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•

•

•

P.age 10 • The Dally Sef!tinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday

Wednesday, September 1, 1999

Set*ml* 2, 1111J8

Weather

Parents aren't teaching kids how to behave because they don't have a clue
•

wp of his lung&gt; and "'c.trs a blue
streak.

Lc;anders

\\ here- fw m one day

lol,..ilnoetes
~ricrtors

Dea~ Ann Landers: I am writ ·
ing in response to the leuer from the
15 year &lt;&gt; ld whose younger cousin
· grabbed his seat when the boy got
up to answer the phone.
When the boy returned. the
cousin refused to get up, ami 1hc
older boy forcibly re moved him

from the chair.

H111es Syndtcctte
Syncn cote .

Aflerwards. 1hc · o lder boy's
uncle said, "If I e ver see you pi ck·
Htg on my son again . I will "tomp :.1
mud hole_in your back."
I agree that the li.:ousin should
have moved when the bov rcturn t~d
t~ the room. but I 3m sht;c ked that
y&lt;&gt;u blamed I he older ·boy (or gel·
ri ng physical
: The moment lhc (OUsin sa id .
"Move your me at. lose vuur scat. "
bis father should have ·spoken up
and told his son to get up and give
the chair back. And what about I hat
father's attil.udc ? What w·as ·. he
te3.ching his ~t.m when he threare ned
the older boy ·&gt; ~
That whole ugly scene could

have be~n avo ided ·r. c ~:o u s in had
given up tne sea the m1nutc the

older boy returned, or if lhe unde
had to ld his son to stop mouthing
off and move his bull. No wonder

kids today grow. up and commil
·hein ous cri mes. Their parents arcn ' t
teachin g them right .from wrong.

an~

hec o m ~s

11.

- -

he \~IJ,

.lt

a \\. ee l .

help. bu1 he never tlo&lt;&gt; an) thmg

e:u n.· mc h .tnt! n O\cr tri.\ ia l th irt2s. sud1 :.b [ho..• L"il1.IJ rc n gn; n ~

w hl.'d 'J:; minuti.'.., ·Lnc

10

. \Vhcn h~ !'! naps out of it. he JP~l\1) ­
git ~ ~ and !&lt;Ia: s he knows he nccJ,

years . Al rirst. thi ngs \\ ere wonderful. hut aflcr th~ tn rth ol o ur secoml
t' hild five YL'ars ag0. Patric k h'-·gan
hav in g violcn l f1 t!'i ~)r rJgl.' .
Patn.: k n~:v a ~, h lls' us. hut hl!'

\Vhcn hL' los e"

an~ ­

The !&lt;te "moods .. can la \t

thL"

ahom 1t.

Ll o\'c Patric k and

~n u ld

nc,c r

io:onsi dt: r d1vorcc. He is a v.nnde"rful
f.ll ht• r whe n lu -. mood IS , ,m nal I
dnn·r kn cH.\' -tnyonc \\. ith tht-. pnlh-

k m. . tnJ I lll'Cd :'lOme hl· lp. -UN ABLE TO COPE IN IND IANA
IJEAR INDIANA : h &lt;nunJ, as
if Patrh.: l.: ... r.l~r-. cnu lJ he llll.l.f!.' I han
a te mper pmhk m .

Pc r ll.tp~

he

should be on medication. Please talk ment. The child; ~owever, was conto your doctor about thi~. Also, ceived through seJlual intercourse,
'orne JOilll counseling could help. not aruficial insemination .
Good luck .
That child is now an adult. and
Dear Ann Landen: The letter Donald wonders if his son will ever
about telhng a 9 year old child thai know who his birth father is. Donhe was t·onceived through anificial ald has a wife and children of his
m ~c minatio n hit home.
own, and they are unaware of this
Ae&lt;;ording to the fertility expert "gift. "
you qu oted. lhe parents shou ld
I can only think how devaSiating
mdeed tell the child about hi s par- lhe truth would be to the child. his
enthood. We ll , I'm no1 so sure your parents, my frie nd and his family. In
"l.' xpat " i ~ right about this.
, a ·situalion like I his , do you still
My g11ud friend "Donald" helped · think the child should be told' ..
lu :-~ sts t~r in Jaw gel pregnant
LOS ANGELES
hl.'r au!-1.' ht s brother was impotent.
DEAR LOS ANGELES: Yes , I
Ht s hmthc r agreed to this arrange'-. do. The true details of the impreg·

nation; however. need not be
spelled out. It's nobody's business.
Ann Landers' booklet, "Nuggeu
and Doozics." has everything from
the outrageously funny to the ,
poignantly insightful.
Send a self addressed, long, busi·
ness size envelope and a check or
money order for $5.25 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Nuggets,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box I 1562,
Chicago. Ill. 60611-0562. (In Canada , send $6.25.)
·
To find out more about Ann Lan·
ders and read her past column s. visit
the Crealors ~yndicate web page at •
www.c realors.com.

PEPSI, MT.
PRODUCTS, DR.
PEPPER,
-LIPTON·BRISK

P0 WEL L'S
STORE HOURS
Monday thru
· Sunday
8 AM·IO 11M
298 SECONII ST.

$499

Accepts Credit Cards

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SEPTEMBER 4, 1999

. COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
DOUBLE COUPONS -EVERYDAY· SEE STORE Ff)R DETAILS

4/$

fairness or' respect fur the fee lin gs

$
. 299

BONELESS B_
UnERFLY PORK

• Ch ops ................
Ll.
101_,
.

1

Dear Ann Landers: "Patrick"
and I have been married .for seven

CHICKEN LEG .
Ll.
9
e . . ~~:~~ ee•eee•

Quarters ..

FAMILY PAK A~SORTED

.

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·

Pork Chops·····~··· .

33

MAXWELL

C

$_
1139

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•
2 12

ON-COR CHICKEN

.

Nibblers.~

•••••••••••• · 1'9
Ll.

LB.

J.T.M. BEEF

a

very personal issue , and it 's no,t easy

to talk about ." said Ms. Lewinsky, in
a statement released 1&lt;xlay on lhc
company's Internet site .
The compan y did not : ...J.y how

much weight she in tenus to lose.

,.

LAY'S
POTATO
CHIPS

. .

By CURT ANDERSON
AP Tax Wrtter

move foi)Vard."
Republicans kept the
WASHIN,GTON (AP}- There is room for compro- tax bill locked away on
mise with Republicans on tall cuts, but they must be Capito l Hill during the
modest and not come at the expense of adequate spend- August recess as they
ing on critical programs, a lop White House aide s,ays.
tried to drum up public
John Podesta, the .White House chief of staff, said support for the measure
I'Tesident Ointon. hopes to begin serious negotiations and demonstrate their
with the GOP-led Congress on spending and tall issues commitment to ·cutting
after he vetoes the )().year, $7!/2 billion Republican tax !axes as a prelude !o the
CUt
2 ()()()
. congressional
"We believe that some tall relief is appropriate, " elections.
Podesta said following a National Press Oub speech
Over' 10 years, the
Wednesday. " It ought to be balanced against the other bill would reduce all ·
income tax rates by I
important national needs."
Podesta s)rCSSed the administration's contention that percentage point, ease
the tax bill passed by the GOP-led Congress spends too the marriage penally on
much of JliOjccled budget surpluses- at the expense. of many two-inrome couples, eliminate estate taxes and the
Social Security and Medicare - and is improperly allernative minimum inrome tax, reduce capital gains
weighted toward wealthier taxpayers. He said Ointon taxes, expand pension and 401(k} laws and provide
would veto the measure as soon a5 congressional leaders · · ilumeious business tax breaks.
send it to the While House ~ which· will ~ur as early- as
There are mixed feelings within !he GOP about·
Sept. 14.
.
whether to seek compromise with the president on a
"Please send us the tax cut bill so that we don't have · smaller tax bill . Some hard-liners would rather force a
to keep fooling around with the phony debate," Podesta veto on the $792 billion bill and use that as a political
said. "Send it down to us so that we':"" veto it, and then issue, but others believe voters prefer a concrete aocom-

5.5

oz.

FT BBQ
SAUCE .

4lb.box

69~ ..

(STOKELYS SQUEEZE
CATSUP 79¢ 28 OZ.)

POST 13 OZ. COCOA OR .
PEBBLES, 12
OREOS, 13.75 OZ.

FRESH HEAD
hd
lettuce•• ~ ••••••••••••••

59c

3
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$ · 79
Cheese ••••••••••••••• 1
2/ s:4
$ 99
Dress1ngs.~ •• !~:~....
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KUFT AMERIC~N 12 oz.umit 2 please2/ $

KUFT SHREDDED

!I OZ. ASST

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Reg . Fat free, or 7 Seas

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14.25. 15.25 oz.

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2/$4

4
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KRAFT 14
DELUXE
MAC &amp; CHEESE OR ORIG.
·VELVEETA SHELLS '&amp;
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21$3~~
LIMIT 3 PLEASE ADD. PURCH. 218~

.

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE

$4!t,
LIMIT 1 W/$10ADD.
PURCH $5.99
33-39
'

oz.

-

·- - - - -

WHEELERSBURG ( AP) - A house fire that started on a mattress
killed three people and seriously injured a fourth person, firefighters said.
The bodies of Shawn Douglas Ewing, 8, his father, Gary Coyl e, 46, and
Shawn's -aunt, Alma Coyle, were fo~nd Wednesday morning in lhe front
bedroom of the 150-year-old log farmhouse east of thi s town about 90
miles south of Columbus, said Vic Justice, Vernon Township fire chief. ·
One of the Coyles' brothers, Jerry Dean Coyle, 38, was in serious con·dition today at Ohio State University Medical Center with burns to his

.

.

. It appears !he victims fell through the floor from the second story, Justis
said.
Some of tile four family members who survived the lire told Justice that
the fire started about I a.m. in a mattress in an upstairs bedroom .
·Alma Coyle tried !o drag the mattress downsiairs, but it got stuck in the
stairwell:
Her pareniS, Carl and Alberta Coyle, escaped out the front door while
her brothelS, Jean Dean and James Coyle, jumped from the roof.
Justice said he suspects that an electrical short started !he fire, but the
cause likely will pever be determined since the house was destroyed.

Today's

COLUMBUS (AP}- More than

Lotteries
Pick 3: 9-8-0; Pick 4: 1-9-6-0
Super Lotto: 4-31 ·34-38-39-46
Kicker: 2-4·5-2-4-6

' Daily 4: 6-8-3-1
3: t-4-0;

~::

........ Cash!

BIG PURCHASER - Home
National Bank of Racine pur- ·
chaaed 17 anlmala at a cost of
$11,207.30atthe Melg• County
Junior Fair livestock nle and ·
as a big purchaaer were honored at Saturday night's buyera banquet. The youth whoH
animal• were . purchased by
the bank Included Ed Smith,
Robert Forester, Jessica Dll·
Jon, Billee Pooler, Jnalca Justice,
Kayla
Glbba,
Kyle
Edwarda, Zack El,uah, Joeh
Eniln, Alan Moore, T. J. Moore,
Stephanie Wllaon, Renee Colburn, Chad Hubbard, Alex .Burroughs, Amanda Upton, and
'Joe Brown: Joining them for
the picture were bank repr.,
aentatlvea Gary Norrla, Wayne
and M111:lne RoH.

Report: Guaranteed insurance for miners in trouble

8 ROLLPK

Win A
BANKROLL
This Week
Powell's Super
Value

PURCHASED MOST ANIMALS - Farmera Bank and
Savings Co. purchased the
most anlmala at the Melga
County Junior Fair livestock
aale, a total of 25 coating
$11,894.65. Paul Reed, Ed
Durat, Terri Fife and Angle
Morrla of Farmera Bank joined
the boys and glrla from whom
they purchased animals for a
picture following Saturday
night's buyers banquet. In the
group were Joshua Rathburn,
Kenny Zuapan, April Butcher,
Courtney
Kennedy,
Aah
O'Brien, Kaaa Lodwick, B L i e
JQ Welah, ~yson Patter ri,
·
Chrlatopher Myers, Kim May
Jo1h Collins, CheiHa Young,
AlyiBa Baker, Brook Bolin,
Ashley Hager, Theresa Baker,
· Amber Pooler, Andrew Upton,
Amanda Upton, Cassandra
Patterson, Carrie Sheets, · and
Jessica pooler.

Kroger strike ends
.,. Kroger bakery today after mainte·
nance employees ratified a revised
three-year . contr~ct propos!'~ to end
a three-day ·strike.
Members of the International
Association of Machinists and
Aerospace .Workers had gone on
strike at midnight Sunday. Union
bakers . honored their picket lines,
leaving operation of the plan! in the
personnel.
hands of

ors buyers

TOP BUYER Rutland
Bottle Gaa, the top buyer at
the Meigs County Junior Fair
livestock sale, purchased the
grand ch,amplon market steer
and· 12 other animals spend- .
lng $12,530.85. They were
given 1peclal recognition at
the buyere banquet Saturday
night. Here rapreaantlng the
bualnea• ara Herb Grate, Herbie Grate, and David Grate
with the boys and glrla fro _m ·
whom they purchased ani·
male, Andrea Neutzllng, Und·
say
Houser,
Shannon ·
Enright, Sarah Stobart, Sta·
cle Wataon, Wesley Karr,
Brent Buckley, Dayld Tucker,
Shawna Davia, Hollie Davia,
Brlttlnl
Henaley,
Aaron ·
Gillilan, Erin Harris and Sara
Ervin.

Sentinel

600 workers were back on the job at

,.

Meigs County Fair Board banquet h

· Good Afternoon

$499

$600

_......... ......._

PAINESVILLE (AP) - Lake County and the owner of !he Perry
Nuclear Power ,Plant will split !he cost of $6 million in improvements to
emergency control operations for !he facility.
Richard Collins, attorney for Lake County commissioners, said utility
negotiators questioned whether the agreement was binding, even though
Oeveland Electric Illuminating Co. officials and Lake County commissioners had signed it. CEI is now owned by FirstEnergy Corp.
CEI paid for emergency control centers for both the plant and for public safety agencies in order to obtain a license from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in the midJ1980s.
FirstEnergy executives and commissioners agreed at a meeting
Tuesday thai the funds will be used
to rephice 1987 equipment that is
becoming obsolete.
Z Sections • 12 Pages ·
" ·These were tough negotiations,"
said Todd Schneider, FirstEnergy
spokesman. "The county will have
ihe best, state-of-the art equipment
that· will contribute ICY everyone's
safety."

SPARKLE
PAPER
TOWELS

9"

NABISCO 0 EO
SANDWIC:H
COOKIE!S

2/$

WAFFLE CRISP

TOMBSTONE FROZEN

.

STOKELY'S
VEGETABLES

•

3·
2/$
6
P•IIIGS................ .

UNITED F~ILY PACK

5QTPAILS

TOP
• CHICKE~·

•

----

plishmenr even if it is of the I ~7 balanced budget deal. Unless the caps are·
more modesL
lifted - neither the White House nor GOP leaden are
•
1111 W
Ointon has said a tax suggesting thai- many programs are going to suffer.
toward
cut of up to $300 billion
In his speech, Podesta accused Republicans of shanptO(p'fla, over 10 year.; might be changing vital science and research programs in various
not~ polltlca
acceptable, and moder· spending bills, including a cut of $1 billion from Qinwith 1111 .....,. 110
ate lawmakers of both ton's fiscal year .2000 request for the National Aeronau- .
.. ~____._,111
parties iri Congress are . lies and Space Administration and a cut of $1 .8 billion
,..,_,_,_.,
working . on alternatives for civilian research and develilprnent:
t:tUt:/M to Ollf
somewhat higher than
"We should all be working toward bipartisan
· - - · :S IUIUIY .,,
that.
progress, not playing politiCS with an issue SO fundamen•
Although Podesta dis- · tally crucial to our nation's future, " Podesta said.
-John
counted any growth in
But Elizabeth Morra; spokeswoman for the House
Whlflt
public support for the Appropriations Committee, said that unless the spending
chief or
GOP plan, many Repub- caps are altered, lawmakers will be forced to make
licans believe Ointon's painful choices in allocating a limited pool of money
willingness to rompro· throughout government. .
mise shows that pans of the bill are popular.
Ointon, she said, wrote a budge! that depended on
"Th is latest exercise is further proof that President unrealistic revenue increases, such as higher .tobacco .
Ointon does not want to admit that he is dead set against taxes.
giving any tax relief to married rouples, small business
Under the caps, for example, the spending bill that
owners, investors and millions of other Americans;" said pays for labor and mariy social programs would fall $19
Rep. Bill Archer, R-Texas, chairman of the House Ways billion under Clinton's request.
. and Means Committee .
"We have to deal in reality," Morra said. "We've
Ultimately, the size of any · tax cut depends on how do
very best we can to prioritize spending under
lawmakers cope with tight spending caps imposed as part
t
e! restrictions. It's tough."
'

"Wi tlhould

Utility, Lake County will spend
million for emergency planning

c

LB.

Pa ties ••

KRAFT

a Jen ny Craig In c.\ wei ght loss pro -

120Z.

8
9
C
Spare Ribs ..................
BOB EVANS PORK

. gram since earlier thi s summer.
"Anyone who has struggl ed with
excess weight knows that this is

Single Copy· 35 C en t s

.

-~and~~

$." 19
Pork Chops •••••••• · ..&amp; ·

CENTER CUT

.

-Page 4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 61
.

Three people killed in house fire

2.LITER$

n. .sS 69
Lunchables ..................

OSCAR MAYER

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Moni ca
Lewinsky Is on a m1ssion Lo ~ lim
down .
The fo nnc~ White HouSe intl!rn
announced
. she has been enro lled at

Meigs County's

-

mud hole" in the boy 's back was
totall y uncalled for. That krnd of
intimidating tactic . is. mexc usable

Monica
Lewinsky
enrolls in Jenny Craig

High: 80s; Low: 50s

Reglon.al Briefs

and hi s viole nt threat to "stomp a

ANDREW TREY COATES
TURNS ONE • Andrew Trey
Coates, son of 'Joey and Misty
Coates, celebrated his . first"
birthday July 18 with a party at
his home in Chester.
A Teletubbies theme was car·
, ried out and cake, ice cream,
chips and pop were served.
Attending besides his parents were his grandparents,
Roger and Diane Coates, grandmother, Jane Estep; great·
grandparents, Alva and Mary
Coates and Howard and Marie
Birchfield, and his great-grandmother, Phyllis H11ye.
Others attending were Janel,
Morgan and , Wesley Harrison ;
Charlie, stephanie, and Jacob
Brewer; &lt;;:athy Coates, Jenny
Mayle, Pam Manley, Kathy
Stone, and Rodney and Michael
Grueser.
A second party was. held lor
Trey at the home of his grandparents, Beth Birchfield artd
Tom Schoonover in Middleport.
Attending that party besides his
grandparents were parents and
Jake Birchfield and Jenny
Mayle. ·Sending gifts were his
grandfather, Chris Haye and
Heather Elkins, Holly, Georgeanna Bucky, and Shane Blaek,
~manda ·Coates and Amy Harri~
son.

Tomorrow: Sunny

The Atlanta Braves
stop late Reds ral!y,
defeat Cincinnati 8-7

Veto of GOP-tax cut certain, but :then compromise possible

of 01 hcrs.· · CR ITICAL IN CA PE
COD
DEAR CAPE COD: You arc
right . and I thank you for saying· it
so well
A great many-readers were out ~
raged by the un cle 's fai lure 10 insist
lh.at the boy be give n his seal back.

and reprehe nsibl e.

Local football preview, Page 5
Children of alchoholics, Page 6
Family medicine, Page 8

Today: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 50s

Spo rts

ELTER- Charlotte McGuire; a vlctlma advocate for
Serenity HouH, lt~,glven a tour of the new homeless shelter for
men, located on Union Ave ., Pomeroy, by Michelle Casto, manager, and Hilda Stotts, director ol Serenity Houae, which operates the ahelter. An opan houae event was held at the aheltar on
Wednesday.

r

PIITSBURGH (AP}- The fund that guaran·
tees lifetime health Insurance for retired roal min·
ers and their families is about to go $13 inillion i·n
debt, and the problem could get worse, a newspa·
per reported today..
.
.
The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review said the debt
troubles rould jeopardize coverage for 70,000
people in the United Stales.
Recent court rulings threatened the solvency of
the United Mine \\brkers of America's Combined
Benefits Fund, union President Cecil Roberts said.
He said the debt will hitS 13 million on Sept. 30
and could increase dramatically during the next
ftve years.
About 300 roal mine owners pay into I he fund ,
which pays out benefits of Sl million a day.

Roberts said three court rulings undermine a
In June, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor
federal Jaw that is supposed to guaran lee benefils of a company that went out of business before it
to miners for life - even if their employers go out came under the rontrol of the Jaw. Union officials
of business. .
.
.
say t.liat opens the door for other older compani es
In 1995 i~ Alabama, _mmers successfully s~al· to Withdraw as well.
.
.
lenged the annual premiUm they had to pay mto
"These (court) rulings have created a loommg
the fund.
.
fundihg crisis. ... I caution that unless a solution is
Union officials say that cut overall contribu- found soon, there will be increasing pressure bytions to the fund by I 0 percent. Before the ruling, Some trustees to cut benefits as the CBF's defic1t
the Social Security Administration had set premi· continues to grow," Roberts said.
urns at a level I hat was suppoSed to keep tf.e fund
The union has suggested shifting m~ncy from
in good shape.
·
the $250 mill ion in interest ina fund destgnated to
In February, a federal judge in Alabama clean up aban.doned coal mines.
.
ordered the fund to return $40 million to the mine . That fund has a balance of $1.4 billion. said
owners to make up for premiUms the court said Jerry O.ildress, a spokesman for the Office of Surhad been to high in the past
face Mining, which administers it.
·

�Thursday, September 2, 1999
•

:C ommentary
•

By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Bulllnn• Arlalpt

'Lstllbli.sftd ill 1948

'

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-8112-2158 • Fu: Wl!-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlllher

CttAAl.ENE HOEFLICH

DIANEHtlL

NEW YORK (AP) - Perhaps it is true, as
many Internet investors insis~ that a new world of
vast economic resources and riches lies ahead for
those daring to believe.
Even Alan Greenspan, his ideology sown in
what s.ome think is the old world, has hinted that
iechnological breakthroughs make him wonder if
he can rely anymore on his old economic maps. '
·The technology of 'the information age, the
new worlders assert, has made business more pro-

Controller

ar-•urnrgeo

ductive,
·creating
value
ideas
rather than
of iron,
coalout
andofbrawn
·and vastly enhancing human wealth.
Millions of people - inventors,'
entrepreneurs. investors, speculators, employees among them already have benefitted rrorn their
faith. And now, they say, the benefits
will flow to all. .
.
Ordinary people will be in constant communications via vest pocket electronic gadgets. ~sembly
· lines will be run by electronic chips,
.. Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio freeing workers for more elevated,
brainpower jobs.
·
newspapers:
·
/f.eno should worry about public
confidence
Busines.s costs will be cut at
,
every stage in production, meaning
Aimro &amp;aeon Jountlll, Aug. 19
·
"II fall d' ctl to lh
: There's more that should concern Janet Reno than her own credibility. more revenue WI
Ire Y
e
bottom line. The economic pie will
"[be attorney general should be worried about public confidence in the coun- grow larger, enabling everyone . to
fO''s top investigative agency.
'
have a bigger slice.
In the wake of the fire at the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas,
And the threat of inflation, which
on April 19, 1993, officials of the Justice Department and the Federal has hung as heavily over progress as
Uwcau of Investigation deni~d any role in the fire that killed 80 members of . the plague in ancient days, will be
the cull They insisted that no pyrotechnic tear-gas canisters had been used greatly reduced.
,
If this sounds like Utopia, it may
during the FBI assault that aimed to end the 51-day standoff at the .com-

thousands of ICSKr fortunes have been made by
inve51ors and employees who believed in them.
U's enough to make anyone w~r if there
isn't something to the new world thesis. And to
wonder also, IS Greenspan hos, if there isn 't also
reason to be fearful and cautious of lottery fever.
Millions of investors alresdy have expressed
their belief in the new world by buying up shares
in new world companies. Their pensions are so
invested. Their savings. And their borrowings.
Is this inflation? Not as we used to think of it.

Friday, Sept. 3
AccuWealhe.- forecast for da

prices), and the deflation can be catastrophic,
affecting jobs. pensions, wages, profits, home
equity values and ownership ...
And so, Greenspan, the Federal Reserve chairman, is now more 1han ever inclined lo examine
stock prioes as well as consumer and producer
prices.
And perhaps to di. oourage heavy investing by
raising interest rates.
·
" We no lon~er have the luxury to look primarily to the flow of goods and services, as convenuct

\

0

Today in History .
By The Auocleted Pr•••
··
'
.
: Today is Tl]ursday, Sept. 2, the 245th day of 1999. There are 120 days left
in the year.
: Today 's Highlight in History:
: On Sept. 2, t945,. Japan formally surrendered in ceremonies aboard the
USS Missouri, ending World War II.
: On this date:
·
In 1666, the Great Fire of London broke out, claiming thousands of
homes, but only a few Jives. '
.
In 1789, the U.S. Treasury Department was established.
: In 1864, during the Civil War, Union General William T. Sherman's
filiUS occupied Atlanta ·
•
: In 1901, Vice President Theodore Roosevelt offered the advice, " Speak
softly and carry a big stick," in a speech at the Minnes.ota State Fair.
In 1924, the Rudolf Friml operetta "Rose Marie " opened on Broadway.
· In 193S, a hurricane slammed into the Florida Keys, claiming 423 lives.
In 1945, Ho Chi' Minh declared Vietnam an independent republic.
In 1963, Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace prevented the integration of
Tuskegee High School by encircling the b~ilding with state lroopers.
In 1969, North Vietriamese president Ho Chi Minh died.
In I98S,.it was announced that a U.S.-French expedition had located the
wreekage of the Titanic about 560 miles off Newfoundland . .
Ten years ago: In Nicaragua, a 14-party opposition coalition chose Vialeta Barrios de Chamorro as its presidential candidate . (Chamorro went on
to win the election the following February.)
Five years ago: The government reported the nation 's unemployment rate
.
for August was unchanged from July, at 6.1 percent
One year ago: A Swissair MD- I 1 jetliner crashed ·off Nova Scotia, killing·
all 229 people aboard. Pilots for Air Canada began a two-week strike, the
first in the carrier's history. ·President Clinton concluded his Moscow summit with Russian President Boris Yeltsin.
Today'• Birthdays: Jazz musician Horace Silver is 71. Former Senator
Alan K. Simpson (R·Wyo.) ·is 68, Former Baseball Commissioner Peter
Ueberroth is 62. Rhythm-and-blues sjnger Sam Gooden (The Impressions)
is 60. Singer Jimmy Clanton is 59. Singer Rosalind Ashford (Martha &amp; the
Yandell as) is 56, Singer Joe Simon is 56. Football Hall of Famer Terry Bradshaw is Sl. Actor Mark Harmon is 48. Tennis 'player Jimmy Connors is 47.
Actress Unda Purl is 44. Rock musician Jerry Augustyniak (10,000 Maniacs) is 41. Country musician Paul Deakin (The Maveri cks) is 40. Actor
Kcanu Reeves is 35 . Actress Salma Hayek is 31. Rhythm-and-blues singer
. K-a (Joded) is 30. Singer Tony Thompson is 24.

0

0

0

0

· Icatumbul 111·,... I

W. VA.

KV.

C 1999Aa:t1Waalhar,tne.

.

~

.

Marshall A. Miller, Jr., 75, of Beverly, died at j o n Wednes.day, September 1, 1999.
He was born on July 1S, 1924 in Pa•~shla, son u tbe late Marshall A.
and Ethel Searles Miller. He retired in 1986 after 23 yCarl from Central Ohio
Coal Co., and was the owner of M&amp;M Electronics in Beverly.
He was a member of the Beverly United Methodist Church, Jackson
Moose Lodge 11569, and the Fraternal Order of Eagles 13665.
Surviving are a daughter and s.on-in-law, Bonnie and Virgil Hutchins,
Beverly; tWo sons and a daughter-in-law, Stephen Miller of Jackson, and
David and Debbie Miller, Grove City; seven grandchildren; three great
grandchildren; three brothers: Raymond Miller pf Columbus, Vernon Miller
and George Miller, both of Michigan; t.Wo sisters, Ruth Sheldon of Princetqn, Ind., and Sonja Smith of Auburndale, Fla.
Besides his parents, he was. p~ded in death by his wife, Nina R.
McCollough Miller, a Meigs County native; a brother, Carl Uoyd Miller, a
sister, Margaret J. Farr, and a daughter-in-law, Nancy Miller.
Funeral services will be held on Saturday, September 4, 1999 at 11 a.m.,
at Beverly United Methodist Church, with Rev. Carl Orphanides.
Burial will follow at Chester Cemetery.
Friends may call at" the McCurdy Funeral Home in Beverly on Thursday
from 7 to 9 and Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m., with Moose services at ·
8 p.m.
Memorial contributions may be made.Beverly United Methodist Church,
Beverly \blunteer Fire Department or the Beverly/Waterford Emergency
Squad.

:o ~•~·. ~• • @•.

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Jr.
will remain for weekend
leJAUitdldln .. .

It isn't the 50!11e as pushing up prices of ilcms in

the Consumer Price Index. But it is creating a
wealth effect, which theoretically allows people
to overspend and undersave.
And the consequences are different too: Stock
prices can deflate as well as inflate ,(as may prod-

ing alleged widespread Chinese
espionage at U.S. nuclear labs.
"
Then, on May 7, the United
States accidentally bombed the Chinese embassy in Belgrade.
Last month, U.S-China ties carne
under further.strain when the president of Taiwan advocated a change
in the relationship . between his
island and the mainland, suggesting
relations henCeforth be "state to
state."
China viewed 'that as a move
toward Taiwanese independence. It
considers Taiwan · a renegade
province and has said it would use
force, 'if neces.sary, to block independence. ·
The United States has a military
agreement with Taiwan to defend it
against an invasion from the mainland.
But despite the elevated rhetoric
across the Taiwan Strai~ there have
been optimistic words from bot)l
qtina and the United States on
using the New Zealand meeting to
mend fences.
'•
"Obviously we hope that !his
meeting can be the occasion for significant progress on WfO," said
Stanley Roth, assistant s.ecretary of
state for &amp;stern Asian and Pacific
affairs.
The wro is the Geneva-based
organization that· oversees .and sets
rules for international trade. U.S.

'tionally estimated," the chairman said in a speech
late last week.
Now and in the future, he explained, the Fed
must increasingly focus on changes in asset values in determining whether inflation is becoming
a danger to the economy.

.
·
·businesses ' see China's entry as WfO," Li Zhaoxing, the Chinc:Se
imJ?Orlant to opening Chines.e mar- ambassador to the United States,
kets. For China, it also could mean told a news conference. "I hope our
new markets - and an end to the American friends will not further
annual, emotional debate in Con- raise the threshold."
'
gres.s over renewal of normal trade
One Democratic official clos.e to
relations.
the talks said Clinton and Jiang
But China hasn't been 'able to would not use the meeting to hamjoin the WfO because of U.S. mer out an agreement- but would
' demands that it first liberalize its only act if they could seal the deal,
markets. ·
.
Thus, some U.S. officials, includ. The two countries &amp;!most reached ing U.S. Trade Representative Chara deal in April, during a visit to lene Barshefsky, were flying to
Washington by Chinese Premier Zhu Auckland, after Labor Day and
Rongji. The Chinese made a number ahead of the Clinton-liang meeting
of market-opening 'concessions.
in hopes of seeing their Chinese
But Clinton, bowing to pressure counterparts to prepare the groundfrom CQngress, refused to approve a work.
·.
deal. He claimed China had to do
It remained to be seen whether
more to protect U.S. steel and textile Clinton and Jiang would be able to
companies and open its market to announce a final market-opening
American finan¢ial service firms.
trade agreement.
Then came t)le embassy bomb"Right now it's a dance because
ings - and China froze the trade of the embassy bombing," said
. talks.
economist Lawrence Chimerine of
Some hard liners in China remain the trade-oriented Economic Strateopposed to resuming trade talks with gy Institute. "I know the Chinese
the United States, just as many U.S. leadership still wants 'to do it and I
congressional conservatives oppose know our government wants to do
closer relations with Beijing.
it."
Thus, both presidents must walk
, At the very minimum, U.S. offi·
a careful line.
cials were hopeful that Clinton and
China wants to join the trade Jiang could announce that formal
organization, but there's ·a limit to talks could resume.
the price it will pay.
EDITOR'S NOTE - Tom Rlium
· "I personally believe that China
·
covera
national and International
, is already qualified to ascend to the
alfalra lor The AeiiOCiated Pr...:

Working ·undercover

i

' r

.

.

upper hand. Politicians don't listen to us." It's
true, big contl'lbutors and lobbyists do have undue
influence, 'but it's wrong to say that individuals
have none. •
Members of Congress do listen to the people
who raise campaign money fo• them, but they
als.o·are deeply attentive to the voters who send
them to Washington -~ especially if the voters are .
vocal and organized.
If citizens want to reduce the influence of spe.cial interests, they can go to a congressional can ~
didate's town meeting and demand campaign
finance reform.
And bring some friends. Candidates do listen
to what's on peoples' minds.
People say they can't find out what the issues
are, that the media are only interested in sex,
scandal and polls. There's certainly a disturbing "
tendency in that direction, but simultaneously
there's more issue information around than.at any
time in U.S. history.
Through the Internet, Americans can now read
almost any newspaper or magazine in the country,
every major candidate's positions, the repons of
think tanks and research centers and any government publication.
lt's.true, both party establishments are trying
to pre-select candidates this year, freezing out all
but Texas Gov. George W. Bush and Vice President AI Gore.
But the choice is not inevitable if enough people ·decide they don't want it. You like Sen. John
McCain or former Sen . Bill Bradley better? Go to
work for them.
·
Citizenship does take effort. Pass ivity and
complaining is much easier. On the other hand,
what's up for grabs is ihe fate of a great country
we inherited. We should be worthy of the inheri'
tance.
(Morton Kondracke I• executive editor of Roll
Call; the n-•PI'per of Capital Hill.)

.

a 4 . . . . .. ... 11 II •r

·•

covers

the1 ~i!Y::c~:;~~s~:~·

Business group at odds with
GOP over financing campaigns

year

The Daily Sentinel

U.S. ~uture up for grabs in 2000

Republican.
By Morton Kondracke
.
Fact: In 2000, not only the pres' My friends Lionel and Gloria Chetwynd had.a
idency and control of the House
conversation in Paris that bears on Americans as
will be up for grabs, but probathey approach the millennium, especially the
bly the complexion of the U.S ..
2000 election.
Supreme Court and domination
The conservative Hollywood movie writer and
of American politics for the next
his wife, transplanted Canadians both fluent ill
decade.
French, were walking down a beautiful Paris. .
The next president may well
street in a summer mist. The pavement gleamed,
make up to three Supreme Court
the buildings enchanted.
Gloria s.aid to Lionel, "I have figured out why nominations. Chief Justice William Rehnquist, a
the Parisians are s.o mean and nasty even though • conservative, is 76. Justice John Paul Stevens, a
they live in such a beautiful place: They think liberal, is 80. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, a
swing voter, is 70.
they built it, when in fact they just inherited it."
· There are a whole series of issues, including
Lionel's observation is that Americans are in
'danger of having the same said about them. Not afirmative action, aid to parochial ·schools and
that we're habitually arrogant, nasty and callous state-federal relations, where a one-vote switch
like the Parisians, but careless and apathetic, will- could make a difference.
Republicans seem likely to keep control of the
ing to let rot seep into our politics and culture.
" We have a great colin~ry, " he said. "But we Senate next year, but the House· easily could go
th ink we buill it when we actually just inherited Democratic even if-- as polls now indicate •• the
. it. ..
presidency goes Republican. And, of course, polls
That's worth thinking about and -- if we're now mean nothing, especilllly if citizens are payinclined to be passive -· dqing something about as ing active attention to politics.
Moreover, governois and state legislatures
the country heads toward the millennium election.
Expens figure that only about 55 percent of elected next year will redraw congres.sional and
American voters will' participate in next year's state Jegislitive districts after the 2000 census,
presidential election, even though a record $2 bil- possibly altering the partisan balance in Washinglion Is expected' to be spent trying to influence ton ~nd many states.
Not significant? In 1990, Democrats won 53
their vote for all federal candidates.
.
People say they won 't vote because politicians . percent of the popular vote for Congress, entitling
orily listen ~ to monied special interests, because them to 230 seats in the House. In fact, they won
the parties have rigged the choice of candidates, 61 percent of the seats, 258, because district lines
because the scandal- and horse-race -minded were gerrymandered in their favor. Reapportion ..
media don 't tell us what the issues are, because ment made a 28-seat difference.
Are the parties just the same? Well, there has
polls tell us in advance who's going to win,
because there 's no difference between the candi- been a convergence toward the center, at least at
the presidential level, but which party controls
dates anyway.
Fact, howe-..;er: In 1998, if only 7,000 people will make a big difference on taxes, guns, Social
had switched their votes in the five close.st con- Security, Medicare, education and health care pol·
·
gressional races,. the U.S. House of Representa- icy.
People say, "special-interest lobbyists have the
tives now would be Democrat-controlled, not

I

Marshall A. Miller, Jr., 75, of Beverly, died at home on Wednesday, September I, 1999.
·
•
By Th• Associated Pre. .
He was born on July 15, 1924 in Pataskala, son of the late Marshall A
. A huge, slow-moving dome of high pressure continues to provide
and Ethel Searles Miller. He retired in 1986 after 23 years from Central Ohio
sunny and dry skies for Ohio.
Coal Co., and was the owner of M&amp;:M Electronics in Beverly.
·
And the conditions will reinain basically unc:;hanged through the threeHe was a member of the Beverly Unite~ Methodist Church, Jacks.on
day Labor. Day weekend, the National Weather Service said today.
Moose Lodge #1569, and the Fraternal Order of Eagles #3665. ·
Lows tonight under clear skies will be in the 50s.
Surviving are· a daughter and s.on-in·law, Bonnie and Virgil Hutchins,
On Friday, skies will be mostly sunny with highs in the mid-80s to 90
two s.ons and a daughter-in-law, Stephen Miller of Jackson, and
Beverly;
degrees.
David and Debbi~ Miller, Grove City; seven grandchildren: Barbara Rymer
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather staof Gahanna, Brenda Schwendeman, Waterford, Jennifer Rosen, Powell, Erik
tion was 100 degrees in 1953 while the record low was 43 in 1967. SunMiller, Jackson, Jon Miller, Andy Miller and Elisabeth Miller of Grove City;
set tonight will be at 8:03 p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7:01 a.m.
.
three
great grandchildren; three brothers: Raymond Miller of Columbus,
WClltber forecast:
.
Vernon
Miller and George Miller, both of Michigan; two sisters, Ruth ShelTonight... Mostly clear. Lows in the mid to upper 50s. Light and vari' don of Princeton, In~ .• and Sonja Smith of Aubum!lale, Fla.
able wind.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by- his wife, Nina R.
Friday...Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 80s.'
McCollough Miller, a Meigs County native; a brother, Carl Uoyd Miller, a
Friday ilight:..Partly cloudy. Lows 55 to 60.
sister, Margaret J. Farr, and a daughter-in-law, Nancy Miller.
'
Extended fom:~~ll:
Funeral services will be held on Saturday, September 4, 1999.at 11 a.m.,
Saturday...P;utly cloudy. Lows in the mid to upper 80s.
at Beverly United Methodist Church, wilh Rev. Carl Orphanides.
Spnday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower to mid 60s and highs in the
Burial will follow at Chester Cemetery.
upper 80s.
·
,
·
Friends may call at the McCurdy Funeral Home in Beverly on Thursday
Labor Day... Partly cloudy. Lows in the low to mid 60s and highs around
9().
.
from 7 to 9 and Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m., with Moos.e s.ervices at
8p.m.
Memorial contributions may be made Beverly United Methodist Church,
Beverly Volunteer Fire Department or the Beverly/Waterford Emergency
The 47-page legal report gives Squad.
COLUMBUS (AP) - City
Safety Director Thomas Rice says an analysis "of evidence studying
, he•IJ investigate a report that the work performance of police
some vice cops actually engaged officers" over a 4S-day period,
in sex with prostitutes .before
by ·Police
arresting them.
growth since 1942.
A report compiled hist year by Chief James Jackson last year, By· JIM ABRAMS
About 100 executives and acade·
the Police Division's Legal Sec- and no· officers were disciplined Aaocllltld Preu Writer
b~cause
of
the
reporl
re~ults.
WASHINGTON
(AP)-Apromimics
in the CED - about half its
tion details three instances in
The
review
stMes
clearly
that
.nent
business
group,
..
defying
the
membership
- have endorsed the
which vice officers described
it's
designed
"for
a
fact-finding
protests
of
a
leading
Senate
Republigroup's
recommendations
for changengaging in sex with prostitutes,
The Columbus Dispatch said and training purpose and not as a can, says it expects support to grow ing the laws, including by banning
'
foritseffort~obringabout.changesin unregulated soft money donations to
. today. The encounters included basis for discipline."
The Police Division wouldn't campaign spending laws.
political parties. It also ~uggests
oral sex and intercourse.
release
the
names
of
the
detecBusiness
backing
for
legislation
to
increasing
the ceiling for contribuThe morality issue aside, the
ti
ves,
who
also
weren't
named
i11
restrict
the
flood
of
company
and
lions
by
individuals,
providing public ·
police action outlined in the ·
' union money into political campaigns matching funds and setting voluntary
report was legal, said Kelly Cas- the report.
Castle admitted that other sex· could be influential when the House spending limits for House and Senate
tle , an assistant ·city attorney
assigned to the police depart-· ual encounters between p'olice considers the bills this month, said raoes.
and prostitutes have occurred, but Edward Kangas, an officer in the
"We don't think that money is a
ment.
said
Deputy
Chjef
John
Rockwell
Committee
for
Economic
Developbad
thing, but we think it needs to be
, Criminal cases involving offiissued
an
order
a
year
ago
to
halt
ment.
regulated
and accounted for," said
cers who had sex with prostitutes
'
"I am convinced, whether it is this CED president Charles Kolb.
have been successfully prosecut- such conduct.
"We made it clear that we did- fall or a
from now, we will have
The CED, in a written response to
ed, Castle said.
: But Rice said sex between n't feel it · was appropriate," campaign finance reform because McConnell, said "we make no apolothere is a revolt brewing," said Kari- gies" for joining such groups .S the
police officers and prostitutes is Rockwell told the newspaper.
Some
police
·officials
said
gas,
chairman of the accounting an&lt;! League of Women \bters and the
unacceptable .and said he'll con·
aUowing sexual contact some· consulting firm . Deloitte Touche Sierra Club "on an issue that they
duct an investi ation.
times is an acceptable way of fur· Tohmatsu.
believe 'threatens the vitality of our
thering the case.
Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., participatory democracy."The CED's
What the officers did' in the who heads fund-raising ej!ons for letter was first reported Sunday by
(USPS lll·960)
cited cases was good, "aggres- Senate GOP candidates, recently The New York 'limes.
Community Nl:wap ptr Holdlop.lne.
sive" police work that did not wrote business executives saying he
McConnell and other GOP leade"
· P'ublilhed every ' afternoon, Monday through
merit
any
discipline,
Lt
..
Robert
was
"astonished
to
learn"
their
comargue
that businesses, which tend to
Friday, 1t1 Court St., Pomemy, OhiO. by the
Ohio Valie r Publi!hinJ Company. Seoond class
Britt, who supervises the vice panies were supporting the CED "in give more money to Republicans than
postage pa1d at Pomeroy, Ohio.
,
·
officers, told the Dispatch.
its all-out campaign to eviscerate pri- Democrats, would see their power to
Member. The Associated Press and the Ohio
Newspaper A.s.~iation.
··
Vice officers allowed the sex vale sector participation in politics."
influence public policy weakened if
PDdm&amp;Jtcr: Send address corrections 1o The
to
occur
in
some.
instances,
he
He
said
executives
who
disagree
campaign
spending were limited.
Daily Sentinel, ltt ' Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
said,
to
have
stronger
cases.
with
the
"radical"
campaign
finance
But
some
businesses have begun ·
4~169.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
agenda of the CFD should resign to balk at demands from the parties to
By Carrier or Motor Route
from the nonpartisan · public policy finance increasingly expensive politiOne Wcek •••..••......:...................S2.00
One Month .. ..............................S8.70
group that hiJS promoted economic cal campaigns.

Progress seems likely at Clinton-Jiang meeting

.(

I Mormt.lcl lsr/W I •

0

.

By TOM RAUM
Aaciclllled .P,.. Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- .Barring
new· snags, President Clinton and
Chinese President Jiang Zemin will
make a major effort to get derailed
trade talks back on track when they
meet on the sidelines of an AsianPacific conference in New Zealand
Both sides want to repair the
~vere damage done this year to Beijing-Washington ties. And improv. G
Lak
h
·bl
ing trade relations is in the interest
Keeping real
es water W ere it e ongs
of both countries, say officials from
N..,•Jouriull, Mansfiold,Aug. 25
both sides and trade analysts.
One lesson we should have learned from the buffalo and the pas.senger
Informal trade talks between offi·
pigeon is this: Just because something is plentiful, that's no reas.on to waste cials from the two countries on
it.
China's Jong-s.ought bid to join the
· This lesson must be kept in mind whenever the subject of diversion of . World Trade Organization are likely
water from the Great Lakes comes up.
to begin · even before the ClintonThese lakes ll!"e so large that the water supply seems infinite and inex- Jiang session in Auckland on Sept.
haustible. It won't be, however, unless adequate steps are taken to preserve 11, the officials said.
aild protect it from both pollution and diversion.
"We hope at a minimum we Cll!l
Fpr ni&gt;w the proposed selling of Lake Superior water remains on hold, as have the tw\) leade{S talk about the
iliterested parties await the rel!"rt of the International Joint Commission.
. importance of the wro accession
· President Clinton already has said he will support the commission's judg- agreement for China," said David
nient. Let's hope it calls for keeping Great Lakes water where it belo~gs Leavy, a White House national secu·
rity spokesman,
in the Great Lakes.
Having a staff that looks like Ohio
· Of course, avoiding hew snags is,
Dayton Daily N~ws, Aug. JO
·
.,
the key. Recently, the ·relationship
. When black legislators took Gov. Bob Taft to task in March for choosing , has been plagued with little but
a:cabinet and staff far Jess diverse than the state's population, he vowed to · snags.
(lp more. Fiv~ months IO!Cr, his minority appointment numbers are a bit betFirst, there were Republican outter, if not impressive _ but his gender gap is disturbing.
.
cries over campaign contributions to
~ Spokesman Scott Milburn says Gov. Taft has "made it very clear to his Clinto1i's re-election ~ampaign by
staff they need to do better in finding qualified minority appointments."
Chinese interests. Then came a
• Going the extra mile just makes good business sense, too: Having a staff bipartisan House report documenttJiat looks like·Ohio improves the odds that state policies will better mirror
llihat Ohioans want and need.

•

IND.

~~~lcsures

focused illl attention sway from economic issues, as.the region 's economi~s
grow stronger, and toward North Korea.
: One of the last bastions· of hard-line communism, a country ruled by a
vic:ious elite that terrorizes and repres.ses a demoralized and starving populalion, North Korea is engaged in dangerous brinkmanship. As its missile
test over Japan last year showed, it is willing to risk an acceleration of the .
arms race in the region and jeopardize the area's stability in order.to squeeze
hand-ouiS from the West.
·
. . Because the regime has so completely failed in its management of the .
country, its people are starving. But there can be 00 bail-out.
We can ccr1ainly understand the reticence of western nations. to curtail
humanitarian aid. But perpetuating the sham that aid encourages moderation
ia North Korea's lesdership is equally dangerous. .

.

r~~~~r-~----------~~;;i

.
last week' from an FBI inventory of weapons used that day be. But, say the daring, the wealth of
iitdicate, however, that agents, in fac~ had used pyrotechnic tear-gas canis- ' Utopia is already pouring in upon
innovators and risk takers. Someten at the compound.
times even in billion dollar amounts.
. The agency's explanation of the contradiction is that the canisters had
been used six hours before at.a bunker 100 yards away from the main buildA billion dollars is a fig~re no
human being can easily fathom in its full dimening where the fire started. That may, indeed, be the truth, but what reason sions. 11 can't be spent. It is difficult even to give
·"''Ould anyone have now, after six years of denials, to trust the word of the it away. Or, if Someone were s.o disposed, to
throw it away.
bureau or the Justiqe Department?
: Reno announced in 1993 that the buck stopped with her. If there is a time
But it has been amassed, and quickly, by inno10 order a tnily thorough and independent investigation, this is it. ·
vators s.elllng shares in their companies. And

~~~~~~·~K~~ation of South &amp;st Asian nations rightly

JVIarshall Miller, Jr.

•

Editorial views.

The sham that aid encourages modera.tion

. Deatl\ ,NOtice~

1 Weather

The Daily Sentinel Greenspan: market needs a dose of disbelief

•

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.•

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Corractlon Polley
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Stocks
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Akzo .....................................46'Y•
Amerltech .................•...........63'1.
Ashland 011 ....... :.................. 38~.
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Bank One ............•................ 38~
Bob Evans ........................... .20'1.
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City Holding ........:................... 21
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Flrstar .. :........•...•............... ,.•.. 26'1.
Gannett ......................,.......... &amp;~~
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Lands End ...........................50 7o

limited .................................38'1.
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OVB ~ ................ ;..................... 32'•
One Valley ...............................38
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Prem Fln1 ............. ......... ,........ 11 ';,
Rockv.. ,11 .......... :..•...•......... 58'1.
RD/Shell ................................ 62 ),

Sears ....................... ~ •••..••••.••.33'1.

Shoney's ...............:...... .......... 2~.
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..

-·-·Stock reports are the 10:30
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by Advest of Gallipolis.

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: KANAUGA DRIVE - IN :

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FRI, SAT, SUN&amp; . MON .

••
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UNIVERSAL SOLDIER
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THE RETURN"
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AND
:~
BOWFINGER
,., ~··._
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MONDAY NIGHT CAR lOAD
NIGHT $5.110 .

Redovian, Veterans Memorial.
RUfiAND
7:51 a.m., with Central Dispatch,
Price Strongs Run Rd., ~qhn Keye~,
Holzer Medical Center;
9:20 a.m., White's Hill. Franni~
Mili~r, Holzer.

- --

Local Briefs
Minor Injury reported In collision
Two drivers were slightly injured following a two-vehicle collision
early today at the intersection of State Route 143 and County Road 10
(Carpenter Hill), the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported.
Not treated at the s.ccne of the 2 a.m. accident were Neil P. Giles, 19,
26770 Orchard Road, Albany, and Lori R. Fillman, 36, 40366 Carpenter
Hill Road, Pomeroy.
Troopers said Fillman pulled from th e slop sign on Carpenter Hill to
enter the northbound lane of I 43 and collided with a northbound pickup
truck driven by Giles.
Giles' vehicle was severdy damaged, while moderate damage was
listed to Fillman's car. Fillman was cited for a stop sign violation and .failure to yield.

Meigs Local named in suit
A student at Meigs High School has fi led a civil lawsuit against the
Meigs Local School District, alleging neglige nce on the part of the dis,
trict and a teacher at the s.chool, in a shop acc ident earlier this year.
Jeremy Jay Rowe, Middleport, suffered burns on March 30. He has
now filed th e lawsuit in Meigs County Common Pleas Court, alleging
t~at the district and teacher Kenneth Eblin were negligent in supplying a
nght-angle· sander to be used for grinding_ melal, and in not providing a
guard for the sander. This alleged negligence resulted in "severe and permanent" injuries when sparks from the sander ca ught his clothing on fire,
the complaint staies.
'
The complaint demands damages, including the costs of medical treatment, rei\Bbilitative s.ervices, future medi cal costs and punitive damages.

Petition disallowed .

.· ·

The petition of candidacy of Jack Ervin, whl) fii'ed with the Meigs
County Board of Elections as a candidate for Salem Township Trustee,
was rejected by the Board of Elections when they met to certify petitions.
According to Rita Smith, director of the board, Ervin 's petition did not
contain enough valid signatures, and hi s name will not appear as a candi·
date in the November election .
The petitions of all other carrdidates were certified as valid, Smith s.aid.

Rummage sale set
A rummage sale will be held at the Grace Epis.copal Church, East Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ftiday and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Items ·are needed
for the church sale including children's clothes and toys, men's clothes
and household items. Anyone with items to donate are asked to take them
to the Parish Hall behind the church on Thursday or Friday. ·

Dance to be held
' Round and square d~nce with clogging and Iine dancing will be held at
the Tuppers Plains VFW Saturday; &amp;to 11 p.m. True country will provide
the music and Ronnie Wood will be the caller. The dance is open to the
public. ·

Trustees to meet
The Orange Trustees will meet in regular session , Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
at the home of clerk Osie Foil rod.

Cleveland suburb to enforce
first cell phone-driving ban
ue to talk on the phone while driving
By MIKE WENDUNG
in the future - just not in Brooklyn.
Associated Pr•• Writer
BROOKLYN (AP) - Police
Patrolman Richard Hovan, the
have started ticketing drivers for primary officer in charge of enfoic- ·
chatting on cell phones in this Cleve· ing, the 'new law, s.aid the ordinance .
land suburb under a law believed to will make city streets safer.
·
"You might save a couple min- ·
be the first of its kind in the country~
Police had been warning drivers utes with a cell phone, but is it really'·
since the ordinance was passed in worth it if you get. into an accident?".
March. But on Wednesday, police Hovan said.
A I 997 study published in the ,
started handing out tickets to drivers
using hand-held cell phones.
New England Journal of Medicine
Fines for the misdemeanor start at found that talking on a phone while
$3 for first-time offenders, but can driving quadrupled the risk of 8!1 .
shoot up to S100 for a second offense accident and was almost as dangeror if the driver is involved in an acci- ous as being drunk behind the wheel. "
dent. Six lickets were written during
According to National Highway
the first two eight-hour police shifts. Traffic Safety Administration stalls;
· The law. prohibits use of a cell tics, cell phones were a contributing,
phone while driving ~nless both factor in 57 fatal crashes in 1997, the ·
hands are on the steering .wheel. last year for which figures are avail•:
Exceptions are made for1 emergency able.
calls, using a phone in .a parked car
or using a speakerphone.
The idea for the ordinance began
when Mayor John Coyne learned
that an accident near a city recreation
center was caused by an inattentive

driver talking on a cell phone.
"What we're telling people is that
if you're going to give the gift of
gab, get to the side of the road,"
Coyne said.
David Cleary, 35, of. Arlington
Heights, Ill., was one of the first drivers to be ticketed. Although he was
surprised at being pulled over, he
understands the reas.oning.
"If it makes the road safer, that's
good, " 'he said.
But Cfeary said he ~ould contin·

Seven EMS calls answered
U~its of Meigs Emergency Services answered s.even calls for assistance on Wednesday.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
· 9:48 a.m., South Second, Middleport, Elden Walburn, Holzer Medical Center;
11:28 a.m., Ash St., Middleport,
Wanda Findling, Veterans Memorial
·
Hospital;
'
5:10 p.m., Fifth St., Racine, with
Racine unit as first responder,
Dorothy Bentz, treated.
POMEROY
10:01 a.m., with ·syracuse unit as
first responder, Broadway St., Middleport, Dessie Kuhn, Veterans
· Memoria1;
,
· 9:20 p.m., Smith Goeglein Rd.,
with Central Dispatch,. Nellie

-

Clil fACTii ~ t4&amp;, 6:00;1:11, 8!56

\PRIIIGVIdlll fliiiMA
446·4524 :' ... : .: '

Our Memorials
are Easy to
appreciate. Now
they're also
easier to afford!

Summer.
SQle
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WED 9/1· THURS 9!2199

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The Dally Sentinel

_Sports

·
~~~

Paae4

-

2,1999

~astern

Braves beat Reds
8-7; Mets, Cubs,
·Cardinals also win
get it · done, " said .Remlinger, who
made one of ·the pitches that got 11 ·
done Wednesday.
'
The Braves pulled ahead 7·1
againsa Ron Villone (7-5) as Bret
Boone and Brian Hunter homered.
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) Mark The Reds chased Terry Mulholland
McGwire-and Sammy Sosa are going (8- 7) in the seventh and scored three
to hit home runs. The Atlanta Braves runs but could have had more:
are going to beat the Cincinnati
Remlinger relieved and got Sean
Reds.
Casey to hit inlo a double play .w1th
One is just as sure as lhe other.
the .bases loaded and none out,
Even in their otherwise enchanted underculting the rally. He ahen struck
season, the Reds still have not fig- out Greg Vaughn, who was 0-for-5
ured out how 10 pqt a dent in lhe club wilh three strikeouts and hit into
that has tormented them since the another of the Reds' four double
1995 playoffs.
· · plays.
·
Aaron Boone homered in the
The Reds Pulled Off One Of thel·r
hetter late-innmg rallies Wednesday eighth and Brian Johnson turned ~
mght but wound up with an all-too- into a one-run game with a pine
famlhar ending - an 8-7 Atlanta. RBI double off John Rocker. but
victory and an eighth strrught series , Scott _WIIhamson came_ 00 for the
won by the Braves.
·
Reds 10 the moth and let 10 a run with·
lfs unexplainable. lt·s uncanny. a wild pitch~ ~akmg It 8-6. .
It's overwhelming.
. Casey hit a solo homer- 10 the
"Any time a club beats you up moth, but Rocker •truck out Vaughn
like they have, it seems like they and retired Dmltn Young 00 a
have your number," said Reds third grounder to get his Jist save.
·
baseman Aaron Boone who traded
Nice comeback, JUSt another l~ss.
''I'll tell y·ou what: ,I,t's cenamly
home-rs w'lth brother Bre' t.
Red h
These are the Braves' numbers fun to play those guys, .. s &amp; ort·
against the Reds: 8-1 this season, 24- stop, Barry Larkm Said. You kno:-"
5 over the last three years . The Reds you re gomg to be 10 a dogfight. 1 d
have not won a series from the rather ha.ve the kind of game we had
Braves since September 1996.
tonight than a blowout. We JUSt .~01
The surprismg Reds have .trans· outplayed, outhu and outpltched.
formed ·themselves into one of. the
. The only consolation was_that the
small-market surprises of the season, Braves were headed out.
trailing Houston by 1 '!,games in the
"I'.~ glad to see them get ou~ of
NL Central. But when it comes to town, ~anager lack McKeon said.
playing the Braves, it's still no con· "They give .us a tough tJme. Every
once 10 a wh1le_, you run _across a club
test.
.
h f h
"No one on this team looks at it where eve'&gt;:th mg goes ng 1 or 1 e~
thai way," said Bret Boone, who and everylhmg goes wrong for you.
In other NL games, it was San
went from the Reds to the Braves m
a trade last November. "We know
ancisco 5, Philadelphia 3 in 11
they're for real. You don't play as Fr
innings; Pitlsburgh 9, Colorado 8;
god&lt;! as they have to this point and _be Milwaukee 5, Los Angeles 4 ; St.
a fluke.
Louis 9 , Florida 3; Cubs I, Padres 0;
"We. know we have to play our and E&lt;pos S. Diamondbacks I.
best against them, It just seems like
Mets '· Astros 5
when we've played them, we've
Robin Ventura hit his 2001h career
played them very well."
homer aod drove a'n four runs, and
· "It's nice to be on this side;'' said
Mike Piazza went 4-for-5 as New
reliever Mike Remlinger, who vork won al Ho·uston.
.
switched teams with Boone in the ••
Octavl·o Dote! (6-1) limited the
same trade. " But it's definitely not as Astros
ao four runs and five hits in

(leftl

with a triple ahead ol the teg by Anaheim third baseman Troy Gla'!l

In the thfrd Inning ol Wedneeday nlght'a American League game 1n
Cleveland, whare the Indians won B-1. (AP)

Indians roll to. ·a-1
victory over Angels
By_JOHN AFFLECK
CLEVELAND (A P) The
Cleveland Indians looked slrong,
while lhe Anaheim Angels JUSt
looked lost.
Cleveland scored six runs in lhe
!hint inning Wednesday. including
one on a Jim Thome fly ball that
.' Angels center fielder ' Garret
Anderson couldn't find in the twilight, as ihe Indians beat Anaheim 8-

charged with all six runs in lhe
inning.
. "Last night was a tough loss for
us and we came back wilh a good
approach tonight, " said Angels manager Terry · Collins. " But tonight 's
game was the only one in two weeks
that we have not been in. We've been
playing well and losing. " ' ,
Kenny Lofton. coming back from
a right hamstring injury that· kept him
1.
'
out of all but one game in August,
The win came , a night after finished 2-for-3 with a walk. His
Cleveland needed a big inning late double to the wall in center drove
- a 10-run eighth - to defeat home Einar Diaz to start the Indians
Anaheim. But this time the Indians scoring.
scored early and often.
Omar Vizquel followed with a
"If you look at the offensive tal- single to right-center and Lofton
cot in our lineup, we have that capa· scored on Roberto Alomar's RBI sin' bility," Indians manager Mike gle.
· Vizquel scored on a double steal
'Hargrove said, ."to hurt people and
·hun them qUick."
when caacher Malt Walbeck's throw
' Cleveland starter Dave Burba to third skipped into left field .
"(12·7), who is suddenly the Indians Manny Ramirez then got his !36th
holiest pitcher, won his (ourth _ RBI of the ye~ with a tnple to nght.
straighl stan.
~ngels outfielder T1m Salmon
· · Pitching before a record regular helped out ~amirez when he slipped
· season crowd at Jacobs Field of on the war~ing track.
, 43,399, Burba gave up eight hits but
Then came the ~arne's str.angesl
just one run over eight innings. He !liOment as Thome "hit a towenng fly
s!l'Uc:k out seven; including the side to center.
.
.
Anderson waved liis arms and
in lhe eighth.
"Nothing's changed really, " Salmon backed off. But then
Burba said, talking about his pitch- Anderson broke toward nght field,
ing style. "It definitely majces it eas- looking skyward. Salmon cut behut4
ier when you have an inning like him and p1cked up the ball as
tonight. B ul you tr)i' to stick with Ramirez jogged home. Thome was
your game plan."
cred1ted w1th a double ..
The Angels have lost eight
"I think 11m (Salmon) said he
straight games •and 10 of II. Starter saw it, but when !-put my arms out to
' Jarrod Washburn (0-3) couldn't say I couldn't find it, he didn't hear
rewrd an oul in the third and _w;as
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

Colorado ................ :. ,....... , ...60 15

Baseball
E15hm Di•ision

't!CI.I'&lt;I.

IU

New York .
Bolton
Torolllo ..
Baltt.rnon'
Tampa Bay

. 7~
?I
.. 59
...... 59·

,

51

6 14

58
04
D
74

S64
526
.447
44..

New York 9. flous1on

6' ·
II \

22

21'

Crntnl Di..-lsloo

CLEVELAND
...... 82
thicago ............. .,..........6l
Minneiota...... .,., .... 56
Detroit .. ,....
. ............ .5.'
Kanus City .. .
...51

.SO

62 1

72
75

"']

,!1

ls ',

79

.Wl
38.'

J l':

82

Wcsltrn DIY"Ion
TexM . .... ..... . ............. 80 54 .S97
Oakland ............. , ....... 7~ 60 s.o&lt;t
Seattle ... . ..
. .......... 67 66 .l04
Anaheim ..... .............. ... 51 81_ .J86

"

.

6'·:

\2' ,
l8

Wednesday's.scores

~

MLS standings
Ilam.

(Nathan 4-J).
St. Lou1s
6). s·os pm

~ : .' 5 p.m. ·
(O h v~r 7-8)

Oakland
(Hmdia 11 -Sl at New York (Hernandez
14-7),
I :05 p.m.
:rexas (Scle IS-7) at DetrOit (Mik:ki 10-10), I :05

p.m.

T~

n

LSOWPtJ .G(

Friday's games
Los An&amp;f'les (Park 8-1 0) at ctucngo (looatnt 1~ )..' :20 p.m.
,
Houswn &lt;1;-lampton 11&lt;4J at Montreal tSnuth 46), 705pm
. CIN CINNATI (Parris 7-1 l at Ptnl adelphta
(S~·hilling

14-5). 7·m p.m

.5 47
5 35
S 26
4 22
4 19
3 9

SJ
JS

~8
32
]0
24

Colorado ....................... 16 8 .l 42 J6
Los Angelc5 .
. ... 16 9 .l 42 .\8

10-lt). 7:0S p.m.

a1

San Otego (W Wllltams 1- 12) at Florida
(Burnell 2-0), 7 05 p m
: SM Francisco tEstes 9-7) at Pinsburgh (Cordova
8-7). 7:05 "p.m .
Colorado (Wright 1-2) 01 New York (Henhiser
•
12-10). 7·10 p.m.
Anzona ( Re~noso 10-2) at Atlanta (Mtllwood
14-7), 7:40p.m.
·
St. Louis (Ank.id 0-0) at MilwJWkel.': (Karl 8-I I),
8:05p.m

Los Angeles 3, San Jose 1

Saturday's games
Tampa,IJ.y al New England, 7·30 p.m

Dallas at DC United. 7.30 p.m.

Los Angeles at ~tanu, 7:30 p.in.
Colorado at COLUMBUS, 7:30p.m.
Kans~ City at San Jo51.':, to·30 p m

Sunday's game
Ctucago at New Yorlc:-New Jersey, I p.m.

r;::==:;::===========;;;;::==::i!:=:::!=::;:'l

Minnesola (Mays 5-6) at Toronto (Wells 12-9),
7:03p.m.
.
Anaheim (Sparb 5-10) at CLEVELAND (Nagy
1&lt;4-9). 7:0S p.m.

Friday's games
11). 7:05p.m.

Toronlo·(Halladay 8-6~ at Kansas City (Stein 01), 8:0S p.m.
O,ia.go (Na\lruTO 7-12) a1 Teus (Burket! .5· 7)
8:0S p.m.
'
New YOfk (Penme 12·9) at Anaheim (Belcher S
1). 10:05 p.m
Boston (Rapp 6-!i) at Seattle (Moyer 12.-6). 10:0:
p.m.
l
Detroit (toiitkowski 2-4) al Oakhmd (Appil.':l' 1
12), 10:3.5 p.m.

NL standings
•

Eulem DMsion

.n:a.

f&lt;1,
.630

New York ..........................81 5J
Philadelphia ..................... 6 7 6.5

604

D:lll

Atlanta . ........... ........... 1..... 85

Mlonlrt:al ................ .. ............ 57

Florid. ...... ,....... .

.....

SO

7()

ll 80

429
.398

Jl

Cenlnl .DI•Islnn
. ..... 79 .56
CINCINNATI.. ............... 76 56

.m

Piusbu,.Jo ....

.SilO

.... ....
.6 7 6 7
.............. , ..... 65 69
Milwaukee...
. 58 74
Ol•c:~~o ...

1

.S08

J '~
1 6~

Hovseoo ...

St louis

.. . 55 77

Wutrm Dhi5ion
Arizona.
.79 55
San FnmciKo . ... .. , .. .71 61
Los ,._,ngeles.. ................... 62 71
Sm Diego ... .
6 1 7J

GJl

l76

485
4.\9
417

l'lO
l41
466

4SS .

27

~

t'1111
IJ t.
19'·

n'
6'
16'

JO
11
'1J

Wednesday's score

Bahimore (Eriduon

CLEVELAND (Haney 0.1) at Balttmore
(Muasina 1.5·7), 7 05 p.m.
'.
MinneSOia (Hawkins 9-I I) at Tampa Bay (Witt_7-

JS
'28
40
47
42
SS

Chtcago ......................... 14 I I 1 40 44
Dallas ..
..... ....... .. .. 14 12 2 ~8 44 26
San Jose ....................... 114 II 10 22 \5 46
Kansns Cuy ... . , ........... 8 17 2 20 .\0 4.5
NOTE Three poinb for \lictOfy, one point for
shootout win aiJd z.ero potnts for loss. Shootout
tSOW) IS a subset of wins.

.
Bay (ArroJo 4-9)

GA

Western Conference

at M1lwaukec (Nomo 11 -

Today's games .
Kansu City (Sut.uli 0-4) at Boston (R Mllftinez
0-0). I :05 p m.

Eastern Conference

D.C .
. .... 19 1
Montrtal 8, Anlona-1
COLUMBUS ....... ..... , ..... 15 10
Chicago I. San Diego 0
' Ta!'lp~ Bay
... 1·2 14
Mtanu .. ....... ............ 10 16
New England .
.. . .... 9 16
Today's games
1
.. .....S 21
Phil adelphia (Grahc 0-1) ar San Francisco NY-N] .. .... ....

l9

Bahimofl.': 3. Tampa Day I
Toronto 4, Minnc:tOOl 0
Boston 4, Kamas City 3
CLEVELAND S. Anahctm I
Tc11.as 14. Detroit 7
Oakland 7. New York 1
St:altll.': l Chicago 2

•,

Soccer

Wednesday's scores

AL standings
Jam

444

San Francisco 5. Ph1ladt:lptua J (Ill
Piusburgh 9, Cc,&gt;lomdo 8
Mdwaulcee 5. Los Angrles 4
1\dama S; CIN CINN ATI 7
St Loo•s 9 , Floridtl. 3

a

:v.•

::

:~!~i;~:~~i~~~es~~~:.~~pw~~ Ailing·. Starnell
enters hospital _·~
::J
12 of 13 overall, improved the best
record in the majors to 85-SO and
tightened -their -grip on first place in
theNL.East. They're3%gamesahead
of the New York Mels, who beat
Houston 9-5 Wed.nesday.
·
"We al\~ays seem lo find a way to

Meigs County

District Public: Ubrary
eo.... vidt us lor
Storytime darting September ut
Eastern: Tuesdays at 1:00 p.m.
Pomeroy: Tuesdays at 6:00 p.m.
Racine: Wednesdays at 10:00 a.m.
Pomeroy: Wednesdays at 12:00 p.m.
Middleport: Thursdays at 1:00 p.m.
Youth Group meets Thursdays at 5:00
Ages 10-16

.

By ALAN RO.BINSON
PITI'SBURGH (AP) "'- Hall of
Farner Willie Stargell is undergoing
treatment for an .undisclosed serious
health problem wilh one of his
1
organs.
· Pittsburgh Pirates officials have
refused comment about Stargell, one
their grealest players ever and an
assistant to general manager Cam
Bonifay.
But forrner teammates and friends
have become increasingly concerned
about the 58-year-old Stargell, who
-has had health problems for about .10
years. ·
Stargell was admitted to a

Pittsbu!llh hospital under an assumed
name ~&lt;lnests aboutthree weeks ago,
accor.dmg to three sources close to
the Pirates.
.
During his hospital stay, the· former Pirates. star_ underwent blood
tests _and . d1alys1s, a source sa1d,
speaking on cond1t1on of anonym•ty.
The sources did not disclose
Stargell's specific ailment. But a former teammate, who did not wanl to
be identified , said Stargell has undergone kidney dialysis for several
years.
Stargell was moved recently from
the Pittsburgh hospital to another
medical care facility to undergo addi·

lional treatmenl and care, the sources
said.
It was not immediately known if
Stargell was still in the Pittsburgh
area or had been moved to a facilitY'
near his home in Wilmington, N.C,.
where he lives with his wife.
Margaret.
. Pirates managing general partner
Kevin McClatchy, who hired Stargell
'" I 997, has ordered team officials
not to comment about Staigell.
Stargell has not been seen in the
owner's bo~ at Three Rivers Stadium.
where he often watched games. lor
about a month .

·NOTICE TO' SEPTI INSTALLERS

.

.

The work will be bid out to those qualified/experienced contractors that are bonded, carry Workmens Compensation on employees and liability insurance.
The Grants Office will P.rovide technical assistance to the homeowner by creating the bid d&lt;:JC~!Jlents in. conjunction. 'Yith the
Meigs Health DeP.artment, sohctttng the btds from quahfted contractors, and ))roviding assistance to the homeowner in awarding ,
the bid to the lowest and/or best bid. The Contractor will contract
with each homeowner with payment providetkby -the County
EPA funds. Contractors must warrant the work for a period of one
(1) year from any defects occurring, with the exception of damage to the unit by others. All work must be ap__prqved ~y the
Meigs County Health Department and Grants Ufftce pnor to
payment for the work.
,
..
· ·
•

The Meigs Grants office is now requesting any qualified contractor wlio wishes .to participate and receive notice of the request
for bids on these pro1ects to contact the Jean Trussell, Grants
Office, at 1-740-992-7908 to obtain an apP.lication. Contractor
must provide this office with verification of Workmens Comp.,
liability insurance, and bo~ding through the Meigs County
Health Department.
The bidding process will start in October. The program will be
ongo~ng until funds are depleted. Call this office if you have any
que~t10ns.
. ..
·

"'

Jean Trussell
Meigs County Grants Administrato,r.
\

'

•

. .

'

I

.

of the frontline, where Eastern consistently manhandled
the Gallians. Eastern had more than 600 yards of total
offense.
Christman said, "This is a huge win for us. South
Galli a had some good athletes They had a couple down
.
·
hnemen that gave us fits early, but after we got some
rhythm, we weren't going to let up. These kids have
worked hard for this . I asked them after the game,
"When is the last tinie you can say you were on an undef · ·ted football team'" I saw a lot of pride in their faces.
we've got another tough week coming up against
Symmes Valley."
Chris Lyons had 'three catches for 109 yards as the
sophomore receiver displayed great agility. Lyons
. ht
caugh t the fi1rst o f -several EHS touchdowns, an e1g
yarder.from Garrett Karr. another talented Sophomore.
Freshman Brent Buckley added the kick for a 7-0 score

at the 6:00 mark of the first period.
The second score came on a 25-yard pass to Lyons
from Karr, ending with a voided e&lt;tra-point kick and a
13-0 tally. Karr ran in the next score on a quarterback
keeper, a I 3-yard ramble . He also added the two-point
·
conversiOn.
Karr added another touchdown, an 18 yard jaunt off
the option .
Sophomore Brad Parker added a one yard run set up
by a 25 yard run by Justin DeLaCruz. a senior running
back and one of three Eastern backs to reach the 100yard mark. DeLaCruz was later lost to a a knee injury,
that at press time was feared to be serious in nature . That
score with the voide(J kick pushed the score to 33-0
De LaC ruz rus hed nme
.
.
'aor 105 ,yards. Brad
t1mes
Willford was 15-102. Karr was 9-101. Parker rambled
four times for 58 yards. and Aaron Schaekel was 3-12.

· DeLaCruz is out for a while with an ACL ae.-~
may return early with a brace. Matt Bissell,
.
Schaekel and Jimmie Putman are also fiJhting inj
this week.
.,.
.
heeped
ben f lhe a ..........
.earn pratse was
upon mem
o
...,.
.... ,.
fli ·v
d d ~ ·v
· 1 addition 10 5
·a1 cite-!:
~ en~ e anrti e ensl ef unltsL
K
B~illf~
lons o; ~ ~'f'~cesC rom ~~' tt :--· 11
'
aron c ae e ' es row an
a
ISSC ·
~
Parker added another &lt;core. a 29-yard run follow
by a Brandon !Juckley k1" ,., '"~' "the score 42-0. Ch ~
Lyons had an interception and Brad Parker also had one-,.
. 11 ·h
Th E 1
h
· d ~ · · ffort lik~"
e kag ehs With a vie toedavse atheGealns !ve1 e . st 32
1Ia o JU
1ast wee w en ey Ifill
ou
•
d
.
·
A
11
avera yar s.
,
. Game time is 7,30 at -Eastern.
-~

1:

°

Athens to battle Meigs' in Marauders·first road contest Friday
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
' Two former, Southeastern Ohio
Athletic' League rivals will tee it up
Friday evening when the Meigs
Marauders travel to Athens. to play
the Bulldogs.
Both teams are coming off season
opemng losses, the Marauders
dropped a 21-6 coolest to Gallia
Academy, while the Bul)dogs lost a
35- 17 game at Nelsonville· York.
In the 17 game series between the
two schools Athens holds a slim 9-8
advantage. Meigs however has won
the last live ga':"es between the two
schools, mcludmg a 32-26 contest
last year at Bob R,oberts Field .in
Pomeroy.
Les C~arnplin returns as the head
coach ._of the Bulldogs. Charnphn
coached the Bulldogs back in 1984,
and has been an -assistant' the past
several years.
Athens welcomes back four
starters, two . on both offense and
defense from a team that finished 2-

8 last season.
Academy last week, that game was · almost like two separate ball games.
In last year's Marauder win , .--- -- - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Meigs opened up a 32-12 lead heading into the final period and held off
ihe Bulldogs for the win . Meigs had
the withstand an aerial assault from
.
Stli,B
departed quarterback Nathan White
1967 ......... .................... :: ....... .. ................... .... .. .......... .. Melgs 12, Athens 8,
. who threw for 322 yards and three
1968 .·........... .. .... .... ............................. .' ........ ::· ....... Athens 20, Meigs, 18
touclidowns.
1969 ... .. ..... ..................... ..... .'.................................... . ,.. Meigs 6, Athens.-0
Replacing White at quarterback
1970 ................................ ..... , ..................................... .Meigs 42, Athens, 6
this season will be the coaches son
1971 ............................................................... L ....... Athens 31. Meigs, 0
Les Champlin a 6-4, 200 pound
1972 .............................................. .... :.......................... Athens 13, Meigs, 6
junior who played tight end last sea1973 ......................................................................... ... Athens 13, Meigs, 7
son. In last weeks loss to
I 974 ............... ....... ....... .. .............................................. Athens, 8, Meigs, 7
Nelsonville-York, Champlin com1975 ....... :..................................................................... Athens 12 Meigs, 0
pleted si&lt; of 20 in the air for 160
1976 ........,.. ........... ......... ............................. :.. ................ .Athens 9 Meigs. 7
yards. All six competilions were to
1977 ...... ........................................ :.. ...... .......... .......... Athens 19 Meig1. 0
Steve Llewellyn a 6-foot, 150 pound
1978 .......................................................... ....... ..... .. ...... Athens 2, Meigs, 0
junior, including a 74 yard touch1979 ...... ... .... ........... ............. .. ......... ....... .......... ......... .. ..... ... .. .........No game
down pass.
1980 ........ .................................................................... Meigs 16, Athens 13
Junior tailback Jason Sparhawk
1981 .................................................. ...... .... :...... , ......... Meigs 18. Athens. 7
led the Bulldog ground attack with
1~82 ....................................... ,:..... :...... ...................... Meigs 28. Athens 16
21 carries . for 89 ·yards, Steve · 1983-96 .......... ....................... ................ ...................................... No game
DeWeese added five carries for 51
1997 .................................... ....... ... ... :.............. ... ........ Meigs 41, Athens 22
yards.
·
1998 .............................:............................................. Meigs 32, Athens 26
In the Meigs loss agai_nst Galli a
·
Athens leads series 9·8

Meigs vs. Athens: the series

The Blue Devils won lhe first half
jumping out on top 21 -0. In that half
the Blue Devils oul· gamed ]he
Marauders 168-55.
Meigs carne out in the second half
a different team holdmg the Blue
Devils scoreless, but the maroon and

Kennedy also added an inlerceptiol)
on defense .

~

"Athen s is a well coached team,'l
Marauder coach M1ke Chancey said ·
of th1s weeks opponenl. "''m su~
that they are going to be anxious IG
p1ck up thelf first ,win . We have lobe
sure that we are ready lo play foot·
ball ."
'
K1ckoiT IS 7.30 from Rutter Fi~ld
from Athens Hi gh School in The

gold was only able to score once. In
that second .half Me1gs out gained the ·
Blue Devils 223- 101 in total yards,
but they couldn't d1g out of their first
half hole .
Plams .
•
Justin Roush desp11e only having
Traffic. note : Due to construction
very limited pre season pract1ce ttme on Sta te Route 33 . motorist arc
earned 28 limes for 131 yards. Josh unable 10 IUm off of 33 north at the
Hooten added five carries' for 25 Johnson Road exit which is near the
yards. .
Athens Messenger.
Grant Abbott completed I 0 of 26
Contmue on to llle Plams exit
in the air for 131 yards, while Roush (State Route 682) dnve to the second
was one for qne for 24 yards. Aaron hght in The Pl ams and tum left. A~
Vanlnwagen ano Adam Bullinglon alternate route is tO go into Athens
each . pulled ·m four passes, imd tu~n onto S.R. 682 right before
Vanlnwagen gqod eno~gh for 67 you get to Peden Stadium and the
yards ·and Bullington for 40. B. J. Convocation Center. Then drive out ~
Kennedy and Man Stewart each along the Hocking River past Whites
caught a pass for 24 yards, while Milltnto The Plains . .

Southern to take on Portsmouth East in home opener Friday
This
week
the
Southern
Tornadoes again try their luck ai
' · home against Portsmouth East, a
team that in the past has been a tradi~onal power in lhe Portsmouth area,
but has fallen upon rough times the
past couple of seasons.
Portsmouth ·East Is small. but
quick. The Tartans line up in a S-3
defense in most cases, however, they
have also shown a 4-4 front in their
-only scrimmage. They were 28-12
.

losers to Lewis Counay, Ky. last
weekend.
Southern will have io watch for
East's outside quickness on the
sweep and bootleg, while also d6ing
a better job of plugging up the middle.
"
. ,
The Southeastern Panthers took
the ball and ran it riRhl up Southern's
gullet last Friday night en rout to a
29-0 triumph before a nice crowd in '
the season opener on Southern's

Roger Lee Adams Memorial Field.
The non-league game left Southern
al 0-1.
:
Ross taliied 167 ,Yards on the
ground in the first half and collected
seven first downs. In 24 plays,
Southern, held the visitors to just 44
second half rushing yards, roughly
two yards per play. Southern gave up
211 yards . rushing and 288 yards
overall.
Southern's inefficiences could be

.

~

trace to someone m1ssmg their
assignement on almost every play.
That's why they call it a team.
Missed responsibilities cost Southern
plenty early and set the tempo for the
game.
After a tough week of praclice,
Southern has had some i~juries.
Buster Penix, who was 10 get som¢
time in the backfield this week is
questionable with a back/hip injury,
while Jeremy Hill is out with a

severe ankly sprain. Tommy Smith tackles, Clay Enslen had a sack, and
may get more reps this week after Jimmy Alley, Buster Penix, Adam
missing much of last week with Cumings, and Tyler Little each had
fumbie recoveries . Brice Hill
InJUrieS.
Southern has made soll]l!"changes blocked a pun!.
in its offensive personnel.&lt;hat should
Cumings led with 14 tackles .
remedy some of · last . week's strug- Baker had 8, Collins six. Jlrandon
gles. lliis is a good week for a good Hill si&lt;. and Josh ·Davis seven.
showing from the Tornado offense.
Sophomore Matt Ash led the rushIndividually, Southern's Will.ie ing with 12-39 yards, Adam
Collins had a sack .and si&lt; tackles, Cumings was 5-29. and Ryan Hill 1Jamie Baker had a sack and eight 12.

Brister returns to Bro-n cos' camp after verbal clash with Shanahan
By JOHN MOSSMAN
DENVER (AP)- There's trouble
in Broncoland.
Denver's quarterback controversy
erupted into angry words Wednesday
as deposed starter Bubby Brister crit·
icized his head coach, even as Brister
returned to the practice field and
pledged his support to new starter
Brian Griese'.
During a remarkably ~andid news
·conference, Brister said he felt
deceived by Shanahan and felt he was
being made the "fall guy" for teamwide breakdowns during the presea·
son.

" If it was just between me and
'Mike, I probably wouldn 't have come
back: -' Brister said. "But I didn't
· want to walk out on my teammates

Indians ...

Meigs County Grants Office will be providing grant/loan fun~~ng
through an EPA Water Pollution Loan Fund Program to quahfteo
homeowners within Meigs County for the replacement and/or
upgrade of on-lot septic systems.
·

)

For More lnfonnation please contact Emily
Bass at Pomeroy Library (740) 992-5813

.

Easte~ EaRles will meet a very Iough Symmes
Valley club th1s week when they return home against
Sym~es Valley. In Symmes they will face a much more
· pbystcal team With a stronger line. This could be a real
test for the Eagles.
.
Like Eastern s
h had
.
. . , ymmes as
. a quarter century 1ong
we•ght trammg program and agatn won numberous liftmg meets last year. There size and strength is their trademark to success. Symmes handily defeated Trimble last
;.veek.
The Eastern Eagles started .out their best campaign in
~vera! _years by defealing South Gallia 40-6 at
Mercerville last Friday night in the season opener for
!lOth clubs at South Gallia High School.
. to rh y th m Eas tern never. Iet up. The strength
· . 0 nee m
and conditioning program instituted by second year
mentor Scott Christman proved its worth in the trenches
·, BACK TO SECOND_ The Atlanta Braves' Gllt'ald Wllllama dlvee
back to sacond biiM al Cincinnati second bllaeman Pokey Reese
waite for the pickoff throw trom pitcher Ron Vlllone In tha llret
Inning ol Wednesday nlght'l National Leegue game In Cincinnati, .
where the Brave• won B-7. Williams was thrown out on the play (AP)
five innings. The rookie right,hander from the lop of the 17-foot perma-,
·
h.
11
is 6-0 in II starts since 1osmg IS nent wa .
major league debut.
·. The &lt;;ubs won for just the ninth
Ventura hit a two-run homer, his time in 39 games and avpided a
29th, after Piazza doubled in the first three-game sweep by .the Padres. San
inning. Ventura, who went 3-for-6, Diego lost for the 27th time in 39
added an RBI single in the fifth and a games.
run-scoring double in the sixth.
,
Giants S, Phillies 3
Jeff Bagwell hit his 39th homer
Jeff Kenfs two-run homer in the
for Houston:
bottom of the II th inning gave San
Cardinals 9, Marlins 3
Francisco the victory over the
In St. Louis, Mark McGwire Phillies, who have dropped a seasonhomered and Garrett Stephenson high si• straight.
·
I . h lh'rd
. ht . b the
posted another strong outing for the
t wast 'i 1 stra1g wm Y
Cardinals in their victory over Giants over Philadelphia, and two
Florida.
came on e&lt;tril-inning homers. Barry
McGwire· ended a drought of 25 Bonds hit a two-run homer in the
at-bats without a homer when he hit lOth inning Monday night.
his 52nd of the season, in the fifth
Bond~ led off the lith with a dou'
inning 'offRyan Demp~ter. He passed ble into the right-field corner, and
Lou Gehrig 10 become the c·areer Kent' followed with his 17th homer
leader at first base with 494.
of the season, off Wayne Gomes (4McGwire remained four homers 4). Rick Rodriguez' (2-0), also the
behind Sammy Sosa with a 459-foot winner Monday night. pitched one
drive off the scoreboard in lefl field inning for lhe victory.
B ·
Dod
4
for ~js first homer in eight games.
rewers 5,
gen
So..;rhomered against San Diego.
Cal Eldred, suffering through
St~phenson (5-0) pitched 6'/, horrendous season, pitched six
'innings, allowing one run and seven strong innings as Milwa.ukee won .i~
· sl theu fourth VIC :
hits with 'aour stn'keouts and two Los A nge1es 'aor JU
lk
'
tory 1·n 18 games
wa s.
·
Cubs 1, Padres 0
Eldred (2-7), who brought an 8.07
Sosa homered off a TV camera in ERA and a si&lt;·garne losing strea~
center field for his major league- into the gan~e, look a four-hit shutout
leading 56ah homer as Chicago won into the seventh, .b ut left after allow·
in San Diego.
ing two walks and a single by pinchSosa's shot with two outs in the hitter Jose Vizcaino.
th fi
· hh
PII'lltcs 9, Roc:Ides 8
fourth came on e 1rst p11c e saw
from left-hander Sterling Hitchcock
Brant Brown homered and drove
·
d
431
f
Th
and went. an esumale
e~t.
e
'
that JUt s ou t
(S ee NL on p
5) ·
camera SIIS on a p1aborm

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

to face Symmes Valley in football .home opener Frida}'{

! ' The

National Lea gue
roundup

GETS TRIPLE - AI third bllae umpire Eric Cooper
makea
the call, the Cleveland Indians' Manny R11f11lrez alleles into th rd bllae

J:hur•day, September 2, 1999

(Contin~ed from Page 4)

cabin, where he was consoled by
and my assistant coaches."
Asked how seriously l)e consid- some teammates, and he met for
ered leaving the team, Brister said, about an hour on Tuesday with
"It depends on what time of day it Shanahan.
But it was clear that some unrewas. When I had a level head and
thought aboul it, I knew I couldn't solved issues remain.
'"I'm not· happy with what hap- .
walk out on Romo (linebacker Bill
Romanowski) and Mac (wide receiv- pened," Brister said. "I can "tlie. lam
er E4 McCaffrey) and Brian and the very disappointed. I was shocked."
Informed of Brister's remarks,
guys. I can't do it. It's not about me
and Mike. ll's about the .teanl and the Shanahan said. "If he wasn't bitter
and did'n't feel bad, he wouldn't be
long road to try to three'peat. .
"I owe it to my teammates to made up of the right stuff. Bubby is a
come back and work hard and be _cOmpetitor. He's a warrior. He wants
ready when they need me . I'm sup- to play. I want him to - play.As
porting Brian as well as he supported Elway's heir apparent, Brister said he
..
never had any indication he might
me. "
In a stunning announcement lose his job during the preseason.
"If 1hey had satd we were competMonday, Shanahan said Griese, a second-year pro who ha.s yet to stan an mg for the job. that would have been
NFL game, would be the St!lfter tine," the 37-year-old Brister said.
instead of Brister.· who was 4-0 as a "That wasn't the case. J·wasjust bidstarter last season while John Elway ing my time. waiting for the regular
'
was injured. Elway subsequently season."
retired after 16 seasons.
Shanahan disagreed , saying,
"I was surprised like most of you "Everybody's job is on the line.
were ," said Griese, the son of Hall of There's not one position on our-team
Fame quarterpack Bob G~ese . "But I where som"eone has that position
thought I was going to play this year won. We evaluate people every day."
Brister struggled in three of the
at some point- not because Bubby
. was going to falter, but because it's a Broncos' four exhibition games,
long s~ason. Not a lot of guy~ can twice throwing interceptions on his
make 11 through the season Without first pass of the game. He had no
touchdowns and three interceptions,
geuin~ hun."
. .
.
Bnster retreated to h1s foothills while Griese had six touchdowns and
-------------------~-----

;.,e and he thought· I was calling for
£he ball," Anderson said.
: · Thome said he could sympathize.
with Anderson .
"I've been there where it is a
helpless feeling when you've lost the
ball," he said. "It is no fun ."
·. The Indians came back from
being down I i-4 Tuesday night to
beat the Angels 14-12. It was the
ihird time this year Cleveland has
. overcome an eight-run deficit, a
. major league record.
• • • (Conunued from Page .4)
· "I guess it's impressive. You . in four runs and Warren .Morris had
El!POS 8, Diamondbacks 1
don't sit there and say 'I hope we're three RB!s as Pittsburgh scored three
Dustin Hermanson came within
down e1ght ru~s ton1ght so we can be runs in the ninth inning to win at two -puts of his second career shutout
the first team ~~. the h1story of base- Colorado and sweep the three-ga)lle as Montreal .won in Arizona.
ball to do th1s, sa1d Hargrove, who series.
Hermanson (.6-12), who lives in
didn 't have to worry about a deficit
Brian Giles doubled with one out Phoenix, brought a five-hitter Into
at all Wednesday.
in the ninth against Dave Veres (3·6) the ninth inning before allowing Jay
:Thome and Richie Sexson added who then walked the next two men: Bell 's 32nd homer with one out. Luis
consecutive solo homers mthe _fifth. 'Mqrris singled, driving in Giles to Gonzalez followed with a double to
Se.son broke h1s bat but still hit the close the Pirates to 8-7, and Brown chase Hermanson .·
ball 395 feet.
.
.
followed with a lwo-run single.
Anaheim's run carne m the s~&lt;th
when Salmon doubled and later
~cored on Troy Glaus' groundout.
· Cleveland set its old attendance
record at Jacobs Field on May 25,
l998, when 43 ,342 fans watched the
' .
Indians play Detroit.
. Notes: The brace being worn by
Cleveland catch~r Sandy Alomar, on
the disabled list since May I I with
an injured left knee, is working so
well that right now he IS planmng to
skip "getting an injection of lubncant.
into the knee to lessen the. pam. He
join the Indians in Baltimore
s weekend .... Anaheim activated
starter Ken Hill from
disabled li st. He had been on the
sablcd hst for the second .lime this
s,~~~s~~:i:w~~ith a strained right groin and
.11
I muscle and tendinitis in
s le ft knee . Hill is 4- l I in 22 starls
Anaheim with a 4.80 ERA ....
Angels also purchased the· conof left -handed pitcher Juan
' lvarez from Triple-A Edmonton
recalled right-hander Mike
from Edmon ton. B01h pitche_d

NL games

.

,

·

W/

12 ·oz. Drink $1.59

Dick &amp;Ruby.vaughan Invite
You To Stop In Before
&amp;After The Ganie For Their
Friday Night Specials.
DAIRY

992·33

one interception.
Despite that performance, Brister
said he thought he earned the right to
start opening day. "but Mike obviously doesn't feel that way."
Asked if he believed he could
work throu h his dis ute with

Shanahan, Brister said, "I don't have
to work with Mike. Kubes (offensive
coordinator and quarterbacks coach
Gary Kubiak) is my coach. I"m upset
with Mike right now, and he 's probably upset with me. I"m upset for a lot
of different reasons."

At least one Denver player· felt
Bristel's comments were ill -advised.
Asked if challenging Shanahan "s
autocratic rule ultimately would lead
10 the end of Brister's career with the
Broncos, veteran safety Tyrone
Braxton said, "I think so."

.;.;,::~.;:.::.;;;.:.o::...;.:.:;,...;;;;:.;:~,;;.;;:.:.:O-C,;:,
. :.:8;:;y;.;S~p:;;::;;;0;;:.;.:,rt~S....,Ir-n-T""""T~F;..;::;;;:...:.:;,:;.:;::.;;;;;;,___...
.

.

Meigs golfers take ~third
in Ohio Division match

Meigs varsity volleyballers beat
Waterlord in season opener
Meigs posted a come from behin!l three·-game victory over Waterford in Tri-Valley Conference volleyball

The Wellston golf team continued its hold onto lirsl
place in the Ohio Division of the TVC by postmg a win
.
action Monday evening at Waterford. The garhe was the al The Elm Tuesday evening.
Wellston won the match with a team score of 156,
first of the season for Meigs . Waterford won the first
malch 17- 15, but Meigs came back and won the last Belpre was second w1th a 169, ·followed by Me1gs
( 175), Vinton County ( 177), Alexander ( 184) and
two games by scores oCI S-11 and 15-11 .
Shannon Pnce was 16 for 16 serving for Meigs with Nelsonville-York (221 ).
Jam1e McWhorter of \Vellston fired ,a one uver par
10 points, Tangy Laudermilt was 14 for 14 serving with
I 0 points with one kill and niric assists. Tiffany Halfhill 34 for match medal 1st. Zach Meadows led Me1gs w11h a
was 16 of 17 \vith 10 points with three kill s and on 39, Nick Dettw1ller and 1bmmy Rbush each had 44's,
assist. Brooke }Villiams was 12 of 16 serving with nine Carson Midktff ana Jos~ Napper each carded 4Ws and
points and five kill s. Amy Hysell was four for se ven Thad Bumg"\"dner added a 54.
servmg with three points and seven kills and Tawny
TVC Ohio Division standings
Jones was six for seven with thr9e points.
(afler two matches)
As a team Meigs was 68 of 77 serv-ing (88%) and .
10
they had 16 kills.
I . Well ston
8
The Marauders will host Wellston on Thursday.
2. Belpre
6
3. MEIGS
4. Vinton Counly 4
S. Alexander
I
Nelsonville-York I

-.

COME ON OVER TO BOB'S
IT'S FALL PLANTING TIME!

Fall Garden
MUIDS
''Many

Col~rs

To Choose From"

8 inch Pot

s3•• each or 3 for s11 °0
Jail 9s ,tl (Jreat &lt;rime &lt;ro
Plant Perennials
"9ood Selection Still Yfvailable"

Fall Pansies
(Winter Hardy)
Selection of Color•"
Planl Now For Beautiful Early Spring Beds"
'~Large

~tr 'Bo6 1s for !Fm~ Proaua

'11iis La6or tJJay 'W~ntl
itu:lwfiniJ 'Ddldous 'flirJJinia Puzcliu
1/4 Mile North of
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Mason, WV
(304) 773·5721

Open 7 Days a Wnk

,-

�•

By The Ben~

The Daily Sentinel

NOll!ING RUNS
UXEADEERE"

P•e

•

Thursday, Seotember 2. 1999

~hildren should know their mother died driving drunk - it might save their lives
'

Ann ' londers
~997,

los Angeles

and

' Creqtor$

Dear Ann Landers: I am wru~
ing in regards to. '' A Perplexed
Father in Boston," whose wife was
killed m an\aUio mohile accident. He
is now wondering if he should tell
their two sons. ages 12 and 16. that

lheir'mother Was driving drunk.
You said the Children need not he
t&lt;)ld about it. and added , '"lt "s tragic·
enough that the v.·oman lost her
life." V-'hat wou ld he truly tragic i-:
if these vuun l! men dtd nm know
about lh~ cir~..7 Um:)tance!'l surmund ~
mg their mot her's de.:J.th ..
I am a 19 yea r old wuh a .Tl!L·m·.
cring alcoholic m oth~r . and a nack
addit·tL·U ktth\.'r. Because of \\.hat mv
parent s arr..'. I h;Wc hcconh.: th~ rcrson I am luday! h,1n:• .1 full time Jll h

in an attorney's office, atte nd college, mak_e good grades and am an
active member in mY church.
1 believe; howevr: r. thai my
greatest accomplishmenl is the fact
1hat 1 have never taken a drink or
used a drug. I have·made my life the
way it is hccausc I have sc~n firs!
' h ~md the de strucJion that drugs and
alcohol can ca use .
These young men ha\'e th.: right
. t~) kn ow how tht:ir mother dtcd and
they should be ' !Old be~.:ausc. just
mayh&lt;:. it t'ould keep them from.
mak ing th e sam'e mistake . Would
tht:ir. mother wa·nt' them to know all ·.
the fa!Dts surrounding h ~r dc:.~th if it
\\Lluld :;ave their lives'.' I think the
ans wer i&gt;. " Yes." -· A CARING

DAUGHTER IN FLA.
DEAR DAUGHTER: I heard
from scvenil · readers who agreed.
with you . They all said the boys
should be told the circumslam:es of
their mother's dealh because 11 could
prevCiu them from going down the
same road.
·
Children of 'alcoho li cs oflc n
become alcuholics lhemsc lves
Oecausc of a generic componentKnowing 1he trulh would serve as
both a di.re warming and an cffe1:.
live deterrent.
Dear Ann Landers: I can never
thank you enough for prin tmg your
Jnnual Reconciliation Day .;olumn . '
· I had not see n or spoken to my son
and his wtfe for several years. even
!hough we live in the same town. I
had always thought "maybe" or
"some d:1y." but "some .day " never
c;~ m·~ and "may be" never happened.
The day thai column appeared. 11
wo ke me up to the fac t thai the
estrangement was alsp my · fau lt . I
wrme 10 my son !hat eveni ng and

commun~ty

First parent S~ need to cxam mc lhc
sa,fety of th~ir home and' neighborhood. Do the fu rn ace . fireplace ,
eleclri cal wiring. and smoke detec-'
Jors work safely?
Does the ditld know what to do if
the detector &lt;) lann so unds of if there
is a fire? Arc dangerous subslances
and articles loc ked where the child
can·, get them? Is the neighborhood
safe for the child to walk home alone
from sc hool ? Can other children in
BY BECKY BAER
the area be trusted?
Meigs County Extension Agent
Does the child know how lo use
Family and Consumer Sci- the phone and how 10 lock the winence/Community Developmeni dows and doors' Is the child able .to
call the par~m' Are there trusting
Now that sohool has started, par- adults or emergency o fficials in
ents may be as~ng themseJ.ves if close proximity that the child can
their ch ild is ready to stay home call during a crisis?
·
alone during after sc~ool hours.
Is there a suppon group such as a
There are considerations that parents Neighborhood Watch Program thai
and children can th in k about 10 can help in a supervisory role?
determine if the you ngs ters are ·
Parents should approach their
mature enough to take care of them- child and ask if they will be frig~l-

668 P I - t Drive

Aaoss ,_ w. .. s. .........35 w.st

the Racine chapter.
In the various c'ategories of 85
ex hibits at the fair, grand champion
ribbons went to the five members - ·
Chris Proffill, bird house ; Brady
Bol ing. welding : Tyl er John son,
Granny Smith apple: Lori Sayre,
sunbeam tomato: and Tyler Johnson. .
mailbox. Rese rve champi on ribbon s
wen1 . ro Matt Johnso n. birdhouse;
J'o n Sm11h, welding : T 1.. Moore,
mailbox: Lori Sayre, Golden Delioious -apple. and Chris Proffill. sun ·
beam tomato.
·
Other ribbon winners were Brady
Boling. birdhouse , blue : Joe Adkins .
birdhouse, red, mailbox.. blue : Ian
Wi se, birdHouse, red. mailbox , blue :
T J. Moore . birdhouse and welding,
blues; Dolly Hill . bi tdhouse. red,
mailbox blue : Chris Proffitt. mail·

-1.
'

·
"",_-

• Buoch Grond 3:30

TUPPERS PLAINS - . YFW
Po&gt;l 9053, Ladies auxiliary. regular
meeting at 7:10p.m
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeli ne
Chapter 17~2. Order of the Eastern
Star, 1'hursday. 7:30 p,m. at ,the
Midt;ll cport Masonic Temple .
FRIDAY
REEDSV ILLE - 'Oii'vc Tow n~ hi p trustees. 7:30p m. Friday at the
township garage on Joppa Roud.
RACINE Meigs Coun ty
Pomona Grange 46. regular sc~si on .
Friday, 7·30 p.m. at tile Racine
gran.ge hall. . located on Oak Grove
Road in Ractnc. All contest items In
he hrought fnr judging.
SATURDAY
Star
SALEM CEN TER
Grange 778, rL":gu lur session, Saturd~y. potluck supper at 6:30 p.m.

· Dunl Lutlo ZOO

p_m_ • Saturday • ESPN

• Winston Cup; Pepol Soortllom ~

'1 p.m. • Sunday • ESPN .

__..

.

I

Dalil Eerm•dl

Mllll-u.tft. ~~ Uil:larl:l. 3,259
.. -.......... 3.222
.. larrw ~. 3.196
.. )aff ...... l.JOf
l . o-. E.m•"· J .O«
I. _,.,. LIIBW, 2,740

a.
31.

SIIH/:.
-.,JdWuu.COII .
See us for Your Stih~
Power Tools &amp;
AccesSories

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-330B

- -·

1999 POINTS STANDINGS

:l. 0.. J.-rett .,l ,57l

cned if they were to stay alone as a and be available if you need to be
lalchkey kid. Is lhere someone in lhe reached'?
neighborhood of whom they arc
Realize that each child will be
afraid ? Do they know so meone . different. Some children may be
nearby who they' could call in an read~ lobe a latchkey kid by ,age 10;
emergency?
.
others may not be mature enough for
Can they do.their homework and ' several -more years.
chores and fix. somethin g 10 eac
When the time is right, stan lhe
without supervi si on ? Can they self-care by leaving the child alone
amuse themselves? Do any 9f their for a few shon lengths of lime. You
friends stay alone? How do these may want 10 set up a trial period
friends manage when left alone?
(one or two weeks) lo see how
Parents shou.ld also ask them- things go. At the conclusion of the
selves if they are ready to leave their . time dis10uss if there needs to be any
child alone. Do you and your child changes.
communicate well about the child's
Parents can determine if their
feelings' Will lhe child tell you if child is ready ,to be unsupervised
something goes wrong?. Does the after school by thinking about their
child follow directions and obey home , neighborhood , the · child's
rules ? Can he or she find useful 1 development and the readiness of ·
1
things to do ?
the parenls.
. Does the child have the know!·
If the previous questions can be
edge and self-confidence 10 lake answered satisfactorily, the child is
care of him or herself? Will you be probably mature enough to stay
home when you say you will ?. Can home alone.
you monitor your child by phone

.. ~~.1.1.40

............ 2.110

AlTENTION
ADVERTISERS! .
Advertise Oft tllis

CcNilllw-.:;

~ Southern

Ria NCGnl; Jeff Gordon.

Cheorole&lt;. 139.031 mon. Seot.
6.-1998 "··
·
~oon nas won the
last foil Southem 5005. ...
David Pearson iS the tfado: 's aHt101eleader with 10 wins. one

500
W11ere: Daniflltor'l (S.C.)
R8CeW81J (1.366-mi~ track). 367
laps/501.322 mi~
WIIell: Sunclay, Sept 5
·

oar

·sctes·~ :Jeff .

&amp;.It •· FtltcNCOnt Dale

TAdde

... 0..0....,. 200

-

Dat11rCton tS.C.i

Racewity (1 .:J66.mile trackl. 147
laOS/200.802 mileS
Salu'day, Seot. 4

D I IICIICciwu /I : Otck

o..-..UM

__

Ricky
Rudd
.
.,.
.,._...,.,_,.

. . . . . . . . 2.121
~ HousiM. 2.734

. -.-.2.101

A-"/ LaJoie. 2.fi11

Raft Harrl(lday, 2.689

~

.ftWt HIIIIIIJ, 2.573

W • lhlft,UOI

1. (1) 0.11 Ja,.U
2. (2) Jeff Gordoo
3. (4) Mork Morttn
4. (3) Boblly ullonto
1 . (5) Ton)' Stew1rt
6 , (7) Dale Elmharctt
7. (8) Jeff Burton
8. (8) Rutty Wallace
• 9. (-} Terrr Llbon1e
10. ( 10) Ward Burton

On !he move
Gal'1"d 101 points
Bristol jln•
Another tOp five
Controversial victory
High hopes for Darlington
Problems after starting 2nd
Bumped out of a win
·Not getting any closer

Earnhardt's flnaHap shove of
Terry Labonte touched off a
muttkar accident that allowed

Earnhardt 10 ateal a victory. The
seconcs. ancl tnlrd-Olate finish..
ers. Jimmy soencer and Ricky
Rudd, naa their best fin ishes Of
the seaSon .

..-tho
-C
U
phe

26. ......... ""'" lie
hM GMn for c. ownirt.

8 1 1 -, Richatd ·
Clltllhll.
K e n n y - and Rick

DdWDn, S.C.
RlttWnOI'Id. Vii.
Loudon, PtH.
Ower. Del.
MlrtN¥illlt, Ya.
Concord. N.C.

_

T...._.,Aia.
AoctllfChim , N.C.

...

~.Arll:.

Homestead, Aa.

·

'

BuO.- .,

. streak.
A8i: 1\111 be 43 on Sepl.

. 12

·;I

'

=-llltQ--Iolo_fll:.:::;;;;t,

. i!OM!JOWN: Born lnd raised In ·

·

·.

Wlfi:LOida

o' September or so. or ·we're 101,. to need tD
CO Old and lhut tne P'~ dOwn and mow
on. I don't tiW\k we're COfrW to have to cb
that.'but we want to be set or really, really
Cloi!&gt;IOHt!JYthefl,' ...

cjiiUI: .UrJdon L-. !SI

CAR: No. 10 TIOO fo«&lt;IMJtul, ownoOI&gt;I'
Rudd P8i bi1Wii'IC8i MDtetlpOrtl
· IIECOIID: 6eO - . . , 24 poles, 20 wino,
. 151 Olplhe ~. 300 10!&gt;10., more
U... $16 mUIIon In- earntrws
FIRSTS: Start (Mardi 2, 1975, 81
.
Rodd'11haml. pole (April 24, 1981, 81

._,

HOW TOUGH WOUUIIT IE TO IHUT THE

T1AM- ·aust,......ISO, n- ·• be a

IJI.IIe S. 1!183. 81

HOW - I T FilL RACIN8 WHEN
THERI ~ 10 MUCH U~RTAINTY
IURROUNDIN8 YOUR fUTIJRI1 •••, no

bl&amp;- we'te WOII&lt;q PfOIIYIIard on
spon~lp fllhl ncrw, .-.::1 we're dolrc
Mry~~~\rc we coniD 101 1«1« 2000 11110

lhe MIQ. Rudd -...nco llolotsports Is
&amp;ood
a
race team, and we want
10 keep avtr)bady tCJIIth8r l'lera. We can do
1 tot fof a spOnsor, and we haw some real!)'

oUtftt. cciod

1

hard dectaion If we reach that point and no
_ . , . , Is thoto. EmoUOnalft, )eell.
would he PfOIIYIOUCh.
he!Wd from a
vmolelot of fins slilC8 It became Dbvk&gt;us we
were --hunllfC. A's triiiiYirC ano A'&amp;
almost IU'J)rlsii'C how much people are
behlncl ua aOd pulllf"C tor ua. 1tnlnk.people
relate 10 us better ~ the)' do to some of
the bl&amp; teams. Some ot the blUer te¥ms
have become like f-=toriH . We're more like
!he 111mlly !atm . ,.. Still, our 1011 Ia notfUit
to be out ~to be out here, just to make
IIIPI: We want to star competttlve. tf we race,
we're aotna to be tn a position to be

Etm- - k wn
~to 1111.\ap bump
pvo him tho Goody's 500 e~..-·s expense.

unllenlloMt:lt

tt wa&amp;n't the first time, either. In 1995, Earnha'dt hit Labonte
In tho llnellum o1 tho final lap, but L-.e crosoed tho ftn.

Ish line nr.t ••• aldeways. This time Labonte .said, •ltJe next
~lme, Earnhardt had better have his belts on

·

tllht. • ·

~AR TN. WN.\'I MHt• Dutton ,I~ hlllplnlon:

"Old Eamllardl dO k on (IOrpose? M&gt;y or cotne he Okt On •
tho onellond, he 11 111e
diiYer or hll _..,.,., .

1/081"''

CHESHIRE - The Fife reunion
will be held Sunday, Kyger Creek
Employees Club House. Dinner at
noon .

reoocniZtd In MfY quarter fOI' J"it .aatonlsnlrelklll. On the

· -lionel ...,.,. supposed 10 -11181 In 11111 one

..... .

1rlsW!ce, he didn't mean It? C'mon. He can't haYe It both

PAGEVILLIO
Reunion of
descendants of Jeremiah and Rachel
Keller Riggs Sunday, at Pageville ..
In 1799 , Jeremiah Riggs buill first
HARRISONVILLE
Har- cabin in Scipio Township in thai
risonville Lodge 411 F&amp;AM, Salur· area. Covered dish luncheon at
day, 7:30p.m. Refreshment s.
. noon . Drinks and tableware provid.. '
ed. Take Lawn chairs. Call 740-992·
SUNDAY
2968 'for information.
MIDDLEPORT - Silver Run
Grade School Reunion · at the MONDAY
school ground "fiat," beginning at I
CARPENTER
Columbia
p.m. Bring lawn chairs and memo· Township Bt&gt;ard of Trustees, Mon·
rabilia. Light refreshments , Big · day, 7:30p.m. at lhe fire Slalion.
Bend Cloggers to perform.

.

PutOC-

NASCAR This Week

vletery- 01 .....

Negotiations ~tween Roberi
Yates' current driver, Kenny
Irwi n, and Felix Sabates have
progressed to lhe point that
Sabates has talked with Yates
ahout releasintllrwin berore the
end or the season, thu s allowing
him to chmb into the Team SaiK:o
No. 42 Chevrolet
Questio11s outn wnbcr answers
by a ratio o r about I 0: 1. Johnny
Denson and Kevin Lepag~ an;
said to be out at Roush Racing,

o.;tono iao, 'putt!IC o.
\ Ull ~ 8t tM1hiit
., ..... -

.. lllo1HO

.•

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

1 . When Greg Sacks won the 1985
Firecracker 400, whO was ttls crew chief~

new

. 2. What coi'npany will sponsor
c~r owner Cal Wells'
entry on the Winston Cup Series next year?
3. WhO was the first Ford driver to win the Brickyard 400?

· - : Dale Ea'nrlardt ShoUld .
haYe v.oo M~ arid dki'ft: .
stnJk)'l't have woo Bristol &lt;nt did.

GoOO nflws for Darrell
Wlllf'IQ: He made the flt!lcl . Bad
news: He was the first one to
bump Terrr Labonte.
'
• NGT:

·uaJJer a1eo ·t :apu.

·z: :uos1aN .4:Je~ "t

Meigs County has been awarded funding for the purpose of pr~widing
housing rehabihtation to 'LMI households in Meigs County. Th1s 1s a two
•
year program.
·

BRISTOL, Tenn. -

~

=-·
~
~ =~ =
:s= ·... ...0' ·- =·
::~::-

~(/J

-·
CD
III.:::J

1\):::J
I
CD

rll

Dtar NASCAR This Week,
' Can you please tel) me what ·
happened to the bearded gentleman {who) always ushcrcd .thc
v.inning NASCAR drivers into
vi~:tury lane? ! don't think I ha~· e
seen him at all this season . ..
B.A. Hoffstot

..--·

~

0

rll
rll
rll

I ll

=

CD
Ill

...

Q..

Middletown, Pa.

Bill Bnxin'd 1JO longer worb
for Unocalffosco, the fuel
ptm&gt;idu for NASC.~R evt&gt;nU. Ht&gt;
still rx!caJionally appears at Cup
races, but no longer acts a.r
informal manager af 1-icroryianl' l1crh·iril'J.

Dear NASCAR This Week ,
When I Wll! watching the
\\!atkins Glen rau ,.. I noticed
{that) ... as Jeff Gordon 'celebrated hi 5 victory. he thanktd the
Lord for being with him .... I
think that is great for our young
sponsmen. We need more of this.
J•ne Trnlrr
Gold Hill, N.C.

• For the Oct. 10 UAW·GM
Quality
Lowe 's Motot
Speedway is offer ing a specialty
priced $19 ticket in the ·Draft
Zone," so named because the
seats are In the tower rows or
the 1.5-mite track"s back .

5oo.

stretctl . The Concord. N.C..
track's ticket hOtllne

pMne

SH!IMSNY

nu mber is (704) 455-3?00.

AROUND TH! GARAGE

Negotiations continue between Sabates, Irwin

8~ MGnte Dulton .

-·
Ill'&lt;
Ill

"-&lt;

· FanTips

V.lllo'aiiGtVJho'sNot

••••••••••••
cMw•l• · ~·

~

~

••••••••••••

• •••••••••••

•

OCD
1»0

~

compelttMo.·

WHAT IS YOUR nMETAII.E?'We'te

i"' ·0. Earnhardt ft, Terry a:.itlnt.
or~

'::1'

=

n

We''"

ioocr da)a"""" or"'·'

FEUD OF THE WUK

laiiiiiC- Uvee pretty -lpolenllal
. _ . ) rWh! now. ,.,. PfOIIY well fll;ured
we r.-e to h8W!I somethk'C set b'J the RUddle

Chetrt118ttlt. ~•• !Net: In Cometius, N.C.

Ji

Ill

Ul
Ul '

«&gt;mb1nation
- added
- ftve ,
owner. Rueld ·has
more yen on htl winnlnt
.

--....

:9

II)-

but In 1.1194 ""
went out on hls own. M a

M~t. wtn

1999 WINSTON CUP SCHEDULE

Marnn is CDpflble of gettillll in
tJrtd out. His Crew mem~rs help
him beanLie he is in pain. not
becauu JJe ca rr 't do it 011 hU

l«ltollht--he

llis-

Blrmtrcnam.

Tile operatlw phnut iJ "mu.rt

bt iJblt. MIn NASCAR jjudgmtnt,

. -.18,.,_. old. He won

BUSCH GRAND NATIOHAL .
Matt Menseth answered Dale
EaTtlcwdl Jr.'s 'li:tc.y the previous
week with a win at Bristol i'l the
Food City 250.
bat·
t1e for the senes ChampionshiJJ is
11)1.0051 thlrC- In NASCAR.

'1:'1
CI!AmiiMN TRUCK SERIES
After numeroiJS taPS on .the
Dale Jarrett took a hit in tne
Goof. Mike anss ot MilWaukie,
points. Thanks to being inwlved
Ore .. final~ kicked . • In ~ a
in two aocidents, he lost 101
"iliitoJy on the road course 8t
potnts to rumer.up Mark Martin. -Heaidand Park Topeka. Allin
Same olj:l stofy tot Tony
all, It was not a bad week faf
Stewart: He won the pole and
Bltss. whO will apparently move
led tne most laps but had to
up to Winston CUll next year in
settle for a fifth{l!aee finish ..
a car fielded by Jack

·

NASCM.

fROM LAST WEEK

WINSTON CUP 11..115
H. was vlnlage Bristol. Dale

own." This is in case of an cmer·
gcncy siruation. Can you tell me '
wtry -.e have seen ... crew nxmbcn lifting Mark Martin into his
ur. I thought Nics 'NCfC mad(
for aJI drivell to rollow.
Ann BloiMiina
Toml River, 'I{,J.

_,

Audd ha won • lUll one
,.,., In 11 striMlN: n 1 •·

Prob'rems at Bristol

0

to get i11 and 01111 (lr his car on his

btl strHk . . . . . &amp;d.

Last week's ranktnc is In parentheses.

I .

Man inj wW dri~r m~at be abk

""'_......... _.

• Weekty rankin&amp;s by NA.SCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton.

information

Dear NASCAR This wen,
One of (the) rules IWe5 thai

NA5CAR Tlllo -

RldlyRINid _

For IIIOI'e

Notllllll: Dartrwton nas
hosted at least one BGN racE en
e\lefY ~son since 1982 ....
Geoff Bodine won the fitst . Netl
Bonnett the second.

IAttwnr-O.Iu•t

'•

'

1992

Kalhy bt. 1' 05

·······•••i•
VCM1rTurn

PROFILE

DenniS SolMI". 2.916
Sllc¥c.t~M. 2.812
J~ s..ttr. 2.829

Dave bt. 104

. , . . . • .,... MCOfd: [lltan
Sadler. Chevrolet. 166.051
mot'l. 1997
. .~ ..
ft-. NeON: Michaet Wattnp.
Porruac. 138.140 fTPI , 5ep( . 5 .

-

morethanOaleEamf\arcrt. ...
Pearson also won 13 Dart~
poles.... Four of Goroon'sfNe.

Gordon

... ~ 2.947

Jeff Gre.n. 3.351
JOdll ~ ~
Eltlll s.a.r,.. 2.9311!:
lltllff'lrrll. U20
Jason Kder. 2.798

Call992-2155

Oartif1Eton victories haw! been In

MISCH QRAND NATJOIIIW:

·I

page

the tau rate. '&lt;lllhiCt1 l'iaS been
hetd every ~i!l sn:e 1950.

x .. 3,• 52 Grll!f 811'fllt. 3.052

,.......,.. 3..,

-

9 7

ON THE SCHEDULE

WINSTOif CUP sana
· Jarrett. Ford. t 7o.9:w ~.
=~!!!!!!!:!~~~c:::
,q, JO. 1!19Ei

TO!' TEN

·

box,pears, cabbage and eggplants, weight class for market hogs and
al( blues, and zucchini, marengo received a blue ribbon : Lori Sayre
peppers and Hungarian wax pepper, placed second in her weigh! class for
red ; Tom Roberts, welding and mar- matket 'hogs, and recfiVed blue rib·
ket pig, blues.
bons for ~er sugar baby watermelon,
Tyler Johnson, welding, onion, squash, mixed hay, cabbage, canWinesap apples, red delicious taloupe , zucchini. quince , cherry
apples, Madison pears, Kennebec tomato, beef steak tomato, golden
potato, cobbler potato, golden deli· delicious apple, pawpaw, grapes ,
cious apple. Granny Smith apple , half-runner bean s, m'aringo pepper,
and sumtner squash , all hluc s1 and · pears and sunray tomatoes. She .also
cantaloupe, zucchini , Maden blush received red ribbons for her red deliapp le, half-r unner beans, swee t cious, apples, black walnu( combanana pepper cucumber and car· mandant peppers and eggplant
rots. reds; Josh Larson. we lding ,
Kacy Ervin received blue ribbons
blue ; Kevin Holler, mailbox, blue : for her mixed hay and corn, and
Robert Forester, market chickens. Andrea Neutzling received blue rib·
blue and yellow tom ato. red: Sandy bon s for her cross-bred rabbits, Cal·
Smith. breeding horse, corn, and . ifornia · doe, California buck, and
mixed hay, blues.
market pen of rabbits.
Jimmy Alley placed second in his

noon. Family and friends are .Skcd
lo lake a covered dish,' old family
pictures, and ilems for a silent auc·
tion . Games and activilies are
planned for all ages. · Children
should take their swim suits and
towels. For more information call
Kay Fick, 985-4115 or Lila Van
Meter, 985-3951.
.
'
·

•

"'tCA·tMI-

Community g~~,~Jf'l~'ir"". . '. . .. . ._~~

The Commu ni ty Calendar is meeting at 8 p.m.
. publi shed as a free service to non·
profi t groups wishi ng w announce
RACINE - The 32nd annual
· mee tin gs and special eve nts. l11c reunion of the Samuel Allen' Ehlen
-ca1endar is not dcs1gncd to promote family, Saturday, 6 p.m Star Mill
sales or fund ra1sers of any type . Park. Take covered dish and table
Items arc printed o n l~/as space per- · scrv1'cc.
milS and .canno t be guaranteed to be
printed a spec ific number of days.
ATHENS
Guthrie/Story
reunion, 4-H butldtng on the Athens
THURSDAY
'County Fairgrounds, at noon. Bring
POM EROY
Alcoholi cs covered dish and table servi ce.
Anonymous. open meeting . 7 p.m ..
Sac red Hearl Catholic Churc h.
DEXTER - · The ol d Dexter ·
Church h o meco mi~g . with serVices
TUPPERS PLAINS __:._ Ladies beginning at noon. Publi c invited.
Auxiliary of Tuppers P.lains VFW
Post 9053 will ha ve a regular meetREEDSVILLE - Re union of
ing on Thursday at 7:30p.m.
Abraham and Mary Will 1 Bahr
descendants at Forked Run Stale
RACINE - Racine Grange will Park, Sheller I. Carry in-dinner al
incc l at the hall Thursday, 7:30p.m.

992-2825

..........----·
tLC.--

orary degree from a small college ..
He now. uses the title "Dr." beside
hi s name in the Sunday bulletin, as
wcH as on the notices posled in
fro nt of the church.
I always though! an honorary
degree was just that -- an honor conferred to show respec11o an individ-

-

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

(740) 446-2412

Racin'e FFA members' stag,e skillathons
Skillarhons were introdUced for
the first time at the 'Meigs County
Junior Fa ir by members of the
Racine Southern FFA. ·
The event' 1csted !he stud ent on
knowledge of se lected pr6jects wilh
questions being a:;kcd ~oncc rnin g
part of an amnuil rrlajor meat cuts,
accepted mcdi ci n:1l dru g app licalll)ns ·for ani1i1als and quality assurance.
Pruv1din g inr..·cntives fo.r ttic·' pro·
gram were Hills Ci tgo of Rac ine and ·
Jeff Warner ln sur4ncc of . PomerDy.
They gave $50 savmgs bonds 10 the
.FFA mcmhers scoring the high~!SI in ·
the area of pouhry and sw ine. The
comes! w~s · nJicn to all FFA mcm hcrs in !he county The winners wt.:!'c
Robert Forester in pou ltry and Lori
Say re in swine product ion. bolh of

Glllllpolt.

received an hoo-

Time Out For.Tips
seh-cs . ·

~1

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

apologized for anything I had ·said
or done that might have hurt him.
The end of the story will please
you . I'm sure . With tears, hugs anil
kisses. my son came back to me,
and my beart is happi er than it has
been in a very long time. Thank you
for givi ng me such a beautiful gift.·'
; A MOTHER IN LA ·CROSSE,
WIS.
.
,
DEAR LA CROSSE: Leuers
such as yours make my day. I am
glad 10 know that my column provided the inspiralion for you.r forgiving and loving gesture.
Dear Ann Landen: What is the
proper use of ~n honorary degree ?
' A couple of years ago, a pastor
in our

a .........

, . . ....a

open· whee[ driver who has been
hirtd to drive Welis' MdJonald'sspOnsored 13usch Grand National
ca r next year

with Benson's name getting
f~uent menrion for the Yates
ride alona with AI Unser Jr., Joe
Ncmechek and Ri cky R,udd.
· Unser's name has been linked
to the new teams being rormed
by Cal Wells and AJv Foyt. Wally
Dallcnbach Jr. lltld CART's Sc'olt
Pruett are also considered contenders for the Wells opcninu;.

wilt, along with Earnhardt Jr., be
a Cup rookie next year. 'Tve
been mad at him (Earnhardt), but
we talk the next week and work It
· out ... thar's the key."

X:

UNLIKELY BUDS: How is it
that Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Man
Kenscth weekly beat and bang
against each other on the. Busch
Grand National ci rcuit ~.~o·hile
maintaining a friendsh1p ofT the

THREE MORE VEARS '

John Andrctti has agree d to drive
the No. 43 Pontiac of Petty
~ E~terpri~s ror thret more ycar!O,
or throush 2002, Andretti has
:rack~
won Dnce si nce the beginoing or
''You've got to keep the cornt,998. when he .moved over to
petitic\n and your ·friendship sepa- .K t~hard Petty's tcani from Calc
rate," said l{enseth, who v.'On the
Yarborough'§. The victory oc~Currcd
on April 18 at Man insville.
Food City 250 Friday night and

X
IN THE iiOUS[ : Pruett was

at Bristol gell ing a taste of the
uni que flavor of the track; Aiso
present, and frcqucndy alongside
Pruett, was Anthony Lazzaro, the

:00: CREW OF TilE WEll
• Are •• ClvlnC thla

clttinetloll to ~WAtt

H1mln .nd 0...

hmhlrdt's cmw? No
WIY, Ten')' LlbotU lOt
bUmped

once, wtMI'

ttr•.

CftMied four
never
pve up and lhould have
won 1M Goody's 500.
Cfew Chief Andy GriVM

m.,. have I~ to llhow
fof

tt. but he Nde .U the

~iftO\'M.

•

'

Qualified, contractors interested in bidding on jobs for ·the Meiqs
County Community Improvement program, may obtain a Contractor s
Statement of Qualifications application at the Meigs Coun!y An~ex at 117
East Memorial Drive (behind Holzer Clinic), Pomeroy, Ohio. Office hours
· are 9:00.A.M. - 5:00 P.!&gt;1.- Monday thru Friday. ~hen the completeq a~~li­
cation 1s returned . 1t should be accompamed by proof of Liability
Insurance and Workmen's Compel'}sation.
' ·.
.

AITENTION

AITENTION .

ADVERTISERS!!
Advertise on this page

we've got i~!!!

i

.

•'

Call 992-2155

Contractors on the eligibility listing will have the opportunity to sub. mit bids on Housing Rehabilitation Projects. Questions can be referred to
Jeari Trussell, Grants Administrator at 740-992-7908 or you may register to
attend a ·contractor's informational meeting to be held in the lower floor
of the Annex on Tuesday, September 7; 1999 at 8:00A.M. Refreshments
will be served.

Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext. 105
For more information ·

•

High Speed Internet
Access With Cable
Modems!

a. •mona th• ffrst fn our ,.,..,.m
'

Call NowAndSign-Up!.
675-3398 or 1-800-766-0553

CABLEVISION
COMMUNICAl'luNS

'
i

ADVERTISERS!!

.' 9/ IJou Have &lt;the !Jeed for Speed.•. ·

.

Advertise on this page

Call 992.- 2155
Dave Ext. 104
Kathy EXt. 105
For more information

•·

�Thursday,

P8ge a • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

September

•

2, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
_
_ _._
. ._ _ 70
70_ _YMS
1

Thunsday, $eptember 2, 1999

Having family doc reduces chances of "iatrongenic" illness
mg a drug reacuon The f1rst step

to read and heed the warnings
On all Of )OUr mediCineS
Another 1mponant yet simple
precauuon IS 10 use onI) one pharmaq Your pharmaC) ha&gt; computer software that checks for patenllald tnteracll o ns between your
me acmes
1 r
Genmg a I o your prescnpu ons from the same pharmacy
assures that all of them Will be
checked
Unfortunate!} thi S step doesn I
check for •ntFracuon w1th nonprescnpuon or her b a 1 treatments
s orne me d 1cmes even
' ou use
h3\ e 3n a d "erse m\eracdon
•
•
\\ h•h
f
1
.A
•h
1
h
1
~peu rc oous or \\. h _ a co o

IS

a_ T77_ ily
~ ~
__./ Y L_

d . .

e

Z-CZ-T'l

e

"""'

~~a~~~~f~~~~

~

·1 M d ·
0.1 p .. hk:
o f Famr y e rcme
----~------;;;;;__.._,_=_,_,,.
___.
QuHtloa: I had a senous reaclion lo the med•cmes my doctor
gave me for my blood pressure
and had lo be hospitaliZed Hm•
common 1s this type ol reacuon 10
med 1cme'

Auwer: Most of us take medr
ClAP today, 1f you consider pre
r·scnpuon,
non -prescnpu o n and

from drug mteracl19nS In
facL 45 percent of those 0\er 65
who arc hosp1tah1ed ha\e an
••tro gemc •line» an\! 60 perccm
of those who ha\e been hospllal
tzed for 45 days do. too'
There are several thmgs ' ou
can do to reduce your nsk o f ha\ -

herbal products under the broader
defimtron of ·medacme ·· These
products are a great benefu for our
society They are at least paruall}
,responSible for the Slgntflcant
Increase 1n average life e~peuan ­
cy for both men and women Sine~
the last ume we approa~:hed a n&lt;"
century It has nearly doubled
Though med1c1nes have a benefit for soc1ety as a whole . they can
occaswnally be detnmental to the
health of spectfic mdt\ldual&gt; The
reactwn you had to the drugs you
take for your blood' pressure " a
good example of such a detnmen
tal react1on
Though many "adverse reacuons" lo specrfic drugs dre well
known and are expected nsks o f
taktng that med1cauon other reac
tmns are very unusual and some
are even umque to a parttcular
md1vidual
Jn the first , more commdn, category would be developmg a rash
after takmg pen1c1lhn or a dry
mouth when on certam allergy
medtcattons Those Side effects

RegJslrallon At The Door At 6 30 PM
(Lea"e ' our C1gare1tes At The Door)

HOLIDAY INN

...

Company

Further, the above collat-

eral will be sold In the condition It Ia In, with no
expreaa or Implied warranties given
For further information,
contact Shannon at 9921330.
(9)1,2,3 3TC ,

Public Notice

J &amp; LInsulation
&amp; Sidint
• Vinyl S•d•ng
• Roofing &amp; Seamless Gutter
• Replacement Windows
• Concrete
• Room Addrt•ons • Garages
• Decks &amp; BOat Docks

Company,

Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves

the right to bid 11 this sale,
and to withdraw tho above
collateral prior lo aala.

Saturday,

September 4, 1999, at I 0 00
o.m , 1 public oala will bo
hold al 211 West Second

and

Savlnga

Company ,

raaervea the right to reject ~

any or all bldo aubmllted.
Further, the above collat·
aral will be aold In the condition It Ia In, with no

expreaa or Implied warranties given.
For further Information,
contact Shannon al 9921330.
(9) t , 2, 3 3 TC

(304} 675·2457 Offtct
(304} 674·3311 Ctll I'lL

a· Grmlless Lea&lt;h

\f111ir Ill I

1DO'- 1000' Ralls 1" &amp; 3/4" 200#Wttler Une
full line of Gas Pipe &amp;Regulalon Water St01age lanks

Coolvltr., OH 46723

74011'-o•a

Sept 2 , 1:;197
and li1s wife
liS

Leoua 'W1se
Oct 2 1 r9SS
Sod too~ tfiem frame
11 ll'as li1s will,
'13ut m our fiearls,

we love rhem sn/1
Tfielf memory l.'i a.'i clear
roday as '" tfrt hour

rDaugfit11 , ~osnhc £Wue
Son 'lf r1fe {.,'&gt;;) 9rand.'ion

rpr,;/,

sr..,/ey

tiWJ r0011

'lf 115C

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

TereA,
You're not •• old
But you're •• old
Happy Birthday

DUMP TRUCK
. SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Ll,mestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio
9121'&gt;9""

CREDI,. PROBLEMS???

Qua/tty Driveways,
Stdewalks, Patros
25 yrs expenence
Free Est1mates

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

WORRYING!!!

740-742-8015

No Embarntllment...
You're Treated with Respect!

877-353-7022 (loll free)
8/111'991 mo pd

Call Now' for Instant Approvaltl"

nu

SMITH'S

'

• New Homes
·Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
g85-4473

Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer
Services
I
Site Preparation
Septic Systems
. RODNEY KELLER
Owner/Operator

7/22/TFN

1-740-985-3949

Howard L. Writesel

·~

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
4/2 TFN

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

• swm9
Gtlo6\ll9
20 Yrs Exp • Ins Owner Ronnte Jones

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

j

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

'

Phone (740) 593-6671

Free Estimates

THE APPLIANCE MAN
985·3561

Joseph Jacks

"Cut this out for future use"

,(ill""?~ 24 Hr. Taxi
al(cl, Deli~ery Service

500 gal. per day 1200 gal. cap.
Porta Jon rentals
Septic Tanks Pumped

We deliver ALMOST anything

HOWARD'S TRI- COUNTY SANITATION

Call for details

740-742-2566 '

7 40-992-0038

Hires Vet

.

Coaling • Gutters •
Siding • Drywall •
Painting • Plumbing

\o\\

•\\t· '('I'\ in· ;I ll mal,t-. • I ... ,.d \pllli;llllt '"
\\ t' ~l'l l polrh
\\ill 1ll'li\l'r
~lt,..J,;- Hi!.!k~ l~itl~ t· Rd., I on~ Bullnm . ()hin

Mighty Mac A~ration Systems

Ne" Roofs • Repairs •

.

s..:• ,.,.

7 40-992·2068

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

Gentleman Seeking CompanionshiP From Nice Female For Talks,
Walks &amp; Fnendsh•P Send At·
piles To CLA 339 c/o Gallipolis
Dally Tribune 825 Third Avenue
Galhpohs OH 45631

START

DATING

TONIGHT/

Have Fun Meeting Eligible Sin·
gles In 'four Area Call For More
Information 1 800 ROMANCE,
EIC1 9735
Start Dating Tonight• Have fun
playing the Ohio Cat1ng Game, 1·
8QO..ROMANCE eKtens•on 9681

30 Announcements
New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West St•mson Athens

740 592-1842
Quality clothing and household
1tems $1 oo bag sale every
Thursday Mqnday thru Saturday

9 00·5 30 I
The lady In the green 4 door au
tomoblle who hit a gray i'oodle,
Saturday around Spm m lrorrt of
CC Frye s Muse, Mason , please
getln touch wUh h1m

40

Giveaway

3 K1ttens Gray /While Black Tlg·
er Strip, Gray Mixed, 740· 446·
1420
6 Week Part Siamese K1tten 740·
25()..6176
7 Foot Indoor Norfolk Pme Tree

Good Condtl~n. 74&lt;l-446-9606
8 Week Old Female 112 Fox
Hound , 112 German Shepherd,
740·441·t286
Adorable K1ttens 8wks old Very
playful, Liller Ttalned (304)895
3957 If no answer please leave
message
Australian shepherd pup, male,
740·742·2795 after 5pm
Border Coll ie 6 month old Pup
Only to Assured Home Please!

(740) 446 1127
CFA Seal Pomt Persian Cat. 1
Year Old Declawed Neutered.
Very Friendly, 74()-245-923~
Dad Is A Shepherd Chow Moms
A Rollweller, &amp; I Am A 3 Month
Female 'Please Taks Ms Home"

740·446-3769 Affer 5 PM

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
I l"!"t9"'aqptpll
HauJW
Bulldozer &amp; Bncklwe
Sen1ires
I louse &amp; Tnuler S1 tes
Land Clear~ng &amp;
Grad•ng
St'plrt Systl! ms &amp;

Darling eight-week old kitten
Looks like So.: Litter Trained
(304/675 3092
Female Cal1co House cal To
Good Home 1 Year Old 740·441·

)304
Re gls1ered Dalmatian two year
old lerna te good with children
740 949 9027
Twa all black k1t1ens &amp; 4 all
wh 1t e klllens to good home

(304/675 3777

1

Utilille.ll

(740) 992-3138

Two Free Pupp1es , Half Beagle
and half Border Collie, to good
hOme (304)576 3101

80 Alot Of

MJKIIIaneoua. M1sc:

TOOio &amp; HaldwllO
Ff~ay

Sllun:Jay 913199, And 9141

99 First HOUM West Of Lincoln

Pilot On Stala Routo 14 I
Frida~ and Saturda~ at Bidwell
Takl 554 toward Ct'lllhlre go
about .t Mllll, turn Ol;\ Morgan
Center Ad 10 1!2 mlltlto a.otge
Ad 11m R!ghllc,.l houiJo on Right

Garage !Yard 4887 S R 850 811
-9/4tt'l, 9·? Bastbtll Cards.
S.anlea, All Size CIOthH, Much,

MuciiMolal

Garage Sale F•ir'f'ltw Subdlvl·
slon 198 Buck Rklge Rd Ftiday+

saturday 9 oo-5 oo

Huge Garage Sale, Eno Trinity
Gospel Mission State Route 554,

3 FamllleJ Saturday Stl)tember
4th Only ClotMing, Baby Thru
Adult S8w.ng Machine, WOOden
Shelves Toys, lots Of Every
thmgt 844 Second Avenue Time

..

3 Family Garage S81e September

Moret

3 Family Movmg Sale, Sept 3 I
4 Fnda'( &amp; Salur(Jay 8 OOAm To
4 OOPm tt 00 Second Avenue
Rear Toys Games Books
Household Items Clothes Fumi·

hxe&amp; MISC
3 Fam•ly 648 Fourth Avenue
Septerrllor 1st. 2nd 3rd 9-5
3 Famty 911 st To 9/3rd 9 To 5 7
M•les Out 218, First House On

Rocldlc:lc Road
3 Fam1ly Fnday Saturday 1/2
Mile On Route 218 011 Route 7
Floor Lamp Table, Wooden H1gh
Cha ir, Dishes, What Nota Longa·
berger Baskets Lots Of Mise

"

4 Fam1ly \.¥).Ia East On State
Route 55.:-Ffom Porte!' WatchFor Signs, Chlldrens And A,dulls
ClOthing, AU Sizes lott Of Name
Brands Fnday Anel Saturday
September 3rd 4th: 9-5

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

EXCAVATING

KEN'S APPLIANCE SERVICE

F'lft1 Timl. 3 FamHy On Mcau·
Vinton, G E Aefrigera·

qy Road,

Ohi&lt;l

4 Family lndW!dual Salt Rodney
Pike Church Ot God SaiUrday 9·
4

KCB

Ken Young Former Owner of

.......,_, Lawn Equfl) . Car Par&amp;&amp;
And More Woodt M111 Road,
-.&amp;to...., OIJ sA 554

House On The Hill Behind Foo·
dland, JackSon Pike September
ts1Thru41h 8TI115

day

"I'M BACK"

EJectronk:l,

2 Family Labor Day weekend
Seplember 4th, 5th, Slh 428
Hedgewood Orl't'e Gallipolis

3 Family Mary layne State Ao·
uta 7 North Cheshire September
2nd 3«1, 4th Rain Cancels

• Roofs

• 1'tll'll

f

t5 Family Chesh•re 't'ard Sale At

4 t/2 M11&amp;1 North. 7-"6 SA 160,
From Holzer Hospt1al, Nice Wom
ens Cress ClOthes, Friday Satur-

TREE SERVICE

.

Or 850. Sop...- 5111. eth, 9-5

3-4 Rodney Vlllage II. 9 00·5 00
Ttmd Street, Little Girls and
Womens Ciothll, a Lot morel

JONES'

6129/mo

TRUCKING

(7 40) 592-5025 Athens

Four-Wheeler purchased at:
Rlvertront !ionda, Gallipolis, Ohio

' ·Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
· Sales Representative
Larry Schey

Roacl. Oil Of 160

1 Milo Out -

4th 9 -?172 Skidmore ROAd Lon·
genberger Baskets And Acees
sorias. Home lntenor Crafts &amp;

William Safranek, Attorney

For More Jnfor muhon Call I 740-54.]-4001 Lo,•al Call
or contacl uny Pomeroy Squad Memhe 1

Call 614·843·5426

I

R. L. HOLLON

For ~nformatton regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

Drawl•t to be held at 12 pm on
Sunday October 10, 1999

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience
Free Estimates

Tlial.gnef ean
mlf lfS Dll'/1
Sadly m1ssrd by.

..•

740-992-52!2

SpollJored by the
Pomeroy Yolullleer Emergency Sqrurd, /ut;orporaJed.
Tickets -$10 00 Dona11on Each/1000 Mru&lt;~mum

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

rfrry passed away
lf'e often sll
and tfrmk of tfrem
ff'fien we are all r1lone
'Tor memory 15
tlu· only Jnrml

can rel1eve a debtor of l1nan"al obtlgGIIOit! and amtllgt ah* distrihutian of
ossob among ueditol\. Apenon !JOI"' lhraogh bankruptcy IIIOY Itlain cortain
p1operty, known os ' txlmpt" proptrty, for h• or htr Jli"'IIIIIIIM lb.IIIOJ
mclude a"'· a house, doth~&gt;, and hOU!Ihald goods. YCMJ should dired any
qu"1io"' regarding bankruptcy 1oOft attamoy bolero pr-'ng

1999 HONDA FOREMAN
4SO ES 4X4 GIVEAWAY

'

740) 742-8888

'Rev Cecd W1~e
wfro left

BANK.RUPRY

33795 Hi/a,d Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio I ·

(740) 992·2753
or 992·1101

,n.,.,

Gallipolis
&amp;VIcinity

The Red Light, Foday Only. 7 30·
330

Self-Storage

992·6215

AT8:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progreulve top line.
Uc. II 00-50

1000 St. Rt. 7 South

Mon.· Fri. 9:00 to 4:
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

..

High &amp; Dry

25 yrs experience

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

1/lrll

NowRential

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Yard Sale

70

•New Homes•
Remodeling • Siding

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yrr. Local

241t'l Tuppers Plains area· bird
dog. wMo with Mod
and ticlclng bulklog. tan wlttJ blad&lt;
t~l and no11. 1100, 7-40·667·
3126
Lost wMe gold bracelet reward,
74();.992 2783

CONSTRUCTION

,.,.,E.....,..

DEPOYSIG
PARft

Tuppers Plains, OH

Culverts: 4' - 48" in slock

'

(740) 388-9686

p(j

•NtwGirlgu
•Eloctricll &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing &amp; Gutters
•VInyl Siding &amp; Ptlnllng
•Pitlo &amp; Porch Dtclcl

Truck seats. car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four 'Yheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
boat covers, carpets, etc.

In lo111ng memory of
1

mo

•Room oddHiano &amp; Remodtllng

Rutland, Ohio

In Memory

Company parking lol, to sell
lor cash lhe following collateral
1
t 994
FORD
ASPIRE
Savings

7/27199 I

Mon - Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yrs exp~rlence

Street, Pomeroy, Ohiot The
Farmer's Bank and Savings

Further, The Farmers Bank

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia ttereby given

Pomeroy, Ohio
"BLITZKRIEG"
Live
Rock &amp; Roll
Saturday Night Sept 4th

I

A &amp; D Auto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

Public Notice

i&lt;NJLT05H6R6138992
The Farmers Bank and

Albany, Ohio

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Cont. IIWV00350tl

Kenneth
I
Charles Riffle
,
Mon ll1ru Fn 8 a m to 9 p m . Sat B am-8 pm
Sunday 10 00 a m to 4 00 p m
PRESCRIPTION
PH 992-2955
E Ma1n
Pomeroy Oh
1111 9

reservaa the 1lght to reject
any or all bids aubmlltod.

S;tl;,, &amp; Sl/lil

SATURDAY

FREE ESTIMATES

Pharmacy

3-4-5
6am-5pm
Sp&amp;ce Avarlable
304-675-5463
(Located at Fairgrounds)

) I'll/'

.'

'·

CONCRETE
CONNEOION

7amTONOON

' HOIIISo 7am 1HIU 4pm

We Do•••

SWISHER LOHSE

on

:.!0

J'' .. ;.:,· ·~· •.
''

.

7 40-985-3813

YOUR

MONDAY·FIIDAY

740-742-3411
Bryon Reeve•
Swan Reeve•

Henderson, WV

Public Notice

WILLIS'
1EAMLESS
GURERS

J·-··..-··

Price• Goo Through Wednesday, Sept. 8, 1999

Famil

thai

St. AI 7

~

Septembef , ...
1..... ~

•u~6='~052~A~ftot~~5:30~-----l Friday 9/ 3rd , Salurday 9/4th e
AM ·3 PM, 3/10 Mile Out
U&gt;sl- • yr old ma1o Bugtt (BuctJ Goo&lt;gn c - Rom SA 7 Dilhahot), white wlbrown . ., Wolfe wastier, Boys Clo1htl Size -4·0,
Pon::::._.7:_:0-992.:._:::.:..:·2:.:1:.04:..:eat=:.21:..:1;____ Bq&lt;:IOI. Largo Mtrrer, Flreploco.
:..:
1Wood Swing Set. Swimming fOGI.
Lott reward last 111n August 8•12 Budding , Honda 50, Honda

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

~

nrne su.

Ot Collar. 7'0·U6·32t7, 7-40·

IJ/24199 1 mo pd

1-800·311·3391
Free E~timates
Cntraetors Welcome

'

MYERS PAVING

Limesto11e, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil
(Low Rates)

740-992·3470

I.I.A.P. VOIIC.IS
ACCIPIID
DIUVIIY AJAIWU

Free Eatirnate•

• Parking Lots
• Basketball Courts
• Driveways
• Grading Work
• Hauling Slone

Senior • MHS·
J.ove Mom, Da

collateral p1lo1 to sale.
Fur1hlr, The Farmers Bank

'

'

PH: (7401 992·2772

J

I999-2000

Pomeroy, Ohio, reaarvaa
till right to bid at this sale,
1nd to withdraw lho above

We Deliver

Sr 124 Wellston, Oh1o
740-384-6212
LU., UD n0111 COAL

- Conltntctlon •
R..-tng-I(JtetMn Cobl'*l
Vinyl Sldlng-Rooii-Ooclol-

ple who take f1ve or more are at
stgntftcant nsk
Those over 65 have a h1ghcr
probabtllly of ha\lng mult1ple
health problems that requtre mul
uple med1ctnes
Consequently , they are at
greater nsk of haVIng 1atrog•n•c

Tho Farmers Bank and
Savlnga
Company,

of painting, and let

Free E11timates ''

Conatr•ctlon

common among those who ta kt:
more than one mediCIne and pe o-

JY44BDA09TA274084

R .::; '';..... ,,

Flral

Sui No Tags Please Call And tM'. Ukl New, $300 On
klonlily EI&lt;Hd. Ge- And Color .... Sift. &amp; 6Ift

S«r""'

(CMIIIII&lt;JAl . . II5RIDIIIAl

Take the pain out

BRAMHI COAL
SaaHIBo•e
COM PAN~

Our
Complete
Stock of
Sunglasses

Savings

FOtJnd: 8rowft Ancl Wl'IIW 0og On

Sar~dars Onve Fnendly Collar.

(No Sunday Calls)

lftt'PK!.Sun•etHome.com

These disorders are parlH.:u larly

and

Cta111(~

--Ctol*v--

4 Family 8 5 Saturday Septem
ber 4th Only 1374 Neighborhood
Road K1ds /Adult Clothes, Toys
ChriStmas TrH Computer MISC
4 Fam11y Beptembef' 3rd &amp; 4th g.
5 State Route 279 At Shirley Ar
rowoods, Clothes Shoes, Washer
&amp; Dryer Antiques And Much
Much Morel
5 FatTNIIeS September 2nd, 3rd &amp;
4th At OJd Porter Texaco On
State Route ~54 &amp; State Route
t60 Tommy s '24 t-t_our Ftoad
Service. Across From Joe s For·
sign Cars, Plus Sin Clothes
Kids Clothes, Home Interior, &amp;
Much Much Morel Something
For Everyone• Too Much To List!
5 Family Garage Sale Saturday
SeptembeJ 4th, 8·5, 2596 S R
t41 Wilson SS Gall Clubs Dave
Mann Graf•te Irons Retlfed Lon·
gaberger Baskets / Acce$5orles
All Size Clothing, Household
Items B•Jc.es Small Shop Vac,
Bedspreads
5263 S A 160 Kerr Friday 9 A M
-5 PM Saturday 9 AM To 5

PM

'

9·5 34 Smithers Street Friday
Saturday, 16' Flat Be&lt;l Trailer
Pressure Canner Home lnter~or
Glass Household Clothes
913, 914 Clothes Shoes Toys Fill
Bag For $5 6535 Stale Route

2nd

Mo't'lng 132 State StrHI. Frida~
&amp; Saturday Appllances, Furniture
And Numerous Other Items
Phone 74()..4.46..421 5
Name Brand lnfani-'Adull Cloth·
mg. Baby Items Winter Coats
Shots, Crafts 3 Mites Out 218
Fnday Salurday
Saturday 9/4/99 9·-4 583 Le·
Grande Boulevard Womens &amp;
Mens Clothing Mlscellaneou..s
Items
Saturday. Septemtlar 4th 9.&amp; 4 5
M1les Oui Cherry R1dge, Flio
Grande Kids, Men &amp; Women&amp;
Clothes, All Slfi\!_ H_ome Interior,

Toys Set Of Ekln~

DEAQUNE· 2:00pm

neous
September 2nd, 3rd &amp; 4th 19t4
State Route 14t Galtlpolis Table
And Chairs, Chair And Ottoman,
Baby Chlldrens, And Adults
Shoes And Clothes Crafts Halla
ween And Thanksgiving Yard
Decorations
Loungfi! Chair,
Tools Insulators, High Chalf 2
Wooded D ining Room Chairs.
Coca Cola Collection Tool Boxes,
Bedd1ng Keyboard, Stone Jars
AM Jug Kerosene Heater 1989
Pontiac Wheels, 225 llncpln
Welder Craftsman Welder 150
lb An ... el Smail Table Saw And
Jo1nler Combination. 8 Horsepower W1sconsln Molar Wlth Gear
Reduct1on Box. 2 Handed Side
Grmder 7" large 60 Galton Tank
Air Compressor
September 2nd 3rd 4th 8 30

AM

Mise

Tltl

5 30 PM 62 Ann

Drive.

Clolhlng

Thursday 912nd, Fnday 913rd 8·
5, 189 H1Htop Drive Oft Neighbor·
hood Road , Little 81t Ot E\ler~­
thmg
Womens Chlldrens Maternlly,
To~s Halloween Costumes Re
tired Longaberger Baskets Exer·
else Equipment, Friday Saturday
9-5, Dairy Queen
Yard Sale Northup Yellowtowh
Ad off Lincoln Pi~ on Route 141
Saturday, Sunday Monday
Vard Sale, September 3+4 9 00

5 00 At Pollecal Ad and Rt. 7 Near
Addison

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;r VIcinity
15 Family Cheshire Yard Sale AI
The Red Light. Friday Only, 7 3D

330
4 family yard sale· 1·3 on 338 by
Rac ine lOCkS &amp; Dam, lOIS of
Items dishes bed clothing, tow·
els rugs porcelain dolls clothes,
tent chaus screen housa &amp;

more

pel11

Carporl Sale 1041 Second Ave
nue, Thursday Friday 8 5 Many
Household Items &amp; Clothing
Clothmg All Sizes, Glassware
RadiO fTape Home lntenor Lots
M•sc 260 Fourtt'l Avenue Friday
3rd Saturday 4th 9 5

aet.

OriwJ Lillo -

turnitur• tools houstl\01~

....... gOtt """ Clotlw1g loU
"' doon 11lloc.
Ettatl taJ,t- ,. C F Kenmore r•
frigeraltor, $150, ga range LP or

natural 175. both almond no
chec:kl , 740·2-47·284-t or 740

4 lamlly Saturday, September 4th
Bam 1pm Clothing exercise
equipment, books toys and much
morel Next to the Dank In S~ra·
cu", OH

Stpt 3 .1 8AM· 4PM Lots m1sc
•terns/ some .new 14 3 M1 INorth
ot Pt Pleasant Fh 2 Chutnut·
Ridge Roaa 1sr r161Ctnce r~ghr

-·go .......

Four tamlly- Sepltmbt&lt; 3-4, ~-

4pm 41130 Pomeroy Plkt Po·
mtroy. Furniture houlti'IQid
llama, tools, toys. clothing and

"""' """"

Friday 133 But1arnU1 Bat stools,
•••lng machine rocker new
15,000 BTU heater, tOOl cabinet,
wardrM anllque organ top with
beveled glass mirror. lamps, TV
•••nd, fireplace set Ill or c:hma

-

""""' """"

Friday, Saturday Sunday Sept

tO

H

5 30 112 ""'• pall tralllc

light on SR 124 Mlnersvtlle
HOUIIhOid, QIIISWire, tmall ap·
pHancea ladles size small leather
jackett, IBM eomputar much

more

•

Friday, September 3, 490 Grant
Street. Mlddleporl Name brand

CIOthoo. -doiiS
Friday· Don Spaun s, Hill Ad •

Aaeine CardiOgllde 5ega games.
cardls , clothing otc
Garage Sale· 685 General Har·
tinger. Mld&lt;llell&lt;&gt;rt. Sepl 1-4 bed·
spreads curtains. clothing, diSh·
lnter~or

mise
Garage sale· Grate residence 4

1/2 mites out Eagle Ridge Road off
St Rl 7 ftner name brand quality
ftams, at garage sale prlets Sepl
2nd-4111, 9-3pm 740-949-2369
Garage sale· Salem Center, Sep·
tember4&amp;6
Garage sale· Sepl 2·4, 9am-5pm
33438 Bashan Rd and 49627 Ea·
gle Ridge
Garage sale· Sept 3 &amp; 4 9am
3pm County Rd 19 off Route 33
N Watch for Signs
Garage sale· September 2·4.
something for 8\ltryone 7987 SR
554 Aatn or shine
Moving sale- one day only Sept
3rd 9·1 EYif}'lllong """" go 41ft
Street Syracuse

Sept 3rd Rt 124 towards Au-

lland oH At 7. 41h house on nghl.
adult &amp; children's clothing, baby
lloms. toys.

Back yara sale · Ma1n arid Walker
Alley Racine Summer and wtnter
.£!othlng Lots ot mise Thursaav
end Fnday Sepl 2 3

Yard Sale Rain or Shme 4 m•tes
out Sandhill Ad
lot s of
ITIISC: items Sept 4 5 6 9-6pm

Auction
and Flea Market

Blll Mood11paugh Auctloneet lng
Complete .Auct1oneenng Serv1c·
•• Cons ignment auction- Mr ll
Street Middleport Thursdays
Ohio l1cense 17693 740 Q89·
2623
G'oantiC Auction
Salurday. Sept 4. 1999
Bed Linens Sma ll Appl•ancts
Collecllblts Glassware Home
lntenor Beds Toys Furn1ture
718 Ashton Streal Ravenswood
wv 26164
R1ck Pearson Auct1on Company,
full time auctionee r complete
auction
ser ... 1ce
lleensed
168 Ohio &amp; West Vtrgm1a 304

nJ-5785 Or 304-nJ-5447
Wedemeyer s Aucl lon Serv1ce
GallipoliS, Ohio 74().319-2720

90

September 2-3 corner ot Flatwoods and Rocksprings Ad 9am·
3pm Somethlllg lor everyone
September 2·4, 267 West Matn
Street, Pomeroy 8-t Tools, toys,
clOthes guns Ttus 11 a pre-mov·
lng sale dltferenl nems added
eaCh r;tay
September 3 9 OOAM New L1ma
Ftoad out•sde of Harrlsonv•lle
Household goods complete bed
ciOtnes
Three lamdy Bailey Rd oft Texas
Rd (stgns lrom Fl\le Pomls) Fri·
day 9am-1pm Women's plus SIZes, ldd s mise Ra•n cancel~
Two ramify, September 2 4 22842
SA 338 Letart Fails Microwave,
pressure canners, furniture sewIng mach~nes, old dishes Home
intenor Xmas fishing
Yard sale 2nd·3rd Pomeroy
Street to
Mason, girls clolh·
lng mlantto 5 plus sizes rain or
shine

tevv

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vlclnl~y
3 Family Vard Sale Fr! &amp; Sat 3
112 miles out Union Campground
A,oad Cann1ng Jars, Home lnten·
or Baby Clo thes, Mise / Fresh
Brown Eggs SAM·?
3 Family, Friday/Saturday 9AM
3010 Kathnor Lane Lots or nice
school clothes Housewares,
Miscellaneous
5 Family Hereford Lane Apple
Grove, FriJSat 9· 7
Back 'Yard Sate 2221 Jefferson
Ave Wed Thur Frl , clothes
turn baby Items
Big Garage Sale, Rt 2, Jcl 87

Milt Crk. Ad. Sepl 2 3. 4 5 Old
picture , Old jewelry Furn1ture
dishes, pots &amp; pans Lmens
Home Interior Cedar Chest Lots
mora Childs Old rocker
Big Garage Sale Sept 3rd and
4th Corner ol 2nd &amp; t--tartln In
Mason. WV Lots of stuff lnclud·
lng kids school clothes girls
dresses &amp; Home School Books
Grades 2 6

Garage Sale 3rd House Below A
&amp; L, on RIQhl 913 4 and 6th
Garage Sale Sept 2 3 4 at 2923
Maple Avenue , Pt PI Lots ot

M&lt;SC
Huge Yard Sale Mo't'lng Sept
2 3.-4. t1-dark 401 Hender~on
St Henderton Too many Items
to mention
Just Moved Sale FriiSal Sepr
3rdl41h t409 Oh1o Street 9-3PM
Rain or, Shine
Large Garage Sale. Rt 87, Me·
ton Counly End folloW signs

Sepl 2 3

t10

Abso lute Top Dollar All U S 811
ver And Gold Coms, Proofsets,
D•amonds Anllque Jewelry Gold
Rings, Pre -1930 US Currency
Starting Etc AeQuls•Mns Jewelry
• M T S Coin Shop t51 Second
Avonue Galll&gt;otts. 740.446 2842
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, Low Miles 1995 Models
Or Newer Sm1th Bu1ck Ponhac
1900 Eastem Avenue Gallipolis
Wanted To Buy Used Mob1le
Homes, Call 740·446·0175 Or 1
304-675-5965

Help Wanted

Mull HoYo H S Dl!*&gt;ma GED Or
Some E.q&gt;er..-.ce Carmg Fot The
E-ly """ May Poei&lt; Up An Ap
pliCIItOn To 266 Upper R1ver
Road GallipoliS OH 45631 (Belrde kenny s Auto Sates) No

""""" Call5 Pleasol
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or SeN
snw~ey Spears 304-675-1429
Dominos P1zza of Po1nt Pleas·
ant Now H1nng Sal.e OriV8rs Apply &lt;n po&lt;I001 (304/675-5858
OAJVERS • Cannon E.~preSS 99%
Onver No Touch Frt •ght Start At
32 Cents M1 15 Yr + Exp 3t
Cents Ml 13 Vr 30 Cents M1 11
Vr . 29 Cenls M1 16 Mos 28
Cents M1 12 -6 Mos Students Or
1 Mo Exp $350 Wk Pay Raese
E\ltry 50 000 Miles Bonu ses
Aider Program Paid vacaiiOns
Ins
Ava il
www cannonexpreu com Call for Oeta11s 1
800.&amp;15-9390
OAIVERS IMMEDIATE OPEN
INGS REGIONAL i OTA Start At
29 CPM /All M1 Unloading Pay
Personalized D!ipatch Home
Ot1en Hol1day Nacallon Pay
401 k IMed•cai /Pres !Dental As·
Signed 99 T2000 s Alder Pro
gram 98% No Touch Freight
Call Butch At Summit Transpona

l-------.,.---11 0 Help Wanted
$2,000 WEEKLY! Mallmg 400
Brochures! SatisfactiOn Guar
anteedl Postage &amp; Supplies Pro
v1dedl Rush Self-Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO DEPT
5 Bo.: 1438 ANTIOCtj, TN
37011 1438 Stan: lmi'I'Mately
$800 WEEKlY' POTENTIAL
Complete S1mple Government
Forms At Home No Exper~ence
Necessary CALL TOLL FREE •
1·800-966·3599 Ext 260t

$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSSI WORK FROM HOME

PROCESSING GOVERNMENT
REFUNDS NO EXPERIENCE

NECESSARY 1·800 854-6469

ATIENTION , ·Have A Computer?
Pull! To Work!
$25 -$75/Hr PTIFT
1·888-890-3481
www pc·1ncome com
A110n Products Stan your own In
Home Business Work Flexible
Hours EnJOY Unhm1ted Earmngs
1·888-561·2866
Babys•tter Needed Must Have
TransportatiOn ASAP 740·367
7120
BANKING

Customer Service /Telter
Rapidly Grow i ng Independent
Ban~ Has Part·T•m e Opportunity
For Fuendly EnergetiC Person To
Provide Superior Customer Serv
1ce Process Customer Transac
liOns And Promote Ban~ Serv1c
es Should Have Customer Serv
1ce Expenence Prelerably In A
Bank Sav1ngs &amp; Loan Or Credit
Union Opportunity For Advance
ment And A Great Office Wo rk
Envlronmenl Apply In Person To
Oak H11t Banks 50Q Th1rd Ave
nue GaU1polls EOE. MIFION
Christmas Around The World &amp;
Gifts. Now Hmng Sales Aepresen
tatlves, All Area s Also Bookmg
Parties Call Monday Friday
7PM 8~M 740 446 9209
CLASS A COL DRIVERS Ded1
cated Regiona l &amp; OTA Solos
S 30 1M• Teams S 34/ MI /Spilt
100% Company Pa1d Health Ben
ems Medical. Dental VLSIOfl
Company Pa!d Retirement Plan
PLUS 401k After 90 Days (Wtth
Matchmg) Company Pau1 Vaca
tion And Paid Holidays 95% No
Touch Fre1ght Satellite Communi
cation Cred•t Un10n Clrect De
pos1t Assigned Con~,~enl1onals
Company Pa1d Un1torms Slack
Purchase Call 800·555-CWTS
cw1 JObsOcon way com Conway
Truckload Serv1ces CWT Is An

EOE
Computer Use rs Needed Work
Own Hrs $25K $BOKI Yr 1 800
536 0486 X 7777 www 1cwp com
QIRECTOA OF ACCOUNTING
100 bed nursing center w1th 25
bed Drs! Part locuSrflg on Venll
Rasp Care Umt needs an el(perl
enc.ed track recora proven heallh
-&lt;;are account•ng manager South
ern Oh o locatiOn excellen1 phys
teal planl extens•ve mgt team
and quahry stalf m place Lookmg
lor the 11ght candidate that can
supe r\1 1se subordmates and dl
rectly manage "hands on' the
stand alone lull servrce compu·
tenzed accounllng system
Competttrve compensation pack
age to be oflered to the rrght can
, dldate Including Oenetrl plan and
relocation assistance tor lamily
triQI(8 to Center's locatiOn
Send resume salary expectat1on
and hst of references to
Oav•d Snyder Adm1n.stra1or
0\lertlrook Center
333 Page Street
Middleport Ohro ~5760
740 992·6472

110

Help Wantad

•-'

j

•

I

• 4
...~

... ~

'*

•:
: •:

State Tested Nursmg AA1atan&amp;ll .. : :
needed tor t 00 bed skilled nu,.._. : "' ~
mg laCiilly EnergetiC anthuSill· ~ ~ ,~
be and Cledlteted staff to care lor ..... •
our reSidents Interested cand•·
~
dates should apply to Roc61
:
sp11ngs Rehabt lnahon Center•• ,#
ann Carol Greening. Otrector ot •'.,
Nut~mg, 36759 Rocksprings Ad , . ...-'
Pomeroy Ohio 457159 Equal Op~otyE-

The Me igs Counly Council on ,
Ag mg Inc 1s seekmg a AN or
LPN health proftSIIonal for posi· ~
lion ot Long Term Care (LTC) u·
s•stant d.rector Job responll~ill
lieS will 1nclujje personnel super·
viSIOn client a51essment and
momtormg heallh trammg and
agmg network report1 Mm1mum
q~al1tltations R N with a minimum
or 3 years super ... lsory e~eperi
ence '" a health cere sening or
LPN w1th a mm1mum of 5 years
super\I ISOry exper~ence In 1
health cate setting Apphcation1
are ava1table at the Me1os Multi
purpose Senror Cen1er, Mulberry '
He1gnts Pom eroy On An EOE

,
•

. ..

.

'

..'

E~toyer

Dnvers Free 3 · Week COL
Tram !ng Earn $26 ·$32.000 I ts!
Vt W / Full Benehls No E.:p
Needed PA M Transport Spe·
c1a1 Call Tpll Free 1 877 230
6002 Sun ·Fri 7 AM -7 PM
www pamtranspon com
Expenenced Ser't'ICe Tech B1cy
cle &amp; tawnm ower Assemb ly
Great Pay &amp; Benef1ts

APPLYTOOAY.
STAR TOMORROW
Call 1·8()0..852·2453
Fast Money No selli ng Not MLM
earn $1,250 per Clay 1 800 882
5044 10,272692 PPR
Flexible Schedule up to $3,400 a
monlh proceulng medical
claims No experience nec:es·
tary PC required . (800)945·
7ll81
Janitor Wanted For New Ames
Store in GalliPOliS Call 1 888
491 6131 Leave Message And
Will Return C~ll

NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS
FOR NEW GALLIPOLIS STORE
PARTTIIIE OPENINGS
Interested Ca11d1dates May F1 11
Out Apph cat1ons in Pers on At
The Kroger Store Located AI The
S11ver Bndge Ptaza Slat11Mg Man·
day August 30 Friday Sep1em
ber 3 Between 9 00 A M 5 00
PM We W1t1 Be Acceplmg Ap·
pi cations For All Part Trme Pos•·
liOnS
Eligible Benet11s Include

* Company Paid Tra1n1ng
• Health /\.lie Insurance
• Weekly Pay Per~oc:ls
• Ret"ement Pla'n
• StoCk Ownershtp Plan
• Company Pa1d Vacations
• Employee Credll Union
..., New Store EnVIronment

NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
MINORITIES AND FEMALES
ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY

eo"E
Laborer For Sel Up Crew At Mo
b•le Home Dealership E.:per~en ce
Preferred Call 304 736·3868
LPN POSIIIOn 3 To 11 Wllh Shill
D111erent1al &amp; Expenence Pay
Apply At Scen1c Htlls Nur sing
Center 311 Buckndge Road 81d
well
MEDICAL BILLING Earn E•cel·
lent Income Full Tra1nmg Com
puler ReqUired Cah Toll Free
BOO 540-6333 Ewt 2301
Off1ce seeking Med•cal Data entry
reps for Entry·Level Poslhon FT/
PT E~cellent Pay PC"' Reg Call 1·

I :':.00:.:·.:.29:.:8:..85:::..:06:::..:.:__ _ _ __

MEDICAL PROCES SORS Full
Ana Part Time No E .:penance
Ne cessary' W111 Tra tn 1 PC Re
Quned Earn $40K Call I 800·
458 4135
MOTHERS &amp; OTHERS WORK
FROM HOME I Ma11 Order Part
Time &amp; Full Time $650 $3 6001
Month Full Trammg Prov~e1ed'
For FREE Booklet Call 1 888 234·
9897 www cash-911 com/home
Gtrl 10 Batlysllrn my Home Part
Time For Twm G1rls 4yrs old t·
(7401 446 8627

POSTAL JOBS To I1S 35 IHR
IN C BENEFITS NO EXPERt
ENCE FOR APP ANO EXAM
INFO CALL 1 800·813 3585
EXT U210 8 AM 9 PM 7
DAYS Ids 1nc
Pr~vate

non prof11 fam1 1y plannmg
agency seek 1ng a full 11me Ac
countmg Ass•sta nt A ssoc•ate
Degree rn accountrng requ1red
Computer e.:penence a must De·
ta11 ortentea Able to work 1nde·
pendently as well as part of a
team Full beneht paGkage mctud
mg 401 K ret~rement plan Send
resume and th1ee ernploymen1
relerences to Planned Par
enthOod ol Southeast Oh10 396
Rrc htand Avenue Athens OH
45701 by September 8 1999

EOEIESP
Ro ckspnngs Rehablltlat•on Cenler
w111 be runnmg a class to tram n
t'IIV IOuals who wan1 to MCome a
Stale Tesled Nursmg Assistant
lnlerested cancJrdates should ap
ply to Rocksprmgs Rehab•htal ron
Center 36759 Aockspr mgs Ad
Pomeroy Ohro 45769 Attn~ Catol
Greemng D•r.ector ol Nursmg
Equa10pporlun.ty Employer
Route Sales Positron Available
Please Call (740,4 46 9892
Scen1c H1fls Is Ollerlng CNA
Classes II Interested App ly At
Sc enic H111s 311 Buckndge Road
81dwell
Seek nQ a person to t 11e tn and
manage Elderly Hous 1ng ProjeCt
•n tt'le Pomeroy Rac 1n e Mrddle
pon area Must be able to ao or
l1ce work and get along well With
others Evenmg call co11erage re
qu•reo as part of lh1s pos1t1on Ac
pllcants may be reqUITed to sub
mil to a pollee check and dr ug
test Send leiter of applicaton rn
clud mg a Mel hrstory e~perlen ce
and Jhree (3) current references
c/o The Da11y Sentinel R 0 BoM
7~9-87 Pomeroy Ohio 45769

TRAVEL US A.
Nat•onat Public ation Sales Com ~ •
pany {L S 1 ) Now Placeng 18 ·23
Sharp EnthUSI8StiC lf'dlvldual&amp;
Wh o Are Free To Travel Entire
U S We Guarantet~ 2 Wee«" AU
E•pense Pa•d Tramrng Including
Round Trrp TransportatiOn And
Lodgrng It You Are 18+ Ad11en- - · •
turous AM Available Today Call
1 877 802 4795
Truck Dr1ver Needed Class B
CDL With Hazmat And .:Tank En
dorsement For Home Heatmg 011
Delivery Weekends Off In·
surance Pa•d Time Off Send Ae·
sume To CLA 481 c/o Gallipolis
Ca ll y Tr~bune 825 THird Avenue
Gall1pofls OH 45631
VENDORS WANTED! Sunbury
Harvest Bazaar at B•g Walnu t
M1delle School Octooer 16 1999
9am 3pm call LeeAnn Bookman
loll free 740'-965 5743
Wanted· dnvers to transport cars '
to &amp; trom auctions call 740·992·
6088 between 1Dam &amp; 6pm
WANTED•
63 People To Lose 30 IDs In 30
Days &amp; Ea tn $$$$$ While Sur11ng
The
Net
1·888·221·8427.
www evltal1ty nettteelgood
Wanted Babysmer lM My Home
For 2 Toddlers Day Shift 740441 9842
WarehOuse And Delivery Person
Apply In Person No Phone Calls
Please! lifesty le Furniture 856
Thrrd Ave Galltpolls

,;

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 /HR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR·
DENS
SECURITY
MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO

EXP NEEDEO FOR APP ANO
EXAM INFO CALL 1·800·813
3585 EXT al4211 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS Ids 1nc

140

Business
Training

•
•

--::=::::-;:::::::--:::=-:::•
Gallipolis Career College
(Car'eers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446 4367.
1 800 214 0452
Reg 1'90·05 12748

150

·.•

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY Bachelors
Masters Doctorale B.y Corre
sponde11ce Based Upon Pnor Ed
ucahon And Short Study Course
For FREE lnformatron Boo~let
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY I 800·964 8316

180

,.

...
...· · .'

Wanted To Do

\.

Br ck &amp; Blo ck Work Inc ludes
F1replaces 35 years e~perlence
(304)675-1163

:-::---~-~

,
,_

~.

ChilO care provi ded 1n my hOme
non smoker any hours Bur
l1ngham/ Darwm area 740 992

,"

6536
Child Care Provrded In My Home
Non Smoker Exce llent Play Area
Numous Meals 740 245-5823

...

.

-

Crrdacare In My Home 15 Years
E.:perlence References 7 AM
5 PM Call Anyttme 740 245
E &amp; S Lawn Serv1ce Des,gn lm
ptementat!OI'l
and Serv1ce
Available lor Sprmg Clean up
fertlllztng ana plantmg Free estl
mates Sa!lsfaclton guaranteed
Greg Mrlh oan 3041675 4628

'

'

We do trarler demolition&amp; some
ho,mes8 tras h pick up 304 773
6167
.W•II load And Hau l "Any!hwq '
Away Call Between 9 00 AM
7 00 PM AI 740·446 6467
Wdj Aepa1r Farm Tractors Auto
mobiles Lawn Mowers &amp; Sem1 s
Major Or M1nor Call 740 441
QW
Wil t Do Painting &amp; Oda Jobs
$4 00 A Hour ,740·367 0140

..·..
'

-,

;.·
,_
-~

J1m~

'
Mag•c Years Oa) Care pre
school now acc ept rng appllca
Irons tor !all eMr oumeMI Ma.glc
Years Day Cate for parenJS. whO
care 1B yrs expertence l1
censed by the Sl ol WV 304
675 5847

.
..
..

-.'

Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haut yOUI logs 10 !he mrll JUSI call
304 675 1957
Drywa ll &amp; Construct ion
New Constructron &amp; Aemode ll
Drywall Srdmg Ro ots Addl
trons Pam t~r1g e1c (304)674
4623 or(304)674 0155

'

..
.
..'

5052

I

•

-

SINGERS! GOSPEL OR Ct.£AJI
COUNTRY call Now Tal FrM 1~
801}339-420&lt; Or 1·1100---11M
For Appomtment To Comt To
Nuhvtlfa. Tanr14ssee And Auc:Hbon For Major Recant ProdUOif"'.
ln&amp;ernet' www wck'lac

non 800-676-0080 EOE

KROGER

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

--~~~~~~~~- .-

AM CNA'l Homo Heihh Agency Now H1nng Full T•mt And
Part Time Po.SihOtiS Agency Will
Tra in For The PCA Poswona

Wanted to Buy

Ext 5045
Sept 3rd·4th, hunting clothes, !=:::=:7.~::-:~~:-:-.:~:--:­
bow furniture, bedding, glass· ASSE~BLY AT HOMEN Crafts
ware baskets, grandfather clock. Toys Jewelry Wood. Sew1ng
Kaylor residence. TP, 681 west, Typing Great Pay' CALL 1·800·
fOllow signs
795-0380 Ext 11'20 I (24 Hrs)

~rlday Sept 3 Sat
Sept 4
Sandhill Ad First house on left
ott ot u S 33 at letart Lats of
nice clotnes

Ali Yard Salea Must Be Paid In
Advance. Dndllne: 1 OOpm the
day before the ad Ia lo run,
Sunday I Monday edition·
1 OOpm Frtday

""" Clut:h Rain Canatls

80

484 Main Street Middleport, Sat·
urday Sept 4th only 6 month·24
month bov clothes, toys , grltl, pa·
tlo chairs &amp; table 4-wheeler

m•sc

Sept 3ra&amp;4th 3217 Howard Ave
Under Carpor1 1St ol 99 Gas

First tilnl ever yard II~· Hugel
11t·41h Something for eYiryona
Loti of mesct Turn onto Depot In
milo~ 9om-?

Big Yard Sale Goo d ch •l drens
clothes &amp; lots more 402 112.
24th St PI Pleasant September
234

842 Pearl St , Middleport some
turMure picture frames lots
more, Sept 2nd &amp; 3rd, 9am

Sept 3 6 4, 9AM· 5PM You
Name 11. We Probably Got It
Somalh l n~J For Every Room &amp;
Everybody 4M I Out Ten Ulle
Ck Rd Off Fit 2 Oealets We i
oomt (304)89s-3315

Rongoltols ol rmc

4+ tamlly - Friday &amp; Sarurday one
m1le off SR 7 on SA t24 0 inter·
section ol CA5 &amp; Bailey Run

6 famHy garage 'iale· f6 South
Th~rd Street Mason September
2·4 9 ooam-? Clott'llng beaniea
table chairs, bar stools, lots of

--.wv

low- . Or- Oflor-

9&amp;9-40110

Sept 2, 3, 4 Doat wilh tra11er and
motor ul1llty trailer, pick up truck,
yard roller, yard trader hand tools
smoker and odds and ends Iron
skillets &amp; Dulch oven, at the end
or Jividen Hollow Ad call 740·
742 0003

edition • 2:00p.m.
Frklly. Monday Hltlon
• 1o 00 e m Slturdey

Camcorder TV Clocks VCR
Dolls Jewelry, Much More, Cash
Only 828 Second Avenue Sep·
!ember 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 11 7

..... """ -

Sept 3+4 2534 Georges Creek
Ad Two Fam•ly Yard Sale girls 2·
TB·1 0 Men l+Xl, Curta1ns, 'Bed
s8ts, Car Stereo, VCR, Barbie
Jeep, Toys. Shel't'es Football
Cleats mise

4 fam•ly Loop Ad Frl &amp; Sat,
Sept 3-4, first trailer on left above

Big Vard Sale Thursday Friday,
Salurday, Monday Old Uprlgh~
Plano, 2 Organs, Bicycles Com·
pulers Prmters Copier Some
work Some For the Handyman,
Some For Parts Books, Old En·
cyclopedias Toys Sheets Blan
kats Quills Clothes Of All S•zes
Willow Valley Mlss1on Mlmstrles.
2780 Ewlngton Road, F9110w
S1gns From Vinlon PhOne 740·
388·8033

,..._1101..,.... .............

Oak Gro't'e Ad Rac1ne 5 family
yard sale Sept t-3 9am-5pm no
earlier please Home lntenor,
baby Items, nice clothes curta1ns
and comfQrters

'""Iaday
bofole '"" lid
to run. Sunday

Baby nems Furnllure, Household
Goods, Antiques Nlnlendo 64,
Many Other Things Friday Sat·
urday 9·3. 1304 McCormick
Road

l;g yard ..... Seple- 3 ' • .
5cMn Coiner ol Pomeroy

..., to

Sept 2,3,4 9 00·5 00 ' 2 Family
Moving and Garage Sale An
tlques, Furniture Household arid
Decorating Items E11ercise Equip·
ment. Adult Clothmg Bear Run
Ftd olf St At 7 Past ~ac:coon
Creek FollOw Signs

September 1 • 5 Large SaSe, 9 Till
? 6 M1les State Rte 218 From Route 7 lots Good Chlldrens
School Clo thes. New Jeans
Tops, Shoes. Lots Infant Baby
Clothes, Adults, Also Mlscella·

y.,....,_,._ e...

cllner, Cushk)na
var•erv or
CIO!hlng , loll of Ul.sc lttma •

es Beanie Bat11es Home

!ng For E""'YYOJJ/8 oo n1 Dal11.

913199, 9·? 1107 Adrian A'f'enue
Gallipolis Home Interior Toys
Clothes, Baby FurniiUre Mise

ALL Ytrd Salol Muat
Be Paid In AdYinct.

Baby

l arge 63 Homewood Drive. 81d·
wen September 1st To 1 Someth

588 Behind Bodtmers

9/6199, 113 Fourth Avenue 10·4,
Nice Mens Ladles, Plus Size,
· Boys S1ze 14 And Up Clothes,
Mise Household Jewelry, Mowers Avon, Tin Collectables, Rain
Cancels

3rd. oth. 9 To ?

Clolhes, Furniture Tools, House·
hOld ITems Lots Of MISe Food

YerdS.Ie

Sllurdo&gt;l. Sepl. . , 9AM·1
rythiftO Mutt Go 1 FurMLtfe, At·

Infant To

hciiPf6lda, Toys

41h. t-? e.a,
______ 1ing
, HOUIIWire.

Found Black Female Puppy
Found on Owl HoUow Rotd
(304)117s-n.oa

•

DOZER WORK

740.992·7643

740·985·4180 '

3111199TFN

tton

PUBUC NOTICE
NOncE Ia hereby given
thai 1 on
Saturday,
September 4, 1M, at tO:OO
a.m., a public oalo will be
held ot 21 I Woot Second
StrMt, Pomeroy, Ohio, The
Farmer's Bank and Savings
Company porlllng lot, to sell
fol cult the following colllterll:
·1111111
YAMAHA
ATV

740-11912·3562

~::..::.:::..::::..::::..:

1,. TrrRurr tl'll Sfd h IL'N' ,
iowfftJI rev J fUH/ lrf I~

New Homes • Vinyl
Sid1ng • New GaJages
•Replacement Windows
•Room Additions
•Roofing

, WICKS
HfiOUHG IHC.

me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

740·742·2138

good

Public Notice

60 La.! and Found
:F:-o-uno-:-_-det:-.-S;:,R::-osa~1-.,-.,-:,:-,,.-•"'•"'oc,l

"Family Medicin~" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
Ohio Univrrsity College of
Osteopathic
Medidne,
Grosvenor Hall, Athtns, Ohio
4S701.

FREE ESnMATES

linda's Pal•tlftl

Hauling
Umestone &amp;Gravel
Reasonable
Rates
•
Joe N. Sayre

example of an 1atrogemc condt·

(:1

ST. RT. 7

992-1717

SAYRE
TRUCKING

OOPM

7ooto

NEED '10 REPLA~E YOUR
OLD SUNGlASSES?

uck •
Cheer Loud!
MeghanAvis

HARIWEIL
STORAGE

t*:Jo4&gt;- 7-7714.

med1cmes and other treatments
you need work wel110gether

IISSELL IUILDEIS,
INC.

COinmufljty Ylnl Salt: s. . "'"'
:Srd, I. 41h . Gr"" Terrac• In
c.ntrlOOI'f ComjKIIM. furllilura,

Woad IDgl m JL222 / a .... I

lh •••.. . . .

"1alrogen1c •

IS a

colog1st all prescnbe treatments
for your maladtes without fully
cons1denng the Other treatmentS
you ar. rece1v1ng It IS easy for an
1atrogen1c 1llness to anse m thiS
snuauon
Your famtly phystcian has a
more all-encompassmg respoH ns1b1hty for your health care e or
1 f
she can make sure that al o the

lOX 10$40
10 X20 $60

WITH THE
CLASSIFIEDSI

Literally, this tenn means "phySI ctan mduced Illne ss .. The adverse
reaclton you had to your blood
med1t.:1nes

t•11mJ

llaragH,

to an tndiVtdual are called " ldiOsyncrauc" reacuons
You may have had an tdtosyncrattc reactton 10 your blood pre.sure medtctne More l1kely. how ever, 1s that you expenenced an
unanticipated mterac[tOn between
the several med1cmes you take
There IS an obscure word that
descnbes an undestrablc reacuon
to a phys1c1an-prescnbed med1

pressure

Services
CLEAN HOUSE

that are very tancommon or umque

Ctne or treatment -

Therefore, you should also ask
your phannactst or doctor about
IRlCr&amp;CUORS between all of the
··medlctnes- you usc
Havtng a famtly phys1ctan as
pan of your health-care team
r.duces the nsk of drug tnteracnons. too.
As an example, ler's say thai
your 1nterms1. urologiSt and gyne-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

·-

:-•

•••

..
.......
. • ••
•

.
.........
.'
•

#

•

-:
•

'

•
~=

.·'

.

..-·-•,
'

•,_•

.-'·:..
'

•,_

.-.

'.
.--..
•:

�-

.... 10 • The.Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
•

6-

' Thursday, Saptember 2, 1199

ALLEYOOP

•

The Dally Sentinel • P9 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

r a r

aaJDO•

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

,,
210

a.,.lnesa

Approved Master Licensed Elec·
!riC IQR, WV025956 , Esti mate s

Opportunity
INOTICE I
OH1Q VALlEY PUBliSHING CO.
recommends that-you do bus t·
MM whh peopie you know, and

IIOT 1o Hnd money lhoough lhe

Nil untM you have Investigated

.. -..g.

2.9 Cents /Min PHONE CARD
Ate. EASY SS MONEYII FEW
Houral earn $500 ·$5.000 /Wk
CASHI FREE Silos 1-800·997·

-.24th
ARE U LAZY1 I Am And Earn
$1,000 A Day. No Selling . Not
MLM. Froo lnlo Package. 1·800·
~.24HnXTV

for

ResidenHal

(304)67S.7927.

$4500. 7&lt;10-949-2013.

Beautiful Cleanmg . In your
nome or busine ss Carpet a net
upholstery to lnlenor/ exterlor
wall&amp;. decks and driveways. The
complete cleaning service. Call

12.1.60 mob1le home, back dam·
aged by tree , $400 OBO, 740-

Cloorly CIMn For Froo
I;J0&lt;-67~ .

e.-10

Mount's Tree Service "The Tree
Profess ionals" B,ucket Truck
Servic e , Top, Tnm , Removal,
Stump. Grindtng Free Estimates
Fulty Insured . Works Camp Bidwell, OH Call And Save. 1-800·
838·9568, 7•0· 388·96-il, Owner
~lei&lt;

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 -20 Locations. S4K ·S10K .

...ooo

Services

Moont

.-u

l-100-3110-2t115 · 24 Hrs.
tlonst A-1 Location , Plenty of

Pa11&lt;1ng, 4 Tanning Bods, well Sell
together or S-rala. Call (740!·
387-11612

EARN fiOK THIS MONTHII Cui

All real estate advertising in
Is subject IO
ttle Federal Fair Housing Act
this newspaper

of 1968 wtuch makes ittllegal
to advertise •any preteret ICe,
Nmttation or dtscrimlnatton

-xl234.
FRITO LAY !PEPSI lCOKE
VENDING ROUTE . $1,000+
WEEKLY POTENTIAL ALL
CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO·
CAL SITES. ON GOING SUP·
POAT. SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PR.lJFITS . 1·800·
131-7233 EXT 3503

advenlsements tor real estate
whtcn is In violation of the
law Our reaoors are hereby
1ntormed that all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
aru available on an equal
opportunity basis.

TUNITYI Ground Floor. Hurry
Ltrnlte&lt;l Time Only! Call Toll Free

1100-858-0110.
MEDICAL BILLER Up lo $20 ·
S40 n-tr Medical Billing Soltware
Company NMds People To Proceas MediCal Claims From Home
Training Provleled Must Own
Compuler. 1·800-434-5518 Ext.

race, color, retigion ,

se)l tam11ra1 status or natiOnat
ongm, or any intentiOn to
make any such pJe1erence,
limitation or d1scnmlnation •

condlllon. $9500. 740·909·2453.

New Heat PU01&gt; Asking $14,000,
740.388-6335.

1990 1 4K72 Skyline 2 Bedrooms,
2 Baths , 16Kix8 Deck, 12x10
Shed, washer, Dryer, Frldg,
Stove, Set-Up On Rental lot, 2
MtleS From Holzer Hospttal. Great
Shape, $15.500, 740-441.()6011.
1990 Clayton Trattor 1•x10.
K1tchen Appliances stay 1 112
balh , 2 Belrms Covered Front
Porch, Back Oeck Can be left on

Rented Lot. SHARPII

11-t...().W 0.1$-T
S499 Down All Singles , 5999
Down Doubles, Super Low Pay•
ments, Limited Tlma, Oakwood
Homes. BarbOursville, wv, 30..·

736-3409.
Brand New 80's 3 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, Just $239/Month Free
Oall\lely and Set-Up! onty one at

lhio Prtcol Hurryl Ookwood; GaiiiBrand New Ooublawlde 3 Badrooms. 2 Bath&amp;, only S3401month.

CD· AOM . Investment S4,995 •
$8,995. Financing Available . Istend Automated Medical Servlc·
es, Inc 800·322· 1139, Ext 050

\\Jklln KY, IN, CT.

Win Our Beautllul Income -ProClueing Building In Malnel For
Free Contest Rules !Building
Prospeelus, VIsit www unicorncontest com Or Sand SASE· Unicorn Easay Contest, P.O. Box

1403, Bethel, Maino 04211. $200
Enlry Fee Requlfed.

220 Money to Losn
fU NEED CASH77 WE Pay
Cash For Remaining Payments
On Property Solei! Morlgagesl
Annuities! Settlements! lmme~;tlate Ouoteslll "Nobody Beats
OUr Prices • National Contract
Buyers 800·490-0731 Ext 101
www.na~lcontractbuyars com

$$$ OYEADUE BILLSIII $$$ConIOitdate Dot&gt;lsl Sarno Oar Appro,.. NO APPLICATION FEESII I·
800-863-9006 Ext 936 www helppa)'-bils.corn

$FREE CASH NOWS From
Wealthy Families Unloading Mil·
Help Mlnim1ze
Their Ta11es Write Immediately

1ona Of Oolars, To

Wlndlalls, 847-A SECOND AVE ,
SUITE 1350, NEW YOAK, NEW
~K 10017
FREE MONEY! ll's True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500 $50,000. For Debt Consolidation,
Personal Needs, Medical B1lls ,
Education &amp; Business Can TollFree HIOD-724-6047, (24 Hr$)
CASH Or LOAN! Farm Capital
Will Purchase Or loan Against
' Your Governmenl Farm Pay
menta. (CRP/PFC) Call Farm

Capital 1-8811·FARM·ACT (327·
12211).
CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monthly l'llyments 20 ·50~•. Save

310 Homes for Sale
$$$0 DOWNI HOMES NO CRED·
IT NEEOEDI IGOV'T REPO CON·
DO'S. TOWNHOUSES. HOMESI)
t ·800-434-2434 EXT 3205.
1789 A'deljson Pike 3 Bedrooms,
Includes 12 Acres &amp; Free Gas
Need Quick Sale. Prtee Reduced!
Call For Detatls, 740..384-()()63
3 Beelroom House With 3 Acres
Lanel Few Fr uit Trees, 2 Beetrooms, &amp; Bath Upstairs, 1 Bedroom Front Room Dtning Room,

Vijllly Room, Kl1chen, Sath Down·
stairs Slls On Storys Run Road ,
Off Route 1, For More InformatiOn
Call 740-367-7576 Atrer Noon,
PriCe $49,500, Firm
3 Bedrooms, Bath &amp; 112, Ranch
Styte Home, Exceltanl ConditiO~.
Located On The Corner Of Kl ·
'neon &amp; Teodora In Gallipolis.
Ohio, 740-446·7928 Evenmgs.
5 Rooms, 1 Bath, Partial Basement. Gallipolis C1ty Schools,
$4.500 Down Owner Wtll Finance,

740-441·1106
ARIZONA RARE BUY! Pristine 40
Acre Ranctles In Northwest Arizona From Only $495JAcrel Near
Co lorado A1ver No Qualifying.
Low Down EZ Terms! Selling
Fast' Stagecoa ch Trails 1·800711 -2340
Buy Homes From $10.000
1 -3 Bedroom Local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Financing
Possible , .for listings Call 800-

319·3323: Ext 1709
Five room house, lull basemen!.
central atr, two porches, nice lot,
near new shopping center In Mason, WV Stop paying rent ana
start bu1lding equity m your own
home, 740-992·3041 or 740.992-

3557
FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down! Gov't "nd Bank Repo's
Be ulg Sold NOW! Flnanc tng
Available Call Now! 1-800-730-

==·sT~ ~;~~-~erest.

7772 Ext. 804Q .

CREDIT CLEANUP! Send Name,
Address. Phone To HL.G Financial Services. P 0 . Box 90257 ,

l'tttelug, PA 15224.

HOME FORECLOSURES · NO
MONEY OOWNI NO CREDIT
NEEDEDI TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! 1·1100·916·
9191 xHS023.

CREDIT PROBLEMS Slop Here

HOMES FROM $5000

Wa Can Help. loans Available

Foreclosed and repossessed
No or low down payment.

13,000 And Up . No Feo 1·877·
163-9289 Ext 221
CREDIT • PROBLEMS .. STOP
HEAEII WE CAN HELPII LOANS
AVAILABLE 53,000 AND UP.
CALL TOLL FREE 1·877 ·663·
8289 EXT. 231 .
FAEE CASH NOWI Wealthy Fa·
mMiea Unloading Millions To Help
Minimize Their Taxes Write Immediately: Fortune -LP 1, PMB
249·1628 Norlh Wilcox Ave -

249, Hollywood, CA 90026

GET YOUR CASH NOWI Oldest

BUwer1 01 Structured SetUement&amp;,

Annultiea, And Government Farm
Paymttnts Also Purchasing L.ol·
terles And Private Mortgages
Call Seltleme,nt Capital. t·800158·0006 www.aeutemantcapl ·

llt.corn
Need A loan? Try Oebt 'Consoll:

fallon. U.ooo · $200,000. Bad
O.K. FH. 1·1100.770·0092,
EXI. 215

c-

Head a loan? Home , Aulo , &amp;

Consolidation, Good or Bad

Credll. Call ton free · 677-658·

0551 .
NIID AN IARLY PAYDAY??
No OffiCe Visit Necessary. Up To
$500 Instantly. Call Toll Free 1·

177-EAALYPAY. 1St ADVANCE
FREEl Lie tcc70036.
RECEIVING PAYMENTS? In·
V8110r Paya CASH NOW For
Your s.tler Financed Mortgage,
Real Estate Contract, Insurance
Annully Highest Prices Free

Quotes Why Wall? Call Alch, I·
100-888-&amp;450.
WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS,
MORTGAGES , DEEDS "OF
TRUST NATIONWIDE . CALL
lEN OWENS (TOLL FR~E) I·
188-399-1965

Credrt trouble O.K
For CUfTent liStings call,
1·800-311·5048 ext 4640

Price Reduced- remodeled home.
4 bedroom. kitchen , rr. lr. bath,
utility room, ale, beautiful view of
rl~er, basement w/full bQih, 740·

992·9012
Three bedroom, 1 &amp; 112 story: cedar and stone t}ome, stone chlm·
ney. large windows, two baths ,
basement, covered deck , large
garage, 18 112 acres, prl~ate ,
near Pomeroy, 740-992-6116

Two year old modular home, t .&amp;8
acres, 2x6 construction , block
foundation, three bedrooms. two
bath&amp;, large family room, attached
one car garage, separate one car
garage, large privacy fenced
backyard, Ideal for children or
pets, lront anel back large con crete porctlas with slelewalks,
heat pump, propane gas, natural
gas tap, satellite dish. 18x40 tinlshad pole building- air conell·
lloned, heated, dry wall , ceiling
fans, 112 bath, concrete noor. lo·
cated SR 33 at Pratts Fork , 12
mite&amp; lrom Athens, 15 miles hom
Pomeroy, $102,000, call 740·593·

11527
Unlblll House, 3 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, PartiBI Basement Finished.
Appliances, 2 Car Garage, Fron1
Porcn, Rear Deck, 1 Acre With
Fruit Trees, Basketball Court. S8t·
alllte D1sh. Off 2t8. On Lewis

Offer won't last! Only at Oakwood: Gallipolis, Oh. (740)·446·

3093
Buill Like Housel 1995 14x70

Dulch, VInyl Siding, Shingle Root,
Ther,mopayne Till Windows, Skytights. Oak Trim, GE Appliances,

Doci&lt;s $18.500. After S. 740·256·
6980.
Clean affordable previously
owned names large selection
available. Call Karena at Ri'l8r-

dalo Homes. 7ol0-365-4367.
Come see our large selection of
us&amp;d home at Rl~erdale Homes
Neat, clean , financing available.
Ready tor delivery. Call Nikki at

740'385-4367
For Sale 1967 Homectale Trailer
Call After 5 PM. 740..388-9611
Large selechon of used tlomes , 2
and 3 bedrooms avallaDia. Excel·
It'll cond~lon Great starter
homes. Call Cheryl, 740-385-

4367

5 Bedroom local Repos a Fore·
closures. Fee Financing Possl ·

l!le For Llstmgs: 1·800·719·3001
xt 185.

1275/Mo.. 1150 Do·
posl1, 2011 Ctlllnut S"Mt, c;&gt;alll·
pdls, 7oo--.3871l.

2 BR Hou11 located at 1 I 12

Hagg St. , Pt. Plollant. S290 per
mo. References and security de·
pool -(304)882·2Z11
FOf rent- 3 bedroom home In PQ...
"*"Y· no pols, 740,992-15858.
For Rent: 28R House. 2 large
Extra Rooms Built- In Garage
$375 Per Month + security Deposit and Years Lease. (304}675House In Chester, good size
rooms &amp; yard, lOts ol posalbllllies,
614·501-8339after 7pm

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14x80 2 Bedrooms. Open Kitch·
an. Living Room. Air, Electric
Washer &amp; Dryer, Refrigerator,
Ralerences , No Pets, Deposll,

740-256- 11&gt;14
t•x70 4 12x65 halltrs, $250
month, $150 depOSit, total elecbic,
two bedrooms, no pets, 7-40-7.t2-

&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
condUioned , $260-$300, sewer,
water and trash lnclueled, 74D-

992·2167.

Double Wlda On lot $250 De·

posrt, 1·600-383-6862

,330 Farms for Sale
26 Acres MJL , Horse Barn , 3
Bedroom House, 740-388-8504.
Farm 56 Acres in Putnam County Evergreen Road Nice Home
Site. Needs to be sold.(304)675-

350 Lola &amp; Ac1'4!.1ge
131 Acres More Or less,
Fenced, City School System, locatd In Clay Township, 740-3886504
2 114 Acres MA.., For Sale On Ro-

ute 588, $35.000. 740.245-9448
2.•4 Acres, Homesite. Green
Township, Gallta County, Scenic,
Quiet, Close To Gallipolis, Some
Restrk:tlons, 740-245-5776
30 acres· ridge top, halt trees,
hall pasture lield w-Ith water and
electric available, 25 mmutes to
Gelha or Altlens, $1.t001 acre.
must sell all Ott 143 &amp; Kmgsbll"f

Rd .. Meigs County, 740.992·5284
73 Acres--3 Bedroom, 2 bath.
Ranctl Mme. 2 Barns, WOods
and pasture Partially fenced
Call Homestead Benet, Broker, at

1304)882·2405 or 882-2221 .
23 ACRES
2 Miles Oft SR 7 &amp; SR 2111, Souln
Of Gallipolis Singlewldes Allowed,
Rough , Mostly Wooded, Road AI·
ready Cut ln. Land Contract
Available Only $27,000, 1·800·

213-8365.
BUILDING LOTS
FOR SALE
Weter and Electric Ready For
Hoo•·Up. Nice Lata. U,OOO.OO

Eoch. Coll304-7l'3-61M.

360

Real Eatsle
Wanted
WANTED: MOBILE
HOME PARKS

80+ Sites (Occupied) National
Company Pays Cash !Closes
FaSIII Toll-Free 888· 653- 2244
x13.
We Buy Land . 30 · 500 Acru ,
We Pay Cash . 1·800·213-8365,
AnthOny Land Co

RENTALS

410 Hou- for Rent
2 Bedrooms, $325/Mo , + Uftlltles,

No -

740-446--4313.

o380.

Nice Ground-Floor, 2BR , WfO
Hook-up Rtlerence, Deposit No
Pills. (304)675-516:1.
Nice Unfurnlah•d 3 Bedroom
Apartm.nt, Point Pleuant, 304-

67S.2015.
Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom TownhOuse
Apartmentl , lncluelet Water
S.wage, Tra,ah. $315/Mo., 740·

DUCTS BY MAIL Premium
Brandl $22 75 &amp; $18.00 Generic
Brands $11 50 • $20 .25 Volume
D•scounts &amp; Group Rates FREE

ll~trld

Miniature Plnaherl , nrs

lftllllld. (304)615-3381 .

S&amp;H In Continental US W/ 3+

CI&lt;C Regiattrtd Jack Rulltll
Ttrrltr Male, 3 Monttls, PartlaHy
House _Tralneel, $125 , 7&lt;10-255·

Carton Ordera. Toll Frtt 1·817·

6162.

90!Ml662
F l - Fer Sale, 740-258·1922.
For Sale : Patio Door, Replace·
ment Windows, Whitfield Pellet
Stove. Interior Doors Call alter

For aale- hand led Quaker Parrot,

ca17ol0-992·9910
Reglsttrad Alreelala puppies,
rnaka great hunters. farm dogs,
k)yal gentle Ptts. Shots, wormed.

Mobile Home !of Aont. Call. 1740)·
446·1279
Three Bedrooms, with Fireplace,
Bath &amp; a 112 $300 oo Monlh Appo~ 10 miles RouM 7 Bladen Rei·
arenca/Oeposit. No Pets! Ap-

pol...,..nt Only, (1401·256-1568
Trailer for rent on Condor St.,
$250 par month, S100 deposit,

caii74G-667·3083 altef 5pm
Two Bdrms, Above Crown City,
Route 7, Water Paid, Ale lnctud·

ed. 740-256-8449 Al1er 6:00PM
Two Beelroom $275.00 a month
Approx 10 miles Route 7 Bladen
Rd. Fleterence/Oeposlt. No Pets!
Appointment Onlv. (740)·256·

15611
Two bedroom mobile home, Pomeroy. S150 deposit, $325/mo.,
also mobile home, lots, $90/mo,

740-949-2093.

446-0008

UH FORD EXPLORER fiOOI
080. Seized And Selling local

Rental ProperlY. CottagO Apt. 2br.

For SaJa : Three year old lawn

A o - PUW/ Fer 5ale, AKC 8
WHkS Old, $250 Coli Evt~lngs,
740-388-{1002

$250 . Homestead RtaltV 304·

rnowar.l304)675·3092.

675·SS.O.

FULLY

Tara Townhouse Apartments,
very St:~acloua , 2 Bedrooms, 2
FlOOrS, CA, 1 112 Battl, Fully Car·
peted , Adul1 Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $350/Mo No Pets,
Lsasa Plus Security DepoSit ReQUired , After 5, 740·4•6~ 0101 ,

COMPUTERS. Poor Credit O.K!
1·800-520&lt;;364

Bolore 5, 740-4*3481
Upstairs Furnished, 3 Rooms.
Bath, CNtan, No Petal References
&amp; Deposit Required, 740-•48 -

LOAOED

PENTIUM

GOT A CAMPGROUND MEM·
BEASHIP OA TIMESHARE? We11
Take ttl America's Most Sue ·
cessful Calt'pground And Timeshare Reule Clearinghouse. Call
Rasort Sale~ International 1-800·

Pup&amp;, 740-256-1517.

Musical
Instruments

570

'

Bundy C larlnet $200 Excellent

Condllk&gt;n, 740

us

8981.

FAR~.1

SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

423-596724 Hoors.·

Mobile Home lot at Santa's Forest on At. 87. Water/Sewer, prireterences
requlrtd .
vate,
Mobile, home site available between Athens end Pomeroy, call

740--7

WATERLOO

4 P.M Or 74D-643·26« After II
PM

440

Appliances·
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Aanges. Refrl·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maylag, 740-446·
1795
For Sale: Reconditioned washers, dryers and refrigerators
Thompsons Appliance . 3407

Jackson Avo,.,., (304)67S.7388.
APPLIANCES

Washers, dryers, relrlgerators ,
rBnges Skaggs Appliances, 76
VIne Street, Call 7•0-446-7398,

1·6811-818-()128.

'

New And Used Furniture Store
Batow Holiday Inn, Kanauga
Beds, Chest&amp;. Couches, Tablas,
Much Morel Stop And See Us.

740 446 H82.
Furniture,

Apartments
for Rent

t &amp; 2 Bedroom Apanment In
Henderson, Deposit &amp; Referenc·

R&amp; D's ,Used

Buylna Partial Or

Solid Cherry Wood Table And 4
Chairs, $225 00, Also Oak Ex·
press Entertainment ~ Cetuer.
Shelves &amp; Glass Door, $225.00.

1·740-446-3514.
Washer $95; Dryer $95, Electric
Rangt~ $95, Refrigerator $150,
Washer Like New, $205, (Has 1
Year Warranty~; Freezer like

New $300. Skaggs Appliances,
76 Vlno Stroot, Gallipolis, 740·
446-7398
2 Dryers for aate 3112 to 4 yrs.
old (304)675-6693

Sporting
Goods

520

992-2218.
1 bedroom apartment in Mldelleport, all utilities paid, $270 per
monlh. $100 deposit, 740-992·

Sportln~ Equlpmonl, Besl Oller,
740-4-46'9709.

71106.

530

1 Bedroom Upstairs, Clean, No
Pels, Reterencaa, $300/Mo , Paki

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques,
1~24 E Main Street. on Rt. 124.
Pomeroy Hours M.T.W. 10.00
a m 10 6:00 p.lfl , Sunday 1:00 to

UINIUes, 740-446·3667.
1 Bedroom, AJC, WID Hook-Up,
Near Arbors Nursing Home, No
Pets, Quiet locauons, S279JMo.
+ Ut~llles, 74o-44&amp;-2957
1 Bedroom, AU UtHtla1 Included,

$3115/Mo.. 740-441-()720
2 bedroom apartment In Middle·

Antiques

6 00 p.m 740· 992·2526, Russ
Moore o;wnar.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlaa
112 Carat Diamond Sotrtalro

Rl~.

sewer &amp; lfash,

VS·2 Clarity, 14K, Yellow Gold, 6

you pay gaa 6 electric, $200 per
mon,lh, $100 Clapoeil, ?.t0-992·

$2,000, Less Than One Year OICI,

port, we pay water,

7606.

Prong, TII1eny Band, AppraiSOd AI
$1,100080740-446-4548.
1011tOx6 dog kennel excellent

2 Bedrooms With CIA, Gas Heat,
Water &amp; Garbage Pa1d, $300/Mo ,
Deposit Required . Aererences.
740-446-7456.

~

MallrOSS. $100, 7ol().~

$115 00 304-87s-5253.

$4,500. Buclwtl that 111 a 215 hOe,

'!..•

•

740-44 Hl901 Evoolngs
New Born To (Year Old, 740 -

25H412.

.

Nice used Appliances, turn11ura,
freezers, Bedroom Suites, 01naltes, Lots MorJI (740)-446·

1004, 1740)-446-4039 any time. ,,
Old Oak OresseJ &amp; Chest $100;
Con~ole Color TV $75; Gas Grill
$40; Nice Coffee Tabla $25;
Corner Curio Cabinet $80; Sears
Tent, Sloops 4, $~5. 740 ·245·

5341 .
' .
Oldar Public Sch9QI Computer

And Software, Still l1o Good Work·
lng Order 5150, Ot Best Oiler,
7.ta-&lt;W1-D901 Even;f.

OWN A COMPU!!1, PUT IT TO
WOAK. S850 ·$3,5fi&gt;MO. PT.IFt.
FREE Details. Log~lo : htlp:l/
www.tt&gt;n.com Aoctts'Cocle 5298

PRIM.:T,... ,

.:t

Good Tires, 740-446-9853.

OlrecTV Summer PrOmotion. CeM
now 1-888-265-2123
Queen Sized Water 'Bed, Excel·

tent CondiUon. $100.00. CaA 740·
446-,1525.
Redllne stunt bicycle, new condl·
bon. cost $400, sell for $200, NordiC tractc ski macNne, cost 11200
sell tor $500 , Pioneer DEH 45
stereo, $175, 740-!MS-2389.

Tandy Computet &amp; Desk With
Accesaones; Wetsh1ng Machine
&amp; Antique Roller-Piano, 740-446-

03;!5, 7ol0-379-219tl.
Tharrington

FUel 011

Stove,

60,000 BTU, 2.Years Old, $400,
New $640, 740-\!56-6316
WANT A COMPUTER? BUT NO
CASH777 MMX Technology. We

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
tram $279 to 1358 Walk to shop
&amp; movie&amp;. Call 740·448·2568.
, Equal Housing Opportunity
Christy's Family living , apartments, tlome &amp; trailer renlals,
740-992·4514, apartments avail·
able, furnished &amp; unfurnished
Firat Avenue , Gallipolis, 1 A 2
Bedroom Apartments , $250 &amp;
S3001Uo , Unfurnished, Security
Deposit. References Aequlred,
740-446-1066, or Weekends

7ol0-441-&lt;l952

Wolff Srstem Sunquest Tanning

Cage, Call740-4*3409.

550

BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 lbs, 30 DAY MONEY
BACK GUAAANTEEI Natural, Dr.
Recommeneled. 740-441 · 1982

-

5arrj&gt;les.

COOL DOWN
Central Air Condntonlng Added
To Your Furnact. Complete Duct
Systmes &amp; Furnaces. Heat
Pumpa Certified Installer. If You

For lea&amp;'B: One Bedroom, AC
Apt . Comer 01 Second And Pine.
$2501Mo., Plus Utilities, Security
And Key Deposit, References Required, No Pets, 740-446-4425

Don't Call ua We Bolh Looel 740446-63011, 1·600-291.()098.

Furnished Apt Downatalra' 3
Rooms. Bath. All Utilities Paid!
919 Seconel Ave. $275 .00/mon,

VInyl Skirting Kill $299.95; 5 Ga"

1740)-446·3945
Gracious ltvlng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Alvlfslde Apartmftn1s 'In Middle-

port. From $249·5:173 Call 740·
992·506ot. Equal Housing Opportunities

OI!IODunt Mobile Home

Parts &amp; S14&gt;Ptv
Hugalnwntory
ion Aluminum Fibtred Floor Paint
S25 .21 , 5 Gal White ~oof Paint
157 69; Anchors $5; Doors I
Wlnelow•. Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters, Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts. lntartherm, Miller &amp; Coleman Air Conditioner• &amp; Heat
Pumps. Bennett't Mobile Home
Supply, 7.t0-446-9• 16 Gallipolis,

OhiO.

s.l

7~110

THE BQRN LOSER
,.ilL 1-\1\'llt '{(),) ~ 1 f!J..\1( ....
t-10\1-\1 t-IC:&gt; 10 e£

·~Dof

1

710 Autos for Sale
•sod CARS FROM 5500111 Buy
Pollee lml)ounels &amp; Repos. Fee .

CALL NOW For LlstlngBI 1·800·
319-3323 x2156.
CARS 5100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUNDS. Honda's Toyota's,
Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport Utili·
ties CaH Now! 800-772 -7470 ,

'95 DOdgo pickup, 112 ton, 4WD!
SLT Laramie 11\JdC, IOadod, 80,~
mites, asking $10,000, 740-9851

34011.

Pldt·Up, 314 Ton, Good Condioon,
Al1er 6 P.M. 740-256-1489.
1999 Chevy TahOe 4x4, 2 DQOrt.
Black, All Power, leather lntertof.

7000 Milos Cal740-386·8304
1996 Bronco XL 25K Mag
Wf'leels, Tint Glass, Auto, 0 D. '": :
8, Loctcoot Hubs. New Tire~ . Stared. Adult Owned, S18,000 Firm.:
74o-.«e-7527,Aft8f6
,1

740

r
lo/ANTEO
IT TO

SEEM

HOMEY'

Motorcycles

.

1984 Celebrity Euro - New Jasper
Engine, rebuilt trans, $1200

115 HP, Chrysler Outboard 89at
Motor Good Condlllon $600

080 (304)882·2625

OBO, (304)882·3921

1985 Chevy Celebrity station

760

wagon, runs good, S5M , 740·
992·1493.

1 Coli, •·II·

v.wn.....

~-30
32 Don.-

2 AmllrOul look
' 3 s.........
4 Genlllcltull

DI'Oducl
34 l'lbrlcal8d

Bad, Pro 24, 20 Minute Bad With
Face

Tanner,

Asking

Price

$2,500, 7ol0-388-9882.
Word Processor MaclntoS 1'
Classic II Stylewrlter Printer Wltl
Keyboard And MOUII, $200,

740-4*2105.

Building
Supplies

2 ·ALL STEEL BLDGS, FAC·
TORY LIQUIDATION 40x36 Was
$10,8111, Soli $3.900. 50x90 was
$2~.800, Sell $10,800 Doug 1100·
388·5314
Block, brick, sewer pipes, wlnd·
owa, lintels. etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740·2•55121.

560

-

( -,)
5 811-rdo, • ·II· t2 Somotwonlll
e AlloYe (poet.) 13 Mualclll notoo
7 lion foxy

--&gt;

~ass

Nortb
Pass
3•

18 Comporlthre

-ng

20 Cottle
21 Rou.-lump

Pass

Eul
Pass
Pass
Pass

CELEBRITY CIPHER
'

by Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms ara craatad from quotat100s b'; famous people, past and
present. Each letter tn tne Cipher stands for another.

Today's clw· 0 equals G
'WSYNP

NY

HDL . EKNHDWLHNP

YJSZBY

E y

JAI;INPY

OLJWLHKC

J X

MAV8E 'f'OU COlJLDTRADE IN
LAST VEAR'S, SEEING AS HOW
THE'f'IIE AARDL't' l!EEN USED..

.-~•.. '

'{OU 51-lOULDN'T LET WEIRD
PEOPLE IN VOUR STORE, SIR ..

•

I

.. :

'

·~-~~
..

NY

J X

' HDL

PIESBL

IN 0 D H

BLIISYYC
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Every man should keep a 1alr·Sized cemetery rn
wluch to bury thelaulls o1 hrs lnends."- H.W. Beecher
(&lt;:11~ by ~EA.

Inc

2

'::~~;~' s©~onlA-"~trs·
__:~==--=-= llllllo~ "" CLAY L . POlLAN
0

low to lorm four

I

WOII
lAM I

Rearrange &amp;ett.n of the
four ~erambled words b.
~mplo

W04'da

HENBID

II
QAKU E

1-..,.:0-;.Y..;L~D_,Err-11!,
3
I I I 1

.

.:_,

~::=~==~~~

Our new netghbor was very

standoffish Granny says that
1f folks look down thetr noses
,theymaygetthewrong--··-

L-.L...J.L.-..1..-oi.-.J.L....-1.
•

THESE SQUAHS .

•

Comploro lhe chockle quoled

by flll.ng in the m•amg words
you dewlap from step No. 3 balaw.

PRINT NlMfRED LETTERS IN

UNSCIAMILE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

•

l'rl'ttl
111111

SCRAM LETS ANSWERS
Valtse- Teeth -Knack- Clumsy- THEM ALL

Don't gtt !lung by hrgh prrm!
Shop lht ciGssi(i&lt;d SKIIOrl.

.

Famous quote "You w1n some. lose some, and some
get rat ned oul, but you have lobe ready for THEM ALL "

ITHURSDAY

SEPTEMBER 9 I

Pela for Sale

AKC Bassett Hound Puppies. Trl$t75 .
coiPf, Vet checked

!ao:I)S76-2126 or (304)576-2489.
AKC Basse11 Hound Puppies,

$200 Each, Roady 8130199 De·
po~lt Will Hold, Both Parents On

1988 Ford Tempo Nice, Good
Shape, 80,000 Mites, Bucket
Stata, Automatic In Floor, 740·

256-6228.
1989 Corsica lTZ , excellent
shape, retail $3,150 . asking

12,500. 304-895-3940 aftor 5 pm.
I 989 Ford Tempo, .t door, au1lomatlc, dependable car, $750
automatiC, runs QQOd, $.t50 080,
1988 Ponllac Sunblrd, automatic,
runs good, S8QO 080; 1967 Maz·
da 626, automaltc, 4 door, 4 cylinder, gas sa~er, $595; 1992 Chevy
Ca~aller, 4 door, 4 cylinder, Ice
co~

air,

9utomat~.

$1150

M&amp;J Auto Open Monday thru

Friday. 12·6. 740-388-9693.
1991 Ford LTD Crown VIctoria, 4
door sedan, eKcellant condition,
75,000 miles. new tires , brakes,
exhaust. loaded, no rust , $5500,

7ol0-742·2887.

1992 Ctlrysler, New Yorker, Auto,
Cruise, Air, AMfFM Tape, 4dr.
Int .. ext .. engine, excellent Runs

groot $3500. Calll304)675-1504.
1992 Shadow, looks and runs llk8
new, 70K, cold air, automattc,
sunrool, • cylinder, spoiler, reel ,

$3650, 740.949·2045 """'lngs.
I 994 , 98 Olelamoblla, 4 Door;
Loaded, 45,000 Miles $8,700 oo

AKC Bo•er Pups Sl50 To $225,

1-740-882·7512

256·1666
AKC German Shepherd Pups,
White , Or Sliver /Sable ; Snow

Cloud Uno, 740·245-9213.
AKC Registered Basalt Hound
Puppies, Anel Siamese Kittens ,
740-il67-77~

Sunburst

e•c

conel~

,

SERVICES

080, 1986 Ford Tempo, two door,

Premises, 740-256-168Ei.
Both Parents On Premises. 7-40·

84x30

$4200. 304-87S.5187.

810
,

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime guarantee
local references turnlshed Es -

tablished 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446·0870, 1·800·287-0576. Rogers Watorproollng.
Appliance Parts And Service· All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
parlenca All Work Guaranteed ,

French Clly Maytag, 740 ·446·
7795
C&amp;C General Home Mamtenence- Painting , vinyl siding ,
carpentry, doors. windows, baths ,
mobile home repair and more For
free estimate call Cl"'et, 740..992-

6323
L.1~1ngs1on's Basement Water
Proofing, all basement repairs
done, free estimates, IUetlme
guaran1ee 12yrs on job experi -

ence (304)895·3887.

840

1995 Monte Carlo Z:M, E•celtent
Condition, 89,000 miles . Price

Residential or commercial wiring
new service or rapa!rs . Master l 1
censed electr ic ian Ridenour
Electrical, WV000306, 304·675·

1788.

Thursday, September 2, 1999
Pay liule heed to how much
longer it may take tc;&gt; achieve your '
ambi110ns as you begtn your annual
btnhday year cycle. It's not how you
open, bul how you finish 1hatcoun1S,
and yours will be 81"•1.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Little
ac1S of kindness can go a Ions way
today towards gening people who are

' dasagreeable to become cooperative
and harmonious. This can include
simply no1 noucmg their bad bchav·
•or. Know where to look for romance

1995 Butck laSabre Custom, 4
Or, Pwr Wndws , Pwr Seat, T ill
Cruise , AMIFM Cassens , Allmu nlm Wheels , 64 ,000 MHes
$8,700 00 74()..882-7512

(304)675·2714 or (304)578·

ASTRO-ORAPB

Electrical and
Refrigeration

and you ' ll find rt. The Astto-Graph
' Matchmaker instantly reveals which
' signs are romanhcally perfect for ,

you Marl $2.75 to Ma1ehmaker, c/o
1hrs newspaper. P.O Box 1758, Murray Hrll S1ation. New York, NY

10156.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) As the
dock licks on today, that reclustve,

..
Commumcat.J.on

can go a long way
today towards g1ving you some

answers you ' desperately need "to
accomplish a personal ambition. Talk
·to everyone in your field of endeav-

or.
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
21) Don ' t take for granted 1hat a deal
is in the bag when 1t comes· to some

type of aBI"ement you suk. Keep 1he
lines of d1alogue for negmiation open

until thrngs "" .completed.
CAPRICORN IDee . 22-Jan. 19)
Some type of message you'll receive
today concemmg an Important JOb

you're undenaking could be di51ort·
ed. Don '1 hesitate to liS1en to differmg thoughts no matter where they

•budget in tact

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)1fyou
off the day 10 a
srumpy mood, tnsisting everything
be done your way, quickly tum Ibis
find yourself starting

attuude around and you w1ll get the

cooperalion you want.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) The

come from.
AQUARIUS (Jan

ARIES(Much21-Apriii9)Treat
everyone as a friend today, espccral·
ly cohons al work or oervice people
who are working on a problem for
you. They'll try harder to occommodatc your desires.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Don 'I stve rn today to spendms
household funds on somelhing friv·
olous for yourself. The mere thoughl
of your fam1ly's needs w1ll keep your

20-Feb. 19)

Av01d

getung mto financial proJects
With somebody JUSt because she or he

is a good friend . That person mrght
mean well, but seek expen advice
first from those 1n the know.

only way you can gain the collaboration you need from others today as
10 be up fronl about what your fears
and apprehensions are concemmg a

JOint effort: Don 't hold anythmg
back.
LEO (July 23 -Aug 22) Ahhough

ncgalive mood you m1gllt expencrice

PISCES (Feb. 20-Much 20)
Don'1le1anyone make small or large

c ould tum mto one of hope and JOY

decisions for you today. because

all endeavors, 11 wquld be w1ser today

when somethong lucky happens to

chances an: what is _good for therp
won 'I necessanly be nsJ&gt;t for you. Be

10 put

your own petson.

through dealmgs Wllh people.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov
I

DOWN

iA!i" worller,

36 Oulcla'o high
a In a - l d
noll
I Ole. 31 word
37 nn1
t'rv.l
Flrat-rate
39
,._,
or poem 11 12
__,

self of a loser. That requ1res findtng
a suit with more cards in one hand
than tn the other, whtch are either
wmners now or wtll be m lime -here, spades . BulrfWest holds up his
spade ace one round, you wtll need a
dummy entry to get to the third spade.
So, wtn trick one with the diamond
ace, cash the heart ace (the king
mig hi drop), and continue wilh lhe
spade king.
Let's suppose West wins wtth the
ace and contt,nues Wtlh the diamond
I 0 You wm with dummy 's lung, cash
the spade queen to squash your jack,
and call for the spade I 0, on which
you discard your rerriatning dra·
mond Play another !rump, and when
everyone follows, you can claim, los·
ing one spade, one heart and one
club.

PEANUTS

you matenally

,,

.........

57 TapMiry

IF S TIM
~_,1,;..~1"~:.,.1,;_.;1;-.,.1"s-1 Q

'{E5, SIR .. 11D LIKE TO l!lJ't'
SOME SCHOOL SUPPLIES,,

Auto Parts &amp;
Acceseorles

27

(2

wmners first. You must dtvest your~

'

t981 Chevrolet • Wheel Oriv~

TRANSPORTATION

EXT 71132. .

$8500, 740-992·2209.

51 ConMetlcut

wedding dress size 6 never worn

8x8x4 Dog Kennel 6 Month&amp; Old,
2 Dog .Boxes, Latter Jaeks New
Brand; 1993 "LanDau• Flat Bottom Boat like New, With Trolling
Motor: Simmons Rifle SCope 3 •
91t32 New, Camillus Amtrlcan
Vfllellila Series Knlte Branel New;
Chicken Or Pheasant Incubator 8
Monlh&amp; Old, Heat Lamp And

'

1185 GMC Jimmy 4x4 Maroon '
Automatic Transmission, P
Cruise, Anij LOck Brakes, EloclrtO
4K4 Shll~ Traltorlng Pkg., 4 3, V-8~
Excollant C o - . Inside &amp; Our,
New Factory Exhaust, New.

'92 Astro AWO G&amp;adlator, ~

55 Actor - -

35 £nlhuoloom

tion , you wtll rarely gam an insight
into the location of missing key honor cards. However, if an opponent
btds, you have been given a bluepnnl..
Don't forget to read the plan and act
on it.
In lhis deal, you reach four hearts
after West kicks off w11h one dtamond. He leads the diamond queen.
What ts your line of play?
When tn a sutt contract, first
check your losers, then count your
winners, Here, you are faced with
four losers: one tn each suit. Without
any opposition btdding, you might •
• incorrectly! •• hope that the trump
finesse is working. However, you are
mtssmg only 14 hrgh-card points, yet
Wesl opened. So, he must have the
heart ,k ing.
Apparently, you have 10 tricks v1a
two spades, four hearts, two dia·
monds and two clubs, but that's not
much use if the opponents take four

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

•

or

If you have an uncontested auc -

1995 Chevy 5-10 Standard, 2 Bl '
4 Cylinder, AMIFM RadiO, G~
ConciiiOn, 740-441·1354.

amttm canette, $3500, 740·992,

-

17 -lng
11 Cornponlon

54 Wind-pow a ad

By Phillip Alder

992·2213

Brakes, one Owner, $13,995, CaJ
740-446-72119

bird

Listen, think, act

1993 Dodge one ton, 5 speeel ~
steel bed. wooden racks. 740-.

2209.

rcctll "
,, .8eltlmore
_. ,. ,..,.... .......

Opening lead: • Q. '

$37 00 Per 10o; All Brass Com·
preS&amp;Ion Attings In Stock

5:30, 740-4*9066

P.M.

7 Horses For Sale, Prlcea Start
$300, 4 Quarter Horses a 1 Ap·
patoosa &amp; 2 Tennessee Walkers,

I HEAR YOU
ROBIN•Iaa
BOUGHT YORESELF BLUE II
SOME SPIFFY
NEW SEAT

•

'9 1 Plymouth Voyager, air, cruise.

Livestock

1•

1989 S·10 Truck with or wunou(

Slide In camper. (304)675-4631 .

~~=+=¥.

314 200 PSI

Only, 740-441-1763

Carytng Case, Canon BJC-70
Printer $1 ,250, 7.t0-441·1971 9·5

up truck. $2500 OBO, (304)6112·
3921
'

Weal
1t
Pass

4•

'.!

Al1er 6 00 740-446-6808

630

BARNEY

1986 OMC 4WO, full size, ptck"'

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs ·

Equipment 740-446·1675

Soudr

9'· ~

'

Massev Ferguson 50 Gas With
Loader John Deere 820 Diesel, ,
Wagon Load Salel Hydrollca,
Electrical And Tractor Parts\
Boll1, Pipe Fitting JMdens Farm

•

$21 95 Per, 100; I' 200 PSI

Wtllte Kenmore Washer $80;
White GE Washer $70; While
Kenmore Dryer $70, Call Aller

AST P133 Laplop, MMX, I 6ghd,
55K Modam, Floppy /CD, Touch·
pad, 32 Meg RAM, Deluxe Nylon

1304)576·2147. All aoe clean &amp;
wtllkept.

''

Atwtllw10 PI011D . . . . . . .

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

_,

llltltl

bow hunting $125 (304)675·
4901

2 Piece MuiU-Colortd living
Room Suite (Couch &amp; Chair)
Good Condlllon, Serk&gt;us Inquiries

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

M.F. 150 T;actor, No. 12 Baiter,
Ford 501' Mower. 3 pts. Hayrake,
Oliver II Bouom Plow $8,.t00. 2
hon;e Rubber Tlra Wagon, $500

I"

'

'

• 9 4 3
• 10 I 7 5

A 9 4

Warren and Sweat TreeStand.
250 lb. Rating Used 2 years

2bdrm apts , total electric, ap·
pllances furnished, launelry room
factlltlas, close to school In town
Applications available at: VIllage
Green Aptt 149 or call 740·992·

no pels, 7ol0-992-5858

John Deere 60, Mrything new or
rebuilt, priced on Inspection. 740-

.

4t0els1 Klclold •

Cro&lt;lllll-800-659-0359

304·675-8011

Apartment tor rent In Middleport,

after 4.00 (740)·643·2644 olter
6"00

• K7
• Q J 10 8

Finance, •o• Oownl Past Credit
Problema OKII Even If Turned
Down Before!! Reestablish Your

111" Dloec:TV Sotolllto Syoleml·

1'1118, 740-446-1163.

struction blankets, construction
barrel&amp; . Phone. (740)-643·2916

3612.

__

,...,..

Speakers, 2 t o• MTX Subwoofers, $100 100Watt Optlmua
Amp, $40 170Watt Optlmus
Amp, $60 140Wa.tt, Autotex Amp
$90 Used Utile. ('l04)675-1504

$69 oo, 3 month rree programing
with NFL Tld&lt;lt Purchase llmlled
ttme otter, cal 1-80Q.n9-8194

4 Rooms &amp; Batt!, Garage Apart·
menl Stove &amp; Refrigerator. WBah·
er &amp; Dryer, New Carpet &amp; Paint,
Security Deposit, $250/Mo , No

~ackhammers, air drills, con-

742·3020.

New Electric Wrangler Pride, 4
whHI scootar. l304)773-5207

Waterline Special

18 Ft. Flat Tr811er Dual Whee.ts ,
Make Great Car Hauler, $450 ,

Miscellaneous Stool l!oamo, Plate
nmp that fit&amp; 416 Backhoe
$~.200; 5andblaster $1,300' MIS·

• 9 8 6 3

• 3 2

•AJI064
t A 7 2
• QJ 2

DOC

1979 GMC Truck , 112 Ton, good
shape, asking SI.BOO (304)882•

Yarel Concrete Bucket $700 .00,
2,000 Gal Water Tank $650 oo.

46 Alrlcen -

14 T•- c11y
!2 - .)

= -~~ n u -

Eut

• A 7 52

•

COVERS,

11700: 16' Trench Box $3,500 00;
3 Arrow Boards $1.200 each,

Oland, $500 080, CJII 740·992·

S385.00 mo. + deposll 1304)7735577 Loovo Message.

3111 EOH

742-3311 or740-742·1-400.

720 Trucks for Sale

3129

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, OhiO, 1-80().537·9526

2 BR Apartment, New Ha~en
Area, All utilities Included

Rutllnd tot Salol
. Clean, newer useel cars , good
variety, reasonable rates, 740·

Cat 215 Hoe $30,00, •21 Chev
tJlotor $650 , 45' Parts Trailer

cenaneous hanel tools, Tar Kahle
$300 00; 40ft extended Trailer

Longaberger Baskets 98·98
Christmas CoU•cUon And 96-99
Easter Collectll!fl. Au Have lin·
ers, Protectors And Tle-Ons,

Household
Goods

QUICK CASH

King Size Water Bed, Full Wave
Large 28" churnh bell on metal

MERCHANDI SE

GOOD USED

~
·

For Sale: 1992. Ford Tempo GIJ
N;, PW, PS, (304)67!5-4014.

1-1100·3 t 1·5048 ex1. 9287

Condition, $350, 7.oi0-256-IC&gt;I4.

12 laft clolhllrt

20 WOI'Ihlppor,
111111111

e3

Weal

/

1999 Montt Carlo Z-34, Black1
loaded, Mu&amp;t Sell. 7&lt;10·
U6-5983, leave Message, Wi~

FftlmlliOO

Klndlewood /Woodburner, Good

• K

Leau~er,

Sport, Luxury &amp; eoommy cars
Thlc:U, 4x4'a utility &amp; """"
For cumont isllngs, cal,

_460 Space for Rent

EEK&amp;MEEK

Fee.

-·Coli

_,

• Q 10 4
• Q9 as
• Ke5

Fee t -800·409· 7511 Ell:t. 9088.'

_:_:__..:........o._ _ __

_

Soutb
• K J

&amp;e!ZEDCAA8

1519.

510

Norlla

t 998 Pontiac Trana Am 3SO V·ll\
lS-1 Corvette Engine, Automatic,
T· Tops. Montoon Stereo wnr.
12 011c CO Changer In Trunk:
Dark Navy Metallic With GreY,
leather Interior WIU Take P~r~ Oij
Or Reasonable Ofler. 7•0·446 -

Registered English Coon Hound

5PM, (304)675-7652.

-ttdon
40-tlay
1, _ - U Tlley'N yaUd
• . . . . . .IMd 46 1D
Klmplll'o
plo -··
tldng curftd

15

11198 Ford Muota~ $100 lOBO'.
Salzod And Selling LOCIIIy. 1'
II00-40tH511, Ext 80119, Foe.

For Sale· Super Ntntendo with 24
games. (304)67H395.

Whole Estato.7'\()-3117-D2110.

3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, $335/Mo. ,
Plus Raterences, Deposit, Also 1
Bedroom $275/Mo , Trl!lah a Water Included, 740-643-2916 After

Air, COIIOtto, Automatic, u· ~
Now, FO&lt; Pay Ott, $1S,500 , 74Qi
- 1 0.

4548

2 Bedroom Trallar $3001Mo , +
Deposit, Water Included, 740·
441-QOOO, 74()-441·1238.
Mob1l1 home tor rent In Pomeroy
•area. no pets, 740-992·5858

11111 Oodgo ca.-. Low Milot.

$150, 740-992-76811.

1304)675-4136

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
nlsh&amp;d and unfurnished, sacuruy
deposit required , no pats, 740 -

Special 28x80, 3 or •BR $1000
Down. $349. per mo. Free Delivery &amp; Selup. 1-1100-891-6777.

Modern 1 Badroom Apartment,
740 ~~e

DISCOUNT TOBACCO PAO ·

·Mot&gt;lo Home Lol Fer Aont - ·
Between Athens and Pomeroy, 2 oncoo Aoqulred, 7ol0-256-1!122.

New 38R 2 Bath, 14 Wide. $500
Down. $210 permo Free Air I·
800-69t-67n

691-6777

Pitot Program, Renters NMdeO 1·

choCOIIII OliO btadt. AKC Aog·

271'~.

OS reQUired. (304)675·1972

R- $75,000, 740·256-1709
"HOMES FROM •1 0,0001" I ·

Outbulldl~.

Now Bank Aepo's Only 3 Left, I·
600-383-41862.

New 4SFI 16 w1de . $500 Down,
$245 . permo, Free Air, 1-800·

AKC Reglatertcl PorMrantana,
800-:J83.68e2 '

2 Bedrooms, Stove, Ralrtgerator
Fur nished, Garden Space Wilh

or

P!)II&amp; 1740)-446-3093

REAL ESTATE

Call740-448-2280

1995 Fleelwood 14 Ft x72 Ft 2
2 Bedroom Mobllt Homo, S3201
Bearooms, 2 Full Baths, CIA, All , Mo , Deposit $15Q, 740...6-D368
Electric, Payon
524.000. 740- Evonlngl

This newspaper Will not
•now1~1y acoept

For tnrorm&amp;tlon, &amp; Appointment

4035.

1988 Redmond Danville 14l70
Also . Has E~tpando , Very N ice ,

Froo Delivery and Set·Up. Limited

MEDICAl BilliNG Unlimited In·
come Potential No Experience
Necessary. Free lnlormatlon &amp;

-

1980 1.. x65, two bedroom, two
bath, new air condnloner. great

256-9382.

4187.

-

992-7761 or 7ol0-992-2213.

1601

based on

· INTERNET BUSINESS OPPOR·

t4x70 IWO bedroom, two full baths,
carpet , air conditioned. call 7410•

nyl Siding , $15,0Q0,..!40·386-

DENTAL BILLER Up IO $20 ·$40
Mr Dental Btlllng Software Com-

Taxes, Protect Assets Onty S.rlous People Please! 1· 800-320-

14 Ft 1t80 Ft t995 Nonls Windswept, 3 Bedrooms. 2 Full Baths.
Take Owr Payments, 740·9926660 . •

1989 New Hampshire Ux70 Mobile Home. 2 Beelrooms. 1 Bath,
All Electric Appliance With CIA ,
Gas Furnace. Shingled Root, VI·

Beevty Sllon: tor Sale. 7 Sla·

480.

992·5039

-rno5Sa91·

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUIITY ISSI?
No Fee Unle$S We Wlnl
H!88·5112·3345

+IMo, Income CASHI 100% Flnarw:e Available

pany NHds People To Proceu
Medical Claims From Home
Training Provided Must Own
Computer. 1·800·223· 1149 Ext .

12x52 house trailer will'! add·on
roo m , centr11 air, awning, patto,
okl btU very good , on renlad lot.

2 hdroom1, 19 Evans HatghtJ,

ACROSS

22)

financ1al consaderauon IS prevaJent m

them

out of your m1nd for the

moment Your lucky break w1ll come

t

\

�~ge 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Company to retire Beanie Babies, but is it the ~d of an era?

CHICAGO !AP) - The message "all Beanies will be
retired" - came in a flash on Ty
Inc .'s Web site and th"n disappeared. startling and confusing the
Beanie Baby legions.

Women ~ s

Center to
consider , emotional
issues at program
Imagrs of Women, a conference
. offerin g women of all ages the
opportunity to address physical.

Could it be that the Oak Brook, whi ch has an auctwn site dedicated
Ill .. toymaker is really bringing an
to reselling the toy s that first start end to the Beanie Baby. one of the ed a craze when they hit the market
hottest toy crazes of the decade? Or fi "e years ago.
is it just a marketing ploy?
The· privately-ow'ned company
Either way. toy experts say com- has distributed more than I 00 charpany president Ty Warner is likely acters, from dinosaurs and teddy
to revive a market that ha• steadily be.ars to birds and zoo animals .
bee n losing interest in the cuddly
The company·s revenue was
. animal toys.
estimated at just $1.7 million in
··Ty Warner is a very sman man. -1995 but had ballooned to $674
He knows how to create a produ'ct. million by las1 year, according lo
He knows how lo create deman.d ,'' NPD Group Inc .. a market research
said Leonard Tannenbaum. presi- firm.
dent

of

Collectingnalion .com,

Discontinued. or retired models

lectibles for adults who could sell a
single toy for as much as SI,OOO.
The lengths people have gone to
get Beanie Babies are legendary.
Consider the former bank president and his wife who were
charged in Wisconsin earlier t.his
year with embezzling millions of
dollars - a good chunk of 'it used
to buy Beanie Babies. In Salinas,
Calif.. a woman admitted using
stolen credit card numbers to feed
her habit of buying Beanies.
' Anne Nickels. a Ty spokeswoman. had little to say when

have been the hottest sellers, leading some toy industry expens to
believe that Ty Inc. is simply trying
to rekindle interest in the newer
and perhaps oversupplied toys .
'" Beanie Babies right now are
really being bought ... by the pure
collector, whereas they were the
rage a year ago ... said Jim Silver.
publisher of The Toy Book, a New
York -based trade publication.
Beanies initially became popu-,
lar because their price of $4 to $5
was affordable for most children.
Later. they became valuable col-

reached Wednesday at the company·s hea&lt;lquaners.
She confirmed that the message
posted on the Web site was legitimate but declined to say why the
company made the decision - or
whether the company would be
making any new Beanie Babies
after the first of the year.
·
While collectors puzzle
over Ty"s cryptic statement, there
could be a sign from the company
in the name of one of its soon-to-be
released bears.
The bear is called "'The End ...

spiritual and emoti onal
issues. is being o ffered by 'Hocking
College's Wo men 's Center and will
The theme for the . ; ixth annUal

conference held during Womcn·s
Health Month 1s ··Passages" an'd ·
June Ho lley. pr(•sidcnt and

Today: Sunny
High: 80•; Low:

eos

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 60s

Se~tember

found~r

a CtiOHnunilv cco nomio..·

dcvcl op mCnt organi zat i;m will hc
the fcalUrcd spcakt•r on Thursday.

Kathlee n Kutskn. Women's Cc nh.:r .::nnrJinator. :-.aid a panel o r ·wJSL:

women" w1ll share the m0s1 mean·
ingful passages of th~.: ir lhcs on Fri·
day.
A few of 1l1c ~~ 11 cd ukd s~.·s/lions
i~cludC pass ages of pan:: nthnnJ .
yoga for stress man agc nlcnL. aro ma

Southern, .Eastern volleyballers win, Page 4
Senior sentiments, Page 6
Court news, Page 3

assa ~h

_Meigs County's

increase the mayor's salary. He then made a motion lo
decrease the salary S100 a month which would make it
$300 a month.
The motion to decrease the salary was passed by
Council.
Lavender suggested that a committee be named 10
remove th~ diving board at London Pool.
Roben Wingett, grants administrator, reponed that a
bridge across the creek 10 Carleton Cemelery has been
co.mpleted and asked council to approve payment.
He also suggested that Council apply for Issue 2
fun~ for future village projects.
Councilman Mony Wood reported on various street
signs in the village. He suggested a type of sign to be
used and noled how many are needed. both replacement
and new. He also noled that blacktop is needed on State

Participation in th e &lt;.'onference
that eKtc nd s from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

dai ly is free but there is a luncheon
fee of $10 eac h day. If participants
want onr Hoc kin g College course
credit for attending the confer~ n ce

or a CEU. an additional $63 will be
assessed. Kutsko .sai d scholarships
are availahlc.

College's · Women·s

•

Center rc.:civcd a grant from the

Ohio Dcpanmcn t of Health and
Area. Health Edu cati on Center at
Ohio Untvcrsity to help fund the

,.

··'

conference.
For information or to register,

call 740-753-3591. e&gt;ltcnsion 2112
or 2206.

..
,.

DRIVER CITED - James Spaun, Jr., Racine, was cited
fllllure to. yield after he struck thla 1994 van, driven by Chrlalto-1
pher Rendolph, on State Routu 338 on Thureday afternoon.
According to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department, Randolph, 17, wea driving north on 338 when hla car was struck by
J:&gt;paut1, ai Speun, 75, turned left onto Yellowbuah Road.
van, owned by Stephen Randolph, WIS towed from the
scene, and no nrloua lnjurlea ware reported, although Marie
Spaun;-a paaeenger In Jamea $paun'a vehicle, and Nathen Martin and Jordan Hill, panengera win Randolph's van, ware treat·
ed at the acene by the Racine emergency squad.
-

-

-

Regional Briefs
Vehicles crash in northern Ohio fog

•

'99 ·Malibu®

'99 Blazer® 4-Door

Masons award Kristina
.Kennedy scholarship
The Scottish Rite Masons head q uartered In Co lumbu s rcce r11l y

awarded a scholarship 1(1 Kristina M.
Kennedy of Pomeroy
"'The Scot tis h Rite ' Masoni c
Scholarships arc given to qualified
srudcnls in recogn it ion of scho last ic
and all -around achie veme nts," said
Georg~ W. Stevens, chaim1an. in
making the announ ce ment. " Our

goal i&gt; to help young people fulfill
their career goals by asSISting them
financially as they further their education beyond high sc hool."
Kri stina. daughter of Mr. and .
Mrs&lt; Glen Kennedy, ts atte nding
Ohio Universi ty. The 1999 grad uate
of Meigs High School has exce lled
' scholastically while being involved

'

•Standard 4-wheel ABS
• Air conditioning .
transmission

MUNROE FALLS, Ohio (AP)- An unpaid city income tax bill of 19
cents has led to $900 in lawyei and coun costs for a suburban Akron coupie.
·
.
·
.
The problem for Heidi and Steve Celaschi slarl~d when they failed to
pay 'their 1997 income tax bill on time amid the. confusion of their move
from nearby Cuyahoga Falls. .
·
The city of Munroe Falls tried to reach the couple, Wh!J have an unlisted phone, and sent tax notices by mail aod certified mail.
The Cetacjtis said tliey never got ·any notice.
Their case was due for trial on Thursday but was settled beforehand
with the couple agreeing to pay $382 in Municipal Court costs and the city
dropping the charges.
·
City Law Director Richard Goldsmith said taxpayers must. file for an
extension if they don't send their tax forms and payments pn time.
"What are we suppos~d to do with people who don't pay their taxes?"
Goldsmith asked.
"ll's not fair to the folks wh&lt;l do pay to let this sit, sit, sit."

•Standard 4-wheel ABS
•Standard
Vqrtec~ 4300 V 6
...
that puts ·out 190 hp and
250 lb.-ft. of torque
•Theft-deterrent system
~

•Theft-deterrent system
•+speed.automatic
I

s1,500 Cash Back*

'

.

~2,000 ·Cash

Back*
•

•

she is the reigning queen of the
Meigs &lt;:;ounty Junior Fair.
Stevens· noted that Freemasonry
has historically . been dedicated to
the importance of ed ucation and the

awarding of the scholarship to
.. l:&lt;.ennedy is anothe r md,ication of
arc

given to the chi)dren of Scottish Rtte
Masonic familie s or to yo ung people ·
who have been

acti~

in Masonic

related organizati ons such as DeMolay, RainbQW and Joh's Daug hters.
The grands arc m0dc over the I5slate Northern Jun sdic tion . Tota l
sc hol arship s i!l. the jurisdictinn is
$400,000 I&lt;Jr the 1999-2000 period .
· A year ago 345 coll cgo students in
·the di strict were he lped by Abbou
Grants. The Scotti sh Rite Valley of
Colurnbus has granted

3 11

See Your Local Chevrolet• Dealer Today!
1-800-950-2438 or 'WWVV,chevrolet.com

'·

.

.

No rnatte.r how you look at it, you're jn the money.
.,

lhroug:h a legacy of former Sovct' J

cign Grand Commander Leqn M. ·
Abholl. In rece nt year, , the fund has
been

st rcnglh en~d

hy sharing in

annual contributions to the "blue"
envelope appeal by 'the Fr~ternily's
321.0{)(1!11cmbcrs.

I

Man accused in Amtrak stabbings a"algned

'Cash Back offers available only to residents o(FL. GA, NC, SC and select counties in AL, IL, IN, KY, MS, OH .. TN. VA and WV. For more detail~ caii1-B00-950·CHEV. You must take retail delivery from participating
dealer stock by 9130199. Not avatlable wtth spectal GMAC fmance or lease offers . The Chevrolet and Malibu Emblems are registered trademarks of the GM Corp. ~1999 GM Corp. Buckle up, America! 111

j

OPEN CENTER - Partners In the new
Malga County One-Stop Worldorca Devel·
opinent Center on Hllend . Road in
Pomeroy attended' an opan house on
Thureday. Pictured are, front, 1-r, Trlsh
McCullough, executive director of the Gal·
lla/Melga Community Action Agency;
Cathy Radevlck, the center'a coordlnetor;
Oorna Smith of the Urilveralty of Rio
Grande; Susan King of Adult Baelc Litera·
'
accessed
through the new center.
Those seeking employment will be able to
meet with OBES staff on Thursdays, eliminating
the need for a trip to Rio Grande, the location of
the nearest OBES center.
·

cy Education; Ruth Frank, representing
COAD Title V; and Sharon Moles, OBES.
Back, 1-r, Dewayne Poling, director of
adutt education at tha Washington County Career Center; John Coetanzo, auparln·
.t endent of the Athana/Melgs Educational
Service Center; Debra Miller, Ohio Rehabilitation . Services Commlnlon, and
Meigs County Commlealonerl Miele o.venport and Jeffrey Thornton.
They can also use the center's resources to
prepare a resume, access the internet for
employment opportunities through Ohio Works
First, and check the center's bulletin board for
regional job p(&gt;stings. .

Drought helps southern Ohio police in war on drugs
By CHARLEY GILLESPIE
. sore thumb."
Aaaoc'-ted Preas Writer
Here are 1998'S top "We look for trails, but the plants themselves also stand ·
10 counties in
oui this year because the ones that are surviving the
COLUMBUS (i\P) -Finding marijuima plants buried
deep in the southern Ohio hills is much easier this year
mariiuana seized:
drought are being watered and given fertilizer," AI may
because of the drought. So is finding those who plant
said.
them:
.
L Gallia
$7.075,000
" With each mar ijuana plant wth about $~,000, y~u ~a.n
"If you see a guy walking in the woods with two 5-gal- ~ ~ ·
$S 223500
see why pol growers try to ta e very goo care o t etr
Ion buckets, he is probably not out there watering now· 3. Hardin
$3.203.000
pAia nts." 'd
f h
•
..
1may sat most o t e stales manJuana crop comes
_
ers," Ross County Sheriff Ron Nichols said.
Athens
$
3 000
4
s~: ~~::ooo
fFrodm th e sfofiuthe rnh0hiodwh eredthe droughht is m ohs~ severe.
Forced to water to make up for lack of rain, growers S. Logan
are producing crops that stand out from their dry sur·
$ · 143 000
·e era1 o tcta1s ave ec1are mne sou 1 ern
10 coun2• '
6· Clinton
roundings.
.
ties disaster areas. In some counties, rainfall for the year
7. Jackson
S1.288.000
. d
h 6· h '
The stale has destroyed 15,000 plants so far this year,
·
ts own more l an 1nc eo .
220 000
, putting it slightly aheadoflastyear;stally.Attorney Gen· ~:~~:'om
$l, •
Gallia County led the state last year with more than $7
era! Betty Montgomery said.
!0. Adams
~~c:;i,~
million in marijuana plants seized, followed by Meigs
County witl) more than $5 million in plants uprooted.
· "It will be a sig~ificant eradication and will have at
SOURCE: Ohio Bureau of . "Southern Ohio gets a lot of attention because it is very ·
least a shon-term impact on w.hat is available in the mar·
ket," she said.
Criminal Identification and
rural ," Almay said. "This allows growers to have f~)Wer
Montgomery said the stale uprooted 45,000 plants last
Investigation
people wandering around that could stumble onto their
year wonh more than $45 million and arrested 127 people '-;iiiii;oo,iBi;;;;p;::=.;:::::;::iiiiiiiiiiiii,..; fields ."
Dennis Salisbury, chief deputy with'
during the season that runs · from the
•
the
Gallia County Sheriff's Depart·
spring planting to mid-October.
me
nt
, sitid marijuana production is
The state sends up five · helicopters
down this year. He has spotted more
daily to look for marijuana, said Ted
than 3,100 plants from the air, comAlmay, superintendent of the Ohio
pared with more than 7,000 last year.
Bureau of Criminal Identification and
"If you're raising pot this year, you ·
Investigation. .
are
either really devoted to it or it's
Plants are easier to find because
your
only source of income," Salisbury
growers are forced to plant close to a

0

CLEVELAND (AP)- A man pleaded innocent Thursday to charges
that he stabbed three people on an Amtrak train outside Cleveland.
Aaron Hall, 41, of Ontario, Calif., was arraigned on one count of road or a water·source.
"There will be a lot less of Ohio
attempted murder and three of felonious assault in Cuyah&lt;;&gt;ga County
grown
pot out there this year," said
Common Pleas Court.
Nichols,
whose department has found
Hall, who was arraigned in a video link from the county jail, asked that
more
than
$1 million worth of plants
an attorney be appointed for him. Judge Chris Boyko set bond at
this
year.
"Com
used to be the best
$500,000.
.
plac~ to grow it, but now the corn this
Hall is accused of stabbing two
year
is only 4 feet tall, and the 7-footAmtrak conductors and. a passenger
tall
marijuana
plants stick out like a
in the early morning hours of Aug.
26 in Olmsted Township, "about 15
miles west of Cleveland.
.
Hall said during his initial court
growth appear to be good developments for
By JEANNINE AVERSA
· 2 Sections - 12 Pages
appearance in Berea Municipal
workers, economists worry that it 's a rec ipe for
Coun that he acted in self-defense Auoclated Preas Writer
sparking
inflation . Their fear: Employers scramWASHINGTON
(AP)The
nation
's
unem
6
Calendar
after he was threatened with gun.
bling
to
find workers woo them with higher
Classifte!ls
!1&amp;10
That claim was similar to one that · ployment rate dipped back down to a 29-year low
wages
and
benefits, costs li kely to drive up con~Cko!l!m~lcs!W!·L--:----:n':"'"'-1 he made the day before the train of 4.2 ·percent in August as gains in computer.
sumer
prices
if not constrained by other'forces.
attack when he w.S removed from a data processing and health care jobs helped offset
But
August"s
sJgwdown in the growth of aver2
continued job losses at factories .
Editorials
bus in Illinois for being unruly.
The Labor Department reported today that the age hourly earnings combined with the0.3 down3
Local
Woman pleads no contest decrease
in August's unemployment rate fol- ward revision for wage growth in July and
4&amp;5
Sports
In fee cream truck accident lowed a 4.3 percent rate in July. Oespile the calmed .some economists' fears that inllati0n
Weather
TOLEDO (AP) .:._A woman dridecline in the unen'fploymen.l rate. employers could ignite. That. along with August 's slower
added a smaller-than-expected 124,000 jobs to job growth. economists said, could forestall the
ving an ice cream truck that struck
their payrolls in August, following a gain of Federal Reserve from raising interest rates again
Lotteries
and killed a 9-year-&lt;Jid boy will serve
in October.
338,000
jobs in July.
10 days in jail for violating a city law
OHIO
"This should relieve some of the Fed's worry
key
Meanwhile,
average
hourly
earnings,
a
that prohibits vendors from playing
Pick3: 8-6-2; Plck4: 1-7·1-5'
abou
t inflation an~ too-strong job growth." said
gauge of inflation pressures, grew a tiny 0.2 permusic while their vehicles are in
BuckeyeS: 3-6·7·10.15 ·
Davi
d
Wyss. economist with Standard and Poor's
cent to $13.30 in August, a 3.5 percent in crease
mo~on.
w.yA.
compared to a year ago. That. WI'S the th ird DR I.
Municipal court Judge Roger
Last week. th e Federal Reserve raised interest
. Daily 3:2-4-6; Daily 4: 6·7·1·2
straight monthly rise, but slightly slower than 0.3
Weiher sentenced Billi Urban to 30
· rates for the second time this year and hinted no
e !W'l ohio Valley Pubti~hlna Cu.
percent increase in July.
days in jail, but suspended 20.
· While low unemploymen! and strong wage additi onal rate incre ases may be necessary unless

said.

"Growers had to lrfple their workload
just to get out a small crop," he said.
CASH CROP - In Meigs .and
Gallla Counties, the combined
totals In seized marijuana totalled
$12,298,500. The neighboring counties ranked one and two In the state
In 1998.

National unemployment dips back to 29-year low

Today's Sentinel

additiona lr

$ !6,000 in sc holars hips.
Funding for the P;-og rdlll comes
from the Supreme Counci l Education and Charity Fund establi shed

Single Copy - 35 Cents

!toule 124 at Bridgeman Street just beyond the fire sta- dent last month. He also talked about the need for street
lion. During the meeting Wingett contacted a contractor light improve'ments .
regarding the blacktop. The contractor will .be in touch
Clerk Jani ce Zwilling reported a total of S I 00,552.90
with Councilman Bill Roush about the work.
in all village funds . Balances in the various funds are as
· Roush reported on streetlights which need attention, . follows : general fund, $40.844; street construction,
and was advised that some work is now being done . . $21,849; . highway, $ 2.868;' fire department, $12,844;
Residents who know of lights that are out was '!'ked to water $1 2.720; pool. $3.040; guaranty meter, $3,654;
contact Ernie Sisson who works with the power compa- cemetery. $201 ; law enforcement, $688; EMS building
ny.
fund , S1,839.
Michael Ash met with Council and reported that he
The Racine Home National Bank was named deposis taking police officer training at Hocking College. He ilo ry for village funds, and Council approved the
asked to be "commissioned" by Council for ~olunteer am ounts and rates as set by the eounty"s budget comwork in the village in conjunction with his schooling. mi ssion.
Council agreed to check into the legality of such action ..
Attending besides those named were Mayor George
Tim Gillilan . police chief. reported he issued !9 cita- Connolly. Eber Pickens, Sr.• and Council members,
lions, investigated one complaint. and one traffic acci· · Eber Pickens, Jr., Donna Peterson, and I&lt;:atie Crow. ·
.
.
.

The Gallia/Meigs Community Action Agency
opened its Meigs County One-Stop Workforce
Development Center in Pomeroy on Thursday,
with an·open house.
· ·
The n.ew facility, located at 33091 Hiland
Road, adfacent to the former location of the
JTPA office, will combine services of several
CAA operations under one roof.
According to Trish McCullough, executive
d,irector of the CAA, the new facility will allow
those seeking employment, job training, and
other services, to receive services from several.
agencies, even agencies not affiliated with the .
CAA, at one stop.
"We're bringing all the · partners together,"
McCullough said yesterday.
·
"The Center is the .latest step in a process to
make employment and training services mQre
accessible to Meigs County residents."
In addition to the JTPA office, the center will
house staff from the Adult Basic Literacy Education program, which provides literacy and
GED training, as well as other b~ic skills
through the Athens/Meigs Educational Se~;Vice
Center, the Ohio Bureau of Employment Ser·
vices, the 0 BES Ve!erans Services departmen l,
and the Oh.io Bureau of Vocational Rehabilitation.
. Buckeye Hills Career 'Center, the Unive111ity
of Rio Onnde, the Green Thumb program of the
Older Workers' Employment Program, and the
Meigs County Department of Human Services
arc also partners in the center, McCullough said.
Also, other CAA programs, such as the
weatherization program and HEAP, not directly
related to employment resources, can be

Good Afternoon

· :!Continuing Masontc commitment.
~dlll l ars hip s

SA,NDUSKY (AP)- At least 14 vehiCles piled up in heavy fog this
morning on westbound State Route 2 in Ottawa County, the State Highway Patrol said.
.
No fatalities were reported in the pileup that was reported about 8:30
a.m., said Lt. John Born of the patrol.
The cause of the wreck in nonhero Ohio remains under investigation,
he ;.,;d.
·
Traffic in the area will be rerouled until the crash site is cleared, Born
said. ·

Unpaid 19-cent tax bill leads to $900 in
lawyer and court costs for Akron couple

in numervus sehoul acttvll ies anq
contributing to civi c and community
events : A longtime member of 4-H

Scotlish Rttc

Hometown Newspaper

Open house opens new One-Stop Workforce Development Center

preventiOn. under·

KRISTINA KENNEDY

-Page4

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 62

standing your personality through
the Myers Bri£gs ,Type Indi cator
(MBTI) loving kindness meditation.

Hocking

Cleveland beats
Anaheim 6-5, sweeps
series

'

therapy. fimess options for a busy
lifestyle::,

Sports

3, 1111111

•

BY KATIE CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
If your vehicle is inoperable and unlicensed, you better not leave it parked on a street in Syracuse.
Syracuse Village Council last night took action to
notify residents who are in violation of Ordinance
303.10 which requires that vehicles have current' license.
plates and be in running order. The action followed a
motion by Councilman Larry Lavender who noted thai
there are a number of ,.,;dents ·in violation of the ordinance.
.
.On a motion from Lavender, Council also approved
a·salary increase for Mike Ralston, mainlenance.supervisor, of 50 cents an hour effective Jan. '1.
Council, on a motion· from Lavender, candidate for
mayor, voted 10 rescind a motion made Jist month to

be held Sept. 16 and 17 at Ramada
• lnh.

. of ACE no..' I ,

Weather

Council to clamp down on parking inoperable vehicles

'

m~ntal.

Friday

Thursday, September 2, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

a

I

the economy show signs of overheating or if
innation breaks out.
Financial markets have been on edge in re"''nl
sessions amid continuiitg fears among investors
that the Fed hasn't yet completed its efforts to
ward off intlation by imposing higher interest
rates .
But the inOali'On-sensitive market for government bonds was heartened by the August unemployment report, and immediatdy pushed yields
on 30-year Treasuries down to 6.03 percent this
morning from 6.13 percent late Thursday. At
midmorni ng. the Dow Jones industrial average
was up more than 150 points.
ln August, the number •of service sector jobs
increased by 132.000. led by gains in computer
services w~ich grew by 15,000 jobs. Doctors
offices, hospitals ·and othert health-care facilities
added 19,000 new jobs.
Duri~g the last· rilonlh of the summer, amusement and recreation services added 17,000 jobs.

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