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                  <text>Tuesday
SeptNiber 7, 1Me

Weather

.Cleveland downs the Orioles, Page 5
Elderly couple renews vows, Page 10
Humane Society, Page 6

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

Cubs 6-3; Sosa belts
58th home run

-Page 5

•

.a1
Mei$s County's

•

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50. Number 63

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Appalachian counties have highest death rates
CINCINNATI (AP) - Health researchers have
found that a cluster of six Appalachian counties in
Ohio's southern tip has some of the highesi death rates
in the state.
A new report on the 15 leading causes of death finds
that Adams, Pike, Scioto, Vinton, Jackson and
Lawrence counties are among the 11 counties with the
highest death rates in the state.
The study was produced by lhe Health Planning &amp;
Resource Development Association of the Central Ohio
River Valley.
Those: who work in Appalachian counties aren 'I surprised by the findings. They cite poverty, Jack of health
insurance, Jack of health: services and poor habits as

l~eglonal

Roberts said. "People won't change their &lt;liets or start
some of the f~ors in the high mortality rates.
"It's a combination of all those: factors," said Susan exercising."
Isaac, who leads a state Appalachian Task Force.
High unemployment rates are linked to the death
"We're talking about some of'the deepest poverty in the · rates, experts said. The unemployment rate for Adams
state."
County last June was 7.8 percent. An e~timated 28 perPike County had the highest death rate in Ohio, 41 cent of residents lack health insurance,' compared with
percent higher than Delaware County north of Colum- the state average of around II percent.
bus, which has the lowtst rate in the state.
Smoking rates are high, obesity is common and
Gary Roberts, director of Pike County's Family dietary habits are-poor, 'health experts said. A lot of peoHealth Center in Waverly, said some members of his ple won't go to the doctor until it's absolutely necesfamily have developed problems because of smoking sary.
and poor eating habits.
"There's a sort of fatalism in•Appalachian people,"
"I II)' to live a healthy lifestyle, but there's a resis- Roberts said. "Tiley say, 'We're all going to die anytance here toward seeking out preventive health care," way. Something's going to get you, so why bother?"'

Briefs

Two people killed after falling from
towed pickup truck ohto interstate
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio (AP)-Two people riding in the bed of a towed
pickup truck fell onto Interstate 71 and died as they were hit by at least 10
vehicles that dragged their bodies for two miles, the State Highway Patrol
said today.
The driver of the U-Haul truck pulling the pickup on a dolly has beeri
, charged with vehicular homicide. John Byers, 43, of Ashland, was in the
Circleville jail awaiting a court appearance today in Circleville Municipal
Court.
The victims, Margaret Mitchell, 61, and John Mull, 75, both of Bradenton, Fla., had a history of mental problems, said Trooper Bill Elschlager of
tbe patrol's Circleville post. Mull also suffered from seizures, Elschlager
sai!J.
·
.
· Elschlager said investigators believe the two fell from the pickup aboui
10 miles south of Columbus as the U-Haul stoppcxl or slowed suddenly in
the northbound lanes. He said there were no witnesses to the accident,
which happened about 8:30p.m. Saturday. ,
.
Elschlager said he doesn't know how many vehicles hit the victims, but
figures it was at least 10 based on the traffic at the time.
Byers showed up at the Ashland County Sheriff's Office to inquire of
the victims' whereabouts Sunday night. He was questioned and arrested
early, Monday, according I~ the patrol's Ashland post.
Elschlager said Byers, who had two relatives with him ·io the U-Haul,
was charged because it is illegal to have anyone in a towed vehicle. He
also said the victims should not have been left in the pickup because of the
mental problems they had,
The charge carries a maximum six-month jail sentence and $1,000 fine.

Police: Children were told to leave pool
DAYTON (AP)- A 7-year-old boy who drowned in a backyard pool
over the weekend was told to come indoors but decided to take one more
dive, police said.
Adults at a church party told a group of seven to 10 youngsters to come
indoors about 9 p.m. Sunday night, police U. John Bardun said Monday.
One youth saw Daylaquan Hudson take one more dive off a diving
board, go down, come up and then go down again. The child infoiT(Ied the
adults, who pulled the boy from the pool but couldn't resuscitate him.
He was pronounced dead on arrival at .'Children's Hospital Medical
Center.

Divers recover body of man wht;J
disappea·red in lake three days ago
CAMBRIDGE (AP) - Divers on Monday recovered the body of a
man who apparently drowned in Salt Fork Lake three days earlier.
The body of John R. Rush, 26, Of Cambridge, was found about 25 feet
from shore, said Bill Patterson, assistant manager at Salt Fork State Park.
Divers from the Guernsey County underwater rescue team found the
body about I: 15 p.m. Monday, Patterson said. Several divers, park officials and state Division of Watercraft workers searched Friday night, Saturday and Sunday.
At least three people. saw Rush disappear under the water while swimming about 7 p.m. Friday. ·
Visibility in the lake was close: to zero at times, delaying the search,
Patterson said. Rush was.found in water about 13 feet deep.
. Rush's body has been taken to the Stark County coroner's office for an
autojJsy. Dr. Janet Brockwell, the Guernsey County coroner, said the Stark
County office has a forensic pathologist on staff for such autopsies.

Public officials resurrect Red Mass
CINCINNATI (AP)- A desire for more spiritual guidance has led a
group of lawmakers, judges and lawyers to organize the return of the Red
Mass to Cincinnati after a 35-year .absence.
Cincinnati's last Red Mass- named for the color of the priestly vestments worn- was celebrated by Archbishop Karl Alter on Oct. 5, 1965.
This Roman Catholic Mass, whiCh has its origins in 13th century
France and 14th century England, historically has been used to open legislative and judicial sessions, invoking God's blessings on public officials.
The first Red Mass in the United States was held in 1928 at St. Andrew
Church in New York City. It is held every October in Washington, D.C. at
'
the Cathedral of St. Matthew the
Apostle, to open the new session of
the U.S. Supreme Court.
. No one really knows why the Red
Mass was discontinued in Cincinnati, but organizers say they want
Today's
the worship service to..become an
1 Section - 10 Pages
annual tradition again.
"I think the meaning of it and the
10
Calendar ,
symbolism of it is important. It
7&amp;8
gives attorneys a chancF to get
Classlneds
together for ·reasons other than to
8
Comics
litigate," said Judge Thomas Nurre
2
Editorials
of Hamilton County Common Pleas
3
Local
Court.
4&amp;5
Sports ·
N11rre is helping plan the Red
Mass which is scheduled to be cele3
Weather
brated by Cincinnati Archbishop
Daniel Pilarcyzk on Sept. 24 at Old
Lotteries
St. Mary's Church.
.
"It's
not
a
political
Mass.
It's
simomo
ply to call people together who
Pick 3: 1-2-0; Pick 4: 3-2-5-5
commonly
feel they want to have
fluckeye 5: 7-15-20-21 -24
(God's) presence guiding them,"
W.YA·
said attorney Daniel Donnellan.
Daily 3: 5-6-3; Daily 4: 1-7-3-0
"There is a higher calling we report
C 1999 Ohio Vallty Pul'tli5hing Co.

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

to."

Randall Hylton·to perform
·. at the Racine Fall Festival

Joe Doodan, executive director of the Ohio Primary
Care Association, said rural health care problems have
been overlooked .for too long.
"None of these problems is new," Dpodan said.·
"The question is, what are we going to do about them?
We need to get out there, pick some communities and
see if we can make some change!'
In many rural 'counties, cuts in federal grants have
forced health clinics to educate residents.
"Health education takes money;" said Dr. Blair
Chick, medical director of the Southern Ohio Health
Services Network. "We're talking about changing
lifestyles, not just of individual patients but of a whole
culture."
·
·

Millennium might
extend the will to live
CLEVELAND (AP) - Sick
people sometimes have the
willpower to survive long enough
for special events, and that could
lower death rates heading up to the
much-anticipated year 2000, The
Plain Dealer reported.
Dr. David Agle, a psychiatrist at
University Hospitals who counsels
elderly patients, offered two explanations for how people can postpone their deaths.
Someone who wants to live for
the birth of a grandchild often will
continue difficult but life-sustaining activities such as eating and
drinking to reach that goal and then
stop, he said.
For others, the letdown after the
big day is ·enough to cause major
depression. "Depression increases
mortality," said Agle, citing a study
of heari attack ·patients who were
five times more likely to die if they
were suffering from . major depression. ·
•
The phenomenon is called
"postponing death." '
David P. Phillips, professor of
sociology at the University of Californil! at San Diego, predicts there
million of that to other states.
will
be a decline in deaths just
It is the states, not insurance polbefore
Jan. I, followed by an
icyholders, that would lose if the
increase
just after the· year 2000
insurers remain in the red.
begins.
'The states guaranteed the poliHis prediction is based on
cies and will have to pay any
research
into tlie effect certain holamount · not recovered from the
idays have on mortality.
insolvent insurance companies.
In one study, titled "Death takes
Most of the policies, including
a
Holiday,"
Ph ill ips found that
12,000 in · Tennessee, are burial.
Jewish
mortality
dipped 31 percent
plans worth several thousand dolbelow
normal
before
Passover and
lars apiece.
.
then
peaked
by
the
same·
amount
It could be a long wait before any
just
afterward.
Similar
findings
money changes hands.
"We're hoping to have it resulted when he studied the Chiwrapped up within a couple of nese and a Chinese holiday.
In a birthday-related study of
years," Wenzel said.
nearly
3 million people who died of
Frankel might still spend months
natural
causes, Phillips found thai
in custody in Germany, where he
people
are
more likely to die in the
was captured by federal and international authorities, even if he waived week after their birthdays than in
any other week of the year.
extradition to the United States.
After II years of comforting the
Insurance companies can spend a
dying,
Sister Rita Costello said she
year or longer in receivership in a
is
a
believer
in the "gift of post:
typical case, and "this one is more
paning."
.
·
complicated than most," said John
think
it's
given
by
the
Lord
"I
Knox Walkup, the former Tennessee
attorney general who is handling the so the patient can be at peace to go
receivership of the Tennessee insur-. home, so life comes full circle,"
said Costello.
er, Franklin American.

This coming Saturday, September 11, one of the
g[eatest names in country/bluegrass entertainment will '
be making an appearance at the Racine Fall Festival at
Star Mill Par.k in Racine, Ohio.
When you meet Randall Hylton you're immediately
taken with his easy manner, his warmth, and sincerity.
You're also in for a surprise when this shy mountain
grown performer takes to the. stage with two acoustic ·
guitars ani! ~ingle-handedly entertains as if he were a
full band.
There are two Randall Hylton's-the songwriter and
the entertainer. Both are equally successful. He is also
a publisher and record producer. Born and raised in the
·Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, Hylton began playing the guitar at age five. He was soon absorbing the
rich musical heritage of the region.
Billboard Magazine and Record Review both
acclaim Hylton as ... "Asuperb singer and picker": He
was dubbed as one of the' six best shows at the Emelin
Theater, just off Broadway, in New York City.
At present, more than 120 of his songs have been
recorded by top name artists. From country singer Vern
Gosdin to folk guitarist Leo Koike to Bluegrass legend
Ralph Stanley to Southern Gospel greats, the Kingsmen and now delights audiences from coast to coast and in
Quartet. Randall Hylton's compositions have thrilled Canada. Versatility, dynamic guitar playing, dry humor,
· and award-winning songs are all part of the Randall
diverse audiences since the late sixties.
In 1986, Hylton began traveling as a solo performer Hylton Show.

States hope former fugitive will help recover money
monds and jewels belonging to
By JOHN HENDREN
Frankel, Wenzel said Monday.
AP National Writer
So far, regulators have seized Frankel may have been financing
$57:5 million of Martin Frankel's his run with more than $10 million
assets and are eyeing millions more in diamonds and gold he bought
in a frozen Swiss bank account.
before fleeing, authorities said.
Some regulators doubt they'll
Frankel is accused of embezzli[\g
at least $218 million, and now regu- recover much more than they've
lators are hoping he will help them already identi tied.
recover it, presumably in a bid for
"l don't feel like they're countleniency.
ing on full' recovery," said Marilyn
Frankel, formerly of Toledo, Elam, a spokeswoman for TenOhio, was arrested in Germany on nessee's Department of Commerce
Saturday night, ending a four-month and Insurance:
Federal investigators say Frankel
international manhunt for the 44year-old alleged rogue financier. used pseudonyms and partners to
But if state officials were expecting buy small insurance companies in
cooperation, his German lawyer, states with reputations for lax insur·
Thomas Piplak, said Frankel is con- ance regulations·.
Then, regulators said, Frankel's
sidering fighting extradition to
avoid possible retribution from · unlicensed brokerage- apparently
run out of his $3 million Greenwich,
· those he is accused of cheating.
Investigators have linked at least Conn., mansion - siphoned money
three foreign bank accounts - in from the companies.
Now regulators in those statesSwitzerland, Italy and Germany Mississippi,
Arkansas, Tennessee,
to Frankel, said Keith Wenzel,
· director of Missouri's Department · Oklahoma and Missouri ·- are
banding together to recover the lost
of Insurance.
State regulators also hope they 'II funds. Tennessee managed to seize
be able to liquidate homes, dia- $57.5 million, and .has given S17.5

'Like a factory opening,' prison brings jobs, prosperity
Ralston credits the prisoners with east of Columbus pitched in about
By DAVID JACOBS
helping
end any hard feelings. After . $4 million to upgrade its water plant
Associated Preas Writer
CALDWELL (A'P)- Visitors to a flood caused nearly $1 million in and extend utility lines to the prison.
this southeastern Ohio community damage last year, honor inmates The local chamber of commerce
used to have to look 25 miles away spent about nine months cleaning secured a . 10-year, interest-free
$225,000 loan to buy the prison site,
.in Marietta or Cambridge for up.
"They also painted the Methodist a former farm that it turned over to
overnight accommodations.
Now there's a new motel in this church, they painted the Knights af the state at no cost.
Townspeople credit the prison
village of 1,800 people, along with a Columbus hall, they've worked in
new health ·club, cellular phone the creeks cleaning up trash and with driving up wages and leading
store, restaurant, and not coinciden- shrubbery along those creeks and to new construction, such as the Best
tally, a prison that opened three waterways," Ralston said. "They Western Caldwell Inn, with 53 guest
years ago this month.
·
rebuilt city hall, helped out at the · rooms and an indoor pool. Several
Noble Correctional Institution is water plant and at the street depart- other businesses have opened, and a
major truck stop is planned just off
pumping life into an area once con- . ment."
sidered economically depressed,
Noble County leaders lobbied nearby Interstate 77.
with a scarcity of well'-paying jobs hard for the· prison, and then-Gov. ' "The banks have benefited. and
the car· dealerships. the grocery
George Voinovich took notice.
and double-digit unemployment.
gas stations and hardware
stores,
"It was a very conscious effort on
"The prison's been like a factory
\
behalf of Gov. Voinovich and' me to stores have all benefited.'" said
~ing," Mayor Bud Ralston said.
.!They've helped us big time. It's make sure that Appalachia Ohio had D,avid Evans, president of the Noble
like Ford Motor Co. opening a plant an opportunity tp benefit by a prison Coonly Chamber of Commerce.
here."
being sited in that community," said "There are a lot of new homes being .
With 460 employees and a $17 Reginald Wilkinson, director of the built all around the county."
The staff and nearly 2,500
million payroll, the prison is a major Ohio Department of Rehabilitation
inmates al the 36-acre prison compart of the area's economy, the and Cor'rection.
mayor said. "We'd rather have a
Wilkinson said it's important to pound outnumber· village populaschool or that type of thing, but' you look beyond the prison for its bene- · tion.
•
"That can give you a little idea of
have to have prisons, and we're glad fits.
we've got one."
"We support local businesses what it"s done for us," said Dennis
Initial opposition by a group with buying gas, stopping at Gersl. vice president of the Farmers
called Concerned Citizens for a Safe McDonald's," he said. "The proper- and Merchants Bank in Caldwell.
Community is dead. The group, ty taxes that employees pay just by "We were most fortunate to get
'
which took its fight to the Ohio living there is significant. Any these people."
Supreme Court, argued that a prison prison in this state is just like buildAbout 20 percent of the prisl'm 's
was inappropriate for the rural set- ing a factory. They. are going to employees arc from Noble County,
ting of Noble County. About 1,300 spend their money there, and it's with the rest from neighboring cou nties. estimated Gerst. chairman of
people signed a petition opposing going to help the local. economy.""
The vi llage about 80 miles south- the prison's site selection commi tthe prison.

tee. The share of local residents will
go up. as area colleges learn to prepare students for corrections work,
he said.
Robert Bond, a guard and local
school board president, said some
prison workers live up to two hours
away, and will probably move closer as more housing is developed.
"Without the prison, we definitely would have had to have moved,"
added Bond; who was laid off
repeatedly in his formerjob as a coal
miner.
'
In some cases, longtime residents
are building new homes because
they were able to get good money
for their existing homes from prison .
employees.
'
Wilma Kerns, a lifelong Noble
County resident, doubled her salary
as a secretary by taking a job at the
prison.
·
·· We bought a new house," she
said. "I'm not sure we would have
been able to do that. "
. She also values the friendships
she's made as a prison employee. "I
have met hundreds of people .since
rve been here that I wouldn't have
met had I not been working here:"
David Kress, a guard, had '
worked 22 years in the coal industry,
working with heavy equipment. But
in 1993, he was laid off from a coal
company. He wen"t back to school
and used a federal program to get an
associate's degree in criminal 'justice.

�•

•

1Commentary

. ~----~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~------~-----­
.
'
' i'~--·~~~----------------------------------------~

.~~·The Daily Sentinel

'• ..•'

. By M'o non Kondrxke

I..
I

Airport rage increases, with good.reason

'

nounced cancellations.
100 per~nt in O.icago over last year and 110
Miraculously, airline deregulation has pro- percentrn. Dallas.
. .
.
duced another discount regional carrier, Shuttle
The Air Transport Assocratron esumatcs that
America, that for some reason could fly to .Wilm- the ~·':JOO Oight delays last year cost the auhncs
ington. Del., when United and US Atrways $4.1 brll•?"·
weren 't flying '1/'YWhere along the Eastern
aulrn~ blame the delays on the Fede~al
seaboard.. I rented a car from there and got back Avtatron Admtnrstralmn ~nd tiS outdated equrplate at night.
menl. They sa~ ·that the 81f traffic control system
But the very next day, it was the same story on needs to be pr!vat12ed.. ·
another busjness trip out of .Dulles Airport to
. '!"he FAA, rn tum_. ~lames the weather and the
Seattle. United's 5:35 p.m. flight was pos1ed as urlrncs, although thts was a less stormy ~ummer
delayed to 6:30. OK, but United's 3:35 flight also -at least on the East Coast - than any rn mem,
hadn't departed as of 6 p.m.
ory.
. .
,
Bad smell. I switched to American even
And both J!'e arrlmes and FAA blame c;ongress
though it required a change of planes in Dallas, a for not releasmg money to upgrade the atr traffic·
notoriously delay-prone airport. The risk was system.
.
worth it. I made it to Seallle, albeit late.
The FAA last month announced a senes of
'That's my story. There are much, worse ones: administrative ~h.anges designed to lessen delays
stories of people ,camped in airpo~ overnight, - mostly by grvmg the FAA. more power to cen-.
sitting on runways for six hours, losing luggage trally rmposc ground stops ·~ the event o~ bad
for days or forever, gelling lied to repeatedly by .weather and reducmg the spacmg between Hrghts .
'
·
·

Everybody's heard about
road rage, ilnd il's bad. But
111 Court St., ro-y, Ohio
unless the government and
l .. ...
740 S1S12 ·21M • Fax: 11112-2157
the airlines get busy, we're
' .....
also going to have increasing
II \ \ · Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
incidents of airport rage.
Aiready there have been a
I
• '' t
CHARLES W. GOVEY
few violent attacks by pasI
. Publlahw
sengers on gate agents. As
'I '•·;
night delays mount. however,
' U I
lh~re
are bound to be more. .
: · ·•CHARLENE ttOEFucH
DIANE HILL
' Controller
I know. Without acting on them, I fell violent
urges teyself on my summer vacation. If you lrav eled
by air, you probably did, too.
·.,
.
Actually, the travel I did on my vacation was
.'IJioScnllnol
.
- · ... - - - ..... - - .......
rather
smooth. I used Southwest. a discount air~ ........ ,. ....... Md . . ,_,.,...,._ &amp;dt Mould~- lip If ...
line. to go from Baltimorc-Washinglon lnterna......... . , . . . , . , . ,......... ~· . . . ,,..,. .••• , • • • to. pt.•
- - . , , . _ - fD: ~,.
'IJio Sonlln•l, 111 c- Sl.,
tiona! to O.icago Midway and back.
: , -·tu ort~~car.FAKto .7-••.ttn.
I've flown it before and found Southwest personnel invariably kind and efficient in processing
me and my wheelchai.r:bound wife.
The planes take o[f more or less on
time, too.
It was on a business trip to Buffalo and back that the trouble arose. I.
:ef~EP. JOHN CAREY
.
got to the Buffalo ,airport an hour
: On April 20, 1999, Governor Bob Taft si81'ed Senate Bill I into law early for a High! to D.C. on United.
:requiring Ohio ~hool districts to establish safety plans and develop safety Skies were clear. We passengers
bOarded the plane on time.
~ ~. Unfonunately, many Ohioans and Americans alike remembeo April
Then we sat past takeoff time.
:20 for a more somber reason the shootings at Columbine High Schpol.
You
know the feeling: "Uh oh."
: In the last three years, the media has reported more than 20 school sh001Sure
enough,
a voice announced that
1iP,P._to audiences throughout the United States. In an effort io resp:&gt;nd to
:~ violenc:e, Ohio hosted its first Safe Schools Summit, and as the sum- t~ere were air-traffic delays in
aired on CNN, viewers saw not the devastating.side to school violence, Washington, and the delay would .
·
,
:~tthe proactive side. .
·
·
· last an hour. ·
We did not have to sit on the run• · On August 17-18, nearly 700· educators, students, administrators, law
:officials an!Jiegisllllor$ gathered at the Colpmbus Adam's Mark Hotel to way as many passengers do. We
the growing concern with school violence. The Ohio Safe Schools went back to the terminal.
,summit started on Wednesday with a brief video inviting the audience tore- "Updates" foHowed one another,
llive the Columbine tragedy, The video served as a remil)der of what we all each reporting that "temporarily"
· ~ to prevent in Ohio, whicn been fortunate not to suffer a school shoot- no flights were going into Washington because of the weather.
oils,People I called in Washington
: The two day summit, created by Qhio Attorney General Betty Montreported
no weather problems. One
:gQIIICry and Governor Taft, focused on how Ohio can keep school environpassenger said he lives a half-mile
~ safe for learning and mindful of a diverse student population.
•:n.e summit also featured nationally prominent speakers, law enforce- from the airport, and his wife said
ment officials from Littleton, Colorado and Conyers, Georgia and work- . the surr was shining.
Maybe there were thundershowshops and panel discussionS giving participants the opportunitY to experi~ innovative violence prevention programs in use throughout Ohio and ers so mew here in betwee~.. but the
lllolt.Onitcd States.
.
·
'fact is,, not a soul hovering around
. Outside of the Safe Schools Summit, Ohio has taken several steps aimed the departure area b,elieved the gate
~,X..venting school violence. Senate Bill I adds two years to prison terms agent when she said she didn't know
~r'llrimes such~ assault when committed in,school safety zones. Safety what was happening or whether the Hight would· airline, personnel apparently' trying to prevent
Results .haven 'I been reponed yet, liut the
zones include school grounds, school activities and school buses. The new be canceled.
them from switching 'to another airline.
anecdotes reponed by various news organizations
In fact, as often happens, one airline-savvy
Ia~. which became effective August 6, also requires schools to establish
The lines at check-in at any major airport these do not suggest thai delays were down in August.
passenger had talked to a pi lot who had made a days are horrendous. Also at security: Last Christ- Quite the contrary.
~tty plans to implement i r a violent event would occur.
· ''To assist schools with developing their safety plans, the Ohio Department mysterious phone call and learned that there v:as mas at Hartford-Springfield, the line to security
It's true, air travel is safe ind significantly
p(.Educalion and the Education Council of Franklin County created a school linle likelihood the plane would Hy. ·
stretched down a stairway and out the ~rport onto cheaper than it used to be. Now, Congress and the
·J cast around for alternate options. Drive back the sidewalk. Flights are routinely overbooked.
~t:ty audit. The audit helps school districts gather vital data that will make
airlines should find ways to make it more pleasant
creating a school safety plan more comprehensive and accurate. For the to Washington? Too far. Go to another airline? US
, If you feel frustrated, official statistics show and efficient.
·PIQSI success, the audit shpuld be conducted by those in the community - Airways, with Hights to .Baltimore and Washing- that you have a right to be. Airline delays were up · . (Morton Kondr•cka 11 executive ·ldltor 'of
·J18f•nts, teachers, students, law officials and administrators. The audit takes ton, also had delays that smelled like . unan-. 40 percent this summer nationwide - includi~g Roll Call, the n_e.,.par of Capitol Hill.)
abOut six weeks. Once the audit is completed, school districts can send it on
computer disk to be analyzed by the non-profit CIXI'eator, the Educational
~cil of Franklin County, for $200. It takes about three weeks for the
report and recommendations to be issued.
·
. lfl June, the General Assembly passed its first education budget, House By Jack Anderson
. something in common with each sage to voters; and 3. using the Inter'Local' doesn't mean
Blll282. House Bill 282 includes more than $8 million earmarked ·for school end Douglas Cohn
other.
'Local'
doesn't
mean
geogra·
net
the
way
John
F.
Kennedy
used
. saf~y measures, Funding was included for a Safe Schools Center; which
WASHINGTON - Campaign
~_iii ,coordinate efforts to assist scHools and communities bent on improving 2000 may be more about medium phy any more. Politics still are all television to communicate.effective- geography any more. Polilocal but local about attitudes and ly.
tics stili are all local but
school safety, and the Safe Schools Hotline.
baules than money battles, and those aspirations, common denominators
Gephardt
is
so
confident
the
local about attitudes and
The Safe Schools Hotline allows students, parents and community. mem- ballling media are TV and the Interthat
are
based
on
communication
J;&gt;emocrats
will
win
the
White
.
bcn to report at risk situations without identifying themselves. The hotline net.
.
through the Internet - or through House and at least the House next aspirations, common
is open 2&lt;4 hours a day throughout the year. Each caller is assi81'ed a random
Sources tell us that Texas Gov. the telephone or interactive.TV."
year that he eschewed seeking the denominators that are
case number and can then leave a message. The ~uperintendent of the school G. W. Bush, the Republican presiAndrew is a Yale~trained lawyer, Democratic presidential' nomination based on communication
dl'strrct in question receives a transcript of the message and takes appropri- dential front -runner, tried the Inter.former
Indiana Democratic chair- again. He expects to be House
llte.tctions. The caller, using the case number may call back in three days to ·. net as a campaign tool and discarded
man and spy-novel author, who was speaker then in a revitalized Con- through the Internet- or
If there has been any action on the mes5age and/or to listen to a response. it in disgust. Vice President.AI Gore,
elected national chairman in March. gress dedicated to the party's basic through the telephone or
, 1,1:'qr participating school districts, the number is 1-800-4-1-VOICE ext.
the Democratic fron.t-runner, who is Like Senate Minority Leader . Tom · goals: Social Security protection, interactive TV,
·
~~ ·
'
.
·· .
.
derisively dubbe,d the "Father of the Daschle of South Dakota and House improved Medicare and health gains
' In other school related news, the state introduced WebO.eck, a new crim- Internet," has ·another view. Deriinal background check system on Thursday to be used by school districts, . sion aside, he sees the Interne! not Minority Leader Richard Gephardt generally, better public e!lucation,
niJ!ling homes ·and hospitals. .WebO.eck will assist schools in making the only as the medium of the future, but of Missouri, Andrew is emboldened moving people offwe!fare, and safe- to use the Internet ,to solicit cam- "
informed decision about the employees they hire. The new system as the cost-efficient tool capable of by the party's 1998 successes, the .guarding the environment. There is paign contributions, and the effort
~ tip the background check process from 30 days to 48 hours. To usc overcoming Bush's money machine.. . biggest sixth-year election victory no mention in any of these Democ- failed. Further, they concluded that
for eit.her party in 176 years. · ratic equations of such issues as tax the failure was 'not theirs but the
tij:iiystcm, job applicants simply place their thumbs and index fingers on a ·
"One of the great axioms of con- Democrats gained five House seats cuts, illegal fund-raising or I nternel's.
'tal scanner and swipe their drivefs license through a machine. If the temporary politics is that •All poliand held even in the Senate.
immorality in high places. But the
Gore's people disagree .. They
ic~t is clear of any felonies or escalating misdemeanors, . a response tics is local' -the great Tip O'Neill
They
talk
now
of.an
even
bigger
Republicans
are
sure
to
take
care
of
the Bush people simply do .
believe
wt be sent back to the agency via the Internet. However, if the applicant line," says Joe Andrew, the Democsweep
in
2000.
"We
Democrats
those
omissions.
not
understand
the Internet, and they
cb:s have a criminal record, the agency will receive a notice through the rat's new party chairman. "What h., must be the party of what's next," · But agendas aside - neither
happily
conclude
that he will fritter
~ail!dctailing the full record. No criminal records are sent over the Internet. happened is that because of the
he
Bush
nor
Gore
is
perceived
as
radiAndrew
says.
enthusing
that
away his huge war chest on over1\aencies will know within 48 hours if applicants have a criminal record. Internet, there are people all over
priced TV.
hopes
to
win
"everything
from
dogcal
or
far
from
the
centerthe
real
The equipment and software cost $2,500, while processing a check requires this country that form relationships.
catcher
to
president"
through
questions
for
2000
will
be
is
it
TV,
May the best medium win.
· ai$15 fee.
.
·
with ·peop,le thousands of miles mechanics, message and the Inter- .the Internet or both. Of course, it
(White
HouH corrupondent:
j As the new school year begins, it is my hope that it will not bring.any of away but do not know 'the people net, by: L providing candidates with will be both, but which will .domi- Warren Rogere;
congreujon•l ·
t~e tragedy witnessed last year. I am pleased with the proactive response who live on either side of them.
corrupondent: Eleanor Clllt; lor- .
"lhe
right
tools.
"
of
information
and
nate?
Qhio has had toward preventing school violence; however, it is not more They have formed ijn entire commusupport lo enable them ·to win; 2.
Sources in the Bush campaign elgn 1nd nlllon•l correspondent
f~ieta! detectors or security cameras thai will have the most impact against nity on the Internet who ... have
developing a simple and clear mes- tell us that they made a strong effort LIB Cullum.) ·
sqhool violence, it is simply better listening. To listen and be involved.with
Copyright tm, Andtll!OO I Cohn
our children and the children in our community is the best defense that we
htve against violence.
• While I believe these steps by Ohio and local school districll! are impor~1, I do not believe government can solely stop violence. The real chaltold.
lcf!ge come to us as ~ents and rn~mbers of the community to create a struc- By William A. Rusher
same young lady answered. Had she reached .
Notlo~g ago I had my annutured and healthy envuonment for our children.
·
What could the bad news be? Almost certain- him? Not yet. Rather testily, I asked her to page
: If you have any questions or concerns regarding this. or any other issue, al physical examinatiQn. Most ·
ly, the doctor would say that the X-'ray revealed him again, and keep trying - that report was
pl~ase do not hesitate to contact me, State Representative John Carey, 77 S. of the tests - the blood count,
some sort of spot, or lesion; or blur, on one of my important. .,the electrocardiogram, etc. --: ·
High St., Columbus, Oh 43266.
·
·.
lungs. No doubt he would try to soften the blow:
Five minutes later, the phone rang. It was the
: John carey, R·Welllton, repreeente the Nth DIStrict In tile Ohio took place in niy doctor 's
li might be c~ncer, but then again . it might not. · head nurse in. the office, to whom the young lady
H1'UM of Repruem.tlve•.
.
·
office, or in a medical laboratoThere would have to be more X-rays, more tests, had apparently reported the problem. The head
ry in the same building. But the
perhaps exploratory, surgery. There was no need ~urs~ (an old friend of mine) was almost laugh- ·
chest X-ray was taken several
foi premature alarm, but of course we would have •?g. ;;Mr. R~sher," she said, "the report is negablocks away. and when I
to pursue the matter. I knew the odds, though, and ltve, Reahzmg how I must feel, she had overridphoned the doctor for the
~ T1le lle-tal-.1 Prua
.
knew that they were heavily against nie.
den the younger woman's bureaucratic refusal to
, Today is TUesday, Sept. 7, the 250th day of 1999. There are 115 days left results of the exam, the report
I sal there for the better part of an hour, digest' . tell me what the X-ray report said. The news was
on it had not yet arrived. Everything else was fine, ing the news. Interestingly, I felt no panic; I was, good after all!
. inllhe year. '
· 1On Sept. 7, 1936, rock legend Buddy Holly was born Charles Hardin but would I call again in a day or two about the after all, 75 years old, and had led a long, interI hung up, and went back to my chair. A feelchest X-ray?
·
Halley in Lubbock, Texas.
·
esting and largely happy life . If it was to end with · ing of relief and mild exhilaration swept over me.
:On this date:
I did so, and this time a young nurse in the lung cancer - well, it would be ending one way
I w":'n 'I going to die after all - not right away,
:In 1825, the Marquis de Lafayette, the French hero of the American Rev- office answered the phone, and told me that the or another fairly soon anyhow: I just hoped the that ts, and not necessarily of lung cancer. All of a
. . · ol.tion, bade farewell to President John Quincy Adams at the White House. doctor was out. When I asked for the results of the end-game. wouldn't be too painful, or too pro- sudden the afternoon sun seemed to shine more
In 1892, the first major title fight under the Marquis of Queensberry rules chest X-ray, she put down the phone for a couple tracted. ·J wondere~ if my ·habit of smoking one
brightly, and the colors in the roonlwere sharper.
· cigar a day, after lunch; was the caus~ If so; I
w won by heavyweight James J. Corbett, who knocked out John L. Sulli-. of minutes, then carne back on the line.
The next day I spoke to the doctor, told him
va lrl New Orleans.
.
.
" Mr. Rusher, " she said, "the doctor wants to · coulfl feel no regret; those cigars hll!l been a high
what had happened, and asked him to explain tO
· talk to you personally about that report. "
1Jn 1901, the Peace of Beijing ended the Boxer Rebellion in China.
point of my day, and I had smoked them in full that young lady the implication necessarily creatWell, of. course it was possible lhat she was knowledge of their dangers.
· :1n 1940, Nazi Germany began its blitz on London during World War II.
ed by her response.
.
'In 1963, the NFL Hall of Fame was dedicated in Canton, Ohio,
· simply honoring the general rule that doctors like
I reviewed the plans I had mnde in anticipation
. Understandably embarrassed, he assured me
~ 1969, Senate Republican lesder Everett M. Dirksen died in Washing- to convey medical information themselves, rather of my death: the disposition of my property, ·and that he would do so.
than through proxies. But, considering the cir- the deposit of my remaining papers in the colleclo~D.C.
·
But, on further retleclion, I think I owe th~l
cumstances,
the implication of her statement was tion already held by the Library of Congress. I
''1977, the Panama Canal treaties, calling for the U.S. to relenquish conyoung lady a debt of gratitude. Someday, before
trof:'!f the waterway to Panama by the end of 1999, were signed in Wash- all too clear: There w"" bad news in thai report, reviewed the provisions I had made for the indi- long,' the news will really be bad. And when it is,
and the doctor wanted to break it to me himself.
viduals and organizations. close to me, and was I know how I will react. I've been there before.
I asked if she could have tlie doctor phone me satisfied with them. Spiritually, I felt at peace:
intim, convicted Watergate' conspirator G. Gordon Liddy was released
Copyrlghnm NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
as soon as possible, and she said slle would have Insofar as one can be, I was ready to go.
froM 'Jirison after more than four years.
'
·
Wllll•m A. Rueher le e Distinguished Fellow
In 1979, the Entertainment and Sports Programming Network (ESPN) him paged. I hung up, sat down in my favorite
But now ' an hour had passed, and the doctor of the Cl•remont lnttltute lor the Study of,.
leather armchair, and reflected on what! had been hadn't called. I phoned his office again, and the Staturn~~nshlp and Political Philosophy.
made its cable TV debut.
•
·I

'

!h.•

a.,. .. .._.

,__ - -,_-.,. _,-... - -ot-..,. .. ._

111o-

iOhio leads states with
!innovative safety summit

:nUI

laddress

Campaign 2000: May·the best medium win

see

rM·

Someday the news ~ill really be bad

"today in History

~

r

· v

Death Notices

Weather

1\tnMy, 81;l&amp;mbw 7, 11180

Harold 'Tom' Nice

WednHday, Sept. 8

Harold ~Tom" Nke, 79, Pomeroy, died Sunday, Sepl. 5, 1999, at Overbrook Nursing Center in Middleport.
A retired operator for Union Carbide. he was born March 3, 1920, in
Bartlett, son of the late James L. and Vina M. Waymer Nice. He was a veten~n of World War II, a member of the Seventh Day Adventist O.urch of
Pomeroy and the Tuppc;rs Plains Veterans of the Foreign Wars.
He is survived by his wife, Laura Mae Van Meter Nice; three sons. John
Gary Nice of Pine Knot, Ky.• Thomas Lee Nice of Cutl~ r and Fre~rick
Allen Nice ·of Barlow; ·four daughters, Linda Marie Croston of Whrpplc,
Constance Jean of Beverly, Deb.ra Jane Sealey of Bartlett and Tamara Sue
Cunningham of Lyndhurst, Va.; 17 grandchildren; several great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by two children, Glenda and David Nice, and ·
by two brothers, Glenn ~Jack " Nice and James Carlos Nice.
Services will be held Wednesday, I p.m. at the Slone-Matheney Funeral
Horne. Chesterhill, with Pastor Roy Lawinsky and the Rev. ·Sharon Hausman officiating. Burial will be in Bartlett.
Friends may call today, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

lor

0

-

0

•
/

•

Kenneth Matthew 'Matt' ·Pavich

W. VA.

· O ~a~. ~ · *•ff~,.J~
Sunny Pl Cloudy

T.stonns

AWl

.....
Chance of showers will
arise late Wednesday
Cloudy

St'loMft.

Aumes

Sno.r .

' Ice

By The Associated Press

.
' Skies generally,will be clear in, Ohio tonight, with lows in1the 50s.
Showers are forecast' for parts of western Ohio on Wednesday. The rest
of the .state will remain dry until Wednesday night.
_ .
Highs Wednesday will be in the 80s, reaching· near 90 in pans of lhe
southwest.
The record high terni&gt;erature for thi s date at the Columbus weather sta. tion was 98 set in 1939. The record tow ~as 40 in 1988.
.
.
Sunset today will be at 7:54 p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will be at 7:05
a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Mostly clear. Areas of dense fog forming after midnight.
Wednesday ...Areas of dense fog until mid-morning, otherwise mostly
sunny. Highs in the mid 80s.
Wednesday night ...Cicar until midnight, th en partly cloudy' with a
chance of showers late. Lows in the'lower 60s. ·
Extended forecast:
. Thursday ...Panly cloudy with a chance of showers· and thunderstorms.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the·upper 50s and hi ghs in the mid 70s.
Satuiday... Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 50s and high s in th e upper
70s.
'

Blue Angels jet returns to Burke ·
after bird gets sucked into engine
CLEVELAND (AP) - A bird
was sucked into the engine of a
departing F/A-18 Hornet, forcing the
Navy Blue Angels jet to return to
Burke l..akcfiont Airport.
U. Cmdr. David Silkey said his jet
engine began chugging, As a precaulion, he returned Monday night to
Burke, where the ·Blue Angels had
'performed at the weekend Cleveland
National Air Show.
"I knew I had some problems
with the engine," he told WJW-TV.
Petty Officer Chris Si!'"mons, a

Blue Angel~ spokesman in PensacoIa, Fla., sard a replacement engrne
would be. Hown 'to Cleveland and
would be rnstalled today.
Silkey, an 11 -year Navy veteran
whojoined the Blue Angels in 199?,
said 'he dumped fuel over Lake Enc
lo lighten his load.

To get a current weather
report: check the

Sentinel
520

w. Main st. •

Pomeroy, OH
P.ltone 992-2588
Wl'rion - 388-8603
Gallipolis • 446-0852

TUES 9{7 - THURS 9/9/99

lOX OffiQ wtU OPEN AI
6:30 PM FOR !VINING SHOWS

THE

Kenneth Matthew " Matt" Pavich, 19, Pomeroy, died Saturoay, Se.pt. 4,
'1999, at Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
A laborer, he was born June 22, 1980, in Akron, son of Susan Jean Adkins
Brown of Pomeroy. He was a regular blood donor.
·
He is also survived by a stepfather, Terry L. Price of Pomeroy, and a sis- ·
ter, Shellie Pavich of Pomeroy.
·
Services will be held Thursday, 1 p.m. at Ewing Funeml Home in
Pomeroy. Burial will follow in Cherry Ridge Cemetery, Pomeroy.
Friends may call Wednesday. 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

- .ObituariesObltu.,.._ .,. ~d annoui'II*Mf\ta •••••g•d bJ lite* ..._... home&amp;. Obltu&amp; 1ee
.,. publtohod a roqUHbod to~--rlng maN ~11\ionwtlon...,
~· provkltd In lhe .accorn,.nylitg DMih Natlc 11

Kenneth Matthew 'Matt' Pavich

· Ke~neth Matthew " Matt" Pavich, 19, 39677 Cherry ·Ridge Road,
. Pomeroy, died Saturday, Sept : 4, 1999, at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy.
.
.
A laborer. he was born June 22. 1980. in Akron. son of Susan Jean Adktns
Brown of Pomeroy. He was a regular blood donor.
He is also survived by a stepfath er, Terry L Price of Pomeroy; a sister,
Shcllie Pavich of Pomeroy; a nephew, Tyler Lee Pavich of Pomeroy; best
friend , Josh Hazelton of Pomeroy ; girl friend , Trina Nolan; many other relatives and friends.
Services will be held Thursday. Sept. 9, 1999, at 1 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home In Pomeroy. Burial will fo llow in Cherry Ridge Cemetery,
..
.
Pomeroy..
Friends may call Wednesday, Sept. 8, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral hom e.

It's virtual. exer:PiSe, as college
offers wellness class on Internet

RUNAWAY BRIDE (PG)
7:00 DAILY

THE ASTRONAUT'S WIFE (A)
7;00 DAILY
FOR CUSTOMER APPRECIATION ,
PRESENT nCKEt STUB AND
RECEIVE A

Inside MclaJ Counly

t3 w..u ........................... $27.30
26 WeeD ........................... .$53.82
52 Weelu ...........................$105.56
lbtes Outside Meigs Coun1y
13 Weelu ........................... .$29.25
26 W.:elr.s ............................$56.68
32 Wteks ......................... .$109.72

Correction Polley
· Our 111aln conLo.ern In all stork-s Is to bt
aCcurate. II you know or an error In a
stocy, all tbe newsroom •• · (740) 9922155. We will check your infonnatlon
and mab 1 cornctlon If warra•ttd.

.E••·

or Ext. 1106

Other Services
Ad'Vertlslng. ................................ .Ext. 1104
Clrrulati0n ..................................Ext.ll03
Classlned Ads. ............................. .Ext. 1100

Every Tuesday is. Senior Citizens Day at the Lottridge Co1mrrtun1it~ I
Center located near Lottridge Road off Route 50. On the second
fourth Friday of each month, country music is presented from 7
midnight with fiee admission, door prizes and refreshments. Mu1siciaru~l
are invited to participate.

:•

Better Health Club to meet

The Rock Springs Better Health Oub will meet Thursday, 1 p.m. at tho
Rock Springs Church. Lenora Leifheit will be hostess. Bring school su~
plies.

'

:

Veterans of Foreign Wars meeting slated : :
Tuppers Pl ains Veterans of Foreign Wars 9053 will meet ThuJ:$daY:I
7:30p.m. with dinner at6:30 p.m. at the haiL
.

Shade River Lodge meeting

.

·

·;

Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM will hold its regular meeting Thurs&amp;t.
8 'p.m. ~t · the lodge hall in Chester. Refreshments will be served.
. :·

AA meeting slated

::

Alcoholics Anonymous open meeting, 7 p.m. Thursday, Sacred Hell.l1. I
Catholic O.urch, Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy.

Junior and Rita perform
Junior and Rita White will be at the Meigs Senior Center, Thur:$ilay, l
5:30p.m.

Rutland Free Will homecoming set
Homecoming will be held Sunday at the Rutland free Will Ba1&gt;1iSt
Church. There will be a potluck dinner at at noon, with preaching by
Elswick at 1 p.m. Revival services will be held at the church Sept.
with special singing.,

DAV to met

.

,.;

There will be a picnic at the Cheshire park Monday at •6 p.m. for the.
Disabled American Veteians.
·
,.:

Sorority to meet
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Bela Sigma Phi, will meet Thursday:
,6:308 p.m. at the Luthemn Church. Bill Steele will speak on Y2K. ~
Rupe and Nellie Brown will be hostesses.

EMS logs 24 weekend calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency ·. ments, Jean Hall, VMH. ,
. . ' :.'
Medical Service •· recorded 24 calls for
RACINE .
•·
assistance over the Labor Day weekend:
8:10 a.m. Sunday, stale Route 1'!4;
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Harry Richard, JacksOn General Hospilill.
2:31 a.m. Saturday, Brick Stree~ Rul· .
· REEDSVIIJ.E
land, Sharon Boggs, Veter1111s Memorial ·
'10: 14 p.m: Monday, Eden Ridge R!JW,
Hospital; . .
.
Luella Nutter, Camden-Clark Memorial
12:02 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook Nurs- Hospital.
.. . ...
ing Center, .Middleport, lack Beverage;
RUTLAND
.. .
VMH·
·
7:36 p.m. Saturday, Lciving ~
2:05 p.m. Saturday, South Third James Pe&lt;:k, O'Bieness Memorial Hoopital;

10:18 p.m. Saturday, Carpenter Hill
Road, Charles Grubb, O'Bieness MC11'im:
al Hospital;
' •" ·
10:17 a.m. Sunday, Carpenter ·mn
Road, Charles Grubb, Gnlnt Medical 0... ~
ter via helicopter ambulance, Central Dis.
patch squad assisted;
, ',
5:14 p.m. Sunday, County Road. ·1-,
Murl Boudinot, O'Blene.. Memorial !Ips;
pital, Ceptrill Dispatch squad assisted; 8:54 p.m. Sunday, McCumber Rqad,
Beulah Collier, treated at the scene;
'
12:.13 p.m. Monday, Meigs Mine'·:Z:
Sleven Adams, HMC, Central Dispatcll
squad assisted.
.: ·..
SYRACUSE
12:40 a.m. Monday, Butternut AveiiUC\
Pomeroy, Aoyd McClelland, VMH. - , · 0
TUPPERS PlAINS
.' -.,
6:06p.m. Saturday, state Route 7,f~'1'1
Kozup, treated.at the scene; ·
,
1:10 p.m. Sunday, stale Route 7, ~hyi!
lis Glascow, St. Joseph's Hospital; ." •
8;59 a.m. Sunday, stale Route 7, Nimcy
Larkins, CCMH, Central Dispatch sqiliij
assisted.
·
'

Meigs County's "Women's Outing for Wellness" will be hel&lt;:~&lt; ·
at the Family Life Center in Middleport, Ohio on Thursday, ·
September 23, 1999 from 9:00 a,m. to 2:00p.m.
.'
for eleventh grade girls attending Meigs County Local ' ' .
Schools. The celebration is funded by the Ohio Departmenf ··
of Health Bureau of Health Promotion and Risk
Reduction- Women's Health Section, Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine • Area Health Education
Center, Meigs County Rotary Club; Amedcan Electric
Power- Southern Ohio Coal Company, Farmer'~ Bank,
C&amp;J Furniture, People's Bank, and the Pres~ription Shop. :.~
Sponsoring agencies are the Meigs County Prosecuting ·:
Attorney's Office and the Meigs County Health ·
• •'
Department Health education sessions will in~lude ·
information on physical health, journal writing, poetry,
nutrition,
wellness, status of women, sel{ually
transmitted
'
.
diseases, eating disorders, body im~ge, ·exercise, stress
reduction, depression, smoking, violence against women,
rape, assault prevention, secondary education, homelessness, poverty, harmful dieting, teen pregnancy, alcohoi,
breast cancer, and communication skills. Prizes will be
awarded andj:here will be interactive health education .......,.-A
plays available during lunch time &amp; breaks.
f2Ie=.:...-=---~-=---_:___,__~m§l , .
•1

Reader Services

News Departments

Senior citizens center activities announced

0~ OQJP&lt;15" 00~ 00~ 0

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION

'i'be main numbtr Is 992-llSS. Departmnt extensions aR:
Gon•111l Monapt ....................... .E•L 1101
Ntw~ .. :............. .... ...... ................. .
II Ol

A district manager of Modem Woodmen of America will speak at
Saturday night meeting of Burlingham Modem Woodmen Camp 7230.
There will be a potluck dinner at 6 p.m. with members to take a
ercd dish. Meat, rolls, coffee, tea and pop will be served, Guests are
come. There will be a time for members to ask questions of the disltriO! I
manager.

'

Published t:'Jery afternoon, Mopday through
Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the

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,
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Publisher reserves the right to adjust rates dur·
ing the sub$cription p::riod. Sub5Cr ipt ion rate
changes may be implemented bf. changing the
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Modern Woodmen district manager to spes/(

Women's Health.Month. Celebration

THE 1

,postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The ,\ssociated PreM and the Ohlo

The post office at Racine is undergoing extensive interior and exten'?-f
remodeling. Currently concrete in the parking lot is being replaced, sud
Oerk Brenda Matheny.'The project was approved through the ColumbuC
:
office of the U.S. Postal Service, she noted.

'.! •

Comlnualty Newspaper Holdlnp. Inc.

Ohio valley Publishing Company. Second class

Raclne'post office undergoing l'flmOdellng ·~ •

CANTON (AP) - If the instruc- instructor Charlie Grimes, ~0. the
tor In this gy m class has you woik- . track and field coach at the college.
"I suppose in many ways, the
ing too hard, you can put your fi n. ger o n the computer mouse and student is going to have to be selfmotivated," Grimes told the Akron Avenue, Middleport, Ray Foster, treated at
click him off.
Some might call it virtual exe r- Beacon Journal in a story published the scene;
9:54p.m. Saturday, Laurel Oiff Road,
cise, but Malone College calls it an Monday. " But it isn' t much unlike Pomeroy,
Christopher Lee, VMH,
lnternet .class on physical education th e traditional classes I have .. ... As Pomeroy squad assisted;
soon as the students leave the classand wellness.
3:50 a.m. Sunday, East Letart Road,
''I' m going to be like an online room, I'm not sure what they're Fossie Hayman, VMH;
trainer. " said course doing."
8 p.m. Sunday, Curtis Road, Thppers
Students enrolled in Personal Plains, Jeffery Lales, St. Joseph's Hospital;
~Fitness and We.llness will be able to
12:17 a.m. Monday, Red Hili ' Road,
· puli up video in which he and Mal - Rutland, Loi' Ann Barrett, VMH, Rutland
one students demonstrate exercises, squad assisted; ·
7:08 a.m. Monday, Bailey Run Road,
· and audio describing various techPomeroy,
Bertha Bing. Holzer Medical
niques.
Center,
Grimes said .the class is experi3:20 p.m. Monday, North Second ,
Doors ()penAl
mental.
Avenue, Middleport, Sam,Williams, Pleas**'It-~**
It is· one of five online courses
Valley Hospital, Middleport squad
Clil JACTIII 111 2:45, 5.110, 7:30, 11:55 that the 2,200-student college will ant
assisted.
{Tidlj~ln, Qbl !ln!oj.l, OaliJ l'i)!l!,I'll• F~
begin offering nexl month .
MIDDLEPORT
"
If
they've
thought
creatively
...
.
1:24
p.m.
Monday, Ash Streei, Maggie
MPECTIII GAIJGfT "' 1:00, 3:00, 5:00
Sike,
PVH,
Central
Dispatch' squad assistabout how to get that person off the
ed.
couch and exercise, then they 've
POMEROY
accomplished a real goal," said Jeari .
9:17
a.m.
Monday, stale Route 143,
Blosser. an int erim associate
·
Della
Uoyd,
VMH;
·
provost at the University of Akron.
7:41 p.m. Monday, Maples Apart-

The Daily Sentinel
(USPSliJ....)

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 7, 1999

·-·

NFUR·NITURE CO.
304-773-5592

2nd Street

Mason, WV

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The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Pege4

Tuesday, September7, 1999

Braves beat Cards
4-1 ; Mets, Astros,
Padres· also win

Reds notch 6-3
victory over Cubs
ByRICKGANO
CHICAGO (AP) - Sammy Sosa
wothin two swongs of reachmg 60
lil'nners for a second straoght season
That's somethiOg no player has ever
loCcomploshed
·~" But what about 70, the mark Mark
MtGwore set last year"
''I'd hke to wan at the end of the
)'ear and see how 11 goes I don't
'«-ant to say what, wtll happen 'n the
future. After the year os over. maybe
'We can talk about 11. ' Sosa satd
Monday after h1t110g hos maJOr
league-leadong 58th homer as the
cago Cubs lost agam 6-3 to the
ncmnah Reds
McGwore tbld the Chocago SunTimes he th10ks Sosa "'til reach 60
.fu:st and that they both sod! have a
'sllot at 70 Sosa needs 10 hn 12 10 hos
final 26 games
:J Not so fasl , savs Sosa
"'Yeah, I woll gco there (to 601. hul
ttght now my mond os not oherc he
said. shruggmg off the pressure uf

is:

changeup and I tned to get away wtth
lt. ••

Cone m nau bad been on a homer
rampage woth a maJor league record
14 on ots two prevtous games al
Pholadelrohoa Domtn Young hot lhe
Reds only homer Monday, butot was
a bog one, a three-run sbot cappmg a
five-run fifth mnmg
Homers don' t guarantee success
Consoder the last-place Cubs and
Sosa Or some other st ruggling
teams.
"You look at the slats and you sec
the home runs and they're mce ...
Reds manager Jack McKeon saod
"'But you look at the standongs and
vou see teams like Scanle and
Colorado leadong the league on
homers. and where are they ' At the
bouom '
The Reds arc trymg to catch
Houston on the Nl Central or the
Mets for the wold card
·MaJOr league records are tine.
but that s not our focus . · Young saod
Guzman. mak.jng h1 s fir:o;t career
:anmher home race I'\ c been Ju1 ng
iffor the last t\!o o years I m the same appearance agamstthe Cubs. won for
,erson. the same gu) and I plan lo the fifth tame m SIX ~tarts allowing
three runs and :-.1x h1ts 1n seven
~~ep on smolmg

t

· Sosa took a four-homer lead O\~ r
McGwm: wllh a long ... o lo shot m the

mnmgs

lhord off Juan GuLman (' · 21. ,, dme
tllrough a 15 mph wind that landed

for h1s 19th 5avc m 2.6

Dann y Grave&gt; pllthcd the nonth
chance:-.~

The Reds two day power &gt;urge

on Wave land A\C ouP•Id~ o l Wngley
F1eld Sosa. :s l'&lt; ~ame' Jhcad ot the

L1ga1nst the Ph1lhes Included nm~
homers m a 22-3 VICtory Saturday
(f'll"&lt; of hos 66-homer 'cason ol a Thc1r 15 homers over three st~q 1 g ht

}ear ago. also \\alkcd and muck out games toed the Nl record they C&gt;tabllshed Froday through Sund.oy at
lWICC
, .. It wa:-; the: tir~t ume I faced Pholadelphoa The maJor league
Sammy." Guzman saod I threw a record for most home runs m three

.:~ighth-inning
' DAVID GINSBURG
By
BALTIMORE (AP) - As they
&lt;:harge toward theor fifth stratght Al
Oentral utle. the Cleve land Indoans
Jlf~n 'I exactly check ong the standmgs
-qn a daoly basos or repeatedly domg
,lhe math to check thctr magtc num-~er
' For the re\.:urd. any combmatwn

pf Cleveland voctones and losses py
foe Chtcago Whne Sox totahng two
' w,tll once agam put the Indoans on the

gle 1n the seventh as the Mets won for
the lOth tome on 13 games I
San Francosco dropped 6 fl. games
behmd tdle Anzona. whtch leads the
NL West
Astros 6, Plilllies S
By The Assoc;lated Press
Houston
scored all of Its runs 1n
Greg Maddux osn't struggling
the
sox'lh
mnmg
to enable Jose Lorna
anymore
to
become
tbe
NL's first 19-game
"'It was vmtage Maddux I don 't
know of u was hos best stuff of the winner.
Lorna ( 19-7) left the mound after
year. butot's about as good as you can
the
bottom of the foflh tratling
potch." Braves manager Bobby Cox
Pholadelphia
4-0, but m the top of the
said after Maddux's three-hotter led
soxth,
pmch-hotter
Russ Johnson, balAtlanta to a 4-l voctory over the St
ling
for
Lorna,
hot
a three-run homer
Louos Cardmals on Monday mght
Maddux ( 18-6), who has won off Randy Wolf (5-7) .
Bolly Wagner potched a perfect
eight consecuuve deciSIOns and tS
one voctory shy of the league lead. nonlh for thiS 34th save Pholadelphta
has lowered hos ERA from 5 02 on has lost 10 of II
Padres 4, Pirates 3
May 21 to 3 36 He got 16 outs on
Tony Gwynn hot hos second gogrounders and retored hts final 23 batters followong Alberto Castillo's ahead three run homer m four days
and Andy Ashby ( 14-7) hmited
thord-mmng smglc
"He's been domg thos for years. Pmsburgh to fove hots on seven-plus
He's one of the best. · saod Adam mnongs as San Doego overcame a 2-0
Kennedy, who had one of the deficu at Putsburgh
Todd Rnchoe ( 12-9) allowed three
Card10als' htts
At Atlanta, Chopper Jones backed runs and s1x h11s m f1ve tnnmgs
Maddux. w1th h1s thtrd homer m two Trevor Hoffman potched lhe nonth for
,games as At\anla mamtamed a 2 1/2- hos 36th save
Rockies S, Expos 3
game lead ' m the NL East over secAt Montreal Dante Bocheue hll
ond place New York
" I threw good and the mostakes L, hiS 29th homer, and Pedro Aslacto
made, I got away wnh." Maddux (15-1 0) hoi a two-run tnple and
allowed three runs - two earned - '
satd
Garrett Stephenson (5- I) allowed on eoght-plus onn10gs to WIO for lhe

National League
roundup

BLOCKING the throw to second base as the Chicago Cubs' Lance
Johnson steals the base is Cincinnati second sackl!f Pokey Reese
iti the first inning of Monday's National League game at Wrigley
Field, where the Reds won 6-3. The baseball got away from Reese,
and Johnson went to third base on the play. Behind them is short·
stop Barry Larkin. (AP)
straoght games IS 16 by Boston on homers ohos season, breakmg the pre1977 the mark for four maoght voous cl ub mark set 111 1997 . Barry
games os 18. shared by Bos ton Larkm passed Frank Robmson for
thtrd place on the Reds· career runs
(·1977) and Oakland ( !996)
Thev would have had another scored hs1 wnh 1,044 Pete Rose
Monday. but Greg Vaughn's long (1,741) and Johnny Bench ( 1,091)
The Cubs are 27-40 at
dnve to Iefton the fouroh was held up arc 1-2
by the wmd before Glenallen Holl home. the first tome they've lost 40
leaped onto the 1\'Y to pull the ball games at Wngley Foeld smce 1990.
when they were 39-42 under Don
down
Me Keon says cent er
Notes: The Reds. road record of Zommer
43-23 os better than the home record foelder Moke Caoneron, who has not
of every maJor league team except played smce Aug 27 because of a
the Braves and Athleucs The Reds hamstnng stram. could return to the
have wo n five of sox at Wngley hneup when the Reds and Cubs play four runs and mne hit s m seven
Fteld
Tioe Cubs have allowed 186 a doubleheader today
mmngs Mark McGwore was 0-for-4.
rema m1ng at 54 homers
In other NL games. ot was New
York 3, San FranciSco 0. San Doego
4. Pmsburgh 3, Houston 6.
Wnh a 23 112-game lead, the Pholadelphoa 5. Colorado 5, Montreal
the eoghth 10nong. as Cleveland beat
Indtans are a lock to won the Al 3; and Flonda 8, Los Angeles 6
the Balumore Onoles 7-6 Monday
Mets 3, Giants 0
The lndoans bounced back from a Central. but manager Moke Hargrove
Kenny Rogers (4-d) potched a
3-0 deficit after beong held scoreless IS trymg to get hts team ready for the
on two smgles through the first sox playoffs whole sec~ nng the best four-hiller 10 won hiS I 8th straoghl
mmngs. wmnmg for the seventh t1me record m the league Cleveland cur- home deciSIOn and struc k out a seaon etght games behond Ramtrcz, a rently has a two-game lead on the son-hogh none - one short of hos
career hogh.
rookie who came 10 wuh a 236 bat- New York Yankees
Mtke Ptazza hn a sacrtftce fly off
" We want to gel people refreshed
long average
Mark
Gardner (4- 10) m the stxth, and
"The bottom line os thetr seventh and rested But you have to do that
Rtckey
Henderson had a two-run smhotter drove on five runs agamst us: ·
(See
INDJANS
on
Page
5)
Balllmore mana~er R~v Moller saod

rally helps

playoffs
.. A lot of guys aren't reall y thmk
mg about 11 We' re JUSI showmg up
and gomg out to play what we 've
been play10g - qualny baseball, ·
pllcher Dave Burba saod 'It hasn't
eve n been brought up. or heard
around the clubhouse ''
Burba pnched seven solid onmngs
and rookoe Alex Ramorez homered
and had a career-hogh five RBis,
mcludmg a ptvotal three-run tnple m

Tri~e

top O's 7-6

fifth

11mc In SIX

decisiOns

Dave

Veres tinoshed for hts 28t h save
Mtke Thunnan (6- 11) gave up all
ftve runs. but JUSt two were earned
allowme seve n hits m four mmngs
Marlins 8, Dodgers 6

At Mtamo, Mark Kotsay hll the
forst grand slam of hts career as
Flonda look a 5-0 lead on the first off
Is mae! Valdes (9-13) and overcame a
paor of homers by Raul Mondest
Flonda (55-82) SUfjl3SSed US " ·n
total last season. wheri the Marhns

had the worst record m baseball at
54-108, a year after wmmng the
World Senes
(See NL on Page S)

Baseball

Monday's scores
S!lfl Diego 4 Pmsburgh 3
Colorado 5 Montreal 1
New York 3 S&amp;n Francuco 0
CINCINNATI 6, Ch1cago 1
Atlanta 4 St Lpuu I
J-1onda B Lo5 Angeles 6
Houston 6 lltuladelph1a 5

AL standings
Eastern D1vaStOn

'1Dm

1'&lt;1.

18 60
1' 65

5\2

II

"''
"''

21 '

"

Tanipa Bay

.. .

Q,EVEIAND
Onca_go

,.61 451
"56 ""~ · '"
"
"6'" 56 "'
;96

Ccntnl 1&gt;1viS1on
ll

li1mne~ta

f)mrou
~aruas

611
SM

53

61 76
61 77

Balhmo~

GJI

~

!!'

New YOJk
BoSion
Toronto

Cu v

628

.liJ9
187

5I

6'•
23

21'
27'
10
11

\\ f'strrn D1v1slon

'
rf!"as
Oakland
Seanlt&gt; i

&lt;97

61

7

,."
" "'

69

Amll~e 1m

51

Sunda) 's scn~s

Today's games
DH CINCINNATI CViUone 7 Sand Tomko 4 7)
at Cb1 cago (TrachseiS 16 and M~Ntd\01 0-0) 5 05
pm
Colorado (Thomson I 61 at Monlreal
(Hermanson612) 705pm
~ Houston (Holt 3 I l) at Plul addph10 (Grace I I)
7 0'. pm
L05 Angeles (Gagne 0 0) EJt Ronda (DempSI!:I
b-7) 7 05pm
San D1ego (Hn chcock II 101 at Pmsburgh
(Schrrudl 11 -q) 7 O:'i p m
San Franmco CNathan :'i I) at New York (Rt&gt;ed
10-·H710pm
St Lou1s COIIH'r 7 !!) at i\llama !Mu lholland 8
7) 7..Wpm
Amona CS t onlem~ re :'i 2l .u t\lil"aukee iE idrcJ
2-7) tl05pm

Mm n~sota

4 lmup.1 ll·iiY I
Kansas Cu y 6 l v1untt 1
C l EVELAND I~ B~llllll&lt;l Tl 7
Del111ll 'i 0 1kl 1mi 4
Boston Q St&gt;alllt' 7
New York B Anahc1m I
Ch1cago ~~ Tl·\as ppd r un

~!

i=

\1ondal
CLEVEL\ND 1 Rah11nr~re 6
Mmneso111. I I larnpa B~v 7
Boston ~ Sc&lt;~ttlc 1
Anaheun S New Yorl 1
Ikno1t 9 O~k l !lnd 7
DH Te:o.a~ 8 Clmago 6 lc:o. IS 9 C h1{~go'

-~

Toni~ht's ~ames

~~~-_Palnmore IEnckson
~ 805 p m

11 111

New York {Cone 11 7)

~

11

~~

Mmnc&gt;ut 1 11\bvs

K msa§ (11}1 (Ro!ndo 7-

1805pm

"tLEVELAND fNagy 1'i 'l) at Tc:~as (Sr.:lc 15 7)
05 p m
ChiCag o 1S1rotk.a 8- 111 at Anuh~ un iCooper 0 0)
ll iO O'. pm
Boston (Wa\c:efic:ld 4-91 at 0.1klanU 1Herctl11 II

I

~ ,. IOOSpm

Toronto (Wells P 9) .u Scmk IMeche
10,05 p IU

(' .

41

(Rapp 6-'.J at Oakland (A pp1cr 11- 12)

\JI~ pm

•

~

Wednesdafs games

B ~ t on

"

Detroit (MI1ck.t I I 10) &lt;1!

i&lt;~mp~

lla) IW1t1 7-11)

~705pm

~
Baltamore (J Johnson 5·7) at Mmnesota
'J Hawkms911J 805pm
New York (0 Hernruadez 15·7) a1 Kansas C n~
SO!.uki 1-4) 8 O'i p m
L . fLEVELANO (Haney 0 I l at Texas &lt;Bu rken 6
~n

11 os P m

,. .Chtcago (Baldwm 9 12) at Annhetm (Belcher 6
E)•IO '5 p m
IIi Toronto (Halladay 8 6) 111 ~enttle (Moyer I1-6)

~9~5 pm ,

standings
ta
ew York
tladc:lpht a

lont~l

~da

65\(lll
INCINNATI
1tfsburgh
t Loms
,foilwaukt:e

h:::~

~

n Franc t ~co
s A.ngeles
11 D1ego
f61orado

t

Ea!ttcrn Olvislon
!!' ~
87 51
84 S4
68 69
57 80
55 82

Crntral DIYI$ion
fl' 56
79 57
6R 70
67 72
60 16

w......

1'&lt;1.
626
609
49fl
-1 16
401
597
5MI
491
482
441

,p;,.,. ;~ ::
7S
6:'i
6-'
62

Colorndo t\.\l!lght I 2J at Montn:al (S nlllh 4 71
1'i p m
San OIC!f:O (W \\ 1 lh~lll \ I'! 12\ M l'lltshurt: h
tCordOVJ 8 !$} I ''i pIll
San Franusco ([stes 10 71 at 1\'ew York (\1oid
61J I40p m
CINCINNATI ( P ~n1s 7 ~~ al Chllag&lt;.J( ( orrrunc
1 \J 220pro
Los Angeles (Park 9 1OJ .11 Fl on d.1 1Burnell 2 I )
7 0~ p m
H ou~ton
( H~mplon
Ill l) at Phdi!delphu
I Schdlmg I 'I S j 7 lS p m
St Lou1s (Ankn!l 0.0) .11 &lt;\tl1111a (M11lwuud I 'I
71 ? .Wpm
Amon:t{Daa ll l MlatMIIv. ;mk~e ( Nomo II 6)
ijO'i p m
1

'~curt~

•

•

Wednesdafs games

6~
72
74
77

54l
474
464
446

GJI

AL leaders
BAITING Gnrct~parra Boston l5l Jeter
New York \Sl Bem1e WJiham~ Nc .... York 342
E Martmez Seaule 1\8 R r almeara Tcxa ~ li7
T Fernandez Toromo \34 M Ramtret CLEVE
I AND ~n
RUNS R Alomar CLF.N£LAND 122 M
R;umru CLEVEL"'ND Il l Jeter Nr.:wYork 109
5 Green Toronto 109 Gnffey Jr Seaulc 107
Knoblauch New York 105, C DdgaJu Toronto

101

RB I M Ramnez CLEVELAND 141 R
P~lme1 ro Tella5 1 \2 C De lgado Toront o 126
Gnffey Jr Seattle 117 Ju ~n Gonl.a lez Tex..u II \
M Ordonet Cht ~ ago 108. S Green Toronto 108
\I l lS Jeter New York 189 Surhoff Baltimore
182 Stew~n Toronto 178 Bern1e Wtlham5 New
York 172 Ram.!.~ Kansu Cny 171 I Rodnguel
Texas 168 M Ordonez Chkago 16i
DOUBLES 1' Femand~l Toronto 41 S
Gree.n Toronto l9 Damon Kanu! City 38 Z.Ctle
Texas 38 Garctaparra Boston l7 Greer ruas 17
C De lgado Toronto H R Alomar CLEVELAND

"

TRIPLES Offerman Boston 10 Febles
KMsasCuy 9 Dye KanusCI!)I 8 Jete~ New York
8 Durham Chtcago 8 Randa Kansas City 8
Daman Kansa5 Cuy 7
HOME RUNS : Gnffe) Jr , Seau le 42 R
Palme1 ra l e-;u 42 C Delg:uin Tnrontn 40 M

NL leaders
BAITING L Walker Colorado 167 Abreu
Phlladelph1a '-'~ L Gnnmlez An zona '" l
Cas..:~ CINCINNATI "9 E\erl'n Houston l\1
Glmql\c Phd addplu~ HC. C Jo nes Allonld Pol
RUNS Bagv.e\1 Houston 1 2~ Alfonzn Nc"'
York 110 J He: II, o\n zona 11 0 U1 gglo..' Holl~lon
IQ'i Abreu Phllade lphta 10~ C Jones Atlanta
IOl So5a Ch 1 c~_go IOl
RRI Sosa Chicago l.:'fi Man W1lhams
t\nwna l~l 1\kG\\Ire St L ou1~ Il l R1 ~hl.:m::
~o l orado II'i Ven1 ura N!.'!" York 11 2 Uagv.cl l
Houston Ill V GurJTJ:ro Montre:tl I~ G1lcs
P1 ltsburgh 10-' L W.Uker Co lorado 10-'
HITS L Gonzalcl Anzona lS I Gl.ul\tllc
Ph1lade lph1a 174 Alfon:w Nr.:w York \69 Casey
CINC INN1\ll 168 N Perez Colondo 166
Bl,IH!IO HiJustu u 165 Man W1ll1ams Anzo11a 16'i
DOURlfS B1gg1o Hom ton 'i2 Vtdro
Mnntrca l 42 L GunJ.a lel Antuna 41 C Jollts
At lanta W K Young P111 shurgh \9 Jenk.m s
Milwaukee '8. Alfonw New York 1R
rRIPLES Ahrru l'hd~delpht~ 10 KOI 'ia)
Flonda 8 Cameron CINC INNATI B A Gonzalez
Flonda 1 W Gue11ero Montreal 7 N Percl
Col orali o 7 Womack Am.on 1 7 Mmtn
Pmsburgh 7 S F1nley Amona 7
HOME RUNS So5a Ch1 cngll S8 McGwne St
Lout s, 54 Bagwell, Houston W C Jones Atl;mta
'tl G1lc\ Pmsburgh ~5 V Guerrero Montreal ~-'
L 'Walker Colorado l-'
STOLEN BASES Womack Amona 64
Cedeno Nev. York 60 L Casu ll o f&lt;1onda 49 E
Younl! Los Angdes 45, Cameron CINC INNATI
B Rentena St lou ts U Hender5on New York
12
PITCHING ( 16 deca51ons) H 1mpton Houston
18- l B57 2 92 Schlllmg Ptuladelphta 15 S ?50
l 45 .&lt;J Maddux Atlanta 18 6 7SO l 16 Lmm
HousiDn 19 7 7 J I J 40 K Brown LOs Angeles
16 6 727 110 Bonenfield St Lou1s 16-7 696
~ 98 Millwood Atl nnta I~ 7 6B2. 2 9\
STRIK EOUTS Randy J uhn~o n Anzona 128
K IJrown Los Angeles 184 Reynolds Houston
182 Astacto Co lorado 182 Huchcock San 01!.'!80
172 Ma\ho,ood Atlanta 169 Lama Houstnn 151
Schilling PhJiadelphta lSI
SAVES Hoffman S" n D1ego 16 Wagn~r
Houlton 14 Urb1na Montreal ~ ' Rocker, Atlanta
ll Nen San Franmco 31 Shav. , Los Angeles 31
Wickmaq Milwaukee 29

NCAA Division I scores

Football

Saturday through Monday

AP Top 25 colll(ge poll

1

I

MadwHt

Ea.t

lbe Top 25 teams mlbe Assocuted Press college football poll w1th first place vores 1n pnrenthe
ses records through Sept 5 po1n1s based on 25
pomts for a f1rst pl11a vore through one pu1nt for B
251h place vote and prevtous rank.ing
l..asl '
Iwn
J!,1. ..... :1\'Hk
l Ronda St {1))
1-0 1 698
I
2-0 I 691
2
2 Penn St (26)
l Tenors5« (II)
I 0 1,611
l
-4 Flonda (I J
1 0 1446
4
5 Nebraska
I 0 I 402
:'i
6 MiChigan
I 0 I 394
1
I 0 1 37 1
6
1 TellasA&amp;M
8 M1anu
2 0 1 258
R
9Wmonsm
10118\
9
10 Georg1a TtCh
I 0 I 091
10
II V 1rgtm aTe~h( I J
1 0 1025
II
12 GeOC[tlil
I U 974
12
IIOHIOST
0- 1 786
n
14 UCLA
I 0 719
J7
15 Arkansas
I 0 626
I I'!
16 Nl)tn:: Dame:
I I 571
16
17KansasSt
0 0 526
19
1 0 524
21
18 Southern Col
19 Amona
I I S\7
IS
1:0 Purdue
21
1 0, ~ 1 ~
1 0 ....
10
Z1 Al11bama
22 V1rgmm
I0
114
2~
21 N C Smte
2 0 209
14
H Colo rado St
I0
176
2~ Anwna St
00
124
1~
Olhtrs rectmng votes
Tnas
10~
MARSHALL 98 BYU Bl Mns1ss1pp1 St "i9
Ml( h1 ga n St ·" I o m s~ 1ll e -'2 S)rnc use 26
Colorado 2'i Au For{e 2' Oklahomll 14 Oklahoma •
St 8 LSU 6 MIAMI (OH IO) 6 M1SS1U1pp1 6
Soulhem M1ss 2 East Carolina 1 Utah I Wyom1ng

TexM A&amp;M 37 LiM.usaana Tech 17
Virprua 20, North Carohna 17
Virprua Tech 4] JarrLJ Madison 0

Albany NY 3~ Cent Connecucut St 11
Boston College 30 Baylor 29-0T
Bucknell H Morgan St 10
Buffalo St 32 Robert ~orm 20
Colgate 28 Mru~ 21
Georgta Tech 49 Na~y 14
Hofstra 56 Connecticut 17
La Salle 44 S1 Francts Pa 7
New Hampshan: n, RhO&lt;k bland 14
Nonheastem 44 Amencan Inti •7
Penn St 70, Akron 24
Putsburgh 30 Bowllnt Gretn 10
Towson 14 Monmouth N J 1

Sou•h
Alabama 28 Vt~nderbilt 17
Ahabama A&amp;.M 17, lackwnv1lle St 20
Au bum 21 Appalachian ,SI I~
Be1bune Cookman 17 Sa.,.annah St 14
Easl CMohna. '0 Wes1 Virgm1a H
Elon 24 Funnan 22
Flonda 55 W Mt clug~ n 26
Georgta '8 U~nh St 7
Geor~n Southern 76 FayeUe\ tllc St 0
Grambhng St 41 Alcorn S1 2S
H ~ rnpt o ll U 21 Dl·l~ware St 0
Jackson S1 1~ Howard U 21
LSU 29 ,Sau Jo~e St 21
Le n01r Rhyn~ 28 Jachnnv1ll~ ! l
Ubert) 21 Vu'g mt.~ Umon 12
Louumna- Monroc 27 N1choll~ St 10
Louuv tll ~ S6 Kentucky 2R
1\hnhall I\ Clemson 10
MtamJ ~7 Flondo A&amp;M I
MISSUS1ppt 1 Memphts 0
Mlnautppt St 40 M1ddl~ Tennessee 1
N lowa41 McNeeseSt 17
N C Stale 10 South C~roh na 0
Purdue 47 Cent Flouda 11
R1chmond "' 2 VMI6
S Carohna St 20. Chillleslun Southern 14
Southern U 20 NW Loms1ana I ~
Tennessee 42 Wyorrung 17
Tennessee St 41 Alab:tmll St B
..._
.·.

.

,.

,,.14'

16

26 '~

From Marshall University
Sports Information
CLEMSON S C

remamong m lhe contest Three plays Marshall lead 10 hal f
Nenher offense could put po101s
John Grace led the anack woth II later. Tiger kocker Chns Campbell
Doug tackles. m;:ludmg both of Marshall's mossed a 33-yard attempt to toe the on the board 10 the thord quarter but
Chapman 's scvcn,-ydrd touc hdown sack.s Paul Tov1es~1 recorded seven ~..:on test
Clemson scored the gaml:'s fmt
scamper w1th I 10 rcmammg m 1hc tackles (one for a loss) on hiS ftrst
The Herd came out strong. march- touchdow n wnh 7 13 remaonmg on
founh quaroer lofted 'the Thundcnn2 game back smcc lnJ Un ng h1s knee tn mg 43 yards on five plays to set up a the final stanza Javos Auston's threelf•&lt;d to a 13 10 ' 'ICtory Saturday 1~ the second game last :-.ca~on Maunce Bolly Malashe' och 22-yard field goal yard run capped a 10-p lay. 67-yard
iheason opener at Clemson
dnve. giVI ng the Togers theor forst lead
Hones also played well from hiS cor- on the games ope mng drove
'The 13 po101S os the fewest nerback positiOn garncnng seven
Marshall's second dnvc agam pen- of the game
amount m a Herd vtclOrv smcc a J3- tackles
The Herd olfcnse, led by quarteretrated the Togcr 10-yard Ime , buothe
3 wm over Georg1a Southern on
ltm Thorpe Award nom10ee Herd sellled for a second back Chad Penmngton. took the ball
September 18. 1993
Rogers Beekelt anc hored the sec- Malashe\lch lield goal to take a 6-0 on tts e nsu ang possess10n a nd
The Marshall delensc pocked up ondary wtth an mterccpt10n Beckett lead
marched 76 yards 10 II plays for the
the slack. allow10g the Ttger offense also made the game·savwg tackle on
The score remamed 6-0 untol the wmnmg score The Herd overcame
on!) ] I ) ards per rush on 34 carnes Clemson rcceover Bnan Wofford's second quarter when the Togers 28 penalty yards on the drove. wh och
The Herd forced seve n Clemson 33-yard gam woth under a mmute knocked home a 42-yarder to cut the was kept ahvc .by a Pen n10gton 12-

By MICHAEL GRACZYK
HOUSTON (A P) - The WNBA
has a dynasty before 11 had two
champo onshop teams.
"'When you won three m a row, I
thonk thai's takong a slc p. Houston
coac h Van Chancellor satd. the
WNBA trophy gleanung 10 front of
hun, after the Comets beat New
York 59-47 Sunday to wm the or thord
stratght WNBA mle on the thtrd year
9f the league's e&lt;tstence. "It doesn't
get any better than this."
Wolh thetr 2-1 senes vtctory over

yards and two mtercepuons on the

game
Doug
Chapman
was
Marshall s lcad10g rusher woth 47
yards on 13 carnes. Llow Turner
averaged over 5 yards per carry woth ,
31 yards on stx tncs
Pennongton completed passes to
eoght dofferent rece"ers Jame s
Wdhams caugh t seve n balls for 79
yards. whtle Nate Poole hauled m SIX

for 46 yards Chapman was the team
leader m recetvmg yardage w1th 90
on ftve catches Gregg Kellen. Lanoor
Washmgton. Turner,
' Davtd Foye and
Bnan, Greenleaf all caught passes
Auston was the Togers' leadmg
rusher woth 50 yards on 14 cames Quarterback Brandon Streeter and
Woodrow Dantzler comboned for 244
yards 27 compleuons Streeter saw
most of the acllon. goong 23-of-36 for
187 yard s Dantller was 4-of-6 for 57.
yards
Marshall makes Its home debut on
Saturday. Sept II at 7 p m when the
Loberty Flames come 10 Huntongton

pmnts

CooQcr's mother d1cd m the past

year Then her best fnend on the
team , Kim Perrot, was dtagnosed
wnh cancer and doed last month
" It has been extremely tough to

Tiffany Halfhtll led Mctgs with
18 for 18 servmg, 15 poonts and four
kills. Shannon Pnce was seven for
seven servmg woth four pomts and
s1x ass1sts, Tawny Jones was

SIX

for

SIX servmg wolh four pmnls, Brooke
Wolhams seve n for eoght wtlh four
pomls and fove koll s, Tangy

For the playoffs. she averaged 20
AI that pmnl, the L1berty had only w1th her name and picture and Jersey
pomts, four rebound s and almost two field goals for the second half
No 10
seven a5S1Sts
.. We JUSI couldn l get anyth10g to
"Maybe thiS one woll be a lltlle

slay focused and to stay motivated
thro ug h Kun 's s 1~.:kn ess and my

mom's ollness and throughout the doffcrent thmg s that have happened ,"
she sa od "I really wanted to leave the
problems on the outsode and focus on
the task at hand on the court ·
CooperwaSJUSII-for-IOfromthe
field 10 a 6R-67 loss Saturday She ho\
Houston's forst shot Sunday, then
helped the Comets break 11 open m
the second half She fmtshed 13-of15 from the foul hne to take her thtrd
senes MVP in as many years

Meigs varsity, JV sextets sweep Wellston in DH
Laudemult was two for three wllh
one pomt. one koll and etght assists,
Amy Hysell was two for three woth
one pmnl and four kills and MarJOrie
Bratton had three kolls
In the JUno or varsoty contest Meogs
ran theor record lo 2-0 wotb a 15- 11 ,
15-2 Win

·

"Both teams played great
defen se," loberty coach Rochoc
Adubato saod "We stopped thctr
people They stopped ours The person that made the dtfference was
Cooper"
The Comets put on a late spurt for
a 33-25 halftome lead, and extended
II to 38-27 woth I5 33 left 10 the
game Both stdes got sloppy, wnh
Houston fathng to score m a span of
6.50, whtle the ltberty mt ssed mne
strmght shots
The Loherty closed to 38-] I
before Tma Thompson broke
Houston s scoreless streak and staned a 10-0 run for a 48-3llead wtth
4 28 to play. Thompson also had a
JUmper and three-poont play for
seven of the I0 pomts

drop for us ," saod Sue Wocks, the
only Ltberty player on double figures
with II po10ts "Our defense was
strong I felt , but to wm tht s ganie you
have to put some poonls on the
board "
Thompson had 13 pomts and
Sheryl Swoopes had II for the
Comets
Cooper, who led the league on
sconng thiS season and IS a two-ume
league MVP, mststed 11 was too early
to talk about dynastoes
"We JUSt want to enJOY thos cbampwnshtp," she saod
The lllle was the first for Houston
wnhout Perrot. the spunky pomt
guard whose presence hovered over
the team and Compaq Center Fans
chanted her name and earned stgns

more spectal because we won n .(br
Ktm," Thorgpson satd "All the
desore and passoon and strength and
toughness she brought to thiS team,
we used ol today "
"'If you don 1 thmk the spont O'f
Kom Perrot IS not alive m the
Comets' world nght now, you're de.ad
wrong," Chancellor saod "I thought
all along that 12 Comets pulhll~
(ogether would be hard to beat
because she's sllll on thiS team "
The voctory also marked the lhu-d
tome thos year a Texas team defeated
a team from New York for a pr9
league champwnshtp Earloer, Sjlll
Antomo beat the New York Kmcltii
forthe NBA ntle and the Dallas Sui~)
defeated the Buffalo Sabres for tfte
NHL's Stanley Cup
::

••

Wellston golfers win two matches; Meigs takes third

Seuthwcsl
Ark Pine Bluff I' MVSU 9
Ar l.: ~nsM 26 SMU 0

Hous10n 18 Race 0
Oklahnrm St 2J , L.:.m smna- Lala~~.--ttc 7
Srephen FA!JSim ~I Ab1lehc Chmt1.1n ~ ~
lt&gt;xas 69 Stanford 17
Tuas SoUi hern l4 Prcune Va~!w 0
Tulo;a .J.'i SW f.hHoun St 21
UT EP I 1 Ne"' Mexac o 10
Far \\ul

Ptlchmg for the Red Sox to
the 1918 World Senes, Babe
Ruth won lwo games and had a
I 06 ERA

Davts' 47
In the regular match, Well ston
won With 152, Belpre, whoch was
second with a 155. was followed by
Meogs' 156. Alexander's 170, Vmton
County's 17 1 and Nelson\llleYork's 204.
Man Preston of Belpre was match
medalist fired a one under par 33 for
top honors Meadows and Roush led
Metgs wtth 38s Nock Dellwoller.
who added a 39. was followed by

Davts ' 41 , Modkoff's
Bumgardner 's 44

43

an&lt;\

Ohio Division standings
fum
I
2
3
4
5
6

&amp;

Wellston
Belpre
MEIGS
Alexander
Vmlon County
Nelsonville- York

20
14
12

7
0
.0
.

--

, If the 992 Exchange is a Free Part of Your
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis
.
Toll Free!
.
.
DIAL

~

992-7834

.

. ,,
'
Holzer Clinic .•. Keeping the Promise!

.
GETS TRIPLE -

NOTICE OF THE PUBLIC HEARING

.

Meigs County intends to apply to the Ohio Department of Development for funding undet
the Community Development Block G~anl (CDBG) Microenterprise a federally -funded
program administered by the State. Meigs County is eligible for Fiscal Year 99 CDBG ·
Microenterprise funding in the estimated amount of $50,000, providing the county meets
applicable requirements.
The first of two public hearings will be held September 20, 1999 at I : 15 P.M. at the regular meeting of the Meigs County Commissioners, Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Ohio to provide citizens with the pertinent information about the CDBG program including an explanation of eligible activities and program requirements. The goal of the CDBG
Microenterprise program is to provide low to moderate income persons with access to
capital for business development arid self employment. The activities must be desigm:d to
primarily benefit low and moderate-income persons or limited clientele.

The Cleveland Indians' Alex for the throw in the eighlh inning of Monday's
American league game in Baltimore, where the ·
_triple as Baltimore third baseman Cal Ripken waits Indians won 7-6. (AP)

~amlrez slides Into lhlrd base with a bases-loaded

IndianS ...

(Conunued from Page 4)

wuh an eye on kee piOg people sharp
also," Hargrove satd "' We have an
added tncenu ve to get the home
field "
Ramtrez was 10 the lineup whole
Davod Justoce served the fmal game
Of a three-game SUspenSIOn for hiS
part on a Aug 3 1 brawl agamst
Anaheim.
"Someumes when you don 't play
too much, you go on and try to do
your JOb," Ramtrez saod "You do
what you have to do mstead of JUSt
gmn g out there ~nd swmgmg...
Ramtrez made the most of h1s two
best sw10gs of the afternoon - a
two-run homer that lt ed the game on
Ute seventh and lhe lnple that put
Cleveland up 7-3
"' Fove RBis 111 one game - that 's
bog Nobody expects fove RBis 10
one game," he said
Burba ( 13-7) allowed three runs.
five hil s and tour walks to won hiS
ftfth straight dccosoon Mokc Jackson
got three outs tor hos 35th s.Ivc on 3~

J anel Howard, President
Meigs County Commissioners

l

'

chances, but II wasn't easy
After an RBI smgle by pmch-hllter Delmo l}eShoclds. the Onoles got
w11hm a run when Jtm Thome miShandled Brady Anderson 's grounder
to ftrst for an error A sacnftce
attempt by Mok c Bordock fatled,
leav1ng runners at f1rs1 and, seL:ond

woth one out. and B J Surholl hot
onto a game-end10g double play
" It that bunt was succe~sful , we'd
be m the dnver's scat," Mtller saod
Albert Belle hn two homers fot
Balumore, a three-run shot on the
thud onnm g and a solo dnve on the
eoghth Cal Rtpken went 1-for-4 to
move wllhm 28 hils of 3.000 for ho s
career

Wtth the score 3-all. Dave
Robens led ot f the coghth wnh a

walk off Doug Johns (4-3) and took
second on a sacnfice Jesse Orosco
replaced Johns, and Robens stole
thud before Robcn.o Alomar grounded a smgle past the drawn-on mfield.
AI Reyes came 10 and gave up a
double to Manny Ramtrez, walked
fhom e tntentoonall y to load the
bases and retued R1ch1e Sexson on a
tly ball Alex Ramtrez then hn a 1-2
pnch mto the gap m nghl -center, ho s
first maJor league lnple,
Alomar, who had five RBis and
the decostvc three-run homer Froday,
went 2-for-4 The lndo ans won \Ioree
of four 111 the senes, whtch marked
Alomars first tnp to Balumore after
spendm g three seasons wllh the
Onoles fro m 1996-98

NL games ...
(Cont lll ~r.!d f1 o m P.1gc 4)

'

the Loberty, the Comets JOin the
NBA's Lakers Celloc&gt; and Bulls as
the on ly pro basketball teams to grab
three consec unvc league champoonshtps
· It was a long road " saod senes
MVP Cy nthoa Cooper. who topped
the Comet&gt; on Sunday wtth 24

Anlona 35 TCU ll

Sunday"s scores

Anzona 7 Atlanta 5
It
Plll~burgh H San Frnnc1sco 4
t
CINCINNATI 9 Phll,ido.-IJ'IIII~ 7
It ', Houston 6 Montreal 2
• New York 6 Colomdo 1
Lm Angeles -' Chu;ago 1
S1 i..QUii I\ Mtlwaukcc 9 ( IOJ
San Ou·gn ~ Aondn 2

yard scramble on thord and I 0 from
the Marshall 36-yard hne
Marshall had to ftght the yellow
nags all noght. as the Herd racked up
17 penahoes for 136 yards
Pennmgton went 29-of-44 lor 333

Comets down Liberty 59-47, win third straight WNBA crown

M1ch1gan 26 Notre Dame 22
Mmll('sota l l, Ohao 1
M15soun ] I UAB 28
Nebr;uka 42 lowB 7
Valpar.uso 15 St Franm lnd 6
W•scon~m J9 Murray St 10

mailed to the Meigs Courl Comm1ss10ners, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Oh 10 45769.

1

punts on the eventng

lndt!llla 21 Ball St 9
M c KI:nd~ ~8. Day1on ~1 20T
, Mtanv Otuo 28 Nonh"'esrern '

~r~tten co mmen.l s will b e accep~e~ until 1:00 P.M. , September 20 , -1999 and may b e

16

Chapman's clutch TD pushes Marshall past Clelnson 13-10~

The Wellston Golden Rocket golf
team conunued liS hold of ftrsl place
m the Ohoo Dovtst'of\ of the TVC by
fintsh10g on forst place on two matches last week
The forst match was started back
on August 19. but was suspended by
loghlnong. that match at Franklin
Valley was completed last Thursday
wllh the regular match followmg
Wellston won the suspended
match wnh a 149, foll owed by
Alexander wolh a !53 Meo gs was a
close lhord wllh 155. follow ed hy
Belpre (159). V10ton County (182)
and Nelsonvollc-York (207)
Jon McDonald of Well ston was
matc h meoahst wuh a 34 For Metgs
Za~h Meadows and Ntck Dcu-.. ollcr
car ed 38s Carson Modkoff's 39 was
followed by Tommy Rou sh's 40.
Thad Bumgardner's 43 and Andy ·

.

,.••zo

By JOSH DUBOW
AP Spol1s Writer
Boston all bul ended Seanle's wold-card hopes No\\
the Red Sox can do lhe same agaonst Oakland
Jason Vantek hot hos thord homer in t\\O games and
Butch Huskey addcil an RBI double as Boston's former
Manners helped the Red Sox beat Seattle 3-2 Monday
Seattle entered the four-game senes 7' . games beh10d
Boston and needed to won at least three games to get
back inLO contentJon Instead. ot was the Red Sox who
won three and moved three games ahead of Oakland.
. The Athletocs lost 9-7 to Detron and begon a twogame set woth Boston tonight at Oakland
"'Thos os the road tnp of the year for us. Huskey
saod "'We dtd a good JOb here by wmmng three out of
four Now we have to go lo Oakland and take care of
busmess ..
Vantek homered on the second olf John Halama ( 116). winless in hos last three stans. and hot a sacnfice fly mnmgs

Drakell Morm ngYde 17
jlltnots 41 Arkansas St J

Citizens are encou~aged to attend this meeting on September 20, 1999 to make suggestions and to provide public input '!n various activities which may be undertaken in this
program. If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailled or taped material , assistive h stening d evice, other) due to a disablilty, please contact Gloria Kloes Clerk.prior to September 20, 1999 at 740-992-2895 in order to ensure that your n eed s' will b;
accommodated. The Meigs County Courthouse is handicapped accessible.
· •

II

Omar Ohvares (13-10) went sox-plus mnongs and startong debut for Texas as the Rangers completed a dou·
allowed sox runs on coght hils, losong for tbe firslllme on blet"oeader sweep at home
•
Rock Hellmg ( 13-7) won hiS seventh conseculi~
su deciSIOns s1nce commg to Oakland from Anaheim m
a July 29 trade
dectston and Todd Zeole hn a grand slam m lhe firit
In other Al games, 11 was Anahetm 5, New York 3, 10ning as the Rangers won the opener.
Fassero (5-14) gave up two runs and SIX hils m fi~
and Mmnesota 13. Tampa Bay 7 Texas swept the Whne
Sox 10 a doubleheader. winmng 8-6 and 9-3.
onnings. endmg a sox-game losong streak. He ~
Angels S, Yank- 3 - Jarrod Washburn scattered acquored from Seattle 10 a trade Aug 27.
five htls on 7' dnnmgs and Troy Glaus hit a three-run
John Wetteland pllched lhe nonth 10 bolh games, gi¥homer for hosl Anaheim.
mg hom 39 saves
•
Washburn , won less 10 four stans thos year wnh a 9 15
Rusty Greer hu a three-run homer off John Snyder
ERA, struck out three and walked one to earn hiS first (9-11 ), and Juan Gonzalez added a two-run bomer m tbe
voctory of the year
second game
.·
In the longest outong of htS two-year career.
Twins 13, Devil Rays 7 - Matt Lawton and Todj;!
Washburn (1-3) gave up solo homers to Shane Spencer Walker had two RBis each dunng a six-run stxth innuig
and Choll Davts Troy Percival pitched the mnth for hos as Mmnesota ralhed from a 7-6 deficit after twtcc wast.
27th save.
mg leads at Tampa
Roger Clemens (12-8) allowed Glaus' homer 10 the
Jacque Jones hot a three -run homer and Corey Kosko~
opemng mmng and a two-run shot by Jim Edmonds 10 had a two-run shot for the Twms,
ad 16 hots and
lhe fifth
struck out 14 Urnes
~
Doug Johns (4-3) took the loss
Hector Carrasco (2·2) pnched 3, mn10gs of shutout
Rangtrs 8, White Sox 6; Rangers 9, White Sox 3 rehef Rock Whne (5-3) was th
r
-Jeff Fassero won for the first tome Since July 5 m hts

Cmcmnata 41 Kent '\

2'

tK
29

American League roundup

to dnve in Boston's thord run
..It seem.• that every ball that I hll well was caught
over the fence :· Varitck saod . .. l .. s noce to,.,., that 1 h11
a few of these far enough "here they couldn't catch
them ·
Bostnn starter Kent Mercker left after 3' •lnnongs He
collided woth Wollon Veras when the third baseman
caught Charles Gopson·s fouled bun I allempt on lhG third.
Bryce Aone t3-1) replaced Merci&gt;er wnh one out on
the founh and allowed two runs - one earned - and
one htl in 2'• innongs Derek Lowe polched a perfect
mnth for hiS 12th save
At Oakland, Kanm Garcta hn a uebreaking home run
on the seventh inmng and Tony Clark homered and doubled twoce to drive m four runs for Detroit
LuiS Poloma went 4-for-5 wllh a paor of RBis to help
Detron withstand five Oakland home runs. mcludmg
two by Jason Goambt, and gam a spill of the four-game
series
Dave Borkowsko {1 -4) pocked up hos first maJOr
league wm With 2' 1 scoreless mnmgs m relief of Jeff
Weaver, who allowed five runs and eoght hots m 3;,

Albmn 27 Buller 20-0T

A1r Forll:' 17 V ill a n o~a I \
An zona St II Te,;as Tech ll
Azusa Pactfic 26 San Dt~go 19-0T
CS Norlhndgt 18 W Chgun 19
Cahforma 21 Rutgrrs 7
l oloradu St 4 1 Co lorado I-'
PreSflo St H Ptmland St 6
Idaho S1 "i4 E Oregon .28
Mon1ana -'5 South Oabl\a I 1
Montana St 20 Chadron 'St 10
Oregon St 18 Nevada I ~
S Utah 'iO Fort Lev.1s 71
S~mmento St 41 St M.1ry s Cal 7
San D1ego St 41 South Flonda 12
Southtorn Cal 62 Haw1111 1
UC LA ~8 Botst' St 7
Utah 27 Waslungton St 7

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Red Sox dim Mariners' wild card hopes with 3-2 victory:

• Metgs defeated Wellston by
:scores of 15·2, 15-10 in volleyball
action last Thursday at Metgs H1gh
~ hool's
Larry
R
Momson
'Gymnasoum
Woth the wm lhe Marauders raose
theor record to 2-0 overall and m the
TVC Meogs woll host Tnmble today

Scoreboard
Ran11ret CLEVELAND 38 A Rodti Kue~, Seattle
36 S Grttn Toronto 36 Staan Oakland. JJ Juan
Gonzalez Teus l l
STOLEN BA SES Stewart Toronto l6
V1zquel
CLEVELAND
lS.
ByA ndcrson
Balumof(' 14 8 L Hunter Seattle 11 R A.lomar
CLEVELAND. 13 Damon. Kansas Cny l\ 1 T
Goodwm Texas, 11
PITCHING (16 dectsiOns) P Mantnez Boston
20.4 8~1 2 26 Colon CLEV ELAND 1'1-5 750
4 12 Mover Seaule I 3 6 684 4 II 0 Hernnndcz
New York IS-7 682 406 Sele TeJ;a.s, IS-7 682
4 97 Mus51na Ualr1more 15 7 682 ~ 60 Fr
Garc1a Seattle 14 1 661 4 28
STRiKEOUTS P Martinez 8o5ton, 2:'i7 C
Finley Anahetm. 161 Sele Teus 158 D Wells
Toronto l.$7 Cone Nc:w York 14"i Colon CLEVE·
LAND 1-W Mu ssma Balumore 1-14
SAVES M R1\ era New York. 19 Weudand
Texas 19 R Hernander. Tampa Ba) 18 M
Jackso11 CLEVELAND l:'i Mes:~ Seattle 11
Koch Tornnto 27 Perctval An:the1m 21

Tuesday, September 7,1999

Bnan Meadows ( 11 -14) allowed
four runs and s1X hHs tn l1vo 1nnmgs.
and AntoniO Alfonseca pllchcd ohc
nmlh for hos 16th save on 19 chances

70Ho OO)SM
~t 6 30 PM
Cleave Your C u!an:.ncs AI rhc Door)

NOTICE OF THE PUBLIC HEARING
•
Meigs County mtends to apply to the Oh10 De partment of Development for funding under
the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) New Horizon Program , a federallyfunded program administered by the Stale. Meigs County is eligible for Fiscal Year 99
CDBG New Horizon funding in lhe eshmated amount of $15,000, providmg the county
meels applicable requirements.

The first of two public hearings will be held September 20 , 1999 at 1:00 P .M . al the regular meetmg of the Meigs County CommissiOners, Meigs County Courtilouse, Pomeroy,
Ohio to provide citizens with the pertinent mformation about the CDBG program including an explanation of eligible activities and program requirements . The goal of the CDBG
New Horizon program is to provide funds to units of local government to ·affirmatively
further fair hou sing in addition lo activities undertaken with their Formula Alloca tion
Program fund s. The activ1ties must be designed to primarily benefit low and moderateincome pe r son s or lim1ted clie ntele.

.

Citizens arc encouraged to attend this meeti ng on Septembe i· 20, 1999 lo make suggestions and to provide public input on various activities whic,h may be unde rtake n in this
program. If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailled or taped material, assisiJve lis tening device, other) due loa disablilty, please contac t Gloria Kloes, Clerk,
prior to September 20, 1999 at 7*0-992-2895 m order to en s u_re that your n eeds will be
accommodated. The Meigs County Courthouse is h and ica pped accessible.
Wrillen comm e nts Will be acceptPrl unhl 1;00 P.M., September 20, 1999 and may be
mail ed to the Meigs Court Commissioners, Courth ouse. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

Rcglstr,ltlon At The Door

HOLIDAY INN
Uppeo Roule 7

Jan el Howard , President
Meigs County Commissioners

~~-------------------·-· ------------------------JI

�Page 6 • The DaJiy Sentinel

Skunks
and Raccoons: For Watching But Not Pets
•
By Alden Weltt, Pmldent
Melg• County Humane Society

_ Raccoons and skunl&lt;s - on the
house reared as "pets," or trapped tn
ra1sed pens behmd the house - are
sad t reatures I cannot imagine why
:anyone would want to interfere with
thetr hves and keep them confined
Even de-scentmg a skunk to keep 1t
JJ1 the house as a pet. although not. I
would guess, inhumane, 1s certainly
1~1erfenng wnh its preferred way of
ltfe.
_ Most people would rather watch
~hem from a far and enJOY thCJr
anucs But some of us find thetr
presence unwelcome at those limes
}\l~'en they get onto thongs we would
rJJiher they didn ' t
' Raccoons. for example, m1ght
lii;e ch1mneys or attacks ' as nesung
sites to ratse thetr c ubs dunng the
:Spnng or summer. An aroused, protective mother raccoon w1ll attack to
_protect her young , so nddmg the
&lt;TlVIrons o f a raccOOI'\ and brood can
be m cky By the way, this 1s not the
' !lumane Officer's JOb W1ld ammals
-ate handled by the W1ldhfe Officer.
_ If you can, wa1t unt1l the fam1ly
moves o ut un 1tS ow n, 11 should only
ta ke a few weeks There won't be a
:Smell or a mess wh1lc they live ""h

k.led w1lh about a quaner of a cup of
ammoma around Jhe amc Do these
th1ngs at dusk, but don't overdo the
arnmoma for you could k1ll the
bab1es
Although they are nocturnal creatures, a mother may forage dunng
the day.if she has nursmg cubs and
her energy IS becorinng depleted On
the whole, you should leave raccoons and their bab1es alone If you
see a raccoon wnh paralysis, mov1ng
10 mcles, 1f the ammal IS screechmg. appears too lame, or IS behavmg
aggressively for no reason , then you
should worry and call the WJidhfe
Officer, for th1s could be a sign of

amves

rabtes
,
If you have a skunk' who you
would rather nor hve wtth or near

try to move the an1mal off the rOad 1f

you please try 10 get the ammal to
move on If you call an extenmnator. then the skunk may be k1lled
Agam, the •rad1o works ~ery well.
and you can place the radiO (w11h
very loud musiC ) near the nest You

can also cnuce someone will come

If you try to rescue a small animal yourself. remember that the animal (even a dog or cat) cannot know
that you are trymg to help and may
btle or scratch m sell defense Use
heavy gloves to protect yourself or
avmd d1rec1 handling An old trowel
1s helpful 1f you need to move an
IOJured ammal Gently coax or place
tbe ammal 10to a cardboard box and
transpon h1m to a shelter, wlldhfe
rehab1htator. or a receptive local vetennarJan. If there's a delay, keep the
ammal m a dark, warm, qmet place

to mimm1ze fear and stress
If you acwlentally k1ll an ammal,
you can do so 10 complete safety.
Otherwise , report the location of the
carcass to the local pohce depanment or Depanment of Transportation, and the personnel will arrange
for n to be removed. ThiS w1ll prevent scavengers from bemg auracted
onto the road and ehmtnate a poten·
l1 al traffic hazard

qu1ckly Stay 10 the area unul help

Protect. the-- .imggrtant
people m -your life.

you because mother raccoons clean

•

Tuesday, September

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. thc1r bab1es meuc ulo usly so as to
' a'\•oJd atl ractmg predators to the
'nest As soon iiS the raccoons are
•gone. you s hould call a ch1mney
-sweep to mstall a mes h chimney cap
·~n'd seal any holes leadmg to the
·attic (If that's where they ended up)
~ ' The reason the mothe r ra{;conn
--&lt;:hose th1 s place was because she
"was seckmg a dark, qUJet, no n nox~ ous smelhng places to rear their
' young If you create JUSt the oppo..S ite cond1tmns, you ~.;an keep them
out But a harassed mother Will not
iriove the bab1es 1n the day ume , th1 s
could take a couple ot days to a
:week Then you mist permanently
seal any holes :;he used to get m
· It you can't wan for her to move
LIJn her own, then try placmg a blar•mg rad10 m the fireplace Then put a
'bowl of ammoma on a footstool
: close under the damper and crack
;the damper open slightly. You can
also spnnkle a few drops of ammo1\.m on a rag and then wedge ot m the

t9j

10- or 20-year level temJ we
'
msurance fiom Auto-Owners

Timothy 0
Jones ,
ouppooodly d ..aoood, Jane
Doo, Unknown Spouoe ol
Timothy D. Jones, Rob&lt;lrt
Scott Toytor and Jane Ooo,
Unknown Spoull ol Rob&lt;lrt
Scott Taylor and H Timothy
0 . Jonee II deC111ed1 all
hotro, dovllooo. logotooo ,

+
Anoclotoo, ArChil- &amp;
Noel ,

oawaon

EnglnMI'II, 507 Richland
Avenue, Athan•, DH,
45701 upon payment of
depoolt ol $40.00 lor
each aet of documents.

Any bidder Rlumlng the
documonto In good
condition within ten
doyo ol tho bid opening
will t.. relundod tho lull
deposit,

mlnua

any

ohlpplng chargn, Any
nonoblddar retumlng tho
documento within ton
doyo will t.. refunded
hall or the dapoolt.
Th• olio moy bo
lnopoctod by Blddero at
9:00 o.m. Sept•mbor 8,

·-·

Bldo lor the above
doacrlbed work mull 11&lt;1
1ccomponlod by a Bid
Guortnly meeting tho
requlromonto ol Soetlon
I 53.54 ol tho Ohio
Rovlood Coda.
No
bidder
may
withdraw hie bid within
olxty days altar tho
actUil date ol tho
opening.
Blddaro ohall nolo that
tho Prevailing Wage
Ratoo published by the
Department ol lnduotrtal
are to be

executor1,

Jonea, whoae addreases
are unknown, will hereby

take notleo thot on tho
Docamber 9, 1998, USDA
Rural Dev•lopmont, Iliad lie
Complainl In Foreclosure

and Morahallng ol Llano In
tho Common Pleu Court ol
Molgo County, Ohio, baing
Coso No. 118·CV·109 against
Timothy D. Janet and Mary
Uribe and Robert Scott
Taylor praying lor judgment
In tho amount of $8,661 .71

forever borrod, thot upon
ltllure o1 Mid Dofendanto to
poy or to couoo to lM pold
uld judgment wnhln tiWH
dftya from Ito r-.Jon !hot
on Order ol Solo be loouod
to tho S!lorlll ol ,llelgl
County, Ohio, to 1pproloo,
odverlloo In tho Dolly
Sontln•l and ooll oold reol
oolltte, that !hi premloeo be
aotd !roo and cloor ol oil
clalmo, llano tnd lntoroot ol
any ol the portio&amp; her•ln,
thot tho procndo !rom IM
1111 ol aald premlooa bo
applied to the Plalntlll'o
judgment and lor oueh
other rellol to which USDA
Rural Development le
antltlod.
Said Dolondanta oro
dlroc,ed to the Complaint
wherein notice under the

fair debt collection practice
act Ia given
Sold Defendants will lake
notice that it be required to
answer sa id Complaint or\

or before the 12th day of
October, 1999 or judgment
will
be
randered
accordingly.
USDA Rural Development,
Plalntlll,
Stephen D. Miles, AttorMy
wllh Interest thereon (8) 10,17,24,31
according to the te'!!'l• of (9) 7,14 6TC
tho nolo !rom October I.
I 998 until paid and lor
Public Notice
foreclosure
of
said
lolortgoga Deed on the
NOTICE OF SALE
following deacrlbod real
By
virtue of on Qrdar
ealate, of which said
ol
Sate
laouod out ol the
Dolandanta, Timothy D.
Common
Pleaa Court ol
Jonoa and Mary Uribe and
Melga County, Ohio, In
Robart Scou Taylor are the the
CliO Ol the Homo
owners pf:
National Bank, Plalntlll,
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Brady Huffman, J(.,
ATTACHED HERETO ANO va.
et al., Defendants, upon
BY REFERENCE MADE A a ,Judgment therein
PART HEREOF
randarod , being Cue
and that Delendanta,
No. 99-CV-40 In oold
Timothy D. Jonas and Mary Court,
I will offer for sale
Uribe and Robert Scott

The right Ia reserved
by SEPTA Correctional
Facility, to reject any or
all bids, to waive
Informalities or to accept
any bid which Ia d..mad
most favorable to SEPTA
Corrtctlonal Facility.
(8) 31
(9) 7, 12 3T

Life Home Car Busmess

executrhcee,

admlnlotrotoro,
admlnlotratrlxll and
ooolgneoo ol Timothy D.

consecutive weeks.

vlutrJ-Ornren lnlunmee

Taylor, and II deceased, all
heirs, devisees, legatees,
executors, axecutrhcea,
admlnlatratora,

admlnlolralrlxos and
aaalgneaa and Jane Ooe,
Spouse ol Timothy D.
Jonoe, II deceased, and II
deceased, all hairs,
devlseea,
legatees,
executors, executrixes,

admlnlotratoro,
adm lnlslratrlxaa

and

assignees be required to

aet up any lntareat they may
have In said premises or be

It

the front door of the

Courthouoa In Pomeroy,
Malga County, Ohio, on
the 1st day ol October,
1999, at 10:00 a.m., the

following

Ianda and

tenemente, located al

49477 SR 338, Racine,
OH 4Snt. A complete
legal deacrlpllon ol the
real estate Is u follows:
The
following
doocrlbod real eatato,
situated In IM County ol
Melga, Slate ol Ohio,
Township ol Letart and
being In Fractional

Insurance Bel vices

'"

Public Notice

Public Notice

RESOLUTION 7.99
BE IT RESOLVED by
the Council altha VIllage

thence along tho north

ol Pomeroy, all membere
v thereto concurrlnQ:

That
the
Clerk/Treasurer ol the
VIllage ol Pomeroy,
transfer the aum

of

$40,000.00
(Forty
Thousand dollars) !rom
the General Fund to the
Stroot Fund lor tho
operallon of current
expenaea.

This

resolution

Ia

deem an emergency due

'to lock ol lunda lor
current expenen.

PASSED. August 16,
Kathy
Hysell,
Clark(Traaa.
Frank f!. . Vaughan.
Mayor
John
F. Musser,
President
1

(9) 714 2TC
'

Una of said 7 acre tract
north 84 dag. 4'50" weal

593.6 1111 to a point In
the centerline ol tho
public road; thence
along the centerline of

uld public road oouth
13 dog. 45'50":
388.60 leltl to a oplko;
thence oouth 25 dog.
29'50" e11t 155.68 loot
to an Iron pin ond the
true point of beginning
lor tho following
described r11l aststo;
thence conunulng along
the cantorllno ol the
public road south 25
dog. 29'50" east 346.00

••It!

feet to an Iron pin;

1999

"

Public Notice

Beginning ot tho
Southllll COrMI' of tho
Tom Norrlo Lot. oold
corner baing South 43
dog. Wool 1-M IHI trorn
the center ol the Stole
Hlghwoy; thence North
46 dog. 15' Well 147 !HI
olong tho Tom Norrlo
Lot , thence South 42
dog. 30' Wool 75 IHIIo a ,
stake on the Edna E. '
Shields, or what wao tho
Edna E. Shleldo, Woat ·

Public Notice

. :....:....~=..:..:..::..;::..:...:..._

SHERIFF'S SALE, REAL
- - ESTATE, CASE NUMBER
"
99CV007
, ..... CHASE MORTGAGE
. , , SERVICES, INC., A
Dolawata Corporation
" lka CHASE MANHATTAN
a MORTGAGE
" CORPORATION, Plaintiff
'-• •VI· DENNY R. RUNYON,
' • 1tl at., Delandanta
., COURT. OF COMMON
' PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
In pur1uance of an
n · "'Order of Sale to me
l..

directed from sold Court
In tho above entitled
action, I will axpooa to
uta at public auction on
., the front ttopo ol tho
Meigs County Court
House on Friday Oct. 29,
1999 at 10:00 A.M . ol
said day. the following
daocrlb&lt;ld real aetata:
The eaet hall ol the
north hall ol the
northoaot quarter ol
Section 3, Townohlp 7,
- -Range
14,
Ohio
Company's

purchase,

Scipio Township, Molga .
County, Ohio, containing
40 acres, more or leas.
~0 ·
Deed
Reference :
:3

". Volume 136, Page 407,
,,.. Melgo ~ ~unty Doed

thence south 8 dog.
37'50" oaot119.40 felt! to
an Iron pin; thence
leaving tho public rotd
north 48 dig. 55' Will
along the middle ol the
creek, 339.27 leal to an
Iron pin on the
southwest btnk ol tho
creak; thence north 23
dog. 10'40" aaot along
the middle ol the creek
225.69 1111 to the point
ol beginning, containing
0.974 acroo. Baing part
of

33-acra

lract

deocrlbed In Volume 125,
Page 475, Melgo County
Deed
Recordo.
Surveyed

March

17,

I 971, by Harold D
Whaley, License No
4986.
Laat prior conveyance:
Volume 253, Page 997,

Meigs County Dead
Recorda.
EXCEPTING
THEREFROM
THE
FOLLOWING
DESCRIBED REAL
ESTATE, BEING 2.5022
ACRES, MORE OR
LESS.
Baing a part ol a tract
ol land that to now or
lormarly In the name ol
George V. Mclain and
Claudia Shephard Mclain
as recorded In Deod
Volume 319, Pagoo 69
and 70 ol the Meigs
County

Racordar'1

Olllce, oald tra&lt;:t being
ettuatod In the Northoaot
Qu 0rter ol the Northuat

Quarter of Section 3, T·7·

.' ,

N, R-14 -W, Scipio
Townohlp, Molg1 County,
Stata ol Ohio and being

Townehlp 7, Range 14,
: Scipio Townohlp, Melgo
. . County,
Ohio .

deacrlbod ao follows:
Beginning
tor
rolerance 11 what lo
taken to be tho
aouthuot quarter ol the
northaaal quarter ol the

·"' Recorda

SAVE AI'ID EXCEPT
the following dtlcrlbod
- - raalelltato:
Baing 0.974 acre,
situated In Section 4,

more

particularly

the

northeaet quarter , of

aoutheael corner ol
- Stctlon 4: thence north 4
' deg. 42'10" oaat along
the tina between Scipio
and Bedford Townahlpo,
1386.00 , . ., to tho
" northeast corner or 7

Stctlon 3;
Thence 1tong the
eouth Uno ol tho
northoaot quarter ol tho

r,.,. Commanclng

r acre

at

tract ' preaenlly

owned by Weber Wood;

northeael quarter, North
84•28'38" We • t
a

dlotanco ol 391 .91 loot to
a Iron oplko oat (60
penny oplko) In tho

along tho center ol
Pagovlllo Road the
following lhrH eour11o:
I) North 42'37'05"
Will a dlolance ol 20.99
l11tto a point;
2) North 46'33'17"
Will I dlltlonce Ol 37·76
IHIIo a point;
3) North 5'1'01'54"
Will a dlotanco ol 49.36
loltlto an Iron oplka oet,
being the prlnclpol place
ol beginning ol th•tract
heroin daocrlblld,
Thence continuing
along tho center ol
Pagovllle Rood tho
following lour couraeo:
1) North 55'26'53"
Wtota dlotance ol 51 .13
1111 to • point;
2) North 56'48'05"
Woat a dlatance ol '
122.89 IHtto a point;
3) North 58'22'26"
Will a dlatance ol 73.62
•
loot to a point; •")'!
4} North 47 28'21 '
W01ta dlotonce ol 12.17
leal to an Iron oplko altl;
Thence loovlng tho
· center ol Pogovlllo Road
and with a Uno through
the Grantor'o properly
tho following throe

anglea only. Tho obove
deocrlb•d tract waa
ourvoyod by George F.
Seymour,
0 hI o
Proleaolonal Surveyor
No. 6044, October 11,
19115.
Current 0Wne111 N.oma:
Denny R. Runyon and
Julio M. Runyon
Property Actdroaa:
37406 vance Road,
Pomeroy, OH 45789
Parman•nt Parcel No.
17-00285.001
TERMS OF SALE:
Cash, cannot be aalcllor
looa than 2/3rdo ol tho
a p p r a to 1 d
vatu a.
$1,000.00 crown on day
ol oslo, caoh or certified
chock, balonca duo upon
conllrnlltlon ol oala.
Jameo M. soulaby,
ShoriH, Molgo County,
Ohio
DENNIS REIMER CO.,
L.P.A.
By: Donnla Reimer
(Reg.I0031109, Adem L.
Grooa (Rag. 10055392),

1) North 54'11'17"
Eoltl, ptoalng a 5/8" Iron
pin with 1 ploollc
ldantlllcatlon cap 111 at
50 leal, going e total
dlatance ol 485.88 loot to
a 5/8" Iron pin with a
plaltllc tdontlllcallon cap
set;

2) South 35'48'43"
Eaot a dlotanee ol 245
leal to a 5/8" Iron pin
with
a
pl . . tlc
ldonllllcatlon cap eel;
and
3) South 54'11'17"
Woat, pooolng a 5/8" Iron
pin · with a pl11tlc
ldantllleatlon cap aot at
350 loot, going a total
dlotanco of 400 toot to
tho principii placo ol
beginning containing
2.5022 •crea more or

tell and being oub)tctto
tho right ol way ol
Pogavlllo
Rood
(Townohlp Road No. 142)
and oil other aaoomonllt
ol record.
NOTE: On Octot..r 12,
1995 Pagevllla Road
(Townohlp Rood No. 142)
became LAJndaktir Road
(Town1hrp Road 256), 11
found In Record Journol
20, Pogo 228 ol the
Commlootonor'o Journal
ol Molgl County. All 5/8"
Iron plno with plottlc
tdont)llcatlon capo oat
are stamped "Seymour
and Associates".

The boorlngo uood In
tho above deocrlbed

BID ADVERTISEMENT
Silo Work
SEPTA Correctional
Facility
7 Woet 29 Drive
Noloonvllle, Ohio

It!

No Cre&lt;IH • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

Call 614-843-5426

AVON• All Areasl To Buy or Sell
Sh&lt;1ey Spears 304-675- 1429

long

ume being school Iandi!
In Stctlon 116.
•
Thla baing tho oeme;
real estate 11 tho! •

conveyed lrom Edna

E. ;

Shields, widow,
to •
Claudia C. Rouah by
dee~ January 18, 11178, '
and recorded Jo~
27, 1978, In Volum
0
at Page 17 ol tho
!
recorda ol Molgo County, •
'
Ohio.
Reference

Deedi

Volume 38, Page 829, '
Melgo County Official
\Recorda.
Audltor'l Parcel No.:

08-00648.000
PROPERT'f
ADDRESS : 411477 SR
338, Racine, OH 45n1
REAL
E S TATE
APPRAISED
AT:
S40,ooo.oo. The real
estate cannot be sold for
lese than two-thirds tho
appralood value.
TERMS OF SALE: 10%

~

;
,

6129/mo

WILLIS'
'SEAMLESS
GOnERS

day of aale r
balance, qn dollvory ol ,

dead. Sold aubjoet to •
accrued real estate
taxes

Jamos M. Soulaby

'

(9) 6, 13 3TC

,_

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i

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For mformation regardtng
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St Rt 7

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Mon.· Fri. 9:00 to 4:30
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

AL.L. Vat'd Sales Must
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DEADLINE 2.00 p.m
the day befOre ttie ad
II to run Sunday
edition · 2•00 p,m
Friday. Monday edition
-10 00 a.m Saturday.

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

Tuesday aM Wednesday 9 oo- 7
2 m11es east or Porter Rr 554
Ba by Clothes Ja ckets Cloll1est

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Pomeroy,
Middleport
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INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

&amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
-Joe N. Say,re

Limestone

•Roof~ng

COMMERCIAL an4 RISIDINTIAL
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day before the ad It to run,
Sunday I Monday editiOn•
1.00pm Friday

80

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Call for details

Henderson, WV

We Do...

HARIWElL
SIDRAGE

FREE ESTlMAT.tS

7 40-992-0038

0

.

1·800-730-7772. ext 801 0

ADBG, 666 5th Ave ,
Lower Level366
New York, NY 10103
t-eoo 96~

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

011A~~~IFO!ErJ~i

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
Umestonel'l'opsojl
Hal! ling
Bulldo&gt;er &amp; B" ckhoe

"
,I

Sl~n•Jces

I-I oust• '-'V T1 .ulc1

,i:;Jtcs

Land Cleanng &amp;
Grading
St&gt;pth s,s tems &amp;
V t1lrlles

(740) 992-3838

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
New ~oors • Repairs •
Coating • Gutters •
Siding • Drywall •
Pninting • Plumbing

Free Estimates

Joseph Jacks

740·992-2068

Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy. OH
. Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. # 00-50 11110111n

J &amp; L Insulation
&amp; Siding
• V1nyl S1d1ng
• Rooftng &amp; Seamless Gulter
• Replacement W1ndows
• Concrete
• RoomAddtt1ons • Garages
• Decks &amp; Boal Docks
~ames Keesee

II
PH: (740) 992·2772

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All U S Sliver And Go ld Cams Proolsets
Dtam onds Ant1que Jewelry Gold ,
Rtngs Pre 1930 US Currency,
Sterling, Etc Acqu1s1110ns Jewelry
- MTS Com ShOp 151 Second
Avenue Galltpolts 740 446 2842
Clean Lale Model Cars Or
TrLJ cks Low Mtles 1995 Models
Or Newer Smtih Bu ick Pontia c
1900 Eastern Avenue Galhpolts

-

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On

992-1717

$10.00 column 1nch Sundays

90

Cont. #WV003506

10 X 20$60

$8 00 column mch Weekdays

Wedemeyer s Auction Servtce
Gallipolis Oh•o 7'-40·379--2720

(304) 674·3311 CoU Ph.

10 X 10$40

Advertise your
message

Rick Pearson Auc tton Co mpany
lull tlme auc 11oneer complete
auct1on
ser vt ce
Licensed
#66,0hto &amp; West V1 rgm1a, 304·
773·5785 Or 304·773-5447

MYERS PAVING

ST. RT. 7

';1Pu'll be (Joarmg.vn o cloud w1th
•• rh• buy! you II ( md m rhe
1
CkJ!S,(ItdS

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Moodtspaugh Auc tiOneering
Complete Auc t1on eermg Services Cons1gnmen1 auction Mtll
Street M td dlepor1 Thursdays
O.h1o L1cense ff7693 740·989-

(No Sunday Calls)

3/11/99 TFN

Flt•llllo Schedule up to 13.oDQ •
month procualng medical
claims. No experience neces~

•ery PC

MEDICAL BILLING Earn E.xcel
lent Income Full Trammg Coni·
puter Requ1fed Call Toii·Frte
800·540-6J33 Ext 2:xl1

OffiCe seektng MBd1ca1 Data-enVy
reps for Entry-Level POSlhOI'I FT/
PT E~tcellent Pa~ PC Reg CaR 1' •

800·298-8506
UOrHERS &amp; OTHERS WOR K
FROM HOME I Mati·Order Paft
Ttme &amp; Full T1me $650 ·$3 6001
Month Full Tratnlng Provided•
For FREE Booklet Call 1·688 234·
9897 www cash-911 coiT'llhome

Rap 1«11)' Grow~ng Independent
Bank Has Pafi· T 1me Opportun1ty
For Fnendly EnergetiC Person To
Prov•de Supenor Customer SeN
Ice Process Customs{ Transac
hans And Promole Bank Serv1c·
es Should Ha\ie Customer Serv
1ce Expenence Preferably In A
BaAk Savings &amp; Leah Or Cred1t
Umon Qpportumty Fo r Advance·
men! And A Great OU1ce Work
Env tronmenl Apply In Person To
Oak Hill Banks 500 Thtrd Avenue GaMipoi!S EOE M!FfDN

Need BabySitter tn M~ Home To
Watch A 3 Year Old , Need Refet·
erces 74~441-0867'
Part ttme recePtiOniSt/ bllhng Olei'k
for local phys1ctan s offtce EKpen
ence Wl!h computer codmg and
med1ca1 billing preferred Senct 'fe·
sume to PO Box 458 RaCH'lEI . OH
45771
POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 I HR
INC BENEFITS NO EX PEAl·
ENCE FOR A~P AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1-a00-813-3585
E XT ,.2 1Q 8 A M · 9 PM 7
DAYS fds 1nc

Christmas Around The World &amp;
Gtfls Now Htrlng Sales Representatives .4.11 Areas Also Bookmg
Pa rt1es . Call Monday -Fndey
7PM ·SPM 7'4()-446-9219

Aockspnngs RehabilitatiOn Ce"ter
w1U be runnmg a class to train 1n·
d1v1duals who want to become a
State Tested Nursing ASSIStant
lnteresled candidates should ap
pl~ to Rockspnngs Rehabilrtalton
Center 36759 Rockspr ings Ad ,
Pomeroy Ohm 45769 Ann Carot
Greeni ng D1rector of Nurs 1ng
Equal Opportuntty Employer

Computer Users Needed Work
Own Hrs $25K ·S80Kt Vr 1 800·
536-0.WS X 7TI7, www 1cwp com
DENTAL BIL~ER Up lo $20 $40
/ Hr Denta l 81lhng Software Com·
pany Needs People To Process
MediCal ClaimS Tratrolng PfOVId
ed Must Own Computer 1· 800·
223-1149 Ext 460 •

Route Sales Postl!On Av:t.llable
Please Call (740)44&amp;-9892 ~
Scen1c Hills Is Otfenng CN A
Classes If lntere sle d Apply At
Scen ic HtUs, 31 1 Buckndge Road
B1ctwell

Director of
Marketing/Admissions

.

100 bed nu rsmg center w1lh 28
bed dtsttnct part focusmg on 11en·
t1lator and respiratory care needs
an expeoeneed Director Of Mar
ketlng /Adm1ss1ons Candtdate
should be self starte r and htghly
moltvated Southern Oh to location
with phystcal plant and strong
management team 1n place

State Tested Nursmg Ass1stahts
needed for 100 bed sk1lled nurs·
mg tactl lty EnergetiC entl'luslasIIC and dedtcated stall to care for
our restdenl s Intere sted cand1·
dates shou ld apply to Ro ckspnngs Rehab lh tat 1on Ce nte r,
attn Carol Greemng 0 1rector ol
Nursing 36759 Aockspnngs Rd .
Pomeroy. Ohto 45769 Equal Op·

Competitive compensation pack
age with tncentlve bOnus program
ava tlable tor the rlghl candidate
Relocation ass1stance ava1table
SeM resume salary e:.~pectatlon.
and references to

l

Wanted To Buy Used Mob1le
Homes Call 740·446 0 175, Or 1·
304 675·5965

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

portumty Employer

1

David Snyder Admtn.strator
Overflrook Center
333 Page Street
Mtddleport, Oh10 457'60
740·992·64.72

DIAECTQB OF l(;CQYNVNG
100 bed nursmg center w1th 25
bed D1sl Part rocus mg on Venti
Resp Care U01t needs an expen
anced track record proven health
care accounting manager South·
ern Oh10 locatiOn, excellent phY.S·
jcal plant ext ens1ve mgt te8m
and quality staff In place Looktng
lor the nght candidate that can
supervtse subordmates and dl·
rect ly manage "hands on· the
stand alone full servtce compu ·
tenzed accounting system
Compet1hve compensation pack
age 10 be offered to the right can
dldate, Including benefit plan and
reloc al!On as s1stance lor ra m11y
move to Center's 10cat1on
Send resume salary expectatiOn,
and list of references to
Dav1d Snyder A.dm1n1strator
Overbrook Center
333 Page Street
Middleport, OhiO 45'?60

740 992 6472
Domino's Ptzza ot Potnl Pleas·
ant Now Htnng Safe Onve rs
Flex ible hOurs Advancement op
port untl!eS App ly m person
Dnver /Owner Operalor Chtcago
Area Truck Company Needs
Owner Operators To Operate
East Of Rock1es Great Pay New
Trailers, Maximum Mtle s Small
Fleet Owner Welcome Call Jerr y

sae 782 5400 e,, 201
DRIVERS • IMMEDIATE OPEN·
INGS REGIONAL IOTA Starl At
29 CPM /All Mt · Unloading Pay •
Persona11zed Dispatch • Home
O!ten - Holtday /Vacation Pay
401 k / Medtcal /Pre s /Dental As·
signed 99 T2000 s • Rtder Program 98% No ·To uch Freigh t
Call Butch AI Sum mit Transporla
bon 800 876·0680 EOE
Or1vers 2 Week Paid COL Tratn ·
mg No E)(p Needed No Money,
Nor Cred11? No Problemt Earn Up
To $32 000 / 1st Yr W /Full Bene
his PAM Transport Call Toll
Free 1·877·2 30·6002 www Otr·
dn~Jers com
Fuii·T1me Wattress 1 Apply In Pe r·
son At Holiday Inn Galhpolls
HAVE DOCTORS NEED BILLER $ Fli PIT Medical Bllhr'lg No
Ex.penen ce Necessary Earn Up
To $40k+ Workmg At Home
Must Have IBM Compat ible PC
Call 1 800 697 7670 www medJ·
crew nel
Help wanted ca nng lor elder ly
7pm 9am 740·992·5023
HOLZER EKTRA CARE

110

HelpWanted

$2 000 WEEKLY! Mail,m g 400
Brochures t Sat1sfact1on Guar·
anleedl Postage &amp; Suppl1es Pro·
v1ded1 flush Se lf Aedressed
Slamped Envelope I GICO DE PT
5 B ox 1438 ANTIOCH : TN
3701l·1438 Start Immediately

$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSSI WORK FR OM HOME
PROCESSING GOVERNM ENT
REFUNDS NO EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY 1 800 854·6469
E.xt 5045

1800

WEEKLY
POTENTIAL
Complete S1mple Government
Forms At.Home No EJ~ penence
Ne cessa ry CALL TOLL FREE
~ 800 966 3599 Ext 25'0 I

Lfirl POSIIIOn 3 To It W1th Shift
D111erent~al

&amp; EMpertence Pay
Apply At Scenic Hills Nurs1ng
Center 311 Buckndge Road 6td·
well

Nee ded Im mediately Pe rsonal
Care A1des (All Shltts) For Holz·
er Extra Care To Wo r k tn The
Galha / Ja ckson /Meigs County
Areas
bompetltlllfl Wages Offered

If Interested Con tact
V1Ck1 NotTingham
Holzer Extra Care
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jackson Ptke
Gallipolis OH 45631
Phone 1 800 920 8860
EOE /ADA Employer
Laborer F.or Sei·Up Crew AI MO·
I'Hie Home Oea1ersh1p E)(pEiflence
Preferred Call 304 736 3888

WANTED
63 People To Lose 30 lO s In 30
Days &amp; Ear n $$$$$ Wh tle Surl1ng
The
Net
1· 886·229· &amp;•27
www evtlahty neVfeelgood

required . {800)145,-

7H1.

(3041675-5858

1

• Parking Lots
• Basketball Courts
• Driveways
• Grading Work
• Hauling Stone
(304) 675·2457 Office

740·992·7643

740·742·2138

Fast Money No selling Not MlM'
earn $1 250 per day t 800·882•
!Kl44 1Dr272692 PPR

All Yard Sates Mutt Be Paid In

'Advance Deadline 1:OOpm the

740·985·4180

Hauling

Yard Sale

KCB

Take the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.

New Homes • V1ny1
' S1d1ng • New Garages
•Replacement Windows.
•Room Add1t1ons •

Lost and Found

Los l reward last seen August
24th Tuppers Plains area- b1rd
dog white with 11'11er colored head
and t1ckmg bulldog tan wtth black
eye and nose, $100, 740·667·
3126

7/22(TFN

Linda's Painting

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

Giveaway

Female Ca lico C at and CaliCO
Klnens 740 256-6806

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
985-4473

Tuppers Plains , OH

ADVANCED DRAINAGE SY::iTEMS INC

pd

;TRUCKING

\

Ouahty ctothmg and hOusehold
rtem s $1 00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru Saturday
9 00·5 30

40

8" Gravelle~~ Leath
]00'- 1000' Rolls 1" &amp; 3/4" 200#Water line
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators Water Slorage Tanks

Garages

SAYRE

Annou.ncements
New To YOU Thrift Shoppe
9 West Simson Athens
740-592-1842

Culverts 4'"- 48" 1n stock

VInyl Sldlng-Roola-Decks,

Free Estimates

TONIGHT'

4/2 TFN

740-985-3813

New Conotructton a
Remodel(rlg-KIIchen Cablntlt

..

I '

30

Painting

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

SunsatBoma

; 740-992-3470

DATING

Start Oa trng Tonrght' Have fun
playrng the Ohro paling Game 1·
800 ROMANCE extensiOn 9681

Septic Tanks Pumped

William Safranek, Attorney
(740) 592-5025 Athens

740 117-113111

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
' Agricultural Lime,
Mrtlch, Top Soil

CASH LOANSI
• Bad Cred1t OK
• Easy Ouahfy1ng
•Fast Service
• Low Payments
• Conhdential
1-800--478-Q410

START

Have Fun Meelmg Elig ible Srn ·
gtes In Your Area Call For More
Information 1 800 ROMANCE
Exl 9735

Gutter Cleaning

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

(low Rates)

STRUGGLING WITH BILLS?
CON50uuATi: IN'iO ONE LOW
PAYMENTJI
Reduce orWa1ve lntetesl
Slop late Fees
_~~~Cl&lt;~der~crt~,ne
~~-~~·~&lt;ia~m~c~om~~..JI Stop Collector Calls Avo1d Bankruptcy
~
CONTINENTAL CREDIT
COUNSEliNG

pl1 es To CLA 339 c/o GaU1polis
Dally Tnbune 825 Th1rd Avenue
GallipOlis. OH 45631

Downspouts

We Deliver '

Low or 0 downl
' and bank
repo's be~ng sold NOWI
Fi~anc1ng Available.yall Nowl

Walks &amp; Fnen,dst'up Send Re

Hours
7:00 P,.M - 8:00 PM

HOWARD'S TRI· COUNTY SANITATION .

Personals

Gentleman Seekmg Cofnpan1on·
Ship From N1ce Female For Talks

45n1
740-949·2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

Porta Jon rentals

(740) 992·2753
or 992·1101

992·6215

per day

005

Racine, Ohio

Mighty Mac Aeration Systems
500 gal.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

29670 Bashan Road

20 Yrs Exp • Ins Owner Ronnie Jones

·New Homes•
Remodeling • Siding
• Roofs
25 yrs experience

WICKS
HfiOLirtG lrtC.

MEDICAL BILLER
to $45,000/yr. Process
lclairr~ from home. Tra~mng
own computer. 1

_ c,wtn9

• ~etno"a\

CONSTRUCTION

740-992-52!2

63033.

,jop

SMITH'S

• 33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Olrio

PMB

HILl'S
SELF STORACE

• if\11\

5111199 1 mo pd

• ·High &amp; Dry
: Self-Storage

LOANS BY PHONE
FAST AND SIMPLE
NO CBEPIT CHECKS!
$1200 Monthly Income. Active
Checking Account, Direct DeposHed
Paycheck Aeqwed.
Call 1-888·891·MONY

'

740-742-8015
877-353-7022 (loll free)

7/27199 2 mo pd

6/24199 1 mo

TREE SERVICE

Sidewalks, Pat1os
25 yrs experience
Free Est1mates

LUMP AND STOIIEI COil
H.U.P. VOUCHERS
ACCEPTED
DEUVERY AVAIUIU
1-touRs; 7am THRU 4pm

(8) 30

JONES'

Duality Dnveways,

'Albany, Ohio

Colll.-.e62-:Z.053

Avon PrOduclS Stan your own In·
Ho me Busmess Work Fl ea1ble
Hours. EnJoy Unhmtted Earn u,gs
t·P.BS-561 2866

CONCRETE
CONNEOION

1·800·311·3391
·. Free Estimates
'Contractors Welcome

22 yr..

20 years experience

YOUR

·$iliinf &amp; S11#il

,

down

Over

Phone (7 40) 593-6671

,

'

No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated wllh Respectl

• Room Additions

'

Except and' oubj
to :
all rlghto, II any, •• may I
be agalnat oald root ,
estate by reaoon ol tho '

WORRYING!!!

-...$ Vinyl Siding • Garages
• N~~ Homes • Pole Buildings

alte. Mlacellaneoua site

otorm drainage Included
In projtct.
Bldo ohall be 1 on 1
lump oum baolo with on
alterneta lor Interlocking
retaining wall.
SEPTA Correctional
Facility will raeelvo bldo
until 2:30 p.m. locolttmo
on September 15, 1999,
at 7 Wast 29 Drive,
Noloonvllla, Ohio 45764.
Blda received alter thla
time will not bo

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

Help Wanted

Grtal Poy APPC.V
&amp;-·
rtiDAY.
STAR fOIIIOIIIIOW

Pu1 h Town•
S25 ·575 rHr PTIFT
f--891)-3481
VtJWW pc lnCOm8 rom

dog. IS' East 150 loltl to ;
a atako; IMnCI North 42
dog. 30' Eoat 75 !HI to •
stoke; thence North 46
dog. 15' Wool 3 IHI to.,
tho place ol beginning,
tho aama baing • lot 75
1111 wlda by 150~oot ;

.......

Panich, Noel, D1wson +

Auooloteo
Archlttcto &amp; Englnura
507 Rlchlond Avenue
Athena, Ohio 45701
(740) 592·2420
SEPTA Correctional
Facility, will rocalvo
oeolod blda on the
following Contracto:
Silo Work Coot
Eotlmata $60,000.00
Alternate 1 Coal
Eollmato $48,000.00
Slto work lncludoo
removing oon motorial
roar ololte and placing It
In exlollng pond area on

795-0310 Eod. t20 I (2&lt; Hrl)

Free Estimates

Attomay1 lor Plalntlll
P.O. Box 968, 9806
~~v:-rRd., Twlnaburg,
(330) 425-4 201
(9) 7, 14,21 3TC
Public Notice

CRDrr PIOBLEIIS???

'f.

E.xpenenced S.rv1ce TeCh 8l(y·
cit &amp; Lawnmowtr ~sstmD~

Toys. Jewelty, Wood Sewmg.
Typing Groal Pari CALL 1· 800-

llne i thence South 48 ,

Public Notice

for lhe dltermlnlltlon of

cour•••:

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

•' r---------------~
Now Renting

northeast quarter end

~dean 9. 9~·~156

Help Wanted
ASSEII8lY AT HOllE II C•atts,

Ann CNA s Home Health Agen·
cy Now Hmng Fuii·T1me And
Part·nme Postttons Agency W1U
Tra 1n For The PCA Po&amp; lttons
Musl Have H 5 ll&lt;ploma GEO 0&lt;
Some E:.~per1ence Carrng For The
Elderly Vou May Ptck Up An Ap·
pltcatton To 266 Upper Rtver
Road, Gallipolis. OH 45631 , lBeStde Kenny s Auto Sales) No
Pnone Calls P~set

'214 Eaor Main
Pomeroy
992-6687

tract wore baud upon
aouth line ol tho
northoaat quarter ol tho
northoaat quortar ol
Stcllon 3 beorlng, North
84'26'38" Wool and ore

To pl,ace an

110

110

ATTENTION:
..._A
Compui!WP

MONDAY-FRIDAY
7amTONOON
SATUJIDAY

· cantor Dl Pagovlllo Rood
(Townohlp Road No.
142);
Thence leaving the
oouth line 01 tho
northeoot quortor of tho

The Daily Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~:

'·.' ~~~~~==::====~,:::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'

7, 1999

Business Services

oectlon 118, Town II •
and Rongo 112 ol ,,. !
Ohio
Compony ' o
Put-llolntl boundod
end doocrlbed II

11.1&amp;..'-""•

ROGAN @.V
. RNER _:

,leave all the hghls on and put that
nblanng rad1o and some rags spnn·

45402

Tho prolect shall be
completed within 10

details and a i:ompennve p~.

an 1nch or so
To ev1ct raccoons from an atuc.

oxamlnod and obtlllnod
at tho olllce ol Panlch,

contract.

lmurance O:nn{llily. Call tl'; rormore

74~

NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
Stophln D Millo, Attorn•y
at LAJw. 18 W. Monu.,.nt
Avon... Deyton, Ohio

Copt•• or tho Bidding
Documents may Ill

compiled
wllh
throughout thla project.
Blddera shall aloo nota
that the Rules and
Rogulatlono on Equal
Employment
Opportunity (Executive
Order l1246) ohall be ,
modo a part ol this

ou now have the option of plt;ll:ectmg )001' f.unily members

Public Notice

-...umo.

Relations

~J o r a businesS Jmtner Mth iow-o.'R

~damper

o"'*JJIod. Bldo will 11&lt;1
oponod ond publicly
relld otoud lmmodlat•ly
oltor the opoclllod

Tuesday , September

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

7, 1999

The Metg s County Council on
Agmg Inc ts se8ktng a AN or
LPN health profess1onal for pOSt·
lion ot Long Term Care (LTC ) asSIStant dtrectOr Jotl responslblll
11es wtll mclude personnel super·
v1s1on chenl assessment and
mon11onng, l'l ea lth tra 1n 1ng and
agmg network reports M1mmum
quallhcatlons A N Wlth a mtmmum
of 3 years superv isOry ex pe n·
ence m a health care settmg or
LPN w11h a mm1m um of 5 years
superv1sory exper 1ence 10 a
health care settmg Applications
are avatlable at the Me•gs Multi
purpose Semor Center Multlerr.,.
He1ghts Pomeroy Oh An, EOE
Erll)k)yer

VICTIM ADVOCATE
The Sol~eltors Of11ce For The Ctty
Of Gal l1poi1S Is See~1ng auaill1ed
AppliCants For The POSibOn 0!
\liCtlm Advocate T hiS IS A
Position ResponSible For
Orgamzat10n Coord1nat1on And
lmplemenJaliOn Of A V1c1hm's
Asststance Program For Female
Vlcttms Of Misdemeanor Crmes
In Gama County Candkjates
Should Possess Excellen!
Commumcat10n And
Organ1zat1onal Sktlls Other
Necessary Skdls Incl ude
Managtng A Budge And F1lmg
Quarterly Reports CaM1date
Must 8e Computer Literate
A M1mmum Of Bachelor's
Degree In Counseling Or
Reta teo F1~ld Preferred
Send Resume To
C1ty Sol~e l to r
Post Of11ce Box 969
GallipOliS OhiO 45631
By September a 1999
Equal Opportunity Employer

WANTED
63 peop le to lose 30 lbs m 30
days &amp; earn SUSS whtle surllng
the net 1·888·229·5427 www ev1·
tallty nel/1eelgood
Warehouse And Delt very Person
Apply In P.erson No Phone Calls
Plea se1 L1lestyle Furnit ure 856
Third Ave GallipoliS
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 IHR
INC B~NEFITS G AME WAR·
DEN S
SECURITY
MAIN
TENANCE PARK RA NGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM IN FO. CALL 1·800· 81 3
3585 EXT 14211 8 AM ·9 PM
7 DAVS Ids lnc
Wtll Clean Houses Caii 1M1randa
For A Free Est1mate 740-446
67{)9
WORK FROM HOME!
Earn $500 $1500 P'T or S2000
$4000 FI T per month Call j.
(68 8)957 3206 or VISit V.W\10 al·
waysthebest com

140

Business
Training

Gelllpollt Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call TMayl 740 446 4367
1 800·214 0452
Reg 1190·05 1274B

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Bachelors
Maste rs Doclora'te By Cor'r e·
sponoence Based Upon Pnor Ed·
uca t1on And Short Study Course ,
Fo r FREE lnto(matlon Bo Q.klet
Pho ne CAMB R IDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800 964 83 16

180 Wanted To Do
E &amp; S Lawn Ser111Ce Destg n lm·
plementatlon
and
Serv1ce
A11a1 lable tor Sprmg Clean up
lertlltzlng arfo plan!lng Free es11
males Sat1slact10n guaranteed
Greg M•lhOan 3041675-4628
Georges Ponable Sawmill don t
haul your logs to the m1ll Just call

304-675-1957
J1ms Drywall &amp; Construct iOn
New Construction &amp; Remodel /
Drywall Sldtng Roofs Ad dl ·
liOns Palnllng etc {304)6 7 4
4623 or (304)674·01 55

•

�P~~ge 8

Tuesday, September 7, 1999

Pomeroy •

•

Ohio

ALLEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel •

.......

8IIIDOK

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHIUJP
ALDER

.,_
.,., hr

Years

Day

Care pre

now accepting appllca
fall enrollment Magic
Care lot' parents who
experience lt·

of wv

St

304

Nlftd child care? I have two
- · In my homo, Ohio &amp; wv
clw:IW Call 740-992· 3509 as~!!,
IDrMelisa.
We do lraater demoht1on&amp;some
h~&amp;
818~

trash ptck up 304 773

Will patnl Hqu•• (lnterlor/EJ.I8
rlor) " " " • Tin Agot, Expen
enced, References -+ Free Esh
~

1304)895-3981

Will Raoatr Farm Tractors Automobiles, lawn Mowers &amp; Semt s
Major Or Mmor Call 740 4:41

lllliJI

We Can Help Loans A11allablt
$3 000 And Up No Fee 1 877
663-9269 El1 221

CREDIT PROBLEMS STOP
HEREI' WE CAN HELPII LOANS
AVAILABLE $3,000 AND UP
CALL TOLL FREE I 877 663
91169 EXT 231
FREE CASH NOWI Wealthy Fam•hes Unloadmg Millions To Help
M1nimtte Their 1axu Wrile lm
medialely Fonune LPt PMB
249 1626 Norlh Wilcox Ave

SuOo 249 Hollywood CA 90028
GET YOUR CASH NOW! Oldest
Buyers 01 Structured Senlernenls

Annuttles And Governmen1 Farm
Payments Also Purchasmg Lot
tenes And Prlvale Mortgages
Call Settlement Captta l 1·800·
959 0006 www sentementcapt
!alcorn
Need a Loan ? Home Auto &amp;
Debt Consolidation GOOd or Bad
Credtt Ca ll toll free 877 65a

0551

FINANCIAL

21G

CREDIT PROBLEMS StOll Here

Need A Loan? Try Debt Consoli
dalton $5 000 • $200 000 Bad
Credtt 0 K Fee I 800 770 0092
Ext 21.5

Business
Opportunity

$3 000 WEEKLY! Matlmg 400
Brochures AT HOME! Guar
anteed FREE Supplies Start lm
medtately Rush Sell Addressed
Stamped Eniielope MOl 2472
Broadway Sulte t338 AP, New
York NY 1002S ·877-689 4109
!Toll Free)

1

,"'~

INOTICEI
OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISHING CO
reeom.;nent1s that you do tlusl
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have 1nvest1gated
~-ng

2 I Conti /Min. PHONE CARD
Rte EASY $$ MONEYII FEW
Hours! Earn SSOO $5 000 /Wk
CASH! FREE SHes 1 800 997
9888 24 Hrs
ARE U LAZY'? 1 Am And Earn
S1 000 A Day No Selling Not
MLM Free Info Package 1 800
786-8849, 24 Hrs XT 27

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 20 Localtons $41&lt; $10K
$4 000 +IMo Income • All
CASH! 100% Fmance Avatlable
f·800.380 2615 • 24 Hrs
Be1uty Seton for Sale 7 Sta
!tons! A 1 Location Plenty of
Parking 4 Tanntng Beds well Sell
together or Separate Call (740)·

361'0612
EARN $1 000 WEEKLY WORK
lNG FROM HOME!' I No Experl
ence - Bonuses PAID Free
Message 1·310-669·4952 Ext A

NEED AN EARLY PAYOAY77
No Olltce VtStt Necessary Up To
$500 Instantly Call Toll Free 1
an EARlVPAY 1st ADVANCE
FREEt Lie lcc70036

RECEIVING PAYMENTS? In
vestor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Financed Mortgage
Real Estate Conrracf Insurance
Annuity Hlghesl Pr1ces 'Free
Quotes Why Watl? Call Rtch 1·

800-888-6450
VISA IMC $5 000 limit No Credit
/Bad Credit OK No Secunty De
postt 100% Guaranteed For Info
Ca111 80D-859 9855 :&lt;ASS

230

Professional
Services

Beautiful Cleamng
In your
home or business Carpet and
upholstery to lnterior f &amp;JI.Iertor
walls dectc.s and driveways The
complete cleaning serv1ce Call
Clurty CIHn For Free hUmate

I 304·675-4040
Make Money Now Wltl'l A FREE
E Commerce Enabled Web Site
Call 1 800·533 1353 For More
Details
Mounts Tree Service "The Tree
Professionals" Bucket Truck
Serv1ce Top Trim Removal
Stump Gnndlng Free Eslimates
Fully Insured Works Comp Bid·
well OH Call And Save 1 800·
838 9568 740 388 9648 Own&amp;r
Rldl Mount

EARN $500

$1 200 /WK IN
YOUR BATHROBE &amp; SLIPPERS'
Greal Income Opportumty WI
Computers low Investment 1·

TUAHED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We Wtnl

I 888 582 3345

800-449·2969 Code 03

US

/Canada

HUGE OPPORTUNITY Wolh A
Revolutionary TetecommuntcaUona System Free Nauonwtde
Volcemall Call Forwarding Call
Screenmg LO Calls 7 9c /Min
NO SELLING Gtve Away Free
Trials 1·800·310·6718 Ext 1·
817-'"2..()442.

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subjeCt to
rthe Federal Fair Housing Ad
of 1968 wtuch makes 11 tnegal
to adllenise ·any preference
limttatlon or d•scrlmtnatton
based on race, color rehg1on,
sex famthal status or national
ortgln or any lnlenlion to
make any such preference
limitatton or dlscrlmhlatlon ~

MEDICAL BILLER Up lo $20
$40 /Hr Medical Bllhng Software
Company Needs People To Pro
cess MediCal Cla1ms Fror:n Home
Training Pro11lded Must Own
Compulers 1 800 434 5518 Ext
667

This newspaper wit! not
knowtngty accept
adverttsements for real estate
whtch IS tn viOlation of the
law Our readers are hereby
lnf~ed that all dwellings
actllertised In this new3paper

MEDICAL BILLING Unhmtled In

are available on an eq~,.tal

come Potential No Expertence , . ._ _ai,ppa;.rt•u•n•oy•bas-•ls--·
Necessary Free tntormatton &amp;
CD ROM Investment $4 995
$8 99S Flnanr:mg Available Is
REAL ESTATE"
land Automated Medical Servtc
es Inc 800·322 1139 Ext 050
Voklln KY, IN, CT
310 Homes for Sale

STAIIT YOUR OWN VENDING
Bualness For As Little As $5001

ALt CASH BUSINESS!' I 800

220-2985. 24 Hrs
VEfliOINO Not Get R1ch Quick!
Thlf Ia Vary Profitable And Stm
pt• Free Broch~,.tre 800 820

671f
WI~ Our Beautiful Income ·Pro·
duolng Building In Ma1ne1 For
Fr" Contest Rules /BUI!dmg
PrdSpeclus Visit www untctJrn
corees1 com Or Send SASE Um
coth Essay Contest P 0 Box
14$ Bethel, Ma•ne 04211 $20Q-

En11Y Fe&lt;! Required

Money to Loan
NEED CASH?? WE Pay

Cath For Remaining Payments
On · Property Sold! Mortgages!
Annul11eal Settlements! lmme
dials Ouolealll 'Nobody Beats
Ou~ Prices • National Contract
Buyers 800· 490 0731 Ext 101
www na!lonaiCOntractbuyers com
$F~EE

CASH

NOW$

From

Wealthy Families Un!oadmg Mil·
11001 Of Doltars To Help Mtmmlze
Thtf'J Taxes Write Immediately
WtridfaUs, 847 A SECONb AVE

SUITE 1350 NEW YORK NEW
YO~K 10017

'If Your Hearts rn The Country,
ve Got The Farm House For
You -Wtthout Ths Farm/' Lots Qf
Country Charm - While Prcket
Fencs Included/
67 Acre Level lot 3 Bedrooms
2 112 Baths Ul lllty &amp; Pantry
Ratsed l&lt;ttchen &amp; Dmmg Room
Kttchen Has Whtle New Cablnels
Electric Stove, Fng Washer &amp;
Dryer Included 11 Jl28 Front
Porcl'l Overlooking The Valley
11 xI 4 Back Porch t 376 Patriot
Road Priced In Low $70 s New
Whlte Ce lltng Fans Lights
Plumbing &amp; Carpet Throughout
(Hardwood Floors Under Carpet)
F~replace &amp; Lots 01 Storage! Call
740-379·9000 Or 1•0 3~9-9887
No land COntractsll
W~

SO DOWNI HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED!
GOV T
FORE
CLOSURES! GUARANTEE APR·
ROVED PHONE REGISTRA·
TIONI

1 BOO 434 2434

EXT

3205

3 Bedrqom House W/ 3 Acres
La nd Few Frui1 Trees 2 Bed·
rooms Bath Upstairs 1 Bedroom
Front Roonf Dining Room Uttllty
Room Kitchen Bath Downstairs

Sits On Slorys Run Road 0" Route 7 Information (740)· 367·
7576 After Noon $49 500 OBO

511·2840

3 Beclrooms 11112 Bath Ranch
Style Home. Excellent Condition
On The Corner 01 Klneon &amp; Teo
dora In GallipOlis, OhiO 740·446
7928 EvenlrlQS

BANKRUPTCY $79+ Stops Gar·
nisftmtntal Ol~oree $99+ Also
Fortclosure Avoidance Program
Homeowner Loans FreshStart 1·
888·395-8030 www freshstartu-

Buy Homes From SI0 000
1 3 Bedroom Local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Financing
~osslble For Listings can 800·
319 3323 Ext 1709

FREE MONEY! It's True Never
Re~ay
Guaranleed $500 •
$SCf,OOO Deb~ Consollda1ion Per
801\111 Needs Business 1 800·

saoom
CASH Or LOAN! Farm Cap1tal
wur PurchaSe Or Loan Agamst
Your Government Farm Pay
ment1 (CRPfPFC) Call Farm

Copilot I 888 FARM ACT 1327
6228)
CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monlhty Payments 20 50% Save
Thousands Of Dollars In lnletest
Nan-Prall1 TCC 800 758 38&lt;4

HOME FORECLOSURES • NO
MONEY OOWNI NO CREDIT
NEEDEDI TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! I 800 916
9191 EXT H5023
Three bedroom 1 &amp; 1f2 story ce
dar and stone l'lome 1 stone ch•m·
ney large wmdows two baths
basement co~ered deck large
garage '8 112 acre&amp; private
near Pomeroy 740.992 6176

We Buy Land 3Q ·500 Acres.
We Pay CUI'! 1 BOO 213 8385.
A•IIIIO•'I' Land Co.

nom.

t 68
acres 2x.6 construction block
foundation three bedrooms two
balhs ~rge !ani~ room . one car gar•ge separate one car
garage, large privacy fenced
backyatd ideal lor children or
pets front and back large eon·
crete porches with Sidewalks ,
heat pump propane gas, natural
gas tap, satell•te dish, 18x•o fln·
•shed pole butldlng air condt
tloned heated dry wall ceiling
lans 112 bath COOCfete floor Located SA 33 at Pratts Fork, 12
miles lrom Athens 15 mites from
Pomeroy $102 000 eatt 740 593
8527

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
12x.52 house trailer wtlh add-on
room central air. awning, patio,
old btlt very good on rented lot,
$4500 740-949 2013
12x60 mobtle home back dam·
aged by tree, $400
740·
992 5039

ceo.

14x70 two bedroom two 1utl baths
carpet air condltiOfli&amp;d call 74~
992 n61 or 740.992 2213
16x80 1996 Clayton loudon
A C 3BR 2Ba Take Over Pay
ments Ltke New (304)675-8165
1980 14Jt65 lwo bedroom, two
bath new atr conditioner great
cond1tlon $9500 740 949·2453
leave message

1988 SprUC8 Ridge 14x80 3 Bad·
rooms 2 Baths CA Ftreplace On
Rented Lot $10 800 740 379
2627
1989 New Hampshire 14K70 Mo·
btle Home 2 Bedrooms 1 Bath
All Electric Appliance With CIA
Gas FurnaceJ Shmgted Roof VI
nyl S1dmg '1S 000 740 3861601
I

RENTALS

736 3409
Brand New 80s 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths Just $2391Month Free
Delrvery and Sel Upt only one at
thiS Price! Hurryt Oakwood Gallo~

""~ (740)-440-3093
Brand New Ooublewlde 3 Bed·
rQPms 2 Baths only $3-tOJmonth
Free Delivery and Set·Up limited
Ofler won 1 Last! Only at Oah
wood, GalliPOliS Oh (740)·448·

Clean affordable previously
owned homes Large selecllon
avatlable Call Karena at Rtver·
dale Homes 740.365-4367
Come see our la~ge selection of
used home at Riverdale Homes
Neat. clean financing available
Ready for delivery Call Nikki at

740-365 4367
For Sate 1967 Homedale Traller

Call After 5 P.M 740-388 9611
Large sel~ion of used homes. 2
and 3 bedrooms available Excel·
lent condition Great
homes Call Cheryl 740 385·

4367
New Bank Aepo s Only 3 Left 1·
900 383-6S62
New 3BR 2 Bath 14 Wide $500
DOwn $210 per mo Free Air 1
B00-$9t.S7n
New 4BR 16 wide $.500 Down
$245 per mo Free Air 1 800

. ~69~1~~~n7~-------------­
Spectai 28x80 3 or 4BR $1000
Down $349 per mo Free Delivery &amp; Setup 1 8D0-691-6n7
Doubl!ll W1de On Lot $250 De·
post! 1·800·383-6862

330 Farms lor Sale
2'6 Acres MIL Horse Barn 3
Bedroom House 740.388-8504
Farm sa Acres tn Putnam Coun·
ty .Evergreen Aoael Nlce Home
Site Needs to be sold (304)675

68391(304)937 3312

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
t 31 Acres More Or Less
Fenced City School Sys1em Lo
catd In C1ay Township 740 388,
8504
2 44 Acres Homesite Green
Township Gallta County Scenic
Ou1et Close To Gallipolis, Some
Restnct10ns 740 245-5776
30 acres- ndge top half trees1
hall pasture field with water and
electric avatlabfe 2S minutes tO
Gallla or Athens $1400/ acre
must sell all Off 143 &amp; K1ngsbury

Rd Moogs County 740-992·5264
23 ACRES
2 MileS Off SA 7 &amp; SA 218 South
Of Galltpohs Singlew1des AllOwed
Rough Mostly Wooded Road At·
ready Cut In Land Contract
A'llailable Only $27 000 1·800·
213-8365

BRUNER LAND
74~·1-1492

Meigs Co : Rutland Whites Hill
Ad 11 Acres $14 000 Or 9 Acr·
es $12 000 Danville .. q 325 9
Acres S17 000 Water 0r Briar
Rtdge f1d . 7 Acres $13 000
Gallla Co •• Frlenclly Ridge Ad
Hunters 15 Acres S12 600 Cash

Water City Schools
Call NOW For Free Maps +
Owner Financing Info Take 10%
Off LISI Pnce On Cash Buys!

BUILDING LOTS
FOR SALE
Water and Eleclrle Ae•dy For
Hook-Up. Nice Loti 18,000 00

Eoc:h. Cell 30+773-51N

'

$2,000, LMI Than One Year Old
$1100080740148 4541

port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing OW&lt;&gt;r·

1740~9342

2 Bedrooms. S32Wo • •
No PelS

Utilil~es

7~13

""""''-

Ron,...- I

P101 ~m.
800-383-6862

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment.
7-40 448 0390

Outbuiklong $27Wo $150 DeposH. 2011 Chesnul Sl...._ Gallipolis 740-446-3870

Nice Ground-Floor 2BR, WJO
Hook up Reference, Deposi1 No

Pets.l304)e75-5162

3 Bedrooms $250/Mo $1.50 De

Nice Large 2 Bedroom Apart·

posit 27 Ann Street Pomeroy 3
Bedroom S2501Mo1• S150 Oepos·
11, 112 Condor Street, Pomeroy
740-38&amp;-8591 304-633-8937
Lease Or Rent With Option, 2
Bedrooms, Ba5ement, Finished
Atbc Galhpohs Good Area $400/
Mo &amp; Deposit Reterences &amp; No
Pets 74o-.M1-on7
Modern cabin on large farm AI·
bany area, must have good refer·
ences, no ms1de pets 74D-698·

7244
Pomeroy three bedroom house
two bedroom apartment ntferences, security partly furniShed 740
992-6886 aftOI' 5pm

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

monL

&lt;lYt&lt;-"'11

Pori&lt; GallipOlis

Deposit! $325 00/Mo Plus Utili

lies 1740)387-0221 or (740)·
3677242
Nice Unfurnished 3 Bedroom
Apartment, Point Pleasant 30-4·

675-2015
Now Talilng AppliCations- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments Includes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo , 740·

U60008
Tara Townhouse A.partmanta,
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2

Floors CA 1 1/2 Balh Fully Car·
peted Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Pallo Start $3.50/Mo No Pets,
Lease Plus Secunty Deposit Required. After 5, 7-40·446·01 01,

Balaro 5 740-446-34111

14l60 2 Bedrooms Open Kitch
en, Living Room. Atr, Electric
Washer &amp; Dryer, Relrigerator
References, No Pets Deposl1

740-256 104-4
14x70 &amp; 12x65 !railers $250
month S150 deposit total electnc
two bedrooms no pets 740·742
27t4
14~75

Trailer AJC 3 Bedroom&amp;
2 Baths ' Ready Sept 61tl ac
ceptmg Hud
Neighborhood
Clean, Reference Plus Ceposlt.!
Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
conditioned $260·$300 sewer
water and trash mcluded, 740·

992·2167
2 Bedroom Mobile Home 13201
Mo Deposit $t50 740 446 0368
Evernngs
2 Bedroom on Cora Mill Fld De·
postt ReqUired No Pets! {740)·

245-5622
2 Bedroom Trailer $300/Mo +
Oepast1 Water Included 740·
.W1-QOOO, 740-441-1238

Unturnlshed clean apartment In
Mlddtep011, $350/mo plus utllittes.

740-384-7803
Upalalrs Furmshed, 3 Rooms,
Bath Clean No Pelsl References
&amp; Oeposl1 Required 740 446

1SI9
Valley VIew Apartments, Rio
Grande Oh Now Accepting ap
pllcallons lor lmmediale occu·
pancy 1 I 2 Bedroom Apt&amp; Air
COndlhon~ng, Kitchen appUenc;es
Fenced 1t1 Playground laundry
On Sight Managemenl Water
Sewage and Trash Paid FuN time
S1udents must meet Ohio Hous·
lng Finance Agency Quallflca
tions Senior C11izens ~elcome
EHO For more Information call
(740J·24S·9170 Monday ·thruThursday 9:00 -12:00 noon

1740) 245-9322

Mobile Home Lot For Rent, Green
Township Restricted $150/Mo,

740-446-o885 After 5 30 P.M
Mob1le home site available between Athens and Pomeroy. call

740-385-4367

MERCHANDISE

Household

Goods

Mobile home for rent In Pomeroy
erea no pets, 740..992·5858

256-6574

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers Flanges. Relri·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740·446·

Neatly Furnished 2 Bedrooms.
Water Sewer Paid $37SfMo +
Oepostt References &amp; No Pets
740-441..0m

7795

Two bedroom mobile home Po·
meroy $1SO deposit $325/mo
also mob•te home lots $90/mo

JackSon Avenue.l304)675-7388

740.949 2093
WATERLOO
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths $33S/Mo
Plus References Deposit, Also 1
Bedroom $275/Mo Trash &amp; Wa
ter Included 7-40-643·2916 After

4 PM Or 740 643-2644 Allor 6
P.M 1

440

Apartments
for Rent

992-2;!18

t bedroom apartment In Middle·
port all utllllias paid, $270 per
month $100 deposit 740 992·

7806
1 Bedroom Upstairs, Clean No
Pets References $30QfMo Paid
Utllii:IB&amp; 740-44&amp;-3667

1 Bedroom AJC WID Hook·UP
Near Arbors Nursing HOI'Tit No
Pets Qule1 localions $219/Mo

+ Ubitles, 740-448-2957
1 Bedroom, ~II Uttltles Included
$3851Mo. 740-441..0720
2 Bedrooms With CIA Gas Heat
Water &amp; GartJage Paid $300/MO
Deposit Required References
740.446-7456
2 BR Apartment, New Haven
Area
All utilities Included
$385 DO mo + deposit (304)773·

ssn leave Message

2bdrm apt&amp; • total electnc. appt•ances furnished laundry room
facilities close to school In town
Applications available at VIllage
Green Apts U9 or pall 740 992

3711 EOH
2BR Apt In Mason Stove/Rfl!lrlg·
erator!Utltules furntshed A C •
Laundry Room Ceiling Fans,
Garbage Disposal Very Nice No

Pots (3041773-5352/(304)882·
2627
4 Rooms &amp; Bath Garage Apart
men! Stove &amp; Refrigerator Wash
er &amp; Dryer New Carpel &amp; Paml
Seeurtty Oepostl, $250fMo No
Pets 740-446-1163

no

pelS 740-992 5858
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES &amp;2 .Westwood Drl~e
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; mov1es Call 740· 446·2568
Equal Housing OpportunJI)&lt;
Chrlsly s Family Living apart
ments home &amp; trailer rentals
740 992·4514 aparlments avell·
able furniShed &amp; unfurniShed
First Aven"'e Gallipolis 1 &amp; 2
Bedroom Apartmen1&amp;, $250 &amp;
$300/Mo. Unfurnished, Securily
Deposit References Required
740 446 1066 or Weekends

741l-441..0052
For Lease One Bedroom AC
Apt Corner Ot Second And Pine
$250JMo Plus Ulllltles, Security
And Key Deposit, Retertnces Re·

qulred No Pots 740-446-4425

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers dryers, retr~gerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances. 76
VIne StrHt, Call 740·446· 7398

Hi8B•8111-&lt;l128
New And Used F~,.trnlture S1ore
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga
Beds Ches1s Couches, Tables,
Much Morel Stop And See Us

740-446-4782
A&amp; D's Used

Furnl1ure, Buying Par11al Or

•

Apartment tor rent 1n Pomeroy

For Sale Reconditioned wash
ers dryers and relrigeralors
Thompsons Appliance 3407

QUICK CASH

1 ahd 2 bedroom apartments fur
nlshed and unfurnished security
~eposit required no pels 740

Discour&lt; Homo
"""" &amp; Supply
Huge IIMillory
VInyl Skirting KOs $299 95, 5 GalIOn Alum~num Flbered Roof Pa1nt

$25 21 s Gal Whtte Roof Paint
$57 69 Anchor5 15 DOQ.(s &amp;
Wmdows. Gas &amp; Electric Water
Healers, Plumbing &amp; Eteclrlcat
Parts lntertherm Mtller &amp; Coteman Air Conditioners &amp; Heal
Pumps Bennett's Mfbile Home
Suppty 740.446·9416 Gallipolis,
OhiO

EARN 'CANDLES BULK HERBS,
NATURAL PET SHAMPOOS
http://wWw arden nettearcand'e/ 1·
91t;i: 203·24.1, PO Box 41372

Whole Estate 740-367.0280
Washer S95, Dryer $95, Electric
Range $95, Refrlgeralor S150 ,
Wastier Like New $205 {Haa 1
Year Warranty) Freezer Like
Naw $300, Skaggs Appliances

16 Vlna Street, Golllpolls 740
448 7398
2 Dryers for sale 3112 to 4 yrs

old 1304)675-6693

520 ,

Sporting

Goods

949-4000

'

Grubb's PianO. tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned~ Call the
plana Dr 740-446-4525

HEALTH

PRO·

DUCTS Jewelry Shoe Soles
Anti Nausea
Body Support
Magnetic
Plasters
Bands
Whofesale IAelall Free Catalog •
Call1-800-821·9861

45 Paris Trailer

$1100 16' Trench Boq3 500 00
3 Arrow Boards S1 200 eaflh
Yard Concrete Bucket $700 00
2 000 011.1 Water 'Tank $650 00

742·3020
Massey Ferguson 50 Gas With
loader John Deere 820 Olasel

After 8 00 74()-446-8808
Ullhly Trailer {Box Trailer), 4ft x

8ft $500 1304)675·7133

630

Livestock

Ntce used Appliances. furmtura,
freezers, Bedroom Suites 01·
nettes lots Mort! (740) 446

Hereiord cow bred 10 Angul bull
740-696-1 0 17

OWN A COMPUTER. PUT IT TO
WORK $850 ·$3 500 MO PT /FI
FREE Details log Onto hllp II
www hbn com Access Code 5298

,..

PRIMESTA~

OlfecTV Summer PromotiOn Call
oow 1 888-265-2123
STEEL BUILDINGS Factory Concellallonsl 25 x30 , 30'x60'
40 x40 SO x7S 60 x100 New
Materials Selling At lnvotcel 1

BII0-4B2-7930 x47
Tandy Compu!er &amp; Desk With
Accessories Washing Machine
&amp; Anllque Roller Plano '1'40 446-

0325 740-379-2198

,.

Tharrington Fuel Oil Stove
60 000 BTU, 2 Years Old $400
New $640 740 256 6316

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH??? MMX Technology
We Finance •o • Down! Past
Credit Problems OK II Even II
Turned Down Beforell Reestablish

Your ~HI

Mlnialure Male Donkftr (740)

245-5249

TRANSPORTATION

Hlllll·6~359

WARMUP
92% Gas Furnaces !;ttat Pumps
Duct Systems Free Estimates Jf
'rbu Don t CBII Us Ws Both LoseJ
740 446-63011 1·800 29Hl098
Waterline Special

314 200 PSI

$21 96 Per 100

1" 200 PSI

Weight Equipment Power Rack. 4
Inch 1 Bench Leg E•tenslon- lnclme Bench 740-446 810!5

Building
Supplies
40x60 Was

• KQJ I
• K QJ
• AQI I

1999 Monte Carlo Z-3• Black.
Leather, loaded Must Sell. 740-2-'5 5983 Misprinted Number,
From Last Weekend Leave
For Sale 1992 Ford Tempo Gl ,

POLICE IMPOUHOS FROM
$5001 Repo s All Makes I Mod·
els Fee Call For Listings 1·800·
719-3001 ..010

---

s....

Aulland Clr
Clean newer used cars good
vartely reasonable rates 740·
742 331 t or 740-742·1400

BARNEY

PARSON II TH'
AS FIRE II

112 Ton. good

97 Camaro 37 000 miles automatic dark green traction control amlfm casseue 740 669·
0004

CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP POLICE

1987 Dodge 0-50 Pick•UP Au·
tom A/C, 68 OOO'mlles $2 650 00
1990 S-10 Eeettenee Condition
$2 89S 00 Cook Motors (7•0)

IMPOUNDS Honda's Toyota s
Chevys Jeeps And Sport Utili·
ties Call Nowl 900· 772 7470,

EXT 7832
1983' Ford LTD 6 Cyl 4 dr, Auto,
119 744 Mtles Gray w~ed Inter!

or $400 13041882 3236
1983 Jag 4 door XJ6 dacenl old

1987 Ford F·350 Dulally, Flat

Bed $4,000 00 Days 1740)-448
3333 Evens 1740)-256-6959

740 245 5158 After 4 00

MoTOf

1993 Dodge one ton !5 speed ~"
st!el bed woOden racks 740 ...
992 2213

VfHIC/..Et

1995 Chevy TahOe 4x4 4 Doors·
3SO Automatic, loaded Leather:
Black &amp; Sliver Askmg SIS 009 ,
1995 GMC Jimmy 4x4 Maroon
Automatic Transm1ss1on P S
Cruise Anti lock Brakes Electnc
4x4 Shlf1 Tra1lenng Pkg o4 3 V 6
Excellant CondttiQn, Inside &amp; Out
New Factory Exhaust, New
Brakes, One Owner $13,995 Call
74()..4.46-7289

THE BORN LOSER
~

t-10, 1'10, l t•\eAt'. DOM'T ~
BIG WQF.P~ I

9 t Plvmoulh Voyager air crutse
ai'I'Vfm cassette $3.500 7-40 992

2209
92 Astro AWD Gladiator, loaded,
$6500 740-992·2209

BIG NATE

Me An Offerl 1977 Chevy
350 4 Speed Rough

$850 00 OBO 740-44&amp;-&lt;1962
1981 Cl'levrolet 4 Wheel Drive
Ptck Up 314 Ton Good Condtllon

After6 P.M 740-256-1469
ven,

rTdO'

448.0505 oft., 6 00 pm
1999 Chevy Tahoe 4x4 2 Doors,
Black All Power. Leather lntefiOr,

7000 Moles Call 740.3611-8304

Fo•

1987 4 Door Cadllloc, 12 450
740.388·0104

760

1988 Dodge A.rles Auto, Air,
$975 1992 Ford Tempo, Auto,

Aor $1750 740 44)34782 Galll-

p(jls

1989 Ford Tempo 4 door au·
tomahc dependable car $750
080 1986 Ford Tempo, two door,
automattc, runs good $450 OBO
1986 Pontiac Sunbird, automatic
runs good $600 OBO, 1987 Moz
da 626, automatic, 4 door, 4 cylinoer gas savet, $595 199;2 Chevy
Cavalier 4 door 4 cylinder, Ice
cold atr, automatic $1150
M&amp;J 1\Uto Open Monday thru

,_
'

~

W~l'f'

AM
I STANDING
HERE?

&amp; R Aula Ripley WV
3933 or 1 BOO 213 9329

790

740-245-5158

AKC Registered Boston Terriers,
Show Ouatuyt ShOts ~ Wormed,
Ready S 17 5 00 ea each 2 fe
male&amp; Ceposlt or Payments

[7401·388-9325

Coffee Table &amp; End Tallie $35
Each, Air Exerctse Btkt Excellent
Condition s•o Rocking Chair
$40 Sk1 Machine $40 Weight
Machlf18 $40 740.441--0988

CKC Regtsfered Jack Russell
Terrier Male 3 Months Partially
House Tratned $ 125 740 256

Couch chair and two recliner
$25, Norge refrigerator $25 740..

One year old teniala Dalmatian
purebred no papers askmg Sso

6911-1017

740-985 3699

6162

sa 100 oo

740-682 7512

1995 Mercury Tracer excellent
condition, 55 000 mil es atr au·
tomauc new ttres , amlfm tape,

740-!J)2 6810
1995 ~&gt;on.Uac F1rebtrd Automatte
Atr Ttlt Cruise Stereo Cassella
59 000 Miles Nice Car $8 200
740 446-6189
1998 Chevy Cavalier Automa ti c
Casse tt e Power Moon
Roof,
8 500 Miles Asking

$8.500 OBO 740 25&amp;1011

' J
- e

•

Celebri1y ~ ayptogramt oro croa1ed from quotatiOnS by famous PBOP'8 pa$1 onO
present Eech Mltlet Ill the dpher stands fOf another

Today's clue v equals 5

"
'S II II

GWRYL,

HEHGNCTH

U WT H

KX

SIIXYSOHLWDSUMN

SDDCGJWTR

L C

NCKG

DSVHN

YHWRYL

VLHTRHU

-

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "The students react to my pra•se of loll w1th great · '•

applause anc:l loud demands far a hohday from work • -

Galbraith

John Kenneth

-

S©\\Q{}lA-ltttfS• ::::

TltAT DAILf
PUULII
_ _ _ __:_.: 14tto4

~y

CLAY I

POUAN __.:.__ _ _ __

O four
Rearrange '-tters of
strombled words
low

I

fO

•

form four Simple '""'"'"

c u R 0 GH
I I

I 1•

I

I

LALYEI31

,..,.

u....,T_F""TI_N-.--11::..

.r,. .

••

Just remember · the boss
told hts employees 'tf you don t
~:::;:~:::::::-:_........., get whal you thtnk you deserve
G I L KN y
cons tder yourself very - - -

I

I

1-5,..-.,,,..;;..-T,_;;;.,;,.;_;,;I.....;~,--1
.

_

.

.

.

@ PRINI

•

0

.

Cpmplete

..

the cf&lt;tuclr.le quoted

by f,JI.ng n the m•U1ng words
't'OU develop from step No

3

below

NUMSERED tEllERS IN

THESE SQUARES

UNSCRAMBlE ASOVE lEIIERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCIAM..J.ETS ANSWERS
I •

"I'm old enough to remember one gent sa •d to an
other ' that a televtston antenna was a symbol of STATUS'

SEPTEMBER 7 ~~:
•

'tARt\\ SCieNC~ ''

197"' Camper Sleeps 7 Gootl
Condttlon S2 400. Call After 4 00

•

1993 5th Wheel Sandpiper Wllh
Hllch, Excellent Condition '740

367-()632

SERVICES

Tuesday, Sept. 7, 1999
Dort 'I become d•smayed 1f you

Cklud Llno, 740-245·9213

Celebrity Cipher

~l~L'-~
'~:Na~Si-1 t.IT"
'TN~il~~

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1992 Chrysler New Yorker Auto
CrUise Atr AM/FM Tape 4dr
tnt ext engme excellent Runs
greal $3500 Calll304 )875 I 5Q.I

AKC German Shepherd Pups,
White, Or Silver fSable Snow

In th1s auchon, North b1d aggresSively, fi!SI upgradmg h1s hand to
two clubs, deemmg 11 worth 23
pomts. Then. after supporting
spades and heanng h1s partner cuebid the heart ace, he took control
with Blackwood.
Dane Alex Koltscheff dtsplayed
that SIX spades •s easy to make after
a club lead. He won with dummy's
ace, drew trumps, cashed three
rounds of hearts, d1scardmg his last
club, and ruffed the club stx m hand
Now a diamond to dummy's stx (or
covering West's 10 with the queen)
endplayed East. He had e1ther to
lead back mto dummy"s remammg
dtamond tenace or to concede a ruffand-d•scard.
Martm Hoffman, an Enghshman
who has hved m Flonda for a few
years, received the diamond 10 lead.
He finessed the queen, losmg to
East"s kmg Back came the club
ki11g. Hoffman won wtth dummy's
ace, drew trumps, and cashed the
three hearts d1scardmg a dl8mond
from hand. Declarer played off the
d11mond ace, then called for the dtamond mne. If Easl had played low,
Hoffman was going to dtscard his
cl11b laser Yet when East covered
with the Jack, declarer ruffed, played
a trump to dummy, and threw his
last club on the established dtamond
SIX Watch the spots'

I'll FL11' ACOIN

Sleet Buildings New Must Selll
30t~40t~'2 Was $10 200 Now
16 990 40x60x 14 Was S16 400
Now $10 871, 50x100x16 Was

1995 Buick LeSabre Custom 4
Or Pwr Wndws Pwr Seat Tilt
CruiS&amp; AM/FM Cuselte Allmu
nlm Wheels
64 000 Miles

Opening lead: • 10

!TUESDAY

ROBOTMAN

0

1304)37~-

ASTRO-ORAPH

8619 or I7401..WS.0390

••

Pus

All pall

Don I g&lt;l Slung by lwg~ P'KOI I
Shop the clout(ied srcr""'

Unconditional lifetime guarantee
Local references furmshect Es
tabltshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740}
446 OS70 1 800 287 0576 Rag
ers Waterproofmg

2 Male AKC Registered Golden
Retriever 8 weeks old Vet Check,
Wormed , 1st Shots (7~0)·388·

Plia

_

eve Joints, 74Q.245-S677

1990 Doytona Hatchbock 1740) •

1994
98 Oldsm obtle 4 Door
Loaded, 45,000 Mties SB 700 00
1 740-682·7S12

4NT
5NT

Pus
Pus

Jaunty Hutch · Blunt: InSISt· STATUS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Pets far Sale

Eut

•

Block brick sewer pipes, wlnc::l·
ows hntels, etc Claude Winters
Rio Gra·nde. OH Call 740 245
5121

560

Paaa
Paaa
Paaa
Paaa

Nerdt
2•
3.

WH'( DID I A5K '(OiJ WH't'
I'M 5TANDING HERE?

1991 Buick Regal Automatic
AM/FM PW POl AJC CrUise V·
6 While 4 Doors Best Olfer,
740.388-9878

$39,990 I 900-406 5126

---

Budget Priced TransmiSSIOn&amp;
and Engines All Types Access
To Over 10 000 Transmissions

Frklay 12 6 740 388 9693

1992 Shadow lOoks and runs ltke
new. 701&lt; cold atr automatic
sunroot 4 cylinder spoiler red
$3650 740-949 2045 evenings

Weal

'--L-...J'--...L--...1..--'---'

446·0670 or (740) 379·2303 alter 5 oop m

$19990,

Soa~

Auto Parts &amp;
Acceuorles

New Replacement Gas Tanka

C~~Un:t~-...

40 Foaled

42 Ap11C I

Rusty:

$7000 740-992 2321

auto ps p.b 1304)675-5181

2

PEANUTS

Motorcyclu

1996 Honda 300 EX, exc cond
many Mtr8S caM :.IM-675-3613

1987 Celemty Good work cer
Good gas mileage 2 a engine

~ - ----.

1997 Dodge Extended Cargo
Van
EKcellence Condition
57,000 mttes $14 250 00 (7401·

1981 Honda CX500 Custom Mo·
torcycle ~ Tires Battery
Plugs &amp; Brakes Mi.IU,gt 21 700
$800 Includes 2 Full Face Hal

automatic very good condition,

•

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

mots Call 304 773-S723 Ask

•

s

10?

I

OBO 740.256-1011

1984 Ford Thunder bird excellent
cond $1,200 or trade 080 30-4·

$1000 1965 Ford Muslong, 289

'·/../CfNSEf
~&lt;~----

1995 Chevy 5-10 Standard • 2 8L.
4 Cylinder AM/FM Fladlo Good
Condthon S6 000. 740-&lt;W1·1354 •

740

1986 Pontiac Grand Am, two
door 6 cylinder automatiC air

Df!&gt;r. or

1991 ford Ranger Nice looking •
Good Cond1t10n Tan Black Stnp\

""' $2500 740-992 5551

675-5167

:ltl-donNI

By Phillip Alder
Yesterday's deal featured two
ways to make a stx-spade contmct,
dependmg upon the openmg lead.
Well, someone once claimed that all
good thmgs come 10 twos, so here ts
another, from the 1975 Deauvtlle
FesttvaL How would you declare stx
spades agamst the opening lead of
e1ther the club two or the dtamond

448 0103

1985 Ford Conversion
$1 950 740..388-0104

c bot--

M~

Another brace of
possibilities

1985 Ford Ranger 4 ely stan
dard -new tires good shape
$1 ,250 740-992-Q078

4x4

" tO • 5

...,......
II LIUI J f

Vulnerable. Both
Dealer: North

IT'LL' BE COLD AS A FRH
BY TH' TIME HE GITS DONE
WITH TH' ILESSIN"

shape asking $1 BOO [3041882·
3612

$500 CARS FROM

Pollee Impounds &amp; Repos Fee
CALL NOW For Listings! 1 800

• 1

• A2
• I 74

AC PW PS 1304)675-4014

1979 GMC Truck

CMr1r proper
r~C::.
u--~~~
-(2-)

• 7. 5
• K J 52
•KQJ7S

.'.
•

DOWN

23

s.tl1

Meso;age Wit Relum Call

lr"-

21 .. v.y.-y

Eut

t •
10 I I 4 3
10 3
10 5 • 2

4548

$19800 Sell $9800 50&gt;100 was
$28 800, Sell $16 800 70&gt;125
Wao $42,200 Sell S29 200 Doug
800.379 3754

Now

SlAna55 CwazOCMJ
IIIW..•
57c:-trdl
IIIFII-Iow

11Unllof20 Ell c•'c £' unlta

.".

1998 Ponttac Trans Am 350 V·8
l$-1 Corwtta Eng•ne AUtomatic.
T Tops. Monsoon Stereo With
12 Olac CD Changer In Trunk
Dark Navy Metallic Wllh Grey
leather Interior Will Take PBY Oft
Or Reasonable Offer 7 40 -446·

'95 Dodge pickup, 112 lon. 4WO
Laramie truck. loaded 80 000
;;:::;:-~-;;::-;::-;:;~:;::~~;:;...1&lt;~~·· askmg $10 000 740 98S

319 3323 &gt;&lt;2156

60•200x16 Was $58,760 Now

..

1988 GMC 2 ton Cante Truck

$5500 1304)675 1858

6 year old Arabian mare breQ
asking $1000, 740-742·252S

$27590

BACK ClUARANTEEI Natural Dr
Recommended 740·441 · 1982
Free Samples
'

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

New Electric Wrangler Pride 4
wheel scooter (304)773-5207

Older Public School Computer
Anel SOftware, Still In GOOd Work·
ing Otder $1SO Or Beat Offer
740-441·0901 Evenlnos

17W

720 Trucks for Sale

John Deere 60 Mrytntng new or
reDu1h pnced on lnspecf10n 740

NSFonl

BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 lbs 30 DAY MONEY

Not&gt;o Road

Longaberger Baskets 96·98
Christmas Collecllon And 96·99
Easter Collection All Have Lin
ers Protectors And rt,-ons.
740-441.Q901 Evenings

Or. recommended 100% natural
Guarenleed 11 program In Eu
rope Alta at t (888) 449 3759 or
vt&amp;ll www members tripod com!

Cage Call740-446-3409

Canntng Tomatoes, $5 oo Bushel
Your Conlalner $4 00 Bushel 114
Mtle North Qt '41 I 325 Junction

600

3 ·ALL STEEL BUILDINGS Foe-

e

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Klndlewood /Woodburner Good

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New I Retxuh In Stock
CaM Ron Evans, 1 8()().537 9528

tory Liquidation

6ll8x4 Dog Kennel e Montl'ls Olc::l
2 Dog Boxes LaUer Jacks New
Brand 1993 ~anDau" Flat Bot
tom Boat Uke New With Trolling
Motor S1mmons Rifle Scope 3 •
9;~~32 New CamtUus Amencan
Wildlife Series Knife Brand New
Chicken Or Pheaaan! Incubator
Months Old Meat Lamp Ana

580

(740)-44&amp;

Condotton, $350 740-256·1 044

JET

550

21 PEOPLE NEEOED
TO LOSE WEIGHT

Toy Poodle Pupple~ 6 &amp; 1 weeks
ok:1 FlfSt Shots 2 Female 1 Male

Miscellaneous Steel Beams Plate
Tamp that fits 416 Backhoe
$4 200 Sandblaster $1 300 Mts
celtaneoos hand tools, Tar Kettle
$300 00 4011 extended Tra11er
$4 500 BucKets that fit • 21 5 hoe
Jackhammer&amp; air drill&amp;. construetron ptankets construc11on
barrels Phone (740) 6•3·2916
after 4 00 (7.. 0) 6-43 2644 afler

Moore owner

$69 00 3 month free programing
with NF.l Ticket Purchase Umited
tlmeorrer call 1-800-779-8194

Weeks Old $250 Call Evenings
74().388-o3J2

Cal 215 Hoo $30 00 427 Chov

Wolff System Sunquest Tanning
Bed Pro 24 20 Minute Bed With
Face Tanner Asking Price
$2 500 740-388-9862

11" OlntcTY Slltlllle Sy1tem1·

AKC 8

Motor $6SO

Buy or sell Riverine Anllques,
1124 E Main Street on Rt 12•.
PomerQy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm,Sunday 100to
6 00 p m 740·992·2526, Russ

18 Ft Flat Tra11er Dual Wheels,
Make Great Car Hauler $450,
Good nres, 740-448-9853

Rottwe•ler Pups Nlcel 2 Males
left $100 00 (140)-245 5823

FULLY LOADED PENTIUM
COMPUTERS Poor C~dll 0 Kl
HI00-520-8364

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 80Q.S37 9528

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Registered We1maraer Pupptes
for &amp;~it Excellent Bird Hunte f s
lor family pol$.[304)675-3052

5PM,I304)675-7652

res1 &amp; stabll~er ~75-8348

Antiques

$150 740-992-7888

610 Farm Equipment

For Sale Pallo Door Replace
ment Wlndow1 Whiltleld Pellet
Stove, lntenor Doors Call after

$37 00 Per 100 A.ll Bran Com·
pression Fittings In S~

530

Aegnaered Atredale pupp•es
make great hunters farm dogs
loyal gentle pets Shots wormed

Es1a1e sale· 14 C F Kenmore re
trigeraiOr. 1150 gas range LP or
natural, $75 both almond, no
checks 740·247· 291• or 740·

New Mathews MQ.1 bow wf new
quiver, sights peep sight, elbow
Sporting Equipment Best Offer
740-.WS-9709

3427

Toy Poodle Dogs
3398

•til&amp;nr I

lpOft

StO each tor sate (304,895

p._ Fo&lt; 5ale,

51-

1111L._••

Reg NeithertandS Dwarf RatltMts

Ro-ilor

......

Ncuara
1j D'nat ad
• 11c-

For sale- hand "" QuakOt
cal740-992·9910

Sacramen10 CaiOomla 95841

1004 1740)-446-4039onyhme

510

Mobile Home, Nice Cteru 3 Bed
rooms In Mercerville Area, (740)--

Craftsman &amp;HP: 60 gal aircom·
pressor, $275 00 2 pair of end
tables $20 00 lor all Regina
upright swe•per $25 00 , 2 10
gal. Aquariums wlaccessorr

MAGNETIC

460 Space for Rent

3 Bedrooms Clean Near Rio
Grande Reference
No Pats!

l'lorog Toffany Band Apprltoed AI

S2D 00 lor oil 2-GO Racks $5 00
Ia&lt; bOth (140)..W1-1286

2 Bedrooms, Stove Retngetetor
Furnlsl'leel Garden Space With

&amp; 3 bedroom moblla homes air

B-L-0-W 0-U-T

(140~3945

1· Bedroom HouH. No Pets! 26
lincoln Ave $325 00 month

Porch Back Deck Con be left an
Rented Lot SHARPIII30•1675-

$499 Down All Singles $999
Down OoubiBs Super Low Pay·
menls Ltmtted Time Oakwood
Homes Barboursville WV 304·

112 C8ra1 Qlamond Solilan Rong.
VS 2 Clanly 14K. 'l'ellow Gold 6

410 Houses for Rent

-

17401 388-9770

8172

Furnished Apt Downstairs 3
Rooms, 81th, AH UUhiiN Plldl
919 Second Ave $275 00/mon

GraciOUS IMAg 1 and 2 bedloom
apartments et Vtllage Manor and
Riverside Apanrnents In f.AI-1

-

1990 Clayton Tratlor 14x70
Kttchen Appliances stay 1 1/2
batl'l 2 Bdrms Covered Front

6980

FRITO LAY /PEPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE $1 000+
WEEKLY
POTENTIAL ALL
CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO·
CAL SITES ON GOING SUP·
PORT SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS I 800
7311233 EXT 3603

'u4

Two year okl mooular

Built Like Housel t99S 14X'fO
Dulch Vmyl Siding Shingle Roof,
Thermopayne Tilt Windows Sky
lights Oak Trim, GE Appliances
Decks $18 500 Arter 5, 740 256·

www glassmechantx com

2211

Down! Gov' l And Bank Repo a
Being Sold NOW! Financing
A'llatlable Call Now! 1 800-730
1n2 Ex1 8040

3093

EARN $90,000 YEARLY Repair
lng NOT Replacing Long Cracks
In Wmdshields Free V1deo 1·

800-826-8523

FORECLOSED HOMES Law Or 0

,.__ ._,,,,,1 .......

1 IIIII. 7 wlroal C7 . . . . . . .

7 'M

14
Hlng.ng , FlntSIVng Tex
Ask lor PJ 1740) 367

...-.

Tuesday, September 7, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

• The Dally Sentinel

810

Home
Improvements

Appliance Parts And Servtee All
Name Brands Over 2S Years Ex
penence All Work Guaranteed
French C ttv Maytag 740 446

7795

should have to shoulder a tnfle more
respons1b1hty where your work ts
concerned tn rhe year ahead,
because they wtll be accompamed
by grt:aler rewards.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22) If
you

C&amp;C General Home Main ·
lenence· Pamltng vtnyt sldtng,
carpentry doors wmdows baths
mobile home repair and mare For
tree es1tmate call Chet 740 992

JUmp to conclusiOns wtthout

ftrst g1v1ng adequate lime lo
researchtng somethmg 1mportanf, it
will not be too e~sy to get back on

6323

track and could severely ampaar your
success today

Llvmgslon s Basement Water
Proofing all basement repairs
Clone hae esllmales lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on JOb expert

yourself from potent1al cmbarrassmenl by bc1ng lhe firsl one to mention to a fnend a matter under wh1ch

once 1304)895-3887

you 're obhgaled

840

o r her know yo u're taktng care of 11

Electrical and
Refrig,eralton

Residenttal or commer ctal wlnng
[lew ser11k:e or repa1rs Master t 1
censed eleclrto•an Rtdenour
Electrical WV000306 30 4 675
1786

LIBRA (ScpL 23-0cL :z:l) Save

10

fulfill Let h1m

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. ll) Be
extra careful you do not team up
w ith losers today, because per~:ms
w11h whom you affihate wtll have a
greater tnfluence on your thtnkmg
than usual

SAGnTARIUSo(Nov. :z:l-0..:. 21)
Jobs o r tasks that pop up out of

nowhere

tor whach

you hadn't

planned could ovetwhelm you today
if you view what OC&lt;Uts through a
magmfymg glass Instead lake
thtnp m stnde.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 2l·Jon. 19)
Should you run mlo one of your

lcasr

favortte peOple ln a convtvtal

setting today. don't let th1s indmd·
ual dampen your greganous spmt
Maantain control of your mood
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19)
Should any volattle assuc be mtro·
duced mto your relationship wuh
your mate today, you can expect the
day to tum tnto a bummer Avmd or
s•de step them m lhe first place

PISCES (Feb. 20·Mor&lt;h 20)
The laslthing you 'll promote today
1s compelcncy tf you und..,ly cnll·
c1ze the work of another The person
could completely lose mterest and

e ven do a worse Job.

ARIES (Mor&lt;h ll·Aprll 19) If
vou d1dn't manage your resources
IUO wtsely yesterday, you m1ghl find
yourself unable IO part1capatc 1n

doing somelhmg fun witl1 fnends

today. You'll remember th1s lesson.
TAURUS (Aprii2'-Moy 20)
Don't make matters worse for your-

self today by tak1ng by gellmg mad
at others for a rcstncuon thai has
been pJaced on you at this t1me It's
not thetr faull

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) The
best way to make the world look
gloomy today IS to dwell exclusively on your own problems Instead,
turn your atlenhon on the concerns
of others, and th1ngs won't appear so

bad.

CANCER (June %1-July ll) It

JCC)

would be be..~t today not to hang out

w1th pals who do not share your
of operating on a stnn~
gen1 budge1 You'll only make yourself upset
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) If you'n:

Bewtlched

•

prcdtcament

unprepared to put forth the ncces

sary effort requ~red to ach1eve !hal
wh1ch IS worthwhile, meanmgful
ob]ect1v9 m1ght be qulle d1fficullto
come by today

•

�The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Page 10
Tuesday, September 7, 1999

•

Couple celebrates· 79th wedding anniversary 'by dancing at vow renewal service
Ann LQnders
1997, ~o_ s.. Ana!ttes S H•es Syndi,cote C)od

,.

'·

ynou;al:e.

~r~ors

Dear Ann Landers: I think"! can beautiful. - NONA IN LAND
FLA
lopthe story about the, couple who ' O'LAKES. .
celebrated ,their 76th weddmg
DEAR NONA: You did indeed
about

top the couple w~o· wrore abOutt~c i r

Gilbert and Sadie Hill. of
Zephyrhills. Fla, They celebrated

76th weddin~ anni \"ersap;. Gilbert
and Sadie of Zephyrhills. Ra.. win

·Tourist Club. Last sumlJlcr. \\Chad a
reception for Gilbert and Sadie .

Dear Ann ·Landers: I'd like to
tell you :ibout my parents. Abe and

There was danc irig and the couple
ren_~"- ed their wFddi-ng .nl w~. It was

Rat: Rahinoff o f Oc:n ver. Cob .. "-ho
~.·e lebrateJ their 7~ th wcddi.n g

anni\'crsary.

I' m

writing

their 79th .wedding anniversary on firsr pn1.e in the ¥amage Derby.
Juilc" 15 . Both are 99 years uld . The y unless someo nt' cb~ cl a1ms 1L
li ve al one , care fo r thei-r home , and . ~ Here · s anoth!!r love storv " ·hich is a
'
sri II '(:orne w 'the dances at 1hc c'iosC.runner-up :

'.

.
anmverS3r)"on Sept. 18. 1998. The' together through thick and thin and
&gt;till hold hand&gt; and e.change g.xld would happily do it all over again.
Dear Ami l.and•n: Wo~ld you
mommg and good-night kisses.
After their morn ing coffee. Dad please print this essay that I fo.und in
rcads;he Ann Landers column aloud the Dick E. Bird N~ws• I loved 1t,
to Mom. whose eyes aren 't as good and I'm sure vourreaders will, too. •
as the\ once were . Of the ir four . NF.BRASKAFAN
DEAR NEBRASKA: With
daug hi~r~. Ont" celebrated a 56~h
pleasure.
Thanks for sending it· on.
\\ e-dding anni\ ers!U) last o..·h."lbcr.
Anoth&lt;'f '·clcbratcd a -18th in M.-·.
Here it is:
\\'hat is a Cat?
I'm m)l "riling to to p the- olhcr
Cat&gt; do what they want. They "'
st on ~s . .bu~ to pa} lribut.: to th ~
man ) wonderful "gold1c oiJ a:- " "nu- rarely listen 10 you.
The);" re totally unpredictable.
ph.·s \\ ho co nllnu~ lO chc ri ~ h l'ach
When you want 10 play, they ·
01 hcr a nd sera beauti ful 1?\ a mpk for
thei r t'hildren. grandchildr&lt;n JnJ all \\'ani to be alone .
When you want to be alone, they
"ho kn'"' th&lt;m. -- RO BERTA IN
WASHI:-&lt; GTO . D.C.
"ant to play.
· TI1ey ~xpect you to cater ·~o their
DEAR ROBERTA: Wfiat , "".
ing s~l uiL' to } Our parent' and all C\Crv whim .
Th&lt;) · rc moody,
th1lSC dl' , ·nrcd rouples \\ ho ... wy '

.
.
rub their tummies .
They leave hair everywhere.
They drive you nuts and cost an - They leave their toys e'erywhere.
arm and a leg.
Conclusion: They ~re tiny men in
Condusion: They' re tiny 'w omen
little fur coats.
in little fur coats.
Is alco!Jol rummg your life or the
What is a Dog? ·
Dogs lie around all day, sprawled life of a loved one• "Alcoholism :
ori the most comfonable piece of How to Recoenize .lt. How io Deal
With h. How io Conquer If' can tum
furniture in the house .
They can hear a package of food thing.;;; around .
Send a self addressed long. busibeing opened half a block away. but
don't hear you when you' re in the ness j'ize envelope and a che·ck or
money order. for $3.75 (this includes
same room.
They can look dumb and lovable postage and handling) to: Alcohol,
c/o Ann Landers. P.O. Box 11562.
at the ·same lime .
They growl when they arc · n01 Chicago. Ill . 60611 -0562 . (In Cana:
happy, When you want to play. they da. send $4.55.)
.
,
To find out more about Ann Lanwant to play. .
•· .
When you want to be alone. !hey ders and read her past columns; visit
the Creators Syndicate web page at
want to play.
They will iove you fore\'er if you www.crcator,;.Lnm.

1

\\ a \ o f hl'alm !:!: and well b'e lng
pnor w mod~ r..n mc.:- d1 c int: . Thq
said that plant~ pro \ iQ..:- raw rn ah! rials fo r natu rJI mcdku'h: s a nd
stressed th at a person should study

all

informati on

that

can

be

{ I) m~l c C'\CT\ dfo rt rn rrc ~ l'f\('
. mJ prote ct the ha tur::t l boun1~ ,, ,
her~ &lt;: &lt;md trees in the area hccau:-..:
they urt= th~ ~ o un:c of n·a tura l mL~J -

The -~pcakers cautioned th e gar- ' were Atkins. pfesident ~ Dorothy
c.k•ncr-; 10 ~hmk before using herbs Woodard, vic.e presideitt ; Marjorie
a~ sonw can be \'Cry toxic if .used
Ri ce, treasurer; and Betty Lowe-ry.
. \'ro n g .. One eXample t~c-y gave · secretary. Atkins thanks those who
"as fc&gt;x glo\"e . Eva Robson talked took part in .the bicentennial

1c 1ne s.
Am one
th&lt; plan ts and IIW&gt; discu&gt;scd ""'"~

a~out using herbs· in cooking .

. Rcform&lt;rs and Herbalists . They
we re in troduced by Pauline Atkins.
president. The twa credited eating
well as the ke y 10 good health. and

obtaint=d he for e apcnip'tm g to
gro w. prc pa·r(' or use herbs . ThciT

pa s~ i D n ll o wer. Joe pie we c.d . .1rnn
" ·c ed . huncrfly hush. fox ~l ove.

Lan~ ndcr' and lemon -thyme
Jonkic s ,and a decorated cake were

suggesti ons included checking.
local libraries or local book s10res
fo r informal"io n.

yarr.O\\, Ind ian -turnip , ~l ac k root.
sumac berri es. slippery elm . co ne
!l owers: lavender. touch ·mc -nots:

presented tO Mrs. Adkins by
Dorothy Woodard in appreciation
for her worq as regional director.

said that her:bs ' Were ,the primary

The two al sn ~ailed on residems

Hank

Hu g gm s

of

Land

tume.ric and .lh,)ine :·

Officer!;. ele cted for the' year

'
The annual Paul Bunyan Show
will be held on the Hocking Co.ll ege

and saw their way through eight
inch cants of wood. From seasoned

ski lls of chain saw carving and
they"ll host stock saw competitions

prOfessiOnals to weekend competi-

I hat

Spo nsored by Oh10 Forestry
Associatic;m and Hocking College,
the show's foc us is the forest prod-

tors, all are competing for bragging
rights and prizes. Ohio resident and
international champ ionships will be

Saturday is sponsored by Rocky.
Shoes &amp; B9ots w.ith industry com-

ucts industry but it"s 'an eve nt that

o~

ca~·nPus at Nelsonville , Oct. 1-3 .

also offers something for ·everyone.
Prom sophisticated-machinery to
basic chain saws. demo"nstrations
and displays run the g~mul. The
e,__ hibit 'area has been expanded to

include a wider · variety of forest
products including anything that i§
wood or wood related. ·
·
Each day has a sponsor and Friday, ,educat ion . day, belongs to
Pepsi. Finals for. the collegiate
Game of Logging, student lumberjack and stock saw. competitions
and Forest Jeopardy by Stihl and
Bryan Equ ipment are highlights of
the day.
The E. B. Mil.lcr Arena is where
lumberjacks compe\e as they chop .

the line givin g spec'tators a
chance to cheer their favmite. on 10

are open to the general publi c.

petitions to include contests for
skidder opera tors. pallet 'makers and

log truck drivers. .
victory.
Miss Paul · Bunyan will be
Sixteen professional loggers will . announ ced at noon on Saturday and

TUESDAY
POME·ROY

compete for the national Game of

~ Me~gs

Garden Club . held last week ·and

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

•

Spo rts
•r:"; :

I

I

I

:"'""'~

.

with Chicago; Vaughn
hits three homers

-Page4

e
'

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 64

Single Copy - 35 Cents

ties.

the Meigs County .EXPO planned
for Sept. 18 · and 19 -were
a nnounced.

the home. of Marcia Denison .

~~====~==~====
· ==~
. .

history students and community
volunteers share their knowledge of
the Hocking Valley as it was a century ago will hosi a ~ariety of activities. Crafts from a bygone era such
·as log hewi~g. candle making. bas'
kel weaving and quilting are only a
· few things of the 0 n-going activi;
£

Logging t"itle and $10,000.Students
from . about 24 · fprestry colleges
compete for a .scholarship.
Carving competitions arc held
Saturday and Sunday and the carve&lt;
Other c\'e nt s will include Crossing.
wHose item brings the highest bid · Poulan's Scheer Bros. lumberjack
Not far from the show grounds is
during the auction benefiting Hock- water show, a chain saw carving Hocking Woods Nature Center, a
ing College's scholarship fund and demonstration Hu sqvarnas pole special place on the hillside where
OFA's forestry camp will is climbers who wi ll demonstrate activities such as touch tables, anideclared the c hampum .
proper cl imbing Sk1lls usmg ropes , mal. and plant displays and a bird
Pers.onnel from j3ryan Equip- and pulleys to lift themselves into blind will be ongoing from 10 a.m.
ment itnd Stihl will cqnquct a i:arv: and out of trees.
to 4 p.m. each day. Guided nature
ing clinic in Chain Saw Arena for
Robbins Crossi ng: the lillie log walks leave the center on a daily
those who want to learn the basic cabin scttlen1ellt where interprcti~'e basis on Saturday and Sunday.

Appointments available for
men's health screening
The Meigs County Health Department currently is making
appointments for ifs 1999 Men's Health Screening which will
take place .on Tu):sday, Sept. 28 from 9 a.m . to noon .
, Clinic services include finger-stick .fasting bl ood sugar,
hemoglobin and cholesterol, puls.e oximetry,, Tetanus vaccina·
lion, digital recta l exam. height .and weight, blood pressure,
body (at analysis. health risl\ assessment and mental health
stress testing .

Bloodwork will be done on· Sept. 21-2lat Veterans Memo- ·
rial Hospital to determine PSA (prostatic spec ific antigen) so
, results wil·l be available to physicians during the actual exam.
Only 35 appointments are sti ll available. All se rvi ces are
free but donations are accepted.
.
Interested men aged 50 or older or those less than 50 years
old with a· family history of prostate cancer or tho se· experiencing symp"toms should contact Courtney Sim at. 740-992·- ..
6626 Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to noon and I to 4

lp.m, .

.

•

. )

)

)

. crow designing contest.

)

'

.ti on cl inic. Tuesday, I 10 7 p.m. in
offic es at the Meigs Multipurpose
Ce nter, 112 East Memorial Drive,
Ponicroy. Every chi ld must be

Meigs County Extension Agent and Expo commiuee member Hal
· Kne~n said he h opes to have 30to40 entries in the contest with the pri~e
for the most.popular being an original Homespun Treasure primitive scarewood design created by Heather. Lewis. · · .,
i:
Voting will occur throughout Saiurdayand until3:30 p.m. Sunday.
"You bring the fixings for the scarecrow and Expo will provide the stu1U·I
ing (straw)," Kneen said. .
·. ·
"R.ain or shine the creation of I he scarecrows will be held ai II a.ni.
the Senior Fair Building. Remember, these scarecrows are to be
outside during the Expo and can be picked up after 5 p,m ,"

.

•
•

accompanied by a pare nt/legal
· guard ian a nd must present · immu n.iz,a ti on .reco rd . For more infor-

matio n. ca ll 992-6626.

)

)

)

)

ALFRE D ---:- Orange Tru stees,
regular session, Tuesday , 7.30
p.m., home of c lerk Osie Follrod.

)

A 1.7-year-old Ohio University-Athens student is in stable condition at
Grant Mediql Center in Colu mbu~ after apparently shooting hersel M&lt;m-t
day evening ncar the Athens/Meigs couni'Y line,
· ·
·
The Mei gs County Sheriff's Office received a call Monday evening
about a .man along the side of stale Route 32 in Columbia Township near
the Athens County line, according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
. Upon responding, the sheriff's office found ii 17-year·old female suf·
fering from a si~gle gunshot wound ·to the chest, the report stated, .
Soulsby said statements taken from the girl supported statements from
her boyfriend who ·said she had aske(l him to pull over to the side of the

)

MIDDLEPORT ~ Middleport .
Masanic Lodge 363 F&amp;AM, ,
Tuesday, _"7:30 p.m. w11h work in
the F.C. d.cgrce. Refreshments.

')
TUPPERS PLAINS ~ Eastern
Local Board of .Educatwn, 'specia l meeting, Eastern Elementary
School" cafetoriu,m., 6:30 p.m.,
Tuesday, to discuss OAPSE con·

•

l

\

tract, personnel matters and any

ot her business th ~l can be legally ·
conducted
by the' board:
.
.

. 12-M011th AnniArsary CD*

SYRACUSE ~ Syracuse
· · Board of Publi c ·Affa..rs, Tuesday,
Sept. 7 instead of M ond ay .

•

OY·7 0·

•

)

&lt;'

road so she could walk . in tt"!e woods alorae. A shOrt time later, the

)

)

boyfriend heard a guns hot and found she had apparently.shot herself in the
chest with a .38-caliber revolver, the sheriff's report stated.
Also responding to the scene wer~ the Athen~ Post of the,Sta,te High·
way Patrol, Meigs Co unty Assistant Prosecutor Chris Tenoglia, the Ohio
Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Soufheast Ohio Emergency Medical
Services.

Ohio trucker dies in 1-70 pileup

%
APY

GREENFIELD, lnd, (AP) ~ An Ohio trucker was killed and five other
' people were i.njured in a seven-vehi-

Good Afternoon
Today's

of
City_National Bank is.ving a cekbration and you are invi~d! J~in us for a special, one-day orily "Customer Appreciation
.
.
.
. ·
·
' Celebratib n" to mark the I Year Anniversary of ~u')Pomeroy office." . )

ment will be a ·feature of EXPO
'90 to be s taged al the Rock
Spring s Fa~rground s Sept. I K and

• Friday, September 10
• City National Bank Pomeroy Office
)
• 236 East Main Street, Pomeroy
• FREE hotdogs, po~J!:oin, soft drinks &amp; balloons! '
• PRIZE DRAWING for a $500 CDI
• GIVEAWAYS Include City mini-zipper bags (some with cashl)

.

While the feature tractors, will
be Farmall , Ford and Ferguson.,
c·vcryone is in vi ted to bring in
their trac tor s and C(juipfi:le nt. A
Pe oples Choic e award trophy will
he civen to the tractor wh tch
receive s the mo si vot'es . ' All
m·ak es, models and kinds will be ·
di splayed, whet her in their origi -

One-Day Only Specials: In addition to our 12-Month Anniversary CD as outlined above, City Na~ional will
offer the foUowing special for one day only! 8.99% APR on Personal Loans,'with no application fee••
.

·

For more informatio n on the
a nlique display. residents may

contact Dale Kautz at 985 -3573 .

~eJrltutel l

2 Sections • ·12 Pag~s

antique trac tors a 1,1d farm eq uip-

nal condition or re stored .

)f.eglonal Briefs
Teen ,shooting incident investigated

)
RACINE ~ Racine Village
Co.uncil , Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the
municipal building.

Antique tractors and
tools, a feature of EXPO

"

This year's Big Bend Region Town &amp; Country Expo, set for Sept. 18
and 19 at the Meigs County Fairgrounds, will feature a new event, a scare-

)

)

County

exte nsive . di .splay.

afternoon1~ln~:::l)~~~

shown here working on a scarecrow Tuesday
ration for the Sept. 18 and 19 Big Bend Region Town &amp; I,;OtUnllryl

Expo.

Health Depart_ment., immul)iza-

19 .

Easternvolleyballers win, Page 5
Ann on weighty issues, Page 7 ·
Family medicine, Page 7

Robson was hostess for the
open hou se. Woodard registered
parade in Rutland. The club took the guests, and Atkins prpvidc the
firs't for non~ religious . tloats in the ..table arrangeme nt. Devotions by
parade. Taking _pan in .t he nower Lowery included , "'Our Riches"" .
show .were Atkins.' Donna Weber, Life 's Recipe, · "Tribute to the
Golden Road" and a prayer. The '·
and Beny Lowery.
The open ,house · of the Chester September meeting will be held at

' The little village will also be the
a state champion guitar 'picker will backdrop for the draw horse log
be detennined follo'l'ing a perfor- "skidding competition on Saturday
mance by Johnny Staats and Cross- . a(tcrn 0on. A wood craft tent and
road. A barn dance will also be held steam and antique logging equipin the horse barn Saturday" night.
ment will also.be located al Robbins

Community
·Calendar

Ali

September a, 1li!MI

Weather

Speakers talk about herbs, key to w~ll belng

· ~ Mcdlt.:lnal Herhs and Their
Us.e . . .. wa~ -Ihe prog rf). m topic for
th e ·annu al open meet ing of the
Rutl"nnd Garden Club held at the
Rutland Methodi st Church ..
Speaker' \\ere Paul Neidhard

and

Wednesday

¢_
.
lii.f (·"Ofler alf.lilatlle at Pome ro~ . 01110 ofttca onl'J. APR ava11.ilb e Sectember_10, 1999 only. Otrllf ava tla~l e fill' 11nti]CWOor up toSSOOO and101 terms ol Up Ia 48 months . Loan~ subf&amp;tl to credit approvaL APR shOwn Is based on a48-monlh
1

- _

UIIDU

loa ~ of $5.000. Such a loan would ll.iWt 48 monthly payments ol 124 38 per month The stmple tnterest rille 15

liu cl tor tharerr:n of the loan. Current City National Ba~ loans are net eiiCillle for this otter. Other ralesalld terms available .)

Lotteries
NATIONAL
AN&lt;
All the bank you need
Member FDIC

,

www ,c ity~ational·bank .com

Serving West Virginia and Ohto with 59 locatior:as .

OHIO
Pick 3: 7·9-5; Pick 4:.6-4-8-6
Ruc~eye 5: 9 - 13-18- 20- ~6

W,VA,
Daily 3: 4-9-9; Daily 4: 4-2·5··6
0

J'-m Ohio Vt! llt-y i'l~h fi-&gt;hi ug Cu.

cle accident that closed westbound
lanes of Interstate 70 io Hancock
Co~~ty for nearly II hours, ·
Westbound 1-70, about tWo milci
west of Greenfield, remained closed ·
early this moming and eastbound
iraffic was reduced. to one lane,
a~cording to the sheriff's department.
The accident happened about 6:30
p.m. Tuesday in a highway construction zone, The sheriff's department
says a tractor-trail er crashed into
Slopped traffic at the construction
zone, causing a chain reacti on.
The driver of that semi, Raymond
Trushel, 59, of Cambridge, Ohio,
was pronounced dead at the sce ne.
The driver of a second truck, Tim
l'razier, 56, of Akron, Ohio, suffered
multiple fractures and was in serious
condition Tuesday al Methodist
Hospital.
The

driver of another semi,

Theodore. Rohlen, 50, of" Shel·
by ville, Ill., suffered broken ribs.
.
'

.

'

. I

'· ,

By LAURIE KELLMAN
Assoclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)
Attorney General Janet Ren~ is
negotiating with former Republi·
'can Sen, John Danforth the possibility of heading an independent
inquiry into the government's use
of force at the fiery e~d of t~e
Branch Davidian · standoff in
Waco, Texas, government sources.
said.
The sources, who spoke on
condition of anonymity, told The
Associated Press on Tuesday that
the. Justice Department was. i~
Janet
final negotiations over the details of the independent inquiry and an announcement could
come as early as today.
Congressional officials who spoke with the
Justice Department TuesdJy said they understood Danforth was willing to take the job.
According to goyernmentlawyers and congres·
sional officials, the Juslic~ Department was
considering appointing a second person lo assist
Danforth in the investigation and help to man age the day-to -day operations, ·
Danforth, 63, would bring solid Republican
credentials as well as a background in faw
enforcement. Before entering th e Senate, he
·se rved as attorney general in Missouri for eight.
~a~
.
.
He retired from the Senate 1n 1995.
Danforth also is an Episcopal priest, and b?th
admirefs and detractors h11v e noted his moral

integrity and his stubborn independence .

He did not ret urn a ca ll see~ing comment
Final touch es were being put
on the scope and nature of th e
investigation. said the · ~our.ccs,
who include · Republi~ans on
Capitol Hill who h~d discussions
Tuesday with Justice Department
officials.
· Reno's decision comes as con- .
gressional , Republicans have
increased pressure on her and on
FBI Director Louis ' Freeh to
~xplain h'ow evidence abowt the.
.
siege, "including videotapes, was
Reno
withheld from the public for
years.
.
Some Republica n lawmak.ers want to know
whether the FBI lied about using incendiary tear
gas canisters during the final ~aid on the com pound on April 19, IQ9J , ,
The Dallas Morn tng News reported today
that Texas Rangers had found nares thai were
apparently fired by federal officials. The news paper said the Rangers discovered the expended
military illumination fl ares amid tons of evidcnce recovered Friday from a storage faCility
near Waco.
Evidence I.ogs showed more flares were
recovered in the weeks after the Davidian com·
pound burned following the FBI siege .
More than 80 sect members di ed, some of
them children, in a fire that the governm ent con- .
tends was set by sect ms.rnbcrs.
,
None of the co mmltfecs loo king into the ra id
has · fOund evidence that the governmen t was

/

'
•

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      <name>nice</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5858">
      <name>pavich</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
