' the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals .
Although Sc hippers had led the Justice
Th e citizenry depended on the media, not
Department's Organized Crime and Racke- Judge Posner, to find out what was go ing on.
teering Unit under Attorn ey General Robert But because most reponers and editors let
Kennedy, he had been away from Washington themselves become ~Cntanglcd by the White
a long time -· working as a ski lle'd trial attor- House's expert spinners, the constant popu l.J:ney in Chicago - before returning to th e ity po lls showed that most Amen cam be li eved
O rwellian morality of a ca pital in which lead- that Ken Starr and the Republican impeach ers of both parties are ·m esmerized by polls ment ma nagers - not the presidct1t - · had
and chronica ll y accustomed to lying as a way defiled the Constitution. T h ey thou ght tha t
of sur viv;lL
th e president had only lied ab o ut a private sex
I lis new book, " Sellout" (Regnery), written misstep.
Accordingly, as Schippers sh ows in appalling
Wi th Ala n H enry, a widely ex peri enced inves~i~ltiv~ journalist, has not rcc~:: i ved anyw herw detail, the R epub!'ican leadership in the Senas frightened by the p olII as I )racu la
ne&lt;~r the atten tion it merits in the media: ate That's not surprising, since the pre&lt;s. in all its co nfnmteJ by a cross- fo rbade an auth~ntic
tria l o f the president. The intim ida ted leader&lt;
form s, failed - With very few exceptions to cover rhe fum..lamellt&lt;Jl st~ry of why Clin- prcvc;_n ted the Home managers fi·om c;~llin~
li ve witnesses. They insisted t h at the manager~
ton was impeached.
In "Sell out." Schip pers specifi cally exposes ' present only a portion of th e evidence that
the maino.;tream press's shallow downplayin g of Sc hipp ers and his tea m of investi gators lu d
C linton 's rampant violations of th e Constitu- gathered using their extensive fe deral and
tion ; obstr uction of justice, including tamperL police experience.
While Senate R epublicans, led by th e
ing with witnesses; se rial perJ u ry; &lt;md abuse pf
pompously
'ineffcctive Trent Lott, rescue d th e
powe r. H 1s perva."ive
.
contt;mpt for the Co!'l-,
stituti on has also been detailed in "An Affair prCsi dent ti-om co nviction (bu.t nnl tfo m hisof State: T he Investigation; Impeachment, and tory) , congressional Democrats were deter-

minl'd to hid~o.· tlw cYidcno..'l..', nnt only ll·o m rlu: ,
p1iblic. bu t :1 ho fi·mn tli cl lht'h-c o:.
A-:. Lhc I l o u ,~· \\,1\ deciding \\ ht' rl ll'r to .•
illlpe.l~o.·h th~o.· prt:~ ;d~,.·lH. SchippLT' 'oLJ liP .1
,cc un.: L'VJdt' lil'l' room r,toch· . . l \\"ith \ 'iLko'. 1
t.lp L''· tr.m,ntJH". ",qtl'lllL'Ilt' .111d I"L'ptlrt'l. Not
.1 'i nglc ll m i"L' l )cnHH ul w~o.·1H imu th.n mum.
to cx,unill L' th L· ~,.·,· id t'lll"l' . hut h:1 R~..·pllbli c tn\ ·
thd.
Wlwn thL· ~'K'Il ,ltt.' \\',1-:. dLT Hhn t; whether to _'/
convict· the president, tb t• ev iden ce room was "
o,;rill opt'll. Bttr ,\\ ~ c h l ppt' P-. IH HL'\ in "~L· I,lout,''- .
" nin m1c.: .;etl,lt or" of citlH.: r p.trty "tt HJk th e
tim~ tu n:vil..'\\' tht' l·,· idl'IK~· my . . ra tr lu d ·•
ga thaed ."
,
Th L'IT 1~ Olll' othl'r hook th.ll j.., l'"L'Jlli ,ll Ill '
undn'-lti.l llding why C linton ,]wul~.i h,t\'l' hl'l:l1 :
co nvicted . "Truth' .Jt Any Co&lt;t.". '( 1-i.JrpcT-·,
Collnh) t\ by two rc.:porrcro,; w ho were nor:
tlmJWII otT cu Hrw hy rhe pn·,Jdclll \ _i.mit.ll'IL''I
•wth in .md u ut o f the Whltc GI I&lt;Hl \L.'. Sm,m
Schmidt of the W,l, hington Po't .1nd Mich.11...'L
Wei«kopthave. like Schlpfwr;. prm'Jcbl v·.du Jblc sourn· mate rial l(n future lli'ltun.Jm; the1r ""
book, tdo: h.1 s .dso been ignorl·d or tr,l'dll..: d by
m(ls t of' the preso.; ,
Tht• New York Titll ~'- Uook Review i..'VL'Il
assigned ;1 my"'tny wntt'r- a person without
e\'C.:!I '\l.'cond-Jund rep.o t:ting kn(&gt;wkdgc of
the ~'~' hington minCtielch - · tq nuk ~. · fun of •
"Trmh ,n Any C:o,r."
I ho pe that ll rian Lamb will lm ng \lli JJe
sun light tt&gt; th e &lt;lw low pl.1y nf the impeJchtlll'nt by im·iting Da vid Schippe r..; to bl· on CSpan's "Book Nnte"i." He \ al n:;uly bt:&gt;cn on C -.:
Span in .l k s..,- t(H:"Usl·d contl'xt. And I hope ,.
pl'opk around t h e cou n try \vho t H..'Ver get
i11vited to \)'i/a"ih lll gton parries w il l ~t't Sc hipp~o.· r~· ddi:lntl y h o n e~t- and acc ur;'Jt-t' ly ritl e. d :
-

.

The streets, sidewalks and shores of
the Pt&gt;meroyjMiddleport area were
busy this weekend as the Sternwheel
Riverfest wrapped up. Above, six sternwheelers line the levee Saturday. Top
right, t,he Veterans of Foreign Wars
lead the parade down Main Street.
Bottom right, Gov. Bob Taft and first
lady ·Hope Taft walk the streets of
downtown. (Sentinel staff photos)

The Community Calen- ·
dar is published as a free '
service to non-profit
" '
groups wishing to
LETART Letart Townannounce rneftings and
ship Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m .
~ special events. The calen-at the office building.
dar is not designed to proCARPENTER - Colummote sales or fund raisers ·
bia Township Trustees, Mon of any type. Items are
day, 7:30 p.m. at the Fire
printed only as space per- ·
Department.
mits and cannot be guar~
anteed to be printed a '
TUESDAY
specific number of days .
CHESTER
Chester
. -~-- - ·

·POMEROY - Friends of
the Library, fvlonday, 7 p.m at
the Pomeroy Library.

Alabama: a
pubHc unMirsltlss olllr ubWdi'*Y ~
and out-of-tha-ordlnary opiiOIIUnlllll tiD lllm,IIIOOIId, ....,
and grew. Eliplora till 1111 and eala 111, business, lllll_.dllllllualllon,
· heallh

cal!, and lllllallmoN II one ol11 01rnpusee

•

and the University Ill ManteVIIIo Ofllr dqrees and progreme fou nd at fe w olher col leges In the
,

nation. Plus the Unlveliltr ol W•t Alllllmlllleldlng till WIY In cteveloplnQ a campus that Integrates lmamal
lechnologles lnloevery phlllllllllllldlnre oolllge 01-. • lhlplng Global Leadershlp-1n the mlltlary, ln lhe
boardroom, and In your hometown, A11blm1 01n prep1re you to take charge at your tuture. Troy State University

Dolhan and Auburn University Montgo111411Y 11'1 noled for training military leaders. In fact, both General Henry She lion.
chairman oflhe Joint Chiefs of Sllfl, lnd Generel Mlchaet Ryan, Air Force chief of staff. are AUM graduates. And the

011 tfw First Auu·lldl!lc/11 and tire !Jiff r.' ( k.il!hr.,.)

University at Alabama's nationally renkld techno-M.B.A. progr&lt;~m helps business execulives connect with success in the
new economy. • Pioneenng Heallh

Snort of the bull being heard on Wall
Bv JOHN CUNNIFF
the bull again .
NEW YORK - Like th e old pro who gets
Earlier thi s year, the monthly small bminess
wnttcn off after a bad game or two, this econ- optimi~m index had bee n in neg;nivc territoomy repeatedly comes su rgi ng bacli with a ry, indipting that the 1113JDrity of small -buliburst qf v igor that makes fools of critics.
· ness owners were l'XPL'Cting a wcJkcnmg
Critics in this instance ran ~e from authors, economy.
who in good times see k to peddle tornes
The National · Feder&lt;lti on of lmkpc11tlent
about recess ion and orlwr imminl'n t di ~iaste rs, Bu..,in eo.;s, wl1ich maim;~ ins the indl'x, ~ayo.; rbc
tu Federal Reserve governors who st·ek gllid- index i"' rising Jg;fio, with ow n er~ \I.'I Jo,;ing th.n
ance o nl y from the past.
the economic expansio n will l'Oiltinuc.
Once again th ~ re .1re indicatic;ns that the
" It may be thi . . ~cenario th.11 t'i drivin g thl'
old vet has not only defi ed a push toward renewed optimis111 fi)r ~rowth." li.tys ~cono­
rctiremcnt, but tha~ it is ki ckmg up irs heel ~ mist Udl !)unk cl lH:rg, who 11\,llllt.t in -; dll'
a~ain and havin g fun.
,
index , whose latl''.L ver-;iwl i'l b;N.-d un rt·porl 'l
Homebuilder&lt; can't keep up w ith th e (_f;:_om 561 small bulii,IC'I&lt;C\.
.
dema nd , intlatton J'i liO tame the· Federal
Maybe it'o,; b(..·cau"c nf rhis exp;l!l\lnn \ ·'W'
R est:rvc is resting, and ~while consumers an.: ~11·1d , that fL:w people rc.lii'V· rxpl'cted VL'l ;,
·-rooling it a bit, otht:r '-'CCton :ll'l' picking up much more tl·o1ll it. hut ito,; pnt()rlll.llln' h;,..,
dw slack.
·
repeatedly been lllldcrL''tinJ ,Itcd tur ci')'C.: w .1
Mood~ are shiftin g. ton. It m.1y be just
yeJr.
anothe r of the 'itock nurket\ tnck~.'bu t yo u ~ For exa111pil'. the: m.tti.JI go\'L·rn.mcJ H eqican lit'tl~C big inVe'lton. h,I\:C dl..'nded th&lt;Jt . lll.ltl" of ~ero ud -q u . 1rtn ( ; N J ~ &lt;11' ,tntlU ,liJ7cd
p nlt'' have dropped ~utlinl'nt l y tOr them to 'gro~o; doiac'lt;c prudlH l. \\",1'&gt; ~.~ pen T nt ( )ne
'i-lr.lpt· up lurga111'.
month ;lgo th~..· 1.'\r/tn:~.tl· w.1 ... r.li'L'd to :S.:'. PL'l
You t-.IJ"l't tru...r rlw lll,lllt'r, of nlu ro,;e, nor CL'll! . I ,1,t TI1u r,d.1y\ .111110tl!h.l'llh.'llt r. l hl'd rhc
thm~ "ex.pnt..,·~ who ci.ltlll to we 11110 Lhc
rc~Lc to :i.(J percent.
future . Uut the breeze\ ot~ ,Hltllll·ln \ice m to
Pc rhap' th ~o.· L'J rl y L.llll loll w;J ~ undtT,Lllld -:,
llavl:' reston;d optin11~111 that h.1d tlaggl'd in rhe abl e, &lt;&gt; in ce the ~.2 percem LHL' wao; .1 'uh~t.lll­
~umntt'T\ lw.1t, a!'Jd vou
t.l/1 hear the •murt of tial ~;·1 in ov~1 Lill' tJr,t qu .1rt'e 1 tllll lll ,Jh lcd r.1t c
.

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1nternationat' headlines by pinpointing the ongm of the AIDS virus-and are now moving closer.to developmg a
vaccine. Plus the University ot South Alabama's Bum c..twls a national leader in the development and use
ot anificial skin for bum victims. These renowned health care powerhouses also are pursuing new methods

www.thinkalabama.edu

'

'J
r.Jtcs i

•

4.K \)lTLT nt. Morcovl' r. rl\lli g mtel"l''t
wc rL' s u p p o~t·d to h ;JVL' coo led hu-.i Il L''' acti vi- ·
ry, and lllan y p~o.·opk W'..'H.' n'l lw inccd tiJ l 'Y lwd. ~
Moo,;r '\ llr~)ri,in g .1bout thl' Nrln .11HI o th er,
~ 11 1"\.l'Y' .II"L' ~ i gu' ti1Jt IntLltinn rcm,lim um'tmllcd . Afin .111alyz mg rco,;p o n'icli, I )unkeihl'r~
t(nt nd •·,l hinL ti1 .H th e nlnl1lL'Iltum in price

1)t

cats Innervations~The discovenes and advances made by Alabama's medical pioneers

are something everyone can feel good about. Reaearchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham recently made

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I

Str~et

hllw cilr lll~~ng

IIIah till wlllld? Allblllll MM Unlvllllty, Alhlnl Stata Untverslt)', Jacksonville Slats University,

'
·•
(Nr lf 1-lcul,!/f is r1 nar;ollrtlly rt/1()1/'Hcd llllliwriry •

•

You'll dill -

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01n htlp »GUI!IIIhtld. • CNtlng UniQue Lllrnlng Oeportunlti-What 01n Alabama

"Scllom."

BUSINESS MIRROR

possible answers. Your letters were wonderful.
Dear Readers: Thursday is National
Depression Screening Day. Once again,
the number is 1-800-242-2211 (TTY
for the hearing impaired: 1-800-8552880). If you are depressed, or know
someone who is, make that call today.
An alcohol problem? How can you
help yourself or someone you love?
"Alcoholism: How to Recognize It,
How to Deal With It, How to Conquer
It" will give you the answe.:S. Send a selfaddressed, long, business-size envelope
and a chet:k or money order for $3.75
(this includes postage and handling) to:
Alcohol. c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11 562, C hicago, Ill. 6061 1-0562. (In
Canada, send $4.55.) To find out more
about Ann Landers and read her past
columns, visit the Creators Syndicate
web page at www.creators.com . ·

MEIGS
COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

Stemwheel Riverfest scenes

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

: Today is Mond.1y, O ct. 2. the 27nth day of2000Jhere are 90 days
left in the year.
: Today's Highlight in Hi1tory:
; O n O ct. 2, I Y51l . the comic strip ''Peanuts," created by Charb M.
~ c hulz, was first published in nine m·wspapers.
· On thi s date:
: l.n 1780, Bri tish spy John Andre Wa&lt; hanged in Tappan, N.Y.
: In 1835 . the first battle of the T(xas Revolution took place a1
American &lt;ettlers defea ted a Mex1ca n cavalry ncar che Guada lupe
!liver.
: In 1890, comcd1an (.;rouc ho Marx was born in New York .
: In 1919. President Wilson 1uffcred ,1 stroke th at left him partially
P,aralyze d.
· In 1941 , .German armi e&lt; began Operation Typhoon- an all-ou t
drlve against M oscow.
' In 1944, Nazi troops cru shed th e 2-mmi~h - old Warsa&gt;v upri sing,
durmg which a quarter o f a million penple were killed.
. In 1958, the fo rm er French colony of Gmnea in We&lt;t Afri ca proclail11ed HS md epenJenfe.
.
In 19n7,Thurgood Marslu ll wxs 1worn 111 .11 an associate Jmti ce of
th e Supreme Court; he w.11 tl1e first black appointed to the nation'&lt;
highc . . t lOUTt.
~
In I 'J75, President ForJ welcomed j.1pan's Empemr Hirohito to
the United States.
In 19H5. actor R ock Hu rilon died at h~&lt; home 1n lleve rl y Hills,
Calif. , at age 5'J Jfter .1 bmle With AIDS.
Ten ye."H'i .tgo: l"ht· St:n.ltc vott..•t.l 1JO-&lt;) to confirm the nomtrL.Hion
of JudgL' J),l\· id H Souter tn rilL' ~uprt'lllt" Court. Pre"iH.lnlt Bmh,
trying to mu-.rn o~u t•pt:uH..:c t{&gt;r .1 S5fl0 bill1on p.tcbge of t.IX
increast'"i .md ~pt.·n dnJ g cuh, ,l,keJ Amr...'flL111'i _111 ,1 tdl'\'Jr.,ed addrl'""
to &lt;;uppnn rhc pl.1n
Five y~...·.n, .tgo: O.J. )n,np~on'.. JtlmT'i ~tun ned th1...' courtroo m .wd
t h ~. .· 11&lt;1t1o11 by rcKhmg n.'r~,.hrt~ 111 thr 'C:ll'i,ltlOJJ.Jielt{ht-lllOII th lllllr
der trLll m k·o.;o,; th.1n fi.mr lwuro,;. (T he dl'll'll ll fl \Va'&gt; kept ,~( ret untJ I
th ~.; rOilO\\llig dJ.y, when ll \\i,['-, ,Jt1110 UI1Cl'd rl1&lt;1t Simpo;on had bCL'Il
.ttqumed.)

Page A~

Reader looks to false recov'ered memOries for anSwer to strange behavior

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

•

ot prevention.

diagno~s.

and treatment for cancer, heal1 dlsaeae, and mucll more. • Developing New

Technologies-Alabama creates the maten~s to bold bell8r IIvas. Aubum unr,ersity is responsible
for revolutionary.developments in engineering, designing ovorything from stronger bridges
and roadways to more effective car airbags and bulletproof vests At the nigh -tech
University oi Alabama in Huntsville, sclenllsll appty their skrlls to creal!l
tlijh-temperature superconduclors and promising
new medicel devices .

hikL·~ JJ\ ,1~ b L· f~ l lilllg."'

\

In t:JCt, thL' i.ltL''i t gnvlTillllt'IH rep ort \\'nfi L'"i ·
t h ~..· h111t , \\ tth in!Lltio11 at"tu,Ji ly 111 m ll'r,1t1ng 111 :

ril e "L'L·o nd qu.1r~e r to .111 .ll~llt·l ,d r.Hc o(tl•'t 2. 1 ;
ptTCL'Ilf , do\\. 11 lro111 J.5 pcn.Ynt in the L';n-lin •
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thll't'- II HJili !J p l'l'I Od .

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doi ng ito; O\\- ~l 1 th in g. 11ot lln llti ng thL· ol d ru k~:
of ccononlil' h cluvinr bu t l·nuinh· nnt 'ifrH·t- :
ly uho,;ervin g th ~. .· n 1. rlm1~'i h,l\.L' dJ,.J il ~L·d
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k "S. l 11l too.,,.., l}t" bu lg1 ng co tKT, ,1ttL.·,t.
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0_P-Inion

Moncl.y. October 2, 1000 _

_Th_e_nail_·;:_YSe_n_ti.....
ne_I_ _ _..,...
_ ____

~m1.948

111 Court St., PolllefOy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

OIL
CO.
W.J. CUNTON

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

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

Dear Ann Landers:You printed a ietter
from "Crushed in California," whose
daughter, " Norma;' had been acting in a
bizarre fashion. She made horrible accusations about her parents, and was irrational when they tried to speak to her.
You said Norma might be mentally ill,
and suggested therapy. I'm afraid Norma
may already be seeing a therapist, who
could be the source of her problem.
Norma's odd behavior and hostile
ac~usations sound a lot like those false
recovered memories that were so popular a few years ago. This now-discredited
type of therapy was based o n the flaky
theory that all adult problems are the
result of some childhood trauma, the
memories of which have been repressed.
The. assumption was that as children,
these patients must have been sexually
abused by their parents in order for the
memories to be so deeply repressed,
Under this so-called "therapy," patients
are taught to recover these non-existent

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor .

Lany Boyer
Advertising Director

Chari- Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Ldten ro 1/u fiii.W ~ w~lcOIJU. TltcJ slw•ld btl fLu INut JOO words. AU letun ~ fMbj«t
to~~~~ IUid •DIN sifrwd 1111111 iltC'IMIIIIdnss Md wkpltoM tfiUfi!Mr: l\'o 11tui«Md WtkrJ •·ill
N l"'llJIQiwiL l...ulrn slrovld 6c Ut food,_,., ~niltf issuc;s;, tK14 P"Jl'IIIJliliLJ.

Tlu opUtiom a,qsSfti U. tlte rol11mt1 &amp;.tlow tJJY 1M con.m rsus of rile Ollia V.U.J f.IIIUiti111
Co.'s UiloriiU IHMrd. IUIItn 01Jt.erwin IIOfftL

NATIONAL ViEWS

.,

Dilemma
Gun buyback program diverts
crime-fighting funds
• American Press, Lake C harles, La., 011 gun buyback pro.~ram:
At fir.;t glance, a federal department'&lt; offer to fork over money tO
h~lp cities buy and destroy firearm&lt; looks great. ... A second glance,
however, "haws r;;tgn~ of J cla~~ir dilemma.
In order to get the tt-dt'r.:l.l gun-buybick mon~y, cities have to
divert their b\Vn anti-drug· money mto the new buyback program.
So, we have the unusual picture of Housing and lJeveloptnent
Sctretary Andrew Cuomo announrmg "in the memory of
Columbine the Buyback America pro~ram" at .the same time that
every city in Columbinr: ·~ home st~al· of Colorado was ,annou_n ci ng
that they wouldn't take pan m rill' progr;1m. ...
·
Under the program, city housing agn1cies operating under HUD
·are- encouraged ,to buy and dcqroy unwanred firearms. The gun
buybacks give c:1sh nr gifr certificue-; ranging from S25 to $1 SO for
e;,.:h tirea~m h.mded o;•er.
A total of H-l Citles have sig~1ed up, accounting tor' about $3 mi llion otthe $15 m.illion pledged by the C linton administration.
Co lunlbinc and m.tny orht·r cirieli art' passmg on the opportunity.
Tht· reason: Local housing agencie1 must spe nd S I00 of their own
arug-fighting money on the buyback program to ge t an ad ditional
$-l3 from HUD tor th r buyback program.
The gun buyback program has generated controversy, but not as
much over gun contra\ as over priorities. Whi\e an initial goal of
buying back 50.000 guns in 84 cities received mu ch attention, critin wen&gt; CJj-Jeltioning whether the program would -produce false
claims inst&lt;,'ad of genuine progress in cutting down crim e.
_That's not the basis for the objection registered by most cities. It's
the necessity of having to choose between two approac hes - b_uying back firearms. or fighting against illi cit drugs ....
• The Daily Oklahoman, Oklahoma City, 011 dismissing
VVI1itewatcr chmges:T he Whitewater investigation officially ended last
week"with the following moral: Som~times , you can get awav with
it.

lndepend&lt;;nt Counsel Roben l~ays 'legal conclusion that there
was insufti cient evi denc e tn indi ct Bill and Hillary Clinton was not
a. declaration of their inn ocence. R ather, it was a tribute to the ClmtOns' abiJiry to stOnewall inve;:&lt;;tigato r'\, o;ilenc~ potential witnesses and
riutlast prosecutors - much of it nn th e taxpayers' dime.
: By nature, corruption and tra ml cases are difficult to prove, and
th e Clinton&gt; proved adept at all the eva&lt;ive maneuvers that can be
~sed to hide their trail. .. .
: Claims of executive privilege bloc ked Investigators. Ev1dence wis
ti1rned ewe r 1lowly, if it was taunt! at all - remen1ber Hillary's miss~
iilg billing records. found I H uwnths after they were subpoen aed ....
, When history remember-; the Cl inton pre.:;idency,Whitewater will
· ~e right there. Perhaps such a stain on his legacy- along with C hiQagate. Monica Lewinsky and othe r umightly blotches- will serve
"' a type of justi ce: As well as Bill and llillary Clinton dodged
Whitewa ter's un;avory truths, the ;lfT:nr 's unanswered questions and
l~nger ing &lt;;uspicions will 'ihadow them fon:vcr.
]

~TODAY

IN HISTORY

fami li ~s. Read

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
memories.
Ask "Crushed" if her daughter is
receiving this type of therapy. If Norma's
" mental illness" is therapy-induced, it can
be corrected through treatment with a
legitimate therapist .who does not practice this nonsense. -- Lloyd in British
Columbia, Canada
Dear Lloyd: You've used some
extremely harsh language, but I go along
with every word you have written.
Thanks for another opportunity to
unmask those charlatans who destroy

on for more about

Norma:
· From Casper, Wyo.: This is for
"Crushed in California," whose daughter
is behaving strangely: Ten years. ago. my
sister-in- law began having memory
flashes. " Maureen" saw a therapist, but it ·
didn't help. One . day, she had a mild
seizure while eating lunch. It would have
gone unnoticed by most people, but her
lunch companion was a nurse who was
able to recognize the possible implica-,
tions. She suggested Maureen see a specialist, who dis~oveted that my siste't-inlaw had a brain tumor. Please tell
"Crushed" to check this out immediately. It could save her daughter's life.
Lancaster, Pa.: Tell "Crushed in Califor.nia" their daughter may be on drugs .
My older sister had a great job and a
bright future. She started abusing drugs,
and has been physically and verbally abusive to my -parents for the past 20 years.
We've tri ed hard to help her, but nothing

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October 2. 2000'·

works. The entire family is sick over this.
Columbus, Ohio: I'll bet Norma met
a new man who got her invoived with
one of the designer drugs. A frien? of
mine was convicted o( child endangerment because-she left h er young son with
her boyfriend, and the child ended. up in
the hospital with broken bones. Designer drugs ruined my friend's life.
No State: Two years ago, my daughter
and I were very close. Suddenly, her personality changed- so drastically, I could
not believe it was the same penon. She
was fired from her job, disappeared for
hours, forgot to pick up - her children,
stole money. wrote bad checks, and her
car was repossessed. We also discovered
she was using crystal methamphetamine.
She wa~ diagnosed as being bipolar, and
is now being treated for mental illness
and addiction. Tell N orma's parents that
this could be what is really going on .
Dear No State: You , and many other
kind readers, gave Norma"s parents some

MONDAY
Council . 32~, . Daughters of
C OOLVILLE
Whit~ s . Am erica . Tuesday, 7
p.m ..
Chapel Wesleyan Church, Inspection; members to wear·
Coolville, revival services,
white.
Monday through Oct. 8, 7 p.m .
evenings with a 10:30 a.m. serPOMEROY
Salisbury
vice_ on Sunday. R ev. Jim
Hord, evangelist.
Township Trustees, 6 p.m .
Tuesday at the hall.
RACINE - Racine Chapter 134, OES, Monday, at the
REEDSVILLE
· Olive
haiL Officers to be ele cted.
Township Trustees, regular
SYRACUSE
Sutton meeting, 6:30 p. m. on Tuesday
Township Trustees, Monday, at the township office on Joppa.
7:30 p.m., Syracuse Village Road. ·
Hall .

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HENTOFf'S VIEW

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reasons why Clinton wasn)t convicted.
.

The mo~t Jccurate account of the co ngn:ssiot)al role in the C linton· impeac hm ent has .
been wntten - from the inside - by David
Schippers.
A lifel o ng Chicago Deniocrar, · Sch i pper~
was app ointed by Republican Henry Hyde.
cha irman of the House Judi cia ry Com mi ttee,
as rhicf investigativt co un~el during rhc proceedings that led to the impeachment - but
4' not the conviction - of the president, who
now says that he "saved tl}e Constitution of
the United States" by fighting for his acquit-

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Nat
Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST

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Schippers has voteJ twi ce for C linton. " I'm Trial of Preside nt C linton" {Harvard Univergoing to spend some time in purgatory for sity Press), by Rich ard 1:osncr, chief judge of
that," says Sc hipp ers, a practicing Catholi c.
' the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals .
Although Sc hippers had led the Justice
Th e citizenry depended on the media, not
Department's Organized Crime and Racke- Judge Posner, to find out what was go ing on.
teering Unit under Attorn ey General Robert But because most reponers and editors let
Kennedy, he had been away from Washington themselves become ~Cntanglcd by the White
a long time -· working as a ski lle'd trial attor- House's expert spinners, the constant popu l.J:ney in Chicago - before returning to th e ity po lls showed that most Amen cam be li eved
O rwellian morality of a ca pital in which lead- that Ken Starr and the Republican impeach ers of both parties are ·m esmerized by polls ment ma nagers - not the presidct1t - · had
and chronica ll y accustomed to lying as a way defiled the Constitution. T h ey thou ght tha t
of sur viv;lL
th e president had only lied ab o ut a private sex
I lis new book, " Sellout" (Regnery), written misstep.
Accordingly, as Schippers sh ows in appalling
Wi th Ala n H enry, a widely ex peri enced inves~i~ltiv~ journalist, has not rcc~:: i ved anyw herw detail, the R epub!'ican leadership in the Senas frightened by the p olII as I )racu la
ne&lt;~r the atten tion it merits in the media: ate That's not surprising, since the pre&lt;s. in all its co nfnmteJ by a cross- fo rbade an auth~ntic
tria l o f the president. The intim ida ted leader&lt;
form s, failed - With very few exceptions to cover rhe fum..lamellt&lt;Jl st~ry of why Clin- prcvc;_n ted the Home managers fi·om c;~llin~
li ve witnesses. They insisted t h at the manager~
ton was impeached.
In "Sell out." Schip pers specifi cally exposes ' present only a portion of th e evidence that
the maino.;tream press's shallow downplayin g of Sc hipp ers and his tea m of investi gators lu d
C linton 's rampant violations of th e Constitu- gathered using their extensive fe deral and
tion ; obstr uction of justice, including tamperL police experience.
While Senate R epublicans, led by th e
ing with witnesses; se rial perJ u ry; &lt;md abuse pf
pompously
'ineffcctive Trent Lott, rescue d th e
powe r. H 1s perva."ive
.
contt;mpt for the Co!'l-,
stituti on has also been detailed in "An Affair prCsi dent ti-om co nviction (bu.t nnl tfo m hisof State: T he Investigation; Impeachment, and tory) , congressional Democrats were deter-

minl'd to hid~o.· tlw cYidcno..'l..', nnt only ll·o m rlu: ,
p1iblic. bu t :1 ho fi·mn tli cl lht'h-c o:.
A-:. Lhc I l o u ,~· \\,1\ deciding \\ ht' rl ll'r to .•
illlpe.l~o.·h th~o.· prt:~ ;d~,.·lH. SchippLT' 'oLJ liP .1
,cc un.: L'VJdt' lil'l' room r,toch· . . l \\"ith \ 'iLko'. 1
t.lp L''· tr.m,ntJH". ",qtl'lllL'Ilt' .111d I"L'ptlrt'l. Not
.1 'i nglc ll m i"L' l )cnHH ul w~o.·1H imu th.n mum.
to cx,unill L' th L· ~,.·,· id t'lll"l' . hut h:1 R~..·pllbli c tn\ ·
thd.
Wlwn thL· ~'K'Il ,ltt.' \\',1-:. dLT Hhn t; whether to _'/
convict· the president, tb t• ev iden ce room was "
o,;rill opt'll. Bttr ,\\ ~ c h l ppt' P-. IH HL'\ in "~L· I,lout,''- .
" nin m1c.: .;etl,lt or" of citlH.: r p.trty "tt HJk th e
tim~ tu n:vil..'\\' tht' l·,· idl'IK~· my . . ra tr lu d ·•
ga thaed ."
,
Th L'IT 1~ Olll' othl'r hook th.ll j.., l'"L'Jlli ,ll Ill '
undn'-lti.l llding why C linton ,]wul~.i h,t\'l' hl'l:l1 :
co nvicted . "Truth' .Jt Any Co&lt;t.". '( 1-i.JrpcT-·,
Collnh) t\ by two rc.:porrcro,; w ho were nor:
tlmJWII otT cu Hrw hy rhe pn·,Jdclll \ _i.mit.ll'IL''I
•wth in .md u ut o f the Whltc GI I&lt;Hl \L.'. Sm,m
Schmidt of the W,l, hington Po't .1nd Mich.11...'L
Wei«kopthave. like Schlpfwr;. prm'Jcbl v·.du Jblc sourn· mate rial l(n future lli'ltun.Jm; the1r ""
book, tdo: h.1 s .dso been ignorl·d or tr,l'dll..: d by
m(ls t of' the preso.; ,
Tht• New York Titll ~'- Uook Review i..'VL'Il
assigned ;1 my"'tny wntt'r- a person without
e\'C.:!I '\l.'cond-Jund rep.o t:ting kn(&gt;wkdgc of
the ~'~' hington minCtielch - · tq nuk ~. · fun of •
"Trmh ,n Any C:o,r."
I ho pe that ll rian Lamb will lm ng \lli JJe
sun light tt&gt; th e &lt;lw low pl.1y nf the impeJchtlll'nt by im·iting Da vid Schippe r..; to bl· on CSpan's "Book Nnte"i." He \ al n:;uly bt:&gt;cn on C -.:
Span in .l k s..,- t(H:"Usl·d contl'xt. And I hope ,.
pl'opk around t h e cou n try \vho t H..'Ver get
i11vited to \)'i/a"ih lll gton parries w il l ~t't Sc hipp~o.· r~· ddi:lntl y h o n e~t- and acc ur;'Jt-t' ly ritl e. d :
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The streets, sidewalks and shores of
the Pt&gt;meroyjMiddleport area were
busy this weekend as the Sternwheel
Riverfest wrapped up. Above, six sternwheelers line the levee Saturday. Top
right, t,he Veterans of Foreign Wars
lead the parade down Main Street.
Bottom right, Gov. Bob Taft and first
lady ·Hope Taft walk the streets of
downtown. (Sentinel staff photos)

The Community Calen- ·
dar is published as a free '
service to non-profit
" '
groups wishing to
LETART Letart Townannounce rneftings and
ship Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m .
~ special events. The calen-at the office building.
dar is not designed to proCARPENTER - Colummote sales or fund raisers ·
bia Township Trustees, Mon of any type. Items are
day, 7:30 p.m. at the Fire
printed only as space per- ·
Department.
mits and cannot be guar~
anteed to be printed a '
TUESDAY
specific number of days .
CHESTER
Chester
. -~-- - ·

·POMEROY - Friends of
the Library, fvlonday, 7 p.m at
the Pomeroy Library.

Alabama: a
pubHc unMirsltlss olllr ubWdi'*Y ~
and out-of-tha-ordlnary opiiOIIUnlllll tiD lllm,IIIOOIId, ....,
and grew. Eliplora till 1111 and eala 111, business, lllll_.dllllllualllon,
· heallh

cal!, and lllllallmoN II one ol11 01rnpusee

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and the University Ill ManteVIIIo Ofllr dqrees and progreme fou nd at fe w olher col leges In the
,

nation. Plus the Unlveliltr ol W•t Alllllmlllleldlng till WIY In cteveloplnQ a campus that Integrates lmamal
lechnologles lnloevery phlllllllllllldlnre oolllge 01-. • lhlplng Global Leadershlp-1n the mlltlary, ln lhe
boardroom, and In your hometown, A11blm1 01n prep1re you to take charge at your tuture. Troy State University

Dolhan and Auburn University Montgo111411Y 11'1 noled for training military leaders. In fact, both General Henry She lion.
chairman oflhe Joint Chiefs of Sllfl, lnd Generel Mlchaet Ryan, Air Force chief of staff. are AUM graduates. And the

011 tfw First Auu·lldl!lc/11 and tire !Jiff r.' ( k.il!hr.,.)

University at Alabama's nationally renkld techno-M.B.A. progr&lt;~m helps business execulives connect with success in the
new economy. • Pioneenng Heallh

Snort of the bull being heard on Wall
Bv JOHN CUNNIFF
the bull again .
NEW YORK - Like th e old pro who gets
Earlier thi s year, the monthly small bminess
wnttcn off after a bad game or two, this econ- optimi~m index had bee n in neg;nivc territoomy repeatedly comes su rgi ng bacli with a ry, indipting that the 1113JDrity of small -buliburst qf v igor that makes fools of critics.
· ness owners were l'XPL'Cting a wcJkcnmg
Critics in this instance ran ~e from authors, economy.
who in good times see k to peddle tornes
The National · Feder&lt;lti on of lmkpc11tlent
about recess ion and orlwr imminl'n t di ~iaste rs, Bu..,in eo.;s, wl1ich maim;~ ins the indl'x, ~ayo.; rbc
tu Federal Reserve governors who st·ek gllid- index i"' rising Jg;fio, with ow n er~ \I.'I Jo,;ing th.n
ance o nl y from the past.
the economic expansio n will l'Oiltinuc.
Once again th ~ re .1re indicatic;ns that the
" It may be thi . . ~cenario th.11 t'i drivin g thl'
old vet has not only defi ed a push toward renewed optimis111 fi)r ~rowth." li.tys ~cono­
rctiremcnt, but tha~ it is ki ckmg up irs heel ~ mist Udl !)unk cl lH:rg, who 11\,llllt.t in -; dll'
a~ain and havin g fun.
,
index , whose latl''.L ver-;iwl i'l b;N.-d un rt·porl 'l
Homebuilder&lt; can't keep up w ith th e (_f;:_om 561 small bulii,IC'I&lt;C\.
.
dema nd , intlatton J'i liO tame the· Federal
Maybe it'o,; b(..·cau"c nf rhis exp;l!l\lnn \ ·'W'
R est:rvc is resting, and ~while consumers an.: ~11·1d , that fL:w people rc.lii'V· rxpl'cted VL'l ;,
·-rooling it a bit, otht:r '-'CCton :ll'l' picking up much more tl·o1ll it. hut ito,; pnt()rlll.llln' h;,..,
dw slack.
·
repeatedly been lllldcrL''tinJ ,Itcd tur ci')'C.: w .1
Mood~ are shiftin g. ton. It m.1y be just
yeJr.
anothe r of the 'itock nurket\ tnck~.'bu t yo u ~ For exa111pil'. the: m.tti.JI go\'L·rn.mcJ H eqican lit'tl~C big inVe'lton. h,I\:C dl..'nded th&lt;Jt . lll.ltl" of ~ero ud -q u . 1rtn ( ; N J ~ &lt;11' ,tntlU ,liJ7cd
p nlt'' have dropped ~utlinl'nt l y tOr them to 'gro~o; doiac'lt;c prudlH l. \\",1'&gt; ~.~ pen T nt ( )ne
'i-lr.lpt· up lurga111'.
month ;lgo th~..· 1.'\r/tn:~.tl· w.1 ... r.li'L'd to :S.:'. PL'l
You t-.IJ"l't tru...r rlw lll,lllt'r, of nlu ro,;e, nor CL'll! . I ,1,t TI1u r,d.1y\ .111110tl!h.l'llh.'llt r. l hl'd rhc
thm~ "ex.pnt..,·~ who ci.ltlll to we 11110 Lhc
rc~Lc to :i.(J percent.
future . Uut the breeze\ ot~ ,Hltllll·ln \ice m to
Pc rhap' th ~o.· L'J rl y L.llll loll w;J ~ undtT,Lllld -:,
llavl:' reston;d optin11~111 that h.1d tlaggl'd in rhe abl e, &lt;&gt; in ce the ~.2 percem LHL' wao; .1 'uh~t.lll­
~umntt'T\ lw.1t, a!'Jd vou
t.l/1 hear the •murt of tial ~;·1 in ov~1 Lill' tJr,t qu .1rt'e 1 tllll lll ,Jh lcd r.1t c
.

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1nternationat' headlines by pinpointing the ongm of the AIDS virus-and are now moving closer.to developmg a
vaccine. Plus the University ot South Alabama's Bum c..twls a national leader in the development and use
ot anificial skin for bum victims. These renowned health care powerhouses also are pursuing new methods

www.thinkalabama.edu

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4.K \)lTLT nt. Morcovl' r. rl\lli g mtel"l''t
wc rL' s u p p o~t·d to h ;JVL' coo led hu-.i Il L''' acti vi- ·
ry, and lllan y p~o.·opk W'..'H.' n'l lw inccd tiJ l 'Y lwd. ~
Moo,;r '\ llr~)ri,in g .1bout thl' Nrln .11HI o th er,
~ 11 1"\.l'Y' .II"L' ~ i gu' ti1Jt IntLltinn rcm,lim um'tmllcd . Afin .111alyz mg rco,;p o n'icli, I )unkeihl'r~
t(nt nd •·,l hinL ti1 .H th e nlnl1lL'Iltum in price

1)t

cats Innervations~The discovenes and advances made by Alabama's medical pioneers

are something everyone can feel good about. Reaearchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham recently made

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Str~et

hllw cilr lll~~ng

IIIah till wlllld? Allblllll MM Unlvllllty, Alhlnl Stata Untverslt)', Jacksonville Slats University,

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"Scllom."

BUSINESS MIRROR

possible answers. Your letters were wonderful.
Dear Readers: Thursday is National
Depression Screening Day. Once again,
the number is 1-800-242-2211 (TTY
for the hearing impaired: 1-800-8552880). If you are depressed, or know
someone who is, make that call today.
An alcohol problem? How can you
help yourself or someone you love?
"Alcoholism: How to Recognize It,
How to Deal With It, How to Conquer
It" will give you the answe.:S. Send a selfaddressed, long, business-size envelope
and a chet:k or money order for $3.75
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Alcohol. c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
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MEIGS
COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

Stemwheel Riverfest scenes

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

: Today is Mond.1y, O ct. 2. the 27nth day of2000Jhere are 90 days
left in the year.
: Today's Highlight in Hi1tory:
; O n O ct. 2, I Y51l . the comic strip ''Peanuts," created by Charb M.
~ c hulz, was first published in nine m·wspapers.
· On thi s date:
: l.n 1780, Bri tish spy John Andre Wa&lt; hanged in Tappan, N.Y.
: In 1835 . the first battle of the T(xas Revolution took place a1
American &lt;ettlers defea ted a Mex1ca n cavalry ncar che Guada lupe
!liver.
: In 1890, comcd1an (.;rouc ho Marx was born in New York .
: In 1919. President Wilson 1uffcred ,1 stroke th at left him partially
P,aralyze d.
· In 1941 , .German armi e&lt; began Operation Typhoon- an all-ou t
drlve against M oscow.
' In 1944, Nazi troops cru shed th e 2-mmi~h - old Warsa&gt;v upri sing,
durmg which a quarter o f a million penple were killed.
. In 1958, the fo rm er French colony of Gmnea in We&lt;t Afri ca proclail11ed HS md epenJenfe.
.
In 19n7,Thurgood Marslu ll wxs 1worn 111 .11 an associate Jmti ce of
th e Supreme Court; he w.11 tl1e first black appointed to the nation'&lt;
highc . . t lOUTt.
~
In I 'J75, President ForJ welcomed j.1pan's Empemr Hirohito to
the United States.
In 19H5. actor R ock Hu rilon died at h~&lt; home 1n lleve rl y Hills,
Calif. , at age 5'J Jfter .1 bmle With AIDS.
Ten ye."H'i .tgo: l"ht· St:n.ltc vott..•t.l 1JO-&lt;) to confirm the nomtrL.Hion
of JudgL' J),l\· id H Souter tn rilL' ~uprt'lllt" Court. Pre"iH.lnlt Bmh,
trying to mu-.rn o~u t•pt:uH..:c t{&gt;r .1 S5fl0 bill1on p.tcbge of t.IX
increast'"i .md ~pt.·n dnJ g cuh, ,l,keJ Amr...'flL111'i _111 ,1 tdl'\'Jr.,ed addrl'""
to &lt;;uppnn rhc pl.1n
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t h ~. .· 11&lt;1t1o11 by rcKhmg n.'r~,.hrt~ 111 thr 'C:ll'i,ltlOJJ.Jielt{ht-lllOII th lllllr
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th ~.; rOilO\\llig dJ.y, when ll \\i,['-, ,Jt1110 UI1Cl'd rl1&lt;1t Simpo;on had bCL'Il
.ttqumed.)

Page A~

Reader looks to false recov'ered memOries for anSwer to strange behavior

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

•

ot prevention.

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and treatment for cancer, heal1 dlsaeae, and mucll more. • Developing New

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Page AS • The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
roamer pthst investigated
NEW YORK (AP)- A renred pnesr who gave food ro rhe homelas and JObs to the unemployed is bemg mvestigated for the theft of
~ million from his church, authorities said.
Monsignor Thom,as Gradilone, who retired last year after running
the Our lady Queen of Martyrs Church i11 Queens for almost 20
)Tan, is being investigated by the piocese of Brooklyn and Qu""n~
and the Queens district attorney's office, church offiCials sa1d Sunday.
~1 have learned that substantial sums of money have passed from
Monsignor Gradilone to one or more individuals in amounts that
~ady exceed the bounds of charity," Bishop Thomas Daily, who
heads the diocese, told shocked parishioners at a Mass on Sunday.
Church officials·alerted District Attorney Richard Brown about the
missing millions of dollar&gt;, two weeks ago. Brown's office acknowledged the investigation Sunday but declined to comment on it.
The church, established in 1917, is one of the largest and richest in
the diocese, which serves 1.6 million Catholics in Brooklyn and
Queens. It raises about $9,300 in collectmns each Sunday
Daily said Gradilone told hun that the miSsing mo.ney w.1s donated til the needy but that he was unable to recall the namt'l of the imhviduals and organiz.1tions that received it.
. Gradilone, 75, hves m a facili ty outside the diocese mel could not
.. ~ reached for conmtcnr.
Daily. the bishop. asked the parishioners to pray tlw Gr,,dilon~· "will
be relieved of whatt.·ver pressures have caused him {O n1.1kt&gt; tht'SC yet
unC"xplained, totally unacc~ ptablc- . fin.mcl.1J tr JltSJ..:tions .111d that h-..·
will be cooperaun.• \\'Hh the investig.ttion.''

•ncy

Mon~ay,

Pomeroy, MJddieport, Ohio

'

October 2, 2000-

Fuel-stingy vehicles o~umbered in showrooms
WASHINGTON (AP) -While a handful
of small cars arc getting 40-plus miles per gallon, dw vast llll]Ortty of ne\v vehicles coming
, mtn showrooms get about half that, the govern. ment·s latest autumobLit.' fuel ~cunomy "iLlristics
show
'For the second year, a hybnd gas- and electric-powered vchtcle -. the t'.vo-seJter Honda
Insight - topped the liSt of btggesr fuel misers
with 64 mpg co mbined city and high,~ay driving :i.mong 2001-model vehicfes. It was followed by anoth&lt;'r hybria; the Toyota Prius, and
three Volkswagen d1esel car;.
The huge popularity of sport utility vehicles
again drove down th~ overall numbers of the
nlore than 800 cars. trucks and \'ans hs;tc:.d in the
anriual fuel economy s tansttc~ released Monday
by the: Environmental Protection Agency.
Avt·rage fuel economy for .358 n10dds or

variations ofSUVs, vans and pickup trucks was
just over 18 mpg, compared with 23.6 mpg for
neatly 500 em on the EPA list.
King-SJze SUVs such as the Ford Expedition, lincoln Navigator and Dodge Durango
and their twin pickups accounted for 12 of the
36 vehicles on the ·list with the worst gas
mileage, all with 12 mpg or less in city dri~ing
and 17 mpg or less on th( .highway.
The luxury sport import · Ferrar-i 500
Maranello was the biggest ~r (8 city and 13
highway) followed by the lamborghini Diablo
(10 city, 13 highway).
·
With the growing popularity - even with
high fuel costs - of minivans and SUVs, the
overall fuel economy for all veli.icles continued
a steady decline that has been under way since
the late 1980s, when average fuel economy for
all vehicles was nearly 26 mpg.

'

Bush begins trip to Boston
AUSTIN, Texas • (A P)
Gcurgt.: W Uu~ h IIi hL·:-.dmg to
th~ tina sho\\'do\\'n with AI
Gore , enrollraged by llL'\\'S thr..·
two an: tied in tr.lditiotHily
Dcmocratic-k·aning stltL'S.
At his ranrh in Cr.l\\'ford.
Texas. J two...:hour drive from
Austin , the . Rc·publican presidcnti;ll nomine e ;md Tex:1s .go\'t'rnor said over the weL"kend
that he sees tht• resr of the election campaign as a sp rint.
"We 'vc got five weeks to go."
he said. "Three weeks of debates
and two wet"ks of turning nut
the vote. l like to come here to
this place to get my batceries
recharged . It helps dear m y
mind."
&lt;&gt;
Bush was stopping Monday
in traditionally Democratic West
Virginia, on his way to. Boston
fin the ca ndidates' first ,debate,
potentially&gt;the most influential
&lt;&gt;f any presidential election since
1960.
·Meanwhile, his campaign was
tounng polls in West Virginia
and in Gore's native Tennessee·
showing the two tied, as they are
nationwide.
.. No matter . how you cut it,

saambles to move refugees

i\TLANTA (AP)- The walls arc covered in grime and bugs crawl
t."Vef)'\Vhere in the Atlanta apartmem where Nyator Gany lives with
her four children after fleeing her native Sudan bee&lt;~ use of nvil \~·ar .
Gany and dozens of other refugees who were put in the crime-ridden apartment complex by Catholic Social Setvic~s said they pleaded for help t"rom agency sonal workers but received nothing but broken promises.
"The refugee camp was better than he;e,' ' Gany said.
On Sunday, employees and volunteers with Catholic Social Services began moving Gany and other refugees into temporary quarters
at a hotel .
"This is clearly not acceptable," said Kathi Stearns, vice chancellor
in charge of special projects for the Archdiocese of Atlanta. " What I
saw on Friday was so horrid I don't evenlhave words to describe it."
Catholic Social Services, which takes hundreds of thousands of feder.d dolla,.., has been resetiling refugees Ill the same apartments for at .
least five years and its social workers staff an office there. Officials of
the Archdiocese of Adanta said they became aware of the conditions
there last Week.
"I \va.lked into one house and there were 150 roaches on the wall,"
Stearns said. "When something like that happens, you ca n look the
other way or you can solve the problem. l think every night we leave
them here is a risk."
. The State Department, which pays for refugee resetdement programs in dozens of American cities, routinely inspects those programs
but has refused to release copies of any of its findings, The Adanta
Journal-Constitution reported. The newspaper filed suit in federal
court Thursday after the State Department refused to respond to
requests for the rep.orts filed in April.

.t hat's good news for Governor

Hush," said spokesman Ari Fleischer. "The vice president is

:-tru ggling to C\\;n b~ in th~.· race
1ll pbct.~s \\'hac h-..~ should have
~l' \\' 11 up .1!ong tintr..' ago."
Tlut':-; true for Bush, too, in
Flond,. where hiS brother Jeb is
gon·rnor and the- le-gislature- is
Republican-run . Gore, who is
bc·1ng outspent by Bush· there,
spe m the we~:kend practicing
f(H· Jebates in SaraScfta.
BliSh's campaign still had not
been updated Sunday by the
FBI on reports that it had intensified its probe into who sent a
p.Kkage of the GOP nonunee's
dt~bart?' preparanon material to
Gore 's campaign last month,
FleiScher ~a1d . Agents inter,·iewed . Bush 's chief strategist,
Karl Rove, on Saturday.
Lowehng exP.ectations, doing
well 111 the debate and winning
the game of electoral math is the
key to th e candidates' strategy,
five weeks before. Election Day.
Bush .was going forcsymboiISm Monday by attending a rally
w1th West Virginia Gov: Cecil
Underwood in Huntington,
W.Va , The state, whose economy
his heavily dependent on coal
nuning, also
complements
Bush's speech Friday ori energy
policy
·

In the latest statistics, mileoge ranged widely
even within various size classes, and in sonte
cases even withm bke groups of cars. made by
the same manufacturer. Among compacts, fot
example, the Volkswagen Passat average 20 mpg,
compared with the Volkswagen Jecta and Golf
diesl:ls' 45 mpg average.
Among midsize cars, the Mazda 626 and
Honda Accord reporred the best combined
city-highw•y mileage of 29 mpg, while the
worst in that category were the luxury Rolls
Royce Silver Seraph and Bendey Arnage, both
at 13 mpg. Most em .111 the category came in
the low- to mid-20s mpg.
"Choosing the most fuel-efficient vehicles in
a class can save the owner at least $1 ,500 in fuel
costs," said EPA Administrator Carol Browner,
and reduce carbon dioXJde ~:ntissions which
contribute to global warming.

1,,

Workers discount claim that

·Gore threatens auto industry
LANSING, Mich . (AP) Flush with ov~rtime pJy and on
track for another year of record
vehicle sales, auto workers don't
set:m to ~:my Republi ca n Gov.
John Engler's message tllat AI
Gore's environmental VIews
threaten Michigan 's economy.
In fact, it's hard to find many
people in the auto indus~ry executives or union tnembers who accept the argument that
the Democratic presidential
nominee .would throw a monkey
wrench into the· auto industry if
he wins the White House in
November.
James Owensby, 53, who
works on the assembly line at
the. Delphi Automotive Systems
Corp. plant in Saginaw, Mich.,
thinks it's only a matter of time
before other politicians start
echoing Gore's call for automobiles that pollute less and go farther on a gallon of gas.
"We're going to be thrust to
come up with engines that are
more fuel-efficient and even
gas-free .... We need to evolve
with it," Owensby said. "I
undbrstand that he's pro-environment .... But AI Gore, he's my

..
man.
.

tim es rn the .wto
indu~trv :md ·t ht· •utwnal ceonomi c Doom make workas lc:ss
likdy to buy the d&lt;iom-andgloom Ftepubb can me ssage, said
Craig Ruff nf Publi c Sector
Consultants, a think tank in
olansing. Mi c h.
"Times arc too good right
now. Peop le arcn 't worried,''
Ruff sa id. "They just can't see
that ... anything a president can
do can harm their job securiry."
Desp'ite signs their campaign
may be going unheard, Republicans are working hard to make
Gore unpabtable to auto workers, many of them swing voters
expected to help d'ecide the
presidential election in this crucial battleground state.
A Sept. 26-28 poll of 600
likely Mi c h1gan voters by
EPIC / MRA of Lansing, Mi ch. ,
shows Gore leading GOP presi d e ntial ca ndidate George W.
Bush 45 percent to 3&lt;) percent,
with Green Party candidate
Ralph Nader. getting 3 percent
and 13 percent undecided. The
poll ha1 a margin of error of 4
perct: nu ge points either way.
Cood

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Inside:

The Daily Sentin£11

J

Page 81
Monday, October 2, 2000

MONDAY'S

HlGHLIGHTI
.Prep·Spoits
Vol~··

.

_
Saturday a Mlilches •
South Gallia del. Hannan, 15·6,
15-1
· South Gallia def. Eastern, 15·13,
' 14·16, 15-6
Morgan del. South Gallia, 15-12,
15·6
Today's Match ·
South Gallia at Federal Hocking,
6:00
Tuesday's Matches
Warren at Gallia Academy, 5:15
Jackson at River Valley, 5:15
Miller at Southern. 5:55
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 5:55
Meigs at Belpre, 5:55

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MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) - Tony
'!Last year l felt .like I really stru ggled
The 13th and final caution of the day
Stewart is rethinking his dislike of Mar- and l dreaded coming here, not because of was being cleaned up, and Earnhatdt's_
· tinsville Speedway. He n.tight even be the people, but just because of ihe race black car was right behind Stewart's.
using it as a· barometer of his develop- and the racetrack ," he said.
When the green Oag flew with II laps to
ment
This rime, the NAPA SilO tutned into a go, the crowd was buzzing in anticipation
Stewart, who talked all week of not lik ~ career highlight for the second-year Win- of Earnhardt doing )Omething newsworing the crowded, .526-mile oval, followed ston Cup star, who also took over the thy.
his second straight record-setting pole vic - series lead with five victories, won conIt, never happened. The flag flew, and so
tory here with an equally impressive vic - secutive races for the third time and won did Stewart, pulhng away comfortably and
leaving Earnhardt holding off Jeff Burton
tory Sunday that left him feeling great for the eighth rime overall .
about hiniself and his team.
The end of the race set up as a duel for second place.
"I couldn 't catch him," a disappointed
" l feel like I've made great gains here , between Stewart and Earnhardt, a sevenbut I think (crew chief Greg Zipadelli) time champion not known for treating Earnhardt said. " If l cou ld have got to
· and the guys have made gre:it gains· here, " the young guns well, especially not with a · him, it would haw been good, but I
too," Stewart said after running away fium victory on th~ line and a ch ::~t i1pionship cou1dn ·~ catch him ."
Stewart admitted to needing calming
a possible duel with Dale Earnhardt over close enough that :The Intim idator" can
words
from Zipadelli while' preparing t0.1o
the final 11 laps.
smell it.

Cross Country

• 6 hp • 21-lnch steel deck

Stover \Vas a member of th e
prev10us Brown s franchise
when it was tnoved to Baltimore after the i995 season by
owne r Art Mod ell. He converted tield goals of 45, 30, 44 and
22 yards as the R avens' offense
'
.
.
conn nually faltered as it got
Olll
LOI ISCC LitlV t'
opponeiH~
while kicker Matt Stover sup- close to the end zo ne .
Th e same held true tor th e
plied what offemc there was in
a 12-11 victory over the Cleve- tlrtl\~ns (2-.1), limited to 23
rushing yards on 13 attempts by
land Urowns o n Su11day.
Some of the bi ggest cheers of the NFL's top defense against
tht· d.1y came when' updates the ru n.
Quarterback Tim Couch was
were Dashed on the scorebo ard
from the lndiam' g&lt;1mc again"r hit hard by Sam Adams after the
Toronto at nearby Ja cobs Field. Browns' only substantial gainer
They won 11 - 4 to maintain of the first half- a 38-yard pass
\O David Patten ~ and Couch
their tlickering playoff hopes.
The Ra vens di,ln 't give had to be helped off the field
CJeveland \ footb all fam much with a hyperext ended right
knee.
to shou t ,\bout.
"~) ur dcft•nlil: \vas magnitl"When he went down , I
ccnt," Baltilllnre coach Brian thought 'he was gone for the
year," Hrown s coach Chm
Billic k said.
The shu tout wa\ Bal timore 's Palm er said. "He was in a great
third of the season . The R ave ns deal of pain."
(4-1). \\·· Ito beat Cincinnati 37-11
The pass play resu lted Ill a
lm week, bcc.une the first NFL first down at the Baltim ore ll.
tea m to stri ng toF:tthcr shuto uts but fullback Marc Edwards
' inn• the 19H5 f:hirago Bears fumb led 011 die next two pl.1ys.
be.lt Dallas 44-0 and Atlanta 31i- He recovered the fir st 'o ne himself, hut Woodson fell on the
{) In SUCC&lt;.' S'&gt;l)/l' g&lt;Hllt'S.
"We were n.·silicnt ," said co r- second in the end zone to snulf
ncrlu ck' Rod Woodson, who the threat . ·
intern;ptc d a pas\ ~1 11d recovered
Couch sat out the re st of the
first
half, but returned in the
a tinnbl c in tht· en d zone. "They
.mowd the b,tll o n us pretry third quarrer to co mplete seven
good. It 'ihows thl' dur,Ktcr of of. nine passes in a drive that
took th e Browns to the Balti th i~ ddt·mc.·:
,
The R&lt;~ven s di scuS&gt;cd anoth- more 19. But on first down, his
t'r 'i huto ut in their \\'orkouts thi' pass to Dennis Northcutt was
picked off by linebacker Ray .
\Vt'l' k.
" We threw that out to our Lewis, who caught it with one
h;md.
~u ys .lS ,\ challenge cmd rha t 1~
" I thouf(ht we wuld ha ve
no JJ..,re~pcct to tJH' Bn)Wil"i. lt
didn't lllJttcr ,who we were
Please see Browns, Page Bl
uH nm g iu a~ainst._l' Billi ck :-;ait}.

NEWS &amp; NOTES

Meip sweeps Vinton
Cou. Junior h1gh netters
UNDATED The Meigs
eighth-grade girls volleyball team
defeated Vinton County 15-10,
15-8.
Megan Garnes led Meigs with
two aces and a kill . Renee Naily
had an ace and kill and Erin Cullums and Emily Ashley each
recorded kills for the Maraude-rs

(8-1).
The Meib" seventh-grade team
debted Vititon County 12-15,
15-H, I 5-H.
"
Hrittany Hysell had a pair of
aces for Meib"· while Joey Haning
and Miranda had an ace apiece.
The Marauders improved io 7-

. OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - The
Oakland Athletics clinchc'C! the
AL West title with ·a 3-11 victory
over the Texas Rangers that set up
a first-round playoff series against
the New York Yankees. The A's , in
the playoffs for the first time since
1992, join Atlanta as the only
teams with 11 division titles.

Mariners headed
to playoffs

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Phils fire Francona
MIAMI (AP) Philadelphia
Phillies manager Terry Francona
was fired after a season in which
his team tied th e Chicago CDbs
for the worst record in the majors
at 65-97.
.

Duval wins
Buick Challenge

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PINE MOUNTAIN, Ga. (AP)
David Duval won't have to
.mswf,;"r any more que"itions about
h(s back injury. Or wmning.
Playi ng for the first time in 10
week s, Duval.showcd he might be
ready to take a mn at Tiger
Woods, makin g birdies on three''"
of the last four holes to win the
lluick Chall enge.
He closed with a 7-under 65
and finished at 1'9- under 21j9, two
strokes ahead of Nick Price (68)
andJeffMaggcrt (70), for the for·mer Georgia Tech star's first vi ctory in 29 tournaments .
Duval, who earned $414 ,000. ,
has 12 career victories to beco me
only the third aciive player w1th
that many wins in his 20s.

'

Othe'
•

"'"'"''""'and teJms may tJe ""'''"''.'"''""' tnstellrronl r"'"'"i
and foanctn&amp; fo' oomm""'' use. A»laOie at
,

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•

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Please see NASCAR. Page Bl

CLEVELAND
(AP)
While plenry of fans kept an eye
on the baseba ll game next door,
the Baltimore Ravens pitched
another .shutout.
The Ravens became the fin~
NFL teaill in IS years to sh ut

Saturday's Meets
Rio Grande lnv~ational , 11 :00

ANAHEIM, Calif (AP) -The
Seattle Mariners won a ticket to
the postseason, beating Anaheim
5-2 to grab&gt; the A L wild card the season's final playoff spot.
Seattle, which had a franchisebest 1}1-71 record, opens the bes tof-·5 first rouna in Chicago
against the White Sox.

hang on, and to feeling pretry good about
prevailing so convincingly.
"You ktiow he is going to try something o n the restarr, so you can't say that
you're definitely going to win, so that
gives you the unknown variable,'' he said.
"We scaled the deal·. We licked the
stamp. sealed the envelope."
Stewart won by .672 seconds.
Earnhardt, meanwhile, settled for seco nd , gaining 36 points on points leader
Hobby Labonte with six events lefi: on the
sch edule.
" It 's going to take a whole lot of gaining and a whole lot of him finishing back •

Ravens top
Cleveland

Thursday's Matches
Ohlb Valley Christian at South Gal·
lia, sro
· Marietta at Gallia Academy, 5:15
River Valley at Athens, 5:15 .
Southern at Federal. Hocking, 5:55
Eastern at Trimble, 5:55 · •
Vinton County at Meigs , 5:55

]560 Walk·Behind Mower

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Stewart captures·NAPA 500 championship

Ks dinch AL West

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BREAK IT UP - Cleveland's Corey Fuller (24) battles Jermaine Lewis of Baltimore during Sunday's
game at Cleveland. The Ravens won 12·0 on four Matt Stover field goals. (AP)

cards top Reds to
secure home field
ST. LOUIS (AI?) - · The St. ·.
LouiS Cardinals enjoyed o ne last
regular-seaso n victory that will
keep them at home to st;trt th e
p!ayoflS.
The Cardinals scored three
run s in the sixth inning to defeat
th e Ci ncinn ati Reds · 6-2 Sunday.The win, coupled with Colorado's con1eb ack victory over
Atlanta, gave St. Lom ~ hom~field advantage for its tir"round pl.1yoff se ri es agai nst the

other roster moves until M on-·
day.
"We've had a h ;~ rJ - fo ught
series af&gt;aimt the Reds and we
want ,to t'urn the pagt' 0 11 th.J t,''
La Ru &lt;S,, said. " You can ask llll'
about Atlanta ro1norrnw.' '
Th e Cardin.lls and Uravcs wi ll
both workout at Bu&lt;ch Stadium
on Monday. but tb e C.1rd i n .1 l ~
Wt'ren 't ~aying; much .1buu t
Atlanta.
''I'm l ure the !:11\S 3rl' happy
Brave~.
we 'll be p!.tying rhc tir~t g. nnc..,
Both teams !lni&gt;hecl. '!Scf&gt;7. her&lt;'." s.l! J D .1vc Ver&lt;'S. " bur it
but the Cardinals won the &lt;.;ca... doe.. . n 'r matrl'r that Jm 1ch to u \.
sOn ~t'ric:-; ;1gain.:;L Atbnt;l.
Yo~ havt· to · pl.ly tht· ~;lpl c
· " We w:mted to win this game.: so me-place.''
because it would mean a lot to
Will Clark, who drove tn
th ~ f.1ns," said Darryl Kile, who tln~e ru11s with :1 ho me run Jnd
will &lt;.;tart Game;. I of the divi - ,1 single, \.V;J' terse when it C llll C
sional playoffs for the C ardiml1 to t.1lking .tbout his tc·am 's ne'xt
on Tuesday.
opponem
Andy Ben es (12-9) .1llowed
"Tht· Hravcs are the ll r.tves,
two runs in six innings to make \VC 'vc pl.tycd them befort', ,111d
his case for a spot in th e. poo.;t&lt;.;ea - Wt..' k11ow what to ~.·xpect. hL
son rotation behind Kik G.1r- ~aid.
rett Stephenson and H..~ek
The l'.trchn .d, 111.1\' h.1n· lud
Ank1el. Cardinals" mdna~;~er Tony li ttle to " I)' ,\b out Atl.um. but
L1 R uss a said he didn't want to
think about his rotat"'" m' ,111 y
Please see Reds. ·Page B&amp;

New coach, same' Bengals
.C INCINNATI (AI') - MiJmi
was helpless tor nearly .1 half but
rh cn . , hov\o·nl \\ hy the I 'olphin-.,
;m ..• on the tise ,md the CincinnJti
Ben ~.ds ,\IT 11 ut.
' played ,out hearts out, but
" We
thint,."' jmr didn 't go rhc · way \Vc
wa nt ed th em to," s.11d rn~)kie
Pt· tn W;lrri ck, who~L: onL·- h:lllclcd
c.Jtc h gave the lleng::lls their li r&lt;t
rouchdo\\'11 in three f';&lt;lllJl' &lt;.;.
"It\ 60 lllinu tc\ ofll1o tb ;d l. .md
we ju . . t pl.tyl'd oJ(t• lu lf of t(Jot. b.i ll :·
C tnc;imu ti (li- 4) g.1vc M !.IIli i
( ~ -1) jtN w hat rh e llolplnm
cxfwctnl -

;m l' lllotiul i.d i.:trort

new co.lt'h - hut only tC1r
~~) mimlli..'~ .u1d then fv\i .\1111
· 'iCUrt·d .'\ 1 con;,t•l'lltivc poim' to
t()!' .1

\Vlll

3 1- 16 nn Sund;1y,

"The t,ir" lul f. wc· mi"cd t&lt;~ck­

k·"·

\\'l'

rurncd the h.1ll o\ L' r ,
- · otfcn\t.\ ddi.·n~l'.

L'\'LTyt hing

'Pl'Ci .l ( cc;\lll\ ... '''l' were not 111
~ym .n Jll.'" Mi.uni nHl·h l ),1\"l'

Wann:-.teJr ,,1id.
••F\'L'ryrl1111~ \\'C

t.1lkcd .thn u t
not \\".llltlll~ tn h.lppt·n, lupp ~. .· ncd \'(/t• ·rumhlL·d nJlll'. \\.'c
1 tlnT\\ .111

Jllt~·rLt'ption. But \H'

tt·lt

Please see Bengals. Page B&amp;

.

.

TURNING POINT- Miami 's Jason Taylor (99) heads to end zone
after scooping up a fumble by Aklll Smith of the Bengals . (f\P)

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Page AS • The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
roamer pthst investigated
NEW YORK (AP)- A renred pnesr who gave food ro rhe homelas and JObs to the unemployed is bemg mvestigated for the theft of
~ million from his church, authorities said.
Monsignor Thom,as Gradilone, who retired last year after running
the Our lady Queen of Martyrs Church i11 Queens for almost 20
)Tan, is being investigated by the piocese of Brooklyn and Qu""n~
and the Queens district attorney's office, church offiCials sa1d Sunday.
~1 have learned that substantial sums of money have passed from
Monsignor Gradilone to one or more individuals in amounts that
~ady exceed the bounds of charity," Bishop Thomas Daily, who
heads the diocese, told shocked parishioners at a Mass on Sunday.
Church officials·alerted District Attorney Richard Brown about the
missing millions of dollar&gt;, two weeks ago. Brown's office acknowledged the investigation Sunday but declined to comment on it.
The church, established in 1917, is one of the largest and richest in
the diocese, which serves 1.6 million Catholics in Brooklyn and
Queens. It raises about $9,300 in collectmns each Sunday
Daily said Gradilone told hun that the miSsing mo.ney w.1s donated til the needy but that he was unable to recall the namt'l of the imhviduals and organiz.1tions that received it.
. Gradilone, 75, hves m a facili ty outside the diocese mel could not
.. ~ reached for conmtcnr.
Daily. the bishop. asked the parishioners to pray tlw Gr,,dilon~· "will
be relieved of whatt.·ver pressures have caused him {O n1.1kt&gt; tht'SC yet
unC"xplained, totally unacc~ ptablc- . fin.mcl.1J tr JltSJ..:tions .111d that h-..·
will be cooperaun.• \\'Hh the investig.ttion.''

•ncy

Mon~ay,

Pomeroy, MJddieport, Ohio

'

October 2, 2000-

Fuel-stingy vehicles o~umbered in showrooms
WASHINGTON (AP) -While a handful
of small cars arc getting 40-plus miles per gallon, dw vast llll]Ortty of ne\v vehicles coming
, mtn showrooms get about half that, the govern. ment·s latest autumobLit.' fuel ~cunomy "iLlristics
show
'For the second year, a hybnd gas- and electric-powered vchtcle -. the t'.vo-seJter Honda
Insight - topped the liSt of btggesr fuel misers
with 64 mpg co mbined city and high,~ay driving :i.mong 2001-model vehicfes. It was followed by anoth&lt;'r hybria; the Toyota Prius, and
three Volkswagen d1esel car;.
The huge popularity of sport utility vehicles
again drove down th~ overall numbers of the
nlore than 800 cars. trucks and \'ans hs;tc:.d in the
anriual fuel economy s tansttc~ released Monday
by the: Environmental Protection Agency.
Avt·rage fuel economy for .358 n10dds or

variations ofSUVs, vans and pickup trucks was
just over 18 mpg, compared with 23.6 mpg for
neatly 500 em on the EPA list.
King-SJze SUVs such as the Ford Expedition, lincoln Navigator and Dodge Durango
and their twin pickups accounted for 12 of the
36 vehicles on the ·list with the worst gas
mileage, all with 12 mpg or less in city dri~ing
and 17 mpg or less on th( .highway.
The luxury sport import · Ferrar-i 500
Maranello was the biggest ~r (8 city and 13
highway) followed by the lamborghini Diablo
(10 city, 13 highway).
·
With the growing popularity - even with
high fuel costs - of minivans and SUVs, the
overall fuel economy for all veli.icles continued
a steady decline that has been under way since
the late 1980s, when average fuel economy for
all vehicles was nearly 26 mpg.

'

Bush begins trip to Boston
AUSTIN, Texas • (A P)
Gcurgt.: W Uu~ h IIi hL·:-.dmg to
th~ tina sho\\'do\\'n with AI
Gore , enrollraged by llL'\\'S thr..·
two an: tied in tr.lditiotHily
Dcmocratic-k·aning stltL'S.
At his ranrh in Cr.l\\'ford.
Texas. J two...:hour drive from
Austin , the . Rc·publican presidcnti;ll nomine e ;md Tex:1s .go\'t'rnor said over the weL"kend
that he sees tht• resr of the election campaign as a sp rint.
"We 'vc got five weeks to go."
he said. "Three weeks of debates
and two wet"ks of turning nut
the vote. l like to come here to
this place to get my batceries
recharged . It helps dear m y
mind."
&lt;&gt;
Bush was stopping Monday
in traditionally Democratic West
Virginia, on his way to. Boston
fin the ca ndidates' first ,debate,
potentially&gt;the most influential
&lt;&gt;f any presidential election since
1960.
·Meanwhile, his campaign was
tounng polls in West Virginia
and in Gore's native Tennessee·
showing the two tied, as they are
nationwide.
.. No matter . how you cut it,

saambles to move refugees

i\TLANTA (AP)- The walls arc covered in grime and bugs crawl
t."Vef)'\Vhere in the Atlanta apartmem where Nyator Gany lives with
her four children after fleeing her native Sudan bee&lt;~ use of nvil \~·ar .
Gany and dozens of other refugees who were put in the crime-ridden apartment complex by Catholic Social Setvic~s said they pleaded for help t"rom agency sonal workers but received nothing but broken promises.
"The refugee camp was better than he;e,' ' Gany said.
On Sunday, employees and volunteers with Catholic Social Services began moving Gany and other refugees into temporary quarters
at a hotel .
"This is clearly not acceptable," said Kathi Stearns, vice chancellor
in charge of special projects for the Archdiocese of Atlanta. " What I
saw on Friday was so horrid I don't evenlhave words to describe it."
Catholic Social Services, which takes hundreds of thousands of feder.d dolla,.., has been resetiling refugees Ill the same apartments for at .
least five years and its social workers staff an office there. Officials of
the Archdiocese of Adanta said they became aware of the conditions
there last Week.
"I \va.lked into one house and there were 150 roaches on the wall,"
Stearns said. "When something like that happens, you ca n look the
other way or you can solve the problem. l think every night we leave
them here is a risk."
. The State Department, which pays for refugee resetdement programs in dozens of American cities, routinely inspects those programs
but has refused to release copies of any of its findings, The Adanta
Journal-Constitution reported. The newspaper filed suit in federal
court Thursday after the State Department refused to respond to
requests for the rep.orts filed in April.

.t hat's good news for Governor

Hush," said spokesman Ari Fleischer. "The vice president is

:-tru ggling to C\\;n b~ in th~.· race
1ll pbct.~s \\'hac h-..~ should have
~l' \\' 11 up .1!ong tintr..' ago."
Tlut':-; true for Bush, too, in
Flond,. where hiS brother Jeb is
gon·rnor and the- le-gislature- is
Republican-run . Gore, who is
bc·1ng outspent by Bush· there,
spe m the we~:kend practicing
f(H· Jebates in SaraScfta.
BliSh's campaign still had not
been updated Sunday by the
FBI on reports that it had intensified its probe into who sent a
p.Kkage of the GOP nonunee's
dt~bart?' preparanon material to
Gore 's campaign last month,
FleiScher ~a1d . Agents inter,·iewed . Bush 's chief strategist,
Karl Rove, on Saturday.
Lowehng exP.ectations, doing
well 111 the debate and winning
the game of electoral math is the
key to th e candidates' strategy,
five weeks before. Election Day.
Bush .was going forcsymboiISm Monday by attending a rally
w1th West Virginia Gov: Cecil
Underwood in Huntington,
W.Va , The state, whose economy
his heavily dependent on coal
nuning, also
complements
Bush's speech Friday ori energy
policy
·

In the latest statistics, mileoge ranged widely
even within various size classes, and in sonte
cases even withm bke groups of cars. made by
the same manufacturer. Among compacts, fot
example, the Volkswagen Passat average 20 mpg,
compared with the Volkswagen Jecta and Golf
diesl:ls' 45 mpg average.
Among midsize cars, the Mazda 626 and
Honda Accord reporred the best combined
city-highw•y mileage of 29 mpg, while the
worst in that category were the luxury Rolls
Royce Silver Seraph and Bendey Arnage, both
at 13 mpg. Most em .111 the category came in
the low- to mid-20s mpg.
"Choosing the most fuel-efficient vehicles in
a class can save the owner at least $1 ,500 in fuel
costs," said EPA Administrator Carol Browner,
and reduce carbon dioXJde ~:ntissions which
contribute to global warming.

1,,

Workers discount claim that

·Gore threatens auto industry
LANSING, Mich . (AP) Flush with ov~rtime pJy and on
track for another year of record
vehicle sales, auto workers don't
set:m to ~:my Republi ca n Gov.
John Engler's message tllat AI
Gore's environmental VIews
threaten Michigan 's economy.
In fact, it's hard to find many
people in the auto indus~ry executives or union tnembers who accept the argument that
the Democratic presidential
nominee .would throw a monkey
wrench into the· auto industry if
he wins the White House in
November.
James Owensby, 53, who
works on the assembly line at
the. Delphi Automotive Systems
Corp. plant in Saginaw, Mich.,
thinks it's only a matter of time
before other politicians start
echoing Gore's call for automobiles that pollute less and go farther on a gallon of gas.
"We're going to be thrust to
come up with engines that are
more fuel-efficient and even
gas-free .... We need to evolve
with it," Owensby said. "I
undbrstand that he's pro-environment .... But AI Gore, he's my

..
man.
.

tim es rn the .wto
indu~trv :md ·t ht· •utwnal ceonomi c Doom make workas lc:ss
likdy to buy the d&lt;iom-andgloom Ftepubb can me ssage, said
Craig Ruff nf Publi c Sector
Consultants, a think tank in
olansing. Mi c h.
"Times arc too good right
now. Peop le arcn 't worried,''
Ruff sa id. "They just can't see
that ... anything a president can
do can harm their job securiry."
Desp'ite signs their campaign
may be going unheard, Republicans are working hard to make
Gore unpabtable to auto workers, many of them swing voters
expected to help d'ecide the
presidential election in this crucial battleground state.
A Sept. 26-28 poll of 600
likely Mi c h1gan voters by
EPIC / MRA of Lansing, Mi ch. ,
shows Gore leading GOP presi d e ntial ca ndidate George W.
Bush 45 percent to 3&lt;) percent,
with Green Party candidate
Ralph Nader. getting 3 percent
and 13 percent undecided. The
poll ha1 a margin of error of 4
perct: nu ge points either way.
Cood

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Inside:

The Daily Sentin£11

J

Page 81
Monday, October 2, 2000

MONDAY'S

HlGHLIGHTI
.Prep·Spoits
Vol~··

.

_
Saturday a Mlilches •
South Gallia del. Hannan, 15·6,
15-1
· South Gallia def. Eastern, 15·13,
' 14·16, 15-6
Morgan del. South Gallia, 15-12,
15·6
Today's Match ·
South Gallia at Federal Hocking,
6:00
Tuesday's Matches
Warren at Gallia Academy, 5:15
Jackson at River Valley, 5:15
Miller at Southern. 5:55
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 5:55
Meigs at Belpre, 5:55

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MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) - Tony
'!Last year l felt .like I really stru ggled
The 13th and final caution of the day
Stewart is rethinking his dislike of Mar- and l dreaded coming here, not because of was being cleaned up, and Earnhatdt's_
· tinsville Speedway. He n.tight even be the people, but just because of ihe race black car was right behind Stewart's.
using it as a· barometer of his develop- and the racetrack ," he said.
When the green Oag flew with II laps to
ment
This rime, the NAPA SilO tutned into a go, the crowd was buzzing in anticipation
Stewart, who talked all week of not lik ~ career highlight for the second-year Win- of Earnhardt doing )Omething newsworing the crowded, .526-mile oval, followed ston Cup star, who also took over the thy.
his second straight record-setting pole vic - series lead with five victories, won conIt, never happened. The flag flew, and so
tory here with an equally impressive vic - secutive races for the third time and won did Stewart, pulhng away comfortably and
leaving Earnhardt holding off Jeff Burton
tory Sunday that left him feeling great for the eighth rime overall .
about hiniself and his team.
The end of the race set up as a duel for second place.
"I couldn 't catch him," a disappointed
" l feel like I've made great gains here , between Stewart and Earnhardt, a sevenbut I think (crew chief Greg Zipadelli) time champion not known for treating Earnhardt said. " If l cou ld have got to
· and the guys have made gre:it gains· here, " the young guns well, especially not with a · him, it would haw been good, but I
too," Stewart said after running away fium victory on th~ line and a ch ::~t i1pionship cou1dn ·~ catch him ."
Stewart admitted to needing calming
a possible duel with Dale Earnhardt over close enough that :The Intim idator" can
words
from Zipadelli while' preparing t0.1o
the final 11 laps.
smell it.

Cross Country

• 6 hp • 21-lnch steel deck

Stover \Vas a member of th e
prev10us Brown s franchise
when it was tnoved to Baltimore after the i995 season by
owne r Art Mod ell. He converted tield goals of 45, 30, 44 and
22 yards as the R avens' offense
'
.
.
conn nually faltered as it got
Olll
LOI ISCC LitlV t'
opponeiH~
while kicker Matt Stover sup- close to the end zo ne .
Th e same held true tor th e
plied what offemc there was in
a 12-11 victory over the Cleve- tlrtl\~ns (2-.1), limited to 23
rushing yards on 13 attempts by
land Urowns o n Su11day.
Some of the bi ggest cheers of the NFL's top defense against
tht· d.1y came when' updates the ru n.
Quarterback Tim Couch was
were Dashed on the scorebo ard
from the lndiam' g&lt;1mc again"r hit hard by Sam Adams after the
Toronto at nearby Ja cobs Field. Browns' only substantial gainer
They won 11 - 4 to maintain of the first half- a 38-yard pass
\O David Patten ~ and Couch
their tlickering playoff hopes.
The Ra vens di,ln 't give had to be helped off the field
CJeveland \ footb all fam much with a hyperext ended right
knee.
to shou t ,\bout.
"~) ur dcft•nlil: \vas magnitl"When he went down , I
ccnt," Baltilllnre coach Brian thought 'he was gone for the
year," Hrown s coach Chm
Billic k said.
The shu tout wa\ Bal timore 's Palm er said. "He was in a great
third of the season . The R ave ns deal of pain."
(4-1). \\·· Ito beat Cincinnati 37-11
The pass play resu lted Ill a
lm week, bcc.une the first NFL first down at the Baltim ore ll.
tea m to stri ng toF:tthcr shuto uts but fullback Marc Edwards
' inn• the 19H5 f:hirago Bears fumb led 011 die next two pl.1ys.
be.lt Dallas 44-0 and Atlanta 31i- He recovered the fir st 'o ne himself, hut Woodson fell on the
{) In SUCC&lt;.' S'&gt;l)/l' g&lt;Hllt'S.
"We were n.·silicnt ," said co r- second in the end zone to snulf
ncrlu ck' Rod Woodson, who the threat . ·
intern;ptc d a pas\ ~1 11d recovered
Couch sat out the re st of the
first
half, but returned in the
a tinnbl c in tht· en d zone. "They
.mowd the b,tll o n us pretry third quarrer to co mplete seven
good. It 'ihows thl' dur,Ktcr of of. nine passes in a drive that
took th e Browns to the Balti th i~ ddt·mc.·:
,
The R&lt;~ven s di scuS&gt;cd anoth- more 19. But on first down, his
t'r 'i huto ut in their \\'orkouts thi' pass to Dennis Northcutt was
picked off by linebacker Ray .
\Vt'l' k.
" We threw that out to our Lewis, who caught it with one
h;md.
~u ys .lS ,\ challenge cmd rha t 1~
" I thouf(ht we wuld ha ve
no JJ..,re~pcct to tJH' Bn)Wil"i. lt
didn't lllJttcr ,who we were
Please see Browns, Page Bl
uH nm g iu a~ainst._l' Billi ck :-;ait}.

NEWS &amp; NOTES

Meip sweeps Vinton
Cou. Junior h1gh netters
UNDATED The Meigs
eighth-grade girls volleyball team
defeated Vinton County 15-10,
15-8.
Megan Garnes led Meigs with
two aces and a kill . Renee Naily
had an ace and kill and Erin Cullums and Emily Ashley each
recorded kills for the Maraude-rs

(8-1).
The Meib" seventh-grade team
debted Vititon County 12-15,
15-H, I 5-H.
"
Hrittany Hysell had a pair of
aces for Meib"· while Joey Haning
and Miranda had an ace apiece.
The Marauders improved io 7-

. OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - The
Oakland Athletics clinchc'C! the
AL West title with ·a 3-11 victory
over the Texas Rangers that set up
a first-round playoff series against
the New York Yankees. The A's , in
the playoffs for the first time since
1992, join Atlanta as the only
teams with 11 division titles.

Mariners headed
to playoffs

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Phils fire Francona
MIAMI (AP) Philadelphia
Phillies manager Terry Francona
was fired after a season in which
his team tied th e Chicago CDbs
for the worst record in the majors
at 65-97.
.

Duval wins
Buick Challenge

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R"'''"i Piao. 1,,; '"'111: setup '"d clelt"'&gt; ""i" cov'd._ '"J'"' monthly

~yment.

PINE MOUNTAIN, Ga. (AP)
David Duval won't have to
.mswf,;"r any more que"itions about
h(s back injury. Or wmning.
Playi ng for the first time in 10
week s, Duval.showcd he might be
ready to take a mn at Tiger
Woods, makin g birdies on three''"
of the last four holes to win the
lluick Chall enge.
He closed with a 7-under 65
and finished at 1'9- under 21j9, two
strokes ahead of Nick Price (68)
andJeffMaggcrt (70), for the for·mer Georgia Tech star's first vi ctory in 29 tournaments .
Duval, who earned $414 ,000. ,
has 12 career victories to beco me
only the third aciive player w1th
that many wins in his 20s.

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"'"'"''""'and teJms may tJe ""'''"''.'"''""' tnstellrronl r"'"'"i
and foanctn&amp; fo' oomm""'' use. A»laOie at
,

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Please see NASCAR. Page Bl

CLEVELAND
(AP)
While plenry of fans kept an eye
on the baseba ll game next door,
the Baltimore Ravens pitched
another .shutout.
The Ravens became the fin~
NFL teaill in IS years to sh ut

Saturday's Meets
Rio Grande lnv~ational , 11 :00

ANAHEIM, Calif (AP) -The
Seattle Mariners won a ticket to
the postseason, beating Anaheim
5-2 to grab&gt; the A L wild card the season's final playoff spot.
Seattle, which had a franchisebest 1}1-71 record, opens the bes tof-·5 first rouna in Chicago
against the White Sox.

hang on, and to feeling pretry good about
prevailing so convincingly.
"You ktiow he is going to try something o n the restarr, so you can't say that
you're definitely going to win, so that
gives you the unknown variable,'' he said.
"We scaled the deal·. We licked the
stamp. sealed the envelope."
Stewart won by .672 seconds.
Earnhardt, meanwhile, settled for seco nd , gaining 36 points on points leader
Hobby Labonte with six events lefi: on the
sch edule.
" It 's going to take a whole lot of gaining and a whole lot of him finishing back •

Ravens top
Cleveland

Thursday's Matches
Ohlb Valley Christian at South Gal·
lia, sro
· Marietta at Gallia Academy, 5:15
River Valley at Athens, 5:15 .
Southern at Federal. Hocking, 5:55
Eastern at Trimble, 5:55 · •
Vinton County at Meigs , 5:55

]560 Walk·Behind Mower

dealers Not all products

Stewart captures·NAPA 500 championship

Ks dinch AL West

to play, John Deere has the right

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Whether your looking to'Work or

£ •part~elpatJ~g
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BREAK IT UP - Cleveland's Corey Fuller (24) battles Jermaine Lewis of Baltimore during Sunday's
game at Cleveland. The Ravens won 12·0 on four Matt Stover field goals. (AP)

cards top Reds to
secure home field
ST. LOUIS (AI?) - · The St. ·.
LouiS Cardinals enjoyed o ne last
regular-seaso n victory that will
keep them at home to st;trt th e
p!ayoflS.
The Cardinals scored three
run s in the sixth inning to defeat
th e Ci ncinn ati Reds · 6-2 Sunday.The win, coupled with Colorado's con1eb ack victory over
Atlanta, gave St. Lom ~ hom~field advantage for its tir"round pl.1yoff se ri es agai nst the

other roster moves until M on-·
day.
"We've had a h ;~ rJ - fo ught
series af&gt;aimt the Reds and we
want ,to t'urn the pagt' 0 11 th.J t,''
La Ru &lt;S,, said. " You can ask llll'
about Atlanta ro1norrnw.' '
Th e Cardin.lls and Uravcs wi ll
both workout at Bu&lt;ch Stadium
on Monday. but tb e C.1rd i n .1 l ~
Wt'ren 't ~aying; much .1buu t
Atlanta.
''I'm l ure the !:11\S 3rl' happy
Brave~.
we 'll be p!.tying rhc tir~t g. nnc..,
Both teams !lni&gt;hecl. '!Scf&gt;7. her&lt;'." s.l! J D .1vc Ver&lt;'S. " bur it
but the Cardinals won the &lt;.;ca... doe.. . n 'r matrl'r that Jm 1ch to u \.
sOn ~t'ric:-; ;1gain.:;L Atbnt;l.
Yo~ havt· to · pl.ly tht· ~;lpl c
· " We w:mted to win this game.: so me-place.''
because it would mean a lot to
Will Clark, who drove tn
th ~ f.1ns," said Darryl Kile, who tln~e ru11s with :1 ho me run Jnd
will &lt;.;tart Game;. I of the divi - ,1 single, \.V;J' terse when it C llll C
sional playoffs for the C ardiml1 to t.1lking .tbout his tc·am 's ne'xt
on Tuesday.
opponem
Andy Ben es (12-9) .1llowed
"Tht· Hravcs are the ll r.tves,
two runs in six innings to make \VC 'vc pl.tycd them befort', ,111d
his case for a spot in th e. poo.;t&lt;.;ea - Wt..' k11ow what to ~.·xpect. hL
son rotation behind Kik G.1r- ~aid.
rett Stephenson and H..~ek
The l'.trchn .d, 111.1\' h.1n· lud
Ank1el. Cardinals" mdna~;~er Tony li ttle to " I)' ,\b out Atl.um. but
L1 R uss a said he didn't want to
think about his rotat"'" m' ,111 y
Please see Reds. ·Page B&amp;

New coach, same' Bengals
.C INCINNATI (AI') - MiJmi
was helpless tor nearly .1 half but
rh cn . , hov\o·nl \\ hy the I 'olphin-.,
;m ..• on the tise ,md the CincinnJti
Ben ~.ds ,\IT 11 ut.
' played ,out hearts out, but
" We
thint,."' jmr didn 't go rhc · way \Vc
wa nt ed th em to," s.11d rn~)kie
Pt· tn W;lrri ck, who~L: onL·- h:lllclcd
c.Jtc h gave the lleng::lls their li r&lt;t
rouchdo\\'11 in three f';&lt;lllJl' &lt;.;.
"It\ 60 lllinu tc\ ofll1o tb ;d l. .md
we ju . . t pl.tyl'd oJ(t• lu lf of t(Jot. b.i ll :·
C tnc;imu ti (li- 4) g.1vc M !.IIli i
( ~ -1) jtN w hat rh e llolplnm
cxfwctnl -

;m l' lllotiul i.d i.:trort

new co.lt'h - hut only tC1r
~~) mimlli..'~ .u1d then fv\i .\1111
· 'iCUrt·d .'\ 1 con;,t•l'lltivc poim' to
t()!' .1

\Vlll

3 1- 16 nn Sund;1y,

"The t,ir" lul f. wc· mi"cd t&lt;~ck­

k·"·

\\'l'

rurncd the h.1ll o\ L' r ,
- · otfcn\t.\ ddi.·n~l'.

L'\'LTyt hing

'Pl'Ci .l ( cc;\lll\ ... '''l' were not 111
~ym .n Jll.'" Mi.uni nHl·h l ),1\"l'

Wann:-.teJr ,,1id.
••F\'L'ryrl1111~ \\'C

t.1lkcd .thn u t
not \\".llltlll~ tn h.lppt·n, lupp ~. .· ncd \'(/t• ·rumhlL·d nJlll'. \\.'c
1 tlnT\\ .111

Jllt~·rLt'ption. But \H'

tt·lt

Please see Bengals. Page B&amp;

.

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TURNING POINT- Miami 's Jason Taylor (99) heads to end zone
after scooping up a fumble by Aklll Smith of the Bengals . (f\P)

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Monday October 2 2000

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Monday October 2 2000
,_,,
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Classified Line Ads
Tnbune 446-2342
l:.nors r1ot

UH~

Sentinel 992-2156

3 papers

,
"

suc~1

error lessons !he vJiue oi tt1e .1::1

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Register 675-1333

l,1ult ot the Advert1ser will be adJUSted by up to two free 1nseri10ilS d

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In

r_J~;p

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w,, ;&gt;"'

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'•

"-

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•:.'l't'rP dri conLIIIl'&gt; lflLHf' tlldfl onP ,tpm of not•ce

ad 1ustmenls w•ll be made on the 1tem conta1n1ng error. Corrections w1ll be made the f1rst ;Jv;tllable edlt•on

Announcement
Giveaway Loot &amp; Found
Yard Sales and Wonted
To Do Ads
Muot Be Paid In Advance
TRiBUNE DEAQUNE.
2 00 p m the day before
the ad s to un
Sunday &amp; Monday ed tlon
200pm Frday
SENTINEL pEAQLINE
1 00 p m tho day belore
the ad s to run
Sunday &amp; Monday edition
OOp m Frdey
REGISTER PEAPLINE,
2 days before the ad s
torunby430pm
Saturday &amp; Monday
ed lion 4 30 Thuroday
DeadllniJS
ro
change due

70

350 Lota &amp; Acreage

Yard Sale

AP.llrlments
for Rent

BRUNER LAND
7-1 •92

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VICintty

whch s vloa10no he
aw Ou eadefs a e he eby
n armed ha a clwe ngs
ad ert sed n h s newspape
a e ava ab e on an equal
opportun ty bas a

Personals

110 Help Wllnted

The class w II beg n on October 6th at 8 00 a m
Appl cat ons w II be taken unt 1
Wed esday October 4th at 3 oo p m
Appl can s w II be contac ted ro Interviews on
Th rsday Octobe 5 h

WANTED Buckeye Community Serv ces currently hes
a full t me pos lion ava able In Meigs County Hours
12 30
8 30 am M F requirements h gh schoo
d PomaiGED vahd Qriver s I cense three years good
dr v ng expe lance and adequate automob le nsurance
coverage Starting salary $6 00/hour Exce lent bene! t
package nc ud ng health nsurance Interested
appl cants need to specify position of nte est and send
resume to
P 0 Box 604 Jackson OH 4564().()6()4
A I apphcat ons must be post marked by 10/5/00
Equa Opportun ty Employer

(ANd 1 5) TBA
Sunday Oct •

san F anciiCXI a

G8
5 /2
211
30
x St LOuts
Cncnna

0

22

Miwaukee
HQIJSOO

23

Pins burgh
Clllcago

Chicago

s

L.ouit
A 81\18
San F anosco
Carol na
N~Orleans

hlutdoy Oct 7
S t.o.. s (Midol
7) a A anta (Ashby 2
Sunday Oct 8
S LOu s a Atlanta T9A If necessary
Monday Oct 8
Atlanta at S Louis TBA if necessary
AmeriCan l.Mgue

e

Frtd.y Oct 13
ChiCagO at 08k and New York Wlnnef' OR
Oak and New York Winner a Seattle B 5 p m
s.turday Oct 14
ChiCago at Oak anc:l New York Winner OR

Pitlsbu~ a N Y

G een

If necessarv

Tu•ldlly OCt. 17

Oak and New York wnne a Chicago OA
Seattle a Oak and New York winne 8 5 p m

if necessa~
Wedn..day Oct 11
Qakland New Yot.c: winner a ChiCago OR
Seatne a Oak and New Yor1\ Winner 8 5 p m
if necessary

E111

TOfOnto
Baltma e
Tampa Bay

x Chcago
Ceveand

001 Oi1
Kan&amp;as Clty
M nesota
x.Qaldand
y.St~Sn e
Anaheim
Te11as

w L Pot. GB
87 74 540
8577 525 2 /2
8379 5 2 4 /2
74 88 457 13 /2
69 92 429
8
Ctntrll
95 67 586
5
90 72 566
79 83 488
6
77 811 476
8
69 93 426
26
WoOl
91 70 585
2
9 71 582
62 80 !5089 /2
7 91 43820 /2

x-d nched division title
y-et nched WI d card

RENTAL S

Saturdly • 01mt1

C evelanc:l

e Toronto 5

Bos on 4 Tampa Bay 2
Oak and 23 Texas 2
Seatt e 2 Anahem 9
Det o f3 M nnasota 5
nn ~s
Chicago WIIHe sox g Kansas 11y

Ba mo e 7 N Y Yankees 3
Kansas City 6 Chicago Wh e Sox 2
Oe1

o

560

Pets for Sale

(FOX)
W~nHday

Ocl 1
S Lou s A anta winner a San FranciSCO
OR New Yo k 8 A anta S lollls winner 8 5

pm
Thurodoy Oct 12
S t...o'\,1 s A an a Winne a San F anc sea
OR New Yo k 8 A anta S Lou s winner 8 5

pm
Saturday Oct 14
San F anc sea a S Lou s A anta wmnar
OR S Lou s Atlan a w nner a New York4 5
pm
Sunday OCt 15
San F anc sco a S1 Lou s A tan a w nner
OR S1 Lou s Atlanta Winne a New York 8 5
pm
Monct.y Oct 18
San F anc sco a S
ou s A anta Winner
OR S1 Lou s Atlan a wnner at New York 8 5
p m ~ necessary
Wednolldly Oc1 18
S Lou s Atlan a Winne a San F anc sea

NlaAL.755pm
Tue.ay Oct 2.t
AlaN 825pm

L.u.gu•

Tueldoy Oct 3
Seatt e Ga de. 9 5 e. Chicago (S rotko. 5--

0 407pm ESPN)

A

a NL,B 5pm

Thui'SdiiY Oct 215

Ala NL e 5 p m if nece&amp;earv
Nla A

Frldoy OC1 5
Satu day Oe

AFC
Eoa
WLTP11 PF PA

) 808pm NBC

4 0 0 00 88

Wodn-y Oct4

Yard Sale
210

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods
ET
AERAT ON MO ORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Rebu
Sock"
Ca A

Ea

800 5

95.28

441 0207
IOiihan Available
2 Pups One mixed
one mixed shepherd
Boxer /Bulldog Mix
Molher beagle and S pups
4 beagle pups

New Yo k He

4
0 800 0 55
3
0 750 8 64
230400 64 04
3
230400 03
3 0 250 64 75
040000 23 05

Battmo e

7

if ecessary
8
ecessary

•

Centra
Tennessee
Ce eand
acksonv e
P ttsbu gh
en nna

Pl-EASE CALL
TODAY

NY Ga s
Ph ade phia

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed propoaa a w II be
ecelved at the olt co of the
Mayor Munlc pa Bu dio'fl:'
Third Stroot Syracuse
Ohio until 4 p m local ti!J18
on Friday Octobe 3 20ll0
lo turnlahlng a! pav ng
mate al nacassa y to
complete the project know
Sy acuse
St eet
aa
Reaurfac ng and at said
t me and p ace pu" ely
opened and aad a oud
Contract documents bid
sheets and spec fleet ons
can be obta ned at said
office after September 23
2000 at $25 00 pe set

og a

No ee u es wew

888 82 3345

REAL ESTATE

Happy Ad

,

SERVICES
Home

Improvements
Pomeroy
Mtddleport
&amp; V c mty
4 ~m ygaage ~ae 0
pas Wha e~

10/1151
FT

Do you know thl1
ferty Saven ym old?
If you do wl1h him 1

-~--

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Happy Birthday
on Tuti Oot Jrd
Lm Mom &amp; Ded

3
0 750 OS
2 2 0 500 93
2.20500 74
230400 52
050000 86
NFC
Eao
3 2 0 600 88
3 2 0 600 2

Public Notice
wh ch money w 1 be
refunded
to
the
unaucceasful b ddera upon
.the return of the comp ate
eat n good condition no
moe than ten (10) dayo
afto the b d date Checks
aha I be made payable to
tho VI age ot Sy acuse
Oho
This p oject s a Mlno ty
Business Enle p sa (MEIE)
Set Aelde Project Each
bidder
must
submit
evidence that s s a
Minor ty
Bus noso
Ento p lse as cart llad by
tho
State
Equa
Emp oyment Opportun ty
coord nato
Each b dde 11 equ ad to
furnish w th Its p oposa a
Bid Guaranty end Contract
Bond n accordance w th
Section 153 54 ot the Ohio
Rev sed Code B d oecur ty
fu n shed n Bond rorm
aha be Issued by a Surety
Company o Corporation
censed n the State of Ohio
to p ov de said surety
Each proposal must
contain the full nama ol the
Party o part es subm It ng
the p oposa
and a I
persons Interested there n
Each bldde must submit
ev dance of Its experiences
on p ojects of aim ar size
and complexity The owner
ntanda and requires that
thlo p oject be comp etod n
late than October 30 2000
A I contractor• and
aubcontracton nvo ved
w th th 1 project wl to tho
extant practlcab o uoe Ohio
producta
mater a a
aervlcea and labo n the
mpltmontat on or the r
Addltona y
p ojoct
contractor comp ance w th
the Equal Emp oymsnt
Oppo tun ty raqul a manta
ol Ohio Adm n otrot ve Code
Chapter 123 the Gove no o

4
5

45
353
274
2 8
03
0 7

7
9
0
2
20

999

3

940
920

3
6
6
19

as

608
5 4
455
406

4

5

2
6
25

364

3 2

;

~·· · · · · · · · · · · · ·

2 0

22

7

16

A mer een Leaglle
C EVELAND N D ANS Name'd Tom
Cando spec a ass s an o baseba ope
a ons
Nat on•l Leegue
FLOA OA MARL NS..,...Annou ed hey
w no exe c sa a one yea p on on OF
Henry Rod guez s con a
PH LADELPH A 'PH LL ES-F ad man
age
a y F ancona h
g coach Ha
McRae
s base coach Brad M s p ch ng
coach Ga e C sco and bench oach Chuck
Cone

BASKETBAll

Na ona Baeketba I Aeaoc 1t on
NO ANA PACERS-Named Ve n F em
ng ass s a coach

FOOTBAll
Nat onal Footba League
GREEN BAY PACKERS S gned

E

Ryan We n gh

Weat

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TV ISS 7

•

0 800 90 38
0 750 9 82
220500 73 76
4 0 200 79

Frldoy Oct 5

Oak and Hudson 20-6 a
nandez 2 3
BA
Satu day Oc
Oak and a New y, k TBA
Sunday Oct
New York a Oak a d TBA

66

3

BBpmFOX

Public Notice
ed P

4

New YOfk Pettine 9 9 a Oak and App e

576
574

BASEB~ll

League

No

2

875
869

necessary

7

Ch cago a Seattle TBA necessary
Sunday Oct I
Sean e a Chicago BA If necessary
Oak and va New York
Tu11d1y Oct 3
New York Cleme s 3 8 a Dak and (He e

745

73

t JRANSACDONS

755 p m
necessary
Sunday Oct 28

55 p m

Ch cago a Sean e BA

5

Ptt Pv•

39 M ss ss pp 35 Pmsbu gh 24 Pu due 6
LSU 5 Eas caro na 2 Coo ado S tO AI
zonaS 5 owaS 5 To9do5 WMk:tllgan4
Anzona 2 A\ebama

So1urdoy Oct 28

W.cin111d1y Oct 4
Sean e a Ch ago 07 p m ESPN

GALLIA COUN'TYI
D0GSHELTER
HOURS 25M F'

and ank ng n he previous po

Othe s ece vlng vo es MICh gan S 84
279 A&amp;M
South Ca o na 79 N C Sa e 69 Te)(aS

Wedn.aday Oct 25

Ch ca;o ve. Sutt •

da 5

The Top Twency Five earns n The Assoc a
ed P ess co age footbal poU with rs -pace
VOles n pa enthe&amp;es ecords hrough Sep 30
ota pons based on 25 ponts to a tl s pace
vote through one po m for a 25 h p ace IJ01G

(FOX)

D VIS ON SER ES
Am~~rtcan

APTop 25

Soturdoy Oct 21
Na.tlona League a Amer can League 7 55
pm
Sunday Oct 22

Poa aaaaon Baaeba

Adopt

pm

WORL.D SERES

Sean e 5 Anaheim 2
SNaon tndt

TRANSPORTATION

Btl

ICOLLEG,E~li.j

NoUonal LAoguo

12 Mlnneso a

Oakland 3 Texas 0

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

...

ORNewYoka A anaS ouswnne 4 5
p m if necessary
Thuraday Oct. 1g
S LOu s A lanta wmne a San Franc sco
OR New Yo k a Adana S LousW1nne 8 5
p m necessary

Batt mo a 9 N Y Yankees
Sunday • Gam••
C evalancl
Toron o 4
Tampa Bay 3 Boa an 2 0 nn ngs

n

82

y a Oetrat
pm
ennessee a C nc nna
pm
nd anapo s a New Eng and p m
Washing on a Ph lad91ph a p m
N Y Giants a Atlanta 4 05 p m
Den er a San Diego 4 5 p m
OakiBnd at San F anc sco 4 5 p m
Seatt1ea Caona 4 spm
Oeve and a Ar zona 4 5 p m
Batt moJe a Jacksonv1 e 8 20 p m
Open Kansas City Dal as S Lou s
Monday Oct g
Tampa Bay a M nnesota 9 p m

Oak and New Yor1( winner a Seaftle 8 5 p m
Sunday Oc1 15
Ch cago a 08k and New York wlnn9f OR
Oakland New YorK wlnne a Seattle 4 s p m

o mauon As Sou Ou Cash
0 scoun s

14!
158
59

San F ar'ICISCO 27 Arizona 20

Wed.-doy Oct 11
Oakland New Vorl&lt; winne&lt; a1 Cl&gt;cago OR
Seattle a Oakland New vortc w nne 4 5 p m

42 Cou 18S
Ca Now Fa maps F anc g n

8ll

130

Chicago 27 Green Bay 24
Wash ngiOn 20 Tampa 8ay 7 OT
Phi adelphia 38 A anta o
Open N Y Je1s Oakland New Orleans
Today a Game
Seattle a Kansas City 9 p m
Sundoy Oct I
BuffalO a M am
pm
New Orleans a Ch cago p m

Oakland New YOO: winner at Ch1C890 OR
sean e a1 Oak and New YOfk wnner
5pm

Land A aRable

:;

Batt more 2 Cleveland o

(NBC)
- y O e t 10

Cash

74

Pittsburgh 24 Jacksonvi e 3
M18rn3 Cncnna 6
New England 28 06n er 9

LEAGUE CHAMP ONSH P SER ES

2

;•

Sunday 1 Gaime~
Da las 6 Carolina 3 OT
S Lou s 57 San Diego 3
nd1808p0 s 8 Buffa o 6
M - 3 Dolrort 2.
en9Hsee 2B N Y Gtanls 4

3 TBA

5

New York
Bos1on

We

Tampa Boy
Gr-Bay

Thurodoy Oc:1. 5
Atlanta Glavin&amp; 2 9 at S Lows S ephen

2

X

..

Dolroll

107 pm (ESPN)

26

30

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

f5~

-

f"'888&amp;.

son 6-9) 407p m ESPN)

vie 5Acms Wae S 4000
Cash Ruttand 9 1\c es S 0 000

II

New Vorl!: iBA It

Monday Oct. I
New YoOI: a San F ancisco TBA Jf neces
sary
St. L.oula va. AUinta
TUHday Oct. 3
Atlanta Maddwc 9 9 a S. LOu s Klle 208

3 2 0 600 87
2 3 0400 12
1 3 0250 71
Control
4 0 0 00 95
3 2 0 600 84
320600 'J
230400 83
• 0 200 75
W101
50010027
230400 95
230400 42
3 0 250 78
3 0 250 55

WuhngiOn

Dalaa
Arizona

wy

Grande 0 A es W h Pond
$25 000 6 Acres S 9 000 Cash
Chash a 6 Acres S9 000 o 37
Acres S40 000 Cash Clay Town
sh p. 7 AK; es S22 0001 ycoon
LakaAea O.Aces$ 2 500
Meigs Co Nice a ge Home
Mas ..- Su e 3 B&amp;d ooms W m
H s o IC Townshrp SChoo nouse
$83000 LagePoeBan0n6
Acres $3 000 C8st'l 0 6 Ac
es $26 000 On Sla e Rou e 68
Home On 6 Acres $44 000 Dan

AU real es a e actvertJsing In
h s newapape Is subject o
the Fedefa Fa Hous ng Act
o 968 wh~h makes H ogaJ
o advertise any pre e ence
m alonordsc mna10n
based on ace color el1g100
sex tam a sta us o national
or gUl o any n ent10n o
make any such pre1e ence
m.ta 100 o d scnm nation

Th s newspape w no
know ng y accept
ad art sements o ea eslale

Overbrook Center 333 Page Street
Middleport is now accepting
appl!catlons for its upcoming Nursing
Assistant Class

If you have a Y q est o s p ea se call Jackie
Newso me RN C Prima y 1 st ucto
a t 740 99 2 6472

Ga ua Co 37 Pa eels To Choose
From K&amp;r Road t-tome On NICe
Sott ng 5 Acres $77 000 A o

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

440

110 Help Wanted

,"

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•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

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BO

6

82
30
56
85
70

Wa ed DB ason Moo e
NEW YORK G ANTS-.Wa eel LB Kev n
Lews SgnedKJae Homes
HOCKEY

Nation• Hockly laagua
STARS Ass gned F G .eg
Leeb D eft MacM an and G R ck Tab a a
c oUaho he Hl Sg edFJmmyRoy o
a one yea con ac ad assg ed hm on
aan o Man oba o he H
DA LAS

Public Notice

Public Notice

Execut ve Ordo 94 9 shall
be requ ad
Bidders must COI!IPIY w th
the p eva ling wage atas on
Pub c mprovemants n
Me gs County and the
VI age ol Sy acuae Oh o
as dote mln-.cl by the Ohio
Depa tment .of ndustr al
Ae at on a
The V ago ol Syracuse
eserves the lght to waive
ogu ar lias and eject any
oral bids
VIllage of Sy acuse
Sha on Colt
C ark T easu er
(9)25(0)2

aha I be Issued by a Su ety
Company or Co po at on
licensed In the Stele of Oh o
to prov de said su ety
Eac~
proposa
must
conta n the full nome ot the
Party o partes subm tt ng
the
p oposa
and
al

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Sea ed propoea!s will be
ece ved a! the off ca of the
Mayo Mun clpa Bul d ng
Oh o until 4 p m local time
on F day October 13 2000
lo furnlah!ng a! )abo and
equipment neceaaa y to
complete the project known
as
Syracuse
St eet
Resu fac ng and at said
time and place pub c y
opened and read aloud
Cant act documents b d

sheet.&amp; and apactt cat onB'
can be obtained at sold
off ce after Septembe 23
2000 at $25 00 per set
l)'h ch money wl I be
afundad
to
the
unsucceaaful b ddera upon
the eturn or tho comploto
set In good cond tlon no
more than lin (tO) dayo
attoF the bid dote Checks
oha I bs made payable to
the VI ago of Syrocuu
Oho
Each b ddor 1 required to
fu n ah With 11 p OpOII I
Bid Guaranty ond Contract
Bond n accordance JN th
Sect on 1S3 S4 or tho Ohio
Rev asd Code El d "curtly
turn thld n Bond form

pe sons nterested therein
Each bldde

must submit

ev dance of ta exper encea
on p ojects of s m Ia s ze
and complex ty The owne
ntends and equlres that
this p oject be completed
no later than O~tobe 30
2000
A
cant acto s and
subeont acto s nvolved
w th th a project w
to the
eX1ent pract cable use Oh o
materia a
p oducta
service&amp; and h1bo In the
mp ementat on of th s
Addlt onally
p o j act
contractor comp lance with
the Equa Emp oyment
Opportunity equ rementa
or Ohio Adm n st at vo Code
Chaper 123 the Governo 9
Executive Orde 94 9 shall
be equt ed
B dde 8 muat comply w th
the preva lng wage atea on
Pub lc mprovements n
Me gs County and the
V ago or Sy acuae Oh o
as dote mined by the Ohio
Department o1 nduet a

Relet one
Tho V !ago of Syracuoe
the ght to waive
r egular ties and eject any
oral bids
VI ago of Syracuee
She an Cottr I
C a k T eaaurer
(9)25 (10) 2
e~trves

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

CLASSIFIEDSI

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Monday October 2 2000

.

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Monday October 2 2000
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Classified Line Ads
Tnbune 446-2342
l:.nors r1ot

UH~

Sentinel 992-2156

3 papers

,
"

suc~1

error lessons !he vJiue oi tt1e .1::1

'

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\

Register 675-1333

l,1ult ot the Advert1ser will be adJUSted by up to two free 1nseri10ilS d

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ad 1ustmenls w•ll be made on the 1tem conta1n1ng error. Corrections w1ll be made the f1rst ;Jv;tllable edlt•on

Announcement
Giveaway Loot &amp; Found
Yard Sales and Wonted
To Do Ads
Muot Be Paid In Advance
TRiBUNE DEAQUNE.
2 00 p m the day before
the ad s to un
Sunday &amp; Monday ed tlon
200pm Frday
SENTINEL pEAQLINE
1 00 p m tho day belore
the ad s to run
Sunday &amp; Monday edition
OOp m Frdey
REGISTER PEAPLINE,
2 days before the ad s
torunby430pm
Saturday &amp; Monday
ed lion 4 30 Thuroday
DeadllniJS
ro
change due

70

350 Lota &amp; Acreage

Yard Sale

AP.llrlments
for Rent

BRUNER LAND
7-1 •92

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VICintty

whch s vloa10no he
aw Ou eadefs a e he eby
n armed ha a clwe ngs
ad ert sed n h s newspape
a e ava ab e on an equal
opportun ty bas a

Personals

110 Help Wllnted

The class w II beg n on October 6th at 8 00 a m
Appl cat ons w II be taken unt 1
Wed esday October 4th at 3 oo p m
Appl can s w II be contac ted ro Interviews on
Th rsday Octobe 5 h

WANTED Buckeye Community Serv ces currently hes
a full t me pos lion ava able In Meigs County Hours
12 30
8 30 am M F requirements h gh schoo
d PomaiGED vahd Qriver s I cense three years good
dr v ng expe lance and adequate automob le nsurance
coverage Starting salary $6 00/hour Exce lent bene! t
package nc ud ng health nsurance Interested
appl cants need to specify position of nte est and send
resume to
P 0 Box 604 Jackson OH 4564().()6()4
A I apphcat ons must be post marked by 10/5/00
Equa Opportun ty Employer

(ANd 1 5) TBA
Sunday Oct •

san F anciiCXI a

G8
5 /2
211
30
x St LOuts
Cncnna

0

22

Miwaukee
HQIJSOO

23

Pins burgh
Clllcago

Chicago

s

L.ouit
A 81\18
San F anosco
Carol na
N~Orleans

hlutdoy Oct 7
S t.o.. s (Midol
7) a A anta (Ashby 2
Sunday Oct 8
S LOu s a Atlanta T9A If necessary
Monday Oct 8
Atlanta at S Louis TBA if necessary
AmeriCan l.Mgue

e

Frtd.y Oct 13
ChiCagO at 08k and New York Wlnnef' OR
Oak and New York Winner a Seattle B 5 p m
s.turday Oct 14
ChiCago at Oak anc:l New York Winner OR

Pitlsbu~ a N Y

G een

If necessarv

Tu•ldlly OCt. 17

Oak and New York wnne a Chicago OA
Seattle a Oak and New York winne 8 5 p m

if necessa~
Wedn..day Oct 11
Qakland New Yot.c: winner a ChiCago OR
Seatne a Oak and New Yor1\ Winner 8 5 p m
if necessary

E111

TOfOnto
Baltma e
Tampa Bay

x Chcago
Ceveand

001 Oi1
Kan&amp;as Clty
M nesota
x.Qaldand
y.St~Sn e
Anaheim
Te11as

w L Pot. GB
87 74 540
8577 525 2 /2
8379 5 2 4 /2
74 88 457 13 /2
69 92 429
8
Ctntrll
95 67 586
5
90 72 566
79 83 488
6
77 811 476
8
69 93 426
26
WoOl
91 70 585
2
9 71 582
62 80 !5089 /2
7 91 43820 /2

x-d nched division title
y-et nched WI d card

RENTAL S

Saturdly • 01mt1

C evelanc:l

e Toronto 5

Bos on 4 Tampa Bay 2
Oak and 23 Texas 2
Seatt e 2 Anahem 9
Det o f3 M nnasota 5
nn ~s
Chicago WIIHe sox g Kansas 11y

Ba mo e 7 N Y Yankees 3
Kansas City 6 Chicago Wh e Sox 2
Oe1

o

560

Pets for Sale

(FOX)
W~nHday

Ocl 1
S Lou s A anta winner a San FranciSCO
OR New Yo k 8 A anta S lollls winner 8 5

pm
Thurodoy Oct 12
S t...o'\,1 s A an a Winne a San F anc sea
OR New Yo k 8 A anta S Lou s winner 8 5

pm
Saturday Oct 14
San F anc sea a S Lou s A anta wmnar
OR S Lou s Atlan a w nner a New York4 5
pm
Sunday OCt 15
San F anc sco a S1 Lou s A tan a w nner
OR S1 Lou s Atlanta Winne a New York 8 5
pm
Monct.y Oct 18
San F anc sco a S
ou s A anta Winner
OR S1 Lou s Atlan a wnner at New York 8 5
p m ~ necessary
Wednolldly Oc1 18
S Lou s Atlan a Winne a San F anc sea

NlaAL.755pm
Tue.ay Oct 2.t
AlaN 825pm

L.u.gu•

Tueldoy Oct 3
Seatt e Ga de. 9 5 e. Chicago (S rotko. 5--

0 407pm ESPN)

A

a NL,B 5pm

Thui'SdiiY Oct 215

Ala NL e 5 p m if nece&amp;earv
Nla A

Frldoy OC1 5
Satu day Oe

AFC
Eoa
WLTP11 PF PA

) 808pm NBC

4 0 0 00 88

Wodn-y Oct4

Yard Sale
210

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods
ET
AERAT ON MO ORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Rebu
Sock"
Ca A

Ea

800 5

95.28

441 0207
IOiihan Available
2 Pups One mixed
one mixed shepherd
Boxer /Bulldog Mix
Molher beagle and S pups
4 beagle pups

New Yo k He

4
0 800 0 55
3
0 750 8 64
230400 64 04
3
230400 03
3 0 250 64 75
040000 23 05

Battmo e

7

if ecessary
8
ecessary

•

Centra
Tennessee
Ce eand
acksonv e
P ttsbu gh
en nna

Pl-EASE CALL
TODAY

NY Ga s
Ph ade phia

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed propoaa a w II be
ecelved at the olt co of the
Mayor Munlc pa Bu dio'fl:'
Third Stroot Syracuse
Ohio until 4 p m local ti!J18
on Friday Octobe 3 20ll0
lo turnlahlng a! pav ng
mate al nacassa y to
complete the project know
Sy acuse
St eet
aa
Reaurfac ng and at said
t me and p ace pu" ely
opened and aad a oud
Contract documents bid
sheets and spec fleet ons
can be obta ned at said
office after September 23
2000 at $25 00 pe set

og a

No ee u es wew

888 82 3345

REAL ESTATE

Happy Ad

,

SERVICES
Home

Improvements
Pomeroy
Mtddleport
&amp; V c mty
4 ~m ygaage ~ae 0
pas Wha e~

10/1151
FT

Do you know thl1
ferty Saven ym old?
If you do wl1h him 1

-~--

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Happy Birthday
on Tuti Oot Jrd
Lm Mom &amp; Ded

3
0 750 OS
2 2 0 500 93
2.20500 74
230400 52
050000 86
NFC
Eao
3 2 0 600 88
3 2 0 600 2

Public Notice
wh ch money w 1 be
refunded
to
the
unaucceasful b ddera upon
.the return of the comp ate
eat n good condition no
moe than ten (10) dayo
afto the b d date Checks
aha I be made payable to
tho VI age ot Sy acuse
Oho
This p oject s a Mlno ty
Business Enle p sa (MEIE)
Set Aelde Project Each
bidder
must
submit
evidence that s s a
Minor ty
Bus noso
Ento p lse as cart llad by
tho
State
Equa
Emp oyment Opportun ty
coord nato
Each b dde 11 equ ad to
furnish w th Its p oposa a
Bid Guaranty end Contract
Bond n accordance w th
Section 153 54 ot the Ohio
Rev sed Code B d oecur ty
fu n shed n Bond rorm
aha be Issued by a Surety
Company o Corporation
censed n the State of Ohio
to p ov de said surety
Each proposal must
contain the full nama ol the
Party o part es subm It ng
the p oposa
and a I
persons Interested there n
Each bldde must submit
ev dance of Its experiences
on p ojects of aim ar size
and complexity The owner
ntanda and requires that
thlo p oject be comp etod n
late than October 30 2000
A I contractor• and
aubcontracton nvo ved
w th th 1 project wl to tho
extant practlcab o uoe Ohio
producta
mater a a
aervlcea and labo n the
mpltmontat on or the r
Addltona y
p ojoct
contractor comp ance w th
the Equal Emp oymsnt
Oppo tun ty raqul a manta
ol Ohio Adm n otrot ve Code
Chapter 123 the Gove no o

4
5

45
353
274
2 8
03
0 7

7
9
0
2
20

999

3

940
920

3
6
6
19

as

608
5 4
455
406

4

5

2
6
25

364

3 2

;

~·· · · · · · · · · · · · ·

2 0

22

7

16

A mer een Leaglle
C EVELAND N D ANS Name'd Tom
Cando spec a ass s an o baseba ope
a ons
Nat on•l Leegue
FLOA OA MARL NS..,...Annou ed hey
w no exe c sa a one yea p on on OF
Henry Rod guez s con a
PH LADELPH A 'PH LL ES-F ad man
age
a y F ancona h
g coach Ha
McRae
s base coach Brad M s p ch ng
coach Ga e C sco and bench oach Chuck
Cone

BASKETBAll

Na ona Baeketba I Aeaoc 1t on
NO ANA PACERS-Named Ve n F em
ng ass s a coach

FOOTBAll
Nat onal Footba League
GREEN BAY PACKERS S gned

E

Ryan We n gh

Weat

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TV ISS 7

•

0 800 90 38
0 750 9 82
220500 73 76
4 0 200 79

Frldoy Oct 5

Oak and Hudson 20-6 a
nandez 2 3
BA
Satu day Oc
Oak and a New y, k TBA
Sunday Oct
New York a Oak a d TBA

66

3

BBpmFOX

Public Notice
ed P

4

New YOfk Pettine 9 9 a Oak and App e

576
574

BASEB~ll

League

No

2

875
869

necessary

7

Ch cago a Seattle TBA necessary
Sunday Oct I
Sean e a Chicago BA If necessary
Oak and va New York
Tu11d1y Oct 3
New York Cleme s 3 8 a Dak and (He e

745

73

t JRANSACDONS

755 p m
necessary
Sunday Oct 28

55 p m

Ch cago a Sean e BA

5

Ptt Pv•

39 M ss ss pp 35 Pmsbu gh 24 Pu due 6
LSU 5 Eas caro na 2 Coo ado S tO AI
zonaS 5 owaS 5 To9do5 WMk:tllgan4
Anzona 2 A\ebama

So1urdoy Oct 28

W.cin111d1y Oct 4
Sean e a Ch ago 07 p m ESPN

GALLIA COUN'TYI
D0GSHELTER
HOURS 25M F'

and ank ng n he previous po

Othe s ece vlng vo es MICh gan S 84
279 A&amp;M
South Ca o na 79 N C Sa e 69 Te)(aS

Wedn.aday Oct 25

Ch ca;o ve. Sutt •

da 5

The Top Twency Five earns n The Assoc a
ed P ess co age footbal poU with rs -pace
VOles n pa enthe&amp;es ecords hrough Sep 30
ota pons based on 25 ponts to a tl s pace
vote through one po m for a 25 h p ace IJ01G

(FOX)

D VIS ON SER ES
Am~~rtcan

APTop 25

Soturdoy Oct 21
Na.tlona League a Amer can League 7 55
pm
Sunday Oct 22

Poa aaaaon Baaeba

Adopt

pm

WORL.D SERES

Sean e 5 Anaheim 2
SNaon tndt

TRANSPORTATION

Btl

ICOLLEG,E~li.j

NoUonal LAoguo

12 Mlnneso a

Oakland 3 Texas 0

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

...

ORNewYoka A anaS ouswnne 4 5
p m if necessary
Thuraday Oct. 1g
S LOu s A lanta wmne a San Franc sco
OR New Yo k a Adana S LousW1nne 8 5
p m necessary

Batt mo a 9 N Y Yankees
Sunday • Gam••
C evalancl
Toron o 4
Tampa Bay 3 Boa an 2 0 nn ngs

n

82

y a Oetrat
pm
ennessee a C nc nna
pm
nd anapo s a New Eng and p m
Washing on a Ph lad91ph a p m
N Y Giants a Atlanta 4 05 p m
Den er a San Diego 4 5 p m
OakiBnd at San F anc sco 4 5 p m
Seatt1ea Caona 4 spm
Oeve and a Ar zona 4 5 p m
Batt moJe a Jacksonv1 e 8 20 p m
Open Kansas City Dal as S Lou s
Monday Oct g
Tampa Bay a M nnesota 9 p m

Oak and New Yor1( winner a Seaftle 8 5 p m
Sunday Oc1 15
Ch cago a 08k and New York wlnn9f OR
Oakland New YorK wlnne a Seattle 4 s p m

o mauon As Sou Ou Cash
0 scoun s

14!
158
59

San F ar'ICISCO 27 Arizona 20

Wed.-doy Oct 11
Oakland New Vorl&lt; winne&lt; a1 Cl&gt;cago OR
Seattle a Oakland New vortc w nne 4 5 p m

42 Cou 18S
Ca Now Fa maps F anc g n

8ll

130

Chicago 27 Green Bay 24
Wash ngiOn 20 Tampa 8ay 7 OT
Phi adelphia 38 A anta o
Open N Y Je1s Oakland New Orleans
Today a Game
Seattle a Kansas City 9 p m
Sundoy Oct I
BuffalO a M am
pm
New Orleans a Ch cago p m

Oakland New YOO: winner at Ch1C890 OR
sean e a1 Oak and New YOfk wnner
5pm

Land A aRable

:;

Batt more 2 Cleveland o

(NBC)
- y O e t 10

Cash

74

Pittsburgh 24 Jacksonvi e 3
M18rn3 Cncnna 6
New England 28 06n er 9

LEAGUE CHAMP ONSH P SER ES

2

;•

Sunday 1 Gaime~
Da las 6 Carolina 3 OT
S Lou s 57 San Diego 3
nd1808p0 s 8 Buffa o 6
M - 3 Dolrort 2.
en9Hsee 2B N Y Gtanls 4

3 TBA

5

New York
Bos1on

We

Tampa Boy
Gr-Bay

Thurodoy Oc:1. 5
Atlanta Glavin&amp; 2 9 at S Lows S ephen

2

X

..

Dolroll

107 pm (ESPN)

26

30

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

f5~

-

f"'888&amp;.

son 6-9) 407p m ESPN)

vie 5Acms Wae S 4000
Cash Ruttand 9 1\c es S 0 000

II

New Vorl!: iBA It

Monday Oct. I
New YoOI: a San F ancisco TBA Jf neces
sary
St. L.oula va. AUinta
TUHday Oct. 3
Atlanta Maddwc 9 9 a S. LOu s Klle 208

3 2 0 600 87
2 3 0400 12
1 3 0250 71
Control
4 0 0 00 95
3 2 0 600 84
320600 'J
230400 83
• 0 200 75
W101
50010027
230400 95
230400 42
3 0 250 78
3 0 250 55

WuhngiOn

Dalaa
Arizona

wy

Grande 0 A es W h Pond
$25 000 6 Acres S 9 000 Cash
Chash a 6 Acres S9 000 o 37
Acres S40 000 Cash Clay Town
sh p. 7 AK; es S22 0001 ycoon
LakaAea O.Aces$ 2 500
Meigs Co Nice a ge Home
Mas ..- Su e 3 B&amp;d ooms W m
H s o IC Townshrp SChoo nouse
$83000 LagePoeBan0n6
Acres $3 000 C8st'l 0 6 Ac
es $26 000 On Sla e Rou e 68
Home On 6 Acres $44 000 Dan

AU real es a e actvertJsing In
h s newapape Is subject o
the Fedefa Fa Hous ng Act
o 968 wh~h makes H ogaJ
o advertise any pre e ence
m alonordsc mna10n
based on ace color el1g100
sex tam a sta us o national
or gUl o any n ent10n o
make any such pre1e ence
m.ta 100 o d scnm nation

Th s newspape w no
know ng y accept
ad art sements o ea eslale

Overbrook Center 333 Page Street
Middleport is now accepting
appl!catlons for its upcoming Nursing
Assistant Class

If you have a Y q est o s p ea se call Jackie
Newso me RN C Prima y 1 st ucto
a t 740 99 2 6472

Ga ua Co 37 Pa eels To Choose
From K&amp;r Road t-tome On NICe
Sott ng 5 Acres $77 000 A o

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

440

110 Help Wanted

,"

-

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

..

BO

6

82
30
56
85
70

Wa ed DB ason Moo e
NEW YORK G ANTS-.Wa eel LB Kev n
Lews SgnedKJae Homes
HOCKEY

Nation• Hockly laagua
STARS Ass gned F G .eg
Leeb D eft MacM an and G R ck Tab a a
c oUaho he Hl Sg edFJmmyRoy o
a one yea con ac ad assg ed hm on
aan o Man oba o he H
DA LAS

Public Notice

Public Notice

Execut ve Ordo 94 9 shall
be requ ad
Bidders must COI!IPIY w th
the p eva ling wage atas on
Pub c mprovemants n
Me gs County and the
VI age ol Sy acuae Oh o
as dote mln-.cl by the Ohio
Depa tment .of ndustr al
Ae at on a
The V ago ol Syracuse
eserves the lght to waive
ogu ar lias and eject any
oral bids
VIllage of Sy acuse
Sha on Colt
C ark T easu er
(9)25(0)2

aha I be Issued by a Su ety
Company or Co po at on
licensed In the Stele of Oh o
to prov de said su ety
Eac~
proposa
must
conta n the full nome ot the
Party o partes subm tt ng
the
p oposa
and
al

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Sea ed propoea!s will be
ece ved a! the off ca of the
Mayo Mun clpa Bul d ng
Oh o until 4 p m local time
on F day October 13 2000
lo furnlah!ng a! )abo and
equipment neceaaa y to
complete the project known
as
Syracuse
St eet
Resu fac ng and at said
time and place pub c y
opened and read aloud
Cant act documents b d

sheet.&amp; and apactt cat onB'
can be obtained at sold
off ce after Septembe 23
2000 at $25 00 per set
l)'h ch money wl I be
afundad
to
the
unsucceaaful b ddera upon
the eturn or tho comploto
set In good cond tlon no
more than lin (tO) dayo
attoF the bid dote Checks
oha I bs made payable to
the VI ago of Syrocuu
Oho
Each b ddor 1 required to
fu n ah With 11 p OpOII I
Bid Guaranty ond Contract
Bond n accordance JN th
Sect on 1S3 S4 or tho Ohio
Rev asd Code El d "curtly
turn thld n Bond form

pe sons nterested therein
Each bldde

must submit

ev dance of ta exper encea
on p ojects of s m Ia s ze
and complex ty The owne
ntends and equlres that
this p oject be completed
no later than O~tobe 30
2000
A
cant acto s and
subeont acto s nvolved
w th th a project w
to the
eX1ent pract cable use Oh o
materia a
p oducta
service&amp; and h1bo In the
mp ementat on of th s
Addlt onally
p o j act
contractor comp lance with
the Equa Emp oyment
Opportunity equ rementa
or Ohio Adm n st at vo Code
Chaper 123 the Governo 9
Executive Orde 94 9 shall
be equt ed
B dde 8 muat comply w th
the preva lng wage atea on
Pub lc mprovements n
Me gs County and the
V ago or Sy acuae Oh o
as dote mined by the Ohio
Department o1 nduet a

Relet one
Tho V !ago of Syracuoe
the ght to waive
r egular ties and eject any
oral bids
VI ago of Syracuee
She an Cottr I
C a k T eaaurer
(9)25 (10) 2
e~trves

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

CLASSIFIEDSI

�I

Monday, October 2, ·2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 2,

20ilO

ALLEYOOP

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
· Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

Now Open
For Lunch
DOMINO'S PIZZA
Pome'roy, Ohio
Any Large
Any toppings
$8.99
Deep Dish $9.99
Pomeroy Store
Only
992-2124

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement.iJ.j
IErnerge11y Funds; Mortgage;
-~
Medical • Nursing Home

notu PARTinG OUT

ROBERT BISSELL
· CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
Ctrllllntetd,
·Garages
Simington
·
•
Complete
UfeUmt Wall'lnly
Remodeling
Local Conhlclor
Stop &amp; Compere
F~EE

ESTIMATES
740-992-1671

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
'OF

P'u bllc Notice
A. 1 Total Plo. Coplao
Prtnted: 5,088.
e . Paid and/or Requeoted

GALLIPOLIS

Circulation:

State Route 7,

.

· TUppers Plains

1. Pald /Raquutod
Outsldo·Counly Mall
Legat Copy Number: 000503 Subscrlptlona Stated on
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Form 3541 . (Include
Mailing Date: 09/1812000
advertlaer'a Proof and
TE21·GOOOI562)
exchange copies.) 166
Sealed proposals will be
2. Paid In-County
3541.

Athens and
· Washington Counties.
Your Quality 24-Hour
Chlldcare Services

,

124 In Aulland Township,
Meigs County, Ohio, In
accordance with plana and

apeclflcatlons. by grading,

draining, paving with
asphalt concrete on B"
concrete ba1e and by
conatructlng structure No.

MEG-124·1252, a three opon

reinforced concrete slab on
reinforced concrete capped
pile piers and abutments.

(Spano: 26'-5 3/8", 37'·9",
26"-5 1/4" C/C bearings
roadway: 36"·0" F/F curb
w/6'·0" Sidewalks and

concrete railing) over Little

Leading Crook.
"The

dat•

set

1or

0.

911/00 1 mo pd

"Wdijel""

Rutland, Ohio

Free Distribution by

Mums. Indian
,API&gt;Ies. APPle
Gift Items. Subs.
le'Sa,ce,lce Cream. AII)ISi
1io1!~1a. Summer Sausaee. Beef JerkY

atatad on form 3541: 0.
2. In county as stated on
form 3541 : 0.
3. Other claasas mailed

through the USPS: 0.
Free

Distribution

Outside the Mall (Carrier or
·l42·l405
Other Means): 37
" M·F 10-7 Sat 10-6 Sun~ Closed
F. Total l'rea Distribution:
37.
G. Total Dlotrlbutlon : ~·-;:================:::;'!
4,51o.
.A~El
H. Coplee Not Olotrlbuted: ·
478.
I. Total: 5,088
Avorouo No. Coplaa ot

r'

completion ol thlo work -S-t.ngle leaue
ahllllll be •• set forth In the

bidding proposal." Plans

..._ and Specifications are on

file In tho Depar\jnont of
Transportation.
Gordon Proctor
Director of Trenaportatlon

(9) 25, (1 0) 2, 2 tc

Published
NearesttoFIIIngData:
15. Extent and nature of
Circulation.

Pr~i.d:~~~-N•.

copies

B. Paid and/or requested
Circulation :
1.
PaJd / Requeated

1
t

I
f
~

Cellular .
Jeff Warner Ins.
992 • 5479
,

Outside-County Mall
Subocrlpllons Staled on .
Public Notice
Form 3541. (Include
PJIOeATE COURT OF
advertiser's proof and l . r-,..-----~~-----------,
MEIGSCOUNTY,OHIO
exchangecopleo.):151.
Slop ,In And See
IN RE: CHANGE OF NAME
OF Erica GayleTackattto
~Paid In-County
Steve Riffle
•
Jennifer Lyn Tackett Case
Subacrlptlona stated on
No. 30800 ·
·rorm 3541 , (Include
··- Sales R~presentative
NOTICE OF HEARING ON advertlser'a proof and
CHANGE OF NAME
exchange copleel: 95. .
'"'Larry Schey
Applicant
hereby
gives
3. Sales through Dealers
notice to all Interested · and Carriers , Straet
persons that the applicant Vendors and Counter Salaa:

..........

f "-

has llled an Application for 4,295.
change ol Nama In· the C. Total Paid and/or
Probate Court at Melga
County, Ohio, requesting
. the change of name of Erica
Gayla Tackett to Jennifer
Lyn Tackett. The hearing on
the application will be held
on
the
2nd
day
of
November, 2000, at 10
o'clock a.m. In the Probate

Requested Circulation:
4,541 .
D. Free Distribution by
Mall.
1. Outside-County a a
stated on form 3541: 0.
2. In county as stated on
form 3541: 0 .
·
3. Other classes mailed

Court ol Meigs, County, through lhe USPS: 0.

located
at
Courthouse,
E . Free Distribution
Second St., Pomeroy, Oh, Outside the Mall (Carrier or

45769.

Other Meana): 35

Erica Gayle Tackett

F. Total Free Distribution:

Pomeroy, Oh 45769

G.

43883 Cherry Ridge Rd. 35.
(10) 2

Public Notice
STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP
MANAGEMENT ANP
CIRCULATION
1, Title of publlcallon: The
Dally Sentinel.
2.Publlcatlon No. 145·960.
3. Date . of tilling :

Total Distribution :

4,576.
H. Copies Not Dlotrlbuted:
324.
I. Total: 4,900.
Charles W. Govey,
October 2, 2000

.Publisher

. September 29, 2000.
4." Frequency of Issue:

Dally Monday through
Frtday.
5. No . 01 luu.ao
published Annually: 259

8 . Annual Subscription
Price . $104.00 Home

Delivered.

7. Locatlo·n of Known

Office ol Publication: 111

Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio,

Meigs County, 45769.
8. Location ol the

Headquarters or General
Business Offices or the'
Publlsh.-rs: '111 Court St,

Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.
9. Publisher: Charles W.
Govey, 111 Court St.,
Pom•roy, Ohio, 45769.

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich,

P9mroy, Ohio 45769.

10. Owner: Tom Lindley

Ill, the Evening Newo, 221

Spring St., Jeffersonville, IN

47131. M. Jock Quick, cnhl,

'

or

Trade
•
1n

750 Easl State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
. "A

11 .

Mortgagee :

Rellrement Systems of
Alabama, 135 S. Union St.,

Montgomery, AL 36119
Average No. Copies Each

l'sue During Preceding 12
Months :
·
15.. Extent and natura of
Circulation.

'

KJ 2

the
Classi(ieas!

HANING's
a
hlftlll:lftg

Tr•t:llar

kiulw
.
FREE ESTIMATES

East

• J .10 5 4 2
• K 8 3

• J 10 9 6

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

7~0-992-5776

r---------,
Th C
,E · RAFTY,

BLIND SPOT
(Factory OU11et)

All vertical hUmh are
made to order ut our
locntiun

uP To 70% oFF

[II]

HARTWELL HOl SE
We now offer GIFt &amp;
Wcr1cllng Registry ·
We have Village Cunclle'

VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
·Any Size Double Hung·

992-7696

• Free Installation
• Free In Home Estimates

$229.00*

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC

C'all for Further Details

CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Reslct,ntlal, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured

QUHUTY WinDOW

svsnms, me.

992·4119
1·800·291·5600
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
ON STATE ROUTE 33 6
MILES NORTH OF
POMEROY, OHIO, AT
' COUNTY ROAD 18
•No Dealers or Contractors
Please W\/#023477

JONES'
OHIO 45631• CHESHIRE, OHIO
(740) 367-0266 •I·"tt\1'1'1
S\U\'1'1\l
·nall\'6
1-800-950-3359 · Gtt"
20 Yrs. Exp . • Ins. Owner: Ron me Jones

&lt;&gt;ACCieU I.I:i,,

Free Estimates

Stratton trained
mechanics
We service mowers,
chainsaws, tillers,

generators, snowbloWers, .
weedeaters , pick-up and ·
delivery ava1lable on
•
request.

'Open Mqn-Frl 8·6; Sat. 9-4·
Sun. Closed

prier s paid· also.

Dozer work.
Free Estimates

INC.

'

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
I
• Room Additions
:
• Roofing
''
COMMERCIAL ond RESIDENTIAL
FREEt ESTIMATES
•

.

740-~92-5050

( ll undy )
41100

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per ga"JJ!
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. If 00~50 1111 "'""

I

HfiQLIJtG
EXCfiVfiTI JtG

740·992·7599

Hauling • Limestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
.Bulldozer Services

(NO SUNDAY 01\LLS)

(740) 992-3470

.

Ca ll T&amp; H Logginp;
uflt'l' 8:00 JHil

Phone 740.949·2804
Owner .Jim Pickens
Mechanic· Bill Jones
Parts M!lr -Tamra Pickens .

BISSELL BUILDERS

!

. "
or smalllraeks. Top

dlmo

HILL'S
·· SELF STORACE
29670 Bashen
Road
Racine, Ohio
. 45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM
1121100 1 mo. od.
.

SHHDE RIUER ftG SERUICE

Advertise in
this space for
stoo :per
month.

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 15.25/50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle feed 16.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food s6.75/50 lbs.

740-985-3831
35537 St Rt 7 North

·(740) 7 42-8888
1-888-521-0916

Brian Morrison/Rorine, Ohio
(7 40) 985-3948

SYracuse. 'OH

Aher 6 pm-740-985-4180

Featuring two Briggs &amp; .

•

Stantlill'T limber lur·gc

Before 6p.m. leave Message ·

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

Pomero , Ohio 45769

SMITH'S COfimtOCTIOfi
• New Homes
• l3arages
• Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks.
• Roofing

Need If done,

gl~e

us a call

FREE ESTIMATES

•

Creaf Priced on New Homes'

992-2753

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

992-1101

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

•

• Custom Garages • Roofing
.. Concrete Work • Decks
'
• Additions
740·696·1176
or 740·696-1233

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts .
Factory Aut"orized
. Case-IH P,..u
Dealers.
1000 St. Rl. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

741J.887.0383

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE
Meigs County
Fairgrounds
Oct. I, 2000 ·Apr. I, 2001

CALL FUR MORE
INFORMATION

949-2033

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.
OFFICE EXPRESS
BUS!NESS SERVICES
All Type s ofDus iness
Support Se rvice s

11401 661-3224 .
1-800-828-0212
FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
Dump Truck Delivery
Meigs and Gallla Counllu
Cllll &amp; Leave Meuagc

992·6142 or
Toll-Free 1-877-604-735
Ball Logging &amp;
Firewood
35215 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 '
. HEAP Vouchen accepted for
Meigs &amp; Gallla Countle•

Advertise our business
on this page or one month for
-as·low as $2S
"

Pone 992·2155

se llaleptlols

coopllc:

57TI,.feeturw
5I Oceon fish

• 8 • 3
• K 6

DOWN
1 Small monkey
2 60 minutes
3 Skaleton part

23 Flavor

'r1 Harbor
32 Growing out

·~nee
5 Heat unit

-

Iabbr.)
33 SllaterSonJa34 Dye compound 8 Reddish-broWn
35F~(one"•

7 Drink to exceA
rtghta)
a
Garden
36 Roped (8 - )
tool
39 Rocky
Moonlllln park 9 Smell
10 Spanish
40Anger

painter
11 Indigo dye

19=-::t '
~18efonlthls
· time, old-~

12 Maka

22-God ·"
23 Close falcon ·:

. oyoa

24 Foroat ox •
25 Comptlmen- &lt;

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West Nol1b East
South
Pass 3NT All pass
I PIT

992·6215
22 yu. Local

: 740-742-SOISor
: 1-877-353-7022

WANTED

"Take the pain out
of paintingLei me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Phone (740) 593-6671

n:Jtland, Ohio
Truck seats. ::ar seats. headliners,
truck tarps, c&lt;-.nvertlble &amp; VInyl tops.
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon - F ~·i 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yre experience

!Zl

HUBBARD'S
CREENHOUSE

•

V.C. YOUNG Ill .
Pomeroy, Ohio

• Q9 7 6

• A 7 2
tAQ975
.. 53 2 .

Free Estimates

17401 992-3838

Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks 25 years Experience
FREE ESTIMATES

fall Mums 6 for $10
Also Gourds &amp; PumPkins.

740-698-673.5

• Patio &amp; Pordo Dtdts

•
•

a

•AK

• Now Garvaos

• Roofing &amp; Gulltn
• v.,t 5Ning &amp; Palotlng

9

South

• R- aUittons &amp; Ro11odollog
:

10

West

6
• A 7 4

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIC£

connEcnon ·

1-800-272•5179or446-9800

• fall fertilizers

A &amp; D Auto Up o slery _. Plus, Inc

3500 Colonnade Parkway,

Sullo 600, Birmingham , AL,
35243.

t

CBES'I'ER

• lltctrkal ' Plllllblog

14

17 Ollnpor181
• 11 little devil
20 Roekand21 Hot late

• Q Sf
• Q J

Utilities

........ "' .. -··- ...
YOUR
concRETE

Call Us First Or We Both Lose!
Ask For Mr. Ford
. Over 30 Year Experience

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Mall.
1. Outslde·County as

E.

740-992-4559

740-667-6329

(Include

Office of Contracts of the· advartleer's proof and
Ohio
Department
of exchange copleo): 97.
Transportation, Columbus,
3. Sales through Dealers
Ohio, untlltO:OO a.m.
and
CarrJer&amp; 1 Street
Wednooday,
0 c 1o b or Vendors and Counter Sales:
25,2000
4,310.
For Improving Section
C. Total Paid Circulation:

MEG-124·12.52, State Route 4,573

Tues-Frl 10-6
Sat. 10-4
• Candle making .
suppllea
·Wooden crafts
• Baskets

Certified in Meigs,

Subscriptions stated on

qualified bidders at the Form

"ace 're back fo OI.U'
replar 'i.oun"

Se111icei
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Siles
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Seplic Sy61ei1U &amp;

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

The Country
Candle ShoP

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

HanDn1

BuUdo•er &amp; Backhoe

53 Bat-In god
55'--lhewMI

-- -

7Actreol

t e ltuno&amp;: c11y

• 8 3

• 10

Columbus, Ohio
Office of Contract•

accepted from all pre-

740-992-5232

t3 Cryslelllne

~Or.'lorv.

47
51 Sllc:lly
llythlcal
ftler

15~Job

BAUMLUMBER
ST. 11'1'. 248

.1 F'-*
liquid

Norib

-,

42 Actreu OeiiFI)

ACROSS

PRODUCTS

Protect your guns, fam ily heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, inveslmenl records, pholo
albums, ca111eras, household inventory ami
sentimenlal items will be safe.
For more information call

J3795 HiiAnd Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

140-992-1506

- - - - - - - - - - - - --:

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Self-Storage

fOR ffiORE InfO. PLEASE CAll

• 7/22/TFN

Public Notice
' NOTICE TO eJDOERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

SECURITY·.

High &amp;·Dry

1M! tadiUiiC fleetwaod
1!1911 fll"d 1'llmclerlllnt
1991 fll"d flerostar llan
1fl2 filii Explorer
1993 ford taurus
1994 fonlllanger P/U

NEA Crossword Puzzle

.BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALDER

~"~

1916 filii Uan

1MHotOII mR2

·The Dally Sentinel • Page B5

Pomeroy, Middleport, .O hio

DADBURN SOClABLE
SECURITY F,.}f;JY,:,j~~
CHECKS lt

Singer
Redding
211-ond

....

•

-.

31 Golf-a _
37 Expunges
•

An anniversary

Today would have been the
50th anniversary of the Peanuts
cartoon by Charles Schulz. As you
know, sadly he died late last year.
Earlier this year. the cartoonists
had a Celebrate Peanuts day, bu1
unfortunately I didn't know aboul '
it; otherwise I would have run this
column then. Slill, this isn't such
a bad day for my own "thank
you" to Schulz for so many
laughs over the years.
Schulz enjoyed bridge and
used it a few times in his cartoon.
This was the final deal he included , on Sunday, November 7,
1999.
How should Snoopy have
declared three no-trump after
West led the spade four?
Schulz look his deals from a
THE BORN LOSER
Culbertson book. That author
~
~
~
~
""'I ~
opened one no-trump with 16-18
\\-\Et-1 Wf\Y, lt-1 ffi[WOIQD, DO
SO II-\ NJ~ilm.-1~, \.Jf\ER.E: Tf\E.
f\EY, POP, 1\ '~ OrfiCJI\LLY FI'\U.
11\t'( G..LL IT HI( ''~fo\rtiER.' points and would never add more
OlY:'&gt;\1'\C.!&gt; m:,
NOW,\~\ IT 7
than one distribution point with a
Ol-YM.PIC.~ -,
II WOULD !'£
M f\AA
balanced hand.
~II{(;,, Rli'.f\F
Snoopy won the first trick, then
led a club. Suddenly play was
intenupted because he had to ny
·his Sopwith Camel in an air bat·
tie against the Red Baron . Despite
his plane bei ng hit, Snoopy got
back to base safel y. He reported 10
his corn'manding officer abolll
BIG NATE
not only th e battle but also the
1: GUESS IT'S 'i RUE 'TH/\T
deill, poi nling out that he went one
!! .. Wtto.a.! WHOA!
'I'NYONE CAN BE A
LOOK "T Tt'AT ~ EVERY
down in three no-trump . On
GUYS , ! JUST
BIG. · TIME RECORI:&gt;ING.
Gl RL IN SCHOOL HAS
returning Ia th e bridge game,
ST.AI.fi;. ~ A.\.L "&lt;OU NEED
HAD ANOTHER
" LOCKE!&lt;. FULL Of
ONE OF 1'\Y
IS A &gt;'"-LF- DECENT
SYNC PICTURES'
Snoopy lold Woodstock and his
SIIIG.ING. VOICE," FEW
8RtLLIJl.IIT · 'oEAs •.
two friends. "He said I should
t&gt;MICE MOVE~, "-lit&gt; have led a low heart to lhe
~~~1 'queen. "
Correct! Snoopy had eighllop
tricks: two spades, one heart and
five diamonds. When he played
on clubs, the defenders established their spades first, winning
PEANUTS
three spades and two clubs .
Ins1ead, Snoopy should have
I ~AVE PLANS FOR
hoped that West held the heart
IMPROVING HIE APPEARANCE
king; then the heart queen sets up
OF T~E DESERT..
as Snoopy'~ ninth trick .

•

29 -Step- -1~ 30 Splft
.

Opening lead: • 4

38 TVA conoorn

41 Turklc
trlbHmen

BY PHILLIP ALDER

tf.

-

tary ttcbt

211

42 Soli

a=:r:--'
albalt'l
en••
44
Arclllb81d

45 otva'•
opoclally

47 Kamel

41CEO'I-II
48Cu- · '
50 Spirit lamp

ti2TYtleof-

54 110.. quickly

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campoa
CM.ooty Cipher c:ryptograma are creat..:t from QUOtations by famoua people, put lf'ld
pmonl. Eldl-r In tho dphor -tO&lt;-""'·
Today's clue: H eqiJIJ/5 U

• 9 A V M

BJ

ZOZOLBJZ

WXHV

XG

..

AHK·AM·CAAOJ."

. •·

ZJJZGKBXVVF
BG

LAGCHLKZC

'

YKJALNBJY

A'GZBV

"

To get a current weather
report, check the
.. . ...

W'- ....
)

.

Sentinel

. . -.

IMONDAY

lD/2100

--~~em COirthday
'Your

Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2000
The year ahead could be a pivotal one for you in clarifying your
thinking" and the direction in .
which you'd like your life to take.
· Defining your aims will pul you
onto a beneficial cou rse.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) It's
okay Ia appoinMthers to take on
some critical assignments today to
accomplish a common goal, but ·
don ' t relinquish the catbird seat.
You ' re the one who can direct a
wi nning team. Trying to palch up
a broken romance? The AstroGraph Malchmaker can help you
, . understand what to do to make the
&amp;relationship work . Mail $2.75 lo
Matchmaker, c/o th is newspaper,
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY I 0156.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Give your mosl significant finan·
ciul mutters Ihe unenl ion they
need today und there's e.very rea·
son 10 believe you cnn chulk up
some solid number.. Good for·
JUne is in your comer.
SAOITIARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec .
21) Ruther lhun uuempllnB lo .
,sway an entire group Ia your WilY
of thinking today. Isolate lis key

members, who can influence the
rest. One-on-one talk s will be
more effective .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
19) Now is the day to ask for the
assistance you need 10 complete
l n intricate assignment. Chances
ue the response you' re seek ing
Nill be forthcoming.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Through people with whom
you' re in vo lved sociall y today
several pleasant happenings could
occur. rhis even goes so far as to
endorse mi xing business wilh
pleasure.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Something rather signi fi canl
mi ght develop for you today that
could contribule to your prosperity and well being. Stay on your
toes so thai ,you' II be able 10 take
advantage of it.
ARIES (Murch 21·April 19)
Even though it is imponant to you
to be your own person, lodny you
will be luckier if you teom up wilh
n pnr1ner who con offer much
Input. A aood union serves as u
multiplier.
TAURUS (April 20-Muy 20)
Don't leave uny stones untumed

•
today regardin g ways Ia make or
save money. Your financial
prospects loo k especially promising for you at this time.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)
What wi ll help you significantly
loday is you r ability 10 knit
together bits and pieces of info r-

mal ion concerning soc ift l issues
thai are imponanll o you . Lei this
gu ide you.
CANCF.R (June 21-Ju ly 22)
ln Siead of listening to di »c nting
faction s about how a crit ical matter should or should not be managed. rely niote upon your , own
innate ~e n sc of what is ri ght or
wrong and ac1 accordingly.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today
may offer you tbe &lt;&gt;hance 10 have
a wi&gt;b fulfi lled. so don't put lim·
itati ons on your hopes and dri ve,.
Sotncone wbo tbinks on a grand
.-ca1c cmlld inspire you In 'trivc
fol' somc1h ing big.
VIRGO (Au~. 2J· Sept. 22) If
snmclhi11!t yolt. bopcd wou ld
make you money didn't work yes·
terduy, try for it uguin. Toduy
cou ld bring you the lu~k denied
you previously

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'An actor Is ... a craftsman, a bag of tricks, a child, I ·
cool observer or mankind: - Sir Alec Gulnnass

'::~;~:~' S©\\~lA-"f..~s·
....
ClAY I. POlLAN

_ _ _ _..;,__

1~

WOlD
lAIII

-

~r

0 :::ra:mb\:•~c::. 1:

low to form four simple warda.

I R A VA Y
E MP U l

t
1:::

C A NSK

Granny says that if you can

1 1 r 1~

h--r-r-..::--r-l' look back on your life and have

Is

no regrets. you have a great gift
~-~-~~-::~-~-:;~-~~f~or- -------- memo~ -

FETEEF
I
1=,-rl.
.:;.~....;_,~e:::---T.~:-o,r_-I 0
1. . . . L . .
'-...J..-L-..,t.........l--'---'

c

8
8

Comple;e

t~e

chuckle quoted

by filling In the missing word!

you develop from !lop No. 3 below.

I' I' 1· 1• I' I' I' ·1· I' I::

PRINr NUMBERED
LETTERS
•
UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

FORI

•

I I I I I I 1. I l:i.

SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS

Plaque- Brave - Omega .· Eyelid- IMPROVED

My ne 1ghbor_is so used to his job as an ad copywriler
lhal he greelecJ me w1lh . "Hi, whal's new and IMPROVED?"

OCTOBER 21

.

'

�I

Monday, October 2, ·2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 2,

20ilO

ALLEYOOP

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
· Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

Now Open
For Lunch
DOMINO'S PIZZA
Pome'roy, Ohio
Any Large
Any toppings
$8.99
Deep Dish $9.99
Pomeroy Store
Only
992-2124

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement.iJ.j
IErnerge11y Funds; Mortgage;
-~
Medical • Nursing Home

notu PARTinG OUT

ROBERT BISSELL
· CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
Ctrllllntetd,
·Garages
Simington
·
•
Complete
UfeUmt Wall'lnly
Remodeling
Local Conhlclor
Stop &amp; Compere
F~EE

ESTIMATES
740-992-1671

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
'OF

P'u bllc Notice
A. 1 Total Plo. Coplao
Prtnted: 5,088.
e . Paid and/or Requeoted

GALLIPOLIS

Circulation:

State Route 7,

.

· TUppers Plains

1. Pald /Raquutod
Outsldo·Counly Mall
Legat Copy Number: 000503 Subscrlptlona Stated on
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Form 3541 . (Include
Mailing Date: 09/1812000
advertlaer'a Proof and
TE21·GOOOI562)
exchange copies.) 166
Sealed proposals will be
2. Paid In-County
3541.

Athens and
· Washington Counties.
Your Quality 24-Hour
Chlldcare Services

,

124 In Aulland Township,
Meigs County, Ohio, In
accordance with plana and

apeclflcatlons. by grading,

draining, paving with
asphalt concrete on B"
concrete ba1e and by
conatructlng structure No.

MEG-124·1252, a three opon

reinforced concrete slab on
reinforced concrete capped
pile piers and abutments.

(Spano: 26'-5 3/8", 37'·9",
26"-5 1/4" C/C bearings
roadway: 36"·0" F/F curb
w/6'·0" Sidewalks and

concrete railing) over Little

Leading Crook.
"The

dat•

set

1or

0.

911/00 1 mo pd

"Wdijel""

Rutland, Ohio

Free Distribution by

Mums. Indian
,API&gt;Ies. APPle
Gift Items. Subs.
le'Sa,ce,lce Cream. AII)ISi
1io1!~1a. Summer Sausaee. Beef JerkY

atatad on form 3541: 0.
2. In county as stated on
form 3541 : 0.
3. Other claasas mailed

through the USPS: 0.
Free

Distribution

Outside the Mall (Carrier or
·l42·l405
Other Means): 37
" M·F 10-7 Sat 10-6 Sun~ Closed
F. Total l'rea Distribution:
37.
G. Total Dlotrlbutlon : ~·-;:================:::;'!
4,51o.
.A~El
H. Coplee Not Olotrlbuted: ·
478.
I. Total: 5,088
Avorouo No. Coplaa ot

r'

completion ol thlo work -S-t.ngle leaue
ahllllll be •• set forth In the

bidding proposal." Plans

..._ and Specifications are on

file In tho Depar\jnont of
Transportation.
Gordon Proctor
Director of Trenaportatlon

(9) 25, (1 0) 2, 2 tc

Published
NearesttoFIIIngData:
15. Extent and nature of
Circulation.

Pr~i.d:~~~-N•.

copies

B. Paid and/or requested
Circulation :
1.
PaJd / Requeated

1
t

I
f
~

Cellular .
Jeff Warner Ins.
992 • 5479
,

Outside-County Mall
Subocrlpllons Staled on .
Public Notice
Form 3541. (Include
PJIOeATE COURT OF
advertiser's proof and l . r-,..-----~~-----------,
MEIGSCOUNTY,OHIO
exchangecopleo.):151.
Slop ,In And See
IN RE: CHANGE OF NAME
OF Erica GayleTackattto
~Paid In-County
Steve Riffle
•
Jennifer Lyn Tackett Case
Subacrlptlona stated on
No. 30800 ·
·rorm 3541 , (Include
··- Sales R~presentative
NOTICE OF HEARING ON advertlser'a proof and
CHANGE OF NAME
exchange copleel: 95. .
'"'Larry Schey
Applicant
hereby
gives
3. Sales through Dealers
notice to all Interested · and Carriers , Straet
persons that the applicant Vendors and Counter Salaa:

..........

f "-

has llled an Application for 4,295.
change ol Nama In· the C. Total Paid and/or
Probate Court at Melga
County, Ohio, requesting
. the change of name of Erica
Gayla Tackett to Jennifer
Lyn Tackett. The hearing on
the application will be held
on
the
2nd
day
of
November, 2000, at 10
o'clock a.m. In the Probate

Requested Circulation:
4,541 .
D. Free Distribution by
Mall.
1. Outside-County a a
stated on form 3541: 0.
2. In county as stated on
form 3541: 0 .
·
3. Other classes mailed

Court ol Meigs, County, through lhe USPS: 0.

located
at
Courthouse,
E . Free Distribution
Second St., Pomeroy, Oh, Outside the Mall (Carrier or

45769.

Other Meana): 35

Erica Gayle Tackett

F. Total Free Distribution:

Pomeroy, Oh 45769

G.

43883 Cherry Ridge Rd. 35.
(10) 2

Public Notice
STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP
MANAGEMENT ANP
CIRCULATION
1, Title of publlcallon: The
Dally Sentinel.
2.Publlcatlon No. 145·960.
3. Date . of tilling :

Total Distribution :

4,576.
H. Copies Not Dlotrlbuted:
324.
I. Total: 4,900.
Charles W. Govey,
October 2, 2000

.Publisher

. September 29, 2000.
4." Frequency of Issue:

Dally Monday through
Frtday.
5. No . 01 luu.ao
published Annually: 259

8 . Annual Subscription
Price . $104.00 Home

Delivered.

7. Locatlo·n of Known

Office ol Publication: 111

Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio,

Meigs County, 45769.
8. Location ol the

Headquarters or General
Business Offices or the'
Publlsh.-rs: '111 Court St,

Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.
9. Publisher: Charles W.
Govey, 111 Court St.,
Pom•roy, Ohio, 45769.

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich,

P9mroy, Ohio 45769.

10. Owner: Tom Lindley

Ill, the Evening Newo, 221

Spring St., Jeffersonville, IN

47131. M. Jock Quick, cnhl,

'

or

Trade
•
1n

750 Easl State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
. "A

11 .

Mortgagee :

Rellrement Systems of
Alabama, 135 S. Union St.,

Montgomery, AL 36119
Average No. Copies Each

l'sue During Preceding 12
Months :
·
15.. Extent and natura of
Circulation.

'

KJ 2

the
Classi(ieas!

HANING's
a
hlftlll:lftg

Tr•t:llar

kiulw
.
FREE ESTIMATES

East

• J .10 5 4 2
• K 8 3

• J 10 9 6

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

7~0-992-5776

r---------,
Th C
,E · RAFTY,

BLIND SPOT
(Factory OU11et)

All vertical hUmh are
made to order ut our
locntiun

uP To 70% oFF

[II]

HARTWELL HOl SE
We now offer GIFt &amp;
Wcr1cllng Registry ·
We have Village Cunclle'

VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
·Any Size Double Hung·

992-7696

• Free Installation
• Free In Home Estimates

$229.00*

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC

C'all for Further Details

CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Reslct,ntlal, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured

QUHUTY WinDOW

svsnms, me.

992·4119
1·800·291·5600
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
ON STATE ROUTE 33 6
MILES NORTH OF
POMEROY, OHIO, AT
' COUNTY ROAD 18
•No Dealers or Contractors
Please W\/#023477

JONES'
OHIO 45631• CHESHIRE, OHIO
(740) 367-0266 •I·"tt\1'1'1
S\U\'1'1\l
·nall\'6
1-800-950-3359 · Gtt"
20 Yrs. Exp . • Ins. Owner: Ron me Jones

&lt;&gt;ACCieU I.I:i,,

Free Estimates

Stratton trained
mechanics
We service mowers,
chainsaws, tillers,

generators, snowbloWers, .
weedeaters , pick-up and ·
delivery ava1lable on
•
request.

'Open Mqn-Frl 8·6; Sat. 9-4·
Sun. Closed

prier s paid· also.

Dozer work.
Free Estimates

INC.

'

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
I
• Room Additions
:
• Roofing
''
COMMERCIAL ond RESIDENTIAL
FREEt ESTIMATES
•

.

740-~92-5050

( ll undy )
41100

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per ga"JJ!
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. If 00~50 1111 "'""

I

HfiQLIJtG
EXCfiVfiTI JtG

740·992·7599

Hauling • Limestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
.Bulldozer Services

(NO SUNDAY 01\LLS)

(740) 992-3470

.

Ca ll T&amp; H Logginp;
uflt'l' 8:00 JHil

Phone 740.949·2804
Owner .Jim Pickens
Mechanic· Bill Jones
Parts M!lr -Tamra Pickens .

BISSELL BUILDERS

!

. "
or smalllraeks. Top

dlmo

HILL'S
·· SELF STORACE
29670 Bashen
Road
Racine, Ohio
. 45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM
1121100 1 mo. od.
.

SHHDE RIUER ftG SERUICE

Advertise in
this space for
stoo :per
month.

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 15.25/50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle feed 16.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food s6.75/50 lbs.

740-985-3831
35537 St Rt 7 North

·(740) 7 42-8888
1-888-521-0916

Brian Morrison/Rorine, Ohio
(7 40) 985-3948

SYracuse. 'OH

Aher 6 pm-740-985-4180

Featuring two Briggs &amp; .

•

Stantlill'T limber lur·gc

Before 6p.m. leave Message ·

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

Pomero , Ohio 45769

SMITH'S COfimtOCTIOfi
• New Homes
• l3arages
• Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks.
• Roofing

Need If done,

gl~e

us a call

FREE ESTIMATES

•

Creaf Priced on New Homes'

992-2753

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

992-1101

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

•

• Custom Garages • Roofing
.. Concrete Work • Decks
'
• Additions
740·696·1176
or 740·696-1233

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts .
Factory Aut"orized
. Case-IH P,..u
Dealers.
1000 St. Rl. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

741J.887.0383

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE
Meigs County
Fairgrounds
Oct. I, 2000 ·Apr. I, 2001

CALL FUR MORE
INFORMATION

949-2033

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.
OFFICE EXPRESS
BUS!NESS SERVICES
All Type s ofDus iness
Support Se rvice s

11401 661-3224 .
1-800-828-0212
FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
Dump Truck Delivery
Meigs and Gallla Counllu
Cllll &amp; Leave Meuagc

992·6142 or
Toll-Free 1-877-604-735
Ball Logging &amp;
Firewood
35215 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 '
. HEAP Vouchen accepted for
Meigs &amp; Gallla Countle•

Advertise our business
on this page or one month for
-as·low as $2S
"

Pone 992·2155

se llaleptlols

coopllc:

57TI,.feeturw
5I Oceon fish

• 8 • 3
• K 6

DOWN
1 Small monkey
2 60 minutes
3 Skaleton part

23 Flavor

'r1 Harbor
32 Growing out

·~nee
5 Heat unit

-

Iabbr.)
33 SllaterSonJa34 Dye compound 8 Reddish-broWn
35F~(one"•

7 Drink to exceA
rtghta)
a
Garden
36 Roped (8 - )
tool
39 Rocky
Moonlllln park 9 Smell
10 Spanish
40Anger

painter
11 Indigo dye

19=-::t '
~18efonlthls
· time, old-~

12 Maka

22-God ·"
23 Close falcon ·:

. oyoa

24 Foroat ox •
25 Comptlmen- &lt;

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West Nol1b East
South
Pass 3NT All pass
I PIT

992·6215
22 yu. Local

: 740-742-SOISor
: 1-877-353-7022

WANTED

"Take the pain out
of paintingLei me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Phone (740) 593-6671

n:Jtland, Ohio
Truck seats. ::ar seats. headliners,
truck tarps, c&lt;-.nvertlble &amp; VInyl tops.
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon - F ~·i 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yre experience

!Zl

HUBBARD'S
CREENHOUSE

•

V.C. YOUNG Ill .
Pomeroy, Ohio

• Q9 7 6

• A 7 2
tAQ975
.. 53 2 .

Free Estimates

17401 992-3838

Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks 25 years Experience
FREE ESTIMATES

fall Mums 6 for $10
Also Gourds &amp; PumPkins.

740-698-673.5

• Patio &amp; Pordo Dtdts

•
•

a

•AK

• Now Garvaos

• Roofing &amp; Gulltn
• v.,t 5Ning &amp; Palotlng

9

South

• R- aUittons &amp; Ro11odollog
:

10

West

6
• A 7 4

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIC£

connEcnon ·

1-800-272•5179or446-9800

• fall fertilizers

A &amp; D Auto Up o slery _. Plus, Inc

3500 Colonnade Parkway,

Sullo 600, Birmingham , AL,
35243.

t

CBES'I'ER

• lltctrkal ' Plllllblog

14

17 Ollnpor181
• 11 little devil
20 Roekand21 Hot late

• Q Sf
• Q J

Utilities

........ "' .. -··- ...
YOUR
concRETE

Call Us First Or We Both Lose!
Ask For Mr. Ford
. Over 30 Year Experience

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Mall.
1. Outslde·County as

E.

740-992-4559

740-667-6329

(Include

Office of Contracts of the· advartleer's proof and
Ohio
Department
of exchange copleo): 97.
Transportation, Columbus,
3. Sales through Dealers
Ohio, untlltO:OO a.m.
and
CarrJer&amp; 1 Street
Wednooday,
0 c 1o b or Vendors and Counter Sales:
25,2000
4,310.
For Improving Section
C. Total Paid Circulation:

MEG-124·12.52, State Route 4,573

Tues-Frl 10-6
Sat. 10-4
• Candle making .
suppllea
·Wooden crafts
• Baskets

Certified in Meigs,

Subscriptions stated on

qualified bidders at the Form

"ace 're back fo OI.U'
replar 'i.oun"

Se111icei
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Siles
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Seplic Sy61ei1U &amp;

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

The Country
Candle ShoP

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

HanDn1

BuUdo•er &amp; Backhoe

53 Bat-In god
55'--lhewMI

-- -

7Actreol

t e ltuno&amp;: c11y

• 8 3

• 10

Columbus, Ohio
Office of Contract•

accepted from all pre-

740-992-5232

t3 Cryslelllne

~Or.'lorv.

47
51 Sllc:lly
llythlcal
ftler

15~Job

BAUMLUMBER
ST. 11'1'. 248

.1 F'-*
liquid

Norib

-,

42 Actreu OeiiFI)

ACROSS

PRODUCTS

Protect your guns, fam ily heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, inveslmenl records, pholo
albums, ca111eras, household inventory ami
sentimenlal items will be safe.
For more information call

J3795 HiiAnd Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

140-992-1506

- - - - - - - - - - - - --:

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Self-Storage

fOR ffiORE InfO. PLEASE CAll

• 7/22/TFN

Public Notice
' NOTICE TO eJDOERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

SECURITY·.

High &amp;·Dry

1M! tadiUiiC fleetwaod
1!1911 fll"d 1'llmclerlllnt
1991 fll"d flerostar llan
1fl2 filii Explorer
1993 ford taurus
1994 fonlllanger P/U

NEA Crossword Puzzle

.BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALDER

~"~

1916 filii Uan

1MHotOII mR2

·The Dally Sentinel • Page B5

Pomeroy, Middleport, .O hio

DADBURN SOClABLE
SECURITY F,.}f;JY,:,j~~
CHECKS lt

Singer
Redding
211-ond

....

•

-.

31 Golf-a _
37 Expunges
•

An anniversary

Today would have been the
50th anniversary of the Peanuts
cartoon by Charles Schulz. As you
know, sadly he died late last year.
Earlier this year. the cartoonists
had a Celebrate Peanuts day, bu1
unfortunately I didn't know aboul '
it; otherwise I would have run this
column then. Slill, this isn't such
a bad day for my own "thank
you" to Schulz for so many
laughs over the years.
Schulz enjoyed bridge and
used it a few times in his cartoon.
This was the final deal he included , on Sunday, November 7,
1999.
How should Snoopy have
declared three no-trump after
West led the spade four?
Schulz look his deals from a
THE BORN LOSER
Culbertson book. That author
~
~
~
~
""'I ~
opened one no-trump with 16-18
\\-\Et-1 Wf\Y, lt-1 ffi[WOIQD, DO
SO II-\ NJ~ilm.-1~, \.Jf\ER.E: Tf\E.
f\EY, POP, 1\ '~ OrfiCJI\LLY FI'\U.
11\t'( G..LL IT HI( ''~fo\rtiER.' points and would never add more
OlY:'&gt;\1'\C.!&gt; m:,
NOW,\~\ IT 7
than one distribution point with a
Ol-YM.PIC.~ -,
II WOULD !'£
M f\AA
balanced hand.
~II{(;,, Rli'.f\F
Snoopy won the first trick, then
led a club. Suddenly play was
intenupted because he had to ny
·his Sopwith Camel in an air bat·
tie against the Red Baron . Despite
his plane bei ng hit, Snoopy got
back to base safel y. He reported 10
his corn'manding officer abolll
BIG NATE
not only th e battle but also the
1: GUESS IT'S 'i RUE 'TH/\T
deill, poi nling out that he went one
!! .. Wtto.a.! WHOA!
'I'NYONE CAN BE A
LOOK "T Tt'AT ~ EVERY
down in three no-trump . On
GUYS , ! JUST
BIG. · TIME RECORI:&gt;ING.
Gl RL IN SCHOOL HAS
returning Ia th e bridge game,
ST.AI.fi;. ~ A.\.L "&lt;OU NEED
HAD ANOTHER
" LOCKE!&lt;. FULL Of
ONE OF 1'\Y
IS A &gt;'"-LF- DECENT
SYNC PICTURES'
Snoopy lold Woodstock and his
SIIIG.ING. VOICE," FEW
8RtLLIJl.IIT · 'oEAs •.
two friends. "He said I should
t&gt;MICE MOVE~, "-lit&gt; have led a low heart to lhe
~~~1 'queen. "
Correct! Snoopy had eighllop
tricks: two spades, one heart and
five diamonds. When he played
on clubs, the defenders established their spades first, winning
PEANUTS
three spades and two clubs .
Ins1ead, Snoopy should have
I ~AVE PLANS FOR
hoped that West held the heart
IMPROVING HIE APPEARANCE
king; then the heart queen sets up
OF T~E DESERT..
as Snoopy'~ ninth trick .

•

29 -Step- -1~ 30 Splft
.

Opening lead: • 4

38 TVA conoorn

41 Turklc
trlbHmen

BY PHILLIP ALDER

tf.

-

tary ttcbt

211

42 Soli

a=:r:--'
albalt'l
en••
44
Arclllb81d

45 otva'•
opoclally

47 Kamel

41CEO'I-II
48Cu- · '
50 Spirit lamp

ti2TYtleof-

54 110.. quickly

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campoa
CM.ooty Cipher c:ryptograma are creat..:t from QUOtations by famoua people, put lf'ld
pmonl. Eldl-r In tho dphor -tO&lt;-""'·
Today's clue: H eqiJIJ/5 U

• 9 A V M

BJ

ZOZOLBJZ

WXHV

XG

..

AHK·AM·CAAOJ."

. •·

ZJJZGKBXVVF
BG

LAGCHLKZC

'

YKJALNBJY

A'GZBV

"

To get a current weather
report, check the
.. . ...

W'- ....
)

.

Sentinel

. . -.

IMONDAY

lD/2100

--~~em COirthday
'Your

Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2000
The year ahead could be a pivotal one for you in clarifying your
thinking" and the direction in .
which you'd like your life to take.
· Defining your aims will pul you
onto a beneficial cou rse.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) It's
okay Ia appoinMthers to take on
some critical assignments today to
accomplish a common goal, but ·
don ' t relinquish the catbird seat.
You ' re the one who can direct a
wi nning team. Trying to palch up
a broken romance? The AstroGraph Malchmaker can help you
, . understand what to do to make the
&amp;relationship work . Mail $2.75 lo
Matchmaker, c/o th is newspaper,
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY I 0156.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Give your mosl significant finan·
ciul mutters Ihe unenl ion they
need today und there's e.very rea·
son 10 believe you cnn chulk up
some solid number.. Good for·
JUne is in your comer.
SAOITIARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec .
21) Ruther lhun uuempllnB lo .
,sway an entire group Ia your WilY
of thinking today. Isolate lis key

members, who can influence the
rest. One-on-one talk s will be
more effective .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
19) Now is the day to ask for the
assistance you need 10 complete
l n intricate assignment. Chances
ue the response you' re seek ing
Nill be forthcoming.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Through people with whom
you' re in vo lved sociall y today
several pleasant happenings could
occur. rhis even goes so far as to
endorse mi xing business wilh
pleasure.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Something rather signi fi canl
mi ght develop for you today that
could contribule to your prosperity and well being. Stay on your
toes so thai ,you' II be able 10 take
advantage of it.
ARIES (Murch 21·April 19)
Even though it is imponant to you
to be your own person, lodny you
will be luckier if you teom up wilh
n pnr1ner who con offer much
Input. A aood union serves as u
multiplier.
TAURUS (April 20-Muy 20)
Don't leave uny stones untumed

•
today regardin g ways Ia make or
save money. Your financial
prospects loo k especially promising for you at this time.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)
What wi ll help you significantly
loday is you r ability 10 knit
together bits and pieces of info r-

mal ion concerning soc ift l issues
thai are imponanll o you . Lei this
gu ide you.
CANCF.R (June 21-Ju ly 22)
ln Siead of listening to di »c nting
faction s about how a crit ical matter should or should not be managed. rely niote upon your , own
innate ~e n sc of what is ri ght or
wrong and ac1 accordingly.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today
may offer you tbe &lt;&gt;hance 10 have
a wi&gt;b fulfi lled. so don't put lim·
itati ons on your hopes and dri ve,.
Sotncone wbo tbinks on a grand
.-ca1c cmlld inspire you In 'trivc
fol' somc1h ing big.
VIRGO (Au~. 2J· Sept. 22) If
snmclhi11!t yolt. bopcd wou ld
make you money didn't work yes·
terduy, try for it uguin. Toduy
cou ld bring you the lu~k denied
you previously

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'An actor Is ... a craftsman, a bag of tricks, a child, I ·
cool observer or mankind: - Sir Alec Gulnnass

'::~;~:~' S©\\~lA-"f..~s·
....
ClAY I. POlLAN

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low to form four simple warda.

I R A VA Y
E MP U l

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C A NSK

Granny says that if you can

1 1 r 1~

h--r-r-..::--r-l' look back on your life and have

Is

no regrets. you have a great gift
~-~-~~-::~-~-:;~-~~f~or- -------- memo~ -

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chuckle quoted

by filling In the missing word!

you develop from !lop No. 3 below.

I' I' 1· 1• I' I' I' ·1· I' I::

PRINr NUMBERED
LETTERS
•
UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

FORI

•

I I I I I I 1. I l:i.

SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS

Plaque- Brave - Omega .· Eyelid- IMPROVED

My ne 1ghbor_is so used to his job as an ad copywriler
lhal he greelecJ me w1lh . "Hi, whal's new and IMPROVED?"

OCTOBER 21

.

'

�'

'
.

Paga Bl•lbe Dally Sentinel

.~~~~~----------~~~~~----------~~--"' Pomeroy, MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Herd bullies Buffalo
~rdsoveran

· HUmiNGToN. w.va. {AP&gt; 192
·
'-- Manhall found ils focus in the
However, the Herd was penalleCOnd half against Buffalo. The ized 14 times and allowed heavy
Herd will need it earlier for West- underdog Buffalo to stay even for
em Midtiga.n.
. most of the first half.
.
.
Ne~ up is a game Thursday
"That was just rwo different
. night against the Broncos at ball games tonight_." ,_Marshall
home where Manhall has a 33- · coach Bob Pruett satd. We cerjpme 'Winning streak, the best in tainly can't play this way for a half
· Division 1-A.
against the rest of our schedule
uwe have all the confidence in . and expect to be successful."
the world right now," Marshall
The Herd learned that starting
quamlback Byron Leftwich said running back Brandon Carey will
after a 47-14 victory over Buffalo miss up to three weeks With a
in Huntington on Saturday night. sprained knee ligament suffered
Western Michigan {4-1, 2-0 in the first quarter. That means
Mid-American) is the surprise backup• Chanston Rogers and
team of the West Division. It beat Franklin WaUace will get more
division-favorite Toledo earlier work.
dus year and is coming off a 23- "We have to be m':~ ready for
tO win over Ohio on Saturday.
Western Mtchtgan, Rodgers
Marshall's performance against . said.
Buffalo W2S a case of good newsFewer players will be better
bad news.
prepared than Leftwich, who
The Herd gained a season-high rhrew for a career-high 378 yards
631 yards in total offense and and three touchdowns Saturday.
compiled t 48 on the ground after
Malting his fourth career start,
failing to rush for 1{)() ~rds in its Leftwich completed 25 of 36
1asr two games.
passes. H!! was intercepted twice,
MarshaU {2-2, 1-0 MAC West), sacked twice and took several
which snapped a two-game los- ·· vicious hits that aggravated an
ing streak, held Buffalo scoreless injury to his throwing elbow. He
in the second half and got just also hurt his left ankle . .

Bengals
fnwnPapB1

lead against a Miami defense that
had aUowed just 22 points in its
first four games.
Smith was 20-of-38 for 1 78
yards, and Dillon rushed for 110
yards on 22 carries. Bui Cincinnati did no\ score again until
Rackers kicked a 34-yard field
goal midway through the fourth
quarter.
.
The Dolphins were shut out
until Olindo Mare'• 40-yard field .
goal with 56 seconds left in the
half. On the second play after the
kickoff, defensive end Jason Taylor knocked the ball from Smith,
who had 'dropped back to pass,
scooped it up and returned it 29
yards for a touchdown to make it
U.-10.
"In hindsight, l wish l hadn't
thrown the ball:' said LeBeau,
who chose not to have Smith
take. a knee to ena the half. "I
don't want our players to think
we don't trust them, but we don't
want to do anything stupid,

like we had seen their best shot,
and we found out what we were
made of."
The Bengals got off to a fast
start under Dick LeBeau but finIshed up as they nearly always do,
'o tumbling badly after a Miami
touchdown as time ran out in the
first: half.
•
LeBeau, who took over as head
coach bst week when Bruce
'c osier resigned, didn't know if
ihe Bengals' coUapse W2S more a
'technical breakdown or loss of
'emotion.
, "1 don't know the answer to
. "that. but 1 know this: We ~ got
to be able to sustain;' LeBeau
said. ·~we were very focused in
the first half. You could see - I
thin!C we caU could see - this
team can c!o some things."
The Benga.ls, who so often have , elther."
been flat early in games, drove for
Oronde Gadsden caught two
a touchdown on their first posses- touchdown passes for Miami in
sion, a 13-play drive that lasted the second half, but said it was
nearly seven minutes and ended Taylor's pl.ay that won the.game.
"That meant we were only
with Akili Smith's 9-yard touchdown pass to Warrick.
down by three, and everybody
That gave the Ben gals their first · felt aU we had to do was take the
points since the season opener. baU down and score when we got
After beginning the season with a the ball in the second half," Gads24-7 loss to Cleveland, they lost den said. "It snowballed after
1~0 at Jacksonville and 37-0 at that."
Miami rook the second-half
Baltimore.
Neil Rackers kicked a 23-yard kickoff 70 yards in 13 plays, scorfield goal with 46 seconds left in ing on Lamar Smith's 18-yard
the lint quarter and added a 38- touchdown run.
~er two minutes into the sec. The Bengals misfired comond to give Cincinnati a 13-0. pletely on their next possession

Browns
from Page 11
beat those guys if we just would
have capitalized when we got
chances;· said Couch, 20-of-35
passing for 203 yards .with three
interceptions.
After a Baltimore puiu, the
Browns took over at the Ravens
48 and had a first down at the 3
after a pass-interference call.
But Travis Prentice was thrown
for a 7-yard loss by Woodson after
Preniice collided with Couch on
the handoff. On fourth-and-goal
from the 6, Couch flipped a pass
to Prentice, who was stopped at
the 4 by James Trapp

Baltimore's offense wasn't
much more productive. The
Ravens to.ok over at the Cleve· land 47 twice and the Browns 32 ·
another rime in the first halfand mustered just three points.
Jamal Lewis scored on a 2-yard
run midway through the second
qu,arter, but the TD was disallowed by a holding penalty,
• "We were not quite in synch
•offensively," Billick said. "We
probably made more mental
errors today than we had all year."
After taking the second-half
kickoff, the Ravens put together a
19- play drive that ate almost 10
minutes off the clock. But a running play lost 2, yards and Tony
Banks misfired on two more passes at the Cleveland 4 before

"Every. time 1 got hit it see,:
it was on those two spots," Leftwich said. "That's what happens
when you play on {amfictal} turf.
They ought to outlaw that stuff."
The lackluster first half probably .wasn't a case of ManhaU
•looking ahead to Western Mtchigan.
.
.
.
Desptte , ·bemg a 43-pomt.
favorite, Marshall {2-2. 1-0 MAC)
believed the Buffalo game was
tm~ortant to getnng off to a good
startm the conference, ~here tl IS
seeking_ tts_ fourth-stratght tttle
Sl~~e reJ':mmg the MAC m 1997.
. I don t kn?w t!, we we_re lookmg ahead or not, Leftwtch sat d .
"Their coacheS had them ready
to play. We weren't playing with
any emotiOn m the first half. But
the way coach Pruett talked 19 us
at halftime, we had no 'boice but
to play better."
MarshaU scored 30 points in the
second half. Leftwtch, who threw
a 53-yard TD pass to Dav1d Faye
in the first half, thre"'; scormg
passes of 61 yards to Dan us Watts
and 3 yards to Lamer Washington
in the third quarter for a 38-1 il
lead.

and h~d to punt after Akili Smith
missed a wide-open Brandon
Bennett. Daniel Pope's 31-yard
punt aUowed Miami to take over
on its own 46.
'Any time a team scores like
that, you want to get it right
back," Smith said. "But I misse.d
him wide open. The hardest ,
throw to make is when the guy is
wide open; anybody will tell you
that. I just tried to ,guide it."
It took the Dolphins just three
plays to score again, with the help
of a pass interference penalty on
defensive back Artrell Hawkins
that put the ball on the 12.
After an encroachment penalty
moved the baU 5 yards closer,
Fiedler hit Gadsden with the 7~rd touchdown pass.
The Bengals again were unable
to mount a threat, and Fiedler led
a seven-play drive that ended
with a 21-yard TD 'pass to Gadsden.
Fiedler was 14-of-21 for 155
yards, and Lan1ar Smith had 66
yards on 12 carries.
Notes: Fiedler scrambled for 30
yards on a broken play in the second quarter, the longest run by a
Miami quarterback since S~ott
Mitchell ran for 32 yards at
Philadelphia on Nov. 14, 1993 ....
Center Tim Ruddy played in ~
tOOth regubr-season game.
Miami is I 2-3 against Cincinna
including nine consecutive win
... The game, only the second i.
Paul BrowA Stadium, was no
sold out. Attendance 111 th&lt;
65,&amp;00-seat
stadium
was
announced as 61,535 .

Reds
from

I

.

Deta_ils, A3

Broncos h~mmer Bobcats, lpok

••

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The celebrations didn't last
long after Western Michigan beat
\)hio, for the Broncos knew they
faced a bigger test this week. . ,
Western Michigan plays at
MarshaU on Thursday night in a
nationaUy televised· rematch of
last Y,ear's Mid-American Conference title game.
The showdown was obviously
on coach Gary Darnell's mind
after the Broncos won 23-Hl Saturday.
"We have to have them ready
by tomorrow {Sunday) night," he
said. "The big thing is trying to
get them fresh and focused for
Thursday night."
QuarterbackJeffWelsh also was
thinking ahead to Marshall, even
as he tried to downplay the
importance of the game.
·
·
"It's just another game;' he said.
"We just have to go practice and
take care of business.
"We just have to go out and
approach it as another game." ·
The Broncos (4-1 . overall,
MAC 2-0) got past the Bobcats
{2-3, 0-2) despite losing three
fumbles and having two passes
intercepted.
JeffWelsh passed for 332 ~rds
and connected with Josh Bush for
the go-ahead touchdown.
Robert Sanford carried 22
times for 124 yards for Western
Michigan.

Bowling Green 18,
Kent State 1t
Bowling Green {t -4, 1-1}. won
its first game of the seas~m four
.days after C?ach Gary Blackney•
said earlier in the week that he
would retire at the end of the season.
''I'm just very proud of the
players and assistant coaches
because they worked extremely
hard to get this first victory;' he
said.
Janssen Patton had three interceptions, including one he
returned 7 4 yards for a touchdown, for the Falcons, who won
despite being outgained by almost
100 ~rds by the Golden Flashes
(0-5, 0-2).
· Andy Sahm was 13-of-21 pass"
ing for 111 yards and ran nine
times for 19 yards and a touchdown.
Akron 37, Miami 20
Akron's Brandon Payne rush~d
for 188 yards and three touchdowns' and Dwight Smith intercepted two passes as the Zips beat
.Miami (both 3-2, 2-1).
Steve Litde rushed for 128
~rds on 17 carries and Mike
Bath completed 20-of-249 passes
for 174 yards for the RedHawks.
Toledo 41, C. Michigan 0
Toledo (4-1,1-1) had its biggest
margin of victory ever against
Central Michigan (1-4, 0-1) as
Chester Taylor got 152 yards in

strongest car for much of the race '
and led 202 of the first 46 7 laps.
But Dave Blaney's spin brought ·
Page II
out the 12th caution, ending 101
·
laps of green-flag· racing, and
there," Earnhardt said of ·. allowing everything to change for
Labonte, who now leads by 213 the finish.
points. "I know we didn't gain a
Sterling Marlin took only twO&gt;
whole lot on him today, but we tires and was first out of the pit~.
gained."
followed by Stewart. Gordon,
Ricky Rudd finished fourth, Burton and Earnhardt. Stewart
foUowed by Jeff Gordon and Dale need only rwo laps to pass Marlin,
Jarrett.
and Earnhardt passed him too, but
Labonte, w)lo overcame a lot of feU l:!ehind when the last caution
bad luck to finish I Oth, was saris- came.
That fired up th,e crowd, which
fied.
"It was a good day," he said. "To watched
Earnhardt
storm
come · out of Martinsville lOth through the field all day, because
with everything that happened it put him on Stewart's bumper
today- it could have been a lot for a final dash to the finish.
worse."
Instead, the dash turned cut to
~urton pa~.ed series champfon be aU Stewart's.
Dale Jarrett for third, 227 points
Labonte's recovery from repeated bad luck ended up being one
back.
Burton appeared to have the of'the biggest stories ofthe day,

NASCAR
from

24 carries. He and Tavares Bolden
each rushed for two · touchdowns
for the Rockets.
Toledo shut out the Chippe\vas
for the first time, outgained them:
457-168, had a 29-8 advantage "in
first downs and never punted.
. BaU State graduate David Letterman tried to cheer on the Cardinals (0-4, 0-1) all week on his
television show, but that didn't
h"elp th~m against Northern Illinois {2-2, 1-0).
N. Illinois 43, Ball State 14
BaU State extended its losing
streak, the longest in Division IA, to 21 games as Justin
McCareins caught four passes for
150 yards for the Huskies.
One of those passes was from
Dan Urban in the third quarter
on a play that covered a schoolrecord 99 yards. McCareins has
become the Huskies' career
leader in reception yardage with
2,320.
C. Florida 31,
E. Michigan 10
Ryan· Schneider threw two
touchdown passes and ran for
another score as Ceritral Florida
beat Eastern Michigan (1"4}.
Central Florida allowed only a
28-yard · field goal by Toller
Starnes early in the second quarter and Walter Church's !-yard
scoring pass to Matt Kelly with
4:03 left to play. Church was 25for-36 for 250 passing yards.

keeping him on pace for his first
series championship.
With about 215 laps to· go, all
the leaders pitted under caution.
Labonte, who went onto pit
road in fifth place, was on his way
out when Earnhardt cut off
Rudd, causing a backup that
ended with Labonte getting
pinched by two other cars, damaging the front of his Pontiac.
Labonte pitted twice more
under the yeUow to have the
damage fixed, then was running
26th when it went back to green
with 209 laps left.
After working his way back
into the top I 0, Labonte was
bumped by Mike Skinner canting
out of the fourth turn with 23
laps remaining. The bump. caused
Labonte's car to spin, but he
regained • control and lost only
one position on the track.

•

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GALLIPOLIS

Quality.~~

·,,, c,·nt•

•

Pomeroy Council discusses street repa1rs
BY TONY M. lEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF •

POMEROY ·- Village Council discussed new street repair projects and
approved a request by Village AdmiNistrator John Anderson to apply for S98,000
in grant monies to help pay for work on
portions of West Main Street during
Monday night's meeting.
The street ·repairs will extend from
Foodland to the Middleport corporation
line. While the work goes on, the speed
limit will be reduced from 35 mph to 20

mph and the weight limit, currently the festival.
Musser acknowledged the compliunrestricted, wiU be lowered to l 0,000
pounds. The changes :ovill be announced ment but said the event's succe.ss was due
to the hard work' of the people "behind
before the _11reet repairs get underway.
Mayor J8h'n Blaettnar commended the scenes" and thar he "couldn't have
Councilman John Musser on a fine job ·possibly done it without them."
Council listened to Fire Chief Chris
of organizing last weekend's Sternwheel
Rivcrfcst 2000. l3lacttnar said the event Shank deliver the fire department's
was truly a "community effort" and a monthly report for September. The
"huge success," and that the village's report indicated that the department
street, fire and poli ce departments should assisted in two structure fires, two auto
also be commended. as well because of fires four aura accidents, one electrical
their "professionalism" displayed during fire, 'and one medical a·ssistance calL

Council(!Jan Victor Young. Ill
informed co uncil that contrete pads will
be constructed in the new Water Worl&lt;s
ment.
Park for picnic tables, grills and trash
Shank had asked council ·to con;ider cans. Topsoil for the park's surface will be
bidding. for new extraction . equipment put down sometime in the spring ..
last month because- the equipment that
Council also re~uested that citizens
tbe department Uses now is outdated and submit, in writing, their preference of the
worn. Items included in Shank's request three proposed designs for the new
was a new spreader, cutter, power units, Pomeroy / Mason Bridge to · the Daily
chains, stabilizer blocks, and hydraulic. Sentinel within 30 days .The three b10idge
rams. The accepted b1d ·totaled
$27.~37.85.
Please see Council. Pace AJ

Council accepted a bid from
Advanced Resc ue Systems of Mayfield
Heights for new auto extm;tion equip-

Courts c~me ,
to rescue of
county defici~

PRESERVING OUR PAST

Proj~ct

to help
war-torn

children

BY BRIAN J, REED
SENTIN EL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY- Revenue from the payment of
I
two large fines in Meigs County Comrpon Pleas
Court and the transfer of dormant fi.mds from
Meigs County Court will off&lt;et a deficit in the
countv sheriff's budget.
Meigs County Commissioners, Sheriff James
Soulsby and Prosecutor John Lentes met at Monday's regular commissioners' meeting to discuss
again some $.50,000 in past-due bills for out-ofcounty housing of prisoners, in Noble County,

BY MICHELE CARTER
OVP NEWS STAFF

MASON, W.Va. Tricounty residents have a unique
oppurtunity this Christmas
season to help those in need.
Anna Damitz of Bob's Market is spearheading Operation
Christmas Child to send shoe
boxes of Christmas cheer to
children · residing in 65 war. torn and poverty stricken
COlllltries. llamitz has enlisted
the help of local radio stations

and prescription medicine costs for prisoners due

to a"isist in the tri-county pro-

ject.
. "We are so blessi:d here in
this

"This is an opportunity for us
to help those less fortunate."
Operation Christmas Child,
a project through Samaritan's
Purse, has been in ope.rations
since 1993. Last year, more
than three million shoe boxes
were sent from 56,000 ch.urchcs, schools, businesses, civic
groups and other organizatipns
in the United States .
Some of the co untries where
shoe boxes will be distributed
includt; Algeria, Armenia,
Ilrazil, Czech Republic, HonHaiti , Latvia , Kaz a-

haw a way to tramport the
shoe boxes ro the Hunrmgton
Distnbu tio n Center, Bob's
Market will donate a truck to
haul the items.
The Hub's Market in Mason
and Gallipolis will serve as
drop-otT points as well ' as
Wl3YG studios in Point Pleasam and WMPO/ WYVK studios in Pomeroy.

to a Caldwell Pharmacy.
The commissioners are re~pomible for the·
housii1g and medical expenses of all prison ers in
the custody of the sheriff, and many prisoners are
housed in Noble County, at a negotiated rate.
The bills have gone
unpaid
for so long,
Lentes said Soulsby and
Lentes said,
that they expect Noble
, officials to
will be paid County
rejecr future requests for
jail beds . for Me igs
uto the
County prisoners ' until
the pasHi ue balance is
p~d. '
.
lcntes
said
that
$50,000 will be paid
into the general ftn,d this wt~ek, representi1~g
"open items'' funds which have remained in the

that $50,000

(Ountry," Barnitz said.

in [h e project who may not

.

Hometown Newspaper

I
eport • Pomeroy, Oh"10
M.ddl

Volume 51, Nu mber 91

khstan, Ni caragua, Vietnam,
and Zambia.
Barnitz, · a member of
Fairview
l3ibie
Church,
learned
about Operation
Christmas Chi ld when the ·
church selected it. as a servi~e
project . She said there are
other churches in the area that
do the proJect as well.
In an effort to help those
groups wishing to participate

1 2-wheel
4-wheel
I
I Check and adjust camber and to~. Additional pans I

coming off the disabled list,
McGwire, limited to one at-bat
per game, was 4-for- I 4 (.28&amp;)
with two hdmers and three RBls.
... The crowd of 47.533 raised the
Cardinal;' record home attendance to 3,336,493, earning
McGwire a borius of $536,493.
He gcrs $1 for each ticket sold
over 2.8 ntillion .... Mike Matheny, out 'for the rest of the season
after cutting his finger with a
hunting knife, received a standing
ovation when he brought out the
lineup card before the game . ...
Cincinmti's Sean CJSey h11 ..172
('10-for-2~2) after the All-Star
break to finish the season with a
.315 batting average.

Odober 3, 2000

•

Meigs County's

duras,

Stover \"as called on again.
' Notes: The grandmother and
aunt of one of two men stabbed
to death Jan . 31 outside a suburban Atlanta bar protested outside
the sta,dium. Ray Lewis and two
friends originally were charged In
the deaths. The protesters held up
signs demanding a news conference with NFL officials .... Cleveland tailback Errict Rhett sustained a sprained foot and will be
out "an extended period of time,"
Palmer said. ... Prentice was
Cleveland's ,leading rush er with 13 yards on seven carries ....
The game began a three - game
road swing for Baltimore, with
ganies canting up at Jacksonv ille
and Washington.

i

to battle With Marshall Thursday

1
Craig Paquette hit a three-run
homer, giving the Cardinals a 6-2
lead.
Page 81
"Today, was the I story of our
year. We got behind the hitters
they were keeping a cl;,se and they hurt us,'' Reds manager
watch on the Braves-Rockies Jack McKeon said.
game. Benes, after being relieved,
McKeon's job is in jeopardy.
listened to the Braves broadcast Cincinnati, a ~pring tra1~ing
on the Internet in the clubhouse. " favorite to win rhe NL Central.
When Todd Helton hit a three- dropped from 96-6 7 last year to
run homer for the Rockies, 85-77.
Benes took the news to the
Cincinnati\ Steve Parm (12dugout. "E.verybody in the dub- 17) gave up &lt;IX rum , ei!(ht hits
house was jumping up and down and four walks in six mnmgs.
and when I told the ·guys on the
He. clo'icd rhe '\ea&lt;.,on \"v'irl1 [hrcc
bench what happened everything · consecutiVt": l os.se~. .
· kind of snowballed from there."
Notes: Mark Mcdw1re turned
The Ctrdirials were still cele- 37 Sunday and flied out as a
bt::~tihg Helton's home run when pinch-hitter m the e1ghtli. &lt;;,nee

Monday, October 2, .2000

. Tuesday

Meigs society news and n·otes, AS
Chiefs win 'MNF' thriller, B1

Wednesday

Hlcft: 80s; Low:.lOS

i

general jimd
this ,,eek.

A LASTING ART- Donna Davidson Is seen at her antique loom, where she practices the old art of weaving material into
rugs and other items for the household. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

County Court accounts for a number of years,

Rutland woman continues vveaving rugs
Bv

would sew small rugs together to n]ilke
a larger rug to almost fill the floor of a

Davidson actuany has two anti4u e

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

UTLAND - Weaving
rugs is one ofthose.·pio·neer skills which for
years has been enjoyed
by a Rutland area
women.
Donna Davidso n learned the craft
trom her grandmother M&lt;1bel Wood
'

, many ye,trs ago, and now demonstratt:s
her sk ill at various community events

on an early 1900; loom·.
She was most recently at the Meigs
County Town and Country EX PO
2000.

looms, one she U'ies ~n a regular basis as
slie weaves rugs for farn"ily and friends,
and the other a permanent exh1bir at
the old Chester Courthouse.
"For pioneer wome11, it was important to use every bit of material -leftover pieces from . garme1~ts or other
things they had made, because th ere was

room.

This method made it easy. to handl e
when the big rug needed cleaning. It
was just a matter of taking out the
stitching, hanging the smaller rugs out
to be ckancd, and then &lt;ew ing them
back together a'o; they were T('ntrned to
the tloor.
Movmg the &lt;hurtle lrom side to "de
on the old loom at her rece nt EX PO
dem.onstration, Donna m ade th e

no place tOr vvastc. So v..'hat they did
was make the rags into rugs vvhich were

u sed in their homes," she said.
" M aking them into ru gs was, in a

way, a last resort for rab"·" Davidson
added .
She said that often, pi oneer WOillt'll

Soulsby announces
write-in campaign ·

and which the state auditor has suggested be
eliminated.
.
Judge Patrick J-1 . O'Brien said that the "o pen
items" mainly represent payments on fines for
cases predatin g 1995.
Lentes said he also expects paym ent of. two
fines in rhe amo unt of $4 ,600 and $1,8011 from
older case5 in Com mon Pleas Court, and that
those funds will also be applied to expenses at the
sheriff's office.

The commissioners approved Oct. 23 as the
date tOr a viewing of

r1

portion of McKelvey

Road in Leb,l!1on Township. which a resident has
requested be clo~ed. •
.
The m ~Itter ha~ been referrtd to Engmeer
Robert Eason for a recommendation prior to the
viewing of the road.
The board approved a resolution submitted bv

process of weaving ra ~ into rugs seem

Please see Weaver. Page A3

Please see Court. Pace A3

Trador accident

·Today's

Sentinel
i

2 Sections - 1 Pages

"Thi s is a fun project for
1

fimilies t o do together and it i'i

FROM STAFF REPORTS

nm \.:t'ry e.xpcnsive," 13arnitz
said. "My childre n get a real
blessing our of rf1i s they
hove a ball.''

POMEROY - Meigs County
Sheriff -Jam es
M.
Soulsby
announ ced Monday that he bas
filed ~s a wri[e- in cl!ldu.htt' fi.)r a

For those wishing

to

partici -

pate m th~ project. h ~re are
ideas on what it takes to .fill a
shoe box.
1. Find an empty shoe box. It
can be wrappec~ - hd separately - if you would like. but
it docs not have to be
wrapped.
2. Dc.:tcrminc if ~our pan!cu!ar box Will he 1-;;r .1 boy or
girl and the age group 2-4, 5-'.1
or 10-1 ~. Mark you r box as to

Plene see Project. Page Al

interest~

fOurth ~term as

sheriff.
Soulsby, who
has snved as
sheriff for 12
years,
&lt;1lso
&lt;;crvtod
as
a
deputy sheriiT
.under two prior
ad1ni 1li str,lti Oil" .
H1c l"i a t(.Jrm er
Souls by
Kroger employee and Pomeroy postm.tster.
Soul"hy. a I kmocrat, ..,aid ht\

•

•

in Meigs Coumy and it"
people wi ll continu e to influcnc;t•
his st:rvice as sheriff~ if rc - dcctcd.
·~ tf re-elected, I will g1ve the
best service possible with the

reCiources whi ch arc ~ t hand,"

Soulsby saiJ .
He is a combat vt·tcr,m of the
U.S. Navy, and .1 member of Drc\\'
Web1ter Post 3\1, Ameriean
Legion, and attends Rock~prill.h"'

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A5
B2-4
B5
A4
AJ
Bl, 6
A3

Lotteries

United Methodist Church.

OHIO

He is president of rhe Mei!-."'
Athletic lJoo~rers, .md is ,1 llH: IIlbcr

Pick 3: 2-4-7; Pick 4: :-1-(1-..J.-7
Bucke)rc 5: 4...(1--K-22-.~ l

of )'01m:roy Clutcr I H6, Order of·
E,1stcrn Star, £111d the

Pu!llt'tny

Masonic Lodge 164.
,
He and his wife, Su&lt;~l', have fi,lur
children ,md 11 gr.mJrhddren.

W.VA.
Dai~y

3: ~ If~ Daily 4: 2 h-4-h

·Howard Maynard . 5~. Middleport. was flown via HealthNet to St.
Mary's Ho spital 1n Huntington, W.Va., Monday. afternoon after sus·
taining injuries in a garde'n tractor accident. According to reports. the
tractor had rolled over on him and he had been trapped under it for
several hours before help arriveq around 2 p.m . Responding to the
tall was, Rutland EMS and VFD. (Tony M. Leach photo)

•

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