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                  <text>Page B6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 16, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
4 2 0 667 115 120

DetrOit

Glean Bay
ChiCago
~ .. Chomtllonohlp

SoriH

!Jea111e

6 0 01 00 26~ 174
3 3 0 500 110 98

New Orleans
Carolina

TUMdoV, Ocl10
2, New Vorl&lt; 0

2 4 0 333 110 100

Atlanta
San Franctsco

Wodneodoy, Oct 11
New York 7, 5eattle 1

2 5 0 286 130 2T7
2 5 0 286 198 224
Sunday '• Gamet

N Y G1ants 19 Dallas 14

. Frldoy, Oct. 13

St L0u1s 45 , Atlanta 29

New York 8, Seante 2
Slturday, Oct. 14

New York 5

W.a1

Sl LOUIS

American LMgue
(NBC)

Buffalo 27 San Otego 24 , OT
Washington 10, Baltunore 3
Oakland 20, Kansas C1ty 17

~attle

0
Sunday, Oct. 1$
Seattle 6, New Vorl&lt; 2. New York leads

New Orleans 24 Carotma 6
P1ttsburgh 15, Clnc1nnali 0

senes 3-2

Denver 44 Cleveland 10
IndianapoliS 37 Seattle 24
N Y Jets 34 New England t7
Phlladelph~ 33. Anzona 14

Tuoodov. 0c1.11
Seattle (Halama 14-9) at New York {Hernan-

dez1 2· 13),8 12pm.

Wodnosdoy, Ocl18
Sea tHe at New YOI'k, 8 12 p m , If necessary

Green Bay 31 San Franosco 28
M1nnesota 28, Ch1cago 16

National League
(FOX)
Wednesday, Oct. 11
New York 6. St LOUIS 2

Open M1aml, DetrOit, Tampa Bay
Today 'a Game
Jacksonville at Tennessee 9 p m
Thursday 's Games
OetrOII at Tampa Bay 8 20 p m

Oc:t. 12

Thur~ay,

Sunday, Oct 22
Anzona at Dallas . 1 p m
New Orleans at Atlanta 1 p m

New York 6 St LOUtS 5
Slturday, Ocl. 14
St LOUIS 8 New York 2
Sunday, Oct 15
New York 10 St Lows 6, New York leads

Denver at C1nc1nnatl 1 p m
New England at lnd1anapohs 1 p m
St LOUIS at Kansas C1ty 1 p m
Chicago at Ph1ladelph•a 1 p m
Tennessee at BaltlffiO!I3 1 p m
San Franc1sco at Carotma 1 p m
Buffalo at M1nnesota 1 p rn
Seattle at Oakland, 4 05 p m
Cteyeta nd at Pittsburgh 4 05 p m
WAshmglon at Jacksonville 4 15 p rn
Open San D1ego N V G1ants Green Bav
Monday. Oct 23
Mlam• at N V Jets 9 p m

senes 3·1

Monda~.

Oct. 16
St LoUis (Hentgen 15-12) at New York
(Hampton 15-10), B 18 p m
Wednesday, Oct. 18
New York at St LOUIS 4 18 p m 11 neces-

S8'Y
Thuraday, Oct. 19
New York at St LOUIS, 8 18 p m

How They Fared
How the top 25 teams m The Assoctat ecf Press college loothall poll fared th1s
week
No 1 Nebraska (6-0) beat Texa s Tech
56-3 Next vs Baylor, Saturday
No 2 Kansas State (6 1) lost to No 8
Oklahoma 41 ·3 1 Next vs Texas Tech ,
Saturday
No 3 V1rg 1n1a Tach (6 0} beat west Vtr ·
g1n1a 48·20 Thursday Next at Syracuse ,
Saturday
No 4 M taml (4-1) d1d not play Next at
Temple . Saturday
No 5 Clen'lson (7·0) bea t Maryla nd 35 ·
14 Nex t at North Ca rol1na , Saturday
No 6 OhiO State (5· 1) lost to M1nneso
Ia 29· 17 Next at Iowa , Saturday
No 7 Ftoflda State (6 1) beat Duke 63·
14 Nexl vs V1rgm 1a Satu rday
N o 8 Ok lahoma (6-0) beat No 2
Kansas State 41-31 Next ~s No 1
Nebras ka , Oc t 28
No 9 Oregon (5 t} beat South ern Cat
28·17 Next vs Anzona Sa turcta y
No 10 Flor~da {6-1} beat No 19 Auburn
38·7 N e~e t vs No 14 Georgta. Oct 28
No 11 Washmg ton (5· 1) beat A.nzona
State 21 !5 Ne)Ct vs Call l orn•a . Satur ·
day
•
No 12 TCU (5·0) d1d not play Next a t
Tulsa Saturday
No 13 UCLA (4-2) lost to Call l ornta 46 ·
38 30T Next vs Oregon State . Satur·

3 3 0 500 150 97
3 4 0 429148 139
0 143 101 189
' 6

Tampa Bay

11 neces-

"'Y

day

._____P_R_O_SOC
_ C_
ER___JI !COLLEGE FOOIBALL I
Major League Soccttr
Champ1onahlp
Sunday; Ocl 15
at Walhlngton , D.C.
Kansc,s C1ty 1 Chtcago 0

The Top Twenty F111e teams m The Assoc.at·
ed Press college lootball poll w1th f1rSt·place
votes 1n parentheses records through Oct 14
total po1nts based on 25 pomts tor a t~rs t·place
vote through one poul t lor a 25th -place vote
and rankmg m the prev1ous poll

W·L

National Football league
r.FC
East
W L TPio. PF
5 1 0 833 112

Mlam1
NY Jets
lnd1anapol1s

Pr.
51

5 1 0 833 125 103

4 2 0 667 172 130
3 3 0 500 113 122

Bullalo

2 5 0 286 120 141

New England

Central

4 1 0 BOO 104

Tennessee
BalhmOfe
Pittsburgh
Jacksonville
Cleveland
Clncmnat1

5
3
2
2

2 0 714 128
3 0 500 99
4 0 333 113
5 0 286 95

78

75
78
128
175

0 6 0 000 37 143
Weat

5
4
3
2
0

Oakland
Denver •
Kansas City
Seattle
San D•ego

I
3
3
5
7

0 833 161 125
0 571 217 147
0500134 113
0 286 1.18 169
0 000 1,17 204

NFC

Eut
WLTPc1PFPr.
5 2 0 714 120 105
52 0714114 99
4 3 0 571 168 101
2 4 0333114 162

NY G11~nts
Washington
Ph•ladelph•a
A.nz ona

2 4 0333126167

Dallas

Pts Pvs

6 0 1770
6·0 1 656
6·0 1 603
4- 1 1,546
7 0 1 523
6-1 1 439
5·1 1,290
6-1 1 242
5·1 1 147
6·1 1,118
5·0 1 042
5·1
898
4 1 865
5·1
854
5·1
845
5·2 737
5·2 586
6· 1 517
5· t
493
4·2 458
5 1 378

1
2
3
4
5
6

Nebraska (66)
V1rgmta Tech (1)
Oklahoma /4)
Mtam1
Clemson
Flonda Sf
7 Oregon
8 Florida
9 Wash1ngton
10 KansasSt
11 TCU
12 Georgta
13 MISSISSIPPI St
14 OhtO St
15 Southern Mtss
16 MIChigan
t7 Pu rdue
18 SouthCarol1na
190regonSt
20 Notre Dame
21 AriZona
22 Mtnnesota

5·2

23 UCLA

4-2

1

3
8
4

No 22 Ar1zona (5!1) be{lt Washmgton
Sta te 53· 47 30T Next_ at No 9 Oregon ,
Sa turda y
No 23 Oregon State (5·1) bea t Stan·
lord 38 6 Nex t at UCLA . Sa turday
No 2 4 South Carollna (6· 1) beat
Arkansas 27· 7 Ne)Ct at Vanderbilt Satur.

Major College Football Scores
Er.ST
Boston Coll ege 20, Syracuse 13
Bucknell 42 Lafayette 30
Colgate 23 Co rnell 16
Dartmouth 31, Holy Cross 14
Duquesne 44 George town D C 20
Fa trl• eld 24, St Peter's 10
Leh1gh 45, Harvard 13
Mansi 27 tona 7
Massac husetts 33, Ma.ne 10
Monmou th N J 41 St Fran c1s Pa 6
Penn 43 , Columb1a 25
Pnnce ton 55 Brown 28
Rhode Island 7, James Mad1son 6
Richm ond 3 1 New Hampsrme 10
Roc hes ter 34 CaniS! US; 28 20T ..
Sacre d Heart 23 S tony Brook 6
Temple 48, Rutgers 14
Towson 38 Howard 6
V1llano.,.a 34 , Northeastern 20
Wagner 24, Cent Connecttcut St 7
Ya le 24 , Fordham 17
SOUTH

6
16
18

21
24
23
20

22

227

13

The AP Top 25

6 0 0 1 00153 110

day

No 25 Tex as (4·2) beat Co lorado 28·
14 Next VS MISSOUri , Saturday

7
9
1a
11
2
12
14
15

210

No 20 Notre Dame (4·2) beat Navy 4 5·
14 Next at West V1rgm1a Saturday
No 21 Purdue (52) beat No 17 North
western 4 I ·28 Next at W1scons1n Satur·

oay

5

24 NC State
51
183
25 Northwestern
5·2 14Q
17
Others rece1v1ng votes Tellas 134 Auburn
74, Colora do St 25 Iowa St 19 W M1Ch1gan
16. Attzona St 10 Tennessee 9, Alabama 5,
Toledo 4 A1r Force 2 Pittsbu rgh 2. LOUISVIlle 1
W•scons1n 1

Central
M1nnesota

day

The AP Top 25

·j PRO FOOl BAIL

No 14 Geo rg 1a (51) beat Vanderb1l t
29- 19 Next at Kentucky Sa turd ay
No 15 M1SSISS1pp1 Stal e (4· 1) d1d no t
play Next at LSU Satu rday
No 15 Sou thern MISSISSIPPI (5 1) bea t
fulane 56·2 4 Nex t at Ho uston Saturday
No 17 Northwestern 15 2) lost to No
2 t Purdue 41 28 Next at Mtnnesota Sa l ·
urday
No 18 M1ch1gan (5 21 be at tndtana 58 ,
0 Ne~tt vs M1chtgan State Saturday
No 19 Auburn (5-2) lost to No 10 Flon
da 38 7 Next vs Louas1ana Tech Satur·

14
20

Atabam! 4 5 Ml sslssjppl 7
Alabama A&amp;M 30, Morris Brown 24
Bethune-Cookman 42 , S Carolina St

I
I
I

667
500
500

1 2 333
0 2 000

112

Char tone
Ch•cago
Indiana
Milwaukee
Toronto
A11ama
DetrQtt
Cle11elarl1

EaaMrnCon~

Allantlc Divlelon

W L T OL Plo. OF OA
Pittsburgh
NewJersey
N.Y Rangers
Ptuladetphia
NY Islanders

28
Georgra Tech 52 Wake Forest 20
Grambli ng S t 24 . Ark - Pme Bluff 17
Hampton 47, Nortolk St 19
Jackson St 64 , MVSU 20
LSU 34 , Kentucky 0
Lou1s1ana Tech 48 , Lo uis•ana -La layette

onawa
Boston
Buffalo
Toronto
Montreal

3
2

1
1

2
1

1
3

o a

6 15
4 13

a 0
0 0
4 11
1 a 3 14
.. 0 2 1 0
1 5
Northea•t DMalon
3 0 I 0 7 14

... 3210
2

2 0

0

2 2 0 0
. 2 3

0

0

2

0

Southe111t Dfvlelon
Carohna
Tampa Bay
Flarida
\Yash1ngton
Atlanta

lOUISVIIIB 38, CinCi nnati 24
McNeese Sl 28, Jacksonville St 0
Middle Tennessee 28 , LouiSiana-Monroe 0
Morgan St t 2 . Sa11annah S t 6
N Carolina A&amp; T 30 Flonda A.&amp;M 10
N C State 38 North C arolina 20
Northwestern S t 27. Nicholls St 2 1
Sou th Carolma 27 Arkansas 7
So uthern M1ss 56 . Tulane 24
Tennessee St 33 Tenn ·Martm 6
Te)Cas Southern 16. Alcorn St 13
UAB 13 Memph iS 9
UCF 34 E Kentucky 3
W Kentucky 17 Tenn essee Tech14
Wolfo rd 4 0 W Carolina, 31
MIDWEST
Ball St 33 E M.1Ch1gan 14
E lll tno1S 48 Murray S l 7
llhno ts 31 , Iowa 0
IIIIOOIS St 21 Indiana S l 0
Kansas 38, MISSOUri 17
M1am1 (O hto) 24 B owlmg Green 10
M• ch tgan 58 India na 0
Minnesota 29. OhiO St 17
N 111mo1s 52 Akron 35
Noire Dame 4 5 Navy 14
OhiO 44 , Kent St 7
Ok lahoma 41 Kansas St 31
Purdue 41 , Northwestern 28
Robe rt Mo rns 17 Dayton 13
S lllmots 35 Drake 23
Toledo 4 2 Marsha ll 0
ValparaiSO 33, Butler 7
W IllinOIS 14 , SW MISSOUfl St 10
W1sconsm 17, M1ch1ga n St 10
YounQsto wn St 28 N Io wa 24
SOUTHWEST
Alabama St 51, Pra1r1e V1ew 21
Iowa St 33 O klahoma St 26
Nebraska 56, Texas Tech 3
Sa m Houston St 52, Stephen F Austm

1

,

4

. 1 2 1 0
0
0

1
3

1
2

7 18
4 11
4 6
4 15
11

12
9
10
21

" .0 2 1 0

12
9

19
9

Edmonton
Colorado
Va ncoU\Ier
Calgary
Minnesota

a o

g

19
15

2 3 0 0

17
14
18
12

18
12

8

17

0 4

4

1 0

Pacific Oivialon
Phoemx
4 1 0 0
8 21
Dallas
3 2 1 o 7 15
Los Angeles
3 2 I 0
7 28
SanJose
2 1 0 0
4 8
Anaho•m
1 2 o 1 3 8
Two po1nts tor a wm one poml for a he
overt1 me loss
Saturday's Games
Montreal 5, Ch•cago 4, OT
Ottawa 4 Toronto 0
Calgal)' 2 N Y Islanders 0
New Jersey 4, Anaheim 2
Pittsburgh 8 N Y Rangers 6
Dallas 3, Washington 0
Nashville 2, Carof•na 1
Col orado 3. Columbus 1
VancoU\fer 4 Buffalo 0
Phoemx 6, Ph1ladelphta 3
San Jose 5, Boston 2
Sunday's G•mea
Edmonton 5, Minnesota 3
Calgal)' 4. Detrotf 2
Tampa Bay 5, Atlanta 2
Ch1cago 2. Columbus 1
Pl1oen1x 6. LOS Angeles 5
Today'• Games
Anaheim at NY Rangers , 7 p m
Toronto at Vancouver, 10 p m
Tueaday'a Games
Ottawa at Phltaoetphm. 7 p m
Co lorado at Washmgton, 7 p,m
Buffalo at Montreal. 7 30 p m
Anahe1m at NY Islanders, 7 30 p m
New Jersey at Atlanta, 7 30 p m
St LOUIS at DetrOit, 7 30 p m
Los Angeles at Nashville, 8 p m
Boston at Edmonton, 9 p m

41

Te~oeas

A&amp;M 24 Baylor 0
Utah St 17, North Te&gt;eas 12
Fr.R WEST
AH Force 51, Wyommg 34
AriZOna 53 Washington St 47 30T
BOISe St 41 , E Washtngton 23
Cal Poly-SLO 52, W New MexiCO 10
C alifOrnia 46 UCLA 38 , OT
Co lorado St 20, UNLV 19
Dav1dson 27 San D1ego 13
Fresn o St 58 Nevada 21
Haw au 30, SMU 15
Ida ho 4 2 Arkansas St 25
Montana 34 , CS Northndge 30
New MAXI CO St 42 Tulsa 28
Oregon 28 , So uthern Cal 17
O regon St 38, Stan ford 6
Portland Sl 59, Idah o St 21
Sacra me nl o St 24. Montana Sl 13
St Marys Cat 71 , Menlo 34
Texas 28 . Colo rad o 14
UC Dav1s 56, S Utah 20
U TEP 47, San Jose St 30

0 1 00

1

333

I

02000

1 1/2

1

'

3
2
2

2

·

0 1 00
1 667
1 667

1 2

.

Meip County's

2 333

3
4

Pont and

2

Golden Stale
Phoefllx
Sacramento
LA Lakers

1

0 1 00
1 667
I 667
2 3~3

2

2
0

2

333

333

12
7

tim C1St," nmlfi cld er P rek! s.ud
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Whdl' d1l' R.tm' gur to the top nf
tlw NFL \\'1lh otl~·nse the W11~
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Mtkl m. Mohur SU11'L' d tiK onl\
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the Ch1CJgo Fne 1 ~11 Sund.1\ lo
w111 the1r first MLS Cup Th,• \'IC~
tory co mplctt"d a turnaround
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NLCS
from Page Bl
10

Kile o.;,nd " If you make: good
pitc hes, It doesn't nutter 1f you 'rc
prtchrn g on o ne d~ys' rest I d1d11 't
nuke good pitches"
Bur bec&gt;use Bobby J Jon'es
f.ued lmk better wrth stx days ofl"
smcc h1s one-hit shu to ut ag.-unst
SJn Fran cisco, the C.Jrdma l ~
•toyed 111 t he game Jonel ollowed
~lX run s and stx hits m four-plu s
lt ,

inmngs
St. Lotus

Rusch

111

h.1d

a shot abra 1mr

thl' 'i t xth utntn g 1

but

first bascnun Todd Zelle made .1
b1g defe m1vc pL1y R .1y LJ nkford
led off WJth .1 Single. but M e G~
wm: JU~t w.nchl'd a.~ FernJndo
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" I felt !th· \\l' d gL·t o n e mon.:
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Wllllg to bL· .1 \\ ,l\' w ,1\ o1 d huu :·

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1994 Wodd Cttp~ .n 1d onu: llil'd
out '' 1th the Nc\\' Ynt k Jc r~ Atr ~ l

wtrc l1t.'\'l'r go t a c b:~n cl' to b.n.
leavmg hun 0-for-- 1 '' 1t h o ne
mtenuo nal walk 111 four g:1 m cs
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run , to co me tu dtL' plcttl'" L1
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tip, he was tn thcr~ ,.
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t\\o runner-. on

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Paqul'ttc grounded Ollt to e nd thL·
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hts tl' ;~ mmates for thor loo . . c pl.ty
111 Game 3 They rc,pon ckd 111
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2

POMEROY fJom eroy V1llage
Council d1scussed th e construwon of a
new water treatm ent plant Monday
dUJing Its regular mee ting .
Council voted to authonze V1llage
Admmmrator John Anderson to begin
advertising fo r cnginccrmg proposals
on a new water treatment facility to b e
located near the well field 1n Syracuse.

Co un cil co ntmued a d 1\CU'\'ilOI1 abo ur
a n ew roof on the old Juni or H1 gh
Building which sits along Mam S1reer
becau se of water leakage and genera l
d et erioration
It was estlmJtcd It would be chea per
for the village to re-roof the ltru ct urc
u;stead of tearing 1t down.
C.ounCil dis cussed the iss ue JnJ
dee1ded to deh berate un the matter .1t a

Mayor Jo hn 131acttnar said the new
fac!Iity would clean around 800,000
gallons of water per day and would
likely cost more than $1 rmlhon.
"This new treatm ent plant w1ll be a
good expan sion to our current water
proJects," Blaettnar said. "O n ce every~
thmg IS 111Stalle d and connected,
Pomeroy's water quality will b e on an
unp arallel ed leveL"

111

and

.t nd got

Wast11ngton vs New York fit Hart1ord Conn

7 30 p m
Toronto vs Philadelphia at Chapel H1ll N C .
7 30 p m
Tuesday 's Games
Dallas at Oetr011 7 3a p m
New Jersey at Orlando 7 30 p m
lnd1ana at Mmnesota 8 p m
WaShington at Chicago, 8 30 p m
Sea ttle at Houston 8 30 p m
Cleyeland at Utah 9 p m
Phoen1x at L A Lakers at Anaheim Cah1
10 30 p m
Portland at LA Ctrppers 10 30 p m

TRANSAtnONS
BASKETBr.LL

National Basketball Anoci1tlon
BOSTON
CEL TICS -St gned
Jason M1 sk;m

. CLEVELAND

G

CAVALIERS -

R e lea sed G Wlll1e Burton and G
Khal1d Reeves
FOOTBr.LL
National Football League
SEAT T LE SEAHAWKS - Acttvated
C·G Ra bbl e Toback lrom th e phys •ca ll y-unable-to - per t orm ltst
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BOSTON
BRU I N S-Recal led
G
Kay Whitmore from P r ovtde n ce o f
the AHL
TAMPA BAY LIGHTN ING - Ac fl va t ·
ed D Sergey Guse11 from 1n1ured
rese rv e

GB

~cu r~

C!ty C h1 efs owner Lumr Hunt
Hunt pas sed up th e C hrds~Oak­
land RJ~de•s gJmc to Jltcnd th L·
MLS Cup and '' ltllt'~s one of lw.,
b1 ggL'St v1ctoneo;; SJn cc th e C htd"s
upset the Mmn cso ta Vtkmg~ 111
the 1970 Super Bo\\'1 1 &lt;~ en n th,·

between the AFL .tnd Nil
''Th L· te rhc -.pnt t w, t, c~t.lh ­
iJ ,hL· d I h.H 111 .tde L'\ ·cryt h mg
L'\'L' tl. ~~2." I tum •.t td " l'h t\ ,.., .1
d1 fkrL'Ilt b.1t!lc The h.tttk here J\
.lg.un ' t th'-· btlll nile~ t\ll I ki L'. th L·
b.Htic ,·, lO 'L'il [IL kL h . .

l't~ht

'

OUTSTANDING
WOMEN - These
women, repre·
sentmg a numt&gt;er
of professions 1n
the local community, where hon·
ored at a luncheon ot&gt;servmg
World Rural
Women's Day on
Monday. They are,
1-r, Susan Oliver
for serv1ce. Char·
lene Hoeflich for
t&gt;usmess, Mary
O'Bnen for professionalism, Dawn
Kopec for agnculture, and Mary
O'Bnen for the
arts. (Bnan J.
Reed photo)

BY BRIAN

h 1'

Agb Jy,ltW

hon1cr of the
~cnc~ .mJ fou 1th of h 1~ pL&gt;~t­
~L'. I ~Pn &lt;..1rcer m.tdc tt H ~} ITt
1he founh Wdl Cbrk haJ lut .1
'(l in ,!Jot tn r "'t L ot\1\ 111 t h L· tup
SL'COlH.l

P LVZ.l \

r-----------------,
r-----------------,
wheel alignment
'I
tires
· 1I
95
We will meet or beot any competitor's
l$2495 $40
l
4-w~el
advertised price on the some tire. :
1

I

1 2-wheel

JCheck and ad;ust camber and toe Additional parts
1 and labor may be required on some vehicles .

1
I

1

L-----------------~

I

:

I

We feature ali major brands GoOdyear, F1restone
General, Michelin, Bridgestone, Con tmental, UNIROYAL.
BF Goodnch Mountmg and balancmg may be extra

1
I

L-------------- ---~

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1
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Quality~

"-,tL'\'L' It ql~;ll'\

till'

ldl'O

C HAR LESTON, W.Va . (A P)
Ladybug, !Jdybug, fl y away
homt·.
That \ the urgm f( uf Wect V i r~
gmtans whose hotn L''i h ave been
invaded 111 recent LLrys by the
multi colored p e''' With bl.ll'k
T he bu~ norm ,L ily ct.lft l ook~
ing for sh elter when fall 's e.1rly
fro sts h it , but tins yc·Jr, the insects
appear ~Jmp.11 1t , said Berry
C. ru tchfi d d, an l't lt o m o loglst
wit h the state Dcpartlllent of
Agnculture.
There's no way of calcu l.rtmg
the numbe1 of huf," that have
ta"ia_·n w mg and drL~ c lmgm~ to
our!stde wa llc; or h .1vc m y"tcrtously appeared mSidc on wmdow1,
wall' .md ceilmgs .
" You 're talk1n g millions, 1f not
b1lhons," Crutchfiel&lt;-1 ,,mi.

band. Roger, own &gt;nd operate
A&gt;rdvark Sound The Gdmores
also prese nt the1r App .dacl11an
muSic program in schools and at
events throughout the region .
•
Charlene
H oefli ch
of
Pomeroy, general m,mJger ofThe
Daily Sentinel, 111 the area of business. H oeflich . who h as been ge n ~
eral n1 anager of tht' newspaper
sin ce 1989, began her career wnh
The Ath ens M esse nger 111 1959.
• Da" n Kopec, w ho operates o
1\.utl.md-are a fm n wah her hu s~
bonJ, Tony, 111 the arc• a ofagm ul ~
turc. The m other of f1vc, Kopec IS
active m .1 numbcr o f con m1unity
o rgam zannns.
• M ary O'Brien of Syracu&lt;c·,
th e asml ant pm1c1pal at M e1g«
M1ddle School. m the ,\lea
p ro~
fcS'mnalism. O'Bn en .Jufted
•
ca reers 111 !9HH, after I 4 years 111
the nursmg profe ss10n.

m

The Inse c ts , .1crually called
mulncolored AS!~Il L1dy beetles,
are native to Chma. T hey were
rell';,ed Ill tht" United St.ltl'S 111
the early I'JK fls to h elp couthern
pe can growero.; n mtrol the pecan
Jphtd T h e tns ccts .1Tl' now com mon throughout t h ~..· E.lstern
Umted St.lte,,
"Th e fi r~t cst,,bi!SII cd popula~

tion wa" fm111 d .

111

1YHH m

Louimna." Crutc hfi eld sa~ d
"T hey then spread throughout
the Umrcd StJtcs and \Wrl' cstab~
il &lt;lwd m West V11g"'' " by I Yn."
Dunng: the ~pnt1g and 'lll tllmer, the beetles .n·e h .1ppy to hvc
111 ttec top~. l',ttlng aph1Js, mites

a11d any other insl'Ct they em
overpower, ,,ud Orutch tlcld.
In the (,,II , the bec' tles flock to

'

supplemenl
to t h e vol un tee r
'lJ ti.tJ ~
w in c h oper~
.1 t c thro u ghou t th t: coun ty.
llurge«

RURAL
WOMEN'S DAY
- Gina Pellegnno
P1nes, director of
the Me1gs Center
of the Un1versity
of R10 Grande,
standmg, gave
th e keynote
address at Monday' s World Rural
Women' s Day luncheon. (Bnan J.
Reed photo)

• SLISan Ohver of R .\l 111e, the
l'Xl'Cutivc di recto r of rhe M L'Ig'
Co unty C::ouncil on Agmg. fi1r
her co ntnbutt on to scr vtCl' In
Jddmon to her work w1th the
MCCaA and the Me1gs County
Multipurpose Scmor Center,
Ohwr h as held ,, 11Umbcr of
reg10nal ;md ~t.Jtc- k vl' l ofTi tl''&gt;
rcbtmg to rhe .1gmg, find reo.;nfil'd
before th e U.S Sc11a1c 011 the
Older Amcn c&gt;n s Act

Sentinel
'

AS
82~4

ns

Comics

A4

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A3
B1.6 .
A3

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hL' ,ttcd barrie wnh R c publt c lll
Sl'll jol1n A~h rm l t
•
1 hl' l\' \\'L'll' 110 -.un J\or ~ • .Jnr)

Carnahan

l'll llHitl'

N.1rhtq.~.JI.

Pick 3: O~ l ~ l; Pick 4: _,__(,~9 7
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TUC\ ll.t\' llf

Daily 4:

tilL'

to!

l h·~

AdmtnJ o.;tr.ttor

J Ill

lt'l]IIL''&gt;L

rl mount of $ 7 (J.(J=)~.

In

Please see Honored, Page A3

hil t

Alll'plcd

At !...O llll\lll g

[J'tl'\tl'L'~

L Olllllllllllt }'.

ML I&lt; l'hc·\
"-,ttl'L'f,

CLnLT.tlh

John

,Jnd rlHl'&gt;l' ,lrtL' lllhJJg the lun cheon , .md dJscu..,,cd' rlll: 1111p01 ~
t.lll u:· of thl'\1..' pro tL·~~IO!i.l l
women to thl'n pl'l:r~ 111 th'-· rur.1l

I !.Ill h ..'

._tflL'

L} Oil'i , Pru\l'Lllllllg Attolll l'\

wo 111en honon·d

rill'

S.dcs, In c of
Lo udon vtlle.
w.ts
the
apparc11t lo w
J)I(Jde l , Wit h .I
h~tl
111
the
amount
of
$69,773. Other h~tl1 were
t nc!vcd fro m
1\·nn ( ',ltl'
l'v1cJEal P roUuct~ o l' Ndn. 111
the ~ll1\ 0I11lt of S71l,7!1ll .. 111d
\'.&lt;/hcdL·d Co &lt;te h l ndtl\t!IL'\ n t
W 1n1cr l'.1rk. !!.1 .. 111 tile

FMS

g rtn o - PIIll'~, thl' dtt l'UOI of tlll'
Umverstr-v. of Rt o C:r&lt;ltldc \ Mc1go.;
Cen t..:t. dclt vr red .1 kL·ynote

\\l'IH

omo

5~3~ 1

' Ambulanc e

Ac tton on thl' hul ~ \\ .1 ...
t.tbkd pcnd t ng l' L'VIl'\\ h\

Lotteries ·
W.VA.
Daily 3:

and

COLDMAN. Mo. (AI') - ( :o" Ml'i C 1rn .l h.1n
th t· I)t,·mou. ltlt cmda Lltl' 111 ntll' of the most hotly
cm ltcsred U.\ \L't t.ltl' 1.1\ l'' 111 the uHJIItl\', W.l~ ~Ilkd
when thl' pi.111L' -. hurrlm ~ l11111 to .1 l.JII~p.ngil 1.1lly
n.l~htd 111 r.nn y. foggy \\L'.Ith t r
Th L· ( \· ..... n ,t 1J:). he hn·L·d to
h .n L bLL' II t,llt)lll~ ( ' mulun . ln-.
~011 P... ogl't .111d th l' gmL·tnor·~
c. Jtnp.n g n .Hh l~l'l' (:In,.., Sdfulll

2 Sections - 12 Pages
Calendar
Classifieds

G m.1

H L·arse

Ulldvr

Amlm/,mce Sales, I11c. of
L011d01111ille, was the
appamrt law Mdder, with
a hid iu tire '"'""lilt '!f
$69,773. Otlur bids wm·
rccfir'L'd (rom Pt•urr Care
,'\1edical Pradr1cts af
Niles, in the ammml af'
$70,700, aud Wlll't'ied
Coaclr llrdustrii·s o_f
1Viuta Pin·k, Fla., irl
till' amo1111t of $76,954.

l /1'\\,IHl

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Missouri governor killed in plane crash

Today's

'l.ltd

St I ()til\

~ n u ll ptl'CL'' 'Prl' .l ll
V./e h.l \l' found ~Olll!...' Jclll.llll~ \\'l'
cannot fid:·nnt\ .H rht.., po111t." ~.nd (_ ·.qH F.d l(cm p n!'

1 ~2~7~'1

"'V.A:

t(nl n:l

\\'H'l'k.t!;l' 111 nT)

OV L' I .1 ~.Ugl .H L',l.

Please see Ladybugs, Page A3
c

I

nude h\ ll .11cl MtK c h&lt;'\
.tnd
J(Lnrdtng
tn
J .tnLt
H o\\ .1nl. ho 1rd prL''Hknt "·''
rn.ldl" ~o .1 ,u hdl\ 1~ 1 nn L,lll h~·
hllllt 111 til l' .ttl',\ \h•Kt·hn
~trcct. H o\\ nd ~IHl.t~ llDT .111
.h~(t11 1 nud, l!ld
1 plo\\l'Ll
tidd 1\ 111 tht lo~. .ltl&lt;ill I n11~
feet df P.1 1h ~lfl' tt \\.1\ \,tt.lt
Ld Th e p rn p c 1t\ Ill quc-.fll\!1

REED

rq?;ul:tr llll'L'ttng

Pomeroy as a

7
•

\

MonJay
Thn::L' btd'l wert re( el\· ~·J
for th e purch rl"e of rhc IlL'\\
squ ad, w h1c h w !ll b e mnl t(rr
lhe c ounty~wide " M elh L 4 ."
\\Ill 110\\ fL'\L'tt to tbL' prnp
or Ce ntral Dt ;; p:ttc h \l'l'\ IL'l'
l rt\ O\\ IlL r
"I hat squ.1d " "·'ffcd b1 p.ml
H.o\\ ,liLl -..11d ,Ill .dll\ lll.ll
per~onnL·I a nd opcr.l tL'\ holll
{ h l' l' :"\ 1\ U II!!, p ,llk "-,ttll'l
th,· EMS ce n ~
nttght
hL'
t er
ln
redt'd J&lt;.at ed
Burgrss Hearse and

The ·ladybugs are ba~k

~pots

I dmulHh
Nutl''

MIDDLEPORT Five out~
st.mdmg Mdgs Co unty women
from a vancty of profesSions, reprcse ntmg ru ral women everywhere, were honored for then
Jccomphshments M on day dunng
a Rural Wom en's Day lun cheo n
at the Umvcrstty of R 10 Grande's
Me1gs Ce nter
'
The Me1gs County Prosecu ting
Attorney's Office. th ro ugh the
Vict1m s AssJ'ltan cc Prog ram .mtl
Y10lcn cc Against Wom en pro~
gram, Jnd the URG M e1gs C en ter, sponsored the awa1ds lun ~
cheon , wh1ch h onored the fol ~
lowmg women
• M ary G1lmore of ·Pomeroy,
for her cuntnbution to the J rts.
Gtlmorc ts "ec rctary for the
Pomeroy
office
of
the
Athens/ Meigs Edu cJtio n&gt;l Se r~
vtce Center, .mJ sht' and her hus-

J.

COllltlll~~ltlll l' f\

by C O UIH V
durmg thctr

0

1

h dt

]\. lilt!...' ! ll

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

11l'nkn Jt l

Kill', add11tg tlw.:c rut1s 111 the ~t.:l ­
nnd on .1 t\\ o- run doubll' b)
7ede 1nd .1n RBI Sin gle hy

pJ.i\'t:r,

..,_,1\'&gt;l"ttL

iJl'O

POMEROY ll"h for J
new amb u lantt" WL'rl· opt'lll'J

honored on World
Rural Women's Day
BY BRIAN

1

\

re\\ 1nder ..mJ 'l' \ l r tl til h·tbot)k-. tor

SEN TINEL NEWS STAFF

Out~tanding women

.lllHtnd

Met ' Jhe"d 3 ~ 2 qn New York\
fourth str.ught double AgbJ)'Jill
scored Ventura With a two-o ut
double - the Mets' record fifth
on Lhc Jn nmg No team m LCS
pb y hJd ever had more tlun four
cxtr:~-b .tse h1ts m J!l mmng
"We cam e our more :~ggre'l­
stvc." ~;ud P1Jzza, who has broken
h1" po stst:a~o n struggle~ by gomg
(J~fm ~ 1J w11h fiw 1U3I s 111 t he
se nes . "\Ve we re dctenmnL' d to
get b&gt; ck 111to bJI!game "
N ew York w.1sn 't done Jg.un..,t

,ltlJ

Commissioners
open bids·for
new ambulance

Denver vs Milwaukee at Lextng ton. Ky . 7

pm

r hu.t 111 the
l "\-\'lid bulll't fiolll

.1

.1 pp10,

Please see Council, Page AJ

pm

11ght to
thl t)2 lld

I k m.1 Km

l hem 1r.1J\-.
C'Olllll il dL'( llh•d to Obl 1111 llllH\'
mform.Hton on thl' lll.lttl'r .uhi d1'L u~' It
.tt thl· n..:xr mt&gt;..:tmg .
Counul .1ho
l·J du. plHl h.l~l
of five wm[L' r l o.1h fiH' dt\p IH IlL' I
h,ldgL'\, \lX rniJ ll' b,JdgL''&gt;. ,1 tLil'\"1\ lOII

Atlanta vs Boston at Spnngfletd Mass . 7

J.nllcd ,1 l low - J,lll gl'

t

later dare
In oth t:r bu stness, counci l c.hlil'U\\ed
the Gavin Plant 's proposed six 60.011(1 gallon anhydrous a mmom a tanb to b,·
con~tru c tc..:d m
ne1ghbonng Galha
Counry Concern s of tht:! "wor\t-casl'
scena r1o " were brough t up JS well a&lt;
the po s&lt;~bllity of businesses pas"ng up
Melb"&gt; County becaUie of the close
proxtmny of [h e aforelll l"ntlutu:J

Today's Games

13

th L' w .lll l 11~

dl\'L' d

so Cents

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

BY TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

1 112

1--h 1-.to ~tOIIL hkm 111 thl' H(Hh
" I he extr:1ord1tl:lr\' fiH J()Jl\ I\
L'\'tt\' d.ty,'' K1m.1 ~ C1ty ll).ll l l

!'ltl

L!ill ld 1111h

~l O!t..' k\\

so, Number 101

Pomeroy council mulls new water plant

1 112
1 1/2

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1111

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Hometown Newspaper

I

1
333
2
250 2 112
200
3

02000 2 112
2
2

12
17

N•llonal Basketball Association

3

1

Seattle
LA Clippers

7

PRO HOOPS

Orlando

1

2

Saturday' a Games
Charlotte 113 Atlanta 92
PhlladelphiB 84 . washm9ton 80
Mtam1 85 New Jersey 79
Toronto 113 Cleveland 108 OT
Ortancto 118, Detroit 92
Ch1cago 107 , Denver 104
Houston 9a San AntoniO 84
Mttwaukee 9 1 Sacramento 89
LA Chppers 86 Vancouver 78
Sunday' s Games
Dallas 96 San Anton.o 91
lnd1ana 92. Sacramenlo 83
Phoenix 105 Vancouver 94
Portland 101 Golden S tate 83

.,

Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W L Pet.

2

.;

667
667
667
667
667

Pacitic Division

3 1 1 0 7 16 10
3100696
2 2 0 1 5 13 17
2 3 0 0 4 14 13

1 4
2
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. 4 1 1 0
9
3 0 2 0
8
6
3 2 0 0

I
I

I

Dallas .
Minnesot a
HQuston
Denver
San AntoniO
Vancouver
Utah

6

19

Weatern Conference
Central Dl\llsion
W L TOL Pia OF OA

St LOUIS
Nashville
Chicago
Detro1t
' COlumbus

1

2
2

Westam Conference
Midwest Division

8,

3 14 13
2 7 10
2 8 16
I 6 10

1
0

2

Kansas City makes early goal·stand in MLS Cup,\fictory over Chicago
WASHINGTON (AP) - Thrs
worst-to-first thmg 1s gl'ttm g to
be .1 luba for the stJ te of Mr s~

•

I

I
1 112
2

C.ntr1l Division

Chattan ooga 27. VMI 14
Cle mson 35. Maryland 14
Delaware 28 , W1lliam &amp; Mary 17
East Caro tma 42, Army 21
Elan 43 , Samford 21
Flonda 38. ,6,uburn 7
Ftonda ~ t 63. Duke 14
Furman 33. The Citadel 7
Georgra 29, Vanderbilt 19
Geocg1a So uthern 34, Appalach•an St

14

2
1
I

New Jersey
Washington
M1am1
Boston

Odober 17,2000

•

2 0 1 00

Philaoelphla

Charleston Southern 42 , Austin Peay

Meigs netters win TVC title a1

Details, A3

New Vol'll;

Utah 21 , San Otego St 7
Washington 21 Arizona St 15
Weber Sl 12, N Anzona 10

Tuesday

Society news and notes, As

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Please see Governor, Page AJ

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Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
1:z-year-old admits threat
BATAVIA (AP) -A 12-y~ar--old girl who was upset over bemg
teased bv schoolnuti."S has aclrnowle&lt;lged wrinng a bomb threat last
week on • bathroom door at Ameha Middle School, police said.
The g.rl, whose name was not released because of her age, pleaded dehnquent, or gmlty, Monday m Clermont County Juvenile
Cou rt to one count of inducing panic.
A charge of nuking a false alarm was d1smissed in exchange for
her plea before Juvenile Court Judge Stephanie Wyler.
Several police agencies responded Friday afternoon when the
threat )"as reported to school authorities. The building was evacuated. but no bomb "was found.
"When confiunted with this, she admitted doing so, and indicated she'd wntten the threat because she was upset about being teased
about a relanonsh1p she had with a boy at school," Clermont County Shenff AJ Rodenberg said.
The g1d w1ll be held at the juvenile detention center pending a
scncencmg heanng on Oct. 30.
l'ohce sa1d the threat was not connected with racial tension that
had led to fights in recent weeks at nearby Amelia High SchooL
"It's somewhat rd1cving to know that it's unrelated," the sheriff
sat d.

College of Wooster gets SSM
WOOSTER (AP)- The College ofWooster has been awarded
an S8 nnllion grant by the Burton D. Morgan Foundation of Akron
for a new classroom building, the college announced Monday.
The bu!ldmg, to be called the Burton D. Morgan Hall, will house
th,· c~lleg&lt;·'s &lt;eononucs, education and psychology departments and
an mfornuuon technology center.
The bu1ldmg w1ll be constructed at the si te of the current Hygeia
Hall, wh1ch Will be demolished.
Th,. bu!ldmg will be· part of an effort to re-establish the gateway
to the I ,700-studc nt college at rhe southern end of the campus.
about oil miles south of Cleveland.
The new bmldmg "will serve as a cornerstone for the new
planned gateway to the camp us," said Stanley C. Gault, a f~undation
[ru . . tcc: .md tUrnu:r chatrman of the college's board of rruscees.

Police probe shooting deaths
COLUMBUS (AP) - Pollee on Monday were investigating two
&gt;ep.!rate shoonngs that left two people dead.
Two gunmen shot and ktlled an 18-year-old man Monday afterlluon .t~ he \valked our of a convemence store, police said. At least
111 vhot&gt; wen· ti red. No arrests had been nude.
On Sullll,,, m~ht, Ralph Wilson, ~5. was killed wh1le dnv1hg on
lntent.He 670

Anmhc-r we,tbuund car pulled alon'g side Wilson and fired shots
imu the vchlc!t- He was hit t\V!Ce and died at Grant Medical Center.

polJCe

'IJid.

An undetermined number of people were in Wilson 's car and tied
.lfter the 'hoot mg. Sgt. Earl Snuth md Monday.
He ~J1d 1w ar!c'r~ had been made and pollee were urging wit..:
11e.;,.;,t"-. tn colllt' tonvard.
"It\ VL'ry unhh·ly that this was random," Smith said.

Flight has emergency landing
COLUMBUS (AP) - A Delta Air lines flight from Cleveland to
Cmonna~1

made an unscheduled landing here Monday morning
be-came a hght m thl' cockpit indicated e ngine rrouble, an airline
.;,poke~woman "aid.

Fhght 1492 landed at Port Columbus International Airport about
II :48 a.m. A mechimc who mspected the MD-80 found nothing
wrong, and the pbne arnved in Cincinnati at 4:34 p.m., said Delta
&lt;;pokeswonian Jani S Logue.
lncludmg the crew, Ill people were on board the plane, she said.
No unt' wa~ hun.
·

Judge throws out indictment
_ CINCINNATI (AP)- A federal j udge on Monday dismissed a
traud md!ctll!ellt that accused a former bank officer of improperly
approvmg and u"ng b.mk loans.
U.S. Dl\m rt Jud!(e Susan Dlott ruled that despite repeated
requec;r..,, fl'dcr.ll authormec; btkd to rurn over records and documt"nts th.tt joh11 f. Yl' ,tgcr needed to prepare his defense.
The ~incuJIH.'Ilt'&gt; ,.IJowl'd th:uYeager, a former assisrant manager at
·: St.u ll.lnk hr.1m h. h.HI properly created paper records of the loans
tor wh1ch In· \\.1'&gt; lrllhltnl, .... 1id Martin Pina1es, Yeager's attorney.
Yea~cr. J~ \\,J\ llldHtnl m 1998 on nine counts of bank fraud,
~..'.Kh pum~h.l\lk

h· up tl) tivL years in pris_on upon conviction. He

pleaded gudl\. iti \ttY JtJ99 to two co unts of the indictment. His
'il'lltcncing h.td Pt-v:J d,.:l,tyed while the case was pending.
1 li on\ .H:ttnn \'.tp~· out those convictto n:\, Pinales said.
rnh:r.tl.ttltlw·Oltll.''&gt; fud .lCC ttsedYeager of scheming to defraud tht!

b.111k.Jww .dkd I1N.1r IJ.mk,ln 1 ~'15 and 1996 by approvmg seva~d lo.m\ ~h&lt;~t \\'•.TL' mon· than he was allowed to approve for borrower-. wlw \\Tfl.'Il't quahtlcd under the bank'o; polictes. Authorities
.;,)d ht th r: i.h(.'d the !o,m funJr-. fo r his own benefit.
1 )k:t \d~ up ...·n t!Il.' PO'-'ithihty that the government could choose
(!) llH.h~. 'y\ .lL:;n·,ll',l\11
. •'
_john DiPu u.IO ..111 J\mt:tnt U.S. attorney, did not a return a call ro
lw; office tv1 ,l!Hl.l y t()r co mmem.
·
Thom,,, \, hu, k. ,, L1wyer for the bank, &lt;aid he had not seen the
rulmg .md Wtntld not dJKuss it.

The Daily Sentinel
a au Services

Q

&lt;:orrection Policy
Our mam co11Cern 1n 111 stor•es tS to
be accurdte ll you kno w of. an error m

a story call 1he newsroom. at (740)
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News Departments
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Department ex1ent10ns are:
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Inside Meigs County
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galtnbune@eurekanet com

Tueedey,Ckrtober17,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

$27 JO
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Tuesda~~ober17,20oo

she said.
"The focus noally should be on physical
activity," Guo said. "There should be more
outdoor arovity. E~n indoors, instead of just
sitting on the couch, they could &lt;;lo some
housework. Get them up and moving around:'
Children between 4 and 8 with high bodymass indexes are more likely to become overweight adults than people with heavy birth
weights, high alcohol collSumption and liale
physical activity, Guo said.
Body-mass index is an adjusted ntio 1pf
weight to height that has become a generally
noliable predictor of body fat percentage, largely through earlier Fels tesean:h, for evei')'One
without unusually high muscle mass.
Fifty-five percent of Americans are either
overweight or obese, with "obese" meaning at
least 20 percent overweight. The U.S. Centers

for Disease Control and Prevention reported
19 percent ~re obese in 1998, a 60 percent
increase in seven yean.
If obesity were considered a separate disease,
it would rank third behind heart disease and
cancer in causing 300,000 deaths a ~ar, .CDC
researchers wrote in the Oct. 4 Journal of the
American Medical Association. It contributes
to heart disease, cancer, stroke, diabetes and
kidney and liver disease.
·
The Fels study is based .at the Miami Valley
B.esean:h · Park in Kettering. The study is the
world's largest ;md longest-running evaluation
of hunun growth and body composition,
nuking it a unique resource for seeing how
obesity tracks fiom childhood to adulthood.
"There's no other data that allows one to
nolate ""ry early childhood to adults in their
40s, 5(ls and 60s," Guo said.

Retired teachers.

Lenford R. 11ob' Kirby

to meet
POMEROY - Me1gs County
Renred Teachers will hold a luncheon meeung at noon Saturday
at the Tnmty Church annex in
Pomeroy. Perry Varnadoe, economic development director_. w1U
address Meigs County's future.
Members _;re urged to attend.

w.ts mc~o.·ting wah
katkrs to e-xpress condoknees. The cou pl e had four chil-

NEW HAVEN, WVa. - Lenford R . "Bob" Kirby, 81, New Haven,
died Sunday, October 15, 2000 at Jackson General Hosp1tal m Ripley.
Kirby was a mechamc for 25 years at Rawlings Car Lot m Middleport, Ohio; a mechanic for 25 years at the WVa. State Division of
Highways and a mechanic for 15 years for AEP Philip Sporn Plant. He
was also a member of Clifton Tabernacle Church. ·
Born April25 , 1919 in New Haven,WVa., he was the son of the late
George Lester Kirby and Minnie R. Rings Kirby.
In addition to his parents, he is preceded in death by his spouse, Anna
Mae Lewis Kirby, who died in 1988; and five brothers, Lelang L Kirby;
George Lester Kirby; Herman L Kirby; Charles Louie Kirby and Cecil
L Kirby.
He is survived by a daughter and son-m-law, Brenda Kay and Rev.
Larry B. Gilland of New Haven; granddaughter and husband, Bethany
Jo and Richie B. Ranno of fair Lawn, NJ; great-grandson, Michael
R . Ranno of fair Lawn , NJ ; brother, Leo Harold Kirby ofVienna,
WVa .; brorher-in-law, Harold C. Lewis of Oak Harbour, Ohio ; sistersin-law, N. Maxi ne Kirby ofVienna, WVa ., Betty Jo Kirby ofVienna.
WVa. and Josephi ne Kirby ofWest Columbia,WVa. and special friend ,
J oan L Varian of Mason, WVa .. He IS also survived by several nieces
;u\d nephews.
Visitation will be held Wednesd.1y. O ctober Ill. 2000, from 6 p.m . to
') p.m. at Foglesong funaa) Home.
funeral s,·rvle&lt;S will be conducted at I p.m. Thursday, October 1'1,
2000. Jr thl' Foglesong Funeral Home. Maso n,~WVa., wnh Re-v. Gn:gory Blatr offin:lung. Burial \viii bt" .n Graham Cemt"lt'ry Ill New
Haven , W.Va. Pallbearers will be AI Dodson , R.oger Dingey, Brvan
Dm g,·y. M1ke Folmer, Jeff Russell .md Lloyd Hughes.
V!S!t.ltJOn will be held Wednesd.1y, October I H. 2000, from 6 p.m. to

dren.

') p.m.

BorgWarner- 33 1 ,.

Holman
COOLVILLE - Mllfred A. Holman, 83 Coolville died Sunday
Oct. 15, 2000, at Camden-Clark Memorial' Hospital i~ Parkersburg'

.

w~

She was the daughter bf the !are Benjamin and Mattie Reed Creamer and was .a homemaker.
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Charles and Be:ty Ann
Holman Jr., of Coolville; a daughter and son-in-law, Berty and Bernard
Godfrey of Belpre; a sister, Mildred Stedman ofAthens; a brother. Kenneth Creamer of Coolville; eight grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren. and two great-great-grandchildren .
.
Along wah her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband,
Charles B. Holman, Sr. , three brothers and four sisters.
Funeral ser\'ices will be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Wh ite fun eral
Home m Coo!villr. Officiating will be R ev. Seldon Johnson .
Bunal \\'11! follow in Stewart Cemetery in Hockingport.
Fnends mJy visit on Tuesd1y from 6-8 p.m. at the funeral honte.
'

Arthur Miller

·Report: Woman's death
remained secret for years
WOOSTER (AP) - Word
that a body was found inside a
homemade box in a garage in
nearby Seville had been 'kept as a
family secret for decades, an
investigator told the Akron Beacon Journal.
The secret eventually "was
leaked to police who learned the
partially mummified, dismembered body that was found in
1979 and later discovered in Indiana belonged to a woman who
had disappeared in 1969, the
newspaper reported Monday, citing the investigator who declined

to be identified.
Janice Hartman's .disappearance

had beeri a mystery for 26 years.
Hartman , 23, of Doylestown
had been married to John Da~id
Smith lll , the grandson 'of
garage's owner, Chester Chaney,
the newspaper said.
Smith, 49, now has been
charged with aggravated murder.
He has pleaded innocent in Hartman's death and is scheduled for a
bond hearing Friday in Wayne
County Common Pleas Court.
Smith, a former Seville resident
who has most recently lived in
Oceanside, Calif., became a suspect in Hartma!l's ·death in 1991
after the disappearance of his sec~
ond wife, fran Gladden, 49, of
West Windsor, NJ, police have
said. Gladden, who vanished
within days of having hip surgery,
was never found . Smith hasn't
been charged in Gladden's disap-

pearance.
When the box was found in
Chaney's garage, Smith received a
phone call and was told to pick
up the box, the investigator said.
Smith arrived in his T-top
Corvette and loaded the box in
the car, the investigat?r told the
newspaper.
The box, with Hartman's body
inside, was found in 1980 in a
ditch on a rural road in Morocco,
Ind., about 50 miles from where
Smith was living in Hammond,
Ind., the newspaper said. Officials
didn't know back then whose
body it was and buried the
remains in a pauper's grave under
1he name Jane Doe.
Chaney, the family patriarch
who died in !995, had told all
who knew about the box to keep
quiet, the investigator said.
Investigators got a lead in the
ca.&lt;e after they received word of
the box found in Chaney's garage,
at:cording to the investigator. Last ·
year, they sent more than 100 letters to police agencies throughout
.Ohio and in several other states
seeking information on a
woman's partially dismembered
body and a homemade, 4-footlong wooden box.
Newton County Sheriff's
Detective Gerald Burman in
Indiana responded.
The details in the letter were so
. unusual that Burman immediately remembered ·'The lady in the

Box.''

Regulators question
Ameritech's promises
CHICAGO (AP) - Regulators from five states, including
Ohio, questioned

executives

from Ameritech and its parent
company SBC Communications Inc. Monday .about
whether recurring telephone
service problems throughout
the Midwest are being resolved
as quickly as the companies say
they are.
The executives promised service will be back to normal by
year's end and retroactively
expanded last month's offer to
provide an average S 19 credit
for those suffering undue problems with installation and
repair orders.
· "! believe that the worst of
the problems are behind us,"
said Edward E. Whitacre Jr.,
chairman and chief executive
officer· of San Antonio-based
SBG, which serves 21 .million
customers. "We are making
great progress now, and it will
be solved."
But many of the 17 commissioners on hand from regulatory agen~ies in Ohio, Illinois,
Indiana, Michigan and Wisconsin said they still are awaiting
verifiable evidence.
·
"Promises are nice to hear.
Commitments are great," said
David Hadley of the Indiana
Utility Regulatory Commission. But .. it's time for action."
Some questioned the veracity
of numbers provided by

Ameritech showing that service
h•s improved significantly since
Sept. 18, when the company
began a highly publicized sixmonth plan to improve its service.
According to Ameritech, the
backlog of orders for installation and repairs already ha s
dropped by 35 percent in four
weeks.
In questioning that became
testy, Terry Harvill of the Illinois Commerce ComnUssiOn
pressed repeatedly for eviden'ce
to back up the numbers.
··what we needed .. . was
information to determine for
ourselves whether the problems
are getting better," Harvill said
afterward. "What we got
instead were slick, glib answers
from the chairman of SBC a·nd
the president of Amerite ch."
Ameritech said it . will now.
extend, back to Jan . l, its offer
to provide credit equal to the
average monthly service charl!;e
for those who did not have
installation done within five
days after ordering it or have
outages fixed within 48 hours.
When it announced the plan
last month, it was only froiu
Sept. 18 on.
But a chief watclidog of
Ameritech, Citizens Utility
Board executive director Martin Cohen, called the average
$19 payment "an insult rather
than a real reparation ."

RUTLAND -Arthur L Miller, 7-l. ofWiutc's H1ll R oad 111 Rutbnd. died on Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2000, at Holzer MediCal Center, l.JIIipolis.
Arrange-me-nt.-. will be .mnounced by Birchfidd Funer:tl Home in
Rutland.
·

Ciovemor
from Page AI
Sifford . SiiTurd told Temple that
the gon:rnor's plan~ had encounten.,· d lightning and was gomg ro
n:turn to St. louis or Jefferson
City, H oward said.
Tom Hunter, who lives near
the crash site, told St. Louis TV
station KMOV he heard the
plane flying overhead.
"I thought, 'What a crazy person in this kind of weather.' Next
thing, sounded like it was in a
very steep dive, the engine was
just screaming," Hunter said.
. He said he heard a loud explosion and the sky turned red .
':That was it," Hunter said. "It was
total silence.! told my wife to call
911."
, . Carnahan won his first public
election at age 26 as a municipal
judge in his hometown of Rolla .
He was elected to the Missouri
House of Representatives two
years later and served two terms
' before becoming state treasurer.
. In 1988, Carnahan was elected
lieutenant governor.' In 1992, he
won .the governor's office m a
landslide, and he won a second
term in 1996.
"Gove-rnor Carnahan always
bL'lle\·~d publi c service · was a

noble c" lhng ," Nachtigal said.
"We will m iss him dearly."
Prt'SidL' IH Climon ta ll~d CarO:lh ,m\ wife, J~ :l n , fmm Egyp t

Federal audit uncovers problems with contracts
COLUMUUS (AP) - Taxpayer; footed
the bill for more than $1.5 millioo worth of
home construction-related contracts over two
years involving work that was done improperly, not done at all or questionably bid in several Ohio communities, a federal audit has
found.
The U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development audit covered Aug. l,
1997, through july 31, 19~~ . for the cities of
Kenton, Newark, Shelby and Wellston and the
counties of Champaig11. Chnton, Fairfield,
Knox and Pi ckaway.
· ·
The audit found that they:
• Overpaid contractors $172,18 L
• Paid $205,706 tor shoddy or incomplete
work.
'
• Paid $84.~49 tor work that was never
done .
• Paid $1.1 mtlhon fo r contracts that didn't
have "fa1r and open competition" - 113 of
the 139 jobs reviewed.

Joan Cummings said she bought a neglect- more areas of the state after finding similar
ed house in Mechanicsburg in Champaign problems in Fairf1eld County in 1999.
County in 1998 with a government loan and
"People were living in housing that didn't
a pledge from county officials that federal meet standards," Wolfe said.
Some who supervised the work said the
money would bring the buildmg up to code.
One of the many proble!"' with the house audit is misleading.
Cummings bought was it didn't have heat on
"The first look at the audit gives a very bad
impression, but if you would look further into
the second floor.
&lt;'So they ran a tube upstairs and connected the responses that have been provided and
it with duct tape," she said of contractors hired activity that has taken place since then, it\ a
by a county cons ultant. Nothing was added to much differen1 story," said Ed Hurley. He
force the heat up, so the upstairs remains cold , owns CDC of Ohio, Community Developshe said.
ment Consultants, which administers grants
In Cummings' case, the improperly done for several of the cities and counties cited i1r
work amounted to $19,730, according to the the audit.
audit, the shabby heating job being among the
Part of the problem is HUO based the audit
problems.
on federal standards, but his inspectors have
"It's hysterical;' Cummings said. "My kids used state standards for years, Hurl ey said. ·
sleep downstairs on the floor ... because, if
In addition, HUD cited the total cost of the
not, you freeze in the winter."
job, even if only a small part was done
Heath Wolfe, who supervised the audit', said improperly, Hurley said. "So the report overHUD 's inspector general decided to look at states things."

Honored
from Page AI
" Rural women are comnbming to the-I r f:1milics and to thetr
cOJ lllllUilit tt.'S 110\\' marL' than
ever." Pines sa id , noung women
are incn:asmgh,· invo lved lll the
bu siness commu n1ty .\s l e:~.de rs
and cntrcpn:nc urs.
"Rural comm unai cs enga ge 111
·and depend on a widl' range of
eco nomic activities, from manuf..~.nuring to mining, from agric ulture to sm.1 1l business ownership. It i~ ·th e rural woman who
I ~·ads this gruwt h. We see thi s hcrt'
in our ow n co mmunity - here
in this room.
"This day h as· been de signated
to

begin the process of !.ringing

_w h~..~rL"

h~..·

M1d ~o.·ast

"He's kn own him for a long
time. They 'vc: workl'd rogcd1t~-r on
· a lot of issues;' Chnton
spokesman Jake Siewart said.
Catherine Hanaway, M1ssou ri
coordinator for the Bush-Cheney
campaign, said discussions were
under way about whether Tuesday's final presidential debate, in
St. Louis, should be postponed or
canceled.
In 1976, another Senate challenger in Missouri, state Rep.
Jerry Litton, died in a plane crash
as he and his family were flying to
a victory celebration the night he
won the Democratic nomination.
The last governor to die in
office was Florida Gov. Lawton
Chiles on Dec. 12, 1998. The 68year-old collapsed while exercising in the governor's mansion
gymnasium. South Dakota Gov.
George Mickelson died in 1993
when the state's airplane slammed
into a silo in eastern Iowa.
Carnahan's name will stay on
the Nov. 7 ballot b~cause · the
deadline for changing it was .Oct.
13., Secretary of State Bekki
Cook sa id.
The other candidates are
Democratic State Treasurer Bob
Holden and Republican Rep.Jim
Talent.
Lt. Gov. Roger Wilson will

Ladybugs
from PageAl
light-colored structures exposed
to direct sunlight for a large portion of the day. Once the bugs
land, they release a pheromone
that brings other bugs running.
"It's a snowball effect,"
Crutchfield said. "First you have a
few, an hour later you have a hundred, an ' hour after that a thousand. In just a few hours, you can
literally have hundreds of thousands clumped to a house.
'"The ones you see in the living parts of a house during winter are generally a small percentage of what are in the house," he
said.
Once the bugs are inside,
homeowners have few options

TOLEDO (AP) - Dig hits at
the box ot1i ce are the ticket to
mcreased demand for Ohio's
popcorn crop.
Dt·mand for popcorn increases
by 5 to 10 percem when a film
season IS filled with blockbusters,
sa1d Alan Harr~s , plant manager
for Vogel Popcorn in Wyando1
County.
"We can generally tell when
the lllOVlCS .m.• . good and when
thE: m ovie s .:tn.: bad." Harris said.
''The year Jurassic Pork came out,
tlu t JUst darn near killed us trying
to keep up."
Vogel says It grows 25 percent
of the world's popcorn m five
. &lt;tatcs and Arf;entma. It sells popcorn to the Golden Valley plan.t m
M.ln,on,
""'l11ch
packages

Council

Ohio ranks fourth in th e United States in popcorn production,
w1th more than 36,000 acres of
popcorn fields this year. That's
enough to supply about 15 percent of the world's popcorn,
acc·ording to an industry group.
Indiana · is dw biggest popcorn
producer followed by Nebraska
and Ill inois.
About IS O western Ohio farmers grow popcorn.
Popcorn grows on sta lks that
are a little shorter and thinner
than field corn.
It doesn't handle unseasonable
weather as well as hardier field
corn, wh1ch IS usually is fed to
animals or processed mto cereal
or oorn chtps .

In open discussion, council-

man Victor Young Ill informed
counc il tht' srare's finJl inspl.'ction of the new Water Works
P.1rk\ shelter hmJSe was finalized
.1nd that the new period lights
for the park h.1w been ordered
anJ should be receiwd by the

term.

womt'n out of nbscu rity at lt'.lSt .1
day a year. We hope th&lt;tt thl' sruries of thL'SL' outstanding ,,·omen
will inspire other women in the
co mmum ty to tJke rhc same
steps.
;' ThL· day serve~ to rL'Il'nnd us
h ow much we owe to na;1}
women :md to extend ro them
. · the credit and rt'cognition they so

\'illagc sometime in a nutter of

weeks.
Clerk Hysell distributed the
September tin.mctal report . Bal:lnces in the various funds were:

•l:xcellent Payment Plan

observances rela tin g to
\Vomcn. including breast can ce r
:twarenc sfl, depression awareness,
lldtJon J. I child health , and dome stic violence aw:-trencss .

(AP) Illinois fimner Ron Warfield
and other agriculture representatives

Call

vince Cubans that American-grown

crops were a good deal, the Cubans
had already calculated that .their
island country coUld reduce import
costs by 30 percent if only it could
buy food from the United States,
Warfield sa1d.
He and other Illinois f.1rmers are
eagerly following etforts m Congress to case the 38-ycar~old trade
embargo witl1 Cuba- a mo\'C they
~ay would open a lucrative new
market and perhaps help end a

$ 00

Tom Peden Country
1·800-822~0417.
475 South

344·5947

Twin Ea. pc.

Chu1~1' Street • Ripley, WV

)YORLD'•
BEST '

MA1TRESS."'

Full Ea. pc.

5

139.00

$13
Full Ea. pc .
Queen Set

•

/

Serta Angelique

WE MAKE THE
•

cemetery.

pl.'rpetu:-tl

57,1~7 .16:

CHL'

cemetery

l.'ndowmt:nt. 538.12 1.59: police

1

General Electric - 57'.
Harley Dav1dson- 47s,
Kmart- 6

Rocky Boots - 5'.
RD Shell- 62 3 ..
Sears- 34
Shoney's -·~

Kroger -

Wai-Mart- 47 J..

..

21 '"

Champion - 23•

City Holding - 6 ',
Federal Mogul - 4 ~ ..
Firstar- 17 '! ..

BBT- 26',
Peoples - 13',
Premier - 5'•
Rockwell- 32'',.

Wendy's- 19~.
Worthtngton - s•,

•

Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the pre&gt;.Jious day's trans·
actions, provided by
Adves1 of Gallipolis.

VALLEY WEATHER

Dry weather returning
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ·

· Today... Showers likely. Highs
mainly 60 to 65. Tonight. .. Showc
ers likely with a chance of a thunderstorm. Lows in the 40s.
Wednesday... Parcly
cloudy.
Highs· in the '60s.

The storm clouds are expected
to move out of the tri-county
region tonight, leaving clear skies
and plenty of sunshine the rest of
the week:.
Extended forecaat
The showers could linger
Wednesday nighc...Clear to
before the dryout begins. Lows
Tuesday night were to be in the partly cloudy. Lows in the 40s.
Thursday... Ciear to partly
40s.
Sunny and dry weather with cloudy. Highs m id 60s to mid 70s .
friday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
pleasant temperatures was expected on Wednesday and the rest of the 40s and highs from the mid
the week, the National Weather 60s to around 70 .
Saturday.c .Partly cloudy. Lows
Service sa1d. Highs will be in th e
in the 40s and highs in the lower
upper 60s and low 70s.
Forecast
7Qs

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Suhscribe rodm·.
992-2 I 56 .

penS!o!t. S111.(d4.97: buildin g
fund, 53.4 10.2 9; re cre ation,
$(J,H.'&gt;2 .. .'&gt;7;
permissive . tax.
54,550.27: law enforcement.
s~.4611.2 1.
Pl'L'S ~llt , in ,1 ddition to Bl:tL't- ·
mar and Young w~re Council-

Elect

men Larry WehFung, Brian
Shank, Georg e Wri ght. and
Clerk Kathy H ysell.

0\1@W@

Warfield, president of the Ulinois
Farm Bureau ,

: PR111GVAl.\~.\.~.~.~.[~~".,
446 45 24
1

II lo\P•

7

{Jrl•IH

FRI10/13/00 • THURS 10/19/00

lOX Offla WIU OPEN AT

6:30 PM FOR !VINING SHOWS
2:30PM FOR MAnNIIS

209.00
5 449.00 .
5

a Perfect
St. Regis

35

F1,1ll Ea. pc.

Queen Set

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES 84.00

DELINQUENT REAL ESTATE PROPERTY NOTICE
In' compliance with provisions of Section 5721.03 of the
Revised Code of the State of Ohio, there will be published
on November 14 and November 21, 2000, In lhls
newspaper, a delinquent land list containing the description of the property as It appears on the tax list,
the name of the person in whose name the property Is
listed, the amount oftaxes and penalties due and unpaid.

LADIES MAN (A)

Each person charged with real property taxes and
penalties may pay the full amount of taxes at the Meigs
County Treasurer's Office by 4:00 p.m. on November 6,
2000, to avoid publication.
To avoid additional interest charged on December 151, a
taxpayer may enter into written dgreement with the
County Treasurer to pay one-fifth ( 1/5) of the delinquent
taxes.
·
Nancy Parker Campbell
Meigs County Auditor

FREE
• DELIVERY
• SET-UP

'469.00
5 529.00

I

:=

7:20, 9:50
RM~IIIIICII "'::;' 7:25, 9:55
mCARTill "'"'":""" 7:30, 9:55
11fT llfPAIBill

(A)

slu mp _cmscd by depressed commmiitic" prices.
"ThJ'~ " :1 m.~or rr,\de b~rrier
whL'll your own gove-rnment
L'mb.lrgot.:'s you out uf .1 m,1rkec that
the r~o.'st of thL· woriJ em ~eU to," s.lid

:1

To Schedule An Interview;

S 16,559.()6;

had a sale s pitch prepared when .
they traveled to Cuba last year.
But imtead of having (O con-

ProseC uting Attorney John
Lentes presented certificates and
floral tributes to th e women hnn orcd.

Serta Or,tho Aid II

GALLIPOLIS - Carson Reider, proJect direCtor at Madden / NPF Center of Excellence
(OSU). will speak lt the Parkinson support group, concerning
research currently betng conducted. The group meets on the third
Fnday at 2 p.m. in the library of
Grace United Methodist Church.
600 Second Ave.. Gallipolis.
lnfornution is available by calling
446-0H08 or (30~) 675-3533.

Lands End - 23
Ltd . - 22' ..
Oak Hill Financial-14 '2
OVB- 26',

Bank One- 34 1 •
Bob Evans - 1 7'"'

'

station segment they helped finish ins ralltn g dunng an ea rli er
spacewalk
Oi1 Tuesday's spacewa lk,
Jap anese astronaut Ko1 ch1 Wakawork on the expandin g intern:Jta, the shu ttl e robot ,tr m oper;l~ion.ll sp.1cc ~r.Hion.
.
tor, had th,· difficu lt challenge
· Astron:tuts Leroy Chtao and
of
. f.:rr y1 ng _Ch1.10 fro.m che
ll!ll M cArthur pl.u111ed to put 111
p.nr of p O\ver l' om·ertt.'rs, con- shuttl e cargo bay to rhc newly
:nen .1 few fi1ql c.1blc~ and inst;~lkd ~p.H.:e :&gt;.t.ttion trth~,
c.dlcd tlh· Z I
)lllllllll ,1 toolbox to tl1c sp_,1Ct.'

• Work At The #1 Dealership

GanneH~51

AEP - 391 •
Akzo- 42',
AmTech/SBC - 50'.
Ashland Inc. - 32'"
AT&amp;T -24

Illinois farmers support
efforts to lift Cuba embargo Court Judge

othe r

• Great Benefits (locl,dlngdemopro9,..1

Speaker
announced

LOCAL STOCKS

0Gcv®
County

rightfull y d,•servc."
Pmcs sa id October has also
been set .Hide for a number of

SPACE CENTER, Hou,ton
jAil) A pair of as.tronauts
:We re prt·paring Tuesday for
:l0other ven ture ou t~ide space
.Shuttle l hscOvery to continu e

Wonderful opportunities are available in Tom Peden Country.
We are expanding our facilities and need more sales people.
No experience is required, only a willingness to learn ,
work as a team and have a strong initiative.

MIDDLEPORT
The
R1vcrbend Arts Counnl will
sponsor a bJ.stc acryhc patmmg
class. to b,· taught by Carol Tannehill . The class will be held at
6:30 p.m ., cwry Tuesday begm-

m ng Ocr. 31 . and continuing on
Nov. 7, 14, and 21. The cost is
$20, plus the cost of supplies. Prercgtstranon is required and nuy
be made by calling 992-5336 by
Oct. 24 .

from Page AI

f\stronauts prepare for third walk

m1crowave popcorn.

for getting rid of the pests. Wh en
squashed, the bugs release an
unpleasant odor and an orange
liquid.
Most people attack them with
the vacuum cleaner.
Three years ag~. the USDA
started research to develop a
method to control multicolored
Asian lady beetles, but haven't
released anything so far.
Crutchfield said the best
defense is preventative - thoroughly securing, the home ;md
scaling all cracks and crevices.
Meanwhile, homeowners will
have to live with the annual invasion. The bugs aren't aggressive
and don't carry any maJor diseases, but they do bite.
· They test out their environment by chewing on it.
"It's accidental but it hurts just
the same," he said.

general, $89,577 .23; . safety,
$6,006 .17; street, $(32,297.33);
state highway, $2,154.42; fire,
$72,777.47;
cemetery,
54,408.89; water, $50 ,309 .62;
the Pomeroy Police Depart- . sewer, $26,173. 77; guaranty
mt:m.
m~ter ,
S21 .~71.94:
utility,

sc.rn: o ut the n:·m,tinder of Carl1.lha n 's

Painting dass
planned

Charming Shops- s·.~~:

•

Big hits at box. office mean
increased popcorn demand

LOCAL BRIEFS

Obituaries

Study: Obesity can be predidecl between 4, 8
KETTERING (AP) -Weight problems as
an adult can be predicted in children 4 to 8
years old, according to a study by Wright State
University researchers.
"Putting it crudely, the fat kids become bt
adults, so thev have consequences that are
delayed." said Dr. Alexander Roche, a former
Wright State University professor.
Wright State has been tracking people for
71 ~ars through the school's Fels Longirudinal Srudy. Roche .shifted the study from simply measuring people to evaluating their
health in the mid-1970s.
The ages of 4 to 8 are when childhood obesity is most likely to forecast a person's weight
problems as an adult, School of Medicine Professor Shumei Guo and her research partners
determined. That is the time to step in and
insist on mono exercise and less fat and sugar,

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

• REMOVAL
OF OLD BEDDING

&lt;

�\

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
1:z-year-old admits threat
BATAVIA (AP) -A 12-y~ar--old girl who was upset over bemg
teased bv schoolnuti."S has aclrnowle&lt;lged wrinng a bomb threat last
week on • bathroom door at Ameha Middle School, police said.
The g.rl, whose name was not released because of her age, pleaded dehnquent, or gmlty, Monday m Clermont County Juvenile
Cou rt to one count of inducing panic.
A charge of nuking a false alarm was d1smissed in exchange for
her plea before Juvenile Court Judge Stephanie Wyler.
Several police agencies responded Friday afternoon when the
threat )"as reported to school authorities. The building was evacuated. but no bomb "was found.
"When confiunted with this, she admitted doing so, and indicated she'd wntten the threat because she was upset about being teased
about a relanonsh1p she had with a boy at school," Clermont County Shenff AJ Rodenberg said.
The g1d w1ll be held at the juvenile detention center pending a
scncencmg heanng on Oct. 30.
l'ohce sa1d the threat was not connected with racial tension that
had led to fights in recent weeks at nearby Amelia High SchooL
"It's somewhat rd1cving to know that it's unrelated," the sheriff
sat d.

College of Wooster gets SSM
WOOSTER (AP)- The College ofWooster has been awarded
an S8 nnllion grant by the Burton D. Morgan Foundation of Akron
for a new classroom building, the college announced Monday.
The bu!ldmg, to be called the Burton D. Morgan Hall, will house
th,· c~lleg&lt;·'s &lt;eononucs, education and psychology departments and
an mfornuuon technology center.
The bu1ldmg w1ll be constructed at the si te of the current Hygeia
Hall, wh1ch Will be demolished.
Th,. bu!ldmg will be· part of an effort to re-establish the gateway
to the I ,700-studc nt college at rhe southern end of the campus.
about oil miles south of Cleveland.
The new bmldmg "will serve as a cornerstone for the new
planned gateway to the camp us," said Stanley C. Gault, a f~undation
[ru . . tcc: .md tUrnu:r chatrman of the college's board of rruscees.

Police probe shooting deaths
COLUMBUS (AP) - Pollee on Monday were investigating two
&gt;ep.!rate shoonngs that left two people dead.
Two gunmen shot and ktlled an 18-year-old man Monday afterlluon .t~ he \valked our of a convemence store, police said. At least
111 vhot&gt; wen· ti red. No arrests had been nude.
On Sullll,,, m~ht, Ralph Wilson, ~5. was killed wh1le dnv1hg on
lntent.He 670

Anmhc-r we,tbuund car pulled alon'g side Wilson and fired shots
imu the vchlc!t- He was hit t\V!Ce and died at Grant Medical Center.

polJCe

'IJid.

An undetermined number of people were in Wilson 's car and tied
.lfter the 'hoot mg. Sgt. Earl Snuth md Monday.
He ~J1d 1w ar!c'r~ had been made and pollee were urging wit..:
11e.;,.;,t"-. tn colllt' tonvard.
"It\ VL'ry unhh·ly that this was random," Smith said.

Flight has emergency landing
COLUMBUS (AP) - A Delta Air lines flight from Cleveland to
Cmonna~1

made an unscheduled landing here Monday morning
be-came a hght m thl' cockpit indicated e ngine rrouble, an airline
.;,poke~woman "aid.

Fhght 1492 landed at Port Columbus International Airport about
II :48 a.m. A mechimc who mspected the MD-80 found nothing
wrong, and the pbne arnved in Cincinnati at 4:34 p.m., said Delta
&lt;;pokeswonian Jani S Logue.
lncludmg the crew, Ill people were on board the plane, she said.
No unt' wa~ hun.
·

Judge throws out indictment
_ CINCINNATI (AP)- A federal j udge on Monday dismissed a
traud md!ctll!ellt that accused a former bank officer of improperly
approvmg and u"ng b.mk loans.
U.S. Dl\m rt Jud!(e Susan Dlott ruled that despite repeated
requec;r..,, fl'dcr.ll authormec; btkd to rurn over records and documt"nts th.tt joh11 f. Yl' ,tgcr needed to prepare his defense.
The ~incuJIH.'Ilt'&gt; ,.IJowl'd th:uYeager, a former assisrant manager at
·: St.u ll.lnk hr.1m h. h.HI properly created paper records of the loans
tor wh1ch In· \\.1'&gt; lrllhltnl, .... 1id Martin Pina1es, Yeager's attorney.
Yea~cr. J~ \\,J\ llldHtnl m 1998 on nine counts of bank fraud,
~..'.Kh pum~h.l\lk

h· up tl) tivL years in pris_on upon conviction. He

pleaded gudl\. iti \ttY JtJ99 to two co unts of the indictment. His
'il'lltcncing h.td Pt-v:J d,.:l,tyed while the case was pending.
1 li on\ .H:ttnn \'.tp~· out those convictto n:\, Pinales said.
rnh:r.tl.ttltlw·Oltll.''&gt; fud .lCC ttsedYeager of scheming to defraud tht!

b.111k.Jww .dkd I1N.1r IJ.mk,ln 1 ~'15 and 1996 by approvmg seva~d lo.m\ ~h&lt;~t \\'•.TL' mon· than he was allowed to approve for borrower-. wlw \\Tfl.'Il't quahtlcd under the bank'o; polictes. Authorities
.;,)d ht th r: i.h(.'d the !o,m funJr-. fo r his own benefit.
1 )k:t \d~ up ...·n t!Il.' PO'-'ithihty that the government could choose
(!) llH.h~. 'y\ .lL:;n·,ll',l\11
. •'
_john DiPu u.IO ..111 J\mt:tnt U.S. attorney, did not a return a call ro
lw; office tv1 ,l!Hl.l y t()r co mmem.
·
Thom,,, \, hu, k. ,, L1wyer for the bank, &lt;aid he had not seen the
rulmg .md Wtntld not dJKuss it.

The Daily Sentinel
a au Services

Q

&lt;:orrection Policy
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be accurdte ll you kno w of. an error m

a story call 1he newsroom. at (740)
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Tuesda~~ober17,20oo

she said.
"The focus noally should be on physical
activity," Guo said. "There should be more
outdoor arovity. E~n indoors, instead of just
sitting on the couch, they could &lt;;lo some
housework. Get them up and moving around:'
Children between 4 and 8 with high bodymass indexes are more likely to become overweight adults than people with heavy birth
weights, high alcohol collSumption and liale
physical activity, Guo said.
Body-mass index is an adjusted ntio 1pf
weight to height that has become a generally
noliable predictor of body fat percentage, largely through earlier Fels tesean:h, for evei')'One
without unusually high muscle mass.
Fifty-five percent of Americans are either
overweight or obese, with "obese" meaning at
least 20 percent overweight. The U.S. Centers

for Disease Control and Prevention reported
19 percent ~re obese in 1998, a 60 percent
increase in seven yean.
If obesity were considered a separate disease,
it would rank third behind heart disease and
cancer in causing 300,000 deaths a ~ar, .CDC
researchers wrote in the Oct. 4 Journal of the
American Medical Association. It contributes
to heart disease, cancer, stroke, diabetes and
kidney and liver disease.
·
The Fels study is based .at the Miami Valley
B.esean:h · Park in Kettering. The study is the
world's largest ;md longest-running evaluation
of hunun growth and body composition,
nuking it a unique resource for seeing how
obesity tracks fiom childhood to adulthood.
"There's no other data that allows one to
nolate ""ry early childhood to adults in their
40s, 5(ls and 60s," Guo said.

Retired teachers.

Lenford R. 11ob' Kirby

to meet
POMEROY - Me1gs County
Renred Teachers will hold a luncheon meeung at noon Saturday
at the Tnmty Church annex in
Pomeroy. Perry Varnadoe, economic development director_. w1U
address Meigs County's future.
Members _;re urged to attend.

w.ts mc~o.·ting wah
katkrs to e-xpress condoknees. The cou pl e had four chil-

NEW HAVEN, WVa. - Lenford R . "Bob" Kirby, 81, New Haven,
died Sunday, October 15, 2000 at Jackson General Hosp1tal m Ripley.
Kirby was a mechamc for 25 years at Rawlings Car Lot m Middleport, Ohio; a mechanic for 25 years at the WVa. State Division of
Highways and a mechanic for 15 years for AEP Philip Sporn Plant. He
was also a member of Clifton Tabernacle Church. ·
Born April25 , 1919 in New Haven,WVa., he was the son of the late
George Lester Kirby and Minnie R. Rings Kirby.
In addition to his parents, he is preceded in death by his spouse, Anna
Mae Lewis Kirby, who died in 1988; and five brothers, Lelang L Kirby;
George Lester Kirby; Herman L Kirby; Charles Louie Kirby and Cecil
L Kirby.
He is survived by a daughter and son-m-law, Brenda Kay and Rev.
Larry B. Gilland of New Haven; granddaughter and husband, Bethany
Jo and Richie B. Ranno of fair Lawn, NJ; great-grandson, Michael
R . Ranno of fair Lawn , NJ ; brother, Leo Harold Kirby ofVienna,
WVa .; brorher-in-law, Harold C. Lewis of Oak Harbour, Ohio ; sistersin-law, N. Maxi ne Kirby ofVienna, WVa ., Betty Jo Kirby ofVienna.
WVa. and Josephi ne Kirby ofWest Columbia,WVa. and special friend ,
J oan L Varian of Mason, WVa .. He IS also survived by several nieces
;u\d nephews.
Visitation will be held Wednesd.1y. O ctober Ill. 2000, from 6 p.m . to
') p.m. at Foglesong funaa) Home.
funeral s,·rvle&lt;S will be conducted at I p.m. Thursday, October 1'1,
2000. Jr thl' Foglesong Funeral Home. Maso n,~WVa., wnh Re-v. Gn:gory Blatr offin:lung. Burial \viii bt" .n Graham Cemt"lt'ry Ill New
Haven , W.Va. Pallbearers will be AI Dodson , R.oger Dingey, Brvan
Dm g,·y. M1ke Folmer, Jeff Russell .md Lloyd Hughes.
V!S!t.ltJOn will be held Wednesd.1y, October I H. 2000, from 6 p.m. to

dren.

') p.m.

BorgWarner- 33 1 ,.

Holman
COOLVILLE - Mllfred A. Holman, 83 Coolville died Sunday
Oct. 15, 2000, at Camden-Clark Memorial' Hospital i~ Parkersburg'

.

w~

She was the daughter bf the !are Benjamin and Mattie Reed Creamer and was .a homemaker.
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Charles and Be:ty Ann
Holman Jr., of Coolville; a daughter and son-in-law, Berty and Bernard
Godfrey of Belpre; a sister, Mildred Stedman ofAthens; a brother. Kenneth Creamer of Coolville; eight grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren. and two great-great-grandchildren .
.
Along wah her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband,
Charles B. Holman, Sr. , three brothers and four sisters.
Funeral ser\'ices will be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Wh ite fun eral
Home m Coo!villr. Officiating will be R ev. Seldon Johnson .
Bunal \\'11! follow in Stewart Cemetery in Hockingport.
Fnends mJy visit on Tuesd1y from 6-8 p.m. at the funeral honte.
'

Arthur Miller

·Report: Woman's death
remained secret for years
WOOSTER (AP) - Word
that a body was found inside a
homemade box in a garage in
nearby Seville had been 'kept as a
family secret for decades, an
investigator told the Akron Beacon Journal.
The secret eventually "was
leaked to police who learned the
partially mummified, dismembered body that was found in
1979 and later discovered in Indiana belonged to a woman who
had disappeared in 1969, the
newspaper reported Monday, citing the investigator who declined

to be identified.
Janice Hartman's .disappearance

had beeri a mystery for 26 years.
Hartman , 23, of Doylestown
had been married to John Da~id
Smith lll , the grandson 'of
garage's owner, Chester Chaney,
the newspaper said.
Smith, 49, now has been
charged with aggravated murder.
He has pleaded innocent in Hartman's death and is scheduled for a
bond hearing Friday in Wayne
County Common Pleas Court.
Smith, a former Seville resident
who has most recently lived in
Oceanside, Calif., became a suspect in Hartma!l's ·death in 1991
after the disappearance of his sec~
ond wife, fran Gladden, 49, of
West Windsor, NJ, police have
said. Gladden, who vanished
within days of having hip surgery,
was never found . Smith hasn't
been charged in Gladden's disap-

pearance.
When the box was found in
Chaney's garage, Smith received a
phone call and was told to pick
up the box, the investigator said.
Smith arrived in his T-top
Corvette and loaded the box in
the car, the investigat?r told the
newspaper.
The box, with Hartman's body
inside, was found in 1980 in a
ditch on a rural road in Morocco,
Ind., about 50 miles from where
Smith was living in Hammond,
Ind., the newspaper said. Officials
didn't know back then whose
body it was and buried the
remains in a pauper's grave under
1he name Jane Doe.
Chaney, the family patriarch
who died in !995, had told all
who knew about the box to keep
quiet, the investigator said.
Investigators got a lead in the
ca.&lt;e after they received word of
the box found in Chaney's garage,
at:cording to the investigator. Last ·
year, they sent more than 100 letters to police agencies throughout
.Ohio and in several other states
seeking information on a
woman's partially dismembered
body and a homemade, 4-footlong wooden box.
Newton County Sheriff's
Detective Gerald Burman in
Indiana responded.
The details in the letter were so
. unusual that Burman immediately remembered ·'The lady in the

Box.''

Regulators question
Ameritech's promises
CHICAGO (AP) - Regulators from five states, including
Ohio, questioned

executives

from Ameritech and its parent
company SBC Communications Inc. Monday .about
whether recurring telephone
service problems throughout
the Midwest are being resolved
as quickly as the companies say
they are.
The executives promised service will be back to normal by
year's end and retroactively
expanded last month's offer to
provide an average S 19 credit
for those suffering undue problems with installation and
repair orders.
· "! believe that the worst of
the problems are behind us,"
said Edward E. Whitacre Jr.,
chairman and chief executive
officer· of San Antonio-based
SBG, which serves 21 .million
customers. "We are making
great progress now, and it will
be solved."
But many of the 17 commissioners on hand from regulatory agen~ies in Ohio, Illinois,
Indiana, Michigan and Wisconsin said they still are awaiting
verifiable evidence.
·
"Promises are nice to hear.
Commitments are great," said
David Hadley of the Indiana
Utility Regulatory Commission. But .. it's time for action."
Some questioned the veracity
of numbers provided by

Ameritech showing that service
h•s improved significantly since
Sept. 18, when the company
began a highly publicized sixmonth plan to improve its service.
According to Ameritech, the
backlog of orders for installation and repairs already ha s
dropped by 35 percent in four
weeks.
In questioning that became
testy, Terry Harvill of the Illinois Commerce ComnUssiOn
pressed repeatedly for eviden'ce
to back up the numbers.
··what we needed .. . was
information to determine for
ourselves whether the problems
are getting better," Harvill said
afterward. "What we got
instead were slick, glib answers
from the chairman of SBC a·nd
the president of Amerite ch."
Ameritech said it . will now.
extend, back to Jan . l, its offer
to provide credit equal to the
average monthly service charl!;e
for those who did not have
installation done within five
days after ordering it or have
outages fixed within 48 hours.
When it announced the plan
last month, it was only froiu
Sept. 18 on.
But a chief watclidog of
Ameritech, Citizens Utility
Board executive director Martin Cohen, called the average
$19 payment "an insult rather
than a real reparation ."

RUTLAND -Arthur L Miller, 7-l. ofWiutc's H1ll R oad 111 Rutbnd. died on Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2000, at Holzer MediCal Center, l.JIIipolis.
Arrange-me-nt.-. will be .mnounced by Birchfidd Funer:tl Home in
Rutland.
·

Ciovemor
from Page AI
Sifford . SiiTurd told Temple that
the gon:rnor's plan~ had encounten.,· d lightning and was gomg ro
n:turn to St. louis or Jefferson
City, H oward said.
Tom Hunter, who lives near
the crash site, told St. Louis TV
station KMOV he heard the
plane flying overhead.
"I thought, 'What a crazy person in this kind of weather.' Next
thing, sounded like it was in a
very steep dive, the engine was
just screaming," Hunter said.
. He said he heard a loud explosion and the sky turned red .
':That was it," Hunter said. "It was
total silence.! told my wife to call
911."
, . Carnahan won his first public
election at age 26 as a municipal
judge in his hometown of Rolla .
He was elected to the Missouri
House of Representatives two
years later and served two terms
' before becoming state treasurer.
. In 1988, Carnahan was elected
lieutenant governor.' In 1992, he
won .the governor's office m a
landslide, and he won a second
term in 1996.
"Gove-rnor Carnahan always
bL'lle\·~d publi c service · was a

noble c" lhng ," Nachtigal said.
"We will m iss him dearly."
Prt'SidL' IH Climon ta ll~d CarO:lh ,m\ wife, J~ :l n , fmm Egyp t

Federal audit uncovers problems with contracts
COLUMUUS (AP) - Taxpayer; footed
the bill for more than $1.5 millioo worth of
home construction-related contracts over two
years involving work that was done improperly, not done at all or questionably bid in several Ohio communities, a federal audit has
found.
The U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development audit covered Aug. l,
1997, through july 31, 19~~ . for the cities of
Kenton, Newark, Shelby and Wellston and the
counties of Champaig11. Chnton, Fairfield,
Knox and Pi ckaway.
· ·
The audit found that they:
• Overpaid contractors $172,18 L
• Paid $205,706 tor shoddy or incomplete
work.
'
• Paid $84.~49 tor work that was never
done .
• Paid $1.1 mtlhon fo r contracts that didn't
have "fa1r and open competition" - 113 of
the 139 jobs reviewed.

Joan Cummings said she bought a neglect- more areas of the state after finding similar
ed house in Mechanicsburg in Champaign problems in Fairf1eld County in 1999.
County in 1998 with a government loan and
"People were living in housing that didn't
a pledge from county officials that federal meet standards," Wolfe said.
Some who supervised the work said the
money would bring the buildmg up to code.
One of the many proble!"' with the house audit is misleading.
Cummings bought was it didn't have heat on
"The first look at the audit gives a very bad
impression, but if you would look further into
the second floor.
&lt;'So they ran a tube upstairs and connected the responses that have been provided and
it with duct tape," she said of contractors hired activity that has taken place since then, it\ a
by a county cons ultant. Nothing was added to much differen1 story," said Ed Hurley. He
force the heat up, so the upstairs remains cold , owns CDC of Ohio, Community Developshe said.
ment Consultants, which administers grants
In Cummings' case, the improperly done for several of the cities and counties cited i1r
work amounted to $19,730, according to the the audit.
audit, the shabby heating job being among the
Part of the problem is HUO based the audit
problems.
on federal standards, but his inspectors have
"It's hysterical;' Cummings said. "My kids used state standards for years, Hurl ey said. ·
sleep downstairs on the floor ... because, if
In addition, HUD cited the total cost of the
not, you freeze in the winter."
job, even if only a small part was done
Heath Wolfe, who supervised the audit', said improperly, Hurley said. "So the report overHUD 's inspector general decided to look at states things."

Honored
from Page AI
" Rural women are comnbming to the-I r f:1milics and to thetr
cOJ lllllUilit tt.'S 110\\' marL' than
ever." Pines sa id , noung women
are incn:asmgh,· invo lved lll the
bu siness commu n1ty .\s l e:~.de rs
and cntrcpn:nc urs.
"Rural comm unai cs enga ge 111
·and depend on a widl' range of
eco nomic activities, from manuf..~.nuring to mining, from agric ulture to sm.1 1l business ownership. It i~ ·th e rural woman who
I ~·ads this gruwt h. We see thi s hcrt'
in our ow n co mmunity - here
in this room.
"This day h as· been de signated
to

begin the process of !.ringing

_w h~..~rL"

h~..·

M1d ~o.·ast

"He's kn own him for a long
time. They 'vc: workl'd rogcd1t~-r on
· a lot of issues;' Chnton
spokesman Jake Siewart said.
Catherine Hanaway, M1ssou ri
coordinator for the Bush-Cheney
campaign, said discussions were
under way about whether Tuesday's final presidential debate, in
St. Louis, should be postponed or
canceled.
In 1976, another Senate challenger in Missouri, state Rep.
Jerry Litton, died in a plane crash
as he and his family were flying to
a victory celebration the night he
won the Democratic nomination.
The last governor to die in
office was Florida Gov. Lawton
Chiles on Dec. 12, 1998. The 68year-old collapsed while exercising in the governor's mansion
gymnasium. South Dakota Gov.
George Mickelson died in 1993
when the state's airplane slammed
into a silo in eastern Iowa.
Carnahan's name will stay on
the Nov. 7 ballot b~cause · the
deadline for changing it was .Oct.
13., Secretary of State Bekki
Cook sa id.
The other candidates are
Democratic State Treasurer Bob
Holden and Republican Rep.Jim
Talent.
Lt. Gov. Roger Wilson will

Ladybugs
from PageAl
light-colored structures exposed
to direct sunlight for a large portion of the day. Once the bugs
land, they release a pheromone
that brings other bugs running.
"It's a snowball effect,"
Crutchfield said. "First you have a
few, an hour later you have a hundred, an ' hour after that a thousand. In just a few hours, you can
literally have hundreds of thousands clumped to a house.
'"The ones you see in the living parts of a house during winter are generally a small percentage of what are in the house," he
said.
Once the bugs are inside,
homeowners have few options

TOLEDO (AP) - Dig hits at
the box ot1i ce are the ticket to
mcreased demand for Ohio's
popcorn crop.
Dt·mand for popcorn increases
by 5 to 10 percem when a film
season IS filled with blockbusters,
sa1d Alan Harr~s , plant manager
for Vogel Popcorn in Wyando1
County.
"We can generally tell when
the lllOVlCS .m.• . good and when
thE: m ovie s .:tn.: bad." Harris said.
''The year Jurassic Pork came out,
tlu t JUst darn near killed us trying
to keep up."
Vogel says It grows 25 percent
of the world's popcorn m five
. &lt;tatcs and Arf;entma. It sells popcorn to the Golden Valley plan.t m
M.ln,on,
""'l11ch
packages

Council

Ohio ranks fourth in th e United States in popcorn production,
w1th more than 36,000 acres of
popcorn fields this year. That's
enough to supply about 15 percent of the world's popcorn,
acc·ording to an industry group.
Indiana · is dw biggest popcorn
producer followed by Nebraska
and Ill inois.
About IS O western Ohio farmers grow popcorn.
Popcorn grows on sta lks that
are a little shorter and thinner
than field corn.
It doesn't handle unseasonable
weather as well as hardier field
corn, wh1ch IS usually is fed to
animals or processed mto cereal
or oorn chtps .

In open discussion, council-

man Victor Young Ill informed
counc il tht' srare's finJl inspl.'ction of the new Water Works
P.1rk\ shelter hmJSe was finalized
.1nd that the new period lights
for the park h.1w been ordered
anJ should be receiwd by the

term.

womt'n out of nbscu rity at lt'.lSt .1
day a year. We hope th&lt;tt thl' sruries of thL'SL' outstanding ,,·omen
will inspire other women in the
co mmum ty to tJke rhc same
steps.
;' ThL· day serve~ to rL'Il'nnd us
h ow much we owe to na;1}
women :md to extend ro them
. · the credit and rt'cognition they so

\'illagc sometime in a nutter of

weeks.
Clerk Hysell distributed the
September tin.mctal report . Bal:lnces in the various funds were:

•l:xcellent Payment Plan

observances rela tin g to
\Vomcn. including breast can ce r
:twarenc sfl, depression awareness,
lldtJon J. I child health , and dome stic violence aw:-trencss .

(AP) Illinois fimner Ron Warfield
and other agriculture representatives

Call

vince Cubans that American-grown

crops were a good deal, the Cubans
had already calculated that .their
island country coUld reduce import
costs by 30 percent if only it could
buy food from the United States,
Warfield sa1d.
He and other Illinois f.1rmers are
eagerly following etforts m Congress to case the 38-ycar~old trade
embargo witl1 Cuba- a mo\'C they
~ay would open a lucrative new
market and perhaps help end a

$ 00

Tom Peden Country
1·800-822~0417.
475 South

344·5947

Twin Ea. pc.

Chu1~1' Street • Ripley, WV

)YORLD'•
BEST '

MA1TRESS."'

Full Ea. pc.

5

139.00

$13
Full Ea. pc .
Queen Set

•

/

Serta Angelique

WE MAKE THE
•

cemetery.

pl.'rpetu:-tl

57,1~7 .16:

CHL'

cemetery

l.'ndowmt:nt. 538.12 1.59: police

1

General Electric - 57'.
Harley Dav1dson- 47s,
Kmart- 6

Rocky Boots - 5'.
RD Shell- 62 3 ..
Sears- 34
Shoney's -·~

Kroger -

Wai-Mart- 47 J..

..

21 '"

Champion - 23•

City Holding - 6 ',
Federal Mogul - 4 ~ ..
Firstar- 17 '! ..

BBT- 26',
Peoples - 13',
Premier - 5'•
Rockwell- 32'',.

Wendy's- 19~.
Worthtngton - s•,

•

Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the pre&gt;.Jious day's trans·
actions, provided by
Adves1 of Gallipolis.

VALLEY WEATHER

Dry weather returning
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ·

· Today... Showers likely. Highs
mainly 60 to 65. Tonight. .. Showc
ers likely with a chance of a thunderstorm. Lows in the 40s.
Wednesday... Parcly
cloudy.
Highs· in the '60s.

The storm clouds are expected
to move out of the tri-county
region tonight, leaving clear skies
and plenty of sunshine the rest of
the week:.
Extended forecaat
The showers could linger
Wednesday nighc...Clear to
before the dryout begins. Lows
Tuesday night were to be in the partly cloudy. Lows in the 40s.
Thursday... Ciear to partly
40s.
Sunny and dry weather with cloudy. Highs m id 60s to mid 70s .
friday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
pleasant temperatures was expected on Wednesday and the rest of the 40s and highs from the mid
the week, the National Weather 60s to around 70 .
Saturday.c .Partly cloudy. Lows
Service sa1d. Highs will be in th e
in the 40s and highs in the lower
upper 60s and low 70s.
Forecast
7Qs

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Suhscribe rodm·.
992-2 I 56 .

penS!o!t. S111.(d4.97: buildin g
fund, 53.4 10.2 9; re cre ation,
$(J,H.'&gt;2 .. .'&gt;7;
permissive . tax.
54,550.27: law enforcement.
s~.4611.2 1.
Pl'L'S ~llt , in ,1 ddition to Bl:tL't- ·
mar and Young w~re Council-

Elect

men Larry WehFung, Brian
Shank, Georg e Wri ght. and
Clerk Kathy H ysell.

0\1@W@

Warfield, president of the Ulinois
Farm Bureau ,

: PR111GVAl.\~.\.~.~.~.[~~".,
446 45 24
1

II lo\P•

7

{Jrl•IH

FRI10/13/00 • THURS 10/19/00

lOX Offla WIU OPEN AT

6:30 PM FOR !VINING SHOWS
2:30PM FOR MAnNIIS

209.00
5 449.00 .
5

a Perfect
St. Regis

35

F1,1ll Ea. pc.

Queen Set

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES 84.00

DELINQUENT REAL ESTATE PROPERTY NOTICE
In' compliance with provisions of Section 5721.03 of the
Revised Code of the State of Ohio, there will be published
on November 14 and November 21, 2000, In lhls
newspaper, a delinquent land list containing the description of the property as It appears on the tax list,
the name of the person in whose name the property Is
listed, the amount oftaxes and penalties due and unpaid.

LADIES MAN (A)

Each person charged with real property taxes and
penalties may pay the full amount of taxes at the Meigs
County Treasurer's Office by 4:00 p.m. on November 6,
2000, to avoid publication.
To avoid additional interest charged on December 151, a
taxpayer may enter into written dgreement with the
County Treasurer to pay one-fifth ( 1/5) of the delinquent
taxes.
·
Nancy Parker Campbell
Meigs County Auditor

FREE
• DELIVERY
• SET-UP

'469.00
5 529.00

I

:=

7:20, 9:50
RM~IIIIICII "'::;' 7:25, 9:55
mCARTill "'"'":""" 7:30, 9:55
11fT llfPAIBill

(A)

slu mp _cmscd by depressed commmiitic" prices.
"ThJ'~ " :1 m.~or rr,\de b~rrier
whL'll your own gove-rnment
L'mb.lrgot.:'s you out uf .1 m,1rkec that
the r~o.'st of thL· woriJ em ~eU to," s.lid

:1

To Schedule An Interview;

S 16,559.()6;

had a sale s pitch prepared when .
they traveled to Cuba last year.
But imtead of having (O con-

ProseC uting Attorney John
Lentes presented certificates and
floral tributes to th e women hnn orcd.

Serta Or,tho Aid II

GALLIPOLIS - Carson Reider, proJect direCtor at Madden / NPF Center of Excellence
(OSU). will speak lt the Parkinson support group, concerning
research currently betng conducted. The group meets on the third
Fnday at 2 p.m. in the library of
Grace United Methodist Church.
600 Second Ave.. Gallipolis.
lnfornution is available by calling
446-0H08 or (30~) 675-3533.

Lands End - 23
Ltd . - 22' ..
Oak Hill Financial-14 '2
OVB- 26',

Bank One- 34 1 •
Bob Evans - 1 7'"'

'

station segment they helped finish ins ralltn g dunng an ea rli er
spacewalk
Oi1 Tuesday's spacewa lk,
Jap anese astronaut Ko1 ch1 Wakawork on the expandin g intern:Jta, the shu ttl e robot ,tr m oper;l~ion.ll sp.1cc ~r.Hion.
.
tor, had th,· difficu lt challenge
· Astron:tuts Leroy Chtao and
of
. f.:rr y1 ng _Ch1.10 fro.m che
ll!ll M cArthur pl.u111ed to put 111
p.nr of p O\ver l' om·ertt.'rs, con- shuttl e cargo bay to rhc newly
:nen .1 few fi1ql c.1blc~ and inst;~lkd ~p.H.:e :&gt;.t.ttion trth~,
c.dlcd tlh· Z I
)lllllllll ,1 toolbox to tl1c sp_,1Ct.'

• Work At The #1 Dealership

GanneH~51

AEP - 391 •
Akzo- 42',
AmTech/SBC - 50'.
Ashland Inc. - 32'"
AT&amp;T -24

Illinois farmers support
efforts to lift Cuba embargo Court Judge

othe r

• Great Benefits (locl,dlngdemopro9,..1

Speaker
announced

LOCAL STOCKS

0Gcv®
County

rightfull y d,•servc."
Pmcs sa id October has also
been set .Hide for a number of

SPACE CENTER, Hou,ton
jAil) A pair of as.tronauts
:We re prt·paring Tuesday for
:l0other ven ture ou t~ide space
.Shuttle l hscOvery to continu e

Wonderful opportunities are available in Tom Peden Country.
We are expanding our facilities and need more sales people.
No experience is required, only a willingness to learn ,
work as a team and have a strong initiative.

MIDDLEPORT
The
R1vcrbend Arts Counnl will
sponsor a bJ.stc acryhc patmmg
class. to b,· taught by Carol Tannehill . The class will be held at
6:30 p.m ., cwry Tuesday begm-

m ng Ocr. 31 . and continuing on
Nov. 7, 14, and 21. The cost is
$20, plus the cost of supplies. Prercgtstranon is required and nuy
be made by calling 992-5336 by
Oct. 24 .

from Page AI

f\stronauts prepare for third walk

m1crowave popcorn.

for getting rid of the pests. Wh en
squashed, the bugs release an
unpleasant odor and an orange
liquid.
Most people attack them with
the vacuum cleaner.
Three years ag~. the USDA
started research to develop a
method to control multicolored
Asian lady beetles, but haven't
released anything so far.
Crutchfield said the best
defense is preventative - thoroughly securing, the home ;md
scaling all cracks and crevices.
Meanwhile, homeowners will
have to live with the annual invasion. The bugs aren't aggressive
and don't carry any maJor diseases, but they do bite.
· They test out their environment by chewing on it.
"It's accidental but it hurts just
the same," he said.

general, $89,577 .23; . safety,
$6,006 .17; street, $(32,297.33);
state highway, $2,154.42; fire,
$72,777.47;
cemetery,
54,408.89; water, $50 ,309 .62;
the Pomeroy Police Depart- . sewer, $26,173. 77; guaranty
mt:m.
m~ter ,
S21 .~71.94:
utility,

sc.rn: o ut the n:·m,tinder of Carl1.lha n 's

Painting dass
planned

Charming Shops- s·.~~:

•

Big hits at box. office mean
increased popcorn demand

LOCAL BRIEFS

Obituaries

Study: Obesity can be predidecl between 4, 8
KETTERING (AP) -Weight problems as
an adult can be predicted in children 4 to 8
years old, according to a study by Wright State
University researchers.
"Putting it crudely, the fat kids become bt
adults, so thev have consequences that are
delayed." said Dr. Alexander Roche, a former
Wright State University professor.
Wright State has been tracking people for
71 ~ars through the school's Fels Longirudinal Srudy. Roche .shifted the study from simply measuring people to evaluating their
health in the mid-1970s.
The ages of 4 to 8 are when childhood obesity is most likely to forecast a person's weight
problems as an adult, School of Medicine Professor Shumei Guo and her research partners
determined. That is the time to step in and
insist on mono exercise and less fat and sugar,

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

• REMOVAL
OF OLD BEDDING

&lt;

�•

~jh_e_D_ai~ly_S_en_ti_ne_l________________C)~·~illiC)fl
The Daily Sentinel

t;_~(i-zooo ~ wo~

-..,e EtSRA...-.

PageA4

~.

Octo.,

Th~

17, 1000

Dear Ann Landen: I am writing about
the woman who got pregnant even
though she said she was on birth control
pills. Her husband thought she had
tric!Ced him. He didn't want a second
child, but SHE did, and they were having
some words about it. Maybe if he reads
my letter, he will be easier on his wife.
My husband and I have four children.
The ·first two were conceived while I was
using a variety of contraceptive foams
and jellies and my husband was using a
condom. Our third child was conceived
even though I had been fitted with a
diaphragm. I became pregnant with our
fourth child three months after I had an
intraurerme device implamed and was
c hecked regularly by my gynecologist.
He said it was "most unusual." and did
not charge me for the delivery. After &lt;lur
fourt h f hild, I had a tubal ligation .
, We low all our childre11, even though·
~hey were unplann,•d. Each one has
t: moich,·d our lives, and we feel blessed. -

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyar

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Advertising Director

'""""art"

Liners to llr• editor an •·rkmru. Tht¥ slu,lld bt knl!Mrt Jf)() "'onb. 411
,.,b~ct
to rdilill8lllfli lflfUI be siJIIMIUtd induM ~u aJid UWphmtlt rr.umb.tr. .\a lltUiltu.d ~tkn ••ill
M p,b/i,h,.d. l..ntl'n' Jhollltl bor ;,. Kuod t«ite, tJddrruirtr inuf'J, "~ fMrwrnditii'J..
Tltt opini&lt;nu upnsud in flrt colulltrt bdo11· tuY ''" co nuns us of lht Ohio \illlr' Pwblishint
Co. '.t tdiuJrUd board. •ml.u olltf'rwiu 11/Jihl.

OUR VIEW

.success
Tip of the hat to OACHE .
for achieving ,its goals
A decade ago. farmer and entrepreneur Bob Evans, then a member of the Ohio Board of R egents, suggested to college presidents
that reasons why the college-going rare in the Appalachian region
was in decline shou ld be explored.
What grew tium a study of the factors behind reluctance to pursue higher education -or tinish high school . lor that matter- i&lt;
the Ohio Appalachian Center for Higher Education, which has
extended It'i llliS"Iun since· 1ts creation m 19YJ ro West Virginia.
OACHE's mission is simpil'. Having targeted the reasons , its repre&lt;entatives work toward sho\\·ing high &lt;choolers and younger children t~t' benefit\ behmJ a college eJucation.
' OACHE Executive Director Wayne White said the biggest (actor
behind teenagers opt ing out of education is lack of self-e&gt;t&lt;'Cill.

Coupled wnh rhe tan many ti:)lks arc tOrced ro choose between
the expens&lt;' of a college education Jnd providing for their families,
OACHE recogn iz es tlut issues have w be· overnnnC' if the n·gion is
to shake ofF the neg&lt;ltive"i asmct,lted with li v1n g 111 rhe reg ion.
The t-act that its goal of bomting the co lle-ge-goi ng rate in Ohio
and \Vt·st Vir~ini,t i') be ing met is l'v idc.:nce of it-s sun:-ess. ()ne of the
more nouble l'X,lmples i'i in M~i~" Cou nty 's Southern Lor.t l
Schooh, \Vherl' college .lttend.mct' JL1111pcd from 5t.J pcrcc·nt in 1994
to B9 percent tive ye,m latn.
Because OACHE's board Qf directors con&lt;i&lt;ts of university prc•sidcnts, its purpose has nor bet.:n to boost enrollment at their institu tions. instead, with the number of programs and assistance available
making a college career possible , OACHE is pointing the way to the
promise higher education ot1c·r, tor .1 bt•tter litc·.
On Thursday, OAC! I.E 's &gt;eventh ,\1111UJI two-d.ty eo n terence will
be held at the University of R10 Crande/Rio Cr.tmk Comntuntty
College. one ·ot the o rganizati on\ p.lttncr&lt;.
-The co nference will not on lv ce lebrate OACIIE's 'uccess, but
fUrther explore the

possibJlitlt'~ ~f gctting.mnre h1 gh 11chool gradu'- ·

ates to consider coll ege.
:It's at this time we ot1cr our tip of the h.n tin "h.tt OAC!lE h."
a¢complished, and whar It hopt'"' to ,llhic\'c 1n thl' future.
:Through its efforts, &lt;outh&lt;rn Oh10 .md We&lt;t Yirgin1.1 student&lt;
h~v~

been enriched. The pllJjt'Ct h,1.., lTCatnl ,, curt· ot' you11g pt·upk·

who wi1l form the lt·adl'r..,hip for \Vh.u
g;·essive future for App.tl.lchi.L

\\'L'

envi"iton a.;;

,1

more Ft1·o-

T\}ODAY IN HISTO,RY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tue&lt;d,t,.On. 17. the 29l,t d,l\ o l2t l&lt;lll. lhcr,· .tre 75 d,,,,
lett in the ye.1r
,
Today\ Ht~hlight 1n H"tory:
On Oct. 17. 1777. Brimh forces under (;,.11.}1hn lhugoyne &lt;Urrendered to .A mcri c,m troop..,

111

Sar.ltoga. N.Y.. m ·a turmng pmnt of

the Revolunon .trv War.
·
On this d,ttc:
In 1919, the Radio Corporation of Americ.1 was created.
I~ 1931, mobster AI C;~ pone wa&gt; conv icted of mcome tax evasion
~nd sentenced to 11 years in prison. (He was released in 1~39.)
In 1933, Albert Einstein arrived in the United States as a refugee
from Nazi Germany.
In 1945, Col. Juan Peron &gt;raged a coup. becoming absolute ruler
of Argentina .
In 1957, French author Albert Camus wa&lt; awarded the Nobel
ln 197M. Pre,.dent Carter signed a bill re,ronng U.S. Cltizenshtp
to Confederate Pre,ident Jeili.•r&lt;on I hvi&lt;.
In I 979. Mother Tere" of India wa&lt; awarded ihe Nobel Peace
Prize.
In 19H'1, Jn earthquake measunn~7.l on the lti chter sCJ!e 'struck
north ern Cali forma, killing 67 peopk• ;~nd ca usin g $7 billion worth
of daJilage .
In I 994. kade" of Imel and Jord.m initialed a draft peact· tr&lt;·ary.
In llJ 97. the rem,Iin-., uf n.:volution&lt;try Erne-;to. "Che" GuevarJ ,
were ],JJJ to relit 1n

h1"i

adopted ( :u lu , ]II yean a tier h1s extxunnn 111

Bolivia.

Ten yean ago: In tt'\timony before tht: SenJte Fon:ign Rd.1tion&lt;s
Committee. Secretary of State Jmlt·' ll.tker wd Iraqi Pni,ident Saddam l-lu'\sem "mu'!t fJJI 1f pl'ace I\ to \UCC.:tTU.''The Cmunn,m Red'i
opened up a 2-1•1World ~eric&lt; lc.td , be.ttlllg the Oakland A\ 5-4.
· Five years .tgo: President Clinton tol,d wealthy contributor&lt; at "
Aou';ton funJ-rai.;;er th.1t "you tblllk 1 r.Jl\l'd your t,1Xt.''i too 111U ch. It
might 'iurpn'ic you to know th&lt;~t I thmk I rat'iL'd th em too much.
tOo" - a statl'lllt'nt rh.tlt drl'w cn tt cJ-..1)1 from bod1 Republi cd n~ ;md
Democrats. A bomb explod~:l.l ,tbo,trd .1 l~dri"i _, ubw::ty t'.lr. wounding
~') people. The Ckvehnd lndw1&lt; wo11 the· Americ.m Le.tgue pen n ant by defeatmg the Se.tttk iVldnner"i , 4-11. in g.um: 'ilX of their pi.Jyoff serie"i.
: ()ne year ago: The FIH n.:portcd tlut "iL'rlOLI" crime\ reported to
Pohce dl'c'hnn.l fin ~eve nth ~rra1~hr YL".ll 111 1'JlJH .mJ murdt-r and
robbery r &lt;.l((:'"i Tt'&lt;lChcd _10-year lnw\ . h ,mncr ll\lr'll' ( )rullc I VIl li
Major'i \V,l' convicted of murdcnng ~1x p .HICJlt'i ,tt .1 Wt..'\tern lnJJ .Il Ll
·hO'ipltat: the jury_ deadlocked on,.1 'il.'Vl' llth co unt. (M.IJor;; 1.., ..,crv111g
~ J(\0-ycar pmon m1tencc.)
Today\ llirrhday&lt;: l'laywn~ht Arthur Mtlkr 1&lt; X~ . Actre&lt;~ Ma.,h ,t
Hunt is XJ. Actre&lt;l Beverly c;,,rl.tnd " 74.
•

ADVICE
~

Myrtle in Ohio
Dear Fertile My1 de : Over the years,
I've received dozens of letters from
women who didn't want children, but
said rhar after they came (a nd were out ,of
diapers), they turned out to be, and I
quote, " The be't part of my life."
Thanks for another testimonial to
"accident3.1 parenthood." I'm sure there
are plenty of fathers out there who also
said they didn t want that third or fourth
child, but yet. when the children were

Citizenship party
held for Johnson

Hamer wins ped,al tractor

POMERlW - Holly Marie Johnson , daughter
of Mike and Marie Johnson of Pomcrox. became
an American citizen on Oc't 6 at the Lavequc
Tower in Columbus.
In addition to her parents, those attending were
Danny, Roxie and Mary Marcinko: all of
Reedsville ,Theresa &gt;nd Phd Lashley of Marysville,
and Mike and Rose Lehner of Lancaster.
A dinner in Holly's honor was held at the
Lenher home. Cake anJ ice cream were also
served.

LAM BRO'S VI E W

Why Social Security has become a bad deal
WASHINGTON- How can you retire as

a millionaire?
The answer ro this question can be found on

Security than she paid in," the foundation says.
But consider the plight of a 33-year-old Wash~
ington, D. C. man (san1e inc01ne, san1e retirement age). He will pay out $295,119 in payroll
.taxes, but will receive only $163,935 in benefits, giving him a minus 2.85-percent rate of

the Heritage Foundation's new online Social
Security benefits calculator. It lets you compare
the trickle -dow n benefits that the government return.
If that man were allowed to invest his paymll
will pay you after a lifetime of payroll taxes
with what you can earn if you could invest that taxes i1i a balanced, blue-chip stock and Treamoney in a very conservativ2 portfolio ofblue- sury-bond fund , it would earn him .a retirechip stocks and bonds.
ment nest egg of$1 .449 million that he would
What the calculations show is "what a bad a own and could leave to his heirs.
A 32-year-old women living in Newport
deal Social Security is for both current and
future retirees," says the conservative think Beach, Calif., earning S44,000 and living to
tank, which has been a leader in the movement 84.3 years of age, would build up a nest egg of
to lcr workers decidt:: huw they want to invest ·more .than $1 million over het -,vorklng c"'eer
· - a 6.7-percent rate of return on her hardtheir payroll taxes.
The ditference between the return on your earned money Compare this with her me of
investments and what the fed.&lt; will pay you is return under Social Sewriry: a mere 1.55 per&lt;running, especially for younger workers.
cent, pmducing on ly $429,722 in retirement
"A man retiring today, at age 65, for exam- benefits.
ple, gets only 1.75 percent back on the hunHeritage's new Web site - which is based
dreds of thousands in payroll taxes he paid. But on Social Security data calculates how
he'&lt; lu cky. cornpared to a 21-yea r-old man mu ch you can expect to pay into Social Scnlwho has 3 negative .9 pt:rCcnt return," the riry over your working life, the benetits you
·fou ndation says.
will receive from the government, and the
A 13-year-old woman who lives in Ann amount you could eam if you were allowed to
Arbor, Mich., who earns $44,000 and intends invest the same amount in safe, lRA-rype
to retire at (, 7, pays S26 7.509 in Social Sectlri- mutual funds.
ty payroll taxes over ht•r working ltfc and can
These computer calculations can. pmvitlc
expect to get $169,~H4 in benetit~ over her political supporters of partial Social Security
l·ctircment. Her rate of return i1 .1 measly I .12 privatization with some powerful new ammu-.
pt.:lTt'llt.
nition to take to the voters - authoritative
If the ~amt:: amount \Va.., l'Vt.:nly illVl'\ted 50- comparison" th;'!t rhe national news mct11a does
~11 in blue-r hip &lt;rocks .md ro,·k-solid,safe US , not and will not give us.
Trea&lt;ury bonck it would yield her a rctum of
Co nsid,·r "the rate of return for a grandfanearly S I 5 million -- more than S 1 milhon ther and lm gwtdson tti illustrate the )!;en&lt;ramurl' than Soc1al Security would givt• her in tional inequality 111herent in · the currem sysben die&lt;. That's a return of nearly 7 percent.
tem," the foundation says. "A 65-year-old man
"At k·ast the Ann Arbor woman can look is getting a 1.75 percent rate of return . His 15forward to getting back more from Social year-old grandson gets a negative 1.1 H- percent

return."
"While older Americans oppose any rype of
Social Secutiry reform, it would be interesting
to present a grandfather with this ·information,
then ask how he feels about trying to find, a
\vay to improve his grandson.'s· rate of return."
Where you live and your life expectan cy
affects your r~te of return from Social Security.
Take, for example, a 30-year-old man in Ann
Arbor, Mich.; whose average salary is S39,387.
With a hfe expectancy of 7~ years, his rate of
return is a negative .28 percent.
But a man living in Detroit earning S31,197
who expects to live to be 72 will get a neg,Jtive
rate of return of 4.06 percent.
"lloth are bad, but the guy living in Detroit
gets hit much harder. Based on this, you'd think
that inner-ciry residents would be more supportive of Social Security , retorm. Is that the
case' Would anyone choose to invest their
money for a negative return?" the foundation
asks.
r;ood questions. Lmle wonder that when the
issue i~ put hdOrc lower- income:, inner-city
minority-group m eflJbers, polls show strong
su pport tor the freedom to choose and own
private Social Security retirement plans .
This is strong stuff, design ed to show why
Georg&lt;' W. llush \ proposals to let ordinary

-

lJavid Harner of Albany was the winner of a
pedal tractor and wagon in a drawing held at the
recent Meigs County Town and Country Expo
2000. The give-away was sponsored by the Big
Bend Farm Antiques Club.

GranJe leams about
legislative issues
RACINE - . A look ·at the gun control and
other legislatrve issues was taken by Racin"
Grange at ~~ recent meeting.
There · was a dis c ussion on S.B. 2099 in the
U. S. Senate which, according to the the
gra nge legi slativ e age-nc \Vould requi.re J ll citIZens to register their guns on thc ar feden l
incomt" tax forms . A reso lution oppostng the
bdl wJs unammuu sly p:lsscd by the 111l'mbers.
.llld will be ~en r to Congrl'SS.
Co nc(,: rn about ls-;ut.• I asking for a $400
million bond isstlc that will .1ppc:ar on the
Ohio b.dlot \\'.15 .1bo di~ c uss~d . Though the
bill -;~,.·c~~ to pn.:~~..·rve fannland, many ur h er
item:\ h.IVL' bl'c!l put into it dea ling with
depn.·sscd ,l!' t..'.l S .in cittcs and sw;unpbnd

'

.1110 why AI Gore\ rcfmal to kt workns

inwst

t.hl'lr

payro ll

tvces

i~ th L· wor't

plT~lTV&lt;ltlUil.

I t w;~s rt..·pn rtl'd tlut the information currently d(1L'S not mdi c.ltl' how much would go
for ;~ctual farm preservation. Also, it was
pointed out ti1Jt no infornut1on IS available
on how the ~t;-t tl' wiH repay the money and

thing we

could do to hmi-working middle- and lower-

income American.;,
H eritafle's

We,b

Site

"

www.hl'ritagc.org/ '!ocia lo;;ecun ry.Take a look at

ir ,md

~~..·c

how you can bc.·co\ll('

,J

millionain.·

by the• time you retire.

(D"'wld l.m11/;ro fills i11 for Aft•rto11 1\olldmckc~
rolrm111.)

Videogames are more dangerous than comics?
I greatly enjoyed the Senate hearings that
took Hollywood to task for damaging our
nation 's ch.ildren. The senators cou ld barely
believe the insensi tivity and moral callousne&lt;S that paraded·before them in the form of
movie, music and video- game executives.
How cou ld any, re sponsibl e person, the
· Senator~ demar1ded to know, treat children as
if they were adults' Dtdn't they understand
that ch ildren are imp re,ionablc and impulsive' H ow cou ld they not &lt;ee that we, as a
'\OCi~ty, must be vig ilaJJt in protectmg our
youngeo;;t r m7ehs from influ ences they're not
mature enough to process?
The senators' portrayal of child re n as vulnerable and in need of spec ial handling came
a' ~omething of a revelation, cbnsidcring the
~tate of juvl·nik justice in America .
When it's ti me for politician~ to appear
tnugh nn H o llywood , children arc children.
When it's time to appear tough o n crime,
children magically become adults.
They are childre n in video arcades and
movie theater~. but aJults in Courtrooms and
pn)on yard~. L-.:twm.1ker~ ., cl,1im rhild rcn an:
not c,!p,!ble of h.tndlm~ the violenct·
pumped at them from popular rulturc. Then
wht..'ll children commit the predicted violence, suddenly they're perfeqly capable of
handling popular culture and rnusi be held
Jccnuntable.

Tall tales and
Paul Bunyan.Show

working {;.tmilies create wealth and retirement
~ccurity 0\'L'l' their working live-s makes '\Cll'H.'

RYAN'S VIEW

BY JOAN RYAN

Prize in htc:rature.

Ann
Landers

born , loved handing out cigars and
always carried a couple of photos in their
wallets.
Dear Ann Landers: A while back, you
printed a Gem of the Day about Winston
Churchill. It went like this: Winston was
seated next to Bessie Braddock, who
accused him of being drunk. He is said to .
have replied, "Madame, I may be drunk ,
but you are ugly, and tomorrow, I will be
sober."
Actually, I tb&lt;{~ght that quote was
from actor W.C Fields. 1 heard another
anecdote involving Winston Churchill,
however. He was sear~d next to sooalite
Lady Astor at a dinner parry. She said.
''Sir, you are drunk, and if I were your
wife, I would put arsenic in your brandy."
To which Churchrll rephed, "Madame. If
I were your husband I would drink it."- John in Oceanside, Calif
Dear John: Quotes often get garbled
in the retelling. anJ ~t'Vt:Lll n::~ders mentioned that lkssie llr.Hidock w.1~ .1

Lawmakers claim children are malleable
At worst, they're brutally abused .
enough to be damaged by Mortal Kombat
Teen-agers are five times as likely as adult
and The Matrix. Then when children land in prisoners to be sexually assaulted. They're
the courts, they're not malleable enough to twice as likely to beaten by a guard and 50
be rehabilitated. In the last 100.years, despite percent more likely to be attacked with a
our accumulated knowledge about ch1ld weapon. And c hildren in adult prisons are
development, ir's never been easier than it is eight times more likely to commit su1c1de
oow to prosecute children as adults . We are than those 111 JUVeJille fae~hnes.
tossing away the notion that chi ldren arc difDuring the he;~rings last week , senators
ferent from adults. Since 1992, 45 states have cited medical reports that pointed up ,the latpassed or amended laws that loosen the cri- est research on th~: 'teen -aged brain , noting
teria for charging a child as an adult. Fifteen that the brain is still developing through adostates, in cluding California, allow proseci1tors lesce nce and thus still capable of b eing
- not JUdges - to decide if a child should sh aped and reshaped. This , the legi&lt;lators
be tried in adult court, even for nonviolent sai d, makes teen- agers more vulnerable than
offenses such as auto theft and perjury.
adu lts to corrupting influences.
In most states, children as young as 14 can
So where are these politiciam du.ring
be tried as adults; in Vermont and Kansas, 10- debates over such laws as California's Propo year-olds can.
sition 21, which will lo ck away ewn tnorc
The resu lt' The number of children under children in adult prisons? They're waving the
age 18 held in adult prisons has doubled in tough-on-crime flag, redefining what a child
the last I() years. In m any cases, the teen - is to fit their political agenda.
a~ers have no separate living quarters; thl~y'rc
I'd like to see another set of hearings in
mixed in with the adult criminals with no Con grc &lt;S to answer this question: If teenspecial protection.
agt'r' ..1rc imprt_•o.;o.;ionable enough to be corDu lawmakers who think Eminem is too rupted, why are they not impressionable
dangerous for teens have any idea what hap - t:nough to bl! redl'emed ?
pens to these same teens behind prison walls?
At best, they 're learning the ins and ours of
(!om1 Rya11 Is d (tllllm Hist j{n tl1c San Frauriscrime from the cxpetts, making them more ((1 Chro11icfe. Sl'fJd Wlllmcnts to her ifl care if tllis
likely to become career crimi.nals upon their .uewspaprr.
or
send
l1er
e-mail
r1t
'releas e.
joallryo"*atc. com.)

•

POMEROY
L u pus/ Fi bromya Igia
Support
Group, Tuesday, 6:30 to 8 pIll.,
cafett..'ria.Vet~r:ul s Ml.!'morial Hospital, Pom eroy. Sarah McGrew.
arthritis program dtrector at OU
College of Osteopathic Medicine, will talk on the disease.
Those w1th lupus and fibi·omyalgia invited .
POMEROY - Meigs Cormtv Artisans .Assoctat!Oll, special
,;,eeting, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m at the
Pomeroy Library. Purpose to discuss design nf new wt:bpag:e.
POMEROY - · Meigs Cormty Artisans Asso ciation , 6:30p.m.,
Pomeroy L1 brary, to discuss
design of new webpage. All arti sans who are not included in the
Association's catalog but wi~h to
be are urged to attend the meetmg.

gu.udian and shot records ro be
take-n. Donations appreciarion,

p.m ..u the home of Dorothy jet~
fers .

but no one denied service~
because of mabdiry to pay.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Middleport Literary Club, 2 p.m.
Wednesday, home of June Kloes ,
Middleport, Jea nne Bowen to
review "Queen Lucia" by E. E
Benson :

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County Cancer 1m native, Friday. I :3\!
p.m. Veterans Memorial Hospi\;!1
confe-rence- room.

PLAINS
TUPPERS
Homecoming Jubil ee weekend. •t
St. Paul United Methodi St
Church, Tuppers Plams, Starting
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Friday, 7:30 p.m. with the R~v.
Eastern Local Board of Educa- Gary Carlson, speaker. and speeta l
tion, regu lar meeting, Wednesday music by Gary John ~on; Saturday,
6:30 p.m. at the administratiOn 7:30 p.m: R ev. Keith Rad~r -to
spea k, with special music by
building in Tuppers Plains ,
Craig Harrison ; Sunday, poth.IC,k
WELLSTON - The Board of dinner at 5:30p.m. service at 7:.30
Directors of the Gallia/jack- p.m with Rev. Terry Cavanaugh· ,
son/Meigs/Yinton Solid Waste speaker, and special musi c by L,ivManagement District wtll meet ing Faith Praise Team.
on Wednesday at 7:30a.m. at the
STIVERSV!LLE Revivi!l
board office in Wellston . Last
week's meeting was canceled due services, Friday, Saturday" a'nd
to the lack of a quorum, accord- Sunday, 7 p.m . eac h eve nmg.
ing to Execurive Director Lance Dave Dail~y will speak Frida,y
and Sunday; Paul Goodwin on
Wilson.
Saturday. Special music to include
singing from Goodw1n's church
THUR SDAY
POMEROY - Rock Springs in Marietta on Saturday, and
Better Health C lub, T hursday, 1 Delivered on Sunday.

sagg
....... ....

Second graders from Letart Falls Elementary
School visited the Paul Bunyan Show last ''-'eek,
the first day of the three-day event. In preparation ,
youngster spen£ thc previous week h:;"~rning: ;1bout
tJil tales and Paul Bunyan. The &gt;how is co-sponsored by Hocking College and d1c . OhiD Forntry
AssoCI ;ttion . and is a fon·st product'&gt; rr.Hk -;how,
where everything on the grounds .ntu:-. t bL· nt.1de of
wood or :1 wood-rdated pmductli. (Contnbutl'd
photo)

..,.

Road construdion

Lane

_...._
__
. ...
----·
.........IIICIIU

I*!WIIIm,. _

1lttll . - t
bMIU ttlllhtlll. II
I canlnlllllflc llllll

1111111

Choose from our larue "IN STOCK"
selecuon or special order
vour own color cholcel

tion~

1

TUESDAY

POMEROY - Meigs County Health Department, inununizatwn clinic, Tuesday. 1 to 7
p.m. ·in offices on Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy. Children to be
accompanied . by parent/ lega l

the int crl'st on It though Jt does say there will
be no in crl'asc in rax:es. The grange will look
for more infornution on the bill before elecGrange members asked about the bi ll in
Congress. seeki n g 't o ~:1kt." .nvay the Congressiona l c h.trter of the Boy Scouts because of
their beli efs. Th e leg islativ e d~tector reported
that th e bill re ceived only a dozen votes for
it Hhwev e r , it was noted that the United Way
ts look in g to withdraw support from the
scouts.
The grange recently presented a package of
rl."so lution s to su~e and Congressional repre&gt;entJtlves. Only Ohio Rep. John Carey has
replied to these at this time, 1t was reported.
In behalf of members ·of the grange, Geraldine Cross presented Ra c hel Ashley with a
;;weeper as a wc.:dding gift for her upconung
m:1rriagc in December.
·
.
.
The grange co nducted a plannmg meenng
fur th e grange yea r. Its annual hayride and
wiener roast will be held Oct. ~I. The annual pig-in-a-poke a·u ctioi1 i~ tentatively . ~et for
Nov. II pending approval of the aucnoneer.
P.trtJcipatieHl rin the ;'l nnual Ra ~me ~lower
Fcsti\·a l wa!'l .tipprovcd H w:1s the selectto n of
.1n .1nnu :d com muni ty CJ ti zcn s .nv::nd to be
!.!;iY..:n next June . The b.tking contest will bl'
J1l'ld ,1t thl' M.Hch mcct1ng .1nd othn comcsts
\nil be J Udg&lt;· in Seytember.
k .111 Alknc, :"~l'Crl'tHy. prl'\entcll .1 ll'tt l'r
fn.; m' the N.Hion,d Cr.wge :1bnur 11\. new
1 V 1 ~ 1 o n :-. :!000'' progr.1111. The prngr.tm i ~
dq.q;;un1 co ·im.prO\'L' lnc. d gr.Jng:c .1niv1t tcs
.\!h i comJllll ll lt\' wnrk . C hu ck Yl)~t. Jll.lStL'T.
\\ dl .1ppro.H·h · tht..· tvh• 1g:-o Cnttnty Pomon.1·
Cr.111 g..: .1b~Hlt p.1ruup.1tlllg 111 tlll' progr.tm :
A i11nurc (lf gr.1 11 gl' ufliccrs w.l~ ukl'll tor
the upt..·om111g new M~..·1g~ County H1 'tory
bnnk . t~. mma Ad.1111~ \\',1., n.• ported dl. Emnu
A,hkv.· lt..'C tUIT r. p!L'~t.: ntl..'d .1 progr.l1il on
.lp.pk;. In fortllHIOll 1Tg,1rd1ng pl.~nr1n~ and
L ilT uf .1ppll· trl'l?~ w.1~ gl\T!I. A qu1z oq .1ppk·
kno\\ lcdg(' \\',l ' \\'011 by M .Hy K,1y Yl? St.

Socialist and not a socialite, as I had Orig- encla&lt;e a handwnrren note sayt'lg, "We
inally printed. Thanks to aU who wrote realize you are unable to attend, but we
and sent other amusmg anecdotes about wanted you to know that you wtll be
ChurchilL lf I were given the choice of mtssed."
having dinner with one great man of the
Of course, when your dear fr~ends
past, it would be Winston ChurchilL
Dear Ann Landers: Our son is going invtte you to their son's wedding, you
to be married in October, and we JUst will send a lovely gift along w1rh your
learned that a dear friend's son is also regrets.
scheduled to be married on the same day.
Is that Ann Landers column )OU
We have talked to them about it , and nei- chpped years ago yellow wtth age' For a.
ther of us can change the date.
copy of her most frequently requested
We were planning to invite t~elf
poems and essays, send a self-addressed,
entire family (about 14 people) to our
son's wedding. However, since we know long, business-size envelope and • check
they are unable to con1e, we do not want or money order for $5 . ~5 (this mcludes
the tll\·itation to look as if we .a re askmg: postage and handhng) to: Gems, c/o Ann
for gifts. On the other hand, it nught Landers. 1'.0 Box 115(&gt;~. ChJCago, Ill
l1urt their feelings if we do not in,·ite 60611-!1562. (ln Canada, 'end $6 .25.) lo
1hem at aiL
find out more about Ann Lander&lt; Jnd
What is th&lt;' proper w.ay to handle tim'
read her 'past columns , \ 'l ii.it rht..' Crl'ators.
-- A Oikmnu in Mi ssouri
wl.'b
pJg:e
at
De:lf Missouri: By Jll means, send the Syndicate
wl'ddmg mvtt~tion to your fril'nds .•md www.Crl'ators.com .

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

SOC I ET Y N E W S AN D N OTES

B Y DoNALD lAMBRO

-Tuesday, October 17

Fertile Myrtle says to take it easy on pregnant wift

~Vl.ME

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
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Charlene Hoeflich
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\

-

'Esttl58skillll ~

Charlet W. Govey
Publisher

Daily Sentiriel

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SECIID.E
The Hillside Baptist Church is in the process of
building new road around the ch.u rch . Th e road
is being constructed to accommodate the church's
three buses.- Approximately 70 children are carried
by bus to Sunday morning services. Here, Pastor
James R . Acree and Jo e Humphrey work to
smooth the bottom ash uf the new roadway in
preparation for limestone. (Contributed photo)
'

a

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FtRIIUillMIII au

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�•

~jh_e_D_ai~ly_S_en_ti_ne_l________________C)~·~illiC)fl
The Daily Sentinel

t;_~(i-zooo ~ wo~

-..,e EtSRA...-.

PageA4

~.

Octo.,

Th~

17, 1000

Dear Ann Landen: I am writing about
the woman who got pregnant even
though she said she was on birth control
pills. Her husband thought she had
tric!Ced him. He didn't want a second
child, but SHE did, and they were having
some words about it. Maybe if he reads
my letter, he will be easier on his wife.
My husband and I have four children.
The ·first two were conceived while I was
using a variety of contraceptive foams
and jellies and my husband was using a
condom. Our third child was conceived
even though I had been fitted with a
diaphragm. I became pregnant with our
fourth child three months after I had an
intraurerme device implamed and was
c hecked regularly by my gynecologist.
He said it was "most unusual." and did
not charge me for the delivery. After &lt;lur
fourt h f hild, I had a tubal ligation .
, We low all our childre11, even though·
~hey were unplann,•d. Each one has
t: moich,·d our lives, and we feel blessed. -

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyar

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Advertising Director

'""""art"

Liners to llr• editor an •·rkmru. Tht¥ slu,lld bt knl!Mrt Jf)() "'onb. 411
,.,b~ct
to rdilill8lllfli lflfUI be siJIIMIUtd induM ~u aJid UWphmtlt rr.umb.tr. .\a lltUiltu.d ~tkn ••ill
M p,b/i,h,.d. l..ntl'n' Jhollltl bor ;,. Kuod t«ite, tJddrruirtr inuf'J, "~ fMrwrnditii'J..
Tltt opini&lt;nu upnsud in flrt colulltrt bdo11· tuY ''" co nuns us of lht Ohio \illlr' Pwblishint
Co. '.t tdiuJrUd board. •ml.u olltf'rwiu 11/Jihl.

OUR VIEW

.success
Tip of the hat to OACHE .
for achieving ,its goals
A decade ago. farmer and entrepreneur Bob Evans, then a member of the Ohio Board of R egents, suggested to college presidents
that reasons why the college-going rare in the Appalachian region
was in decline shou ld be explored.
What grew tium a study of the factors behind reluctance to pursue higher education -or tinish high school . lor that matter- i&lt;
the Ohio Appalachian Center for Higher Education, which has
extended It'i llliS"Iun since· 1ts creation m 19YJ ro West Virginia.
OACHE's mission is simpil'. Having targeted the reasons , its repre&lt;entatives work toward sho\\·ing high &lt;choolers and younger children t~t' benefit\ behmJ a college eJucation.
' OACHE Executive Director Wayne White said the biggest (actor
behind teenagers opt ing out of education is lack of self-e&gt;t&lt;'Cill.

Coupled wnh rhe tan many ti:)lks arc tOrced ro choose between
the expens&lt;' of a college education Jnd providing for their families,
OACHE recogn iz es tlut issues have w be· overnnnC' if the n·gion is
to shake ofF the neg&lt;ltive"i asmct,lted with li v1n g 111 rhe reg ion.
The t-act that its goal of bomting the co lle-ge-goi ng rate in Ohio
and \Vt·st Vir~ini,t i') be ing met is l'v idc.:nce of it-s sun:-ess. ()ne of the
more nouble l'X,lmples i'i in M~i~" Cou nty 's Southern Lor.t l
Schooh, \Vherl' college .lttend.mct' JL1111pcd from 5t.J pcrcc·nt in 1994
to B9 percent tive ye,m latn.
Because OACHE's board Qf directors con&lt;i&lt;ts of university prc•sidcnts, its purpose has nor bet.:n to boost enrollment at their institu tions. instead, with the number of programs and assistance available
making a college career possible , OACHE is pointing the way to the
promise higher education ot1c·r, tor .1 bt•tter litc·.
On Thursday, OAC! I.E 's &gt;eventh ,\1111UJI two-d.ty eo n terence will
be held at the University of R10 Crande/Rio Cr.tmk Comntuntty
College. one ·ot the o rganizati on\ p.lttncr&lt;.
-The co nference will not on lv ce lebrate OACIIE's 'uccess, but
fUrther explore the

possibJlitlt'~ ~f gctting.mnre h1 gh 11chool gradu'- ·

ates to consider coll ege.
:It's at this time we ot1cr our tip of the h.n tin "h.tt OAC!lE h."
a¢complished, and whar It hopt'"' to ,llhic\'c 1n thl' future.
:Through its efforts, &lt;outh&lt;rn Oh10 .md We&lt;t Yirgin1.1 student&lt;
h~v~

been enriched. The pllJjt'Ct h,1.., lTCatnl ,, curt· ot' you11g pt·upk·

who wi1l form the lt·adl'r..,hip for \Vh.u
g;·essive future for App.tl.lchi.L

\\'L'

envi"iton a.;;

,1

more Ft1·o-

T\}ODAY IN HISTO,RY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tue&lt;d,t,.On. 17. the 29l,t d,l\ o l2t l&lt;lll. lhcr,· .tre 75 d,,,,
lett in the ye.1r
,
Today\ Ht~hlight 1n H"tory:
On Oct. 17. 1777. Brimh forces under (;,.11.}1hn lhugoyne &lt;Urrendered to .A mcri c,m troop..,

111

Sar.ltoga. N.Y.. m ·a turmng pmnt of

the Revolunon .trv War.
·
On this d,ttc:
In 1919, the Radio Corporation of Americ.1 was created.
I~ 1931, mobster AI C;~ pone wa&gt; conv icted of mcome tax evasion
~nd sentenced to 11 years in prison. (He was released in 1~39.)
In 1933, Albert Einstein arrived in the United States as a refugee
from Nazi Germany.
In 1945, Col. Juan Peron &gt;raged a coup. becoming absolute ruler
of Argentina .
In 1957, French author Albert Camus wa&lt; awarded the Nobel
ln 197M. Pre,.dent Carter signed a bill re,ronng U.S. Cltizenshtp
to Confederate Pre,ident Jeili.•r&lt;on I hvi&lt;.
In I 979. Mother Tere" of India wa&lt; awarded ihe Nobel Peace
Prize.
In 19H'1, Jn earthquake measunn~7.l on the lti chter sCJ!e 'struck
north ern Cali forma, killing 67 peopk• ;~nd ca usin g $7 billion worth
of daJilage .
In I 994. kade" of Imel and Jord.m initialed a draft peact· tr&lt;·ary.
In llJ 97. the rem,Iin-., uf n.:volution&lt;try Erne-;to. "Che" GuevarJ ,
were ],JJJ to relit 1n

h1"i

adopted ( :u lu , ]II yean a tier h1s extxunnn 111

Bolivia.

Ten yean ago: In tt'\timony before tht: SenJte Fon:ign Rd.1tion&lt;s
Committee. Secretary of State Jmlt·' ll.tker wd Iraqi Pni,ident Saddam l-lu'\sem "mu'!t fJJI 1f pl'ace I\ to \UCC.:tTU.''The Cmunn,m Red'i
opened up a 2-1•1World ~eric&lt; lc.td , be.ttlllg the Oakland A\ 5-4.
· Five years .tgo: President Clinton tol,d wealthy contributor&lt; at "
Aou';ton funJ-rai.;;er th.1t "you tblllk 1 r.Jl\l'd your t,1Xt.''i too 111U ch. It
might 'iurpn'ic you to know th&lt;~t I thmk I rat'iL'd th em too much.
tOo" - a statl'lllt'nt rh.tlt drl'w cn tt cJ-..1)1 from bod1 Republi cd n~ ;md
Democrats. A bomb explod~:l.l ,tbo,trd .1 l~dri"i _, ubw::ty t'.lr. wounding
~') people. The Ckvehnd lndw1&lt; wo11 the· Americ.m Le.tgue pen n ant by defeatmg the Se.tttk iVldnner"i , 4-11. in g.um: 'ilX of their pi.Jyoff serie"i.
: ()ne year ago: The FIH n.:portcd tlut "iL'rlOLI" crime\ reported to
Pohce dl'c'hnn.l fin ~eve nth ~rra1~hr YL".ll 111 1'JlJH .mJ murdt-r and
robbery r &lt;.l((:'"i Tt'&lt;lChcd _10-year lnw\ . h ,mncr ll\lr'll' ( )rullc I VIl li
Major'i \V,l' convicted of murdcnng ~1x p .HICJlt'i ,tt .1 Wt..'\tern lnJJ .Il Ll
·hO'ipltat: the jury_ deadlocked on,.1 'il.'Vl' llth co unt. (M.IJor;; 1.., ..,crv111g
~ J(\0-ycar pmon m1tencc.)
Today\ llirrhday&lt;: l'laywn~ht Arthur Mtlkr 1&lt; X~ . Actre&lt;~ Ma.,h ,t
Hunt is XJ. Actre&lt;l Beverly c;,,rl.tnd " 74.
•

ADVICE
~

Myrtle in Ohio
Dear Fertile My1 de : Over the years,
I've received dozens of letters from
women who didn't want children, but
said rhar after they came (a nd were out ,of
diapers), they turned out to be, and I
quote, " The be't part of my life."
Thanks for another testimonial to
"accident3.1 parenthood." I'm sure there
are plenty of fathers out there who also
said they didn t want that third or fourth
child, but yet. when the children were

Citizenship party
held for Johnson

Hamer wins ped,al tractor

POMERlW - Holly Marie Johnson , daughter
of Mike and Marie Johnson of Pomcrox. became
an American citizen on Oc't 6 at the Lavequc
Tower in Columbus.
In addition to her parents, those attending were
Danny, Roxie and Mary Marcinko: all of
Reedsville ,Theresa &gt;nd Phd Lashley of Marysville,
and Mike and Rose Lehner of Lancaster.
A dinner in Holly's honor was held at the
Lenher home. Cake anJ ice cream were also
served.

LAM BRO'S VI E W

Why Social Security has become a bad deal
WASHINGTON- How can you retire as

a millionaire?
The answer ro this question can be found on

Security than she paid in," the foundation says.
But consider the plight of a 33-year-old Wash~
ington, D. C. man (san1e inc01ne, san1e retirement age). He will pay out $295,119 in payroll
.taxes, but will receive only $163,935 in benefits, giving him a minus 2.85-percent rate of

the Heritage Foundation's new online Social
Security benefits calculator. It lets you compare
the trickle -dow n benefits that the government return.
If that man were allowed to invest his paymll
will pay you after a lifetime of payroll taxes
with what you can earn if you could invest that taxes i1i a balanced, blue-chip stock and Treamoney in a very conservativ2 portfolio ofblue- sury-bond fund , it would earn him .a retirechip stocks and bonds.
ment nest egg of$1 .449 million that he would
What the calculations show is "what a bad a own and could leave to his heirs.
A 32-year-old women living in Newport
deal Social Security is for both current and
future retirees," says the conservative think Beach, Calif., earning S44,000 and living to
tank, which has been a leader in the movement 84.3 years of age, would build up a nest egg of
to lcr workers decidt:: huw they want to invest ·more .than $1 million over het -,vorklng c"'eer
· - a 6.7-percent rate of return on her hardtheir payroll taxes.
The ditference between the return on your earned money Compare this with her me of
investments and what the fed.&lt; will pay you is return under Social Sewriry: a mere 1.55 per&lt;running, especially for younger workers.
cent, pmducing on ly $429,722 in retirement
"A man retiring today, at age 65, for exam- benefits.
ple, gets only 1.75 percent back on the hunHeritage's new Web site - which is based
dreds of thousands in payroll taxes he paid. But on Social Security data calculates how
he'&lt; lu cky. cornpared to a 21-yea r-old man mu ch you can expect to pay into Social Scnlwho has 3 negative .9 pt:rCcnt return," the riry over your working life, the benetits you
·fou ndation says.
will receive from the government, and the
A 13-year-old woman who lives in Ann amount you could eam if you were allowed to
Arbor, Mich., who earns $44,000 and intends invest the same amount in safe, lRA-rype
to retire at (, 7, pays S26 7.509 in Social Sectlri- mutual funds.
ty payroll taxes over ht•r working ltfc and can
These computer calculations can. pmvitlc
expect to get $169,~H4 in benetit~ over her political supporters of partial Social Security
l·ctircment. Her rate of return i1 .1 measly I .12 privatization with some powerful new ammu-.
pt.:lTt'llt.
nition to take to the voters - authoritative
If the ~amt:: amount \Va.., l'Vt.:nly illVl'\ted 50- comparison" th;'!t rhe national news mct11a does
~11 in blue-r hip &lt;rocks .md ro,·k-solid,safe US , not and will not give us.
Trea&lt;ury bonck it would yield her a rctum of
Co nsid,·r "the rate of return for a grandfanearly S I 5 million -- more than S 1 milhon ther and lm gwtdson tti illustrate the )!;en&lt;ramurl' than Soc1al Security would givt• her in tional inequality 111herent in · the currem sysben die&lt;. That's a return of nearly 7 percent.
tem," the foundation says. "A 65-year-old man
"At k·ast the Ann Arbor woman can look is getting a 1.75 percent rate of return . His 15forward to getting back more from Social year-old grandson gets a negative 1.1 H- percent

return."
"While older Americans oppose any rype of
Social Secutiry reform, it would be interesting
to present a grandfather with this ·information,
then ask how he feels about trying to find, a
\vay to improve his grandson.'s· rate of return."
Where you live and your life expectan cy
affects your r~te of return from Social Security.
Take, for example, a 30-year-old man in Ann
Arbor, Mich.; whose average salary is S39,387.
With a hfe expectancy of 7~ years, his rate of
return is a negative .28 percent.
But a man living in Detroit earning S31,197
who expects to live to be 72 will get a neg,Jtive
rate of return of 4.06 percent.
"lloth are bad, but the guy living in Detroit
gets hit much harder. Based on this, you'd think
that inner-ciry residents would be more supportive of Social Security , retorm. Is that the
case' Would anyone choose to invest their
money for a negative return?" the foundation
asks.
r;ood questions. Lmle wonder that when the
issue i~ put hdOrc lower- income:, inner-city
minority-group m eflJbers, polls show strong
su pport tor the freedom to choose and own
private Social Security retirement plans .
This is strong stuff, design ed to show why
Georg&lt;' W. llush \ proposals to let ordinary

-

lJavid Harner of Albany was the winner of a
pedal tractor and wagon in a drawing held at the
recent Meigs County Town and Country Expo
2000. The give-away was sponsored by the Big
Bend Farm Antiques Club.

GranJe leams about
legislative issues
RACINE - . A look ·at the gun control and
other legislatrve issues was taken by Racin"
Grange at ~~ recent meeting.
There · was a dis c ussion on S.B. 2099 in the
U. S. Senate which, according to the the
gra nge legi slativ e age-nc \Vould requi.re J ll citIZens to register their guns on thc ar feden l
incomt" tax forms . A reso lution oppostng the
bdl wJs unammuu sly p:lsscd by the 111l'mbers.
.llld will be ~en r to Congrl'SS.
Co nc(,: rn about ls-;ut.• I asking for a $400
million bond isstlc that will .1ppc:ar on the
Ohio b.dlot \\'.15 .1bo di~ c uss~d . Though the
bill -;~,.·c~~ to pn.:~~..·rve fannland, many ur h er
item:\ h.IVL' bl'c!l put into it dea ling with
depn.·sscd ,l!' t..'.l S .in cittcs and sw;unpbnd

'

.1110 why AI Gore\ rcfmal to kt workns

inwst

t.hl'lr

payro ll

tvces

i~ th L· wor't

plT~lTV&lt;ltlUil.

I t w;~s rt..·pn rtl'd tlut the information currently d(1L'S not mdi c.ltl' how much would go
for ;~ctual farm preservation. Also, it was
pointed out ti1Jt no infornut1on IS available
on how the ~t;-t tl' wiH repay the money and

thing we

could do to hmi-working middle- and lower-

income American.;,
H eritafle's

We,b

Site

"

www.hl'ritagc.org/ '!ocia lo;;ecun ry.Take a look at

ir ,md

~~..·c

how you can bc.·co\ll('

,J

millionain.·

by the• time you retire.

(D"'wld l.m11/;ro fills i11 for Aft•rto11 1\olldmckc~
rolrm111.)

Videogames are more dangerous than comics?
I greatly enjoyed the Senate hearings that
took Hollywood to task for damaging our
nation 's ch.ildren. The senators cou ld barely
believe the insensi tivity and moral callousne&lt;S that paraded·before them in the form of
movie, music and video- game executives.
How cou ld any, re sponsibl e person, the
· Senator~ demar1ded to know, treat children as
if they were adults' Dtdn't they understand
that ch ildren are imp re,ionablc and impulsive' H ow cou ld they not &lt;ee that we, as a
'\OCi~ty, must be vig ilaJJt in protectmg our
youngeo;;t r m7ehs from influ ences they're not
mature enough to process?
The senators' portrayal of child re n as vulnerable and in need of spec ial handling came
a' ~omething of a revelation, cbnsidcring the
~tate of juvl·nik justice in America .
When it's ti me for politician~ to appear
tnugh nn H o llywood , children arc children.
When it's time to appear tough o n crime,
children magically become adults.
They are childre n in video arcades and
movie theater~. but aJults in Courtrooms and
pn)on yard~. L-.:twm.1ker~ ., cl,1im rhild rcn an:
not c,!p,!ble of h.tndlm~ the violenct·
pumped at them from popular rulturc. Then
wht..'ll children commit the predicted violence, suddenly they're perfeqly capable of
handling popular culture and rnusi be held
Jccnuntable.

Tall tales and
Paul Bunyan.Show

working {;.tmilies create wealth and retirement
~ccurity 0\'L'l' their working live-s makes '\Cll'H.'

RYAN'S VIEW

BY JOAN RYAN

Prize in htc:rature.

Ann
Landers

born , loved handing out cigars and
always carried a couple of photos in their
wallets.
Dear Ann Landers: A while back, you
printed a Gem of the Day about Winston
Churchill. It went like this: Winston was
seated next to Bessie Braddock, who
accused him of being drunk. He is said to .
have replied, "Madame, I may be drunk ,
but you are ugly, and tomorrow, I will be
sober."
Actually, I tb&lt;{~ght that quote was
from actor W.C Fields. 1 heard another
anecdote involving Winston Churchill,
however. He was sear~d next to sooalite
Lady Astor at a dinner parry. She said.
''Sir, you are drunk, and if I were your
wife, I would put arsenic in your brandy."
To which Churchrll rephed, "Madame. If
I were your husband I would drink it."- John in Oceanside, Calif
Dear John: Quotes often get garbled
in the retelling. anJ ~t'Vt:Lll n::~ders mentioned that lkssie llr.Hidock w.1~ .1

Lawmakers claim children are malleable
At worst, they're brutally abused .
enough to be damaged by Mortal Kombat
Teen-agers are five times as likely as adult
and The Matrix. Then when children land in prisoners to be sexually assaulted. They're
the courts, they're not malleable enough to twice as likely to beaten by a guard and 50
be rehabilitated. In the last 100.years, despite percent more likely to be attacked with a
our accumulated knowledge about ch1ld weapon. And c hildren in adult prisons are
development, ir's never been easier than it is eight times more likely to commit su1c1de
oow to prosecute children as adults . We are than those 111 JUVeJille fae~hnes.
tossing away the notion that chi ldren arc difDuring the he;~rings last week , senators
ferent from adults. Since 1992, 45 states have cited medical reports that pointed up ,the latpassed or amended laws that loosen the cri- est research on th~: 'teen -aged brain , noting
teria for charging a child as an adult. Fifteen that the brain is still developing through adostates, in cluding California, allow proseci1tors lesce nce and thus still capable of b eing
- not JUdges - to decide if a child should sh aped and reshaped. This , the legi&lt;lators
be tried in adult court, even for nonviolent sai d, makes teen- agers more vulnerable than
offenses such as auto theft and perjury.
adu lts to corrupting influences.
In most states, children as young as 14 can
So where are these politiciam du.ring
be tried as adults; in Vermont and Kansas, 10- debates over such laws as California's Propo year-olds can.
sition 21, which will lo ck away ewn tnorc
The resu lt' The number of children under children in adult prisons? They're waving the
age 18 held in adult prisons has doubled in tough-on-crime flag, redefining what a child
the last I() years. In m any cases, the teen - is to fit their political agenda.
a~ers have no separate living quarters; thl~y'rc
I'd like to see another set of hearings in
mixed in with the adult criminals with no Con grc &lt;S to answer this question: If teenspecial protection.
agt'r' ..1rc imprt_•o.;o.;ionable enough to be corDu lawmakers who think Eminem is too rupted, why are they not impressionable
dangerous for teens have any idea what hap - t:nough to bl! redl'emed ?
pens to these same teens behind prison walls?
At best, they 're learning the ins and ours of
(!om1 Rya11 Is d (tllllm Hist j{n tl1c San Frauriscrime from the cxpetts, making them more ((1 Chro11icfe. Sl'fJd Wlllmcnts to her ifl care if tllis
likely to become career crimi.nals upon their .uewspaprr.
or
send
l1er
e-mail
r1t
'releas e.
joallryo"*atc. com.)

•

POMEROY
L u pus/ Fi bromya Igia
Support
Group, Tuesday, 6:30 to 8 pIll.,
cafett..'ria.Vet~r:ul s Ml.!'morial Hospital, Pom eroy. Sarah McGrew.
arthritis program dtrector at OU
College of Osteopathic Medicine, will talk on the disease.
Those w1th lupus and fibi·omyalgia invited .
POMEROY - Meigs Cormtv Artisans .Assoctat!Oll, special
,;,eeting, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m at the
Pomeroy Library. Purpose to discuss design nf new wt:bpag:e.
POMEROY - · Meigs Cormty Artisans Asso ciation , 6:30p.m.,
Pomeroy L1 brary, to discuss
design of new webpage. All arti sans who are not included in the
Association's catalog but wi~h to
be are urged to attend the meetmg.

gu.udian and shot records ro be
take-n. Donations appreciarion,

p.m ..u the home of Dorothy jet~
fers .

but no one denied service~
because of mabdiry to pay.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Middleport Literary Club, 2 p.m.
Wednesday, home of June Kloes ,
Middleport, Jea nne Bowen to
review "Queen Lucia" by E. E
Benson :

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County Cancer 1m native, Friday. I :3\!
p.m. Veterans Memorial Hospi\;!1
confe-rence- room.

PLAINS
TUPPERS
Homecoming Jubil ee weekend. •t
St. Paul United Methodi St
Church, Tuppers Plams, Starting
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Friday, 7:30 p.m. with the R~v.
Eastern Local Board of Educa- Gary Carlson, speaker. and speeta l
tion, regu lar meeting, Wednesday music by Gary John ~on; Saturday,
6:30 p.m. at the administratiOn 7:30 p.m: R ev. Keith Rad~r -to
spea k, with special music by
building in Tuppers Plains ,
Craig Harrison ; Sunday, poth.IC,k
WELLSTON - The Board of dinner at 5:30p.m. service at 7:.30
Directors of the Gallia/jack- p.m with Rev. Terry Cavanaugh· ,
son/Meigs/Yinton Solid Waste speaker, and special musi c by L,ivManagement District wtll meet ing Faith Praise Team.
on Wednesday at 7:30a.m. at the
STIVERSV!LLE Revivi!l
board office in Wellston . Last
week's meeting was canceled due services, Friday, Saturday" a'nd
to the lack of a quorum, accord- Sunday, 7 p.m . eac h eve nmg.
ing to Execurive Director Lance Dave Dail~y will speak Frida,y
and Sunday; Paul Goodwin on
Wilson.
Saturday. Special music to include
singing from Goodw1n's church
THUR SDAY
POMEROY - Rock Springs in Marietta on Saturday, and
Better Health C lub, T hursday, 1 Delivered on Sunday.

sagg
....... ....

Second graders from Letart Falls Elementary
School visited the Paul Bunyan Show last ''-'eek,
the first day of the three-day event. In preparation ,
youngster spen£ thc previous week h:;"~rning: ;1bout
tJil tales and Paul Bunyan. The &gt;how is co-sponsored by Hocking College and d1c . OhiD Forntry
AssoCI ;ttion . and is a fon·st product'&gt; rr.Hk -;how,
where everything on the grounds .ntu:-. t bL· nt.1de of
wood or :1 wood-rdated pmductli. (Contnbutl'd
photo)

..,.

Road construdion

Lane

_...._
__
. ...
----·
.........IIICIIU

I*!WIIIm,. _

1lttll . - t
bMIU ttlllhtlll. II
I canlnlllllflc llllll

1111111

Choose from our larue "IN STOCK"
selecuon or special order
vour own color cholcel

tion~

1

TUESDAY

POMEROY - Meigs County Health Department, inununizatwn clinic, Tuesday. 1 to 7
p.m. ·in offices on Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy. Children to be
accompanied . by parent/ lega l

the int crl'st on It though Jt does say there will
be no in crl'asc in rax:es. The grange will look
for more infornution on the bill before elecGrange members asked about the bi ll in
Congress. seeki n g 't o ~:1kt." .nvay the Congressiona l c h.trter of the Boy Scouts because of
their beli efs. Th e leg islativ e d~tector reported
that th e bill re ceived only a dozen votes for
it Hhwev e r , it was noted that the United Way
ts look in g to withdraw support from the
scouts.
The grange recently presented a package of
rl."so lution s to su~e and Congressional repre&gt;entJtlves. Only Ohio Rep. John Carey has
replied to these at this time, 1t was reported.
In behalf of members ·of the grange, Geraldine Cross presented Ra c hel Ashley with a
;;weeper as a wc.:dding gift for her upconung
m:1rriagc in December.
·
.
.
The grange co nducted a plannmg meenng
fur th e grange yea r. Its annual hayride and
wiener roast will be held Oct. ~I. The annual pig-in-a-poke a·u ctioi1 i~ tentatively . ~et for
Nov. II pending approval of the aucnoneer.
P.trtJcipatieHl rin the ;'l nnual Ra ~me ~lower
Fcsti\·a l wa!'l .tipprovcd H w:1s the selectto n of
.1n .1nnu :d com muni ty CJ ti zcn s .nv::nd to be
!.!;iY..:n next June . The b.tking contest will bl'
J1l'ld ,1t thl' M.Hch mcct1ng .1nd othn comcsts
\nil be J Udg&lt;· in Seytember.
k .111 Alknc, :"~l'Crl'tHy. prl'\entcll .1 ll'tt l'r
fn.; m' the N.Hion,d Cr.wge :1bnur 11\. new
1 V 1 ~ 1 o n :-. :!000'' progr.1111. The prngr.tm i ~
dq.q;;un1 co ·im.prO\'L' lnc. d gr.Jng:c .1niv1t tcs
.\!h i comJllll ll lt\' wnrk . C hu ck Yl)~t. Jll.lStL'T.
\\ dl .1ppro.H·h · tht..· tvh• 1g:-o Cnttnty Pomon.1·
Cr.111 g..: .1b~Hlt p.1ruup.1tlllg 111 tlll' progr.tm :
A i11nurc (lf gr.1 11 gl' ufliccrs w.l~ ukl'll tor
the upt..·om111g new M~..·1g~ County H1 'tory
bnnk . t~. mma Ad.1111~ \\',1., n.• ported dl. Emnu
A,hkv.· lt..'C tUIT r. p!L'~t.: ntl..'d .1 progr.l1il on
.lp.pk;. In fortllHIOll 1Tg,1rd1ng pl.~nr1n~ and
L ilT uf .1ppll· trl'l?~ w.1~ gl\T!I. A qu1z oq .1ppk·
kno\\ lcdg(' \\',l ' \\'011 by M .Hy K,1y Yl? St.

Socialist and not a socialite, as I had Orig- encla&lt;e a handwnrren note sayt'lg, "We
inally printed. Thanks to aU who wrote realize you are unable to attend, but we
and sent other amusmg anecdotes about wanted you to know that you wtll be
ChurchilL lf I were given the choice of mtssed."
having dinner with one great man of the
Of course, when your dear fr~ends
past, it would be Winston ChurchilL
Dear Ann Landers: Our son is going invtte you to their son's wedding, you
to be married in October, and we JUst will send a lovely gift along w1rh your
learned that a dear friend's son is also regrets.
scheduled to be married on the same day.
Is that Ann Landers column )OU
We have talked to them about it , and nei- chpped years ago yellow wtth age' For a.
ther of us can change the date.
copy of her most frequently requested
We were planning to invite t~elf
poems and essays, send a self-addressed,
entire family (about 14 people) to our
son's wedding. However, since we know long, business-size envelope and • check
they are unable to con1e, we do not want or money order for $5 . ~5 (this mcludes
the tll\·itation to look as if we .a re askmg: postage and handhng) to: Gems, c/o Ann
for gifts. On the other hand, it nught Landers. 1'.0 Box 115(&gt;~. ChJCago, Ill
l1urt their feelings if we do not in,·ite 60611-!1562. (ln Canada, 'end $6 .25.) lo
1hem at aiL
find out more about Ann Lander&lt; Jnd
What is th&lt;' proper w.ay to handle tim'
read her 'past columns , \ 'l ii.it rht..' Crl'ators.
-- A Oikmnu in Mi ssouri
wl.'b
pJg:e
at
De:lf Missouri: By Jll means, send the Syndicate
wl'ddmg mvtt~tion to your fril'nds .•md www.Crl'ators.com .

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

SOC I ET Y N E W S AN D N OTES

B Y DoNALD lAMBRO

-Tuesday, October 17

Fertile Myrtle says to take it easy on pregnant wift

~Vl.ME

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fllll: 992-2157

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

\

-

'Esttl58skillll ~

Charlet W. Govey
Publisher

Daily Sentiriel

Page A$

BUY liE LINE®RECUIU AT
FULL PRICE AND ID TilE
SECIID.E
The Hillside Baptist Church is in the process of
building new road around the ch.u rch . Th e road
is being constructed to accommodate the church's
three buses.- Approximately 70 children are carried
by bus to Sunday morning services. Here, Pastor
James R . Acree and Jo e Humphrey work to
smooth the bottom ash uf the new roadway in
preparation for limestone. (Contributed photo)
'

a

.-...

We want your
photos!

The Sentinel welcomes your photographs . Here
are a few guidelines for submissions:
• Color photographs are accepted, provided they
are in focus and have good contrast. Negat1ves also
are accepted; however, please 1nclude a pnnt along
with the negative .
·
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they are in focus and have good contrast. Negatives
also are accepted; llowever, please mclude a pnnt
along with the negative .
• Standard-size sl1des are accepted, prov1ded
they are 1n focus and ·have good contrast.
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• Polariod-type photos are discouraged since
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images are saved as high-resolution, h1gh-qual1ty
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FtRIIUillMIII au

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Hours: ·
Mon • Thurs 9~5
Friday 9-6;
Saturday 9l4

Qualitv Furniture·Plus

~-~;&gt;4~:~~;~~~~sor 42123 STATE ROUTE 1 • TUPPERS PlAINS, OH 45783

�P8ge A IS • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, October 17, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS

Morals play role in latest presidential poll

Mideast talks continue
SHARM EL-SHEIK. Egypr (AP) - Presukm Chmon curied
his dn"" for an accord to ~nd Msddle East v1olence into a second
day. shuttling between lsraeh Pnme Mmister Ehud Barak and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat m an atn;osphere w1drrnuned by mutual
mistrust.
Then, afi:er a few hours of sleep. Cbnron conferred wtth the host ,
Egyptian President Hosni MubaraLc for 20 minute&lt;. An Egypt~&gt;n
official, Nabil Osman, sa~d the seven leaders parncipaung m the
summit would gather rogerher agam later Tuesday.
The discussions, lasting more rhan 14 hours Monday and mto
roday, prompted Clinton to extend h1s stay rather than deputing on
Monday night as planned.
·

Navy begins bombing exercise
ABOARD THE USS NASSAU (AP) - Guns boomed off the
coast of a disputed Navy training ground in Puerto Rico and tens
of rhousands of troops prepared for a mass1ve amph1b10us landmg as
NATO began its biggesr exercm' there m four years.
The monumental show of force Monday by. 50 vessels, 31 ;(JOO
U.S. soldiers and an undisclosed number of other Western troops
comes despite fierce protests over the past yeu against military exercises on the .island, called Vieques. The forces are smlulating a
NATO-led U.N. peacekeeping mission, Navy spokesman John
Kirby said. On Tuesday, rhou.,.nds of troops were to. "invade" a
beach on rhe island's eastern end, the Navy said.
The simulation coricludes Oct. 28.

Early voters muld affect races
WASHINGTON (AP) - A record number of Ameri cans will
vote before Election Day this year, a phenomenon that's transform-ing the _parties' get-out-the-vote dnves and that could affect tight
races for president and Congress.
Oregon is holding the nation's first all-mat! ballotmg, and millions
more will vote absentee in stares such as California. Washington,
Nevada and Arizona, where control of the House and Senate could
be settled. The numbers keep rising as states make it eas1er to vote
ahead of nme.
Califorma, where more than 1 nullion absentee ballots wori'r be
counted unul after Election Day, has tive House rac~s that could
spell the difference in control of Congress. Nevada. where absentee
and early voting accounted for more than ·W percent of the I Y98
vote, has competitive Senate and House races .

Potter author aids charity
LONDON (AP) -· Fictional boy wizard Harry Potter 1s being
enlisted to raise money for charity. Author J.K Rawling , Harry Potter's creator, is writtng two spmoiT referenct: books from the popular series to benefit Comic Relief
Proceeds from the sale of the books will help the organization
fight poverty and social injumce. The short books - called "Fantastic Beasts And Where to Fmd Them" and "Qmddirch Through
the Ages" - will be released worldwide during a Cornie Relief
fund drive March 16.
The second new volume will be an anthology of Harry Potter\
favorite sport, quidditch.

Man charged in Oscars theft
LOS ANGELES (AP) - · The brother of the man rewarded for
finding dozens bf'stolen Oscar staruettes has been ch:irged 1r1 c'onnection with the theft earlier this year.
John Willie _Harris. 54. was charged Monday wuh re ce1v1ng &lt;tolen
property and being an accessory after the fact to grand theft.
Harris was arrested last week and released Saturday on his own
recognizance. His arraignment is scheduled for Nov. 8.
Harris' brother, Willie Fulgear, 61, received a $50,000 reward and
tickets to the Academy Award&lt; show i'1 March after he found 52 of
the 55 missing Oscar&lt; while rummaging through a trash bin.
Police refused to say if Fulgear was a suspect in the Oscars theft.
"The investigation is still ongoing, and we arc looking into everyone involved;' said Officer Trevion Stokes, a spokesman for the Lm
Angeles Police Department.
Fulgear demed any mvolvement, saymg he passed a lie-detector
test before he was given the reward.
"You guys are calling and jokinglike I'm some sort of dununy.
But I'm not a dummy," he told reporters uut,lde lm apartment." [
had nothing to do with 1t. I don't know how the trophies got there.''

WASHINGTON (AP) - George W. Bush
has crept slighrly ahead of AI Gore in some
polls, appuenrly because voters consider htm
more trustworthy than the v1ce president.
An NBC-Wall Street Jourrul pall released
Monday had Bush ahead 48 perc.,n! to 42
percent among likdy voten, with a 4-pomt
error mugin. An ABC-Washington Post poll
had Bush at 48 l"'rcent and Gore at 44 percent With a 3-point error margin.
The Texas governor has been faring w.:U in
other recent polls. A CNN-Time poll releasrd
over the weekend also showed Bush up slightly, 48 percent to 43 percent, and a Voter.com
Banleground poll had Bush up 43 percent to
39 percent with a 3-point error margin. Several other surveys have shown rhe two candidates within the error margins.
Bush has gained ground in the race for 270
electoral votes: Heading into the fint debate,

Go~ rwrowly led Bush, according to arulyus
of state polls :and mrerviews with consultant&gt;
in both parties. Now, Bush holds a slight lead
afi:er states that once leaned towud Go~. such
u Pennsylvania and Tennaser, became tossups
after the first debate on Oct. 3.
Democrat Gore continues to hold the
advantage on top issues like the economy,
Social Securiry, foreign policy and education.
He also has a big advantage in having the
Lcnowledge and experience to handle the
presidency.
·
Republican Bush scores highest on trust.
Almost half in the NBC-WSJ poll, 45 percent, said he was mo~ honest and stnightforword than Gore, 29 percent. In the ABCWashington Post poll, 53 percent said Bush ·
was honest, while 49 percent said that of
Gore. Both had lost ground on honesty in that
poll,ho~r.

Bush also had the advantage on serting the
proper mor.al tone for the country, 39 percent
ro 29 percent, and bemg trustworthy enough
to nuke the right decisions, 43 percent to 32
percent.
Bush also scored better on leadership qualities, 41 pertent to )5 percent, and being more
likable, 44 perc t-nt to 30 percmt, in the NBCWSJ poll of 736 likely voters taken Oct. 1315. In the ABC-Washington Post poll of
I ,1 03 likely voters, Bush was l;een as having a
more appealing personality, being more trustworthy and more likely to provide a fresh

start.
Gore ran into trouble on the trust question
after the first debate, when some of his comments rumed out to be exaggerated. He apologized for £!te statements during the second
debate last Wednesday and promised ro be
mo~ careful.

Kentuckians try to conserve Attorneys General discuss
Firestone tire options
water in wake of release
INEZ, Ky. (AP) -A huge spill
of gooey coal sludge that has
seeped into eastern Kentucky
• streams forced officials to declare a
state of emergency Monday. Car
washes and schools were closed in
an attempt to ~ve whatever _Flean·
water remained as the black water
reached the Ohio River.
About 200 million gallons . of
coal waste tl1e consistency of wet
cement flowed into streams last
Wednesday after a retention pond
b'&gt;ve way at a coal-preparation
plant on a mountaintop near Inez.
Gov. Paul Patron declared a state
of emergency Monday in a large
portion of northeastern Kentucky.
saying water shortages were affecting drinking water supplies, basic ·
sanitation and fire protection .
The leading edge of the spill
entered the Big S~ndy River and
black water had reached the Ohio
Riv,er, forcing the cities of Inez,
Louisa and Kermit, W.Va., to close
their water intakes and rely on
existing supplies:

"We're going to have to find an
alternative water source," said
Martin County Deputy JudgeExecutive Gory Lafferty. "That's
our big concern right now. We're
not going to allow our . people to
be without water.".
Classes in Marrin Counry's
schools were canceled until
another source of water could be
fonnd .
School superintendent Bill
Slone said regulators had been
unable to estimate how long the
water crisis might last.
"We need help, or we could be
looking at four to five weeks
without dasses," he said.
The leak occurred at a plant
owned by the Martin County
Coal Corp., · which had crews
working around the clock dredging the ooze from streams.
The state has ordered the company, a subsidiary of A. T. Massey
Coal Inc., to replace fish and other
aquatic life killed and to rebuild
roads and bridges it ripped away.

agreed to provide customers with
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) free
replacements for the tires rhe
Bridgestone/Firestone Inc. wiD
no longer require consumers to NHTSA IS in\'estigating. Howevwaiw the right to sue .when they er, it has not l'&gt;.&lt;ued a recall for
sttk replacements for tires named · those tires, company spokesin the company's recall and a. woman Anitra Budd said MonconsUJBerad~ry.
day.
Budd said claims from attorThe company also has agreed
not to enforce the waivers already neys general in New York and
signed by an estimated 2 million Connecticut that the recall had
customers, attorneys general for been expanded were W~Qng.
Bridgesrone/Fi.;,.tone recently
several stares said Monday in issuing public reminders about the sent letters to the states' attorneys
general explaining how the tire
recall.
Pressured by federal investiga- replacements were being hantors, Nashville-based Bridge- dled. Many then alerted constone/Firesrone agreed in August sumers in their states to the
to recall 6.5 millionATX,ATX II options and urged them to
and Wilderness AT tires under replace rhe tires quickly.
investigation in more than 100
Consumers with tires included
U.S. deaths.
in the recall who go to a FireAn additional 1.4 million stone competitor can be reinlBridgestone/Firestone tires are bursed up to SIOO per tire, and
under investigation and were those with tires on the NHTSA
named in a consumer advisory advisory can receive up to S140
from the National Highway Traf- per tire. Some tires included in
the advisory are more expensive
fic SafetY, Administration.
Bridgesrone/Fire&lt;tone
has models used for off-mad vehicles.

Chevron buying Texaco in $34 million blockbuster·
region's refinery capacity.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) . "There are going to be some
Chevron Corp. is buying Texaco
Inc. in a $34 billion deal that is considerable challenges to getting
likely to run into tougher-than- this deal done," said oil industry
usua] antitrust resistance because analyst Tyler Dann of Bane of
America Securities in Houston.
of high gas prices lately.
The deal, announced Monday, "They need to take a pre-emptive
would create the world 's fourth- strike and sell assets to satisfy regulators. as soon as possible or it
largest oil company.
Analysts expect ChevronTexaco could turn into a real polirical
Corp. to win regulatory approval football."
The combined company will
in six months to a year, but only
after it sells several refineries and also cur about 7 percent of its
hundreds of gas stations, primarily . Work force - about 4,000 workin the West and the South.
Without divestitures, ChevronTexaco would control about 36
percent of the West C&amp;ast retail
market, according to the Lundberg Survey, and one-third of the

ers -

ro help it save an estimated
$1.2 billion annually.
In size, Chevron, based in San
F..ncisco, and Texaco, based in
White Plains, N.Y., will still lag .
behind Exxon Mobil Corp.,
Royal Dutch/Shell Group and BP
An1oco PLC - industry powerhouses also formed by recent
· mergers.
But the rules, of the game have
changed dramatically sirce the
first wave of industry deals in
1998, when oil pnces were

declining to their lowest levels in
a generanon .
Through most of this year, oil
prices have been climbing steadily, driving gas prices to record
highs in sume parts of the country
and increasing pressure ro get
things under control.
"The pressure is building on oil
companies. This deal is going to
get a lot of scrunny," said Stephen
Smith, an analyst with Dain
Rauscher Wessels in Houston.

SATURDAY, OCT. 21 • 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M. •
LYNE CENTER, UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE

Durin!) this course,
you will learn about:

setting financial and investment goals. This class also
will prov ide a summary of the mos1 common
investments used by individuals in reaching their
objectives.
Classes meet one night per week.

Keeping Up With Inflation
Tax-free Investments
IRAs and Business Retirement Plans
Tax Deferred Annuities
Portfolio Asset Allocation
Common Stocks
Certificates of Deposit
Increasing Investment Income
MutUal Funds
Insured Corporate Bonds
Setting Realistic Financial Goals
The Cost of Procrastination

DATES:
TIME
PLACE:

October 19, 26 and November 2, 9, 2000
6 00 p.m. · 8:00p.m.
Universi ty of Rio Grande Meigs County Center
ISO Mill Street, Middleport , Ohio
Call the University of Rio Grande at 992-3383
or 1-888-3 74-6954 to reserve a seat.
Seating is on a first-come, first-served basis.
\&gt;laterial Fcc $15.00.

Elizabeth A. Schaad
347

4th Street
'Marietta, OH 45750
(740) 374-6950

SCHEDULED TO APPEAR:
Three Chord Charlie
Author Unknown
The Earthtones
The Disasters
The Vacants
Flltheology
Shindig _
69 Fingers
Human .Racist
TDH
Donnie Boggs

www.edwardjones.com
\~ember ~I PC

Planning for College Costs
Retirement Planning

ALL·DAY ADMISSION: $5 or 1 NEW BOOK
FOR INFORMATION, CALL 446·2342

Edward jones

. HOSTED BY:
Four Funny Guys and
Matt

Page 81
Tuesday, October 17, 2000

HIGHLIGHTS
~----Mouming to miss
entire season

MIAMI (AP) A common
but serious kidney ailment will
keep five- time All-Star Aloruo
Monrning sidelined for the entire
season. depriving the Miami Heat
of their biggest star and the key to
their quest for an NBA title.
Doctors said that the iUness, .
first sponed just after Mourning
helped the U.S. team to the basketball gold medal earlier tl1is
month, was focal glomerulosclerosis , which leads to kidney failure in about half the cases.
They said there were no immediate plans for a kidney transplant
or dialysis. Mourning's condition
was di'icovered during a routine
physical two weeks ago.
Mqurning finished third in vot- .
ing for t~e NBA's Most Valuable
Pl ayer last season, when he averaged 21. i points, 9.5 rebound&lt;
and 3.7 blocks per game. He has
missed only seven games the past
two seasons.

U.S. Olympians
electecf to track
hall of fame
I NDIANAI'OLIS (AP)
Olympic gold medalists Chandra
Cheeseborough
and
Arnie
Robin so n were an1ong four athletes elected to the National
Track and Field Hall of Fame.
Joining them were two other
Olympians - Bill Dellin~er and.
Maren Seidler.
Cheeseborough was a metnber
of Olympic teams in 197n, 1980
and 1984. At the 198-1 Los Angeles Games, she won !(Old medals
in the 4110-meter and I .(&gt;00mrter re!J.ys and got a sih•er
medal in the individual 400.
Robinson won the Olympic long
JUlllp in 1976, four years after
having won the bronze med al.

N. Illinois, Toledo
&amp; Miami players
take honors

new transfer rule

(

•
(f

Amazin'
Mets win
NL crown

ThEsDAY'S

OHSAA passes

G~LLI~

The Daily Sentinel

More sports, Page 86

CLEVELAND (AI') - Northen' Illinois running back Thomas
Hammock, Tc)ledo dt:ft.·ns!ve end
DeJuan Goulde and Miap1i
punter and kicker Kent McCullou~h were selected Monday as
the Mid-Americ.:an Conference
players of the week .
Hammock ti ed a MAC: record
by rushing for five TDs in the
Huskies 52-35 win over Akron.
Hanuno ck fini sh ed the game
with 174 yards on .12 carries.
Goulde had. three sacks ami
returned a fumble 17 yards for a
tou chdown a&lt; the Rockets sl1ut
out Marshall 42-0. The H erd had
not been shut out since a 14-0
loss to UT-Chattanooga in I 'IMY .
McCullough ave.,ged 47.1 .
yards per punt and put three
punts inside the Bowling Green
20-yard line in Miami's 24-10
victory ovt:!r the Falcons ..

Aday of peace, low and ... litflrGC'/
A 4 il•eek course is being offered to assist individuals in

Inside:

COLUMBUS (AP) High
school studellts who tramfer after
they begin the ninth grad e cannot play sports at their new
schoo l for one year, the Oh io
High School Athktic Association
·said Monday.
·
The OHSAA's member schools
approved the bylaw change to the
transfer rule in a vote taken this
month.
' The new rule says transferring
students will be ineligible for athletics for one year unless they
meet one of three exceptions:
A proposal that would have
made foreign exchange students
ineligible for OHSAA sponsored
tournaments was not approved.
The bylaw changes take effect
Aug. I, the OHSAA said.

NEW YOKK (AP) - The
Met'ii' clinchmg parry \Urted early
.md could stretch all the way to
the Bronx as New York prepare&gt;
for irs wildest ba,eball \Seck. 111 '·
yean.
Mike H .unpton p1t&lt;:hed a
three-hitter MondJy night and
the Met\ \t,llllPcd tiH:ir ticlct into
.1 po~ r;;1hl t' Subw.l} ~l'rll'\ by be.uing th e St ·Louis Cardinal; 7-11
and winmng the N L chJmpl on\hip \(TIL';., -t-J.
All rh.1t\ ldr t(lf New Yor~'s
drc.tm World Seric-. I\ for thL· Vankce'i to clo\e out tlu: Scattk
Mariners in tlw ALC:S. T he YJIIkees le.1d th e sc·m·s .'1-2 with
( ;,l me (, ·1Ut."•.,d,ly mght.
· .. I'm ruorin~ fi,r the Yankt.'t.'\, to
~~ p.:rfc-t·tly lwnt.''&gt;L.. \;Ud ML't\
fir st b .l\L'lll,lll Todd Zeik. \\'ho
broke dH.' g.ullt: upl' II "ith ,1
three-run dou bl e 111 thl' fourth

inning-: " I'd lo\\.' ro

St'rie~. Wt· h.wl:'

WE ARE THE CHAMPIONS - The Meigs volleyball team
captured the Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division championship with its win over Nelsonville-York and Ale~ander's
loss to Belpre last week. The team features seniors Shan -

•

unfini!oih~.&lt;l

bu,ine'&gt;\ with tht· Y.n~~t-e":·
Nt'\\' Ynrk won H~ f~H!rr h N I

non Price and Marjorie Bratton, junior Corrie Hoover,
sophom'ores Mindy Chancey. Kayte Davis and Katie Jef·
fers, and freshmen Jaynee Davis and Nikki Butcher. (Dave
Harris photo)
'

penn~u1t

,1nd

tir'it

11JH(l.

" ill l'L'

JOining th ~..· l9tJ7 Hond.l rvl.nltn ..
a-. the only "1ld t.1rd t L',Illl" lo
make thl' World ~l'rlL'\. llunprcm
won the MVP by pircl1ing I(,

•

e1gs Wins
BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

1-)ubw.tv

\i..'L' .1

\01111.:'

o;ron.._·lc"'

.nHl

int11n g-.

\\'llllltllg

game".
"The tt'.llll tll'L'dcd .1 b1~ g.une.. "
Hampton -.aid. ''\Xk'rc dn'ie. \X/l''rt·
four \\'in~,\\\',\)' ti·o111 ti llfilling rl1.l!
t~vo

The Marauders (15-2, TVC
Ohio 14-1) lwl'e won six
TVC Ohio titles uttder tl1e
direction of llead coacl1 Rick
Ash, who took OIJer tlu
program itt 1988

Jaynee Davis and Nikki Butcher fill out the·
TO'\ter.

ROCK SPRINGS - With its victory
over Nelsonville-York and Alexander's loss
to Belpre last week, the Meigs High School
volleyball ream claimed the Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division championship.
The Marauders (15-2, TVC Ohio 14-1)
defeat~d the Buckeyes 15-6 and 15-3 last
· Tuesda)" to capture to ensure themselv~s at September 26.
This year's TVC title is the oixth for 'the
least a share of the .title, then got some help
from Belpre, which defeated Alexander in Marauders under head coach Rick Ash. A&lt;h
three b"'mes to hand the Spartans their third · has been the top man at Mc·igs since· l'!HH .
Meigs has reached the pinnacle this se,\Son ·
defeat in league play.
Many TVC volleyball observers believed with a squad that features just two se-niors in
this week's match between Meigs and co-captains Sh.nmun Price and Marjorit·
Alexander would be for the league champi- Ilratton .
The rest of the team . which lmt six
onship.
The two sides will meet Thurssday at seniors fmm the 'YSJ .. yuad, is young. wilh
one junior, three sophomores .a nd t\'~io fi·~lih­
Meigs.
The 2000 season has be&lt;·n a bre:&gt;kout men.
Corrie Hoover is the lone junior. Mindy
campaign for the Marauders.
Meigs opened the seaso n with a 10-match Chancey, Kaytc Davis and Katie Jcflcrs make
winning streak before f.1lling to Miller on up the sophomore- group, while fn.:•"hnu. •n

Cuna~\ ...

Tlw Met\ .d-.o 1..'.1rncd f(nJr d.J\''i
ofr before beginning the \X.'nrld

Ash s:1id that every player has played .1 key
roiL· in rht:• Marauders' o;;uccess this year, wirh
athktes stepp ing up in dilfcrc·nt situations.

Snil'&lt;; on S.Jturd.\\'. t' ltlH:r .1 tr.lltl
r itk a\\,1\ ,lt Y.m1...LT Sr._al!um or
.tcrov.. rhc colunn·· m \c.mlc.
·· 1 hnpe tht• Y.mkt'L'" \\"111 lll

~1cibrs

will honor l'rict' and 13rarron
Thunday prior to the varsity match ag:.1inst
Alc.::xanJer. The junior v;usity match b(~gin "&gt;
at S:SS. p.m.

'&gt;l'\'t'Tl sn till:)• burn l.:.l I )uqut..·
(1-lern.1nde7) .md (Andy) l'et
tittt:.'' M~...·h ~l.lltL'I AI l t•itL' l ...lid.
Th e g;mlt' gor tco,n· ;H rht• end
\\'lll'n n.~, ·l'Vl'l't'' hltJ.lY \',tyt(lll n t
tht· !\1cr" in thl· hl· l1n l't w1th .1 \
2 pitt h ~' Hh t\\o O ll t\ 11 1 llu:
cighrh 11111111g. l'.n ron. hkcdJn.g
m·t·r h1" lett t'yL·, dur!-!nl thl·
mound .111d the du~m1t" .n11.l
bullpt'll\ l'!llptit•d .1~ po!ltl' til tt ot
gc.Jr lmcd rlw ticld.

The· Mar.ltlders play host to R ive r Valley
.u1d ~uuth1..T!l this l'Venmg. Match tlllll' j, ~l't,
fm 5:30 p.m. :lf Me1h" High_ School.
Me-igs Will play j.Kkson Saturda'y in the
II "ecrional tourn&lt;lment :n the
University of Rio Grande. Match ti111e is I
p.m.
Divi~;1on

The othe·r half of the se·c tional bracke-t
ti: .Jtures rivals G.1llia Academy and Riwr ·
Valley squaring ulf ,Jt 2 p.m . at Rio Cramk

''Thl'I'L'\ 01JI~

Tlw winners of the two early m atc lws will
pl.1y f(n the right to move on to di,trin plJy
at .Llll p.n1 Saturday.

k ll 0\\''-

l'VtT

OIIC fllT~Oll

rilL'

th.tt

b tll

Ill tl' 11 t.

Please see N LCS; Page 86

Bronx Bombers hope to lock up ALCS title tonight
NEW YORK (A P) A kid from
Brooklyn want&lt; to keep the Bronx
Bombers from meeting the team from
Queens in a Subway SerieS.
John Halama, the Seattle Mariners
pitcher who hails from Bay R1dge, has
been in New York 'l nce Saturday, home
tor his sister's wedding.
On Tuesday night }w pitch,·s against
Orlando Hnnam.lez, trying: to force a seventh game ab&gt;ainst the New York Yankees
ii1 the AL championship series.
" I had to be he re, but my heart was in
Seattle," Halama said Monday bef()re the

Mets tlnishs·d otT the St. Loui&lt; C:ardin.1ls to
win the NL ps·nnant.
Harbara Hal.u ua got nlarricd Si.lturday.
so her brother took :1 redeye fiight .1 trer
Game .'\ Friday night. lie cou ldn't watch
Gi.lmt; 4 btxau~c of the 'n;dding.
"So1ncont: · had a Walk man ,111d kept me
updatl'd , inn il1 g by inni11~, hatter .11~d
everything:,'' l-labm ~l .;:l.id.
He fdt h ~ had to mi~!'l thl· two g-.tllll''l .Jt
Sati:co Field. !Jlood over baucrym.1tes. H1s
sister was in the '\t3tH.I;; at Sht'a Stadiumalong with 69 other f.1111ily and fric·nds
two years ago when he made lii" tlr'\t

11ujor k.1guc o,tart in New York.
" My ~i"'tn docm't pl.w on gl'tttng NJ ,\rlll'd ,lg.u n.'' hL· ~._tid.
The llrooklynite, acquired by Se.lltk
fron1 llow:.ton in the R :mdy Jn lll hOil
tr.llk, kept to hi~ normal throv./ing rou tllll'. going nut to ~l nty park to to~'\ .t h.11l
with his brot!m·. Other than that. he kept
,1 low prntlk. not \\';mting · to gt·t into the
(tc~..·.., o! 'Y.111 kcl'\'

t:ms in

B:.~y R.iJ~~..· .

" I d1dn 't w,tlk .mnmd the nt·ighhorhood ,'' he ,,11d.
I I.Ji.Jrn .1, .1 2H-w.1r-old lcft - h:~mler.
bl.mkl'll th e Y,mkcc-.. t()r ;;ix inning.,, ·k.w-

ing \\irh

.1

1-fl

hut \t·.lrtk\ hullpcn
' - 1 hh-.. 111 (,Jillt'.::
k.1tl.

got bl.1~t·cd 111.1
I krtLi ndcz ,,.mind up )!;Cttlng the \\111.
,Ji]D\\lllg ~)Ill'

11l111!1g\.

Ik

1\

~!."\ \11t~ lll L'Jg \ ll

.Hid

l"llll

7-1

Hh

j \\

1.~~

.1

I RA

Ill .I

h,\\ he~ \llllL' 1111.11\'
r\un hh dl'kCth)ll tiu111 C:ulu

pO'ilO,L',\&gt;_.UlJ (,I I'L'l'l' ~h.11

~tOrtl'd

thrt·c ~\·,1r" .1gu.
1-ft.'\ fil L' l1Ll11

111111Jn11 '11\H\Oih.
Wor~..h. lH'\\'L'\'tT. m •t'.tri. l'
'' \ .d\u\·, kL·l l,l\'' •llrt·." hv .,,lid "-lun-1.1)
(lf. ,1

ntght. ··v.. h.ll 1· d

h.J,-,.

't

1"

k.n ··

Please see AL.:S, Page 86

NFL

Herd and Kent
George, Titans run wild on Jags
in same boat

NASHVILLE. Tenn. (A P) The Tennessee Titans don't -lose
at home, and latel y they just
don't !me to the Jacbo nvillr
Jagu ars.
Eddie George r.1n for 1n5
yards and a tuud1down and
Steve McNair threw for two
TIJ&lt; as the Titan&lt; 'beat the
Jaguars 27-13 Monday night tor
their tlfth straight victory over
their AFC Central Division
rivals .
The Titans (5-1). who rook a
half-game lead over the Baltimore Ravem 111 the AFC Central, now have won five straight
since losing their sea!i011 opener
to Buflalo. They also improved
their NFL record of most victories at a new 'itaJium to I 1-0
since moving to Ad elphia Coliscum.

'

Heismar~

troplty-wimrer
Eddie George ru.1lred for
165 yards as Temresue
defeated Jacksoul'illc
27-13 i11 Naslll'ille

Jacksonville (2-5) wanted to
end a three-game losing skid, but
tht: Jaguars never g:tJt a ch.lllcc to
get tlu~ir otTense going agaimt
the Titans, who sacked Marl{
Brunell five times and recovered
two fumbles while rolling up
407 yards on o'tTeme.
"We knew we wert' goi11g ro
make them play our style of
football," sml tight end Frank
Wycheck, who caught a TD pa&lt;s
while on
h1s b.JLk 111I the llrst
.
quarter.
"St_eve's on, Edelic-\ rolhng. the

ofleu~J\'t'

line '' pL1ying ~rt'.lt,

and the defc-me " rea lly pl.lYIIIl';
wt.:ll. It 's .1 pertl·ct t(Jn nul.i for U\
to win - n1n the h,tll. comroi
tlu: dock ,m d let ou r dct~·nw do
their t hin g."
The Tit,llh tnund thL•msci\'L'..;
Jdkct in g t.dk ot' returnmg to

the, ~upe1' Bowl ,Jttn the· ~-111\C,
ami co,H.:h jdl' ~'J\ htT \did 1t\ \\'&lt;\)'
too e.1rly ro ..,t.lrt thmku1g thl'y
cue unbt'.lt.lble . For the J.igU;lT'\,
they now &lt;m..• mired in ,1 f(Hlrg.mu.' lo..;ing ~kid, the \\Or\t ~itKL'
(hetr lll.lU gur;ll \L'd\011.
','It hun~ ." Jag-u.lr\ rccl'l\'l'r
Koc1W1 MeC.mkll s.nd. " I know
w~ .trc ,l hl'tter k.lm tl1.111 thi~.
Some \\,1). 'omchow· \\l'\c ~ot
to nghr thl\ \lup. I doJJ't ~JJm\ .'.
Thl' j.1gu.1r~ nuy hl' tr\'11lg roo
Please see Titans. Page B&amp;

HUNTINC )'(lN . WV.1. (t\1' 1 .lll"t th111J..

-

M.lr"ihall coach Bob

l'niL'tr

i.,n 't t!oin~ to g-t·~ llHil h "Ylllp.lt\1\·ti·u m Kent ~r.ttc\ 1)l',lll 1\·c.,
fvLII:"i!l.lll,
the
tiHl'l'-tlllll'
ddl:nding Mid-Amcrli.·,Jil ('on
fcrenll' du111p1on. h,l, .dn·.1d~
h1s~ four g.1mcs thi' "l'.l'. nn. the
&lt;.;;m1e ·numbc1 it Jn,r th t.· \.1.,t ti.n1r
J'l'gular ~l'•l~tlll'\ coJnhiiil'd.
'
Pee'\ is J-2(1 in·fli" third 'll'.h&lt;lll
· ,\t Kt..:nt State. i11 cludm~ . th1'
ye.u.-s 1-(&gt; mark .
l'hc teams mn·t S,nunl.~,. 111
H.uminhrron
"If you guy' don't th1nk th1" 1"
.1 good J\l\,1r'\l1.1ll tc.lt11 , ,·ou'rl·
no~ \\,Jttluug till· ...mw lil;n f'lli
w,urh111~."

Pn·\ \,lid Mnnd.1\.
" The y pbyc-d .1 t&lt;•ugh sc hcduk
.tt th( bt•g-iiHl)llg of the "l'.t.,on I

r

1hl'\

trn111

,m·.t\'

!~·" pl.t\·.,
hkl· tht.·\ \L

'n·

.1

lw1n~

.d\\ ,I\' hl'l'll
.. \1 .11'\h:t!l'. .
.111d ht· d.llll l l
I he ..,,\111~'

gnlll~ \(\

'ltl)\\

ur

~.1 ll

lo1

~lHl ._ i.'
l'.lll.l

he

h.ctll \r.ttl' . \\ hll·h lu~ ~J\l'n up
~(I pl)Jilt' 1hrn· tlll.lt'~

tJn,

'L.I

'011. lh li.\lh' \\ lll l.lllll' 111 dllllhk

m _n

0\l'rtlll\l'

( l'lllr.d

rv1h-111

g.1n

In

.t

·+4 -: 1'"'"

h' (

)hJn

l.to,t

\\l'l'k. thn·l· (,l.llt ~JlLtrlt'rb,JLl'
l~llllhllll'd-. -nt211 p,Jo,o,.

\\l'\T ,\

111~- t~1r ~I

,.,1111 . .

'.o \nothn pr\lhkn 1
pll,]tl&lt;.)1J .llld

on pulll
~r.Jrtc~.l

ht!!

tiL·lL.I

pl.!\"\ ~1\ ' l'l\ llJ)

Jl'l\Jtll.,, (
111.111\

\\.1'

)\ml., t~tft.n.,~,.·

dnn·~

•\n,t- ro

Please see MU, Page 86

�P8ge A IS • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, October 17, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS

Morals play role in latest presidential poll

Mideast talks continue
SHARM EL-SHEIK. Egypr (AP) - Presukm Chmon curied
his dn"" for an accord to ~nd Msddle East v1olence into a second
day. shuttling between lsraeh Pnme Mmister Ehud Barak and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat m an atn;osphere w1drrnuned by mutual
mistrust.
Then, afi:er a few hours of sleep. Cbnron conferred wtth the host ,
Egyptian President Hosni MubaraLc for 20 minute&lt;. An Egypt~&gt;n
official, Nabil Osman, sa~d the seven leaders parncipaung m the
summit would gather rogerher agam later Tuesday.
The discussions, lasting more rhan 14 hours Monday and mto
roday, prompted Clinton to extend h1s stay rather than deputing on
Monday night as planned.
·

Navy begins bombing exercise
ABOARD THE USS NASSAU (AP) - Guns boomed off the
coast of a disputed Navy training ground in Puerto Rico and tens
of rhousands of troops prepared for a mass1ve amph1b10us landmg as
NATO began its biggesr exercm' there m four years.
The monumental show of force Monday by. 50 vessels, 31 ;(JOO
U.S. soldiers and an undisclosed number of other Western troops
comes despite fierce protests over the past yeu against military exercises on the .island, called Vieques. The forces are smlulating a
NATO-led U.N. peacekeeping mission, Navy spokesman John
Kirby said. On Tuesday, rhou.,.nds of troops were to. "invade" a
beach on rhe island's eastern end, the Navy said.
The simulation coricludes Oct. 28.

Early voters muld affect races
WASHINGTON (AP) - A record number of Ameri cans will
vote before Election Day this year, a phenomenon that's transform-ing the _parties' get-out-the-vote dnves and that could affect tight
races for president and Congress.
Oregon is holding the nation's first all-mat! ballotmg, and millions
more will vote absentee in stares such as California. Washington,
Nevada and Arizona, where control of the House and Senate could
be settled. The numbers keep rising as states make it eas1er to vote
ahead of nme.
Califorma, where more than 1 nullion absentee ballots wori'r be
counted unul after Election Day, has tive House rac~s that could
spell the difference in control of Congress. Nevada. where absentee
and early voting accounted for more than ·W percent of the I Y98
vote, has competitive Senate and House races .

Potter author aids charity
LONDON (AP) -· Fictional boy wizard Harry Potter 1s being
enlisted to raise money for charity. Author J.K Rawling , Harry Potter's creator, is writtng two spmoiT referenct: books from the popular series to benefit Comic Relief
Proceeds from the sale of the books will help the organization
fight poverty and social injumce. The short books - called "Fantastic Beasts And Where to Fmd Them" and "Qmddirch Through
the Ages" - will be released worldwide during a Cornie Relief
fund drive March 16.
The second new volume will be an anthology of Harry Potter\
favorite sport, quidditch.

Man charged in Oscars theft
LOS ANGELES (AP) - · The brother of the man rewarded for
finding dozens bf'stolen Oscar staruettes has been ch:irged 1r1 c'onnection with the theft earlier this year.
John Willie _Harris. 54. was charged Monday wuh re ce1v1ng &lt;tolen
property and being an accessory after the fact to grand theft.
Harris was arrested last week and released Saturday on his own
recognizance. His arraignment is scheduled for Nov. 8.
Harris' brother, Willie Fulgear, 61, received a $50,000 reward and
tickets to the Academy Award&lt; show i'1 March after he found 52 of
the 55 missing Oscar&lt; while rummaging through a trash bin.
Police refused to say if Fulgear was a suspect in the Oscars theft.
"The investigation is still ongoing, and we arc looking into everyone involved;' said Officer Trevion Stokes, a spokesman for the Lm
Angeles Police Department.
Fulgear demed any mvolvement, saymg he passed a lie-detector
test before he was given the reward.
"You guys are calling and jokinglike I'm some sort of dununy.
But I'm not a dummy," he told reporters uut,lde lm apartment." [
had nothing to do with 1t. I don't know how the trophies got there.''

WASHINGTON (AP) - George W. Bush
has crept slighrly ahead of AI Gore in some
polls, appuenrly because voters consider htm
more trustworthy than the v1ce president.
An NBC-Wall Street Jourrul pall released
Monday had Bush ahead 48 perc.,n! to 42
percent among likdy voten, with a 4-pomt
error mugin. An ABC-Washington Post poll
had Bush at 48 l"'rcent and Gore at 44 percent With a 3-point error margin.
The Texas governor has been faring w.:U in
other recent polls. A CNN-Time poll releasrd
over the weekend also showed Bush up slightly, 48 percent to 43 percent, and a Voter.com
Banleground poll had Bush up 43 percent to
39 percent with a 3-point error margin. Several other surveys have shown rhe two candidates within the error margins.
Bush has gained ground in the race for 270
electoral votes: Heading into the fint debate,

Go~ rwrowly led Bush, according to arulyus
of state polls :and mrerviews with consultant&gt;
in both parties. Now, Bush holds a slight lead
afi:er states that once leaned towud Go~. such
u Pennsylvania and Tennaser, became tossups
after the first debate on Oct. 3.
Democrat Gore continues to hold the
advantage on top issues like the economy,
Social Securiry, foreign policy and education.
He also has a big advantage in having the
Lcnowledge and experience to handle the
presidency.
·
Republican Bush scores highest on trust.
Almost half in the NBC-WSJ poll, 45 percent, said he was mo~ honest and stnightforword than Gore, 29 percent. In the ABCWashington Post poll, 53 percent said Bush ·
was honest, while 49 percent said that of
Gore. Both had lost ground on honesty in that
poll,ho~r.

Bush also had the advantage on serting the
proper mor.al tone for the country, 39 percent
ro 29 percent, and bemg trustworthy enough
to nuke the right decisions, 43 percent to 32
percent.
Bush also scored better on leadership qualities, 41 pertent to )5 percent, and being more
likable, 44 perc t-nt to 30 percmt, in the NBCWSJ poll of 736 likely voters taken Oct. 1315. In the ABC-Washington Post poll of
I ,1 03 likely voters, Bush was l;een as having a
more appealing personality, being more trustworthy and more likely to provide a fresh

start.
Gore ran into trouble on the trust question
after the first debate, when some of his comments rumed out to be exaggerated. He apologized for £!te statements during the second
debate last Wednesday and promised ro be
mo~ careful.

Kentuckians try to conserve Attorneys General discuss
Firestone tire options
water in wake of release
INEZ, Ky. (AP) -A huge spill
of gooey coal sludge that has
seeped into eastern Kentucky
• streams forced officials to declare a
state of emergency Monday. Car
washes and schools were closed in
an attempt to ~ve whatever _Flean·
water remained as the black water
reached the Ohio River.
About 200 million gallons . of
coal waste tl1e consistency of wet
cement flowed into streams last
Wednesday after a retention pond
b'&gt;ve way at a coal-preparation
plant on a mountaintop near Inez.
Gov. Paul Patron declared a state
of emergency Monday in a large
portion of northeastern Kentucky.
saying water shortages were affecting drinking water supplies, basic ·
sanitation and fire protection .
The leading edge of the spill
entered the Big S~ndy River and
black water had reached the Ohio
Riv,er, forcing the cities of Inez,
Louisa and Kermit, W.Va., to close
their water intakes and rely on
existing supplies:

"We're going to have to find an
alternative water source," said
Martin County Deputy JudgeExecutive Gory Lafferty. "That's
our big concern right now. We're
not going to allow our . people to
be without water.".
Classes in Marrin Counry's
schools were canceled until
another source of water could be
fonnd .
School superintendent Bill
Slone said regulators had been
unable to estimate how long the
water crisis might last.
"We need help, or we could be
looking at four to five weeks
without dasses," he said.
The leak occurred at a plant
owned by the Martin County
Coal Corp., · which had crews
working around the clock dredging the ooze from streams.
The state has ordered the company, a subsidiary of A. T. Massey
Coal Inc., to replace fish and other
aquatic life killed and to rebuild
roads and bridges it ripped away.

agreed to provide customers with
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) free
replacements for the tires rhe
Bridgestone/Firestone Inc. wiD
no longer require consumers to NHTSA IS in\'estigating. Howevwaiw the right to sue .when they er, it has not l'&gt;.&lt;ued a recall for
sttk replacements for tires named · those tires, company spokesin the company's recall and a. woman Anitra Budd said MonconsUJBerad~ry.
day.
Budd said claims from attorThe company also has agreed
not to enforce the waivers already neys general in New York and
signed by an estimated 2 million Connecticut that the recall had
customers, attorneys general for been expanded were W~Qng.
Bridgesrone/Fi.;,.tone recently
several stares said Monday in issuing public reminders about the sent letters to the states' attorneys
general explaining how the tire
recall.
Pressured by federal investiga- replacements were being hantors, Nashville-based Bridge- dled. Many then alerted constone/Firesrone agreed in August sumers in their states to the
to recall 6.5 millionATX,ATX II options and urged them to
and Wilderness AT tires under replace rhe tires quickly.
investigation in more than 100
Consumers with tires included
U.S. deaths.
in the recall who go to a FireAn additional 1.4 million stone competitor can be reinlBridgestone/Firestone tires are bursed up to SIOO per tire, and
under investigation and were those with tires on the NHTSA
named in a consumer advisory advisory can receive up to S140
from the National Highway Traf- per tire. Some tires included in
the advisory are more expensive
fic SafetY, Administration.
Bridgesrone/Fire&lt;tone
has models used for off-mad vehicles.

Chevron buying Texaco in $34 million blockbuster·
region's refinery capacity.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) . "There are going to be some
Chevron Corp. is buying Texaco
Inc. in a $34 billion deal that is considerable challenges to getting
likely to run into tougher-than- this deal done," said oil industry
usua] antitrust resistance because analyst Tyler Dann of Bane of
America Securities in Houston.
of high gas prices lately.
The deal, announced Monday, "They need to take a pre-emptive
would create the world 's fourth- strike and sell assets to satisfy regulators. as soon as possible or it
largest oil company.
Analysts expect ChevronTexaco could turn into a real polirical
Corp. to win regulatory approval football."
The combined company will
in six months to a year, but only
after it sells several refineries and also cur about 7 percent of its
hundreds of gas stations, primarily . Work force - about 4,000 workin the West and the South.
Without divestitures, ChevronTexaco would control about 36
percent of the West C&amp;ast retail
market, according to the Lundberg Survey, and one-third of the

ers -

ro help it save an estimated
$1.2 billion annually.
In size, Chevron, based in San
F..ncisco, and Texaco, based in
White Plains, N.Y., will still lag .
behind Exxon Mobil Corp.,
Royal Dutch/Shell Group and BP
An1oco PLC - industry powerhouses also formed by recent
· mergers.
But the rules, of the game have
changed dramatically sirce the
first wave of industry deals in
1998, when oil pnces were

declining to their lowest levels in
a generanon .
Through most of this year, oil
prices have been climbing steadily, driving gas prices to record
highs in sume parts of the country
and increasing pressure ro get
things under control.
"The pressure is building on oil
companies. This deal is going to
get a lot of scrunny," said Stephen
Smith, an analyst with Dain
Rauscher Wessels in Houston.

SATURDAY, OCT. 21 • 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M. •
LYNE CENTER, UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE

Durin!) this course,
you will learn about:

setting financial and investment goals. This class also
will prov ide a summary of the mos1 common
investments used by individuals in reaching their
objectives.
Classes meet one night per week.

Keeping Up With Inflation
Tax-free Investments
IRAs and Business Retirement Plans
Tax Deferred Annuities
Portfolio Asset Allocation
Common Stocks
Certificates of Deposit
Increasing Investment Income
MutUal Funds
Insured Corporate Bonds
Setting Realistic Financial Goals
The Cost of Procrastination

DATES:
TIME
PLACE:

October 19, 26 and November 2, 9, 2000
6 00 p.m. · 8:00p.m.
Universi ty of Rio Grande Meigs County Center
ISO Mill Street, Middleport , Ohio
Call the University of Rio Grande at 992-3383
or 1-888-3 74-6954 to reserve a seat.
Seating is on a first-come, first-served basis.
\&gt;laterial Fcc $15.00.

Elizabeth A. Schaad
347

4th Street
'Marietta, OH 45750
(740) 374-6950

SCHEDULED TO APPEAR:
Three Chord Charlie
Author Unknown
The Earthtones
The Disasters
The Vacants
Flltheology
Shindig _
69 Fingers
Human .Racist
TDH
Donnie Boggs

www.edwardjones.com
\~ember ~I PC

Planning for College Costs
Retirement Planning

ALL·DAY ADMISSION: $5 or 1 NEW BOOK
FOR INFORMATION, CALL 446·2342

Edward jones

. HOSTED BY:
Four Funny Guys and
Matt

Page 81
Tuesday, October 17, 2000

HIGHLIGHTS
~----Mouming to miss
entire season

MIAMI (AP) A common
but serious kidney ailment will
keep five- time All-Star Aloruo
Monrning sidelined for the entire
season. depriving the Miami Heat
of their biggest star and the key to
their quest for an NBA title.
Doctors said that the iUness, .
first sponed just after Mourning
helped the U.S. team to the basketball gold medal earlier tl1is
month, was focal glomerulosclerosis , which leads to kidney failure in about half the cases.
They said there were no immediate plans for a kidney transplant
or dialysis. Mourning's condition
was di'icovered during a routine
physical two weeks ago.
Mqurning finished third in vot- .
ing for t~e NBA's Most Valuable
Pl ayer last season, when he averaged 21. i points, 9.5 rebound&lt;
and 3.7 blocks per game. He has
missed only seven games the past
two seasons.

U.S. Olympians
electecf to track
hall of fame
I NDIANAI'OLIS (AP)
Olympic gold medalists Chandra
Cheeseborough
and
Arnie
Robin so n were an1ong four athletes elected to the National
Track and Field Hall of Fame.
Joining them were two other
Olympians - Bill Dellin~er and.
Maren Seidler.
Cheeseborough was a metnber
of Olympic teams in 197n, 1980
and 1984. At the 198-1 Los Angeles Games, she won !(Old medals
in the 4110-meter and I .(&gt;00mrter re!J.ys and got a sih•er
medal in the individual 400.
Robinson won the Olympic long
JUlllp in 1976, four years after
having won the bronze med al.

N. Illinois, Toledo
&amp; Miami players
take honors

new transfer rule

(

•
(f

Amazin'
Mets win
NL crown

ThEsDAY'S

OHSAA passes

G~LLI~

The Daily Sentinel

More sports, Page 86

CLEVELAND (AI') - Northen' Illinois running back Thomas
Hammock, Tc)ledo dt:ft.·ns!ve end
DeJuan Goulde and Miap1i
punter and kicker Kent McCullou~h were selected Monday as
the Mid-Americ.:an Conference
players of the week .
Hammock ti ed a MAC: record
by rushing for five TDs in the
Huskies 52-35 win over Akron.
Hanuno ck fini sh ed the game
with 174 yards on .12 carries.
Goulde had. three sacks ami
returned a fumble 17 yards for a
tou chdown a&lt; the Rockets sl1ut
out Marshall 42-0. The H erd had
not been shut out since a 14-0
loss to UT-Chattanooga in I 'IMY .
McCullough ave.,ged 47.1 .
yards per punt and put three
punts inside the Bowling Green
20-yard line in Miami's 24-10
victory ovt:!r the Falcons ..

Aday of peace, low and ... litflrGC'/
A 4 il•eek course is being offered to assist individuals in

Inside:

COLUMBUS (AP) High
school studellts who tramfer after
they begin the ninth grad e cannot play sports at their new
schoo l for one year, the Oh io
High School Athktic Association
·said Monday.
·
The OHSAA's member schools
approved the bylaw change to the
transfer rule in a vote taken this
month.
' The new rule says transferring
students will be ineligible for athletics for one year unless they
meet one of three exceptions:
A proposal that would have
made foreign exchange students
ineligible for OHSAA sponsored
tournaments was not approved.
The bylaw changes take effect
Aug. I, the OHSAA said.

NEW YOKK (AP) - The
Met'ii' clinchmg parry \Urted early
.md could stretch all the way to
the Bronx as New York prepare&gt;
for irs wildest ba,eball \Seck. 111 '·
yean.
Mike H .unpton p1t&lt;:hed a
three-hitter MondJy night and
the Met\ \t,llllPcd tiH:ir ticlct into
.1 po~ r;;1hl t' Subw.l} ~l'rll'\ by be.uing th e St ·Louis Cardinal; 7-11
and winmng the N L chJmpl on\hip \(TIL';., -t-J.
All rh.1t\ ldr t(lf New Yor~'s
drc.tm World Seric-. I\ for thL· Vankce'i to clo\e out tlu: Scattk
Mariners in tlw ALC:S. T he YJIIkees le.1d th e sc·m·s .'1-2 with
( ;,l me (, ·1Ut."•.,d,ly mght.
· .. I'm ruorin~ fi,r the Yankt.'t.'\, to
~~ p.:rfc-t·tly lwnt.''&gt;L.. \;Ud ML't\
fir st b .l\L'lll,lll Todd Zeik. \\'ho
broke dH.' g.ullt: upl' II "ith ,1
three-run dou bl e 111 thl' fourth

inning-: " I'd lo\\.' ro

St'rie~. Wt· h.wl:'

WE ARE THE CHAMPIONS - The Meigs volleyball team
captured the Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division championship with its win over Nelsonville-York and Ale~ander's
loss to Belpre last week. The team features seniors Shan -

•

unfini!oih~.&lt;l

bu,ine'&gt;\ with tht· Y.n~~t-e":·
Nt'\\' Ynrk won H~ f~H!rr h N I

non Price and Marjorie Bratton, junior Corrie Hoover,
sophom'ores Mindy Chancey. Kayte Davis and Katie Jef·
fers, and freshmen Jaynee Davis and Nikki Butcher. (Dave
Harris photo)
'

penn~u1t

,1nd

tir'it

11JH(l.

" ill l'L'

JOining th ~..· l9tJ7 Hond.l rvl.nltn ..
a-. the only "1ld t.1rd t L',Illl" lo
make thl' World ~l'rlL'\. llunprcm
won the MVP by pircl1ing I(,

•

e1gs Wins
BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

1-)ubw.tv

\i..'L' .1

\01111.:'

o;ron.._·lc"'

.nHl

int11n g-.

\\'llllltllg

game".
"The tt'.llll tll'L'dcd .1 b1~ g.une.. "
Hampton -.aid. ''\Xk'rc dn'ie. \X/l''rt·
four \\'in~,\\\',\)' ti·o111 ti llfilling rl1.l!
t~vo

The Marauders (15-2, TVC
Ohio 14-1) lwl'e won six
TVC Ohio titles uttder tl1e
direction of llead coacl1 Rick
Ash, who took OIJer tlu
program itt 1988

Jaynee Davis and Nikki Butcher fill out the·
TO'\ter.

ROCK SPRINGS - With its victory
over Nelsonville-York and Alexander's loss
to Belpre last week, the Meigs High School
volleyball ream claimed the Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division championship.
The Marauders (15-2, TVC Ohio 14-1)
defeat~d the Buckeyes 15-6 and 15-3 last
· Tuesda)" to capture to ensure themselv~s at September 26.
This year's TVC title is the oixth for 'the
least a share of the .title, then got some help
from Belpre, which defeated Alexander in Marauders under head coach Rick Ash. A&lt;h
three b"'mes to hand the Spartans their third · has been the top man at Mc·igs since· l'!HH .
Meigs has reached the pinnacle this se,\Son ·
defeat in league play.
Many TVC volleyball observers believed with a squad that features just two se-niors in
this week's match between Meigs and co-captains Sh.nmun Price and Marjorit·
Alexander would be for the league champi- Ilratton .
The rest of the team . which lmt six
onship.
The two sides will meet Thurssday at seniors fmm the 'YSJ .. yuad, is young. wilh
one junior, three sophomores .a nd t\'~io fi·~lih­
Meigs.
The 2000 season has be&lt;·n a bre:&gt;kout men.
Corrie Hoover is the lone junior. Mindy
campaign for the Marauders.
Meigs opened the seaso n with a 10-match Chancey, Kaytc Davis and Katie Jcflcrs make
winning streak before f.1lling to Miller on up the sophomore- group, while fn.:•"hnu. •n

Cuna~\ ...

Tlw Met\ .d-.o 1..'.1rncd f(nJr d.J\''i
ofr before beginning the \X.'nrld

Ash s:1id that every player has played .1 key
roiL· in rht:• Marauders' o;;uccess this year, wirh
athktes stepp ing up in dilfcrc·nt situations.

Snil'&lt;; on S.Jturd.\\'. t' ltlH:r .1 tr.lltl
r itk a\\,1\ ,lt Y.m1...LT Sr._al!um or
.tcrov.. rhc colunn·· m \c.mlc.
·· 1 hnpe tht• Y.mkt'L'" \\"111 lll

~1cibrs

will honor l'rict' and 13rarron
Thunday prior to the varsity match ag:.1inst
Alc.::xanJer. The junior v;usity match b(~gin "&gt;
at S:SS. p.m.

'&gt;l'\'t'Tl sn till:)• burn l.:.l I )uqut..·
(1-lern.1nde7) .md (Andy) l'et
tittt:.'' M~...·h ~l.lltL'I AI l t•itL' l ...lid.
Th e g;mlt' gor tco,n· ;H rht• end
\\'lll'n n.~, ·l'Vl'l't'' hltJ.lY \',tyt(lll n t
tht· !\1cr" in thl· hl· l1n l't w1th .1 \
2 pitt h ~' Hh t\\o O ll t\ 11 1 llu:
cighrh 11111111g. l'.n ron. hkcdJn.g
m·t·r h1" lett t'yL·, dur!-!nl thl·
mound .111d the du~m1t" .n11.l
bullpt'll\ l'!llptit•d .1~ po!ltl' til tt ot
gc.Jr lmcd rlw ticld.

The· Mar.ltlders play host to R ive r Valley
.u1d ~uuth1..T!l this l'Venmg. Match tlllll' j, ~l't,
fm 5:30 p.m. :lf Me1h" High_ School.
Me-igs Will play j.Kkson Saturda'y in the
II "ecrional tourn&lt;lment :n the
University of Rio Grande. Match ti111e is I
p.m.
Divi~;1on

The othe·r half of the se·c tional bracke-t
ti: .Jtures rivals G.1llia Academy and Riwr ·
Valley squaring ulf ,Jt 2 p.m . at Rio Cramk

''Thl'I'L'\ 01JI~

Tlw winners of the two early m atc lws will
pl.1y f(n the right to move on to di,trin plJy
at .Llll p.n1 Saturday.

k ll 0\\''-

l'VtT

OIIC fllT~Oll

rilL'

th.tt

b tll

Ill tl' 11 t.

Please see N LCS; Page 86

Bronx Bombers hope to lock up ALCS title tonight
NEW YORK (A P) A kid from
Brooklyn want&lt; to keep the Bronx
Bombers from meeting the team from
Queens in a Subway SerieS.
John Halama, the Seattle Mariners
pitcher who hails from Bay R1dge, has
been in New York 'l nce Saturday, home
tor his sister's wedding.
On Tuesday night }w pitch,·s against
Orlando Hnnam.lez, trying: to force a seventh game ab&gt;ainst the New York Yankees
ii1 the AL championship series.
" I had to be he re, but my heart was in
Seattle," Halama said Monday bef()re the

Mets tlnishs·d otT the St. Loui&lt; C:ardin.1ls to
win the NL ps·nnant.
Harbara Hal.u ua got nlarricd Si.lturday.
so her brother took :1 redeye fiight .1 trer
Game .'\ Friday night. lie cou ldn't watch
Gi.lmt; 4 btxau~c of the 'n;dding.
"So1ncont: · had a Walk man ,111d kept me
updatl'd , inn il1 g by inni11~, hatter .11~d
everything:,'' l-labm ~l .;:l.id.
He fdt h ~ had to mi~!'l thl· two g-.tllll''l .Jt
Sati:co Field. !Jlood over baucrym.1tes. H1s
sister was in the '\t3tH.I;; at Sht'a Stadiumalong with 69 other f.1111ily and fric·nds
two years ago when he made lii" tlr'\t

11ujor k.1guc o,tart in New York.
" My ~i"'tn docm't pl.w on gl'tttng NJ ,\rlll'd ,lg.u n.'' hL· ~._tid.
The llrooklynite, acquired by Se.lltk
fron1 llow:.ton in the R :mdy Jn lll hOil
tr.llk, kept to hi~ normal throv./ing rou tllll'. going nut to ~l nty park to to~'\ .t h.11l
with his brot!m·. Other than that. he kept
,1 low prntlk. not \\';mting · to gt·t into the
(tc~..·.., o! 'Y.111 kcl'\'

t:ms in

B:.~y R.iJ~~..· .

" I d1dn 't w,tlk .mnmd the nt·ighhorhood ,'' he ,,11d.
I I.Ji.Jrn .1, .1 2H-w.1r-old lcft - h:~mler.
bl.mkl'll th e Y,mkcc-.. t()r ;;ix inning.,, ·k.w-

ing \\irh

.1

1-fl

hut \t·.lrtk\ hullpcn
' - 1 hh-.. 111 (,Jillt'.::
k.1tl.

got bl.1~t·cd 111.1
I krtLi ndcz ,,.mind up )!;Cttlng the \\111.
,Ji]D\\lllg ~)Ill'

11l111!1g\.

Ik

1\

~!."\ \11t~ lll L'Jg \ ll

.Hid

l"llll

7-1

Hh

j \\

1.~~

.1

I RA

Ill .I

h,\\ he~ \llllL' 1111.11\'
r\un hh dl'kCth)ll tiu111 C:ulu

pO'ilO,L',\&gt;_.UlJ (,I I'L'l'l' ~h.11

~tOrtl'd

thrt·c ~\·,1r" .1gu.
1-ft.'\ fil L' l1Ll11

111111Jn11 '11\H\Oih.
Wor~..h. lH'\\'L'\'tT. m •t'.tri. l'
'' \ .d\u\·, kL·l l,l\'' •llrt·." hv .,,lid "-lun-1.1)
(lf. ,1

ntght. ··v.. h.ll 1· d

h.J,-,.

't

1"

k.n ··

Please see AL.:S, Page 86

NFL

Herd and Kent
George, Titans run wild on Jags
in same boat

NASHVILLE. Tenn. (A P) The Tennessee Titans don't -lose
at home, and latel y they just
don't !me to the Jacbo nvillr
Jagu ars.
Eddie George r.1n for 1n5
yards and a tuud1down and
Steve McNair threw for two
TIJ&lt; as the Titan&lt; 'beat the
Jaguars 27-13 Monday night tor
their tlfth straight victory over
their AFC Central Division
rivals .
The Titans (5-1). who rook a
half-game lead over the Baltimore Ravem 111 the AFC Central, now have won five straight
since losing their sea!i011 opener
to Buflalo. They also improved
their NFL record of most victories at a new 'itaJium to I 1-0
since moving to Ad elphia Coliscum.

'

Heismar~

troplty-wimrer
Eddie George ru.1lred for
165 yards as Temresue
defeated Jacksoul'illc
27-13 i11 Naslll'ille

Jacksonville (2-5) wanted to
end a three-game losing skid, but
tht: Jaguars never g:tJt a ch.lllcc to
get tlu~ir otTense going agaimt
the Titans, who sacked Marl{
Brunell five times and recovered
two fumbles while rolling up
407 yards on o'tTeme.
"We knew we wert' goi11g ro
make them play our style of
football," sml tight end Frank
Wycheck, who caught a TD pa&lt;s
while on
h1s b.JLk 111I the llrst
.
quarter.
"St_eve's on, Edelic-\ rolhng. the

ofleu~J\'t'

line '' pL1ying ~rt'.lt,

and the defc-me " rea lly pl.lYIIIl';
wt.:ll. It 's .1 pertl·ct t(Jn nul.i for U\
to win - n1n the h,tll. comroi
tlu: dock ,m d let ou r dct~·nw do
their t hin g."
The Tit,llh tnund thL•msci\'L'..;
Jdkct in g t.dk ot' returnmg to

the, ~upe1' Bowl ,Jttn the· ~-111\C,
ami co,H.:h jdl' ~'J\ htT \did 1t\ \\'&lt;\)'
too e.1rly ro ..,t.lrt thmku1g thl'y
cue unbt'.lt.lble . For the J.igU;lT'\,
they now &lt;m..• mired in ,1 f(Hlrg.mu.' lo..;ing ~kid, the \\Or\t ~itKL'
(hetr lll.lU gur;ll \L'd\011.
','It hun~ ." Jag-u.lr\ rccl'l\'l'r
Koc1W1 MeC.mkll s.nd. " I know
w~ .trc ,l hl'tter k.lm tl1.111 thi~.
Some \\,1). 'omchow· \\l'\c ~ot
to nghr thl\ \lup. I doJJ't ~JJm\ .'.
Thl' j.1gu.1r~ nuy hl' tr\'11lg roo
Please see Titans. Page B&amp;

HUNTINC )'(lN . WV.1. (t\1' 1 .lll"t th111J..

-

M.lr"ihall coach Bob

l'niL'tr

i.,n 't t!oin~ to g-t·~ llHil h "Ylllp.lt\1\·ti·u m Kent ~r.ttc\ 1)l',lll 1\·c.,
fvLII:"i!l.lll,
the
tiHl'l'-tlllll'
ddl:nding Mid-Amcrli.·,Jil ('on
fcrenll' du111p1on. h,l, .dn·.1d~
h1s~ four g.1mcs thi' "l'.l'. nn. the
&lt;.;;m1e ·numbc1 it Jn,r th t.· \.1.,t ti.n1r
J'l'gular ~l'•l~tlll'\ coJnhiiil'd.
'
Pee'\ is J-2(1 in·fli" third 'll'.h&lt;lll
· ,\t Kt..:nt State. i11 cludm~ . th1'
ye.u.-s 1-(&gt; mark .
l'hc teams mn·t S,nunl.~,. 111
H.uminhrron
"If you guy' don't th1nk th1" 1"
.1 good J\l\,1r'\l1.1ll tc.lt11 , ,·ou'rl·
no~ \\,Jttluug till· ...mw lil;n f'lli
w,urh111~."

Pn·\ \,lid Mnnd.1\.
" The y pbyc-d .1 t&lt;•ugh sc hcduk
.tt th( bt•g-iiHl)llg of the "l'.t.,on I

r

1hl'\

trn111

,m·.t\'

!~·" pl.t\·.,
hkl· tht.·\ \L

'n·

.1

lw1n~

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Please see MU, Page 86

�Page B 2 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

-ucana or !mpiOollng o1
........ 1:M, 8ttcllon 12.112,

No 5oWD 11
dtllnollod
upon
tho
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTV
of
. _ In Mllgt County, Ohio Doponmant
OliO
~
rta~Ht-wov
n to nx 1111 vo1u1 or 111c1 plan MEG 124-1f.S2. and
CASE NO OOCVoG1
JUDGE FRED W CROWII
pnlpllty oought to bl rocorded In Enwlopo 1S
Gordon Proctor Dlroctor
olh . _ . . ol 1M
oppror,rlolad
Ia moro
Ohio Ooporlmant ol
Troneportotton PlolntiH v. opocll colly doocribod oo Roconlor'l OHico llolga
County, Ohio.
Unknown
Halra
ft lo undlrotood lhll Olld
'Tl'onthroll
Aollgno. SEE DESCRIPTION(&amp;) OF
porcol
o f - contllnt 0 051
EXICUIOfl Admlnlotroloro PROPEA1Y BET FORTH ON
11101'11
or lola, lnciuoM
and Dtvloaoo of Clorlon "EXHIBIT 1
AlTACHED of tho prooent
roed which
Bonedlct, Otcoooed and all HERETO:
occuplll
or
poroona clolmlng by
!XHIBIT 1"
through or under them at
PAACI!L
Tho- doocrlbtd . . . .
oL Dtol
5-WO
not
a part of ony currenllyLEGAL NOTICE FOR
MEG-124-12.!12
oatlgnod Audllor'a porco!
PUBUCAT10N PURSUANT TO
ALL RIGHT TITLE ANO
R.C 103.07 (1Wo C2) lna.uont] INTEREST IN FEE SIMPLE number
ThlaPorcel-- upon
Tho Unknown Holre IN THE FOLLOWING
• iLUIVIy of
-124 for
Traneferaee
A.ulg~-. DESCRIBED PROPERTY
tho
Ohio
Dtpartmont
ol
EMeoutore Admlnllbatcn. WITHOUT LIMITATION OF 'Tl'anoportollon In 1999 by
lnd DIVIHII of ClarloH EXISTING ACC~SS fliGHTS
Pellla oriel Strout.
SIIUIIed In tho Vlllego of
Bonedlct, o-aoec~ ond all
Miming by, through, Rullond County ol Molgt Inc., uriclor h dlrocUon of C
F-.111, P.S No 7111
or u.- thorn Will 111co no11co a- of Ohio port of FrocUon Wlllllrn
Prior lnatrumontRaleo ....
No
7
ol
OrigiNII
Rutlond
lhll by how
Dtood Book ae Pogo 110
dofondonta by Gordon Townahlp, Town tN Rongo Mol go County Rocordlr 1
Dlroctor Ohio 14W of Tho Ohio Company'o Ofllct.
Dlpanmont ofl'rlnapot1allon Purchlot oriel bounded oriel
OWner tor hlmltH and hlo
who lnlllluled CIH No QOo doocrlbed .. followl:
helrl
executor•
Baing I pon&gt;OI of lind lyl"ll admlnlotrotoro ouCCHOCra
cv.o81 now pondlng In 1111
Common PIMa CDut1 of Mtlgl on the left oldt of tho and otalgna rnorvot all
County Ohio w~lch 11 an conterllno o1 1 ourvoy modi oxllllng rtgllto otlngi'HI oriel
octlon to opproprlllt cortlln lor tho Dopartmant of ogroao to ond from ony
property lor hlghwoy Tranoplrallon and bolng mlduol.,.
locolld wHhln tho boundary
pu~ namely h moklng

loi111E COMioiON PL!AS

~

.......

611 Penonol

-

RENTALS

Yard Sella and Wanted

•

To Do Ado
lluot Bo Pold In Advonco
TRIBUNE QEAQUNE,
2 00 p m. till doy blloro
Ill eel Is to run
Sunday &amp; Morieloy odltlon
2 00 p m Friday

0.000-,.,..
s-

SENDNEL DEAQL!NE

Fl-

poo..,,.

1 00 p m tM d•y blfore
1M ad Ia to run
Sunday &amp; Mondoy odll on
1 00 p m Friday

bHn- ..

Bf:GISnR QEAQL!NE,

2 -toyo bll~ 1111 ad lo
toNnby430pm
Sotuntoy &amp; Monday
edition 4 30 Thunoday
"DNdiiMII aubjec:tlo
rhl"fff'
holidays

-lo

2 b

house on

nco n A e

$300 a mon
dep 304 882
2099 o 304 446 23 5 ea e

message

ANNOUNCEMENTS

230
005

polnla ol -

-a.

,_.

....._.
"~
Glvtowoy Loot &amp; Found

Personals

Professional
Services

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
ATTENT ON HOMEOWNERS
D spay Homes Wan ed fo V ny
S d ng Rep acemen W ndow.s
Enc osu es No Paymen Un
200
Paymen s S a ng a
$89 00 pe mon h A C ed
Oua as Ca
800 25 0843

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday October 17 2000
Public Notice

Public Notice

Purou1nt to Civil flulo
12(A)(1) ...ld ptroonl
mantlonld ........... ....
nollol by . _
21 doYII!IItr .............. "'
1M iorvtco by Publlclllon
- I n whloh 10 INIWir or
ottoerwiH dofond ogolnot
Plllnllll'l . . . . .
Tho origin~~ of MlOh or pltlclng dollo !ding
ogoiiiiiPIMIIIII'I pdon nut
bl ftled with ... Clerk "' ...
Cormlon- Court olllltlgl
Counly, Ohio at 100 Elll
S1NII, P.O 111
~ Ohio .mel oriel I
copy of ony MlOh or
othor ~oodlng dolondlng
1[1111111 1hdlll'lllllll!onbl oorved upon Mortc !!. Hlyl,
Eoq
Aoolalanl Allr1trWf
Gonorol ot 37 Iouth High
Btrw1, SuMo 3110 Columbul,

lol 'MI! COMMON PL!AS

"""*

Ohlo4321~132.

A 1111uro lo on1wor or

- . . dollold within llld
211 dlyo will I'IIUit In Plllnllll
purauont to Civil Rult 55
ooklng 1M court to grant 1
ludgmont by c~om~n IQIINII
ony IUCh poroon who IIIII to
- o r olhorwta -..1

--

Oiroctor Ohio Doportmtnl of
Tranlportlllon
(10) 17 &amp;24

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

COUIIT OF MEI08 COUNTY.
OttO
CAll! NO OOCoiGI2

w CI'DN.

nett

98 Fo d Range $4900 97
Fo d Range
Ex ended Cab
$5900 97 Chevv S 0 P ckup
$4700 95 Dodge Dakota Ex end
ed Cab SLT Package Loaded
$4600 95 Fo d Range $3000

88 Fo d 8 once N ce $3900
B&amp;D A.u o Sa es H ghway
No h 7..a}44&amp;-e865

60

TRANSPORTATION

"ffouurt oriel 8ocllon noo.. oriel
to ftx tho VIIUO ol llld

-

Lltld!ng Clwk.-. ......

Colroly
Ohio
tholr
'Jl' In II I f II I
Alllgnl,
Executor• AdrnlrillriiOIS
Holrl triCI OOVI- ond Ill
poi lOIII olllmlng by through
or under thtm 11 ol
Dlf• ildll iblt.
LEGAL NOTICE FOR

PUIIUCATlON PURSUANT TO
RC. 1e3.07 (1Wo ~ - - 1
Tho UnluiCMft O.W.. ot h
1111 proporty ...,_ on Mlln
Slrtot~ - 1 2 4 ) -

11 palMI over 1111 Uttlo
I II 'I Clwk, Rulllnd Mllgo
Counly,
Ohio
tholr
1l' an 1 I or 111
Aalgrio,
Executore AdlnllihlllaiOo-s.
Holro oriel OOVI- end oil
~ cltolmlng by through
or uriclorlhlm, Wlllllkt nollco
lhlt by how
dolondonlo by Gordon
Ploctot
Director Ohio
Dlplrtmlnt of Ttloolij)OIIIIIoo'l
who lnotl1uled can No oo.
~ now pandlng In tho

bHn-"

ploporty

87 Chevy S ve ado 1 2
sho bed 4x4 ex a ms &amp;
pe good cond 304 882 2159

purpooa, nomoly . . ,..,.,
-.ct~ng,or.......,....ol

proptfly oougtot to bl
OordOII Proctor Dlrlctor ~
Ohio
Doportmont
of opproprtotod 11 moro
lnnoporW!on Plllntlff v. opoolflcolly doocrlbld 11
u - 0wn1ro olh'"' BEE DESCRIPTIOH(S) OF
llfOP'II!Y lltulted on lloln
--~Roull124)­ PROPERTY SET FORTH ON
lt palMI over till Utili "EXHIBIT 1" AlTACHEO
JUDQE I'RI!D

Cormlon CDut1"' Mllgo
County Ohio which 11 on
ICIIon to opproprllll oortoln

Tappan H El c ency 90% Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Sys ems F ee 8 Yea Wa an y
Benne s Heat ng &amp; Coo ng
800 872 5967 www orvb com/ben

Public Notice

Public Notice

lor

highway

NOTICE
GUN SHOOT
Forked Run
Sportlman • Club
Beginning Friday
October 20 2000
700PM

HERETO

PARCEL14-WO
MEG-124-12.!12
ALL IIIOHt T1TI.E AND
INTEREST IN FEE SIMPLE IN

THE FOLLOWING
DESCIU8EO PROPERTY

110

Help Wanted

MILLENNI!!M
TELESERV!CES

IS

Pomeroy call cenler

We ore now settong up

ntcrv cw appo ntments
for outbound
teleserv ces post ons
NO EXPER ENCE
NECESSARY

Polen! a! lo earn up !o
$1 5/hr w lh quarlerly
salary rev ews
Fu I and part 1 me
pos 1 ons ava table
3 Sh fls daoly w lh
flex ble schedul ng
Management
Opportunat es
Ava table
Medocal Denial
40 IK Pa d Vacat ons
ava lab e for
full1 me employees
Slart your new
caree w thus

.....Owrw:

wmtCMJr L.IIITA'IlON OF

ElCISTlNO ACCESS AIIIHTS
s - 1n u.. VIllage o1
RUIIeriel County ol Melvo
bll ol Ohio port "'~

holre

lor hlmlol Md . .
oxooutora

~.:::;:::a

--....poRI!
----..--""'No I of OrigiNII Rutloriel
Townohlp Town IN Flongo
14W ol Tho Ohio Con'4*'Y'•
Pun:hae oriel - - oriel

...... llgllll of ........
egrHo to oriel from any

olllndlytng
on--olh_..,.
or a ourvey midi for 1M
Doponmont of Trw t ; i - ·
and being loclt.d within b
polntl ol No
14-WD a dollnolltd upon h
Doportmont
of
~'I rigM.of-woy
pltn MEG 124 12 52 ond
1'9COrded In Envolopo 18
page B o1 h tocordl oflhl
f11ooo,._ a OHico Molgo
Ccunty. Ohio
H lo undiNIOOCI thlt aid
porCII of oontalno 0.3SII

"""'*"

ar- Incl.,....

-Tllla---

-

s p eased to announce
the Grand Open ng of

Public Notice

11101'11

of tho proHnl road which
accuplw 0.3SII- mono ar
I

upon
.,rvoy ol s- R..... 1241ar

tho Ohio Ooportment of
'Tl'onoporto11on In 1999 by
Petito and Strout.
Inc. urielor lhl dii'ICtion of C
William Fouot. 10 ~s No 7789
Prior lno1Nmont R . AIIor on uhiUIIIve MilCh, no
lnotrumont lor the obovo
-oould bllound
In tho Molgt County
Reconltr'o-

Fl.-,.

-·
notThoa part ofdttcrtbtd
any currently
anlgned AudHar o porcol

Purouont to Cl¥11 llull
12(A)(1) oold poraon1
monllonld ltiMM ........

:::-~-:::!' =:~

within which to • - or
othorwlot dolond qo!net
Plllb stiff'• piCIMon.
Tho original "' MlOh or DIHdlng dllerlllfnt
ogolnot f&gt;lolntlff.. pltltlon
......, bllllod with . . aMI"'
. . Common Court of
Mllgo County 01110, II 100
Eul SI c ICI S1NII, P.O. IGil
151 Potnoroy Ohio 48781:

•==

oriel
1 copy
of
onewor
or ather
Ill
d-Ing ogaiNII
poiiiiOo I mil8l blllf'Ved upon
Mlrk E. Hlyl, l!lq., • I •
All&lt;&gt;mly Qonorol

113110Uth

Stroot Sullo 3SO
Columbul. Ohio 432111&gt;4131.
A folluro to on1wor or
olhorwtlt delorld
llld
28 dlyo will riMlH In Plltlullllo
purouont to Civil Rule Ill,
ooklng tho court to gllllll 1
Judgment by dollub IQIIIIII
any ouch poroon who 11111 to
High

"'"'*'

----dolond.
--

Oir..:tor Ohio Dtpao- of
Trio llpDrllllon
(10)17&amp;24

Call 1 800 929 5753
for an appo nlmenl
We look fo va d to
meet ng you

71 0 Autos lor Sale
P easan

$0 DOWN CARS As ~w as $29
mo Po ce mpo nds and epos

MERCHANDISE

pew

510

sess ons C.4mos@ 9 9 ~ o
800
9 300

s

Household
Goods

JET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Aepa ad New &amp; Reou n S ock
Ca Ron E ans eoo 53 9528

FINANCIAL

New&amp; Us&amp;d
nue
New 2 P e e
ng om Su a
$399 Buy Se
ada

PHOTOGRAPHY
Ma S PM og aphy
5 Ma s

w de $499 down on

a now

mon

y

800

me
TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TV SS?
NoFeeU es WeW

Paychecks from hamel
IV,oriA·tv of EASY Jobs

aaa a2 3345

CASH LOANSI
• Bad C edl OK
• Easy Oually ng
• Fasl Serv ce

CHILD CARE FRANCHISE
K.idd e Academy Uun ng Cen tl'l
Train na &amp;: F nan ial ..... II an
S eSee onandCum ul m
60K Liqu d &amp;: 250K Ne Worth

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandtse

1-800.554 3343
Call for a Free Franchise Kit
SERVICES

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

810

Help Wanted

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

34200PS

Th s newspape w no
know ng y ac:cep
advert semen s o ea es a e
whch s
oa ono he
aw Ou eade s a e he eby
n o med ha a dwe ngs
ad en secl n 1'1 1 newspape
aea a abeonanequa
opportun ty baa a

200 PS
$3 00 Pe
00 A 8 !ISS Com
pessonFtt gs Sock
RON EVANS ENTERPR SES
Jackson Oh o eoo 537 9528
CHEAP AS D RT
ON YS 7900
Jac~aon

Co 0

I

ound bt e 41c5

bt e commanct ne wr1p o w ne
cot1 S 8 CJOO uud on y 200
o a S 3 500 Andy S g t 304
937 201&amp;

nven ory St t
Ga aco Ont23!5AceTrac

8 Ace 1i IC

$5 soo Don Oe ay Ca Now
0 he Reduc Ions n Adams
A htna Sc 0 0 And Nob t COIJM
ea All~ Abou Ou Fa
Ceea ceRa11

Ca U&amp; Today Fo FREE M"l
Anthony l.ancl Co l.td

1 800.113 8388
www 1 eland com
S50~

WORK NG FOR

ALL

STEEL

BU LD NG

c u anee 30•36 Was Sa &amp;eo

so

Se

13 990 40•12

se sse

was s • ae 0

so oo was

532 00 Se S 2 900 Na 1 PIJ
Up Btl 0 1 Tom 800 388
83 4

WEEKLY GRAAANTEEO
HE 30 E~N

WEN
FPOM HOME PAAT
ME NO EX PER EN CE FlE.
OW RED
BOO
6 5 6 E

NH T$90 70 PTO HP 4WD
24x?4 pu se command ans we
cuchd a emoes$2950000
NH 30 0 42 PTO HP 4 WD

Fu

own

OWN A COMPUTE A ~
0
WO k $25 0 J7~ pe Mo WO lo, 1'1Q
om Mome Req es FREE de 8 a
www 9 tucceu com

www BtBou

Sa
o
B a nua Today
P ma 5 opp g Ce e Space
A a act A A o dab e Aa e
Sp ng Va "Y P aza Ca 740 446
0 0

o4

cu

a

cond D s

ooo

RPM mea ae 590000
Hess on 540 A Ba e o.4x5 ba es
00011 0 900 00

hou 1 E•c• en ncomt

IUPPO
F 11 com

4 2

cc ne 3 500 00
NH 90 Fo age cnoppe

HOME BASEO BUS NESS PIT o
FIT wok o o o you compu e
w h an 1'1 e na o 1 ompany Sa

y.ou

nd
ans we b aka&amp;

PTO 2 WD 8x2
$400000
NH

G

va ue Bonanza
a a abe

F nanc g

KeeesServ eCe e
092 5 nse D

1!1

NIIW

modeo 3 9ACI oorr B
en Cond

4 60

y Aa
E •

o Ca
740 446
740 446 0432

S

Look ng T.o Buy A Ntw

Home?

Oon Ha e Land Wa Do H y
On y 0 Lo s Le 304 736 729~

ab shed 975 Ca 24 1 (740
446 oe7o
eoo 2e1 0578 Rag
asWaspoo ng

MAKEAL V NQ
ON THE NTERNET
WE LL TEACH YOU
STEP BY STEP

C~AIMS PROCESSOR I

$20 $40/11 polen Ia

P ocesslng cia ms s easyl
I an ng p ovded MUST own PC
CALL NOW

$8900 Ont59ActTIC

REAL ESTATE

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NQ
uncond ona fe me ~Jua an ee
oca a a enctu~ u n htd ea

61 0 Farm Equipment
New 844 N H

wwwktdd,caradem);com

R

8

P

Ad
304 895 38 4

P easan &amp;. R p ey

Stops
Outb eakal
96°• Success Ra1a
Toll F ea 1 877 EVERCLR
nfo www.e•lerc,lr. c&lt;~m

•

�Page B 2 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

-ucana or !mpiOollng o1
........ 1:M, 8ttcllon 12.112,

No 5oWD 11
dtllnollod
upon
tho
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTV
of
. _ In Mllgt County, Ohio Doponmant
OliO
~
rta~Ht-wov
n to nx 1111 vo1u1 or 111c1 plan MEG 124-1f.S2. and
CASE NO OOCVoG1
JUDGE FRED W CROWII
pnlpllty oought to bl rocorded In Enwlopo 1S
Gordon Proctor Dlroctor
olh . _ . . ol 1M
oppror,rlolad
Ia moro
Ohio Ooporlmant ol
Troneportotton PlolntiH v. opocll colly doocribod oo Roconlor'l OHico llolga
County, Ohio.
Unknown
Halra
ft lo undlrotood lhll Olld
'Tl'onthroll
Aollgno. SEE DESCRIPTION(&amp;) OF
porcol
o f - contllnt 0 051
EXICUIOfl Admlnlotroloro PROPEA1Y BET FORTH ON
11101'11
or lola, lnciuoM
and Dtvloaoo of Clorlon "EXHIBIT 1
AlTACHED of tho prooent
roed which
Bonedlct, Otcoooed and all HERETO:
occuplll
or
poroona clolmlng by
!XHIBIT 1"
through or under them at
PAACI!L
Tho- doocrlbtd . . . .
oL Dtol
5-WO
not
a part of ony currenllyLEGAL NOTICE FOR
MEG-124-12.!12
oatlgnod Audllor'a porco!
PUBUCAT10N PURSUANT TO
ALL RIGHT TITLE ANO
R.C 103.07 (1Wo C2) lna.uont] INTEREST IN FEE SIMPLE number
ThlaPorcel-- upon
Tho Unknown Holre IN THE FOLLOWING
• iLUIVIy of
-124 for
Traneferaee
A.ulg~-. DESCRIBED PROPERTY
tho
Ohio
Dtpartmont
ol
EMeoutore Admlnllbatcn. WITHOUT LIMITATION OF 'Tl'anoportollon In 1999 by
lnd DIVIHII of ClarloH EXISTING ACC~SS fliGHTS
Pellla oriel Strout.
SIIUIIed In tho Vlllego of
Bonedlct, o-aoec~ ond all
Miming by, through, Rullond County ol Molgt Inc., uriclor h dlrocUon of C
F-.111, P.S No 7111
or u.- thorn Will 111co no11co a- of Ohio port of FrocUon Wlllllrn
Prior lnatrumontRaleo ....
No
7
ol
OrigiNII
Rutlond
lhll by how
Dtood Book ae Pogo 110
dofondonta by Gordon Townahlp, Town tN Rongo Mol go County Rocordlr 1
Dlroctor Ohio 14W of Tho Ohio Company'o Ofllct.
Dlpanmont ofl'rlnapot1allon Purchlot oriel bounded oriel
OWner tor hlmltH and hlo
who lnlllluled CIH No QOo doocrlbed .. followl:
helrl
executor•
Baing I pon&gt;OI of lind lyl"ll admlnlotrotoro ouCCHOCra
cv.o81 now pondlng In 1111
Common PIMa CDut1 of Mtlgl on the left oldt of tho and otalgna rnorvot all
County Ohio w~lch 11 an conterllno o1 1 ourvoy modi oxllllng rtgllto otlngi'HI oriel
octlon to opproprlllt cortlln lor tho Dopartmant of ogroao to ond from ony
property lor hlghwoy Tranoplrallon and bolng mlduol.,.
locolld wHhln tho boundary
pu~ namely h moklng

loi111E COMioiON PL!AS

~

.......

611 Penonol

-

RENTALS

Yard Sella and Wanted

•

To Do Ado
lluot Bo Pold In Advonco
TRIBUNE QEAQUNE,
2 00 p m. till doy blloro
Ill eel Is to run
Sunday &amp; Morieloy odltlon
2 00 p m Friday

0.000-,.,..
s-

SENDNEL DEAQL!NE

Fl-

poo..,,.

1 00 p m tM d•y blfore
1M ad Ia to run
Sunday &amp; Mondoy odll on
1 00 p m Friday

bHn- ..

Bf:GISnR QEAQL!NE,

2 -toyo bll~ 1111 ad lo
toNnby430pm
Sotuntoy &amp; Monday
edition 4 30 Thunoday
"DNdiiMII aubjec:tlo
rhl"fff'
holidays

-lo

2 b

house on

nco n A e

$300 a mon
dep 304 882
2099 o 304 446 23 5 ea e

message

ANNOUNCEMENTS

230
005

polnla ol -

-a.

,_.

....._.
"~
Glvtowoy Loot &amp; Found

Personals

Professional
Services

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
ATTENT ON HOMEOWNERS
D spay Homes Wan ed fo V ny
S d ng Rep acemen W ndow.s
Enc osu es No Paymen Un
200
Paymen s S a ng a
$89 00 pe mon h A C ed
Oua as Ca
800 25 0843

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday October 17 2000
Public Notice

Public Notice

Purou1nt to Civil flulo
12(A)(1) ...ld ptroonl
mantlonld ........... ....
nollol by . _
21 doYII!IItr .............. "'
1M iorvtco by Publlclllon
- I n whloh 10 INIWir or
ottoerwiH dofond ogolnot
Plllnllll'l . . . . .
Tho origin~~ of MlOh or pltlclng dollo !ding
ogoiiiiiPIMIIIII'I pdon nut
bl ftled with ... Clerk "' ...
Cormlon- Court olllltlgl
Counly, Ohio at 100 Elll
S1NII, P.O 111
~ Ohio .mel oriel I
copy of ony MlOh or
othor ~oodlng dolondlng
1[1111111 1hdlll'lllllll!onbl oorved upon Mortc !!. Hlyl,
Eoq
Aoolalanl Allr1trWf
Gonorol ot 37 Iouth High
Btrw1, SuMo 3110 Columbul,

lol 'MI! COMMON PL!AS

"""*

Ohlo4321~132.

A 1111uro lo on1wor or

- . . dollold within llld
211 dlyo will I'IIUit In Plllnllll
purauont to Civil Rult 55
ooklng 1M court to grant 1
ludgmont by c~om~n IQIINII
ony IUCh poroon who IIIII to
- o r olhorwta -..1

--

Oiroctor Ohio Doportmtnl of
Tranlportlllon
(10) 17 &amp;24

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

COUIIT OF MEI08 COUNTY.
OttO
CAll! NO OOCoiGI2

w CI'DN.

nett

98 Fo d Range $4900 97
Fo d Range
Ex ended Cab
$5900 97 Chevv S 0 P ckup
$4700 95 Dodge Dakota Ex end
ed Cab SLT Package Loaded
$4600 95 Fo d Range $3000

88 Fo d 8 once N ce $3900
B&amp;D A.u o Sa es H ghway
No h 7..a}44&amp;-e865

60

TRANSPORTATION

"ffouurt oriel 8ocllon noo.. oriel
to ftx tho VIIUO ol llld

-

Lltld!ng Clwk.-. ......

Colroly
Ohio
tholr
'Jl' In II I f II I
Alllgnl,
Executor• AdrnlrillriiOIS
Holrl triCI OOVI- ond Ill
poi lOIII olllmlng by through
or under thtm 11 ol
Dlf• ildll iblt.
LEGAL NOTICE FOR

PUIIUCATlON PURSUANT TO
RC. 1e3.07 (1Wo ~ - - 1
Tho UnluiCMft O.W.. ot h
1111 proporty ...,_ on Mlln
Slrtot~ - 1 2 4 ) -

11 palMI over 1111 Uttlo
I II 'I Clwk, Rulllnd Mllgo
Counly,
Ohio
tholr
1l' an 1 I or 111
Aalgrio,
Executore AdlnllihlllaiOo-s.
Holro oriel OOVI- end oil
~ cltolmlng by through
or uriclorlhlm, Wlllllkt nollco
lhlt by how
dolondonlo by Gordon
Ploctot
Director Ohio
Dlplrtmlnt of Ttloolij)OIIIIIoo'l
who lnotl1uled can No oo.
~ now pandlng In tho

bHn-"

ploporty

87 Chevy S ve ado 1 2
sho bed 4x4 ex a ms &amp;
pe good cond 304 882 2159

purpooa, nomoly . . ,..,.,
-.ct~ng,or.......,....ol

proptfly oougtot to bl
OordOII Proctor Dlrlctor ~
Ohio
Doportmont
of opproprtotod 11 moro
lnnoporW!on Plllntlff v. opoolflcolly doocrlbld 11
u - 0wn1ro olh'"' BEE DESCRIPTIOH(S) OF
llfOP'II!Y lltulted on lloln
--~Roull124)­ PROPERTY SET FORTH ON
lt palMI over till Utili "EXHIBIT 1" AlTACHEO
JUDQE I'RI!D

Cormlon CDut1"' Mllgo
County Ohio which 11 on
ICIIon to opproprllll oortoln

Tappan H El c ency 90% Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Sys ems F ee 8 Yea Wa an y
Benne s Heat ng &amp; Coo ng
800 872 5967 www orvb com/ben

Public Notice

Public Notice

lor

highway

NOTICE
GUN SHOOT
Forked Run
Sportlman • Club
Beginning Friday
October 20 2000
700PM

HERETO

PARCEL14-WO
MEG-124-12.!12
ALL IIIOHt T1TI.E AND
INTEREST IN FEE SIMPLE IN

THE FOLLOWING
DESCIU8EO PROPERTY

110

Help Wanted

MILLENNI!!M
TELESERV!CES

IS

Pomeroy call cenler

We ore now settong up

ntcrv cw appo ntments
for outbound
teleserv ces post ons
NO EXPER ENCE
NECESSARY

Polen! a! lo earn up !o
$1 5/hr w lh quarlerly
salary rev ews
Fu I and part 1 me
pos 1 ons ava table
3 Sh fls daoly w lh
flex ble schedul ng
Management
Opportunat es
Ava table
Medocal Denial
40 IK Pa d Vacat ons
ava lab e for
full1 me employees
Slart your new
caree w thus

.....Owrw:

wmtCMJr L.IIITA'IlON OF

ElCISTlNO ACCESS AIIIHTS
s - 1n u.. VIllage o1
RUIIeriel County ol Melvo
bll ol Ohio port "'~

holre

lor hlmlol Md . .
oxooutora

~.:::;:::a

--....poRI!
----..--""'No I of OrigiNII Rutloriel
Townohlp Town IN Flongo
14W ol Tho Ohio Con'4*'Y'•
Pun:hae oriel - - oriel

...... llgllll of ........
egrHo to oriel from any

olllndlytng
on--olh_..,.
or a ourvey midi for 1M
Doponmont of Trw t ; i - ·
and being loclt.d within b
polntl ol No
14-WD a dollnolltd upon h
Doportmont
of
~'I rigM.of-woy
pltn MEG 124 12 52 ond
1'9COrded In Envolopo 18
page B o1 h tocordl oflhl
f11ooo,._ a OHico Molgo
Ccunty. Ohio
H lo undiNIOOCI thlt aid
porCII of oontalno 0.3SII

"""'*"

ar- Incl.,....

-Tllla---

-

s p eased to announce
the Grand Open ng of

Public Notice

11101'11

of tho proHnl road which
accuplw 0.3SII- mono ar
I

upon
.,rvoy ol s- R..... 1241ar

tho Ohio Ooportment of
'Tl'onoporto11on In 1999 by
Petito and Strout.
Inc. urielor lhl dii'ICtion of C
William Fouot. 10 ~s No 7789
Prior lno1Nmont R . AIIor on uhiUIIIve MilCh, no
lnotrumont lor the obovo
-oould bllound
In tho Molgt County
Reconltr'o-

Fl.-,.

-·
notThoa part ofdttcrtbtd
any currently
anlgned AudHar o porcol

Purouont to Cl¥11 llull
12(A)(1) oold poraon1
monllonld ltiMM ........

:::-~-:::!' =:~

within which to • - or
othorwlot dolond qo!net
Plllb stiff'• piCIMon.
Tho original "' MlOh or DIHdlng dllerlllfnt
ogolnot f&gt;lolntlff.. pltltlon
......, bllllod with . . aMI"'
. . Common Court of
Mllgo County 01110, II 100
Eul SI c ICI S1NII, P.O. IGil
151 Potnoroy Ohio 48781:

•==

oriel
1 copy
of
onewor
or ather
Ill
d-Ing ogaiNII
poiiiiOo I mil8l blllf'Ved upon
Mlrk E. Hlyl, l!lq., • I •
All&lt;&gt;mly Qonorol

113110Uth

Stroot Sullo 3SO
Columbul. Ohio 432111&gt;4131.
A folluro to on1wor or
olhorwtlt delorld
llld
28 dlyo will riMlH In Plltlullllo
purouont to Civil Rule Ill,
ooklng tho court to gllllll 1
Judgment by dollub IQIIIIII
any ouch poroon who 11111 to
High

"'"'*'

----dolond.
--

Oir..:tor Ohio Dtpao- of
Trio llpDrllllon
(10)17&amp;24

Call 1 800 929 5753
for an appo nlmenl
We look fo va d to
meet ng you

71 0 Autos lor Sale
P easan

$0 DOWN CARS As ~w as $29
mo Po ce mpo nds and epos

MERCHANDISE

pew

510

sess ons C.4mos@ 9 9 ~ o
800
9 300

s

Household
Goods

JET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Aepa ad New &amp; Reou n S ock
Ca Ron E ans eoo 53 9528

FINANCIAL

New&amp; Us&amp;d
nue
New 2 P e e
ng om Su a
$399 Buy Se
ada

PHOTOGRAPHY
Ma S PM og aphy
5 Ma s

w de $499 down on

a now

mon

y

800

me
TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TV SS?
NoFeeU es WeW

Paychecks from hamel
IV,oriA·tv of EASY Jobs

aaa a2 3345

CASH LOANSI
• Bad C edl OK
• Easy Oually ng
• Fasl Serv ce

CHILD CARE FRANCHISE
K.idd e Academy Uun ng Cen tl'l
Train na &amp;: F nan ial ..... II an
S eSee onandCum ul m
60K Liqu d &amp;: 250K Ne Worth

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandtse

1-800.554 3343
Call for a Free Franchise Kit
SERVICES

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

810

Help Wanted

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

34200PS

Th s newspape w no
know ng y ac:cep
advert semen s o ea es a e
whch s
oa ono he
aw Ou eade s a e he eby
n o med ha a dwe ngs
ad en secl n 1'1 1 newspape
aea a abeonanequa
opportun ty baa a

200 PS
$3 00 Pe
00 A 8 !ISS Com
pessonFtt gs Sock
RON EVANS ENTERPR SES
Jackson Oh o eoo 537 9528
CHEAP AS D RT
ON YS 7900
Jac~aon

Co 0

I

ound bt e 41c5

bt e commanct ne wr1p o w ne
cot1 S 8 CJOO uud on y 200
o a S 3 500 Andy S g t 304
937 201&amp;

nven ory St t
Ga aco Ont23!5AceTrac

8 Ace 1i IC

$5 soo Don Oe ay Ca Now
0 he Reduc Ions n Adams
A htna Sc 0 0 And Nob t COIJM
ea All~ Abou Ou Fa
Ceea ceRa11

Ca U&amp; Today Fo FREE M"l
Anthony l.ancl Co l.td

1 800.113 8388
www 1 eland com
S50~

WORK NG FOR

ALL

STEEL

BU LD NG

c u anee 30•36 Was Sa &amp;eo

so

Se

13 990 40•12

se sse

was s • ae 0

so oo was

532 00 Se S 2 900 Na 1 PIJ
Up Btl 0 1 Tom 800 388
83 4

WEEKLY GRAAANTEEO
HE 30 E~N

WEN
FPOM HOME PAAT
ME NO EX PER EN CE FlE.
OW RED
BOO
6 5 6 E

NH T$90 70 PTO HP 4WD
24x?4 pu se command ans we
cuchd a emoes$2950000
NH 30 0 42 PTO HP 4 WD

Fu

own

OWN A COMPUTE A ~
0
WO k $25 0 J7~ pe Mo WO lo, 1'1Q
om Mome Req es FREE de 8 a
www 9 tucceu com

www BtBou

Sa
o
B a nua Today
P ma 5 opp g Ce e Space
A a act A A o dab e Aa e
Sp ng Va "Y P aza Ca 740 446
0 0

o4

cu

a

cond D s

ooo

RPM mea ae 590000
Hess on 540 A Ba e o.4x5 ba es
00011 0 900 00

hou 1 E•c• en ncomt

IUPPO
F 11 com

4 2

cc ne 3 500 00
NH 90 Fo age cnoppe

HOME BASEO BUS NESS PIT o
FIT wok o o o you compu e
w h an 1'1 e na o 1 ompany Sa

y.ou

nd
ans we b aka&amp;

PTO 2 WD 8x2
$400000
NH

G

va ue Bonanza
a a abe

F nanc g

KeeesServ eCe e
092 5 nse D

1!1

NIIW

modeo 3 9ACI oorr B
en Cond

4 60

y Aa
E •

o Ca
740 446
740 446 0432

S

Look ng T.o Buy A Ntw

Home?

Oon Ha e Land Wa Do H y
On y 0 Lo s Le 304 736 729~

ab shed 975 Ca 24 1 (740
446 oe7o
eoo 2e1 0578 Rag
asWaspoo ng

MAKEAL V NQ
ON THE NTERNET
WE LL TEACH YOU
STEP BY STEP

C~AIMS PROCESSOR I

$20 $40/11 polen Ia

P ocesslng cia ms s easyl
I an ng p ovded MUST own PC
CALL NOW

$8900 Ont59ActTIC

REAL ESTATE

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NQ
uncond ona fe me ~Jua an ee
oca a a enctu~ u n htd ea

61 0 Farm Equipment
New 844 N H

wwwktdd,caradem);com

R

8

P

Ad
304 895 38 4

P easan &amp;. R p ey

Stops
Outb eakal
96°• Success Ra1a
Toll F ea 1 877 EVERCLR
nfo www.e•lerc,lr. c&lt;~m

•

�•

Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesda~October17,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,October17,2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BRIDGE

..........

I

. . . ...,. 1 ..

..... .... ...w,.
111

-

........., .

OfiiCI IT H2·2155

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

Guirjing Hand "~"'"'""'
Preschool
Craft/Bake Sale
Saturday,
November 4, 2000
9:00 am - 4:00 pm
Renting Tables now for
interested crafters.
Please call for more
information @ 367 ·7371

lmmdlmrr

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

J&amp;J

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
(Rovlaed Code, Seetlona
3501.11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
NOTICE Ia hereby glvon

that In purauanca of a

Ruolutlon of the Vlllaga
Council of tha VIllage of
Middleport, Middleport,
Ohio, paaaod on tho 24th
day of July, 2000, thora will
be submitted to a vote of

tho people of sold
aubdlvlelon at a General
ELECTION to be hold In the
VIllage of Middleport, at tho
regular places of voting

thoroln, on tho 7th dey of
Nov.mbM, ~000, tho

mniiDIIllD

UleUrnt Warranty
Local Contractor

Section 5715.19 of the Ohio
Revlaed Code. Thooe
complaints muat ba flied on
forma which will be
furnlahod by the County
Auditor end muat bo Iliad In
tho County Audltor'a Office
on or boforo tho 31at day of
March 2001. All complolnta
flied with the county Auditor
will be hoard by tho Board
of Aovlalon In tho manner
provided by
Section 5715.19 ol tho Ohio
Ravload Code . Nancy
Parker Campbell Meigs
County Auditor
(10) 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23,
24, 25,26

qUestion of levying a tax, In

excess of the ten mill
limitation, tor the benefit 'ot
Middleport Vllage for tho
purpoae of : Current

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates
D. R. Bissell

740-992-1671

30Yrs

7122/fFN

1/tM. ;e~

VOUR

~Qt:I~B~U
CQNt:IECTIQt:l

that In pursuance of a

Resolution or the Village
($0.10) lor each one Council of tho VIllage of
hundred dollars of valuation Syracuse, Syracuse, Ohio,
passed on the 3rd day or
for flvo (5) years ..
Tho Polls for said Auguat 2000, thara will be
Election will open at 6:30 submitted to a vote of the
o'clock A.M. and remain people of aald aubdlvlslon
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M. at a General ELECTION to '
be held . In the Vllloge of
of said day.
By order or the Board or Syracuse, at the regular
Elections ol Meigs County, places of voting therein, on
the 7th day of Novembar
Ohio
2000, the question of
John N. lhle, Chairman
levying a tax, in excess of
Rita D. Smith, Director
the
ton mill limitation, lor
Dated September 6, 2000
the
benefit of VIllage of
(10) 10, 17, ~4, 31 4TC
Syracuse for the purpose
of: Fire Protection.
A replacement of a tax of
Public Notice
1 mill.
At a rate not exceeding 1
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
(one) mills for each one
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION dollar of valuation, which
amounts to Ten cents
(Revised Code, Sections
3501.11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25) ($0.1 0) tor each on a
NOTICE Is hereby given hundred dollars of valuation
that In pursuance · of a lor live (5) years.
Resolution of the Board. of
Tho Polls for said Election
1

LEGAL NOTICE

of a tax of 1 mill
At a rate not exceeding 1
(one) mills for each one

dollar or valuation, which
amounts

to

Ten

cents

($0.10) for each one

·hundred dollars of valuation

for live (5) years.
Tho Polls tor said Election
will open at 6:30 o'cloc~
A.M. and remain open until

7:30 o'clock P.M. of aald
day.
By order of the Board of

Elections of Meigs County,
Ohio
John N. lhla, Chairman

URNPIKE

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
must
declare
their
Reference: 5715.17
candidacy
for
tho
office
of
Ohio Revised Code
Director
of
the
society
by
The Molga County Board
or Revision has completed llllng with the Secretary
Its work of equalization. The Dabble Watson, 42455
tax returns for tax year 2000 Woods Road, Coolville, OH
have been revised 'and the 45723, a petition signed by
open for

public

Inspection In thB office of

the Meigs County Auditor,

Second Floor, Courthouse,
Second Street, Pomeroy,

OH45769.
· Complaints against the
valuadonJ, as established
for tax year 2000 must be
made In accordance with

Ball Logging &amp;

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

· Firewood

"W.elp"

352111 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

10 or mora members of the

~An11

* Free Installation
* Free in Home Estimates
Rutland, Ohio
Mums, Indian
~API~Ies, APPle

Items. Subs,
Sallee. Ice Cream, Amtts
IOio:l!na. Summer Sausaee. Beef JerkY
742-7405

' 10-7 Sat 10·6 Sun- Closed
- ,t M·F

Call for Further Details

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
992-4119

t-800-291-5600

VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
6MILES NORTH OF POMEROY, OHIO AT COUNTY ROAD 18
• No Dealers or Contractors Please WV #023477

Pomeroy Eagles
CIL!b Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH.
Paying $80.00
per 9811)11
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. # 00·50 ',,.,.,

.ALLtEL
.,

Cellular·
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
Stop In And Sec
Steve Riffle
· Sales Representative
Larry Schey

•

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone (740) 593-6671

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDo'WS

All Types of Business
Support Services

-Any Size Double Hung-

[1401 661-3224
1-800-828-0212

DECORATION ...
INSULATION ...

$229.00*
• Free Installation
• Free In Home Eslimales

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.

Call for Further Details

CONCRETE·

svsnms, me.

candidates who have mat

EDUCATION ...

tlouling • Limeslone e
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

DARE II

.FRANK &amp; EARNEST

~

MASONRY

Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured
Brion Morrison/Racine, Ohio

(740) 985-3948

QUftliTY WinDOW
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 Contraclors
Please WVN023477

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

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

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE

•

Meigs County
Fairgrounds
Oct. I, 2000 ·Apr. I, 2001
CALL FOR MORE
lNFORMATION

949-2033

"Take the pain aut
of paintingLet me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m..
leave Message
Aher 6pm· 740-985-4180

A

"'

li-J~~ JlY.i\T~I~

10 Kf.E.P UP WI Tl\

~oMeroor.

...

11'E~ """"''\ N-lOTf\ER C~
WITf\11-1 t.._ f.\IL( Of. '1'0U I

p-

~

:£E I t \OLD YOU \. WI\:) f\1,1/I~G

WOJ5LE: KffPit:lGupt

lf\E. FLO\o.J OfTf'f.
OHlER. TIZNflC.,
Cffl((~l

740-949-2217

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM -'8 PM

:

'

Bill Slack

• Firewood • Light
hauling • Tree &amp; hedge
trimming &amp; removal

The CountrY
Candle ShoP
•

this space for
$25 per
month.

Coolville, OH 45723

74N87.Q383

WANTED
Standing timber large
or small tracks. Top
prices paid also.
Dozer work.
Free Estlmotes
Call T&amp;R Logging
&lt;~fter 8:00pm
740-992-SOSO
(Randy) .
I mo 411 100

t,U,.

Tues·Frl 10·6
Sat. 10·4
·Candle making
supplies
• Wooden crafts
• Baskets
740-992-4559 .

Advertise in

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

.. IC'f' .rf'' l'tit' /;• 10

rcgrdar luwrj ''

. 740-992-2269

Pomero Ohio 45769

LINDA'S
PAINTING

nfTTY MUGtt OF

Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

'

740-985-3831

992·11 01

\

29670 Bashan

''Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 55.25/50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle feed 56.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 56.75/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

992·2753

~'M

6Uf5S YOU 'OU£.0 SAY

: THE BORN LOSER

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

I

PEANUTS
T~AT

WAS A 6REAT

PLA't', MAWE!

9/1100 1 mo pd

mnde In 01·der nt our
locniion

UPTO 70% OFF
• Verlirnl~ • Woo&lt;l

• Minis • Etc

144 Third Ave: Gallipolis

446-4995

I Toll Free 1-888·745·8841

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

Phone-992·2155

DOWN
1 "How•-t
--"
2 Unclothed
3 Trickle
4 "-- Rhythm"
5 small bird
6 Ford flop
7 Needed

Made dove

8 Gordie Howe's t 2 Remainder
19 Pair
org.
9 Show a decline 21 TV hos~
Tom10 River In Franca
22 Forceful
11 Finished

sc:ratchlng

1..-+-+-l----+-+--l

Wednesday. October 18. 2000
In the year ahead, a number of
:s ignificant opportunities could~
'in tlie offing. Get busy developing
'1hem, and don't forget to give
Fredil to those who helped you
~long the way.
r LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 13)
)Jnfortunately, today a collective
¢ndeavor in which you're
lnvolved may not yield the finan·
~ial blessings you anticipated. Its
problems could hamper its output.
Libra, treat yourself to a birthday
gift. Send for y9ur Astro·Graph
predictions for the year ahead by
mailing $2 and SASE to Astra·
l:lraph, c/o this newspaper. P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156. Be sure to
~lute your Zodiac sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
l.:.et your honesty, not your vanity, make the cvuluation as to why
you may be having trouble in a
valued relulionship toduy. The
faull might nol be all one-sided.
SAG!TI'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
21) Any criticnl assignment or
rc~ponsibility you neglect to take
cure of immcdialely toduy will
come back and bile you in the
race hcforc the day is out. h won't

be pretty.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Finding yourself with the
same poor results in a simi lar
social situati on you didn't handle
too well in the past is due 10 your
inability to learn from your
lessons.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Chances are you will be capable
of holding your own in a testy sit·
uation that arises today, but at.
what cost? If it takes nasty treat·
ment to get the upper hand, you' II
be the loser in the end.
PISCES (Feb. 20:March 20)
Be on guard today when involv~d
.m any ~ompelilive
' ..
.
.
situation;
Eith~r you or your opponent will
not be able to gracefully handle
losing that easily and end up making a scene.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Be particularly careful today,
because someqne with whom you
decide to do business may not
operate by your standards. If this
person thinks you're an easy
mark, she or he cou.ld try to
deceive you.
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) A
failure to select companions who
are share your enthusiasm about a

proJeCt cou ld cause a fatal breakdown of all your past efforts. Be
more critical in your choices.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Only if you arc carefully system·
atic about how you operate and
organ ize yourse lf can you effeclively perfonn your work today. If
not, you're likely to have linle to
show for your efforls .
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Choosing a poor social group
today could put you in the company of people who'll make you
feel either unwelcome or uncom·
fo11able Don'! pul yourself in thai
cage.
LEO (July V·Aug. 22) SiiUa·
tions where you utilize lag.ic and·
reality have u chance of being sue·
cessful today. However, in devel·
opments where your ego governs
your actions, setbacks will be the
order of the duy.
VIRGO (Aug. 2.i-Sept. 22)
Those who treat you the wuy you
think you should be treated will be
met with amicability today, but
should you run mto someone
who disagrees with you. you
won't hesitate to come down
hard.

23
24
-25
26

person

Religious
denomination
Small wild OJ!.
Novelist Uris
Sign ot the
future

28 Father

29 Actor
Connery

30 Neutral color
31 Positive
responses
37 Teara into ·
small places
38 Reason for ~
overtime
41 Innocent

_

42 Baby felines •
43 Concerning

·

(2 wds.)
•
44 Leafthrough "
hastily
45 Pouches
47 Highlander
48 - contendere

49 Oriental
potentate
50 Held In
52 Observe
,
54 Veto, slangily..

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

··

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created hom quofafions by famous people past and
·
present. Each lener in the Cipher stanos lor another.

Taday's ciU&lt;J: R equals U

'K

DWKHN

K AJ

Z

SZ

FZTL

U

JGHN

GAN

Z

LKlPN

E

JTN

C Z Y N H L S N L·J . '

CKHLNH,

ONDPHGUGLC
YGPN
PREVIOUS

ZL

JTN

ZEEGPN

ZE

WHNPGONLJ.
"Sometimes tho light at the end of a lunnel is an '

S~LUTION:

oncomtng tratn . -

Football coach Lou Holtz , after a losing season .

':~~:t~~y scrrR4tllA-~'ElfSS WORD
GAME
by CLAY R. ,ot.IAN - - - - - 0 four
Rearrange letters of the
scrambled words
I~IJed

low to form four slrnple words

LAPEMI

TAFTY

I ,I I' I' I
Two m1 le age woman
S 0 YUL
,... wanted to have a make over .
s
-;'One sighed. "Time may heal
. .
::; many th1ngs but it's a terrible
.--------~
ma keup - - -- - - "·

RI
I

o

I I

I

f---,,.,.KRONEB
--rl.::._l,.-:..,.,.::._,...1-1 0

.

6

_

e

_

_

.

_

.

Complete the chuckle quoted "
by fill ing in the mi$Sing words
you develop from sfep No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQU~RES

1

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LnS ANSWEitS
Skmny - Copse· Rusty- Accent- STICKS
A college roommate had a favorile saying that l1e
confused people with It was . "Run il up the flagpole and

see 1f 1t STICKS ..

OCTOBER17I

~irthday

'

'

coercion

'Your

10/41 mo. ll

(Factory Oullet)

57 Feola
58 Obtain by

ITUESDAY

304-273-0036

All vertical Llindo are

Stern's

instrument

attectlon

An English publishing company under the modest title of Five
Aces has been putting out good
books. The latest is •;Fit for a
King," compi led by Sally Brock
and Barry Rigal. It is a collection
of brilliancies. First, you may test
yourself, then read the original
write-up by a well-known player
or journalist.
This deal is one of my all-time
favorites . Look at the NorthSouth hands . You are in three notrump. West leads the diamond
1wo. How would you proceed?
You have only five lop tricks,
so you need the spade fine sse to
win and to collect three heart
tricks . Yet even if East has the
necessary spade king and acethird of hearts, there are enlry
problems .. Suppose, after winning with dummy 's diamond
queen. you lead a hearl to your
king. return to dummy with a club
10 . the ace, and play a second
heart. East can step in with the ace
and return a diamond. With no
dummy entry remaining, you can·not enjoy th~ 13th heart.
Jim Proc10r, one of England's
OCst tournament d.irectors, saw the
solulion. After the diamond queen
and a hean to the king. Proctor led
his diamond king to dummy's ace,
eslabli shing 1he opponents' suit'
But after a second heart, Proctor
couldn't be defea1ed. East won
with the ac~. and 1he defenders
cashed their ihree diamond tricks
before swilching to a club. Howeve r. Proctor won in hand.
unbl ocked the heart queen,
reached the dummy with a club.
cashed the last heart, and took the
spade fin esse.
The book is $21.95 postpaid
from Baron Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call (800) 274-2221 to
order.

Sentinel

6 Month
Membership $1 Co
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, 'NV

BLIND SPOT

paper

56 Isaac

39 Food lists
40 Huge animal
42 Sign ot

To get a current weather
report, check the

IRON CITY GYM

The CRAFTY,

tr•nsparent

Opening lead: • 2

,

HfiCJLIHG and
EXCAVATIHG

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

SHHDE RIUER HG SERUICE

35537 St Rt 7 North

1•888-521-0916

BOBCAT SERVICES

be eligible for the election
as director.
(10) 10, 17, 24 JTC

DON'T YOU

BY PHILLIP ALDER

INC.

53 Revenue
55 Copied, using

sounds
35 Macaw
36 Tawniest

+108 643
J I0

precoutlon

It's all aces

...

BACKHOE SERVICES

the ~lllng requirements will

ZZ yn. Local

~@:,WICK'S . .

740-992-7599

&amp;

As a

(2 wds.)

daughter

34

cookie

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South West North East
I NT
Pass
Pass 2 •
Pass 3 NT · All pass
2•

I THINK I'LL
STEAL ME A
LITTLE KISS

Pomeroy, Ohio

BISSELL BUIL!1ERS
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RlSIDENTl~L
FREii ESTIMATES .

.. Q 9 3

51

Answer to Prwlous PUD._

olo K 8 54

992·6215

· Open Mon·Frl&amp;-6; Sat. 9-4
Sun.Ciolld
Phone 74fl.949-2804
Owner .Jim Plckena ·
Mechanic· Bill Jonea ·
Parts Mnr ·Tamr• Picken•

Size Double Hunl!-

&amp; K 10 8
¥ A 10 2

• A Q7 3
• K Q 7
+ K9

Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG Ill

chainsaws , tillers,
generators, snowblowers,
weedeaters, pick-up and
delivery available on
request.

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Washington Counties.
Your Quality 24-Hour
Childcare Services

.. J 9 4
• J 9 6
• J 7 5 2

South

• • -·od&lt;ltlons &amp; Ro11odsllog
• Now Gioragos
• Elodrkal &amp; l'lomlblng
• Roofloa &amp; Gvtton
• VInyl $!ding &amp;Pallltfllg
• Patio &amp; Pordt Dodls

We servic:e mpwers,

East

West

Featuring two Briggs &amp;
Stratton trolnod
mechanlca

State Route 7,
TUppers Plains
Certified in Meigs,
Athens and

aoclety who are realdenta of
Meigs County, at least 7
d8'9a before the annual
ela~tlon of directors Is held.

Only regularly nominated

+A Q

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

HEAP Voueben accepted for
Meta• a GIIIJJI. CowttiCI

'

Members of the society

are

992·6142 or
ToU·Free 1-877·604· 73

GALLIPOLIS

SMITH'S CONSTROCTION

vota.

valuatiOnf completeCI and

•

Meigs County Agricultural -n.-:..-;;;-.--:-""";~T""T'-:--·--;::,.---;--, f~~------------------, .
society will be held at the l &amp; D Auto Up o stery • Plus, Inc
Secretary's olllcoMonday,
at lhe
fairgrounds,
1'\atland, 0~.10
11
11
November 6, 2ooo. The
Truck seats. ::ar seats, headliners.
polls will be open rrom s:oo
• New Homes
• Remodeling
'
p.m. to 9:00 p.m. on
truck tarps. cc-nvert:ble &amp; vtnyl tops,
.' AU Makes Tractor &amp;
Elecllon Day.
Four Whfteler seats, motorcycle seats,,.
• Garages
• Decks
EqUipment Parts
. Tho election shall be by
Sldl
R fl
ballot. Ballots must be
boat COV&lt;:I·s, carpets, :'!tC.
•
ng
• 00 ng
' Factory Autl•orized
marked the
withname
an to "X"
Mon ~ f'';l 8:30 - 5:00
Ne• d it done, 91\11
' Ul a ca II
opposite
be
c;.,..,. I H Parts
'
counted. The casting or
Over 40 yra experience
FREE ESTIMATES
•
Dealers.
votes
•(740} 742-8888
"vtelf price d OR NIW HOmll
'
proxiesforIs dlrectoro
not to by
be •
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Meigs
County
holding
momberahlp certlflcatoe for
at lesot 15 daya before the
data of the election may

· Public Notice

DwDp Tlvck DeJJ•ery
Kelp aad O.Uia c-Ues
Call 6: lave lleuafe

Ask For Mr. Ford

The annual election or the
Board of Directors for thB"

peb~:~e~~aldentaof

Rita D. Smith, Director
Dated September 6, 2000
(10) 10, 17, 24, 31 4TC

FOR SALE

Call Us First Or We Both Lose)

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

November,
2000,
the
question of levying a tax, In
Salem Townsl'llp for the
purpose of: Fire Protection .
Said tax being A renewal

74,0-992-5232

I0-17.00

"'A 7 6 2

RACINE MOWER CLINIC .

Township of Salem ,
Langsville, Ohio, passed on 7:30 o'clock P.M. of said
the 26th day of June, 2000, day.
By order of the Board of
there will be submitted to a
vote of the people of said Elections or Meigs County,
subdivision at a General Ohio
ELECTION to be held In tho John N. lhle, Chairman
Township of Salem Ohio, at Alia D. Smith, Director
the regular places of voting Dated September 6, 2000
therein, on the 7th day ot (10) 10, 17, 24, 31 4TC
Public Notice

North
.. 6 52
• 8 5 4 3

BlUM LUMBER
1,.. 11'1'. 248
CHEI'I'ER

FIREWOOD

will open at 6:30 o'clock
A .M. and remain open until

excess of the ten mill
limitation, for·lho benefit of

33795 HilAnd Rd.
PomntiJI, Ohio

OF

PRODUCTS

Protect your guns. family heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, investment records, photo
albums, cenieras, household 1nventory and
sentimental items will be safe.
For more information call

Self-Storage

74D-742·8015 or
1-877-353-7022

t3 Bloated
t4 Prosper
15 Dopes
16 Shuts
17 H follows Aug.
18 Anglo-Saxon
letter
20 Saucy
21 Turned
off-course
23 Beauty parlor
27 Extended
journey
32 Adversary
33 Sibling's

'THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

High 81. Dry

Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experience
Free Estimates

1

Township Trustees of the

SECURITY

740-667-6329

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
Expenaea.
Said tax being A renewal .THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
(Revised Code, Sections
ole tax of 1 mill
At a rate not exceeding 1 3501.1 1 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
NOTICE Is hereby given
(ona) milia for each one

dollar of valuation, which
amounts to Ten cents

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

Certalnteed,
Simington

Public Notice

Public Notice

t
7 Not alfresco

ALDER

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

46 ·The Crying
Game" KIOf
47 Ginger

ACROSS
Compose

PHILLIP

IUUIIII IOAID
11. .

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Ill

I

P~lical

Debale (l•e} (CCI

Nova (CC)
Pol1lical Debale (live} (CC}

tli

.

'

�•

Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesda~October17,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,October17,2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BRIDGE

..........

I

. . . ...,. 1 ..

..... .... ...w,.
111

-

........., .

OfiiCI IT H2·2155

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

Guirjing Hand "~"'"'""'
Preschool
Craft/Bake Sale
Saturday,
November 4, 2000
9:00 am - 4:00 pm
Renting Tables now for
interested crafters.
Please call for more
information @ 367 ·7371

lmmdlmrr

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

J&amp;J

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
(Rovlaed Code, Seetlona
3501.11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
NOTICE Ia hereby glvon

that In purauanca of a

Ruolutlon of the Vlllaga
Council of tha VIllage of
Middleport, Middleport,
Ohio, paaaod on tho 24th
day of July, 2000, thora will
be submitted to a vote of

tho people of sold
aubdlvlelon at a General
ELECTION to be hold In the
VIllage of Middleport, at tho
regular places of voting

thoroln, on tho 7th dey of
Nov.mbM, ~000, tho

mniiDIIllD

UleUrnt Warranty
Local Contractor

Section 5715.19 of the Ohio
Revlaed Code. Thooe
complaints muat ba flied on
forma which will be
furnlahod by the County
Auditor end muat bo Iliad In
tho County Audltor'a Office
on or boforo tho 31at day of
March 2001. All complolnta
flied with the county Auditor
will be hoard by tho Board
of Aovlalon In tho manner
provided by
Section 5715.19 ol tho Ohio
Ravload Code . Nancy
Parker Campbell Meigs
County Auditor
(10) 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23,
24, 25,26

qUestion of levying a tax, In

excess of the ten mill
limitation, tor the benefit 'ot
Middleport Vllage for tho
purpoae of : Current

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates
D. R. Bissell

740-992-1671

30Yrs

7122/fFN

1/tM. ;e~

VOUR

~Qt:I~B~U
CQNt:IECTIQt:l

that In pursuance of a

Resolution or the Village
($0.10) lor each one Council of tho VIllage of
hundred dollars of valuation Syracuse, Syracuse, Ohio,
passed on the 3rd day or
for flvo (5) years ..
Tho Polls for said Auguat 2000, thara will be
Election will open at 6:30 submitted to a vote of the
o'clock A.M. and remain people of aald aubdlvlslon
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M. at a General ELECTION to '
be held . In the Vllloge of
of said day.
By order or the Board or Syracuse, at the regular
Elections ol Meigs County, places of voting therein, on
the 7th day of Novembar
Ohio
2000, the question of
John N. lhle, Chairman
levying a tax, in excess of
Rita D. Smith, Director
the
ton mill limitation, lor
Dated September 6, 2000
the
benefit of VIllage of
(10) 10, 17, ~4, 31 4TC
Syracuse for the purpose
of: Fire Protection.
A replacement of a tax of
Public Notice
1 mill.
At a rate not exceeding 1
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
(one) mills for each one
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION dollar of valuation, which
amounts to Ten cents
(Revised Code, Sections
3501.11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25) ($0.1 0) tor each on a
NOTICE Is hereby given hundred dollars of valuation
that In pursuance · of a lor live (5) years.
Resolution of the Board. of
Tho Polls for said Election
1

LEGAL NOTICE

of a tax of 1 mill
At a rate not exceeding 1
(one) mills for each one

dollar or valuation, which
amounts

to

Ten

cents

($0.10) for each one

·hundred dollars of valuation

for live (5) years.
Tho Polls tor said Election
will open at 6:30 o'cloc~
A.M. and remain open until

7:30 o'clock P.M. of aald
day.
By order of the Board of

Elections of Meigs County,
Ohio
John N. lhla, Chairman

URNPIKE

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
must
declare
their
Reference: 5715.17
candidacy
for
tho
office
of
Ohio Revised Code
Director
of
the
society
by
The Molga County Board
or Revision has completed llllng with the Secretary
Its work of equalization. The Dabble Watson, 42455
tax returns for tax year 2000 Woods Road, Coolville, OH
have been revised 'and the 45723, a petition signed by
open for

public

Inspection In thB office of

the Meigs County Auditor,

Second Floor, Courthouse,
Second Street, Pomeroy,

OH45769.
· Complaints against the
valuadonJ, as established
for tax year 2000 must be
made In accordance with

Ball Logging &amp;

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

· Firewood

"W.elp"

352111 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

10 or mora members of the

~An11

* Free Installation
* Free in Home Estimates
Rutland, Ohio
Mums, Indian
~API~Ies, APPle

Items. Subs,
Sallee. Ice Cream, Amtts
IOio:l!na. Summer Sausaee. Beef JerkY
742-7405

' 10-7 Sat 10·6 Sun- Closed
- ,t M·F

Call for Further Details

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
992-4119

t-800-291-5600

VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
6MILES NORTH OF POMEROY, OHIO AT COUNTY ROAD 18
• No Dealers or Contractors Please WV #023477

Pomeroy Eagles
CIL!b Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH.
Paying $80.00
per 9811)11
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. # 00·50 ',,.,.,

.ALLtEL
.,

Cellular·
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
Stop In And Sec
Steve Riffle
· Sales Representative
Larry Schey

•

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone (740) 593-6671

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDo'WS

All Types of Business
Support Services

-Any Size Double Hung-

[1401 661-3224
1-800-828-0212

DECORATION ...
INSULATION ...

$229.00*
• Free Installation
• Free In Home Eslimales

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.

Call for Further Details

CONCRETE·

svsnms, me.

candidates who have mat

EDUCATION ...

tlouling • Limeslone e
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

DARE II

.FRANK &amp; EARNEST

~

MASONRY

Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured
Brion Morrison/Racine, Ohio

(740) 985-3948

QUftliTY WinDOW
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 Contraclors
Please WVN023477

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

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

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE

•

Meigs County
Fairgrounds
Oct. I, 2000 ·Apr. I, 2001
CALL FOR MORE
lNFORMATION

949-2033

"Take the pain aut
of paintingLet me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m..
leave Message
Aher 6pm· 740-985-4180

A

"'

li-J~~ JlY.i\T~I~

10 Kf.E.P UP WI Tl\

~oMeroor.

...

11'E~ """"''\ N-lOTf\ER C~
WITf\11-1 t.._ f.\IL( Of. '1'0U I

p-

~

:£E I t \OLD YOU \. WI\:) f\1,1/I~G

WOJ5LE: KffPit:lGupt

lf\E. FLO\o.J OfTf'f.
OHlER. TIZNflC.,
Cffl((~l

740-949-2217

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM -'8 PM

:

'

Bill Slack

• Firewood • Light
hauling • Tree &amp; hedge
trimming &amp; removal

The CountrY
Candle ShoP
•

this space for
$25 per
month.

Coolville, OH 45723

74N87.Q383

WANTED
Standing timber large
or small tracks. Top
prices paid also.
Dozer work.
Free Estlmotes
Call T&amp;R Logging
&lt;~fter 8:00pm
740-992-SOSO
(Randy) .
I mo 411 100

t,U,.

Tues·Frl 10·6
Sat. 10·4
·Candle making
supplies
• Wooden crafts
• Baskets
740-992-4559 .

Advertise in

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

.. IC'f' .rf'' l'tit' /;• 10

rcgrdar luwrj ''

. 740-992-2269

Pomero Ohio 45769

LINDA'S
PAINTING

nfTTY MUGtt OF

Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

'

740-985-3831

992·11 01

\

29670 Bashan

''Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 55.25/50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle feed 56.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 56.75/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

992·2753

~'M

6Uf5S YOU 'OU£.0 SAY

: THE BORN LOSER

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

I

PEANUTS
T~AT

WAS A 6REAT

PLA't', MAWE!

9/1100 1 mo pd

mnde In 01·der nt our
locniion

UPTO 70% OFF
• Verlirnl~ • Woo&lt;l

• Minis • Etc

144 Third Ave: Gallipolis

446-4995

I Toll Free 1-888·745·8841

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

Phone-992·2155

DOWN
1 "How•-t
--"
2 Unclothed
3 Trickle
4 "-- Rhythm"
5 small bird
6 Ford flop
7 Needed

Made dove

8 Gordie Howe's t 2 Remainder
19 Pair
org.
9 Show a decline 21 TV hos~
Tom10 River In Franca
22 Forceful
11 Finished

sc:ratchlng

1..-+-+-l----+-+--l

Wednesday. October 18. 2000
In the year ahead, a number of
:s ignificant opportunities could~
'in tlie offing. Get busy developing
'1hem, and don't forget to give
Fredil to those who helped you
~long the way.
r LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 13)
)Jnfortunately, today a collective
¢ndeavor in which you're
lnvolved may not yield the finan·
~ial blessings you anticipated. Its
problems could hamper its output.
Libra, treat yourself to a birthday
gift. Send for y9ur Astro·Graph
predictions for the year ahead by
mailing $2 and SASE to Astra·
l:lraph, c/o this newspaper. P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156. Be sure to
~lute your Zodiac sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
l.:.et your honesty, not your vanity, make the cvuluation as to why
you may be having trouble in a
valued relulionship toduy. The
faull might nol be all one-sided.
SAG!TI'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
21) Any criticnl assignment or
rc~ponsibility you neglect to take
cure of immcdialely toduy will
come back and bile you in the
race hcforc the day is out. h won't

be pretty.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Finding yourself with the
same poor results in a simi lar
social situati on you didn't handle
too well in the past is due 10 your
inability to learn from your
lessons.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Chances are you will be capable
of holding your own in a testy sit·
uation that arises today, but at.
what cost? If it takes nasty treat·
ment to get the upper hand, you' II
be the loser in the end.
PISCES (Feb. 20:March 20)
Be on guard today when involv~d
.m any ~ompelilive
' ..
.
.
situation;
Eith~r you or your opponent will
not be able to gracefully handle
losing that easily and end up making a scene.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Be particularly careful today,
because someqne with whom you
decide to do business may not
operate by your standards. If this
person thinks you're an easy
mark, she or he cou.ld try to
deceive you.
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) A
failure to select companions who
are share your enthusiasm about a

proJeCt cou ld cause a fatal breakdown of all your past efforts. Be
more critical in your choices.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Only if you arc carefully system·
atic about how you operate and
organ ize yourse lf can you effeclively perfonn your work today. If
not, you're likely to have linle to
show for your efforls .
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Choosing a poor social group
today could put you in the company of people who'll make you
feel either unwelcome or uncom·
fo11able Don'! pul yourself in thai
cage.
LEO (July V·Aug. 22) SiiUa·
tions where you utilize lag.ic and·
reality have u chance of being sue·
cessful today. However, in devel·
opments where your ego governs
your actions, setbacks will be the
order of the duy.
VIRGO (Aug. 2.i-Sept. 22)
Those who treat you the wuy you
think you should be treated will be
met with amicability today, but
should you run mto someone
who disagrees with you. you
won't hesitate to come down
hard.

23
24
-25
26

person

Religious
denomination
Small wild OJ!.
Novelist Uris
Sign ot the
future

28 Father

29 Actor
Connery

30 Neutral color
31 Positive
responses
37 Teara into ·
small places
38 Reason for ~
overtime
41 Innocent

_

42 Baby felines •
43 Concerning

·

(2 wds.)
•
44 Leafthrough "
hastily
45 Pouches
47 Highlander
48 - contendere

49 Oriental
potentate
50 Held In
52 Observe
,
54 Veto, slangily..

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

··

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created hom quofafions by famous people past and
·
present. Each lener in the Cipher stanos lor another.

Taday's ciU&lt;J: R equals U

'K

DWKHN

K AJ

Z

SZ

FZTL

U

JGHN

GAN

Z

LKlPN

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JTN

C Z Y N H L S N L·J . '

CKHLNH,

ONDPHGUGLC
YGPN
PREVIOUS

ZL

JTN

ZEEGPN

ZE

WHNPGONLJ.
"Sometimes tho light at the end of a lunnel is an '

S~LUTION:

oncomtng tratn . -

Football coach Lou Holtz , after a losing season .

':~~:t~~y scrrR4tllA-~'ElfSS WORD
GAME
by CLAY R. ,ot.IAN - - - - - 0 four
Rearrange letters of the
scrambled words
I~IJed

low to form four slrnple words

LAPEMI

TAFTY

I ,I I' I' I
Two m1 le age woman
S 0 YUL
,... wanted to have a make over .
s
-;'One sighed. "Time may heal
. .
::; many th1ngs but it's a terrible
.--------~
ma keup - - -- - - "·

RI
I

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f---,,.,.KRONEB
--rl.::._l,.-:..,.,.::._,...1-1 0

.

6

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Complete the chuckle quoted "
by fill ing in the mi$Sing words
you develop from sfep No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQU~RES

1

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LnS ANSWEitS
Skmny - Copse· Rusty- Accent- STICKS
A college roommate had a favorile saying that l1e
confused people with It was . "Run il up the flagpole and

see 1f 1t STICKS ..

OCTOBER17I

~irthday

'

'

coercion

'Your

10/41 mo. ll

(Factory Oullet)

57 Feola
58 Obtain by

ITUESDAY

304-273-0036

All vertical Llindo are

Stern's

instrument

attectlon

An English publishing company under the modest title of Five
Aces has been putting out good
books. The latest is •;Fit for a
King," compi led by Sally Brock
and Barry Rigal. It is a collection
of brilliancies. First, you may test
yourself, then read the original
write-up by a well-known player
or journalist.
This deal is one of my all-time
favorites . Look at the NorthSouth hands . You are in three notrump. West leads the diamond
1wo. How would you proceed?
You have only five lop tricks,
so you need the spade fine sse to
win and to collect three heart
tricks . Yet even if East has the
necessary spade king and acethird of hearts, there are enlry
problems .. Suppose, after winning with dummy 's diamond
queen. you lead a hearl to your
king. return to dummy with a club
10 . the ace, and play a second
heart. East can step in with the ace
and return a diamond. With no
dummy entry remaining, you can·not enjoy th~ 13th heart.
Jim Proc10r, one of England's
OCst tournament d.irectors, saw the
solulion. After the diamond queen
and a hean to the king. Proctor led
his diamond king to dummy's ace,
eslabli shing 1he opponents' suit'
But after a second heart, Proctor
couldn't be defea1ed. East won
with the ac~. and 1he defenders
cashed their ihree diamond tricks
before swilching to a club. Howeve r. Proctor won in hand.
unbl ocked the heart queen,
reached the dummy with a club.
cashed the last heart, and took the
spade fin esse.
The book is $21.95 postpaid
from Baron Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call (800) 274-2221 to
order.

Sentinel

6 Month
Membership $1 Co
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, 'NV

BLIND SPOT

paper

56 Isaac

39 Food lists
40 Huge animal
42 Sign ot

To get a current weather
report, check the

IRON CITY GYM

The CRAFTY,

tr•nsparent

Opening lead: • 2

,

HfiCJLIHG and
EXCAVATIHG

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

SHHDE RIUER HG SERUICE

35537 St Rt 7 North

1•888-521-0916

BOBCAT SERVICES

be eligible for the election
as director.
(10) 10, 17, 24 JTC

DON'T YOU

BY PHILLIP ALDER

INC.

53 Revenue
55 Copied, using

sounds
35 Macaw
36 Tawniest

+108 643
J I0

precoutlon

It's all aces

...

BACKHOE SERVICES

the ~lllng requirements will

ZZ yn. Local

~@:,WICK'S . .

740-992-7599

&amp;

As a

(2 wds.)

daughter

34

cookie

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South West North East
I NT
Pass
Pass 2 •
Pass 3 NT · All pass
2•

I THINK I'LL
STEAL ME A
LITTLE KISS

Pomeroy, Ohio

BISSELL BUIL!1ERS
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RlSIDENTl~L
FREii ESTIMATES .

.. Q 9 3

51

Answer to Prwlous PUD._

olo K 8 54

992·6215

· Open Mon·Frl&amp;-6; Sat. 9-4
Sun.Ciolld
Phone 74fl.949-2804
Owner .Jim Plckena ·
Mechanic· Bill Jonea ·
Parts Mnr ·Tamr• Picken•

Size Double Hunl!-

&amp; K 10 8
¥ A 10 2

• A Q7 3
• K Q 7
+ K9

Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG Ill

chainsaws , tillers,
generators, snowblowers,
weedeaters, pick-up and
delivery available on
request.

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Washington Counties.
Your Quality 24-Hour
Childcare Services

.. J 9 4
• J 9 6
• J 7 5 2

South

• • -·od&lt;ltlons &amp; Ro11odsllog
• Now Gioragos
• Elodrkal &amp; l'lomlblng
• Roofloa &amp; Gvtton
• VInyl $!ding &amp;Pallltfllg
• Patio &amp; Pordt Dodls

We servic:e mpwers,

East

West

Featuring two Briggs &amp;
Stratton trolnod
mechanlca

State Route 7,
TUppers Plains
Certified in Meigs,
Athens and

aoclety who are realdenta of
Meigs County, at least 7
d8'9a before the annual
ela~tlon of directors Is held.

Only regularly nominated

+A Q

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

HEAP Voueben accepted for
Meta• a GIIIJJI. CowttiCI

'

Members of the society

are

992·6142 or
ToU·Free 1-877·604· 73

GALLIPOLIS

SMITH'S CONSTROCTION

vota.

valuatiOnf completeCI and

•

Meigs County Agricultural -n.-:..-;;;-.--:-""";~T""T'-:--·--;::,.---;--, f~~------------------, .
society will be held at the l &amp; D Auto Up o stery • Plus, Inc
Secretary's olllcoMonday,
at lhe
fairgrounds,
1'\atland, 0~.10
11
11
November 6, 2ooo. The
Truck seats. ::ar seats, headliners.
polls will be open rrom s:oo
• New Homes
• Remodeling
'
p.m. to 9:00 p.m. on
truck tarps. cc-nvert:ble &amp; vtnyl tops,
.' AU Makes Tractor &amp;
Elecllon Day.
Four Whfteler seats, motorcycle seats,,.
• Garages
• Decks
EqUipment Parts
. Tho election shall be by
Sldl
R fl
ballot. Ballots must be
boat COV&lt;:I·s, carpets, :'!tC.
•
ng
• 00 ng
' Factory Autl•orized
marked the
withname
an to "X"
Mon ~ f'';l 8:30 - 5:00
Ne• d it done, 91\11
' Ul a ca II
opposite
be
c;.,..,. I H Parts
'
counted. The casting or
Over 40 yra experience
FREE ESTIMATES
•
Dealers.
votes
•(740} 742-8888
"vtelf price d OR NIW HOmll
'
proxiesforIs dlrectoro
not to by
be •
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Meigs
County
holding
momberahlp certlflcatoe for
at lesot 15 daya before the
data of the election may

· Public Notice

DwDp Tlvck DeJJ•ery
Kelp aad O.Uia c-Ues
Call 6: lave lleuafe

Ask For Mr. Ford

The annual election or the
Board of Directors for thB"

peb~:~e~~aldentaof

Rita D. Smith, Director
Dated September 6, 2000
(10) 10, 17, 24, 31 4TC

FOR SALE

Call Us First Or We Both Lose)

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

November,
2000,
the
question of levying a tax, In
Salem Townsl'llp for the
purpose of: Fire Protection .
Said tax being A renewal

74,0-992-5232

I0-17.00

"'A 7 6 2

RACINE MOWER CLINIC .

Township of Salem ,
Langsville, Ohio, passed on 7:30 o'clock P.M. of said
the 26th day of June, 2000, day.
By order of the Board of
there will be submitted to a
vote of the people of said Elections or Meigs County,
subdivision at a General Ohio
ELECTION to be held In tho John N. lhle, Chairman
Township of Salem Ohio, at Alia D. Smith, Director
the regular places of voting Dated September 6, 2000
therein, on the 7th day ot (10) 10, 17, 24, 31 4TC
Public Notice

North
.. 6 52
• 8 5 4 3

BlUM LUMBER
1,.. 11'1'. 248
CHEI'I'ER

FIREWOOD

will open at 6:30 o'clock
A .M. and remain open until

excess of the ten mill
limitation, for·lho benefit of

33795 HilAnd Rd.
PomntiJI, Ohio

OF

PRODUCTS

Protect your guns. family heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, investment records, photo
albums, cenieras, household 1nventory and
sentimental items will be safe.
For more information call

Self-Storage

74D-742·8015 or
1-877-353-7022

t3 Bloated
t4 Prosper
15 Dopes
16 Shuts
17 H follows Aug.
18 Anglo-Saxon
letter
20 Saucy
21 Turned
off-course
23 Beauty parlor
27 Extended
journey
32 Adversary
33 Sibling's

'THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

High 81. Dry

Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experience
Free Estimates

1

Township Trustees of the

SECURITY

740-667-6329

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
Expenaea.
Said tax being A renewal .THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
(Revised Code, Sections
ole tax of 1 mill
At a rate not exceeding 1 3501.1 1 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
NOTICE Is hereby given
(ona) milia for each one

dollar of valuation, which
amounts to Ten cents

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

Certalnteed,
Simington

Public Notice

Public Notice

t
7 Not alfresco

ALDER

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

46 ·The Crying
Game" KIOf
47 Ginger

ACROSS
Compose

PHILLIP

IUUIIII IOAID
11. .

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Ill

I

P~lical

Debale (l•e} (CCI

Nova (CC)
Pol1lical Debale (live} (CC}

tli

.

'

�•
Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

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give ounclvl·s a chJncc to co m pete with rhem , an'd they tnok 1t
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kno w \\'L' 'li: playil1g ~ Uil li.' ynun b
guys out thL·rc. Mayb ...• wc'w got
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t\\'n

r:mly.
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111 today anrl
w.mt ed to change the color of the
lllllform . They thought that
would help," Prueu said "He
w:tmc.: d m to wear our black JCfliC \'S. I s.ud 'rhar's not our school
color.;_"'
With fi~·e ganws left in tht• rcgul.lr Sl'.lSon. Marshall (2- 4. 1- 2
MAC) snll has a shot u winntng
the .Eastt'rn D1vision crown .
Ak ron and Miami Jrc tit!d with
,1-1 r nn fn cnc c: 111.1rh and Ohio
1' thud .lt 2-2.
'' lf\\'C c.1n keep nur confid ence
lt·vd up. \\'L' !JUJI luvc .1 d unn : to
h .1v~ a good )T.Ir ... Pru c.: rr s;uJ.

fi cl dm ~

l t\1~­

C U L'~-

Subscribe today • 992-2156

--Titans
from PageBl

ping Tennessee was

t'\'l' r\ '

Met ~

r.llh·

thi ~ '- L' ri O.

It' d

t l f f \ \' llh .1 ~ in g k. Stok • C: L O Jld

.1!1\l

\\'l' lH

ro

rhu·d o n C.1rl os

ll t' l'! l.lliLk l''s thnHnn g L' rr nr

:·us Robertson knockl'd th&lt;· ball
loo se .111d SJman Rolle recovered
,1

tout'hbJ ck.

··1 \\ '.IS trying to ptlt it on the
linl' out thcrL\•· McCardell ~aid.
" Bt't\\'L'L' n thosl' whitL' linl' s,
you \ ·c got to k-.wc ~.·w rything
oul thl'rt•, .md that·~ ~ Ollll'thing I

LdgHd n Alfun t n h !t th e nex t
p .l\C •lwn , to p Edg.1r
II, l·nr ...·n .J. \\'ho pulled u p ,\.., rhc \\',IS trymg to do ."
h.tll ~~..~. HH l' d p:1 . . r ht , gl o\'t' !i lt1 1
lr got L'\'l'll wors~.· for jJckkft tlc ld for .1 hit . Aft L· r Pu u.1 ..,onnl k when rt' Cl't\'t'r Jimmy
".dk L· d . R o b111 Vcntur ,t ,'it lg:k d Sm 1th brui~ni his right knt'L' in
(II ll Ll kL' H 2-0.
thl' fir st quarter .. Coach Tom
. /e d t· fnllo\\' ~' d wlt h .1 lw rft•c t Coug-hhn said X-r:~ys wert~ ncga lio uh k- pb y grnundl'r, bu t 'l l' lPll d b.l:-. t'IIIJII Fnn.111d o Vi n.1
bn bhkd ir bl·forc tl1pptn g · to
RL' JHL' I'I .l for the fir st out .
Thl· thro\\' to fint wa ~
d rop ped bv Will C lark for
.1n othcr e rro r .1 s Piazz .l scored .
H r.: tlt g ...·n , \\'l'HJn g
sho rt
That, Jccord ing to Halama, is
, Jc c n· ~ on ,1 56-degree m~ht ,
t'.t~y for H..:rnandez say.
g ll t h ::t mm t~Ted for :-.tx rum.
··El Duque proh,bly '"YS he h,s
. , . .. , ·e n hits J nd five \\'Jlks in J no fe .u- because he's back at
~ -3 111!11!1g ~
home. and he h as had so mu ch
" 1'111 dts.tppointcd the W::t)' it po stseason e-xperience," Habnu
t:n d cd up the way lr did , bttr I ~ aid. "There's almost always going
\\' :t~ o m thL' rt: gnnding," Hcntto be :1 nerve f.1c tor with myself
gc n satd .
The fans w ill not be cheering for
M::tktn g m a tters wo rse for St.
me, except for the limited family
Loui :-. . Ankit•l w.t:-.n't uvn hi s I have. I'm sure his comme nts
,,· d d n~ ~s. \\'.tlktng
rwo :111d would be different is h e \vas
rhro w lll g two wild pitc hes in pitching in Seattle."
t\uJ - tl!ird ~ of :~.n uming . An kid
With his team tralhng 3-2 in
h,l, nin e w ll d pitches in four th e series and one loss from elimtn n1ngs thi s pos tse ason .
ination, Mariners manager Lou
Pimella prom ised to make maJOr
lineup changes.
''Hernandez has never been
belten in post!ieason. We realize
l'ICt h

Titam

.I S

they were penalized 10 times for

harJ. McCardell caught a 20-

tln

th~:

ALCS

from PageBl

89 yards. The final score easily
could have been much worse , bur

an 8-yard TO run by McNair in
the second quarter wa s nullifll'd
by a holding call on left gu .1rd

!&gt;C h{u l l .''

ldt.
.fJcksonv11le nu ~sed Its chan ce'i
to m:~ke J game of ir. frL·d T.1ylo r
broke :1 71-yard TU!l in th e op L'Il -

Tl)

Meigs County's

ing minutL'S, but hl' cou ldn 't :-.rorL'
de!ipir e two tries from Jm 1d c the
3. Then c:~me McCarddl's nu ~­

takc at thl' md of thl' half.
By the time rhe Jagu ;lrs tin .tll y ,
scored on a 2 -y:~rd run by Anth o-

T ht• TtLl m h.1d ~ ume boun&lt;:L'S
go th . .·ir w.1y v n bo th of McN:1ir\

dr.:r

Hts 4·-y.Jrd ...·r w
hmt nn:d otT rh . .· 'houl-

p .l ~'~'\.

\X/~·c h L·c k

n fj .1~u .u s

L'nd RL•tuld o Wynn
pu lle d rill' b.11l
111. .111d I jl.'rn r k M,1S01 1 Hl.!.dL' .1
n llL'- Iund ~..·d t.lt l-h ~. m .1 21- y.lfd
Tl ) p.1 ~~ 111 th e "L'llmd qu .trtcr
un ·r ro m L·rb.H k J1 ~0 11 Cr.lt't .

bd.mt'

\V\·~·Jwc k

so. Number 102

Volume

Two yL·ar' :lgo. lbrb.tr;l H:ll :ml:l
r:dkc'ci .tbour her brorhci· before
hi ~ f) n t ~ t.nt t( l r ll mhton in NL'\\'

ble."

York .
"He g rt'\\' up \\',lilting

to

play

for thC Mc-rs:· ~ h l' ....ud . " It w J:. h1~
dn:;un tu pitL h .n Shl'.l St,Hliunl."
Wtrh 3 wtn Ti tL'Stby, he mi ght
get ·3 dlJncc to pitch Jt She-a Stadnun on ce Jg.mL Ag.1inst the
M ers.. In the World Scncs.

good about our guy."

Annual Eastern Athletic

.GOLF SCRAMBLE

Officials: ·Beware of deer on roads
Bv ToNY M. lEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY -With the onset
of deer season near, the Ohio

Department
of
Natural
Resources and Ohio State Highway Patrol are urging motorists to
drive with extra caurion this fa11
in hopes of reducing the large

number of deer-vehicle collisions

deer-breeding season when deer
mo,vement increases," said j 0hn

Wisse, spokesman with the Division ofWildlifc. "November is the
peak month, when the h-ighest
number of deer related accidents
usual1 y occur."

announcmg a
cri tica l appe al
for
donors,

ODNR urges motonsts to use
caution when driving .- - especially at dawn and after sunset,
w hen deer are most active. About
20 percent o( deer- vehicle acci dents occur in the ea rly morning
hours, while more than h.Jif o cc ur

blond mpplies

between 5 p.m. arid midnight.
The Division of Wildlife estimates the state's deer popuhtion

at about 475,000 this fall . There
were 27.427 deer-vehicle collisions reported in 1999 , compared
to 24,868 suc h collisions in 1998.
Meigs CoUll&lt;}' reported 225 deer
related accidents last year and 188
in 1998, wh ile Gallia' Co unty
reported 3H3 in 1999 and 389

the ir door in th e coming days .

Great Buys on Pre-owned Vehicles
Priced To Move • You save $$

/~~'-.

th e results of the U.S. Census.
In tho se cases. a local ce nsus

Retail $26,250
Rel~al,es &amp; Discounts 7,.:o·"l

..;er3P

Nissan Relail $19,738

Sale Price $16,54
1 ~-.::'JJ and
Rates as low as 3.

c~ n ­

e ral progr&lt;~ms, and in th e past,
some communities luvc bcc_n
put in a . po sitio n to challenge

glass. power heated
mirrors, locks &amp; windows

Automatic , air, tilt, cruise. power locks &amp;windows, remote keyless entry. stock #2002200

conduct its own

sus to compare against the 2000
U.S. Census. Population figures
derived from the U.S. Census are
an important part of the grant
application process for most fed-

6 cyl., automatic. tilt, cruise. privacy

2000 NISSAN ALTIMA GXE

to

Price $18,981

decided l'&lt;rrlin tlri.&lt;

/r,u•e ht:~un to i11crease,
ll't' are still Sl![]!·rill,{! .fi'orw
tire .&lt;lwrtages that fral'e
pfd,&lt;,!IICJ liS ,11{ Sllllllllt'r.
It Jl'il! t.rkt• some time to
rebuild our· irwmtMies,
pror•ided II'" are alrle to

-

donations

'!r

u

can be used in the clullenge.
V il lage c ensus fOrms wne
available to re~idcnts who came
into the water ofii ce to pay th eir

bills, but Mayor Sandy lannarelli
said earli er thi s mo nth that
about 1511 hnu&lt;eh olds in Mid-

dleport have not been heard
from .
Now. the volunteer~ havl:
divided th e work and will take
to the street within the next two
wee ks in

:111

att empt to c olle ct

data from the remaining hou se-

holds.
Unlike th e U.S. Census, whi ch ·
asked t{H mo re Jetaiil'd . intOrmJtion, the Middleport r e-mu s
as ~s on ly fo r an address and the
numbe-r of re . . iJenr ~ wh o live
thnc.
C e- nsu s t(Hm~ w11l 11 0 lnn gc r
be avaibb lc at thl: water otTi n:.
The voluntt· cr~ w il1 c arry
iJentitication cn:d c mi ,ds wi t h
them , accordin g to lann arelli .'

CENSUS VOLUNTEERS - Middleport residents who have not responded to the village census can expect
to see one of these volunteers at their door. as they attempt to collect data from those households which
did not respond at the water office. They are Mary Kelly, Diana Brewer, Maggie Biggs , Brenda Barnhart,
Norma Torres, Edgar Abbott. Lawrence Foreman, Jane Abbott, Betty Foreman , Barbara McCurdy, and back.
Bill Asbeck. Dave McCurdy, Denver Biggs, Li nda King and Curtis King. The volunteers represent Rejoicing
Life Church. and are completing the census as a community project. (Brian J. Reed photo) ·

Farm Bureau honors

1
'

Toclay's

Sentinel

I

1 Sections - 12 Pages

Starting At $24;995
2000 NISSAN FRONTIER
CREW CAB 4Jt'4's

sport pack, utili ty pack .

Nissan Retail $25,524
Rebates &amp; Discounts 1,043

Sale Price $24,481

Calendar
Classifieds
Editorials
Obituaries
S11orts
Weather

1 XE left - 2 SE's left
We're always looking tor new personnel
that meet our qualifications. Stop In and till
~tan appflcatlon.

Starting At $21,995

7 .A 'YL C&gt;l1tTE'.AIVI of Dealersh
~
~·

NISSAN

taylorteam.com

I"

~"~

EJI
~.

1f1·41

2~0 North Columbus Road, Athens.

A5
B2-4
B5
A4
A3
Bl, 6 .
A3

Con1ics

Looking for lll txclting new proteuion?

594-8555/594-6631

According

to Bias, vol- ·
umeer blood

)'&lt;'&lt;II' It&gt; fouduct

Loaded with all options

V6 . automat ic, power pack,

.r-l

more

remam
(o,v,
hdp patients
sa id Joy Bias,
bemg treated
with
th e
for
aco American
dents, rouRed Cross.
tine
surg'' Although
erte
s
and
llll'l't &lt;WI' collatio II .~oals,"
collectio ns
seriou s dishave begun to
eases
Joy Bias
mcrc-asc, we
leukemia,
are still sufferlymphoma
ing from the
and
o ther
shortages that have plagued us cancr:rs, heart disea se, sickle
all summ er. It wi ll take some cell anemia and hemophilia .
tim e to rebuild our invento ries . Trauma patients also depend
provided we_ are able to met:c upon blood Jono rs to help save
o ur collection goa1s," Bias said. their life.
She said that despite an overTo donate blood, one mmt
all yea rly in crease in blood be healthy, at least 17 years old
do nations natiomvide,· an o lder and weigh 1()j pounds or
po pu1 ation, improved m edical more.
For mformation about .donor
procedures and more complex
surger ies that we re not possible eligibihty. or to find out where
yL·ars ago have contributL·d to you can donate blood. please
the current bloo d shortage.
call 1-800-G IVE- LIFE .

2000 NISSAN MAXIMA SE'S
2000 NISSAN XTERRA 4X4

coll ecting

its 011'11 c('IISriS to COIIIJ'lll'l' iiXIIillsf t/rc 2(}(1/) { '.S.
Cm.&lt;us. Pt•prt/,rtioll .fl.~lll't'S dail'cd.fi·om tire r ·.s.
CciiSIIS olfl' 1111 importtlllf ptll'l
the .~I'll lit
11pJJ!ic&lt;lfiOII JH.OCI'SS)tH IIIOSf .Ji'tfmr/ pm,l!l'oiiiiS 1 ollld ill
t/re J'IISI, SOIIIt' COIIIfllllllilit'S /1&lt;11'1' ball put ill ol pMifiOII
to rllallcngc the rl'su{rs t&gt;{ tire l' .\. (',·nsu&lt;.
1

head count,
this year

.2000 JEEP CHEROKEE
4X4SPORT

Sale Price $18,695

Volunteers for the village,
mostly members of Rejoi cing
Life Churc h, have been rt!cruited to complete the village- wide
Village counc1l decided earlier

Sale Price $18,592
Dodge Retail $21.430
Rebates &amp; Discounls 2, 735

DEER CROSSING- Deer crossing signs warn motorists of heavy deer activity that is in the area. The Ohio
Department of Natu ral Resources and the Ohio State Patrol are urging individuals to drive with cautiOn
this fall, when deer movement is at its greatest, to reduce the possibility of a deer-veh icle col lision happen ing. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Vil/,r.~t' cou11cil

FROM STA FF REPORTS

DODGE CARAVAN

Dodge Retail $24,160
Rebates &amp; Discounts 5,568

"We're'

blood than we did in past years,
can Red Cro ss blopdmobile but it's been a struggle to keep
will make rounds today in up
with
th e
m c rea sing
demand." Bias said.
Pomeroy.
.
The bloodmobile is sched"Hospitals and their patients
uled to be at Meigs Senior depend on the Red Cross to
Center, w hich is located on supply them with all th eir
Mulberry Height&lt; , rnday from blood. lf people don't donate.
1- 6 p.m.
then
the
Three
blood is not
weeks
after
available."
".4/tltort,l!h collcctious

cle co1lisions occu r between

MIDDLEPORT Those
Middleport residents who have
not responded to the village
census can expec t a knock on

and Rates as low as 0.9%
V6 , automatic, tilt, cruise,
power locks &amp; windows

Bloodmobile
visiting
Pomeroy

Middleport cerisus under way

Automatic, VB, rear air. 3rd row seat, tilt,
cruise.
locks &amp; windows

Sale Price $20,995

::~]lfi~ .ee

POMEROY -The Ameri-

two years ago.
.
''The recent_ increase in deer-

2000 CHRYSLER CONCORDE

Sale Price $27,995

•

FROM STAFF REPORTS

The ODNR's Division of
Wildlife reports most deer-vehi- .

Please see Deer, Page A3

IChrvsl,,u Relail $23,915
Rebales &amp; Discounts 2,920

..

expected to occur.

Oh io's roads," Wisse said. ''Ot h er
factors include a growin g deer

Dodge Retail $31,645
Rebates &amp; Discounts 3,650

Odober 18, 2000

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

vehi cle coll isions is partly due to
the increase in tlw number of
ve hicles an d traflic volume on

2000 DODGE DURANGO
SLT4X4

Wednesday

Hometown Newspaper

October and December when
deer season is in full swipg.
"The fall is the height of Ohio's

it ," he said. "But wt!'rc going ,1u
stack lip ou r lineup lcfr-h:mdcd,
nuke it as tou gh on hi m Js possi Yankees nuna gcr J oe Torr~
wasn't pb.nmng any mJ_Jor m ove~
to adjust to Halama.
"I'd like to be heve momc-nrum
IS as good as you r starting pitcher," he said. 'Tm obviously nut
knocking John Halama . I fee l

Society news and notes, As
Yankees make a subway series, Bl

·

ny Johmon with 53 St' conds left, ·
j:J cksonvill . .· W J.S too busy trying
to fi gure out how to do anything
ri ght.
' 'So mr.: of ou r in ...·fficicnctcs
show up \\'l't'k 111 and \'.reek out,''
J.l b'li.Jr'\ t '':~ c h ' l iun Co ughlin satd
" W~· h.l \'l' some good players on
thi ~ te:Jm. We :tlso h:J VL' somr..· nc:g.lti\'L'S. Thi o;; t~ n ·r Jllllior hig h

Bruce Manhews. AI Del Green,
who ki cked ' field go:1b of 2(, and
28 yards, misst:J a 4-J-yardt·r wide

0 1

Details, A3

0

--.:::w.i&lt;i,e but an MRI will be conducted.
The only team capable of stop-

y:Jrd p:~ss from Brunell just before
lulftime .md tried to dtve into th~
end zone, bllt Titam safety Marl'nl'7. the ... p.trkplu g: \\'h o h;t'
bee n J ll rh ...· mldJI ~.· of n t· .nl\'

ThUnciiiJ
Hlp: 70s; Low: lOS

Marauders, Tomadoes and
Eagles•••• we've got you covered
everyday in the Daily Sentinel!

u om o n wh.H he could do diffcr-

'U'.~.t!L''-

~

NLCS

1

r h~..· s~ n l. c

Pru e n I1Jd

MU

Tuesday, October 17, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

=

~VEHICLES

594·8555. or 594·6631
•

I
I

Lotteries .·

P•)'I"Wnt• figured with $1000 down Jll~Js taxes &amp; title. Aatea &amp; payments subject to cre d1t approva l

LIQUIDATION

I

OHIO
AWARDS PRESENTED- These long-time members of the Meigs Coun·
ty Farm Bureau were presented membership awards at Tue sday
evening's annual meeting of the organization : fro nt, Paul ine Atkin s,
81 years, Nellie Parker, Poole &amp; Parker Farm, 64 years; Dean Barnitz,
35 years; Mary Kay Yost, 59 years . Back, from left. Janet Bolin and
Jan Knapp , Peoples Ba ~ king and Trust Co ., 64 years: George Ho lter.
65 years; Raymond Furblj'e , 61 years; and Delbert Smith. 51 ye ars .

LONG-TIME MEMBERS - Prese nted membe rship awards for long-time membership at the Meigs County
Farm Bureau annual meeting were: Leodell and Mary Davidson , 55 years; Leo and Linda Morris, 25 years;
Virgil and Mary King, 45 years ; Roy, Pat and Alyssa Holter (back) 56 years; Howard and Wi lma Parker, 58
years ; Do n and Barbara Mora. 6 4 ye ars : J.M." and Mi ldred Gaul . 62 years ; Ziba and Sylvia Midkiff, 62
years ; Charles and Daisy Blakes lee, 62 ye ars; and Sam and Nell ie Michael. 65 years. (Brian J. Reed pho·
tos )

'

..

Pick J: .0-4-4; Pic k 4: 4-1-.1-5
Buckeye 5: 4-5 11.1&lt;" 17

"'YA,
Daily 3: H-11 4 Daily 4: .1-7-h-1
'
:!•"~l ~)hu•\-,olk\'

I

l'uhh•hl'lt-ll ''

.1

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