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~P~age---1~0~·~T~h=e=D_a=i-ly~S;e~n~·t~in:e-I;:~~~~-=--~---;:::::::::::::::P:o:m:~:ro:y::•:M:Id:d:l:ep:o:rt:,:O:h:l:o:::::::::::::::::::::::T:u:e~s=day.September21,1999

~

Time Out
Becky Baer
Meigs County
Extension
Agent,
Family and Con·
sumerScieilces
/Community
development
•
•
: . I have had . questions about the
Wisdom of betng on low-carbohyt!Tate, high:piotein diets . High-pro~in diets do not build muscle and
tiurn off fat as some people pro.,laim. .
.
·
: By eating onl y protein foods , the
~rSon is mi ssi ng out m1 man) vitamins.• minerals, carhohydrJtt.•s and
fiber that are found in fruits. v~!!cta ·
tiles a nd whole grains. B~inl! Jcfi~
~ient in these fo;ds will pn:v~nt. thc
tlody from havmg the l'ncrg~ it
needs anti the nutrients that nrc cru·
cialto fun cti on P•'operly.
• Nutritioni sts caution · atlainst tlu.::
. lO w ~ c arboh ydratc' , high-pr otein di~t s
[or several qthcr rl·asnns . as w...-11.
:I;'he hody' s use "u f insuhn is v n~:
~aj or oppositi on Lo thr u~c nf high QTOtein di ets.
In sulin is ·csscmial in dcposiun~
(at in fat ce lls. The fat mav ...·o m~..·
(tom the foods we cat or m;.uic in the
liver. Insulin l"Un also reduce tht&gt; lat
fCJeascd from the fat l'~.-·lb. \Vhcn
there is a rcductioh in the consump·
tion of carbOhydrates. the hody docs
hot release as mud1 i1isulm .. Thl!~uses more movement of f:u rwm·
· the fat cells.
, · Within ~ short tunc , th e Cells
W:ljust to thi s vcrv ln w level or
insulin , If the dieter. overeats on l'arbohydratcs at some point. there will
be. an in crease in e~· l U(:osc "lJing fmm
t.jle blood into the cell s. Potass ium is
also taken into the ce.lls "ith the •lu-

~.?..~~'~.~~..,, """' L. .

with sodium and powssium . lndtviduals arc •omctimcs encouraged to
ta~e P&lt;llasS~um supp leme nts W
co unteract the mtneral deficiency
that resu lts.
In .tddi tton 10 causing und ue
slrain on the liver and de pleting the
body uf energy. high-protein diets
ca n affect the kidneys. The kidneys
have to work clVertimc to break
down the execs~ prm~ins · t hal arc

excre ted in the urine . This can he
quite . inconvcn ic.nt and dangerous
lor athlete &gt;. The '"1°Y will not onl y
Th..'rd to urinal~ more frcque mly. but
with the mhlctc"s already large l osscs of WJII.::r thrinJgh perspiration.
Llchydrminn ma~ al~o dl!vclop .

1 "-" 0 "

pcopll'

wh' 1

&gt;J:rc •amng

ad\ ocate~ of thl..'~c dtcb Thcv. havl'

gr.Hn ,.;.
~hou iJ

L

-

.

~ w~~ ~""'~~~~~rr,?~!~E.~?K~~ "'"'' ...:~. '"' '"~""" "' .J

Mary Ju Barringer led the pledge
service, '" Respo nding 10 God 's
Word", when Alfred Unt teJ
Methodist Women met at the church
on Sept. 14. Worship center featured
a cross; Bible . and candles. Service
opened with group singing of "How
Great Thou Art " and prayer.
Barringer read Daniel 6 and led
.. Our Rcspons~ " anti ''Pl edge Scrvtcc" with all taking part. Plcdg,,.
WL' fl' made tn cnnll!luc ,1ur \~ork in
sc rvtcc and contri but ions.
The husincss meeting was
opened wilh prayer by Nina Robinson and re&lt;tlli ng ofJhc Purpose. Sec-

'"'
pastors

to the present-day 40,000

paslOrs.
Shara h Caldwell had the prayer
calendar and chose Joce lyn Roper,
deaconess in lai)y, West Ohio Conlcrcrn:c. Worthington. The society
&gt;igncd a birthday card for her.
Pasto r Sharon Hausman then
jomed the group and gave the grace
hcr,1rc the refreshments se rved by
Nellie Parker.

The nc:xt meeting will be Oct. 12
ntthl: ~:hur...:h . Florence Ann Spencer
wllllc·ad the program. Refrelhmt nts
,.,,ill he pot luck.
- ---

rctarv Martha Ponlc and Treasurer

Osk. MJe Follrod gave the ir reports.

T he

Adu lt fe males age 19-24
h;n't' 46 grams: 25 years and
oh.k r should haYe 50 gram s. Pregnant woml.!n ~hou ld ha\'C 60 gram s
of protein dail y; nurs ing mothers
:-.hLJuld ha' c 6;i grains for ·the first
:. ix mnnth~ anU (12 grams fnr th t! set: mld six months.
Athlete:-; ~mly need a litt le more
protein tha n no n athlet es. One more
sen 1ng from the Jnl'aL fish, poultry,
· dn~d bl!an ~ &lt;.J. nd nuts group or the
da iry ~roup wil j he sufficien t. Extra
oose.
• This s udd en decrease in hlood protl'ln doC:. not huild more muscle ·
onl y rc~ular physical activity and
~otassi um can damage the heart. If a
dieter dec ides to cat carbohyd rates train ing builds mu s~k stre ngth and
again, they must be i nt rudu n~d slow· SII.C .
ly into the diet in order to pre ve nt
. One last worJ ag:unsl the hight.\lis imbalan ~e from occurring .
prntt:in di ets. Tlic ex tra prote in is not
Another problem thlll ca ri be storcJ in the hody for fu ture usc as
caused by low-carbohydrate. htgh- protein . It may he used for energy
protein diets is a cond itinn called (but not as efficiently 'as carbohyl{etosis: Weakness. nausea and dehy - drates) or stored as body fat. Mun y
dration result when fat (instead of times hi gh-protein foods arc also
carbohydrates) becomes the major foods that lrC high in fat . so it
fuel for the liver. Substances ca lled Ucfcats the p urpo~e o.f try in g to lose
ketone bodies result from the incom- weight by only eating protein foods.
P-lete ox idation of fauy ac ids. They
~

u- .......

·
f ncn
· d shtp
· ca 1Is were
Twcnty -nme
1\ lSI wci.c:
ht
hc~.:auso,;
they
h;n
t'
·
oc~.:.·n
.
rq10ncd. Bu ~ m .:ss Lli~cu s~ 1 o n s were
d 11 ~ ...·1y \\ •11 "-~ hing what thL"y . ~. at. on . . - hOllsing people for fivt• -star·
r! l t') would llbl' \\c•ght 0 11 a \\ell gi' ing. raisin~ annual dues. · suhhalanc~d d l ~l . t~Hl. If 111 ~~ raid that snipt inns for UMW magaLi ncs : ·and
much ~mcntidll hl i1. \Vith a well -hal ·
F
ancCd
diet tile) \v.ouiJ h.: .).!cllill.l! tht~ . do n:.Jt ion s ID l'st i\al ofS hari.ng .
Thelm~ Hc nt.il'rslm gave a repop
n.lHnt· nto; the~ nerd insll:aLI tlf ta~in g on the difkrt~ n ,,:~s hct\·WC n thl· first
num'unnal ~upplc lllc·ms. The n1p id • a1inua l Ml' th oJis"l Confcrcm:c hdd
Wl.!n!IH
. Inss is in lh~ form
· 1792 .and lljc pn:~
, ·o f water an Bal1in10rc Ill
l o~s. nnt hod"'
1".11 .
J
:-;c nt·duy ccmfcrcrh:c : more dch:H-

Kcum11nc ndcd
D ic t ~; ry
Al!~nva n cc-: gi\t' n hy tnc National
A~.1dl·my 1.1f St:ll' n(r.:S suggests that
adu lt male.; .t~c 19 -2-l should con~u m.: 5X grams uf pnl!t:m c;ll'h day:
25 y.:~tr-• and older slw uld have 63

Wednesday

-~==========~

Nciglcr reuhion held

The ann ual reunion of the Ralph
and ks~-.· Ncigler famil y was heiQ
"Sept. 12 :ll the Star Mill Park in
Raci ne.
Prayer wa~ g iven hy Dorothy
Yate s preceding the potluck dinner.
All~IH.Iing from Racine were:
Ralph and Ed na Nciglcr; .Bru...: e ,Nciglc_r: Kenn y and Ivanna Nci gler and
· Curtis and Jarchildrr:.n Manhcw.

Cummins; Sarah and Rodney Nci glcr; Bob and Dorothy Harden:J.i!n
and Pam Foreman and ctiiidr~
Amanda and Erin from Portland:
Dorothy Yates. Don and Angie
Harden, Mike and Beth Harden, D.
J. and Stacy Harden and children
Wesley and Michaela from Oak
Hill : Wanda Neigler of Syracuse;
Mark and Nola Proffiu and daughter
Liz from Ponwroy; Linda Davi s of
Gallipolis: Matt and Joy Matthews
and children Tim. Sarah and Madison from Grove City: John and
Tammy Nelson and children Jljhn
William and Heath from Mi ddle pod: Bri an and P3ge Harden and

sc ripture Galations 6:1-5 which
Dorothy Jeffers read to open the
recent meeting of the Rock Springs
United Methodist Women.
The group sang "Open My Eyes "
and "Love Lifted Me." The Purpose
was read in unison. Leah Ord gave
the treasurer 's report and Pandora
Collins. tile sccf~tary ·s report .
Prayer for the sick was by Dee ·

c hildren Andrea. Ashley and Alysha

d onati o n tor blankets to the fe stival.

Jayne from Point Pleasant , W.Va.,
Drusi lla Hou se. Jitn and Louise
Smith. Meli ssa Bader and c hildren
Matt , Mills and Mason frOm Ha it i ~
mo re , 10hio.

Oct. 10 was de signated as Blanket

..1.

Rock · Springs United Methodi~t

\\'omen

Reagan associates.

"As long as he .levels w'ith the
reader, I don't think it 's a problem. "
·said David McCullough , Pulit Ler
Pri ze winner for his book on Harry
Truman.
"Dutch'" was commi ssio ned in
the mid- 1980s, when R.eagan was

pre~idcnt, and Morris was given ·
exte nsive access for an au1horized
biography. His approach is highly
unu sual for hiography. but it 's com-.
mon for fi ction:

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middl eport
Neig hb or hood Watch meeting
Tuesday. 7 p.m_at the Middleport
·
Church of Christ.

a

Meigs volleyballers win two, Page 8
.Ann on family issues, Page 9
Family Medicine, Page 10

Today: Sunny
High: 60s; Low: 40s
Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 70s; Low: 50s

downReds~2

---:-Page 7

•

The Fcsuval or Shan ng will be~~
Pl'aiil"s United Meth od ist
Church on Oct. 14' beginning at 7
p.m. Severa l memhe rs plan to
auenJ anJ will take hea lth kits .
baby quil t ~ . sc.:hoo l supplies 5nd a
Sunday to gi~c all ch urch all endants
a ch&lt;:~ncc to rarti&lt;:ipatc if they
dcs1rc . The hlankcts cost $5 each ·
and are much-need ed in tlood and
earthquake areas.
L&lt;..'nor;~ Lcilhcit sh ow~d ~ fill!l
and .gave .a tulk oil Althcinicr~.
....
The clo~ in g prayer wois by · Virg"i.ni a Wear~. follom.nl," by refresh :
mcnt s.
·

phy.
" ll's such a beautiful afternoon
here on Mnrtha"s Vineya rd that I
.thoug l11 I'd go help John Adams
mQW hay."' he said With a laugh.

will in"ce t, 8 tun . Meet at tile
hoinc of Jan e Walton to car pool
for lhc Dresd en trip .
Bl' Iil

WEDNESDAY
COOLVILLE ;- Revival se rvjces at White's Chapel Wc s·
leyan Church. Coolville. Wedne sREEDSVILLE - RLvcrview
day through Sunday, 7 p.m. each Garden Club meeting. 8 p.m. at
POM EROY - Auxiliary of .eve ning with Sunday services al the home of Mar y Alice Bi sc .
the Eagles. Tuesday. 7:30 p.m. at 10. a.m. and 7 p.m . Dr. John F. In stallati on of office rs will 'be
th e hall.
·
Hay will be the evange li st. Pastor held .
Phillip Ridenour , pastor, invites
· CHESTER -'-' Chester Council the public .
POM EROY
and
323. Daughters of America, TuesCou ntry Expo Com mittee meet day. 7:30p.m. at the hall . Silent
RACINE -,- Special mc ettn g in g, 7:30 p 111. at the Meigs
auction. quarterly birthdays to be of the Pomeroy -Racine Masoni c . County Fairgrou nd s. All perso n ~
obse rved .
. Lodge 164 F&amp;AM will b~ held int cre stc.d in th e Expo are invited
·
Wednesday. 7 :30 p.m. with work to attend .
MIDDLEPORT - State Rep . in the third degree. Food and
John Carey, R-Well ston , will con- refreshments \': ill be se rved.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tup·
duct an open door sess ion at the ·
pers Plains Veterans of Foreig n
Middl eport Village Hall from 2 to THURSDAY
Wars Po st 9053 meeti ng. 7:3 0
· 3 p.m. o n Tuesday.
POMEROY - Pre ce ptor Bet a p .m . Name dr~wing w he held .

~· ~own

'

Meigs County's

·Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 50, Number 74

Single Copy- 35 cents

New community forms. on 620 acres in Scipio Township
Wisteria
to include nature preserveI campground
.
.

By BRIAN J . REED
In addition, the group also plans to put the land Jo
Sen~nel News Staff
work. Many of the members of Wisteria have interest and
. Rtght of~ State Route 684 and just over a hill in Sci· background in the area of medicinal plants and native
pto Townshtp IS a untque communtly, or at the very least, . herbs, and Suggs said that a "cottage industry" of cultithe begmntngs of a umque commumty.
·vating these plants will eventually be started, and that the
Its name, ~tstena, e.mbodtes the love of nature and land will also be used to grow food for the community.
It sounds like a commune, but Suggs said that there is
the gentle envtronmcnt .that members of the community
hope to foster on .620 acres in Scipio Township. ·
an impcrtant distinction between a commune and the
Wisteria is loca~ed between Harrisonville and "intenjional community" that is being established at Wis~ageville on a hilly terrain created by years of strip min·
teria: members of Wisteria do not share income, as memtng. Now reclaimed and green with trees and native bers of a commune do.
Sitting in a cool and shady clearing on the property
plants, the land is being developed into a combined
nature preserve, residential community and campground, known as "Hickory Grove," one of several such areas on
for use by like.-minded groups who wish to join in the the property which have been developed as refuge areas
Wisteria mission of loving the land and caring for the . for ,meetings, classes, and even more social gatherings ·
·
.
·
' such as weddings, Suggs said last week that the underearth.
·
. The land was purchased in 1996 by a group of friends taking is nothing unusual, really.
\(This is just a community," S~ggs said. "If you think
who had met through various otganizations, music festivals and other gatherings. 10 households now occupy the about i~ it 's a lot like how people used to fonn a town.
land - some pennanently, others on weekends and hoi - We have organized, and now we are pl.anning how to ·use
idays.
the land, how we will generate income, where the memThe group hopes to generate enough revenue from the bers of the community will live, and how we will use the
campground operation, which is licensed by the slate, to common areas of the property."
pay the expenses of building .construction and other
The group's board meets once a month ·and oversees
improvements.
the financial operations and the future planning of the
Wisteria member Charlene Suggs said that the camp· community.
ground is designed more for groups than for ind,ividuals . "We 're all involved on several levels,". Suggs said.
or families who wish to spend a weekend in aJent The "We're involved on an emotion~) level, an ideolog[cal
group hopes to attract workshops, classes, gatherings of level, and an organizational level, so you have to put
lant11cvers and musical festivals to the area. .
them all together and try to make. it work."

"It's an e?ucation in h~n.esty,"

.

·

, ~uggs satd thatthts s~tnt ofcooperalion, often lack-

Equally i~pcrtant 10 the me~bers of the ~steria
commumty ts a good relalionshtp wtth the ne•ghbors.
She said that those who live around the property have
been eager to help, and that the owner.; of Wi steria have
been just · ~ anxious to. be good neighbors, not only to
those living around them , but to the count~ in general.
·"We want to be part of. the business fabric of the coun,
ty," Suggs said. "We want to be valuable to the neighbors
and to our communi ty.''

tng m modem commumttes, ts 1mpcrtant to the success
of Wistena.
"Peop!e haven't learned to cooperate very well,"
~uggs srud, "and that's pan of the problem . We' re worktng here·so that we can have the time we need and the
stuff that we want. It's that simple."
Yulia Sulo, a native of Bavarian Germany, has built
the first permanent home at Wisteria. She r;::-;:-----:-c-r----::;:--;~;r:,!li
is proud of her rustic cabin, surrounded
"' '
~
by a g(een meadow which will one day be
planted in gardens.
'
She is, she said, happy at Wisteria. She
shares respcnsibility for the project with
other member.; of the com munity, but
als&lt;i enjoys the privacy and solitude that
her home affords her.
Last week, the first child, a little girl,
was born on the property, and will join
eight other children who belong to the
community.
Workers with the reclamation and
forestry departments are working closely
with the group so that the land can con·
tinue to heal from its bout with strip min- t--:c======:-!:.-;,~~~5_\~:::,~~~,-=-:::_·_.:.:~
ing, and plans are underway for a watershed project.
VISIT WISTERIA - Students participating In "Living with
Watching the'land recover, and seeing the Earth," a survival akills courae, visited the rolling hills of
more vegetation and other woodland life the Wisteria campgrounds this past weekend , Here, Trenton
return to the site have been rewarding for Harper of Elkins, W.Va. helps John Dittrich with his flre-bulldthese lovers of the earth.
lng s .kllla.

.... ~¢1Cefe!lerf!u~f!~s~plan. to No Pomeroy Police Auxiliary this year
;·shore
un
m1ners ·.benefitS
',
•
·fW:
'
..

By JIM FREEMAN
In other law ·enforcement business, Miller
Vaughan read a letter from Village Admin istra·
Sentinel Newa Staff
introduced new part-time dispatchers J"!!te Hoi- tor John Anderson referring to comments about
By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
of money in August, t.hey're going to
. Pomeroy Vill~g.e Council prob~bly won't c~n- man ~nd Tammy Smith to council.
Pomeroy water in an earlier newspaper &gt;tory
Auoclllttld Press Writer
have a hard time explaining that, if stder the pcsstbthty of reestabhshtng a police
Mtller also requested the purchase of three about Middlepcrt's water problems.
ST. ALBANS, W.Va. -Sen. lay thty're running for president, or department auxiliary - at least until the begi,n- radios for about $300 each with money to come
Pomeroy is able to supply water to Midd lepcrt
nmg of next year.
·
from law enforcement trust fund or safety fund . and hooking onto Pomeroy water will not require
Rockefeller says he will pressure the whatever," Rockefeller said.
Clinton administration and Congress
The Combined Benefit Fund, ~reJoe Kirby, Joe Kirby Jr. and Shannon Walker Council approved the request.
additional treatment faci lities for Middl eport, he
to support a plan ·to resolve the ated by federal law . in .1!!92,_pays met with council and Mayor Frank Vaughan MonDuring open discussion, Councilman Larry said.
financial woes of. a fund that pays h~alth costs for approltimately day nigh\ conecmlnfl t~e projlosed auxiliary Wehru~g asked for a report on the riverbank
Tbe bottom line is t~l Pomeroy water is high·
health benefits .to retired coal min- 70,000 retired members of the Unit- force. The subject of a police department auxil: cleanup and said he has received complaintS cori- ly reliable and th at plans call fo r adding a new
ers.
ed Mine ·workers and their depen· iary to augment the regular police force has cerning broken parking meters.
well. and treatment fa cili ties to the Pom eroy water
Rockefeller, D-W,Va., met Tues- dents.·
sprung .up occasionally in recent years, with no
Councilman George Wright also discussed system, he said.
day with ·retired miners and widows .
The law assigned lialiility for the action by council.
·
parking meters, but said council should consider
"Middlepcrt can so lve its water problems by '
lo explain a plan to finance the ben- retirees' care to their last responsible .
Council members ·did not elaborate on their removing them instead of repairing them .
choosing the Pomeroy alterhative," Anderson ·
efits with earnings from the $1.4 bil- employer, and created a separate apparent decision to pass over the auxiliary.
Wright said he attended meeting about com- wrote.
ln. other busi ness, counCi l:
lion Abandoned Mi}1e Lands fund fund to finance "orphans" - former . Vaughan indicated COUI!cil was not interested ·in peting with Wal-Mart and said that parking
administered by the U.S. Depart- miners whose last known employer forming a police auxiliary at this .time, but may meters are a major obstacle to business in town.
-Accepted sole bids of $505 and $551 for th e
ment of the Interior.
has gone ou t o f bus mess
·
- th at use d cons1·der lhe pcsst'b"1l"tly next year when more
"Personally I'm in favor of taking them out," old pel ice cruiser and dump truek, respectively.
The senator said he has discussed interest from the Abandoned Mine funding is available
he said.
-Heard a complaint by Rev. Don Fritz who
the plan with Interior Secretary Land funds.
· Vaughan also said the trio should have gone . • He also asked if the village was making any said people are parking· across his driveway dur!i~~~~o~a~~i~~~dO~~i~~: ~;~:~r!hc~ theBiaut sowmeree 60filedlegbal cha11e,:gest to :•through channels" with Police Chief Jeff Miller progress in getting grant funds to -demolish the ing Meigs High School .home games.
1 ·
w
Y co~1o,...ra or.; Ill makmg lhetr complaml'
· .dilapidated Sugar Run School building. which is
- Met in executive session to discuss personMining. Both were skeptical, Rock- and former operators. The lawsuits
The junior Kirby said the auxiliary would not now owned by the village.
nel matters.
.
efeller said.
upset the fund's actuarial balance, ~ost anything and would provide valuable trainCouncilman David Ballard said the village
Also present were Treasurer Kathy Hysell,
He won 't be afraid to bring polit- which is expected to be $13 million mg to new officerswhile helping to make police needs to do core drilling on sinkholes on Butter- council members Scott Dillon and Gcri Walton
ical pressure to bear on Clinton in debt by Oct. 1. The fund is run- patrols safer for regular officer&lt;.
· nut Avenue before paving begins.
'
and Fire Chief Chris Shank.
'
'
appcintees, the president or the vice ning a deficit of about $50 million a
president, Jl.ockefeller said.
"lfthe(heallhcare)fundrunsout

Continued In
"Miners8eneflts"onpage3

Regional Briefs
Environmental activist sues Athens sheri
ATHENS (AP) -An environmental activist filed a lawsuit accusing an
Athens County sheriff's deputy of punching him in the jaw.
Chad Kister also alleges in the lawsuit filed Tuesday in Athens County
Common Pleas Court that Sheriff David Redecker did not investigate his
complaint thoroughly.
. .
.
Kister said the alleged auack occurred on Dec. 6, 1997, .when he was in
the county jail. after being arrested on charges of attemp(ing to exto1t
money from a United Mine Workers official.
He later was found innocent of those charges.
Kister is asking for at least $25,000 in damages in the suit, which lists
Redecker and Deputy Bill McMillan as defendants.
The sheriff and McMillan could not be reached to comment.
Telephone messages were left for them at ihe sheriff's office Wednesday.
·
Prosecutor Bill Biddlestone said he would have to discuss the suit with
the sheriff and county commissioners before deciding whether it will be
handled by his office or the county's insurance company.

People feel ground trembl~ east of Cleveland
, WILLOUGHBY (AP) - People in •communities east of Cleveland
reported what they believed was a small earthquake today. No damage or
·
injuries were repcrted.
,• Monitors at the U.S. Geological
·
Survey National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colo., did
not indicate a quake, said geophysicist John Minsch .
·
"It's possible something small
3 Sections - 24 Pages
could have occurred," he said.
The Oeveland Museum of Nalur·
10
Calendar
al History has earthquake monitor-~Cdla!!!s~s!!ili!.!teiJ!d!.s_ _ _ _l!,3!.!&amp;!.!!!14
ing equipment. The staff member
Corilics
IS
who checks it was not immediately
Editorials
2
available for comment
Police departments in Willoughby
Local
3
and nearby Wickliffe received a few
Spor1s
7&amp;8
calls from the public about the
shaking at about6 a.m.
3
Weather
"It was no big deal,' ' said Wickliffe
Dispatcher Tracy Cooper.
Lotteries
was shakirig a little bit "
Willou ghby · Police Lt. Dani el
OHIO
·
Ouior
said he was woken up at
Pick 3: 5-8-2; Pil'k 4: 2-7-9-7
home
by
the shaking and· saw his
BuckeyeS: 3-10-18-25-28
lamp moving.
W.VA.
Ohio has had 120 earthquakes in
Daily 3: 4-8-5; Daily 4: 7-1-4· 1
the
pas't 200 years, most of them
C \999 Ohio Valley Puhli~hing Co .
minor.

Good Afternoon

1

Today's

Sentinel

:·u

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'

.I

San Diego

Th ~

·· Bear Yc One Annthcrs ' Bur-

McCullough, reached Monday hy
phone in hi s Massachusells home,
joked about the oddity of splicing
together elements of .fiction and
nonfiction in presidential biogra-

Septemb« 22, 1Wll

Rader.

New book on Ronald Reagan mixes fiction with .a little history
NEW YORK CAP) - In Edmund
Morris' new biography of Ronald
Reag;m, the Pulitler Prize-\vinning
author uses·~ tl';chnique more in the
spirit of '"Forrest Gump"' than historical sc holarship.
. Morris 'invents a narrator to l1clp
frame the fom1er president 's lire.·
And not just any narrator - it' s a
fe llow named "Edmund Morri s.·· a
ficti onal contemporary of Reagan 's.
So while the author was ))orn
nearl y 30 years after hi s subject. he
places himself alongside Reagan on
the football field, the co llege cam·
pus and at the: Army Air Force's
moti on picture unit.
Few have seen advanced co pies .·
of '" Dutch,"' which will go. on sale
next week. but it has already been
debated hy historian s,· crit1 cs and

.

Weather

La·w wo uId m·and ate t oug. her
.

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CINCINNATI (AP) - A man accused of driv.ing drunk into a crowd of people at an Oktober·
fest' celebration downtown could have faced a
tougher sentence if a propcsed law had been in
effect. ·
.
The tougher drunken-driving proposal is
.snagged in negotiations over how the state would
compensate local governments for the longer DUI
sentences.
The state Senate has approved the measure,
which awaits final action in the House.
Under the propcsed law, the driver of a car that
plowed into a crowd of people Sunday evening
could be considered a "high·end" DUI offender
and face a more severe jail sent'ence.
Michael Cowperthwaite, 25, of Union Town· ship in Clermont County, pleaded innocent Tuesday ,to felony charges of aggravated vehicular

assault, leaving the scene of an· accident and flee- had a blood-alcohol concentration level in exce.~s
ing and eluding pclice. Bond was set at $225,000. of 0. 15. "
·
If convicted on all charges, he could face more .
It is Cowperthwaite's first DUI charge, pelice
than three years in jail.
said.
Police said Cowperthwaite was driving with a
The House Criminal Ju stice Committee is con.
blood-alcohol limit of 0.209- more than twice sidering Johnson's leg islati on and is negotiating
the legal limit in Ohio- when he drove his car with local governm ents over increased lines that
through barricades and injured 29 people.
could compensate. them for the ir added costs .
, The bill that passed the Senate in April would
"' I definitely think it 's a good bill,." said Nora
categorize drivefs with a blood-alcohol levels of Banks, vice chairwoman of field services for
0.17 percent or higher as "high-end" DUI offend· Mothers Against Drunk Driving's Ohio chapter.
ers.
·
" Anything that can be done to prevent someone
"Drivers with blood-alcohol concentrations of from continually drinking and drivi·ng is good. "
0.15 or rnore are atleast200 times more likely to
John son's legislation would significantly
be in ~olved in fatal crashes than the average non· increase the penalty for second fe lony DUI
drinking driver," said the bill's sponsm, slate Sen. offenses. Judges could se ntence offende rs to up to
Bruce Johnson, R-Columbus. " In 1996, 31 per- ti ~e years in prison, in stead of the current maXI cent of ·all fatally injured ·drivers, ages. 25 to 45, mum 18 months.

Both parties seek ways to protect Social Security surplus
By ALAN FRAM ·
billion.
'
Asaoelated Press Writer
But this goal - which Cl in ton and DemocWASHINGTON (AP) - Both parties are • rats also share- marks an abrupt turnaround.
hunting for ways to avoid raiding , next year's Spending Social Security surpluses has long
Social Securi!y surplus, even though they have · been standard procedure in Washington.
routine·ly spent it for the past five decades and
The last time at least some of it was not used
may end up doing so again in 2000.
to finance general government prog~ams was
With the stm of fiscal 2000 just nine days 1951.
away, Republicans are stepping up their drive
But after two years of partisan maneuvering
to complete many of the new year's spending over ·the huge p~nsion program for the elderly
bills on time .
.
and disabled, the pol itical dynamic has
So far, Congress 1\as.completed just four of changed. Clinton issued a call to "save Social
the l3 bills requ ire d to keep the government Security first," Republican s co untered by pushrunning .
ing a "lock box" plan to prevent th e draining of
Republicans say ·lhe·y will help pay for the Social Security funds, and now each party says
bills with most of next year's projected $14 bil- it will leave the money alone.
lion non -Social Security surplu s, which is
"The surplus has taken o n a' symbolic mean building up reserves to handle the retirements ing that you won ' t erode benefits," said Mar of baby boomers as they begin a decade from shall Wittmann, who is congressional affairs
now.
director at the conservative Heritage Founda· Republicans also .will use budget devices lion . 1
.
, that would shift billions in spending in,to fiscal
Asked to explain the sudden importance of
2001 -thereby easing their fiscal2000 spend- leaving Social Security surpluses alone, Whit e
ing problem .
.
House budget office spokeswo man Linda Ricci
GOP leaders also may declare the $1.4 bil- said Clinton has helped create a cliniale in
li on budgeted next year for hom~· heating aid which protecting the prog ram is a priority,
for the pcor to be a budget "e mergency."
"and that doesn't happen overnight."
That would let them circumvent spending
On Tuesday, House Majority Leader Dick
limits impcsed two years ago as part of a bal- Armey, R-Texas, told reporters that Republi anced-budget agreement with President Clin- cans would not touch SociaL Security s urplu ses
ton .
in 2000 or beyond, calling it " the legislative
Republicans hope ·that in the end, .they will opport unity of a lifetime and a moral responsibe able to claim they did nonpend next year's bility that 's as large as anything I've encoun·
Social Security s urpl us, projected to· be $147 tered in this job."

(

•

o·uI.sent ences .·

,..

' But he. didn't men.tion 1999 or prc;_1 ous
years. Asked later why it has beer all right to
spend Soc.ial Security funds unti l now. he said,
"We 're getting there as qui ckl y as we can . ...
Thi s year suffers a hangover from 40 years of
the wrong policy."
Even ·so. Republican le aders pushing a near
$8 Hill ion emergency relief package for farmers
want to enact the legisl ation quickly. so they
can spend $5.5 bi llion of it in the remaining 10
days offiscal 1999.
That would help them achici'C their promise
to leave next year 's Socia l Security .surplus
alone, but would still reduce the $125 billion
Social Security surplus projected for this year.
Even without the added farm spending, the
White House e.xpecis $24 billion in Soctal
Security surpluses to be used in 1999 for gcn·
eral government purposes.
The nonpartisan Congressional Bu&lt;(get
Office projects that $4 bill io n will be used. .
There are man y claims on the Social Sccuri·
ty money. In a letter last month, the Congres·
sional Budget Office· said House budget pro·
posals, if enacted, would erase the $14 billion
and eat into the Social Security surplus by an
additional $13 billion .
That doesn't include th e billions it will take
to pay for the huge labor, health and ed ucation
bill , which has not yet been written. And it
omits pctential new needs such as U.S. ope.ra·
ti.ons in Kosovo, relief from Hurricane Floyd's
lloods, earthquake aid to Turke y and peacekeeping in East Timor.

·'

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Wednesday, September 22, 1999

Commentary

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f

Here comes Bill Bradley

'Esta6fiski i111948

By WIHiam A. Ruahar

111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
740 IMI2-2158 • Fax: IMI2-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
CHARLES W., GOVEY
Publlahar
DIANE HILL
Controller

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na. Sentinel aulcomMittttww 1o,. «&lt;lkK from I'MdtHe on • bn»d ,..,._of,._
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nou. att~CN 01 ,.,.,_ ..., to· utt... to , . edltOI', n.. Sentinel,
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140-~2167.

Editorial views.
Excerpts of recent edllorials of statewide and national mterest from Ohio
•
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Sept. 17:
The U.S. Department of Housmg and Urban Development IS used to having things its own way - often to the detnment of the people 11 is supposed
to serve.
A case m point 1s the steady deterioration of the 82Q..unit Longwood
Eslates, which 1s on default and looks much hke it did in 1996, when it was
cited for havmg 4,300 housmg-code VIolations. HUD has S31d the only solutions are to foreclose on the owners and demohsh the property or rebuild 11.
So it's good that some Ohio congressmen are responding to the pleas of
Cleveland Clly Councilman Frank iackson for scrutiny of HUD's handling
of the hulking hovel that IS sllll home to 650 families. Only their intervention w1ll counteract HUD's delusiOn that 11 IS accountable to no one.
The (l'oledo) Blade, Sept. 16:
What a colossal waste of taxpayer time and money Every mdependent
counsel deployed to mvestigate individuals w1thm the Clinton admmistration has m1ssed h•s mark by a mile In fact, none of the key figures targeted
for lengthy and outrageously costly mvestigations has been h1t with major
convictiOns Cons1der the paltry return taxpayers received for their four• year, SI 0 million mvestment in the Henry Cisneros case.
The former housing secretary adm!tted lying bn an FBI background
check about the amount of payments he made to a former mistress before he
·became a member of the Clinton cabinet. H1s guilty plea to the misdemeanor
charge cost h1m $10,000 and a promismg political career as a nsing star in
the DemocraiJc Party A steep pnce in one sense, but hardly commensurate
w1th all the government's effort and expense
The Columbus Dlspateh, Sept. 13:
· In theory, the deregulation of utilities brings the benefits of competition
'to commumlles. In practice, 11 also bnngs a maze of telephone, electric and
cable TV lines, as competing compan1es prov1de access to theu serv1ces.
Gone are the days when a llm1ted number of compan1es had access to
'city's streets, alleys and utility poles. If a new law remains in effect, cities
will be left to clean up the resulting mess.
Cities should not have to pay the pnce - econom•c or aesthetic - for'
'deregulation of utilities. If compames want to lay cables, pipes or whatever
else they need to,do business in a commumty, they should expect to do so
by those communities' standards. The state has no business protecting utili'ties from the costs of doing busmess.
The Uma News, Sept. IS:
In another blatant abuse of JUdicial resources, the Massachusetts Supreme
Judicial Court on Monday was forced to listen to arguments concerning a
'child's spanking
, In 1997, mm1ster Donald Cobble's then 9-year-old son brought home a
bad report card. Cobble, believmg in stern discipline, admimstered a spank'ing on his son with a leather belt
' By most accounts, Cobble's d1sc1pline was far from crossmg the line into
child abuse and should never have gone th1s far m the court system,
' Deciding whether to spank a child should be a decision left up to the par'ents, not the social workers or courts.
The Marion Star, Sept. 16:
' Here's some good news for those of us tJred of wedgmg mto airplane and
theater seats, and weary from searchmg for pants that are never made in our
size.
The government, which spends a lot of t1me and money trymg to get us
'all to lose weight and stay in better shape, 1s going to participate m a plan
"aimed at offenng some relief to those who have been unable to answer the
weight-loss call.
,
Researchers b1ll 11 as the most comprehensive database ever compiled 011
the shape and s1ze of the average human body
It's about time the people who make our clothes and design our seats realize that the average person is larger than the average person was during the
}940s.
newspape~:

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I

Today In History

Pllge 2

All of a sudden, the 2000
presidential race, which had
seemed so cut and dned, 1s
beginmng to look downright
exc1t1ng.
Up until recently, 11 seemed
inevitable that V1ce President
Gore would be the Democratic
nominee, that Gov. George W.
Bush would be his Republican
challenger, and that Bush woul!l defeat Gore .in
November next year. And so, indeed, it may still
come to pass
But that scenano now looks far from
mevitable It seems clear that Pat
Buchanan will seek the nomination of
Ross Perot's Reform Party, and if he
succeeds he will almost surely take
more votes from the Republican nommee than from h1s Democratic rival-votes that could eas1ly prove pivotal
JR a close election
That didn't matter greatly as long
as Gore was the probable Democratic
nommee

~-

there m1ght tngger a massive shift toward
Bradley in the deciSive primaries of March. The
Democratic convenhon might then become a
breathless re~nactment of the grand old story in
which Jack defeated the g•ant Then, on to
November! (And thank you, Mr. Buchanan.)
Looked at from the Republican slandpoint,
Bradley represents a far deadlier danger than
Gore. He 1s not only free of any taint of Ointonism, but his aforementioned thoughtfulness may
be immensely appealing 10 an electorate tired of
focus groups, poll-driven opinions and cynical
manipulation In television terms, Gov Bush will
come across as a mueh "hotter" personality -- a
feisty little terrier of a man, with a loud bark and

the need to help Amenca's black citizens part1c1:
pate more fully 1R the nallon 's prosperity. ThiS, or
course, is common ground among pohtic10ns of
both part1es, but in r radley's case one senses' a
depth of emot1on nn the subject that 1s uniquely
his own He not only supportS "affirmat1v~
action" (to the , etnment of mpre high!Y qualific~
white students and lower-biddmg white contractors seeking government work), but he also hmts
at a crusade for further "ga~ns. "
Perhaps Sen. Bradley is right m beheving th~t.,
to win, he must run to the left of Mr Gore, lhoullb
that is hardly self-evident But. if he is mdeed
nominated for pres1dent by the Democrats, he will
have to worlt hard to get back toward the center
''

Bush's lead over Gore m

poll after poll was so overwhelming
that losmg 2 percent or 3 percent of
h•s lead to Buchanan was unlikely to
matter much.
,
But now former Sen. B1ll Bradley
is mounting a serious threat to Gore's
candidacy, and if Bradley wms the
Democratic nomination, Gov. Bush. is
going to need every vote he can lay
h1s hands on.
For a long lime, almost nobody
took Bradley's candidacy senously
He IS a tall, soft-spoken, rather bovine
man, incapable of electrifying an
aud1ence. H•s appeal, such as it 1s,
anses from the 1mpress•on of earnest
thoughtfulness that he projects. But
his greatest asset is that he is not, and
never has been, a member of the Clinton administratiOn. Try as AI Gore L~_......:_ _..:.__ _ _..:..........:-'----~---'---------------------'
does, he cannot enhrely free himself from that a corresponding bite. That too may appeal to vot- before Mr. Bush (or any other Republican nomiers, but there's a lot to be said for thoughtfulness nee) can successfully depict him as a le!'tist ideodeadly 1denhficahon.
logue.
Add to that one of its consequences •· Gore's in a pres1dent.
In any case, it's good news that the presidential
But nobody is perfect, and Sen. Bradley has
dreadfully poor showing in polls that pit him
agamst Bush -- and one begins to see why Demo- already given his critics some useful ammunition. campaign is perking up. ,
Another 14 months of nothmg but Gore vs Bush
cratic pohtic1ans all over the country are begin- For some reason, he seems to be deliberately runmng to look longmgly m the duectmn of Sen. mng to the left of Mr Gore on a number of 1ssues, would be pretty haid to beai.
Capyrlght1IIKI NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
most notably soc~al ones.
Bradley.
Wllllmn A. Ruahar Ia • Dlatlngulahad Fello\111
He has come out for allowing avowed homoLate reports put him m a statistical dead heat
of
tha Claremont lnatlluta 'for tha Sludy of
w1th Gore among DemocratiC voters m next sexuals to serve in the armed forces. Perhaps most
Stataamanahlp
and Political Phlloaophy.
year's New Hampshue pnmary, and a Gore defeat strikingly, he has spoken w1th deep feJVOr about
.,

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Dialing, and·begging, for dollars
By J•ck Anderaon
and Douglaa Cohn
WASHINGTON ··An associate
of ours who once harbored political amb1tions mterned for a wellknown senator and came away

thoroughly exasperated: "He spent
50 percent of h1s hme begging for

money."
Even those who agree With Sen
M1tch McConnell, R-Ky., that
mo 0ey IS an appropnate way to
determine whether or not the constituency is buying the message,
must be appalled that their elected
senators and representahves are
able to spend so httle time domg
what they were sent here to do.
According to statistics compiled during the 1998 election
cycle, candidates runnmg (or
office can expect to spend
$100,000 of their own money and
about $5 million on duecl mallmgs
or advertisements if they expect to
wm S1nce all of this money must
be raised in $1,000 mcrements
from ind1viduals or $5,000 checks
from Political Achon Committees,
this translates into an enormous
chunk of time spent schmooz10g
for change or dialing for dollars -unless, of course, they are playing
the big bucks game, in wh1ch they
ask contnbutors to send unl1mited
"soft money" to the party Th1s

money IS then ostensibly used by
the party for general purposes, but
few doubt that 1t will somehow
manage to fmd 1ts way baclt to the
state of the candidate who was
responsible for the largess.
Here is what some well-respected politicians said aftFr s~nd1ng
the bulk of their workmg lives in
the service of the country
Former Senate Majority Leader
George Mitchell, D-Ma1ne·
"As Senate Majority Leader,
one of my respons!Dilities has peen
to schedule the operatwns of the
Senate. And I can say to you that
there's .hardly a day in the past six
years when I've been Majority
Leader when one or more senators
hasn't called and asked me not to
have a vote at a certain time .... One
of the most common reasons is that
they are either holdmg or attendmg
a fund-raising event .that evening,
either in Washington or outs1de
Was~mgton
If I put all the
requests together, the Senate
would never vote. I once had my
staff keep a lost of such requests on
I one day ... and had I honored all of
the requests, there could not have
been a vote that day It covered the
penod from mne am. until midmght "
Former House Minority Leader
Robert Michel, R-111..

By The Anoclated Preas
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 22, the 265th day of 1999. There are 100 days
left in the year.
On Sept. 22, 1776, Nathan Hale was hanged by the Brillsh as a spy during the Revolutwnary Wai
On this date
In 1789, Congress authonzed the office of Postmaster-General.
In 1792, the French Republic was proclaimed
In 1862, Pres1dent Lmcoln issued the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, declarmg all slaves m rebel states should be free as of Jan. I, 1863.
In 1949, the Sov1et Umon '1"tonated 1ts first atom1c bomb.
In 1958, Sherman Adams, ass1stant to Pres1dent Eisenhower, res1gned
amid charges of improperly usmg h1s mfluence to help an mdustr1al1st.
By Joaaph Parkins
In 1964, the mus1cal "Fiddler on the Roof" opened on Broadway, beginMarty Meehan, the Massachusetts Democ;rat,
ning a run of 3,242 performances.
was asked a pomt-blank quest1on about the House
In 1969, W1ll1e Mays of the San Francisco Giants h1t h1s 600th career campaign finance reform bill he co-authored:
home run, during a game agamst San D1ego
"How many of those Democrats would vote for
In 1975, Sara Jane Moore fa~IL . m an attempt to shoot President Ford reform 1f they thought 11 IJad a chance of passing
outs1de a San Franc1sco hotel
·
the Senate?"
In 1980, the Persian Gulf confl1ct between Iran and Iraq erupted into fullMeehan smiled. But he thought it wise not to
answer.
scale war.
In 1993, 47 people were killed when an Amtrak passenger train dera1led
This encounter was reported th1s week by
and crashed into Bayou Canol near Mob1le, Ala
Godfrey Sperling, m The Christian Sc1ence MonTen years ago: hYing Berlin, one of Amenca's most prolific songwnters, itor. It's all the public needs to know about the
died in New York City at age 10 I
politics of campaign finance reform .
Five years ago: The United States stepped up 1ts m1htary control of Ha~t1,
For while 197 House Democrats helped pass
breaking up heavy weapons, guarding pro-democracy activists and givmg the putative reform b1ll wntten by Meehan and
U.S. troops more leeway to use force Pope John Paul II, recovering from Connecticut Republican Chns Shays, Meehan
hip-replacement surgery, canceled his U.S trip, planned for October.
knows full well that most of his fellow Democrats
One year ago Congressional Republicans worked to snuff out new talk do not honestly favor the measure.
They cynically voted for Shays-Meehan to
of a punishment for President Clinton short of impeachment, an idea floated by Democrats as polls showed most Amencans opposed Clinton's dupe their constituents mto bellevmg that they
removal from office. The U.S. and Russ1a agreed to help Russ•• pnvat1ze its support campa1gn finance reform, fully expecting
nuclear program and stop the export of scientists and plutomum
the Senate to kill the measure as it d1d last year.
Today's Birthdays· Actress Martha Scott is 85, Baseball Hall of Fame
Indeed, if the party of Meehan were truly commanager Tommy Lasorda is 72. Actor Eugene Roche is 71. Musician King mitted to campaign fmance, as they proclaim.
Sunny Ade IS 53 Captam Mark Phill1ps 1s 51. Rock smger Dav1d Coverdale they could have enacted a campaign finance
(Deep Purple, Whitesnake) 1s 50. Actor Paul Le Mat is 47. Actress Shari reform law as far back as six years ago That's
· Belafonte is 45. Smger Debby Boone is 43. Country singer June Forester when Democrats controlled both the White House
(The Forester Sisters) is 43. Rock singer Johnette Napolitano is 42. Singer- and Congress.
However, m 1993, ne1ther Bill Omton nor Senmusician Joan Jett is 39. Actress Cathenne Oxenberg IS 38. Actor Scott Baio
is 38 Actor Rob Stone is 3 7. Actress Bonme Hunt IS 35 Rhythm-and-blues lite MaJonty Lead01 George M1tchell nor House
Speaker Tom Foley were proposmg to reform the
singer B1g Rube (Society of Soul) is 28.
Thought for Today. "Art for art's sake is an empty phrase. Art for the campaign finance system They were satisfied,
sake of the true, art for the sake of the good and the beautiful, that 1s the fa1th thank you very much, w1th the system as it was.
Of course, that all changed in 1994, when
I am searching for"- George Sand, French author (1804-1876)

"I have a great concern over
what campaigns are costing these
days, You know, I ran my first
campa1gn (in 1956) for $15,000.
And then by the t1me I got to my
toughest campaign in 1982, 11 was
$600,000 . When I look around
tht country and see some of these
multimilhon-dollar races, I just
have to be concerned about that.
The time that you spend raising
money, and the number of fundraising events I was obliged to
attend or at least slop by •• gosh,
you'd have five or SIX a mght. It
just wears you out doing that Now
they've started the breakfast routing. You can make more at a breakfast because you don 'I have to pay
as much for the s1uff you serve
them."
Former Rep. Vin Weber, R·
Mmn. ·
"I do think that the amount of
time people have to put into raismg money 1s a serious problem m
the country. There's no way you
can prove liS 1m pact on the quality
of the Congress' work . But when
the members making decisions
can't devote serious qualily time to
serious decisions, it has to (result
m) a lower quality of work."
Former Rep Leshe Byrne, D,
Va ·
"You are constantly drawn by

the siren song of trying to raise
money for your race And I think;
1t 's particularly true of the House,
where you have to run every twn'
years. Th1s last race I ra1sed $1 2'

m1lllon and 1t was constantly, ·~
should be making, pho.ne calls.' I
needed to constantly ra1se money '
- a very real distraction from tHe
'
real busmess
o f leg,slatmg "
·'
Former Rep. Guy Vander Jagt,
R-Mich:
"With the increasing cost of
campaigns, a member spends far
more time and effort and thought
to raismg money And usually the
effort is directed not so much al
the individuals in his congressiOnal d1strict, but at the PACs, the spe•
cial iniFrests..
''
The money rarely comes in
unless someone begs for it, arid
that someone is usually the candidate Rep. Jim Bacchus, D-Fia.,
explains: "And the candidate hmiself has to make the calls -because 1( the candidate doesn't
make the calls, then they arc
offended because they thmk you
don't care about them, even
though you have always, always,
always voted for them. "
.
Copyright 111911, Anderson &amp;
Cohn
Distributed by United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Democrats are finance-reform hypocrites

.•

·Death Notices

Wednaaday, Sept!lt'nMr 22, 10118

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE H6EFLICH
General M111t111181'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

Republicans swept into power in
both the Senate and House, sending Mitchell and Foley into
retirement and consigning
Democrats to mmority status
Suddenly, Democrats were ohso-coneerned that "big money"
was corruptmg the electoral
process.
The b1ggest culpnt, campaign finance reformers ms1st, IS "soft money," the unllm1ted donations that corporations, political action commit·
tees, wealthy individuals and, oh yes, labor
unions make to the political part1es for purposes
of "party building."
Wh1le both the Republican and Democratic
part1es have benefited from soft money, like the
cash Clinton ra1sed from th9se infamous White
House coffee klatches, Meehan's fellow Democrats ate willmg to outlaw such political donat10ns
because, it so happens, the GOP enjoyed a $40
m1111on soft-money advanlage over the Dems durmg the 1997-1998 election cycle
The hypocrisy of the Democrats on the softmoney issue is perhaps best revealed by Vice
President AI Gore, who has ra1sed $20 m11lion m
h1s quest to succeed·Clmton in the Oval Office
To demonstrate h•s sincere commitment to
campa1gn finance reform, the v1ce pres1dent
vowed not to accept donations from polihcal
action comm1ttees Yet, just th1s past spring, Gore
attended fund-raisers in California, sponsored by
a technology mdustry PAC, wh1ch added
$400,000 to h1s campa~gn coffers
1

Gore claimed to be unaware that the fund-raiSers were hosted by the technology PAC And Gore
campaign officials stated that he had no intention
of returning any of the money ra1sed because tlfe
contnbutions came 10 the form of checks from
" md1v1duals" rather than a lump sum from the '
PAC that put on the fund-raisers for him.
The irony of it all is that Gore has repeatedly
cntic1zed h1s presumed opponent m the 2000
pres1dential race, George W Bush, for h1s refusal
to embrace campaign finance reform legislation
like Shays-Meehan. Yet Bush has done more to ,
advance the cause of meamn gfu l campa1gn
finance reform than any of the hypocntes Lll
Washington, 1ncluding Gore.
::
Indeed, Bush is the first major-office seeker)!\
publish on the Internet each and every donatio~ '
he receives. If the public wants to know' who is
contributing money to the Texas governor's campaign, all they have to do 1s consult his Web s1te
Let us see if the 197 House Democrats and 55
House Republicans who voted for Shays-Meehan,
as well as Vice President Gore, Will follow Bush's
lead, voluntarily listing their poht1cal contnbutm:s
online and upl:latmg that list on a weekly, if n&lt;it
dally, bas1s
Bush d1d not wait for Congress to pass a campaign fmance reform bill to make th1s mformat10n
read1ly ava1lable to the Aniencan people And
ne1ther should Gore and the 252 House member8 .
who profess to support campa1gn finance reform '
CopyrlghtiiiKI NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Joaaph Parkins Is a columnist lor The San
Diego Union-Tribune.
1

Martha Lou 'Jukie' Hunnell Fox

Thlnday, Sept. 23
:N:I:u'Ntllh&amp;'e forecast for
IIICII.

•
•

!-

IHD

Local Briefs

44"{T7"

l- ·175· 1·

Martha Lou "Jutie" Hunnell Fox, 58, Middleport, died Tuesday, Sept. 21,
1999, at Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
She was born Apri124,1941, in Middleport, daughter of the late Bob and
Martha Geary Hunnell. She was a member of the ReJOicing Life Clmrch ,nd
was employed at the Sen1or C1tizens Center •n Pomeroy prior to her Illness.
She is sumved by three daughters and two sons-in-law, Terri and Mark
Hall of Pomeroy, Sherry and Cliuck Kinnan of Minersville and Shelly Wbite
of Middleport; a son and daughter-in-law, Bobby and Jack•e Wolf Fox of
Middleport; eight grandchildren; a sister and brother-m-law, Jeanme and
Howard Lyons of Wheelersburg; several cousms, meccs and nepbews.
She was preceded in death by a granddaughteP; a son-in-law, James
Wb1te; a by a former husband, Larry Fox.
Services w1ll be held Friday, 11 a.m. at Fisher Funeral Home-Middleport
with the Pastor Lawrence Foreman and Joseph Gwinn officiating. Bunal
will follow in Roclc Splings Cemetery, Pomeroy
Friends may call Thur&gt;day, 7-9 p.m. at Ihe funeral home.

Senate approves defense bill,
reorganizes nuclear programs

-

Warmer conditions make
return to region Thursday

By H. JOSEF HEBERT
Aaaociat8d Praaa Wrher
WASHINGTON (AP)- Respondmg to months of uproar over allegations of Chmese espoonage, Congress today overwhelm•ngly agreed to create a new nuclear weapons agency in the most dramatiC reorgaiuzation oft he
Energy Department m 22 years
The reorgamzahon was mcluded m a Widely popular $288.9 billion
defense bdl that mcludes a military pay rn1se and a 4.4 percent across-theboard mcrease in Pentagon spending, mcluding more money for m1htary
housing and hardware.
The Senate approved the defense measure 93-5, following House
approval of the bill last week by a likewise veto,proof 375-45 vote. The
admimstration has indicated a possible veto because of concerns about the
nuclear weapons agency, but lawmakers said a veto would be politically d•fficult given the defense bill's overwhelming bipartisan support
While some Democrats voiced concern about the new weapons &amp;gency
within the Energy Department, they said the defense measure was too
imporlant to have it sidetracked on the reorganization ISSue
Although the new agency will not be totally mdependent, the legislation
msulates the department's nuclear weapons programs and consolidate
authonty over. the government's three npclear weapons labs
The reorgamzatmn marks the most far reaching fallout yet to months of
controversy about lax security at the Energy Department and the alleged
theft by Chma of nuclear warhead secrets from U.S. weapons labs, dating
back 20 years.
.
Supporters of the measure say the new Nat1onal Nuclear Secunty Adminlstrallon w1thm the department would streamline control over nuclear
weapons programs and prov1de mcreased accountability for secunty and
countenntelligence ~fforts.
Wl!ile supporting some reorganization, Energy Secretary B•JI Richardson
expressed strong reservations about the proposal as it moved through Congress. He arg,ued the new agency would be given too much autonomy and
would mterfere m security and countenntelhgence Improvements he already

By The Aaaoclated Pres•
It won't be as cold across Ohio tonight as it was early today, but temperatures will drop to chilly readings in the 40s.
Lows this morning were in the 30s and there were reports of scattered
f~ost, the National Weather Semce s;ud.
,
A readmg of 32 degrees at the Youngstown-Warren Regional Airport in
northeast Ohio was a record for Sept. 22. The old mark was 36 set in 1991.
. Temperatures will warm gradually into the weekend, forecasters said.
B¥ Sunday, the mercury should crack 80
No rain is m the forecast.
'
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather slation was 95 degrees in 1895 while the record low was 37 in 1995. Sunset
tonight will be at 7:29 p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7·20 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight. .. Oear and cold. Lows in the lower 40s. Light and ~anable
wind.
Thursday...Sunny and w.armer. Highs in the mid 70s.
Thursday night...Ciear. Lows near 50.
Extended forecast:
"' haS made in response to Chmese espiOnage concerns
Friday... Mostly clear. Highs m the m1d and upper 70s
Richardson has sa1d he likely would recommend that Pres1dent Clinton
Saturday... Mostly clear. Lows m the lower 50s and highs in the unn•" I veto the legislation There was no immediate reaction to the Senate vote
70s.
'
from the adm1mstration.
'
Sunday... Partly-cloudy. Lows in the m1d 50s and h1ghs in the lower 80s.
" The president would be crazy to veto it," said Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz.,
who sa1d he was confident of getting a veto-proof maJority on the Senate
bill, mcluding the DOE reorgamzat1on.
Although vo1cing concern about the nuclear agency, Sen Carl Levm, D~llch , sa1d he too would vote for lhe changes because he d1dn 't want to
Jeopardize the defense bill. The $288.8 b1lllon defense measure includes
By KATHERINE RIZZO
entire congressional delegatiQn l)lade a m1lltary pay ra1ses and a 4 4 percent overallmcrease m defense spendmg
Sen. John Warner, R-Va, chauman of the Senate Armed Serv1ces ComAaaoclated Plws Wrltw
rare jOint statement agrunst the issue.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Some
This also IS not the first time Con- mittee, and Sen Pete Domemc1, R-N M , presented their case for the nuclear
Oh10 lawmakers, worried about the gress has moved to protect Ohio, planes. agency in a meetmg w1th the president earlier this week
"I left w1th the impression there is not much fervor down at the While
long term future of the NASA-Glenn
Plans to move the aucmft were
Research Center m Oeveland, are rnls- squelched m 1996 when then-Rep. House for a veto," Warner sa1d
Domenici sa1d he told the pres1den1 " it's h1gh t1me" to separate the
mg questions about the spore agency's Martin Hoke, R-Oh1o, complained that
nuclear
weapons programs from the rest of the Energy Department. He sa1d
mtent1ons for three Oh1o-based research it was illogical to move an 1cing
he
and
Warner
made the argument that another alternative would have been
planes.
research craft to the Califom1a desert,
to
remove
the
nuclear
program entirely from the Energy Department and put
"I atn concerned about reports that and NASNs •nspector general eshmatit
under
an
independent
agency.
·
the Glenn Research Center IS hemg ed it would take the agency more than
Domemci
rejec!ed
suggestions
the
reorgamzahon
would
harm
env•ronmdered to transfer aircraft neressary to 71 years to break even on the oosts of its
mental or worker protection. The new agency would st1ll be subJeCt to all
11s research activities," Sen. Mike rurcraft consolidation plan.
environmental
laws, he sa1d,.
DeWine, R-Ohio, said in a letter ThesThose plans were rev1ved this year, ·
Some
cnllcs
of the proposal said the new agency would be msulated from
day to NASA Administrator Dan amid. a particularly d1fficult budget
the
Energy
Department's
own offic1als respons1ble for ensunng that enviGolditL
cycle that SilW the House 1mpose cuts
ronmental
and
health
protection
requirements are met
"Transfemng these planes for no that Gokhn Silld would result m the
apparent reason nuses conce.ms about , closmg of two or three of its 10 centers.
contlnuad rrom paga 1
NASA's long-range plans for the Glenn
At NASA headquarters, spokesman
mg this," Rockefeller said. "They
Research Center."
Michael Braukus saJd he could not year.
sa1d
they would back off theu oppoThe tax on coal production that
' The latest coocern comes on the respond to quesllons about tbe fl1ght
Sition."
beels of another decis1on by NASA opemhons in Oh1o because Gen. finances the Abandoned Mine Lands
brass to allow the Marshall Space Fl1ght Spence Almstrong. NASNs associate fund expues m 2004. The legislative
However, Rockefeller sa1d the
Center m•Alabama to buy equipment admmistrntor for aerospace technology, proposal Rockefeller hopes to mtro- Chnton admm1strat1on has not yet
duce would reduce the tax, while
duplicative of that used at Glenn. Ohio's was unavailable'
agreed to support the plan.
el!'tendmg
1t to 2010
ArnJStrong wrote a rnemo m March
"They're not there yet," he sa1d.
The proposal also would reduce
that d1rected the GleM center to continthe
premiUms
operatoi'S
would
pay
ue flying thro~gh the end of the year
Rockefeller sa1d he has written to
and directed lito oontmue 1ts transihon to the health fund any time 11 reach- Chnton, as well as approachmg the
(USPS Z13·MO)
Commualty Newsp~~ptr Holdlnp. lne
"from fl1ghl opemtions to fl1ght sup- es a 90-day surplus. The total need· federal Office of Management and
ed for health benefits IS about $240
port."
1
Pubh~hed every afternoon Moo day thJOI.Igh
Budget, the U S. Treasury DepanFnday, Ill Court St Pomeroy, Oh1o, by the
The staff of Rep. Denms Kucimch, million a year, Rockefeller sa1d The ment "and everybody else in sight."
OhiO Valley Pubhshmg Company Second clftM
D-Oh1o - Hoke's suoces.q,r m Con- money would come from mterest
posta&amp;e; pa•d 11 Pomeroy, Oh10
"The v1ce ptes1dent has to undergress - already has had seveml con- earned on the AML fund.
Member: The Associated Press and the Ob1o
Newspaper AsSociatiOn
"We have made a deal viJth the stand that he has got to stand up and
versations
about
the
a•rcraft
with
PGIIMuter: Send address com:cttoll.'i to The
NASA, and earher th1s month Kucm1ch coal companies that have been fight· do somethmg," Rockefeller said
Dally Senttnel, 111 Court St, Pomeroy, Oh1o
4l169
'
submitted a formal request for a status
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
report on plans for the Twin Otter used
By C1rrier or Motor Route
One Week. . •
• .••• .S2 00
in the center's aircraft tail icing
One Month .. .•
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Umts of the Me1gs County Emergency Med1cal Serv1Ce recorde~ four
research.
One Year •.•••, ..... ............. .. $10400
calls
for a~SJstance Tucsd~y Unus respondmg mcluded
SINGtE COPY PRICE
Dally. •• •
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Subscribers n01 dCSirlnJ to pay tDe ca"u:r may
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Kmart .................................. 12"1.
Kroger .................................. 25 "I•
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:
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protests potenti
loss of NASA research craft

Miners Benefits ...

The Daily Sentinel

Meigs EMS logs 4 calls

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HEARING AID CENTER

Friday, September 24, 1999
In Dr. A. Jackson Bailes' Office
224 East Main; Pomeroy
9:00·Noon

•
••
•

•
:

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R011d closing announced
State Route 124 just north of Olive Township Road 274 in lhe
Reedsville area wdl be closed for 21 days startmg at 8 am Monday,
ac:rording to tbe Obio Department of Transportation.
ODOT and its contractor, Parker Corporation of Tuppers Plains, will
be replacing a large culvert at the site. Cost of the project is approximately $270,000 wh1ch also mcludes a culvert replacement on state.
Route 248.
During the closure, traffic may detour v1a state routes 248, 7, 681 and
back to 124. The estimated completion date on the job IS Nov. 30.

Man cited in accident

·

Meigs County Sheriff James M Soulsby reported that 38-year-old
lames A. PICI:.ens, Long Bottom, was Cited followmg an acc1dent on state
Route 7 .at Succes~ Road.
According to the report, Pickens was southbound on state Route 7 in
h1s 1985 Toyota Landrover and because of the sun did not see tbe brake
lights on a 1980 ~evrolet p1ckups that was tummg left onto Success
Road. Pickens applied h1s brakes. He sk•dded and attempted 10 go right,
but h1s vch1cle struck the nght rear comer of the bed
P1ckens' veh1cle was heav1ly damaged on the dnver's s1de.
The Chevrolet p1ckup was dnven by Ray A Young, Reedsville. Damage was hsted as light to moderate.
No 1n1unes were reported.

I

•

Outdoor hymn sing
An outdoor hymn sing will be held Saturday, noon to dark at the
St1versv11le Community Church, Portland, in conJunchon w11h a bake sale
to help funds for a new shelterbouse at the church. Smgers· performmg
are. Delivered, Dave and Debbie Dalley, Mary and Blaine Da1ley, Two
For The Gospel and Joe McCloud. Food and dnnks will be available. The
hymn smg is free Bring lawncha1rs:

Ladies ministry
Ladies for the Lord lnterdenommational Lad1es Mm1stry wdl meet Friday, 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy Riverfront Amphitheater w1th free food,
smgmg and preachmg For more mformahon call Betty Johnson at 4411415/992-6443 or Jan Sw•gger at 992-6667.

Camp meeting
The second annual Tn-County Camp Meetmg w11l be held Monday
through Oct I , 7 p.m. mghtly a1 the Pomt Pleasant National Guard
Armory Evangelist Will· be the Rev. Roger Duncan w1th special smgmg
by the Duncan Fam1ly.

Clarification
The R1chards mentioned in a divorce case in court news are not DenDIS and Eva Richards of Racme.

r

Judge orders new trial in
UDF discrimination lawsuit
COLUMBUS (AP) - A mother
"We beheve the dec1sion IS wrong,
and son w11l get a second chance to and we mtend to pursue all available
prove they were V1ct1ms of d1scrimi- options m ultimate Vlnd1C31lon of
nat1on when they were fired from a UDF's good mime," Gillan sa1d m a
United Dairy Farmers store.
statement
Judge Algenon Mamley ordered a
The COfllpany's defense 1ncluded a
new tnal Tuesday m the $17 m1lhon v1deotaped conversation of PatriciO
lawsUit after determmmg a VIdeotape Munyan, who once worked at the
used by the convenience store cha1n store. In the tape, recorded by her
in its defense was a hoax.
boyfriend, Walter Freeman Jr., MunThe jury ruled Oct. 6 that the yan sa1d that managers never dlscnmCincmnab-based convemence cham mated agamst blacks, but she m1ght
and two supervisors d1d not d•scnm1- teshfy agamst thf' company so she
nate agamst Maud1e Wilhams and her could share many damages.
son Michael, who are black, when
Freeman later sold the v1deotape to
they were fired from the store in the company for $10,000 and cla1med
1995. The company sa1d they were 1t was recorded secretly.
,
fired because they Violated cash-hanAfter the verd1ct, two friends of
dhng pohc1es
Freeman and Munyan told Maml ey m
"I really d1dn't thmk anything else a heanng that the videotape was a
was gomg to happen with this. I thank fake to make money from UDF.
God I have another chance to clear
"Although the v1deotape appeared
my name," Mrs. Wilhams told The engineered and contnved, .~ 1mpact
Columbus D1spatch for a story today was substantial," Marbley said in h1s
"I JUst hope that this lime people tell ruhng " It 1s more hkely than not that
the truth about what really took the Munyan v1deotape played a cruplacc "
c1al role m the outcome of the tnal."
" We just want to get a fau hearmg
The d•scnmmahon accusations
on this stuff Without any underhanded resulted m several groups, mcludmg
taches," her attorney, Regmald the
Rev,
Jesse
Jackson's
Cooke, sa1d Tuesday mght.
Rambow/FUSH Coahhon, to encourBnan Gillan, ch1cf operatmg offi- age boycotts of UDF stores. They
cer and general counsel for UDF, sa1d largely were unsuccessful
the company disagreed w1th Mam- ' UDF has about 200 Stores m Oh1o,
ley's deciSion ·
lndJana &amp;nd Kentucky

Columbus police say unsolved murders may be linked
COLUMBUS (AP)- Columbus
pollee believe 13 unsolved murders
dating back to 1991 may be related.
But offlc1als takmg part m a news
conference on Tuesday would not
say what that connection m1ght be,
or what mot1vated the slay1ngs, all
committed w1th guns
The Columbus D1spatch reported
today that mformat10n prov1ded by
hom1C1de detechves after the shootmgs md1cated that robbery and drug
act1v1ty were mvolvcd m most of the

other agencies to ensure the safety
of w&gt;tnesses.
'
He said those who haven 't come
forward out of fear of retaliatlo·n
could be relocated for the1r safety.
In hopes of encouragmg people
to come forward , Crime Stoppers
has mcreased 1ts reward to $5,000
from the usual $1,000.

cases. In some instances, there were
several gunmen, poss1bly md1cabng
the work of a gang.
Ass1stant c1ty Prosecutor Dav1d
• DeV•IIers sa1d authonties arc bemg
intentionally vague for the protectiOn of Witnesses.
Police spokesman Sergeant Earl
Sm1th sa1d pohce Will work wllh
SPR ING VALLEY CINLMA
446·4524

0 1 [) fl ) Ill I

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·

�P~~ge 6

-

Wednesday, September 22, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

• The Dally Sentinel

.)ustice civil suit against tobacco companies near
11¥ MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN
A81oc!Med Pre•• Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- The Juslice Department1s

....ar to sue maJOr tobacco compames today 10 an
efft,rt to recover b1lhons of dollars taxpayers have
~I on smokmg·relatcd health care, a government
oftic1al sa1d
: Auomey General Janet Reno 1s expected to formal1~ close, Without charges, a nearly 5-year-old cnmmal
•4vestigatl0n of whether tobacco compames hed to
Olngress or regulatory agenc1es about the add1ct1ve
nature of tobacco That dec1sion has been expected
Since last spring
The long-anticipated CIVIl lawsu1t prepared by a
Jushce Department task force over the past year would
allege that the compames engaged m a con~p1racy to
cover up the health nsks of smokmg m v10lalion of the
f~rallaw agamst ciVIl racketeenng, The Assoc1ated
Press learned
'
. "Amencan taxpayers have been forced to spend
bUhons of dollars on smokmg-related Illnesses and the
Jasllce Department 1s workmg on a way to get them
then money back, • a government offlc1al sa1d,

requestmg anonym1ty
The smt was expected to be announced at a news
conference by Reno and actmg c1v1l diVISion ch•ef
Dav1d Ogden late th1s mormng
Tobacco mdustry spokesmen have queslioned
whether the government has authonty to bnng such a
lawsu1t, particularly g1ven more than three decades of
federal government warmng to the pubhc about the
health dangers of smokmg
" From a legal standpomt, 1t's JUSt pure pohtlcs,"
sa1d M1chael York, a lawyer for Ph11ip MorriS, the
nallon 's largest c1garette-maker " When we look back
we ' ll find the best legal mmds m the Justice Department thought the facts and law d1dn 1 support 11 It 's
hypocr~sy to th•nk the tobacco compames m1sled the
federal government about the nsks of smokmg "
The 1dea of sumg the tobacco compames to recover an eslimated $25 bllhon spent by federal C1v11ian
and m11itary health msurance programs on smokmg
related Illnesses was a surpnse element m Pres1dent
Cl mton 's State of the Umon speech last January
It followed an expe ns1ve settlement by the c1ga
rette makers With most state governments last year,

based on thelf outlays for health msurance The mdus·
try agreed to pay the slates more than $240 h1llion
over 25 years.
The setllement w1th the Slates followed the collapse
of an effort to wnte fedcralleg•slatlon that would have
substanlially 1ncreased the cost of c1garettes through
ta.es and would have restncted the markeling of
tobacco Congressional Republicans blocked that bill
fhe CIVIl lawsu1t follows a stalled Justice Department cnmmal mvestlgatlon of whether the mdustry
had hed to e1ther Congress or regulatory agenc1es
about the addiCtive effects ofctgarettes and the 1ndustry's knowledge of that add1ct1ve power The department began scahng back that cnmmal mveshgallon
th1s spr~ng, and th1s summer, several deadlines for f1l
1ng cnmmal charges passed Without any action
Department offic1als have been debatmg for weeks
whether any of the eVIdence gathered dunng the cnmmal mvest1galion could be used by the task force
prepanng the CIVIl lawsuit One off1c1al sa1d department lawyers had dec1ded to try to use that data m the
ciVIl lawsuit but beheved they needed permiSSion from
the US DJstnct Court here wh•ch supeiVlses the

grand Jury wh1ch oblamed 11 It was not dear whether
that permiSSIOn had been obtamed yet
The department's request for $20 mtlhon to pay for
expert w•toeSSC5 and 40 government lawyers •n the fiscal year begmn10g Oct 1 rema1ns 1n hmbo on Cap1tol
H1ll The Repubhcan-controlled Congress hu refused
so far to put the money 10t0 appropr1a11ons bills work·
mg theJr way through the Cap110l but deleted a prohlb1110n aga1nst Jus11ce bnngmg the lawsu1t Justice offi.
c1als expressed contmued hope today that the money
w1ll be approved
Earlier th1s year, the department h1red a Minneapo·
hs law firm, Robms, Kaplan, M1ller &amp; C1res•, wh1ch
helped Mmnesota reach a $6 6 b1lhon settlement w1th
the mdustry last year, to help it analyze mote than
200,000 pages of 1nduslry documents disclosed durmg
the Mmnesota lawsuit
In the CIVIl lawsuit the government will cla•m that
tobacco comp~mes engaged m consumer fraud by
conspmng to conceal from the pubhc the r1sks of c•garette smokmg The suit w1ll attempt to recover cla1ms
pa1d to veterans, m1htary personnel. federal employees and the elderly

Aftershocks jolt -Taiwan in Colombian says he receive
'big support, from Clinton
wake of severe earthquake
By DENIS D. GRAY
AIIIOCiat.cl Pr!ISS Writer
TAIPEI, Tatwan (AP) - Teams
from around the world streamed
mto Ta1wan today to help rescue
VICtims of the devastating earthquake as three strong aftershocks hit
the 1sland
Rescue efforts were complicated
by today·~ aftershocks, wh1ch tng
gered mudshdes, forced terror·
stncken res1dents to scurry mto the
streets and cracked one of Ta1wan's
largest reservOirs
The aftershocks, w1th magm
tudes of 6 8, 6 I and 6 0. were the
strongest of more than 2,000 that
have rocked the 1sland
The death toll from Tuesday s
quake chmbed to 2,003 people, w1th
4,400 mJured, offic•als sa1d Some
2,600 people were beheved to be
trapped m rubble, but rescuers were
fini:bng more bod1es than surv1vors
aS jhey bored mto collapsed houses
a6d h1gh-nse apartment complexes
across central Ta1wan
Rescuers from Fa~rfax Co , Va
and M1am1·Dade, Fla, arnved m
Ta1wan today and qu1ckly found a
consc1ous man trapped ms1de a
caved-m apartment bUIIdmg m the
town of Touhu
"He was pretty glad to see us,'
sa•d Capt M•chael Re•lly, one of
the U S emergency workers who
brought four smffmg dogs to Ta•·
wan m hopes of savmg as many
hves as poss1ble
Among the 14 countnes that d1s
patched earthquake specialists were
the Umted States, RusSia, Sw1tzer·
land, Turkey, Japan, Smgapore,
South Korea, Israel and the Ph11ip
pmes
The Central News Agency
placed the number of fore•gn specialists m the country al about 500,
w1th more scheduled to amve
U S. Geolog•cal Survey offic•als
sa1d Tuesday's quake had a prehm1
nary magmtude of 7 6 - about the
same strength as the devastatmg
tremor that k•lled more than 15,000
people m Turkey last month although Ta1wanese se•smolog•sts
m1t1ally put the magmtude at 7 3
Many of the fore~gn experts had

ass1sted 10 rescue operations m
Turkey
After today s aftershocks. state
rad1o sa1d cracks had been d1scov
ered

10

one of Ta1wan s largest

reservmrs, the Sun Moon Lake
Reservoir. and warned downstream
res1dents to evacuat e the1r homes II
sa1d water would be released from
the reservOir as a precautionary

floor apartment w11h one child when
the earthquake struck, but h1s w1fe
and a second ch1ld were Still trapped
IDS! de
' I d1dn t even realize that the
bUIIdmg had fallen over until the
quakmg stopped " he sa1d, unable to
talk more about hiS traumatiC expe·
nence

Every bndge bot one across the
Tahch1a R1ver leadmg to Tungsh• h
The rad1o report also sa1d off•- was knocked out by the earthquake,
cJals were evacuattng two towns m makmg movement of rescue equipwest-central Ta1wan where streams ment mto the area d1fflcult
Most of the ISland's 22 m1llion
of mud slid mto a nver Off1c1als
feared the blocked water now people were asleep when the quake
struck m the wee hours, forcmg
would cause floodmg
The aftershocks also were felt m people m the1r underwear and paJa·
mas out of homes that were
Ta1pe1, shakmg bUIIdmgs and send
mg many fnghtened cmzens out of smashed or left ulung w1ldly
The damage could come to $3 2
the1r homes and mto the streets
b1lhon
accordmg to a Ta1pe1 newsagam
In Ta1pe1, rescuers contmued to paper, the Umted Evenmg News.
pry carefully mto the tottenng wh1ch c1ted mformatiOn 11 got from
Sungshan Hotel, hopmg to fmd government offic•als 11 d1d not •densome of the estimated 30 people nfy
The Tatwan Stock Exchange sa1d
ms1de sllll ahve Concrete sectiOns
dropped off the partially toppled 12
11 would not reopen until Monday,
story bu1ldmg, penod1cally dnvmg but commerc1al banks and the fore•gn exchange market m Ta1pe1
searchers and rescue veh1cles back
In Tungsh1h a City of 60,000 were tn operation
Ta1wan's polilical nemes1s, the
people m a mountamous area of
Ta1chung county, VIrtually every commumst reg1me 1n Be•Jmg,
house was damaged and one m offered to prov1de a1d
three was rutned, wtth all power,
The government m Ta1pe1
water and links to the outs1de cut expressed cauhous thanks
"Th1s would be a good begm·
off People slept along Sides of
nmg to •mprovmg t1es," sa1d Su
roads or m their cars
AI a commllmty center converted Ch1, chalfman of the government
to a morgue, 105 bod1es lay covered Mamland Affa1rs Coupc1l, wh1ch IS
wllh saffron BuddhJst robes Offer· responsible for Ta1wan 's mamland
mgs of canned dnnks, biSCUitS, relatiOns "I hope we can work on
burnmg mcense slicks and make- th1s baSis and make efforts together
believe money were placed before to bu1ld up stable and peaceful relathe corpses Many of the dead were tiOns "
children
lies between Ta1wan and mam·
Dr Lin Yung-lung sa1d rescuers land Chma had recently sunk to a
were runmng out of body bags and new low after Ta1wanese PreSident
needed refr~gerat1on for the corpses
Lee Teng-hm sa1d Be•Jmg must deal
Most of the bu1ldmgs that col- w1th the ISland on a "stale·to·state"
lapsed were new h1gh·nses that bas1s
have cropped up m the reg1on durThe quake was Ta1wan s deadliest smce a 7 4 magn•tude tremor
mg a bUIIdmg boom m recent years
A man who 1denllf1ed h1mself hit the ISland m 1935, killing 3,276
only as LIU wa1ted anx1ously out- people Ta1wan •• h1t by dozens of
Side a 14 story apartment bulldmg quakes each year, but most are centlltmg at a 45-degree angle He had tered m the Pac1fic Ocean east of
managed to escape from a seventh- the ISland and cause no damage

measure

By GEORGE GEDDA
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Colombmn Pres1dent
Andres Pastrana sa•d today he has rece1ved "b1g support" from President Chnton for h1s $7 5 b1lhon plan
to curb narcotraffickmg, negotiate peace With leftist
guernllas and rev1ve hiS country's saggmg economy
Pastrana left unclear how much support he expects
the Umted States to prov1de for the three-year plan,
wh1ch he outhned m a speech Fnday
Pastrana flew here Tuesday mght from New York,
where he spent 45 mmutes confemng w1th Clinton
about h1s strategy An adm•mstratmn off1c1al sa1d after
the meeling that Clmton d1d not offer a spec1f1c a1d
amount to Pastrana
" We Will be lookmg for support for the plan m the
t:ommg weeks," Pastrana s3Jd
U S off1c1als have sa1d the Umted States 1s w1lling
to prov1de matenal support for the plan but that the
bulk of the financmg would have to come from
Colomb•a 1tself
Contr1but10ns also are expected from mtemat10nal
lendmg 1nslitut1ons
W1th productiOn of coca and opiUm poppy m
Colomb•a up sharply and w1th the government con·
frontmg a tough, expenenced guernlla movement,
Colombm has emerged as perhaps the h1ghest pr1onty
hem1sphenc 1ssue for the Chnton admm1strat1on

Pastrana met w1th a group of Amencan reporters
before v1S11ing Cap1tol H1ll were he was to explam h1s
plan to key lawmakers
He sa1d Colombia wants tanff breaks of the kmd
bemg contemplated for Central Amer1ca Unless Congress goes along, he sa1d, Colomb1an products would
cease to be compelilive and an eslimated 250,000 JObs
would be lost
"We are gomg to mSisl that we need the•r help,"
Pastrana sa1d
Another pnonty on the econom•C front 1s to wean
Colomb•an farmers away from narcotics plants
through the development of alternate crops, he sa1d
Pastrana was upbeat about the prospects for curbmg
narcotrafflckmg Notmg that the drug ch1eftams work
m league w1th the guemllas, he sa1d, "If we defeat the
narcotraffickers, we also defeat the guemllas "
He noted that trammg for a 950 member anll-nar
cot1cs battahon 1s neanng complet1on and that plans
call for the crealion of add11ional battalions whose
combmed strength would total 4,000 to 5,000
As for the struggle a~amst the FARC guenlla
movement, Pastrana sa1d the battlefield Sllualion 1s
1mprovmg because professional soldiers are bemg
used as o~posed lo cnnscripts.
•
After several false starts, Pastrana sa1d, he •• hope- ;
lui that senous negotiations wtlh the FARC can begm •
'
m the commg weeks

I

By BERNIE WILSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Regg1e
Sanders couldn I h1de hiS feehngs as
he stuck 11 lo h1s fonner team
I got extr~ excued. Sanders
sa1d after he hll a three run tnple and
scored on an error to g1ve the San
D1ego Padres a 6 2 wm over
Cmcmnau on Tuesday mght costmg
the Reds a game m the NL Central
race

Sanders smiled as he roundcJ first
base then pumped h1s nght arm as
he scored on an error
It s always mce It's a great feel

1ng smd Sanders who came over
from the Reds m the Greg Vaughn
deal on Feb 2 We were tallung the
other day about guys that have been
on the opposmg te,am, and when they
do somethmg well, how much of a
thnll IllS
But I tell vou that was such a
prcat feeling II doesn I maUer If Its
Cmc mnat1 or not It was JUSL great
that I was able to get the JOb done 1n
that npportumty

The Reds dropped 3t games
hehmd di\ISion lcad1ng Houston
"l11ch won 6 3 •1 Plllsburgh In the
\\lid card race Cmcmnall stayed 3
games hcl11nd the New York Mets
who los1 2 I at Atlanta

By HARRY ATKINS
DETROIT (AP)- Harold Ba1nes
has dmen m I 579 run s Since break
mg mto the b1g leag ues m 1980
Th at s mme than any Olher act1ve
player
Sull he can only wonder about
what m1ght have been
I ve been labeled as havmg bad
knee s s31d Bame s whose three
RBis helped the Cleveland lnd1ans

ll' L

Boston
Toronto
Balumorc
T1mpa Bay

.....

Central Division
• ClEVELAND
'91 60
Oucago
68 82

!ill

n,
21

603
4~3

2211

61

M9

407

29 1!

61 89
60 92

407
J9S

29n
31 'h.

Oh·lswn
89 62
8:\ 67
75
63

SfaUic

Anahetm
l clmched d1vis11:m tll le

76
89

S
14
26 1

Boston 1 Toronto 0
Nev. York ~ Ch1cngo I
B~l umore 4 le~a ~ 2
Oakland 5 M nnesota 1
An:1hc1m 7 rampa BayS
S\"ntt c 11 Kansai ( lly '

foday s games
1\1 nne sota (MillOn 7 Ill at Oak land tHudson 10
ll &lt;OS p n
CLI \II AND J Wni!hl I 9) at Druo r
&lt;Mot:ller 9 I 'iJ I OS I' 11
Tnn rl!O (ES&gt;flbm I 1 II ) ;U lloSil n (Rapp 6 61
7 1'\ pIll

Ch n~o (1\ 'Wdls I II 11 r,;..,,. York {lrabu II 6)
7 l'\ p Ill
A 1 n.rt:CErd:sor 4 11 1 1 l ulls( Helhns 11
H S05 JJ m

Tunpa 8 1y (\Vheekr 0 2) r~t A 1n/ t:tm (Washburn
41 10,5 pm
K ms s Cit) CV.ntmk R I I 1 at Seatlle !Halama
101 ~ p11

I hursday',!j games
D l~

'Onk lnn d (I a;&lt;c. !O il 0 0 and 01 van~s IS 1OJ 31
(11onn n J l II a 1J R ley 0 0) l 4 0~ p m
lC1 t mto ( \\ e ll ~ 14 Ot at BoshJn ( Mer ck~:r I 01
70'ip m
l ll 'vf::l AND N1g\ I ':It 11 0drol1 tB\a r 1
11) 7 0" pm
( I ago (I arqu I I~ ~ 1 N..,,. Y 1k ( Clemen~ 11
':It ~ ~5 1 m
Baltuuu1~

f. asu~rn Du •s•on

w

lllm

L f&lt;l.

94 57 623
92
609
70 81 464
61 88 417
397
tiJ 91

Atlant a

Ne .... Yurk
R onda

Cr nlral DlwtsiOn
91 60

89 61
74 76
12 79
68 82
60 91

Pmsbur~ll

St Lours
Mtlw mkee
Chll •go

Wtslrm Dlvis10n
91 tiJ

l
24

31

34

1,

"'
12

19.•
20

23 \

Today's games

705 ] 01
1~ 1 USIOO (] rn 1 1 0 II) 1

f' tt&gt;b ngl (R td1 e I~
9l 7 0~ 1 m
New York tHcr lr ~~ ~ 11 10 11 &lt;\tl:ll1ta ( Gla~HIC
II II) 740) n
PI ladelphm \\ olt 6 Hl u t.hh1aukn t\\oo. d:ud
II 7) KU~ pm
Srm l rnnc1s~fl (N ~th n 7 lJ t I u~ A •11rb
t \II b IJ I-I ) I 0 ~5 p II
(JNCINN\ 11 f\tll Ill~? II San Defu
\ 1-o; 1-IIJ J 10 ~'ipn

I hursd&lt;n s gounes
;

1 I

I~

1 1

ll ~n\u

D1vis1on II
lllm

fU.
P'

1 ld

27l
J'i'

I Meruor Lnkc Cnth P2H 0
Hruo kha~ tl ( &lt;; )4 0

lDo vcr!~ ) 40

4Ptqua(l)40

j.IU

S Trrnton Edgewood

(I)

40

14 1
I '7

6 C n ~kNt l hula~4 0
7 Untontown Lake 1 I
1\ 1
8 Cuy Falls Walsh Jcsun l I
96
9 Mnrysv •lle ( I ) 4 0
69
10 Mncedoma NOfdoma 4 0
-19
Othrrs r~cehlng II or murt pumb II Cn l
Independence 4~ 12 Mml snn IR II K ntts Mills
Kings(! ) ~614lcbluonl\ l 'i l1ffn Culu mbr ll n
29 16Grnfton ~hdVICW (I)
2'i 17 (tiC)
MARIETIA P~rrysburg 11 19 Clull rcothe 12

bel ore stnktng ou t tn the c1ghth gn
m g tum seven str,Hght hils m the first

Taubensee m the lust mmng of Tuesday mghl s

tllowcd I\\O tun s se,cn hils md
til lee \\ llks Ill Sc\Cll Inning...
Quthto Yen" l.!lHl.' the P,tdr~s a I
(10 12) "on l11 s fourJh s1ra~g h1 sian
thanks w the htg sC \cnth mnm~ He 0 !l.' uJ tn the l1r-.;t \\hen Tauhcnscc
struck out a CclrCt.:r lugh mnc md lh uppct..l 11ght I JciLicl Dmlln Youngs

two games of the three g,lme sene"
San D1cgo starter Matt Clement

DetroJt manager LIllY Pan ISh sa1d
rhcrc IS no &lt;.:CfUll n way you can
puch 10 hun
Mann) Ram1rez also drove m
three run s g1vmg hun 149 Rills llul
the story on th1s mght was Bames
Wuh h1s 99 RBis , Bamcs "
almost a lock to go ove r 100 for the

one

hop

throw

National League game '" San D1ego where
Padres won 6·2 Veras scored from third base on a
short fly to nght f1eld (AP)
I"'
ho me

Phil

after

Nc\ In s 0} hall to shalkm nght It
was Cmcmnau s sc~.:ond ~.:rror ot t ht:
mnm~.z

CU:..,cy ga'c the Ru.h 1 2 I il: JLI

Whnc Sox He played m 160 game,
ll s..:nson IH)\\CVt:r
B.uncs has nc\ cr pl.lycd m rnor~..:
than 141 gam~.::s dunng thts decade
He pl.1ycd m onl) 104 ,!ame' last
th

\\ llh h1 ~ 2-Hh IHlllll.'l
the thud hut S tn

\\lilt lllL
D11.:L 1..,
Rl\cf&lt;.t l l cd II \ \llh ""1]._,1 h Hllt: l

... hot J\1.:1 tht ''
Ill,! ul l thL 111111

illln

out !tl
Ruhc-n
1111~~

It:

kit Ll.'llll.'f

1tf

•'

Baltimore

!'JC 1son fo r

S7

dnvmg 111 JUst

I Ull S

he II get anoth er RBI

gel 100

111

IOD

...,l.' t

RBI~ l:\LI\

\ t.: \1

B&lt;.tmC&lt;.;

s 11d It ~niH llllJlillldnl 11 "hu.! But'
tht.: 1111pl)r\ llllthllll.! ,.., \\Jiltlllll.!
•'
our s1dc
Dt\~.: Bttthl (\~X) "h 11" 72 1n
Wuh ht ~ YY RBis Bmncs '" ucd 10 ,t,uh 'tn~t: \ u~ I \\LI'- l o~. ~~.:J '" ' '
\\llh former DetrOit slugger Darre ll 1 p!tL:hlng du~.: l \-"llh DclrOJt mokt.eh.
E'''"' for second most by a plaver Dl\~o: Bo1~~m"~' throu_ h Llg hv~

HMold IS dmng Ime and Ham id \\Ill
he dom g f1nc I 111 ~lad H 1rold s on

Oh\111usly he had lhrec RBi s 40 yedrs or older Paul Molitor had
tomghl hut people had 10 set the 113 Rills 1n 1996 lhc )ear he turned
the f~rst 11me smc e 198) when he J.tble lor hun too Cleveland man 40
drO\e m 113 runs for the Ch1cago ager M1kc Hargro\e sa1d I d bel
That s never been m) goal to
th1rd t1m c

1nn1ng~

h1s &lt;.:arc er but for JUst

Burb.l lllll~h11e tht.: L tl ~t' l htgh ...
"t.: r-.nn tlh ,.,eti ._

fnr w1n~ hr.: ..,(.:i lt~t

(See INDIANS on Page MJ

11JI) tlludt lh

ell

fU.

I Delphos St Johl'l s (19)-' 0
~4B
2Newarktath 0 140
29~
1 Mogadore (1 ) .&amp;..0
264
4-Toronro 4-0
201
5 1iffin Ca lve n 4 0
200
6-Spnl'lgfield C;uh Cent .&amp;..()
1 5~
1 Mmster \ I
78
8-Beallsvtllt .&amp; 0
57
9 Dan ... llle 3 I
4"i
K,trtland 3 1
45
Olhtrs rccrlv•n~t 12 or morr p01nt5 II
Pandora G1lboa 14 12 B~llam: S1 John 27 13
Amwtrp 15 14 Cin Country Da) 20 I~ Cuynhogn
Hts 19 16 Detianct'Ayerw1lle 18 17 McComb 17
18NE\\ MATAMORASIRONrJER 6

OHSAA football

computer ratings
COLUMBUS Ohto (API - Hett nrc th~ first
weekl y foo tball compu ter rnnngs from 1he Ohr o Hr gh
School Alhlcttc Assnc alton R 111ngs arc bv d v1s on
and regmn w1 h record and averng~ br Jeq: J points
per gaml'. (top etg ht tc~m~ n t"alh regwn ad\ an c to
regto nal s~mrfina l s )

Dn'1S10n I
Regon l I M yfi~ IJ IJ 0! 10 57SQ 'S 1!; 1 -1
0) 10 1000 ~ Shakn Ht !4 OJ ) 87'i0 4 Ck St
lgnattus (\ 1)7 \QO(J ~ 1 1h 1uod S EU":ard (1 I I
6 ~000 b Ea.u lak
Nc rth ( ~ I ) fJ 1000 7
Stn ngHtlk (2 2) 5 4000 8 M~nt r 11 21 ~ j~OO 9
B~rean IJ~ O~OO ltlC( Rl d
I J4t. J'iit
Reero 1 .1
\\ i 11 r gl n 1\.dh ur 1c ~ U
Y!SJ ~O 2Go~c C ty (40l 9 7 ~0 1 \\&lt;"t&lt;:r It
S&lt;ulht-10!91000 -llh 11 \\ rt nc n r40
907'iO Slol \\h ll -10 ~( ~o ux~c"tJO)
7 "7'i0 ~ Hr11 ~r I D tl • 1 1. I e 4000 ll Upp~r
1 I~ '\ f/ 1 ~0

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1 Stcub&lt;.:nvtlle (6) 4 0

I ll

270
229

207
"i Poland Semrnary (I ) 4 0
160
6 Copley (:2) 4 0
I 'I
7 IJellevuc ("\) 4 0
102
8 Cm Purcell Manan 1 1
9:\
9 Orrv11le 3 1
84
]().. Sunbury Bag W.!llnul4-0
71
Othrrs recelvinl!: ll or more poinl5 11
JACKSON 62 12 Col DeSalts 38 I~ PerT}' 34 14Akron Hoban 23 IS Wrllard 20 16 (tae-)
18 ASHVILLE TEAYS
M1llenburg W Holmes 12

VALLEY

ll

15

19

I You Mooney (4) l I
2 WHEELERSBURG (4) 4 0
"\ Bellvtlle Clear Fork (6) 4 0
4 Germantown Valley V1ew (9) l I
5 Chagnn Falls (S) 4 0

6 Uttca (2) 4 0

7 Cm Wymtung {2) 4 0
8 Coldv. ater 3 I
9 Sandusky Perkins ( I ) 4 0
10 Belln1re (I) 4 0

.....

225
2 1~
212

209

19 ~
148
144
130
90

52

Olhe~s

ncrtYing 12 or morlt p01nts II (I e)
Bellaue Wauseon 4\ 13 Oak Harbor 18 14
Campbell Memon~f ( I) ~ 5 15 Struthers 32 16
IRONTON 3 1 17 ALBANY ALEXANDER 25 18
Col Ready 16 19 Cm Manernont 12
DIVlSIOD

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1 St Henry (21) ~ 0
2 Cle YASJ (6J 4 0

3 Metamora E\ctgreen (ll 4 0

4 Bedford Chunel 4 0
5N LtmaSRange40
6 Brookville 4 0
7 LbenyOr (21] I

101~()

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Munr ~&lt;: I ~II -1 U ~ 1()()1) 7 f ~ 1.. r cc
11 I
7 4500 8 Mount V~rnmr' It 7 0000 Y I up t t l t
b 17'\0 10 S mdusk\ ( I 6 -1~00
Reg rc n 4 I C I ldcr 1-1 OJ 9 7&lt;i00 ' Huh r
H s \lo.~) 11.: r4 0) 8 9~00 ~ c tl s X 1\ c1 C1 Ol
.S 10 1&lt; .j. Ccnk \Ill~ 14 0 K 1(100 '\ L1kOW East 11.
I) 7 HSO 6 (m (uk r nn (.J. OJ 7 1 ~0 1 Cm
'hmton Wnod5 {l II 70 70 8 F rll d l I t
6IJOOO 9C rn LaStlk U ll 67'"0 IOCrn
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189
69
11 9
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65

8 Han ler Patnck Hem y \ I
62
9 Apple Creek Wnyncdalc \ 1
44
IOMrlfo rdCir Farbank~{I ) .&amp;O
H)
Othrrs l"i'celvlng 12 or more poln ls II
Woodsft cld Monroe Central 15
11 (I e)
CROOKS\ II LE Jo hns tm~o 1 Northr dg~ 11 1
Mass tll on Tu sl~ "' Orwell Grand Valley 14 I&amp; (I cl
Blu ffton QAK IIILL Roc Uord Jlnrk \I) 'l I }
Delphos Jcffcrsol'l •o 1() Ven~tlb 19 1 1 (t1d
U 11:~ 1 CHESA it l \Kf: 27 '1 Bait mort.: lt!Xm
Unr on 'l6 24 CHII UCOIHE HUNflNGTON l'i
l'i S th' lk Ill
0 16 (I d \mnmla ( ~ ru~d,
(I) \\ \ Clln ndr n h~om \ 11lev S 11'1 l'i rud
BEVbRLY FOR I FH:Yl G1h~nnb u rg 14 IQ
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10 Col Beechcroft (22) -1 ~500
Reg on 8 I On McN1 t hol ts (4 0! "' 1 7~0 }
Trenton Edgewood (4 0) ? 7270 1 K ll!!S Mrlls
K ngs P I) 7 3750 4 Day C rroll (l I) bY 'iO 'i
H11rrrson ( ~ I) 6 ~7'0 6 Lebanon &lt;' 1) 6 ~000 7
MARIElTA 0 I) S 4690 8 Cm Nonh,.cs t (l 2)
S 0500 9 Ctn Roger B:'leon (1 "1 4 17'\0 10
Vnnd11ha Butler Cl 114 22~0

Ce t Cu l (11)l -l ~l
H.~ ~ ~ 1 I 1 I J \( KSON
B~ I hru(l~ .j 01 7 700(1 I I

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t1ot al ~e mh ruunrJ pu.:k m he 2000 drJ.ft Stl!1 1 ..
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Transactions

0) (: 4750 -l N I n11 S R m gc t4 0) 6 U~O S Ck

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Re_g aon 17 I f.. laHtli On Tu.;law (4 0) 7 57~0 2
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srr ng.lt~ll ( l 11' •~oo

CHICAGO BF.AI~.S S ~ned I B 1m Ftnn arltf'•
IJB J..,m,r~tnc Jollt' s to 11 ~pill t: squad \h 'ed I B
Brann Goolsb) and DB ba ~ U.rlo; J n ~
.,
CINCINNAII 131 NG\LS \I. a ed CB Chttol'l
Cwsb) Clatn!L'd S JoJuan Annr. 1r nlf v.at ~ rs I!Uti 1

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Baseball
\

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MIIWA UKEI BRE\\IRS N~m diA~n'tl\ 111'
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NOTICE
OF SECOND PUBLIC HEARING
'
The Me1gs County CommiSSioners 1ntend tG&gt; apply to the Gh1o ~
Department of Development, for fund1ng under FY'99 Communtty '
Development Block Grant (CDBG) New Honzon Program , a federally
funded program adm1mstered by the State Me1gs County 1s el1g1ble for up
to $15,000 of Fiscal Year '99 CDBG fund1ng, prov1ded the County meets
appl1cable requirements On September 20, 1999 the County conducted
1ts f1rst publ1c heanng to 1nform Citizens about the CDBG New Honzon
program. how 1t may be used, what act1v1t1es are elig1ble, and other 1mpor
tant program requirements

1\
I..!

'()f)()\

..J
\1,

A second publiC heanng w1ll be held on October 4, 1999 at 1 15 PM at
the Me1gs County Comm1ss1oners off1ce, Me1gs County Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Oh1o to g1ve c1t1zens an opportumty to rev1ew and comment on
the County's proposed CDBG FY'99 New Honzon proJects
CitiZens are encouraged to attend thiS meetmg on OCtober 4, 1999 to n
express the1r v1ews and commPnts on the county's proposed CDBG
FY'99 New Honzon Application Wntten comments w1ll be accepted unti~
1 00 PM , October 4, 1999, and may be ma1led to the Me1gs County
Courthouse , Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769

2~0 -4

01 1 oooo ~ &lt;\SH\ 11 u n '~ s
\\Ill' (-I 0 6 ~(JOO t1 C J&gt;tr &lt;II M 111 I It l
"7f.OJ ? (i \IIIPOIIS ( \ Ill\ \ ( \D 1 t r
'i~'()() ~N~ I.: I
1l &lt;II~ ~00 !D'
&lt;h nn kl lt~rl~
I~~"'~() lOS l1
~~

It&lt; ~;

Dn•tston V

Rcgwn 21 ! Mogadore (4 0) 7 ~SOD 2 Turu mo
(4 0) 5 9480 ] Independence (4 0) 5 SOOO ~
Wmdham n 1) 4 9750 5 K1nland 1l 1l -1 8440 6
Norwalk St Paul t ~ I ) 4 8150 7 Monroc~o•lle (1 I )
.J 6150 8 McDonald l' 2) 4 0000 9 N~~~r
Wash ngton Back Cent (~ I ) ~ 8500 10 Ck
C uyahoga Hts (3 II :\ 6250
Regtun 22 1 liffin Ca lven t4 0) 6 4000 '
Antwerp (4 0) (I 0000 ~ Arhngton (4 0) ~ P50 4
McComb 1-1 0) 4 5SOO 5 Pandora G1lboa (J 11
-1 1250 6-1 t H:cco\ery (l II 4 0500 7 Lake $ de
Danbury {3 l) 4 0150 8 Oregon Stntch 0 1)
18250 9 Mana Ste n Manon loca l {2 2) J IRRO
10-Car~v () l l 3 1500
Reg on 23 1 Newark Cat h (4 Q) 6 7000 1
BeallS\IIle 14 0) 6 1750 ~ Morr 1l R ilgedak ( l I)
5 l7SO 4 HEMLOCK MILLER ("&lt; I ) 4 2500 'i
H()"'nrd E~s t Knox
1 II 19000 0 NE\\
MArAMOR AS I ROf'TIER (3 l) ~ 8500 7 Uella re
St John(1J)l6750 9DJO\~tle(\1)15500 10
PORTSMOUTH NOl RE DAME 1' 1 l 0306
Reg10n 2.&amp; I De phos St J o hn ~ /-I 0) 7 1000 1
Crn Co untry Day {4-0161'50 1 Co\mg ton !40)
5 9690 4 Meehan lSbUI S (4 0) ~ 5500 5 Spn 1gfidJ
Cath Ct nt (4 0) 5 4000 6 Ncw Hreihen l1 I'
4 B250 7 MmSLet (J I ) 4 ~000 8 Ada (1 I ) 4 4000
9 Dol3 Hnrd1n Nonhero (l I) l 9500 0-Cedar~llk
(l I )19000

Ill

DIVIsiOn

Regmn 9 l Perry (4 0) 7 7150 1 !JIIm~dgl' (40) 7 lQOO l lhy Vi\lngc R IV (-I 01 p 7750 4 Akron
Hoban n I) 6 22~0 "Cl ~ Ornngc tl 0) b 1 186 b
Mcdm 1 Bu ckeye i l I ) 6 1()()11 7 Om 1~: ( l I)
517~0 8 Coplc)' {4 0) ~ 6250 9 Hu bb rd ( l I l
5 4910 10 (bc:sterland Wc.s.r Gt 1uga I l I I ~ l'i()()
Regmn 10 1 Col \\ a11n~ n t.l 01 10 117~0
Ltma BEllh (4 0) H 'i7~0 I ~hclh) 11 I) 7 T'~O -1
Col DeSale~t l I l 7 "i~OO 'i \\11\ r I (4 0! 7 moo h
Su nburyBI!!WIItut l-' 0!70 1 'j0 7Napl1k r (liJ
(1 ~000 8 8~11,\u ~ l 0 r, lH46 9 0 t 1 w~ (ol~ I rl
Cl I; 'i ~2'\0 10 He,k; (-I OJ~ fP~O
Rcg mn II I P I tn I s~nun nf) 14 0) 9 1 7~ 0
M11l ~r sb urg \\ Hol 1~s I-I U) Kf 'iO l St~ 1 ~11, II~
(-I 0) 7 11'i0 4 I 0Ul $Ytll I l I) ~ )!~()U ~ Br 1
We st llrmch (\ II ~6000 f M LONNELS\ Ill E
MOR GAN
l Il
..J S(l&lt;XI
7 l}IOI',N\ lUI
SHI RID AN 1JH ~OUX H\IuiBih l~ xl
C,l 41 7'H JC1rrollt 1 ''Jl( &lt;;(l]IJL

(lh

{1 I) b (1500 Newton Falls (l I) 5 5750 5 Gtrard
(\ I 1 S 5000 6 Warren Champron C3 I) S 4690 7
Wtckhfft: ( ~ I ) 'i 4500 8 0 agn n Falls (4 0) 4 8000
9 Akron St \ nce nt St Marv p 1) 4 '750 10
Castllha MMgan:na (2 2) 4 1750
Rcg10 n I.&amp; l Mar OtJ Elg n (4-0) 7 9500 2
Wauseon 14 0) 7 8000 l Bellv •lle Clear Fork (4 01
7 4150 4 Coldwater (l I) 6 6000 5 Oak Harbor (4
OJ 6 27~0 6 Ton t og~ ny Otsego 0 1) 5 2500 7 Col
Ready { \ I) 4 5250 8 Uppt: r Sandusky (2 2) 4 1250
9 Genoa Ar~n (2 2) 3 9750 10 Spann 11 ghland (1
1)19SOO
RegJDn I 'i I Znnt\t lte Tuscarawas Valley (4 0)
8 6500 2 Campb~ll Memonal {4 0) 8 1600 3
Struthers (\ I ) S OOCJO 4 Bcllru re ( 1 I ) 7 ll 00 5
Uuca {4 o, 6 6250 6 Navarre Frurless n 1)6 S750
7 You lard mal Mont cy fl I ) 6 0580 S Cosl octo n
n 1) 5 9'~0 9 z tnCSIJ ilk w MU $kJngum n l)
'i 17SO 10 \lb1 yAbanJcr(401492SO
Reg10n 16 I Cm W)onung (4 0) Q 4750 2
WHEEl! RSBU RG (..j OJ 7 2~'0 l Cm Madeira
{*OJ 7 1000 .JH1mlrm Badtn 0 I) 58b60 5
PORfSMOU1 H P I)~ 7000 6 On lndHm Hill (l
I) ~ SlSO 1 Lln I ncytov.n 1~ I ) "SOOO 9
Gcrmr~mown \~lie} Vrcw (1 I J ~8000
tO
IRUN ION H.Ul K HILL(\ I) -168~0

1401 ~ ~uoo 1 B~• • l 4 01 ~bOOO
S•J,
ldmt n(l 11 1 97~0 10 Sr Hclfy(lQ)~8 lb

Regao n 5 I Mt:ntor I ke C lh 14 010 :17~0
Mad son (4 018 8250 \ 01 mini 1 Ill ~ (4 0) ~ (}()(
4 Macedon 11 Nord t n 1 (-I [}) H 1~00 ~ P r tm Ht
Holy Nam~ (40) 7 1()()0 () Grc~n (~ 1) 6(1 1 50 7
Cty~ fillsWalshJcs ut (l l )'ito! J50 .S ih\l"Cn l l~
1)58000 9 1"tmS\tllc RI \mdc(l IJ~tH50 10
Uroadv•ew Hr s Bredo.s' lk (1 I 5 1~00
Rcgaon 6 I Wad ~worth H OJ 10 \()(X) 1 Pr qu ~
(4 0) 9 77SO l Grafton Mrdv1ew (-I 0) 8 0500 4
Perry1burg (4 0) 6 8900 ~ Wh111.:lnusc Anthl'(ny
Wayne {4 OJ 6 86 10 6 Amherst S1ech.: { ~ I ) 6 8000
7 MatyS\ 11\e (4 0) 6 77'10 8 Orer;on Cia) ( 1 I )
6 4720 9 New Carlnle Tecum se h (3 1! 6 12~0 10
Stdney (3 1) 61000
R~g1 o l'l 7 I 00\er (4 OJ 10 0150 2 Co l
Brookhaven (4 0) 9 17SO l Col Independence (4 0)
7 S250 4 Ufl on toWn Lake ( l I ) 7 lJ&lt;iO ~
Rachmond Ed15o n (4 0) 6 06'0 6 Col St Ch r ~s
(J l)S I SOO 7 Canton Trmkenl\ 1) 50000 !:1 Col

c 1 1 .n

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90C.XJ

Easr(li).&amp;8~80 9Col l rnnklnHts (l l ) .&amp;

Dinsmo IV

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11 1 ( 1

11'1000 IOW \ t n II Nttl
'it/&lt;iO
Rt gt n l l (n unMKt l
40
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1

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D1vls1on VI
Ium

DIVISlUU

D1v1S1on Ill

20

S Lou s (Stephenson 6-1) n Ch1oago (Tmchsc1
b i 7Jl20pn1
/\mona (Benes 11 11) t Colorado (1-lntk mnn I
01 'i 05pm
Momreal (Batu a 7 7) 11 FlondR (Nunez 6 9)

~l1r~al

I Canton McKinley ( 2S) 4 0
327
2 Cm St Xavu:r 3 0
248
J Grove C1t) (4) 4 0
2.&amp; 2
4 Man11lon WMhmgton 4 0
180
S You Boardman 4-0
178
6 Cm Elder OJ 4-0
17'
7Centcrvtlle.( "\}40
ll9
8 Wetterv•lle South t l ) 4-0
114
9 Cle St lgnal tus \ I
84
10 Brunsw ick 4 0
.&amp; 8
Olhus rec~ivm11 II or mon pumh II
Wonh ngton KJlbourr e 46 I' N Canton Hoo\er n
Jl Solun l ) 14 L kcwood St Ed vard lO 15 (lie)
Cm Moeller H lx'r Ht ~ Wnyn~ 16 17 M wheld 14
18 S~l'ldusk y I ~

17 ,

DH Hor1da 5 Monueal 3 Aonda 4 Montre&amp; 0
Houston 6 P111sburgh l
Atln 1111 2 New York I
St Loms 7 Clncago 2
Amona 7 Colo rado 6
M Jwauk~ 8 Ptuladelph1a 6
Sn n L&gt;icgo 6 CINCINNATI 2
Los Angeles 9 San Fra.msco 4

our eeve?

fU.

CIRCLEVILLE THORNVILLE SHERIDAN
tiJ8
586
491
471
45J
197

tiJJ
82 (fJ 541
12 80 474
71 80 470
68 84 441

'
Thesday 's scores

Phone: 992-2155

!ill

'"

Ph laddphL'
Montreal

CINCINNATI

lllm

1 1uunBllh {2)40
4 Bellbrook (5) .&amp; 0

NL standmgs

Houston

COLUMBUS Ohto (AP) - How a stare panel
of sports wruen and broadcaJten rates Ohiu hrgh
school footballtearm 1n the second of .e•ght w~kly
1999 Associated Press poJI by OHSAA diVISions
with won-losl record and tolal potnts (first place
votes m parentheses)

DiVISIOD I

5S3
497
414

Tuesday's scores

1 71

Ohio H.S. football poll

589

CLEVELAND 6 Octrrnl I

1

Ohio H.S. sports

3

Mmncsota
Kan ~as Cny
Texns
Oakla nd

New York. {Leuer II II ) at Adama (Maddux 18
IIOpm
Phlladclphta (Grace I 3) at M1lwauket ( lk~ 3
0) 205pm
l'itt§burgh (Peters 5 2) at Ch1cago (8ow1~ I 6)
80S pm
San Franmco (L Hemanr:le1 7 11 ) at Los
Angeles( Park II 10) 10 IOpm

,. ~

l:ktrQ t

w~strrn

The Daily Sentinel

beat the DctrOII T1gers 6 I Tuesd,,y
mght When you re m a pla10on
role 11 shard ro get a lot of RBis
Bames thmks lhe label IS a bum
rap and says he hasn t spent an mor
dmate amount of umc on the d1s
abled list durmg h1s 20 year career
801 he s not biller He JUSt goes about
h1s busmess
And that1s hlltmg
He's a profess10nal h1tter

8)

91 59 tiJ7
88 62 587
11 74 510
73 76 490
65 87 428

Ntw York

For Painle$5 Job Opportunities-See The Classifieds

you start, tt s how }OU fm1 sh It '
W11lmmson allowed four runs three earm:d - and three h1ts m I 1
111nmgs
,
Gwynn extended h1s h11tm g streak
lo lfi gam es with a l1rst 1nn1ng Sin
VERAS SCORES - The San D1ego Padres'
gle Cmcmndlt s Edd1e r1ube nscc Qullvro Veras (nght) shdes and kicks the baseball
stnglctl m h1s fm;t three at hat s out of the glove of C1nc1nnat• backstop Edd1e

Scoreboard
Ium

our

Sa1d W1l~amson I had 10 come
m With a fastball and he s too good a
h1tter
Last Wednesday W1ll1amson left
a game agamst Clucago ""h a small
cut on the m1ddle fmger of h1s p1tch
mg hand and he sa1d the cui both
ered h1m Tuesday n1gh1 when he
1hrew h1s fastball
My fastball d1dn t ha' e 1he Zip
and control lik e nonnal • he sa1d
Sanders had struck out endmg 1he
fifth mmng w1th runners on first and
thlfd after Gwynn was mtenllonally
walked the f1rst t1me
You may get me the first t1me
but there s always a second t1me
Sanders sa1d It doesn l matter how

Baines' hitting helps Indians notch 6-1 victory over Detroit

E•5lun DtVIStOn

•
ear1n

"You would have hked to wm
tomght • sa1d Cmcmnau s Scan
Casey, who h11 a two run homer '"
the th11d mmng
We ve got I0
games to go m hng two wnh
Houston We nccc to stay Within
stnking distance "
Wuh tpe score tied at 2, the bases
loaded and two outs 1n the seventh
Sanders came to bat for the second
stra1ght t1me after Tony Gwynn was
mtentJOnally walked and this ume
he made the Reds pay Sanders went
the oppos1te way on a 2-0 fastball
&gt;away from rookie Scott W1lhamson
(II 7), hnung n mto the Reds
bullpen m the nght-ficld comer
Pokey Reese'srelay throw to thud
came '" on a short hop and Aaron
BOOI\C knocked n down, but 11 rolled
mto foul terruory Sanders broke for
home. brushing Boone as1de, arld
pumped h1~ nght arm as he scored
I was able to dnve the ball to
ngh1 field wnh authonty and get
those three runs m and create little bn
of havoc out there, Sanders sa1d
Reds manager Jack McKeon who
managed the Padres froll) 1988
1990 knew that Gwynn likely would
put the ball 1n play You pllch to
Regg1e, you nught get h1m to chase
somethmg

I'

AL standings

•
1re

The Oatly Sentinel • Page ,1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Reds lose 6-2 to Padres, fall
to a'l2 games behind Astros

Baseball

New Kosovo Protection Corps fuels
suspicion, fear in divided city
would be reserved for Serbs and other mmont1es
By ROBERT H. REID
Nowhere m Kosovo are Serb susp1c1ons deeper and
Assoclat.cl Press Writer
KOSOVSKA MITROVICA, Yugoslav1a (AP) tl:le shortcommgs of the three-month old, NATO-led
Angered over NATO 's deCISIOn to reorgamze the Koso· peacekeepmg m•ss1on more ev1dent than m the d1v1ded
vo L1berahon Anny mto a CIVIlian corps, Serbs m th1s c•ty of Kosovska M1trov•ca, 30 m1les northwest of
tense, d1v1ded c1ty say they will never accept an mdcpen- Pnstma
Instead of promollnjj multlethmcuy, French peacedent Kosovo and are threatemng to create theu own
keepers have enforced a d1V1S1on of the c•ty, wh1ch local
defense force
Replacmg the KLA w1th a 5,000-member Kosovo Serbs say 1s necessary to protect them from vengeful
Protecllon Corps s1mply perpetuates the ethn1c Alban1an ethn1c Alba mans The policy, however, has demed some
army and could help Kosovo ach1eve mdependence from ethn1c Alba mans the chance to return to homes they fled
Yugoslavia, satd Oliver Jvanov1c, a Serb commumty durmg the 18•month crackdown on the KLA that tng
gered NATO 's 78-day bombmg of Yugoslavia
leader m the town of Kosovska M1trov1ca
Some NATO and U N officials, speakmg on cond•"I am absolutely sure that members of the Kosovo
Corps will be members of the (KLA) m d1fferent um- t•on of anonym1ty, fear Serb rn11itants may be mfiltratmg
forms and, of course, w1th the same altitude" agamst mto Kosovska M•trov1ca from the Serb1an border 40
miles to the north
Serbs, Ivanov1c sa1d Tuesday
They can travel down the lbar R1ver valley along a
To protest the formalion of the Kosovo Protechon
Corps, Serb1an representatives reSigned Wednesday from route that takes them past Serb VIllages w1lhout fear of
Kosovo's JOmt Serb·Albanian counc1l, wh1ch works wUh runmng mto ethmc Albaman militants
The !bar runs through the center of th1s drab mdustn·
the Umted Nations on creating mult1ethmc structures m
al cuy, wuh Serbs on the north bank and Albamans, the
the provmce
Bernard Kouchner, who heads the UN m•ss•on m south French troops guard the bndge, prevenling free
movement from one sector to the other to av01d v1o
Kosovo and pres1des over the JOint Serb Albaman coun
ell, demed Serb allegations that the corps was a contmu· lcnce
The result has been to create a SlluaiiOn Similar to the
atmn of the KLA and d1sm•ssed the Serbs' res1gnat1on as
a public display of outrage agamst mtematlonal offic1als diVISJon of Berhn dunng the Cold War
On the south bank, walls are decorated w1th KIA
"They JUSt ntded to do somethmg agamst the coun
graffiti,
and the sound of Albaman language songs blares
c1l 10 front of th r public and they chose to do th1s,"
Kouchner sa1d, a mg that he would contmue to cooper- from cafes
Across the bndge about200 yards to the north, Koso
ale w1th the Serb
vo 1s unquestiOnably Serb At the La Dolce V1ta bar,
In Kosovska t VICa, Ivanov1c sa1d Serb com mum
If representatives would meet Fr~day to cons1der a young Serb men somelimes play nationalist songs on a
response and poss1bly to dec1de on orgamzmg the1r own sound system at max1mum volume
Many Signs are wntten m Cynlhc lettenng, not
Serbmn national guard
Albaman,
wh1ch IS wntten 1n the Latm alphabet like
"I suppose (NAT6) 1s prepanng for Kosovo some
Enghsh
Shop
wmdows are marked With a cross and the
kind of
mdependence," Ivanov1c sa•d " We cannot
accept that Kosovo w1ll be mdependent There's no hfe letter 'S' m Cynllic four limes, standmg for the slogan,
"Only Umty Can Save the Serbs "
for Serbs 10 an mdependenl Kosovo "
Vendors sell newspapers from Belgrade, not Pr•suna.
Under an agreement stgned by the Umted Nations,
Kosovo's
provmc1al cap1tal
NATO and the KLA late Monday, the new Kosovo Pro
T-he
atmosphere
1s of a defiant commumty that conlcclion Corps would perform humamtanan miSSions and
Siders
1tself
under
s1egc,
threatened by ethmc AlbaniBns
help rebmld Kosovo after 18 months of ethnic warfare
Former KLA commander Ag•m Ceku w•ll also com· and abandoned by the Yugoslav government, wh1ch has
mand the corps and most members are expected to come •Is hands full handhng a challenge by Serbs opposed to
from KLA ranks Kouchner sa1d 10 percent of the slots Pres1dent Slobodan M1losev1c

Wednesday, September 22, 1999

r.1
1 \l uI

If a part1c1pant w1ll need aux11tary a1ds (1nterper, bra1lled or taped matenal,
ass1st1ve 1tsten1ng dev1ce, other) due to a d1sabl1lty, please contact Glona
Kloes. Clerk, pnor to Oct 4, 1999, at (740) 992-2895 m order to ensure
that your needs w1ll be accommodated

1

Janet Howard , President
Me1gs County Comm1ss1oners

�• Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel ·

Wednesday, September 22, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:Qy "The.Bend

-Meigs varsity volleyball team beats Eastern, Nelsonville-York
The Meigs Marauder volleyball team kept its undefeated season going with a win over Ea&gt;tern on Monday,
and then defeated Nelsonville-York in a road contest on
Tuesday. Meigs is now 8-0 for the season.
Against Eastern Meigs 'defeated the Lady Eagles in
the first contest 15-3, Eastern bounced bnck to take the
econd contest 15- 12, but Meigs won the rubber match
15-5.
Tiffany Halfhill led Meigs with 12 points on 16 of 17'
•.erving, five knl s, one a&gt;sists and one block. Shannon

Price scored eighi points on II of 12 serving and I 0
assists, Tangy Laudermilt scored seven points on 12 for
12 serving and 12 assists. Brooke Williams added six
points on II of II serving and seven kills, Tawny Jones
added five points on eight of eight serving, Amy Hysell
had two points on five of seven serving and 10 kills, and
MarJorie Bratlon two polnis on two of two serving and

two kills.
No Eastern statistics were a\·ailable.
In the reserve game, Meigs dropped their first contest

of the season in three games, Eastern defeated Meias IS7.9-tSand 15-8.
Meigs went to Nelsonville-York HiJh School on
Tue;day, and defeated the Lady Buckeyes 15-IOand 159.
Tangy Laudenmilt led .the way with nine points on II
of 12 serving and eight assists, Tiffany Halfhill had five
points on eight of eight servina with four kills. Tawny
Jones had five points on seven of seven serving, Brooke
Williams also had five points on eight of nine serving

National League
roundup
By IRA PODELL
Associated Press Writer
The Allanta Braves and New York
Mets finally faced off, g1ving
National League fans a diversion
from Big Mac and Sammy.
Chipper Jones homered from both
_ sides of the plate Tuesday night.
· includi ng a tiebreaking shot in the
- llig hth inning as t.hc Braves beat New
York 2- 1, increasing their NL East
lead ove r the Mct s tn two games.
The clU bs will meet five more
times in the next ni 1h.' da\S.
' ·Momentum is ~\cr\ thin~ in ~1
!'Cries like 1his," said Athnta . . :-;tarh:r
John Smoltl. who .:t llowcd on lv 1Hll'
run in !'even inninl! ~. · ··obvi1)usiv. \\L'
wanted to lry to \\~in th~ fi rst ga;Hl: ...
· Even with the loss. lhc Mcb' ·

playoff prolipcc ts \\oCfC nl&gt;t dimmed
- as CiiH.:innati los ( 6-2 at San Die!:!o.
The RedS arc still ~ 1 : g;lrncs· h~ll~1d
New York for the wild 'card .
In Chica-go. all was quiet un the
horne-run front as .S':unrny Sosa ~uld
Mark MeG wire \Vcre k~pl in ch!.!ck.
MeG wire. \\'hO honwrl'd MomL.1y.

4

b l ~ during H ou~ ton 'S ro~.~r~ run

4

SCV ·

Wisconsin head coach to have
_major knee surgery in October

cnth ·111ning at Piftsb urgh. MADISON. Wis. (AP)
Badgers play No. 4 Michigan in
The Astros won for only the sec- Wisconsin coac h BarT-y Alvarez plan s M ~diso n Saturday.
o nd time in six ':!ames to cut thei r to undergo knee replacement surgery
Doctors at the Mayo Clinic told
magiC number fo~r winnmg the NL next month because of severe pain Alvarez on Monday to stay off his
that has made him barely -able to right knee and keep it immobilized to
skep the past co.uple of weeks.
reduce swelling.
~fndians
(Ceiminucd from Page 7)
Alvarez. seated in a wheelchair.
" I'd like to try and continue
told
reporters
Tu
esday
that
the
coac
hin g· from the field, but it
... one unearned run on two h1ts w11h Borkowski in the e1ghth. mcludi ng
surgery is planned O~t. 5 at the Mayo appears likely that I'll have to go to
four walks and four strikeouts. Mike an RBI sin gle by Baines lhat scored
Clinic in Roc hester, Minn. That's in the booth ," Alvarez said.
Jacks'nn pitched the ninth ..
Roherto Alomar for a 3-1 lead.
·
the week after · the 20th -ranked•
Wisconsin is looking to rebound
1
Borkowski ( 1-5), making hiS lOth
" 1-k's a great pickup for those
Badgers
play
at
Ohio
Stale
Oct.
2.
from
13sf weekend's 17-12 loss to
major league Swn . gave up · three guys:· Parrish said.
.
''I've never been sick a day in my unranked ' Cincinnati, which dropped
runs. six hits and four walks in eight
Ramirez had a three-run double .
life . I'd never had a stitch tlntill came the Badgers from No. 9 to No. 20 in
innings . He also struck out five.
the game's only extra-base hit. m the
here," said Alvarez, ihe coach at the natio ~al rankings.
.
The AL Central division champi· . ninth off Matt Anderson to 'm ake it6.Wisconsin si-nce 1990.
Alvarez, 52, is to return to Mayo
ons took a 2-0 lead in · the fourth. l.
" It 's very hard not to go out there. Clinic after the Ohio State game.
.
With two out s. Ramirez walked, Jim
Burba retired lhc Tigers in order and work with the people that you
He had surgery last spring, but the ·
Thome singled and both Scored on. a . in the sixth and seventh innings, getlove," he said , choking up as he doctor told him the knee was beyond
line si ngle to center by Baines.
ting through the seventh on just six spoke.
repair -due, in pan, to injuries dat"Thars what I'm here for. " said pitches.
He said the inJury likely would ing ba• k to his days as a Nebraska
Baines, who has 18 RBis since being
The Tigers had a chance to get to keep him off the sidelines when the • linebacker.
acquired from Baltimore on Aug . 27. Burba in the first. Detroit had run"I'm here to hit."
ners at first and third with one out,
Mike Powell beat Bob Beamon's long jump record by two inches with
- Detro.lt, which managed only four but Burba struck out Dean Palmer
a leap of 29 feet, 4'o inches at the world championships in Tokyo in 1991.
hits, made it 2-1 in .the fifth when and got Juan Encarnacion to foul out.
.J{ltrim Garcia scored on Luis
" I guess I have a closer's mental Moses Malone, 19, signed with Utah of the ABA in 1974 as the first
'i&gt;olonia 's .two-out squeeze bunt.
ity," Burba said. "I'll give out before
player to go directly from high school into major pro ba&gt;ketball.
But the Indians got three hits off I give in ~ "
.
'
-

...

'

.

.

•

Man who wanted nothing to do with daughter sho.uld be left alone

In the reserve game, Meigs ran its record to 7-1 with
a IS-8, IS· II victory.

ganies.
Williams, a 27-year-old left-hander malting his first · care~r stan,
allowed just one unearned run and
two hits in five innings.
Marllm 5, Expos 3 ..
Marllm 4, Expos 0
With the score 3-all in the eighth
inning or the opener, Derrek Lee and
· Mark Kotsay hit run-scoring singles
off Anthony Telford (4-4), starting
Florida to a doubleheader sweep at
home.
Montreal trailed 3-2 in the eighth
when Vladimir Guerrero hit a 447foot homer· off Dennis Springer (6·
15). Antonio Alfonseca pitched the
ninth for his 18th save.
.
Reid Cornelius ·(1 -0) struck out
six _in six innings in the second game
and got his first win for the Marlins.

·Rookie Julio Ramirez drove in hi s
first two nuns in the majors, helping
beat Jeremy Powell (3- 7).
With a tropical storm warning. the
game dre-w an announced crowd of
only 8,468 .
B~wers 8, Phillies 6
Jeff Cirillo hit a three-nun homer
and added an RBI single . for
Milwaukee in its home win- over
Philadelphia.
Bill Pulsipher (5·6) allowed five
runs - four earned- and seven hits
in five-plu~ innings , and · Bob
Wickman pitched the ninth for his
35th ·save.
·
·
Rookie Anthony Shumaker ,(0-3)
Was tagged for seven runs :-- six
earned - .and eight hits in three-plus
u~mngs.

Local sports in brief
Athens golfers defeat Meigs
Athens won a four-team golf tournament held on Monday at the Athens
Country Club. Athens "A" won with a score of 160. followed by Meigs
with a 183, Athens "B" finished with a 188 and Belpre added a 191.
Luke Korner of Athens "A'• was match medalist with a one over par 37 .
For Meigs, Thad Bumgardner carded a 43. Nick Dettwiller added a 45.
Zach Meadows had a 47. Carson Midkiff and Andy Davis shot 48s .
.
Tommy Roush had a 51.

Meigs JV golf team takes second in finale
Trimble defeated Meigs and Alexander·in a three way golf match held
last Wednesday at The.Eim Golf Course.
·
. Trimble had a 164, 'followed by Meigs with a 189 and Alexander who
had a 198. Trimble was led by co-match medalists Noah Barrett and Cory
Dunkle each with a 37.
·
Jason Knight led Meigs with a 43 . Jon Wilson added a 46. Nick Wood
hada 48. Ben Bookman carded a 52. Josh Napper and Brandon Ramsburg
added 61's.
·
·
· The Marauder J.V. team finished the season with a 3-2 mark.

Correction
The players in-!he_ picll;lfe accompaning the Southern-Alexander game
st~ry we·' -Wrongly tdent1fied. Ptctut:ed was Alexander running back
Mtchael Ha_wk, who rushed for 125 yards and four touchdowns . Pursuing
for Southern
.
,is senior
. ~nebacker Adam Cumings.

.

'

99 JoHN

DEERE TRACTORS

98 JOHN
97 JOHN

DEERE TRActoRs

96

ON THE
ON THE
ON THE

FtooR.
FLOOR.

'

DEERE TRACTORS

FLOOR.

I ,:;HN DEERE TRACTORS ON T.HE FLooR.

99
99
99
99

DAYS SAME As CAsH*.
DAYS SAME As CAsH.
DAYS' SAME AS' CASH.
DAYS SAME

As
~I

CASH.

----. 1

,.: .

LTI33 Lawn Tractor '
• 13 lip

Wednesday, September 22, 1999

•

Shannon Price had three points on six of six serving
and four assists, Amy Hysell scored two points on three
or four serving with eight kills and one a&gt;sists, Marissa
Whaley had one point on two -of two serving and
Ma.jorie Bratton had a kill and a block.

Braves -top Mets 2-1; Astros beat Pirates 6-3-; -Marlins sweep ·DH
Diamondbacks, and Damian Miller
drove in three nuns with his first
career .multihomer game.
Cardinals 7, Cubs 2
Kent Bottenfield, a former Cubs
reliever who turned into a stellar
starter for St. Louis , allowed one hit
tn six innings to earn his 18th victory.
_
.
'
Fernando Taus became just the
13th St. Louis player to hit 30
homers in a season. Edgar Renteria
added a three-run homer in the ninth.
. Dodgers_ 9, Giants 4 .
Enc Karros hn a three-run homer
and Jell Williams earned his first big
league
victory,
se nding San
FranCISCO to defeat at Los Angeles.
Karros. who went 2-for-4, has II
hits . _i o his la st 21 at-bats . . Gary
Shcttteld, Paul LoDuca and Raul
Mondesi also homered for the
Dodgers. who ha ve won four straight

Page9

•

with two kills and one assist.

. 't:

remained al 59, while Sosa, shut out Central to seven. They lead secondin the firs1 lwo games of the series place Cincinnati by ·3': games.
that conclud es . todav, has 61.
Scott Elarton (9-4) allowed two
Mcdwire was 0 -for-3 ~ith a sacri- runs and five hits in 6 1-3 innings,
flee fly. a walk and three strikeouts in and Doug Henry pitched the ninth
St. Louis ' 7-2 victory Tuesday. while for his second .ave.
Sosa went 0-for-4.
Rookie Kris Benson (ll-14) _gave
Dennis Cook ( 10-5) relieved in up four runs - three earned- and
the eighth to face Jones., .who man-'-1'ivc hits in seven innings.
aged only one hit in seven previous_
Diamondbacks 7, Rockies 6
at-bats against the lcft-handcr_
Curtis Lcskanic forced in the go. ·_·He had already ~it one left· . ahead run by walking Arizona's
handed. so there was not mu.c.h dis- Steve Finley with the bases loaded in
c ussion ... Mcts manager Bobby the ninth after Kurt Abbott's RBI sii1·
Valentine sa id. " We thought we had gk off Gregg Olson (8-4) tied the
n lut of t hin g~ going for us. indud ing · S1.'or~ in tht: eighth .. ·
'
the wind bl owi nf!: in from lcfi tiel d.
Arilnna. in just its second season.
But it didn't w~.Jrk' out.·· • .
lowcrl!d its maeic num ber for clinchIn other NL ~am~s. Florida swept ing the NL WeSt to three. openi ng a
~~ douhlchcadcr from Mlmtreal. 5 J nin,c gmnc lead ove r Sl!conJ-placc
,\lld -t-0: and it ''.:as, Houston 6. San FrancisL·o.
Pittshurdl 3: Ariwna 7. Colorado 6:
Luis Gont.alc; wcnt4-for-4 with a
Mii\\;\Ukcc 8. Philadelphia 6: _and so lo . hnmcr for thC ,·isi ting
Los Angeks 9. San FrancisL·o -+.
Aslros 6. Pirates 3
Pau i·Bak&lt;&gt;'s apparent douhle -play
grou nder tulll cd into a two· run ·dou-

The Daily Sentinel

-~

, •.

..

(

, 19?7,

they may __once again be entitled to ERANS AFFAIRS
DEAR SECRETARY WEST:
this benefit. Those who think they
..! j f~
Thank
you for giving me the opporare
eligible
should
contact
their
·'I
local VA Regional Office or call VA tunity to tell my readers that they
may be olig1ble for these benefits. I
toll free at I cS00-827 -I 000 .
·: ·,:'
)II
appreciate
your concern fo• the weiOn
behalf
of
the
entire
Depart·
eot01 cndilf
.
fare
of
the
se
surviving spquses. and
rnenl of Veterans Affairs and the
millions or veterans and family hope your ·letter will help get the
concerned ttiat
members who rely on us , thank you word out.
ans' Affairs (VA) may not be able to for helpin,g us spread the word on
Dear Ann Landers: Here s
reach all of these 's pouses, and hope this important change.-- TOGO D. another letter for your stupid crimithat your column wiJIIctthem know . WEST JR .. SECRETA RY OF VET- nal fi les. A couple I know had their

-~

~A~n:n~·~L:II~n~4\r.e:rs~;:"71':=~P.:p~o~rt~.~W,~e~:ar~e

Dear
very young and had a daughter. The
marriage didn't last. l remarried a
few years later, and my· sccon{.l husband adopted •'Eleanor."
She is now 52 years old, and has
ne ver asked about her birth father,
although I would ha ve hcen happy
to tell her whatever she wanted to

car stolen . On the front seat were

their tickets · to a Boston Red Sox
ba&gt;eball game . After their car was
taken , my friend~ went With the
police to the hall pai-k. and sure
enough. the car thieve~ were ~itting
in their seats. Is that rich. or what·• ·
- BROOKLINE. MASS .
DEAR BROOKLINE: Beautiful. Who won?
··A Collection of M} Favontc
Gem&gt; of the Day·· is the perfect lit-

;~

Vctc~

1&lt;-now.
My ex-husband never wan ted
anything to do wi t~ us . He refused
tU poly child Support: even 1ho ug~ il

was mandated by the divorce
decree. He moved back to his home ·
town, and that was 1he last l heard
of him .
A few weeks ago . Eleanor wid
me she needed infommt ion about
her father's mcdi.:al history. and I
found his address and phone num - ·
her. through the Int ernet.
She telepho ned him . and they
spoke briefly. It ~eems he has hecn
Temurricd for 45 years and has three
sons and several _grandchild ren. He
said he never told his children about
his ·first marriage ur tllat t~e !las ·a
grown daughter. and asked Eleanor ·
to keep it quiet . She promised to

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honor his request.
I am upset about

$ 99

this, and
Eleanor is deeply hurt that her
fa ther wants nothing to do with her.
even after all these years.
·
l decided to 'write to my ex-hu sband and send him a photograph of
· Eleanor and her children , along with
her phone number, I asked him. to please reconsider. We have he ~rd
noth.ing.
lsn •t it is a shame that on top of
rejecting his daughter. his sons
aren ' t supposed to know they have a
~:i&lt;: fPr'J

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Should l get their addresses and
give them to Eleanor, or let sleeping
dogs li e?-- IN A QUANDA RY IN
COLORADO
DEAR QUANDARY: This man
did not pay any child support. and
sh~wed zc_
r o interest in his diwghte( .
whtle she was growi ng up . He's
made it plain .that he wants no part
of her now. It would serve no purpose to drag hi s sons into thi s sad
si t~ ~ti on . l say, •'Let sl•eping dogs
lte.
•.
Dear Ann Landers : Pl ease help
us get the word o ut ahout a recent
change in •the law I hat w ill benefit
survivin g spouses of de ceased -veterans.
In 1990. ~urviving spouses who
re married we re nn longer cl igible
for Dependency and Ind em nit y
Compensation (DIC). As of OcL I,
1998 . the Vct er~ns Benefits Ac t per- .
rnits . restora~inn of DIC payments to
a sur vivi ng spouse if the rcmarria!!c
is terminated 1hrough death. di ''or~ c.
or annulment .
This is an impmlant r"csoun:c for
v~tcrans' .·surviv in_g ·spouseS who
often have limi ted means o f sup-

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e~

, Bidwell, OH

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
· 668 Pinecrest Drive .
740-446-2412
\

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Parkersbur., WV

Larry's Cycle &amp; Tractor Sales
· 2706 Pike Street
304-42Ml02

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• Offer ends October 31. 1999. Subject to approved credit On John Deere Credit Re~Oiving Plan, for non-commercial use. A 1~ down payment requ ired . If ttle balance I! not plid In full by 1he tl'ld of same AI Cllh Pl,'omotlonal ~riod, lnternt will be assesseo from the original date of
1
purchase at19.B'IIi APR unless you reside inCA (19.2% APR); Al, FL. KS, LA, ME, M.ll , MN, NE, NC. NO, PA, VT, &amp; WV (18% APR); TX (14'111APR, but rate may wary): AR(9.5'1 APR. but rate mi)'VIfY) wtth 1 $0.!50 per month mlnlrrum. T1111.e1', tr.Wlt setup R delivery Chlflh could Increase
mont hi~ payment. Larger montnly payment may be required in California, Other special rat eli and terms _may be available, Including in~tallment financmg and financing fOf commefci,af u~ . Aveilal)le at partlclpatln&amp; dealers. Prices .00 models may vary by dealer.

BIRTH ANNOUNCED .,Kevin and Angie Pullins have
announced the birth of their first ·
child, Chelsey Renae Pullins, on ·
August 12, 1999. She weighed 5
pounds, 1·1 112 oz., and was 19
inches long. · Grandparents are
Danny and Judy Mc.Dohald and
Bill and Linda Pullins.

Woman ·charged with
larceny in cancer
fun"d-raising hoax
BOSTON (AI') - .A woman
c laimi ng tt1 ha v~..· D\'iUian cancc1~
raised thousa nd s nr doll itrs for cn n ~
. cer research, then used the money 1o
buy herself ·:1 (.'ar and have lipnsu":tion, prosccuh irs. ~a1 d. Tuesday.
· Kristen C!nuglwny, 24. rai~cd as
much as $50 .WO Ill the ptbt year
from friend,'\. rami l v and &lt;nlhcr
donors. said Sulfullo- r"uunty l)l~lricL
Anorncy Ralph C Marlin IL
She .even organ11cd the " Fir:-.t
Annual Kri sl(: n Clnu l!.hcrtv SK
Run/\Valk'' lo bcn~.:fit . .h~r ~am.:cr
funJ -r.aisil}g effnrt-; - cvl'n thou~ h
lnvcsiJgator~ were unable· In find
any cvidem~c ~ hL' ha~ 1,:anccr.
(

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79

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$66 PER MONTH*

h* on a full line of lawn and garden equipment.

DEL MONTE

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PRODUCTS

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• 38-inch culling width
.
• 5-speed shift-on-the-'go transmission

0

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John C . Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Famil y Medicine

Mr and Mrs Robert Hebets
wtll co nduct special servtces at
the Rutland Church ,of the

Un.'v••

Nazare ne o n Fnday , begrnnmg at

Col-of
OM•ap•hk:

7 p.m.

Hemochromatosts: Too
Much of a Good Thingl
Question: My doctor told me that I have htgh tron. [' ''e never read about
thiS problem What causes 11 and how IS it treated?
Answer: Iron IS an essential rnmeral for us humans It 1s used by your
body as an mgredient m hemoglobm, whtt h ts part of your red blood ce ll s
The hemog lobm "grabs" oxyge n as bl ood passes through your lun gs, and II
dtstnbutes that oxygen to ce ll s throughout the body vta the mculatory system. Iron IS also necessary for other body processes that are obligatory for
life .

They are m1ssiona n es for the
Church of the Nazare ne tn Papau
. New Gutnca They were appotnt·
ed to th at post tn 1990.
The coupl e served as ma ss Jonaries from 1968 to 1970 tn SwaZIland. "'here he se rved as a htgh
sc hoo l teacher and she as a book-

rece aved a M aster of Ed1,1 cat aon

Lebanon in 1973. and returned to
Swaztl and tn 1974
Dur,ng thetr term s tn PNG. Mr.

degree from 'Ed tnboro State Unt ve rsny tn Penn sy lvanta in 1966
He atte nded Nazare ne Theolog tcal Semm ary tn Kansas Ctj y,
Mo . fro m 1966 to 1967
He completed his qu allft cat tO ns for Medt cal Tec hn ol-ogiSt
throug h the Carn ey Hospttal m

He be-ts has se rved as a Laboratory

w he re s he co ntinue s to ass 1st.

,:lecades for sympl o ms 10 become cv Jde nl

Upwards ol I 3 perce nt of people worldw tde suffe r !rom hemoc hromatoSIS, and the rare ts sJ malar w1th1n th e po pulatiOn of our country. The d1sease
j s a g ene uc d1sorder a nd .. ru n ~ m tanuhes .. but only produces sympt oms
when you mhen l an abno rm i.ll ge ne trmi1 hoth pare nt s
Smce hc moc hrumato!&lt;m; ~ ~ an a u w ~o nml (nm sex -Jmkl!d ) l)ckct. 1t would
be expected to occ ur wuh eq ual freque ncy m m~n tn \\. Ome n And mdccd.
the ge no IS present ,v'tth equal freq uoncy. but the cit meally apparent diSease
as much more commo n m me n Thh h prohabl) due. at least m part. to the
blood loss - and suhseq uent trun loss - reproduli i\ C age women ex.pcne.nce dunng mc nstrua uon
Th e typiCal sy mptoms of hc mcx: hromaws1s mcludc weakness. fa ugue ,

lethargy, wetght loss. abdommal path. JOint patn. loss of llbtdo (parttcularly
m mal¢s), and a bro nze co loration ol Ihe skm
The sufferer may also nottce palpttauons - a raptd , forceful beaung of
the heart These symptoms arc du e to the ~xcosst ve amounts of iron tnterfenng wtth parttcular organs or body pans Spectfically, excess tron can
ctamage organ s like the lt ver, pancreas heart or lungs a&gt; well as the JOints.
The dtagnosts of hemoc hromatosiS IS . co ndition ally establi shed by a
blood test for serum ferrtttn leve l Unfortunately, thts te stiS not part of. routine bl ood tests It ts only ordered v. hen the doctor already suspects the condttton ts present
. ThiS typtcall y occ urs when there IS a famtly hiStory of the disorder or
symptoms suggesttve of the dt sease are already ev tdent. The confirmatton of
the dtagnosts ts made by usmg a spec tal needle to re mov~ a small sample of
tissue from the li ver. Its mtcroscoptc appearance tdentifies lt ver damage and
the presence of excessive deposits of 1ron
Treatment conststs of removm g 500 mL of blood every three to seven
days until mild anemta develops. Afterwards the frequency of thts "blood
lettmg" - known more properly as phlebotomy - ts reduced considerably
For most people wtth hempchromato'sts every two to stx months ts suffiIS

a senous 11i9ess. but 1ts dtag nos1s

IS

nof a death sen -

tence Fully 90 percent of those who stan treatment before the complication
of diabetes develops are altve I0 years later.
'
Those who develop ctrrhosts before begmmng treatment have a slightly
lower survaval rate - 72 percent Part of thts mcreased death rate results
from the propensity for those with ctrrhos is to develop ltver cancer
The "take home" message from this ts that you should see your doctor if
you don ' t feel well for more than a few days. Al so, be sure to mention tf any
of your blood relattves have sulfered from hemochromatoSis Early dtagno'm and treatment are the key.
uFamily Medicine" is a

~eekly

In 1995, Re v_ Hebets w a ~
appoint ed to the pos llt o n of
Naz are ne Health
Minis tn es
Dtrec tor. The posttton pro-.de s
leaders hip ilnd nall o nall eadcrshtp
deve lopment for th e Coll ege of

Agric uhure Departme nl that was mle nded to modernize a

Consumers wo uld save 2 cents a g allon al thc grocery s tore. USDA says
An alternati ve plan the House IS ex pected to approve Wednesday would ratse
milk pnces slightly,

Under the government's current syste m, guaranteed m immum pnccs for
fluid milk 'lfe lowest m the upper Mtdwest and htghest tn the South and West,
up to $3 per hundred pounds htgher in some places. because the prtce IS based
on a farm 's dislancc rrom Eau Claire , Wts
The system was designed to spu r produ~tion tn areas where 11 had bee n
scarce. Today, mtlk can eastly be transported by refngeratcd truck from one
region to another, according to supporters of the plan
The new federal plan narrows the regt onal prtcing dispariues and does
away with geographical references to Eau Clatre.
The department 's plan, set to take effect Oct. I, IS co ntroverstal boeause
tl would benefit producers tn the upper Midwest whtle cutttn g mcome to farm ers in the South and East, econom1 slS say.

Bus, motor
coach safety
standards
suggested

He be ts also att end ed
Easte rn Naza re ne College .
B oth we re b o rn a nd raa sed 111
Pc nn sy lva nm , a nd are c urre ntl y

members of the Gal tOn Church of
the Nat.are ne on the North Ce ntral
Oht o DtSt rt ct They have two
gro\\ n t: htldrc n Darrd a nd Rnhm

REV. AND MRS. ROBERT HEBETS

evenmg WJth Sunday serv1ces at I 0

am and 7 p m Dr John F Hay wtll
be the evangelist. Pastor Phtlllp
Rtdenour, pastor. mvlles the pubhc
RACINE -- Speetal meeting of
the Pomeroy -Racme Masomc Lodge
164 F&amp;AM wtll be held Wednesday,
7.30 p.m. wtth work m the thtrd
degree. Food and refreshments wtll
be served
THURSDAY
POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta
Beta wtll meet Thursrlay, 8 a.m.
Meet at the home of Jane Walton to
car pool for the Dresden trtp.

Calendar--~------:-

'at the Metgs County Fatr-

grounds All pcr..,nns mtcrestcd m

the Ex po arc mvucd to anend.

'.

TUPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers
Plams Veterans of Fore1gn Wars
Post 9053 meeting Thursday. 7:30
p m. Name drawmg to be held.
POMEROY -- Carmg &amp; Sharing
Support Group meetmg Thursday. I
p m at the Metgs Multtpurpose
Semor Center wtth Daren Hayes
speaking on congestt ve heart fatlure
and card1ac rehab1lttat1on
CHESTER -- Ewmg Chapter of
Sons of the Amencan Revolution
meeung Thursday. 6:30 p.m. at the
Chester Courthouse.

SATUROAY
CHESHIRE
Well famtl y
reunion Saturday at the Kyger Cree k
Re creation Center There wtll be a
basket dtnner at 12 30 p m_Alllamily and fri ends are mvtted
CHESTER -- National Hunting
&amp; . Fishtng Day Saturday. 8:30-3
p m at the IKES Farm on Boy Scout
Camp Road neat Chester. Includes
mstruction, demonstration and parttcipalton for youths ages 6 to 16m
hunter safety and ethics, archery,
canoemg. fly fishmg and fly tying,
fish filletmg , shot shell reloadmg,
trap shooung, .22 rifle shootmg.
muzzleloadmg, coon dogs demon;
stratton, turkey calling apd trappm g.
Lunch will be furnished. Door
prizes.

REEDSVILLE -- Rtvervtew Garden Club meetmg Thursday, 7 p.m.
at the home of Mary Altce Bise.
InstallatiOn of officers wtll be held.

FRIDAY
POMEROY -- Ladtes for the
Lord Interdenommattonal Ladtes
MmtStry wtll meet Fnday, 6 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Rtverfront Amphttheater wuh free food , smgmg and
For more informilt10n

RUTLAND •- Rutland Bteentenntal Commtttee cookout Saturday,
6.30 p.m. at the ctvtc center for
those who helped in the Btcentenntal celebration. Bring dessen.

POMEROY -- Town and Country
Expo Commmee meeting Thursday,

call Betty Johnson at441-1415/9926443 or Jan Swigger at992-6667.

PORTLAND -- Lebanon Town-

preachmg

ship Tru ~ tcc ~ regu lar mcctmg S.lturd ay. 7 a n1 a t tht:.• tow n-;lnp hUJidmg

SUNDAY
ANTIQ UITY -- H A Fred HaY,man and Garnet F Polk Hayman
famtly reum on Sunday. 10 a m at
the home of C E Ha} man Sr Dinncr wtll be at noon wuh games tp
follow. All relati ves and fn ends wel:come

RACINE -- Homeco mmg at tt(e
l::agle Rtdge Communit y Church
Sunday wuh mornin g sem cc at 10
am followed by a carry-m dinner at
noon dnd afternoon sen tees al :1
p m Special smgmg by the Bissell
Brothers and Harvest Ttme All welcome.
CARPENTER -- Chnstt an band
Earthen Vessels performmg Sunday,
10:30 a.m. at Carpenter Baptt$1
Church off state Route 143 and at
6 30 p_m at Poplar Rtdge Freewtll
Bapttst Church, state Route 554.
Pastor John Elswtck invttes all t)J
attend. •

column. To submit questions, write to

John C. Wolr, D.O., Ohio University College or Osteopathic Medicine,
Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio 45701.

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. ·~
Fifteen performers nominated
'

for Rock and Roll Hall. of Fame
CLEVELAND (AP) - Aerosmtth , En c Clapton and Quee n head
up the ltst of 15 normnees for tnduc -

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tton next year mto the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame and Museum '
Clapton, the rock and blues gut tar
playe r who has prev10us ly heen

mducted twtce as a member of the
Yardbtrds and Cream. released ht s
'ftrst sol o album m 1970. Mus tetan s
~rc

e ligible for nomm au on to the

hall 25 years alter the rel ease of thetr
hrst record1n g
,

Ac ros m1th . wh1c h re leased 1ts
self-tilled debut album tn 1973, ts

sttll producmg ht ts v.tth tts blueslaced, hard roc k style

The Bnttsh band Queen gained
fame m the '70s and 80s wtth a theatncal style of rock tncludmg hils
"We Wtll Rock You,' "We Are the
Champtons " and " Bohemtan Rhapsody ... Flamboy ant lead stnger Freddte Mercury dted m 1991
Al so nomtnated were The
O'Jays; soul performer Solomon
· Burke. Earth . Wmd &amp; Ftre, doo-wop
groups 'the Flammgos and the
Moonglows. the Lovm· Spoonful ,
Jaz z-ro" k group Steely Dan, rock ' n'
roll ptoneer Rttchte Valens, heavy
metal act Black Sabbath; stnger-guitartst Bonnt e Ralll , smger-songw_rner Lou Reed and Jamc-; Taylor.

Frank McCourt comes in from the rain
for first reading of new mem~·r" 'Tis"
MOUNT KISCO, NY (AP) - It

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plained hi s hew memotr lacked the

was rammg hard and tmtfi c was bad

" lyn c1sm or s anng mt1macy " of

After cntermg the Mount Kt sco Publlc Ltbrary, a half- hour late for the
; fir st stop on htS book tour, a ured; lookmg Frank McCourt sat behtnd a
' desk and rested throughout the
;applause.
: After the clappmg, he stood.
: "Doesn' t anybody work around
•here?" the 69- year.\,ld author joked
:Tuesday to an afternoon audtence of
:aboutiOO. " It 's a marvelous country
~ that people can turn out at all hours
iof the day "
: The typtcal author would rather
~ wnte than talk. but eve n on a dull
:day the creator of "1-ngela Ashes"

"Angela's Ashes." An lnsh Ttmes
critic, Terry Eagleton, thought
"'Tts" was slowed down by " the
artless, lurchmg sentences fa•oured
by US creattve wntlng c Iasses "
The author explamed that he
wrote the sequel because so many
readers had wanted to know what
happens after the first book, whtch
ends wnh a page contaming only the
word ' ti s
One questtoner menuoned that
some lnsh-Amencans and some restdents of Ireland had been unhappy
wtth hts fi rst book and the miserable
poverty tt desc rtbed

. can summon the spmt of con versa-

" There are a lot of pe ople who

•" tiOf) .
McCourt read· three excerpts
:·from " 'Tis." whtch offi ctally went
:on sale l'uesday andhas a fi rstpnnt1mg of more than 1 mtlllon The book
i begtns with McCourt 's arn val by
: shtp 10 New York Ctty tn 1949 and ,
~ continu es through four decades.
: from a boardmg house m Manhanan
· to hts 30 years of teachmg m city
; schoo ls
McCourt also ,cad m Mount
. Ki sco on hi's tour for "Augela 's
· Ashes," whrc h has sold more than 2
~ milhon coptes and wo n the Pulit zer
· Prt ze.
Only ht gh co nsptracy co uld keep
" ' Tts " uff bes tse ller hsts but
revtews so far suggest a seco nd
Puhtzer is unlikely The Ne w York
Tim es ~
Kakutan t com-

only see gree n ft elds and dtmpled
mtlk matds m Ireland," McCourt
responded " As soon as you wnte
so methm g truthful, th at does n' t
cater to the tounst board , yo u're
cursed "
Asked how he Jell ' about the
upcoman g mova c ve rsaon of
" An gela ' s Ashes, " wht ch stars
Emtl y Watson and comes out · tn
December, McCourt sa td he loved tl
and then re membered a day he vtstlcd the set
" I was sta ndmg agamst a wall
wnh Emtl y Watson and the dtrec tor.
Alan Parker. was talktn g wnh the
ynung actor pl aytn 2 me, " he sa td
" fie potntcd to me ; nd satd , 'That's
what you' re gomg to look ltke when
you grow up '
"The buy dtdn'tl ook happy."

Fall ·

Bunting.
Edition
WINS COMPETITION - Hannah Marquise Kennedy, agad
five months, was the first·placa
winner in the Pretty Child Contest at the recant Albany Independent Fair, One of eight other
contestants, she received a tro·
phy and teildy bear as prizes.
She Is the daughter of Jake
Kennedy and Marquiia McClintic_

Past Councilors meet
Past Counctlors' Club of Chester
Counctl No. 323 met at the lodge
hall wtth Thelma Whtte and Belly
Yo un~ as hostesses
Yi'ce Prestdent Elizabeth Hayes
prestded at the meettng, -and read
three verses of Psalm 118
The Lord 's Prayer and Pledge to
the Amen can Flag were g1 ven an
umson. Members answered the roll
call by telling the1r grandmothers·
names, relating to Grandparents
Day.
Due to the absen ces the secretary,
Mary K. Holter, news reporter, gave
the secretary 's report, and tn the
absence o f the tre asurer. 1t was
dectded to hear that report at the
nex t meeung.
Report of the stck was gtve n, and
11 was announced that Laura Mae
Nt ce 's husband dtcd recentl y. Ruth
Smtih IS tn the Um ve rst ty Ho,ptlal .
and Greg Htbbs ts hospttahzed m
CHclev tllc
The ne xt mecun g wtll be held on
Oc tober 13, at 7 p m. The ho&gt;te»
se rved refre shments. and Mary K.
Holtcr co ndu cted games Do01
pnt.c' were won by Erma Cleland
and Eht.alleth Hayes.
Prese nt we1c Gold1c Fred..: n c k.
M.trgaret Ambe rge r. Thelma While.
ln t y Newell. Opal Hollon. Mary Jo
Barn nger Mary K Holt er. Enna
Clela nd. Eltza bc th Hayes Betty
Youn g an d vts llors Sand y and
Rtchard While

" Our nation's datry farmer&gt; are tn a cmtS," satd Rep Thomas Reynolds .
R-N_Y The ahern att\e plan " IS cr lltcallor the long-term vtabtlity of farmmg tn mo't ,tate&gt;. •·
The While Huu'-C threatened Tuesday to vctu the altcrnatl\c pnct ng 'Y'·
tcm. 11 11 '\ nrprovcdby Cungrc s..o; , on the ground that 11 wou ld \Umul mc cxt:C"i~
da ti] produ.:tton and rcduco tntlk consumption
The rnca ... urc wa~ ..:crta tn to pa~~· thc Ho use - u 's co-... pon ...orcJ hy a
m;IJOnty 1)f the mc mhcrr.., - hut 1t' s tuturc m the Senate ~ ~ lc'!\ dea r
Tuc~ay n1gt11 . the milk 1ssuc sp1ll cd m er mto a Hou:..c Scnatl' ~.: on l crCIKc- c tH nmltlel'lhJ t's IJ1mg to wntc the final \Crsaon ol .m .1gn~. ultural , rc nJ '"~ btll
Supporto.:rs lll Ihi! altc rn.lll vc pl.m wam 10 altal"h n 10 the ,pcndtng hi ll.
.dong w1th autho111atmn lnr rcgwnal pl'k1r1g t:artcls that ~ou ld s d ..::vc n !ughcr nulk pnc~s '" the Northca'l and ,'iouthcast
Hou&lt;e GOP leader, wa nt to keep the ts sue outn t'lhc htll . law maker&gt;satd.
torclng the conk rcncc C( ln1 1lll tll: C to hreak up lo r the nt ght Tu esday ~ ithout
an agreement
Fanne"' m the East and South say tHe US DA pl an would cnst them as
mm:h .ls $200 m1ll lon and dri ve many produlcrs out of busmc s~ Producers
uvcrwhclmtngly apprO\ed the plan tn an August referendum. but oppone nts
say that was only heca use there was no altcrnauve for farmers to vote on
" It was JUSt a ratlroad JOb_ .. Nobody wanted tl and nobody suppo rted
u," satd f!fck Davts. a Georgia datry farmer
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To Appear In The

By GLEN JOHNSON
Associated Press Wrher
WASHINGTON - After a
three-year study, the Natton al
Transportation Safety Board deetded Tuesday agamst recommendmg
seat belts in school buses Belts can
sometimes increase InJuries to children, the board said .
All five of the board 's members
voted unan1mou sly to recommended that the National Htghway
Traffic Safety Admmt straltan
expand standards dest gned to keep
children safely contained tn thetr
seatmg rows

The safety board wants current
standards, whtch requtrc that chil dren be protected in a cocoon of
padded seats and htgh seat bac ks,
expanded wuhm the ne.t two years
so children wtll have a better
chance of rcmammg tn stdc a bu s
durmg a Stde co lhston or rollover
Board eng meers satd that could
be acco mphshed '" a vartcty of
ways, mcludmg an mcrcasc an the
hetght of scat backs. mstallattun of
am1 rests or replaceme nt ot the
sta ndard hu s bc m:h seat w11h
sculpted, bucket-type seats
In adduton. th e safet y b&lt;;atd
urged NHTSA to dcl'cl op standards for constructwn ot roofs and
wmdow s m motor coaches warhm
the next two years and rcqu1re new
buses to meet those standard s

The board found m man y acct·
dents the ever-larger wmdows m
tour buses pop out and passengers
are ejected. Mtssmg wmdows can
also reduce roof strength. Board
engmeers belt eve wtndow and roof
frame s can be strengthened and the
glass coated so that tt doesn' t shatter upon rmpact
In a final recommendation, the
board urged that buses be equtpped
wtth data recorders startmg Jan. I,
2003. to aid in future accident
mvestigattons.
Rtght now school bus destgn IS
closely regulated, wtth provisions
for weld strength, window destgn
and rollover survtvabtlity. Motor
coaches- the type of bus used by
Greyhound -- have no occupant
• protection standards
Regardless. school buses and
motor coaches are constdered the

THE DAILY SENTINEL ,
GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE,
&amp; POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
On

Friday, o·ctober 22, .1999
Reach Over 18,000 Homes
In The Tri-County Area!

ID-DEADliNE .
Tuesday, Oct. 12, 1999
'

Call Dave Harris
For Mora Information
992·2198

safest forms of transportation on
the road. On average, nme people
are ktlled each year in school buses, while four die m motor coaches. Roughly 42,000 are killed
: . annually in car and truck acctdents,
·
Board eng meers conceded that
about half the school bus deaths arc
caused by tmpact, so even seat
belts or extra paddtng would probably not prevent four or five of the
nme deaths annually
Whtl e som e safety experts
belteve that seat belts could make
school buses even safer, a safety
board engin eer produced vtdeo
stmulattons showing that student&gt;
: . m three cr&lt;tshes stud1e~ 1m gill have
actually been more severely
: · tn]ured if they had been weann g
· lap bells or shouldct harnesses.
The engmeer, K11s Bolte, satd
lap belts "are not the stmpl c solution,' ' becau se restrained passe n-

gers whtp back and forlh m then
scats, smashmg therr head s and
snapping thetr necks. A passen ger
bouncmg around the compartment
spreads the 1m pac t more evenly.
The findmg s were accepted by
a le admg school transportati on
offi ctal Charles Gautlu cr, exec utive dtrector of the Nauona l Assoctalton of State Directors of Pupil
Transpof\atton Servt ces, satd chtl dren do not need to wear scat belts
tn buses because they arc bt gge r
and heavJCr than automoh1lcs and
hav~ the scattng safety compart ment
The safety bu;trd ' s study
focused on acctdcnts th at occurred
in Flagstaff. An z.. Ill August 1996.
·. Easton, Md . '" October 1997.
Buffalo. Mpnt . m March 19n.
Monticell o, Minn . tn Apnl 1997;
and Holyoke, Colo . and Holmdel,
N I hoth m Sepl emher t QQR

••

•

The regmnal pm:mg organJ J.aliun!:l ~..:uold set pncc!-. d1ncrc nl thaQthe fe~,

eral \)'Stem A New England pncmg compact IS '&gt;Chedulcd to end Oct I unleS.:
lawmakers ex tend 11 . Proposals tn Congress woul d allow a; many as 27 &gt;tat~
l o JOin ~uch cmnpacts

.;
The Senate refused last mon th to extend the New England compac t
,
The tssue ha&gt; pitied Sen. Patnck Leahy. D- Vt. agamst lellow ltberal s like;

Sen. Herb Kohl and Rep Dav td Obey Wt sconsm Democrats who are arnon&amp;the chtef Democ ratic negoti ators on the appropnauons measure. Kohl threat:;
encd to "detrac k the legiS iatton tf Leahy succeeds
•'
"My state'&gt; farmers deserve better than to have thetr li velihood stolen from
them by protec tin ntst datry poll ctes deve loped dunng last-mmute back-rooll)
negouauons." Kohl satd m a letter to Senate leaders.
·.
The tssue also could pose a problem for some senators up for re-e lection.
nexJ ye ar, 1ncludmg Republicans Rod Grams of Mmnesota, considered on~
of the most vulnerabl e GOP mcumbe nts, and James Jeffords of Verm ont •
Consumer groups bac k US DA's pncmg plan and oppose the pricc-fi xtn g
compac ts
''USDA's rcfonm. are a step m the n ght dlfet.:tJOn,· • sa1d Art Jaeger, ass1s-r
ta nl d1rec tor of the Consumer Federati on of Amenca
All but stx states arc covered by the federal system :. Calt fo rnta. Vtrgtnta,
Wyomtng. Montana. Hawaii and Alaska.

1

, Mrs

111

Dcpre~s a on-cr.J

rece1ve.

Do rc hes ter Mass

7 30 p

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Milk pricing battle s_
p ills over into halls of Congress
dairy pricing syste m and soften regional dispant1cs in pnces thai farmers

Community
WEDNESDAY
COOLVILLE-- Revt val servtces
at Whne's Chapel
Wes leyan
Churc h. Coolvtlle, Wednesday
through Sunday, 7 p m each

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By PHIUP BRASHER
AP Farm Wrilef
WASHINGTON - A battle in Congres' over the way nu lk " prkcd "
pining hberals against libemls, consu mers agamst fanner&gt; and Mt dwc&gt;ternc rs against nearly everyone else
The House began debate Tuesday on whether to throw out a plan by the

Nu r&lt;t ng. Nazarene Hospna l. the
KudJtp Communlly Serv tces. as
we ll as the Co mmun ity Based
Hea lt h Ca re programs
Mrs Hebets has bee n res pons ible duri ng thiS ti me for setttng up
vanous ho ustn g umt s for 1 et urn lng misstonancs , new app01 ntees
and vo lunteers that come to KudJtp.
Mr He bets g ra&lt;l uated from
Eas tern Nazarene Coll ege tn
Qutn cy. Mass.. in 196 1. He

kee pe r. T hey were reass1g ned to

an d Adult Educauon Instructor.
whtl e hiS wt fe's rcsponstbtltu cs
have tnclud ed cann g fo r the
Nazarene Hosp nal LINKS parcel
We co uldn '1 do w 1tho ut 1ro n Converse ly too mu' h o f Ill s dctn mc ntal to
,ope
ning and other donated goods
health Those. li ke you, who have excessive tron leve ls have a conduwn
She
also es tablished a Ce ntral
called hemoc hromatosis. You' ve had the condttt on and the ba&gt;t&lt; problem
Store
s
de partment at th e hos'p nal.
with tron metabolism from btrth. but typtcally tl usually take&gt; four or fi ve

Cie nt.
Hemochromatosts

Wednesday, September 22, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

fimtly
~edicirze

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Wednesday, September 22, 1999

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Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

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North Carolina families mark time in shelters.
By ALLEN G. BREED
Associated Press Writer
TARBORO. N C - After years
of traveling from crop to crop, seaso n
after season, 16-ycar-old Mana Ccrapto thought she had finally found a
home.
She was thtnkmg of going out for
soccer at Martm Mtddle School She
even dreamed she mtght, stay long
enough to graduate here
But Hurricane Floyd may force
her family back on the road.
"I'm trymg to force my dad to
stay here, even though all these
things are going on," the gtrl wtth a
waist-length ponytatl satd as she sat
in the Tarboro Ht gh Schoo l parking
lot m front of a row of portable tot lets " But he satd for our protect tOn,
he wants us to go hack to Flonda "
The Ceraptos were among more
than 2,000 eastern North Carolina
restdent s taktng shelter Tue ~d ay m
the high sehool from the waters of the
swollen Tar R1ver Their trailer across
the bnd ge tn the predonunantly black

town of Pnm:cvtllc now sits under
brown. mly wa ter.
The l~1n11l y o f mt grant farm Will ke rs

from

McxJC o

arnvcd

1n

Pnm:cv1lle m June, pl anntng lO conunuc a cycle that has ta~e n them ft om
the o range groves of Flonda. the

ward for the basketbdll team , the
Ktller Bees Man a. who was born tn
Oaxaca, MeXICO, was catchmg up to
her peers in school, workmg part of
the ltme tn etghth grade and part tn
mnth

"I like how they teach," she said.
" It IS more challen gmg, and wh en
they challenge you, you try harder In
They often came to North Caroltoa sq Flonda, u's easy, and when n's eas y
Venac to Cerapt o. 38, could work the you don' t really try hard."
1
llue-curcd tobacco. .
But life here wa~ not easy by any
Tlw" tune thtngs prom1 s~d tv be means
dtflercnt
The famtly 's used single-wide
Cerapio and ht s wtfc, Aurelt a. 34. · tratler had Just two bedrooms and one
found JObs making holtday doll s tn a bathroom. Mana had to sleep tn the
factory The work was steady and not hvtng room wuh her brother and I 0as backbreaktng as the ft elds, and ycdr-old srstcr Jamra so her parents
they liked the climate.
and grandfather, Jacmto, 63, who al so
.. 1 JUSt feel more comfo rtahlc works at the'doll factory, could have
here ,'' he satd as hts daughter trans- some pn vacv
lated "It's not too hot or too cold "
fh1ng s got even more crowded
The chtldren had already started to recently when a famtly of ftve came
tu stay But Mana hked the fa ct that
establish themselves
Urnberto, 14, a skin ny boy wtth a four other brancj1es of her fatmly had
brtght smtle. was m se venth grade at settled tn nearby Leggett
Now. all of them are shanng cob
Martm Middl e ·and was playmg forstr;1 wberry f1eld s of Cahfm nta and
the hluehcrry patches of Oregon

on a bas ketball court.
BeSides her c lothes. the onl y
th1ngs Man a got out of lhe t1a tler
were he r m:.uh and sc 1cncc hooks
She sa td she would need them to
stud y for a tes t her teac her protnt scd
,they wo uld have when &gt;e hools
1eopcned
'
"She wtll ," Mana satd . pulhng a
lollipop from her mouth to reveal two
rows of,perfect teeth "I know thts
teac her "

The tamtly had a ohan ce to move
to a shelter wtth hot showers and pnvate rooms tn Wtlso n,' but th~
afratq to leave Tarboro for fear of
ma ss mg ou,t on aad mform atJOn for
thetr area Whtl e the grown-ups sat
on cots and loo ked at 2-day-old
newspapers, the chtldren played tag
tn the parktng lots - when it was n't
'
ramtng.
Shelter hfe was .1lready taktng ns
toll Mana's coustn ; Beatrice Rojas.
II , boned her head tn a cot and
sobbed uncontrollahly Tuesday aft er
a fight wtth Umberto

"She's depressed because she lost
everythmg... M an a sa1d as she comfo rted the gtrl
Umbeno cursed th e storm. " It's
spcn led every tht ng." he satd.
Offictals satd tl co uld be a week
before the Ccrapws and others aie
al lowed bac k thto Pnnceville 1.0 look
at thctr homes. Wtth ba rely a halfhour' to fl ee, the faoul y le ft wtth Itt'
lie else but thetr Btble and the clothes
they were wcann g
"The thtngs we lost. we could get
back. bu ~ our lt vc s are more Hnpoitarit, .. the father sat d as he leaned
agamst h1 s gray van w uh n earl~
100 0()0 mtles on n ' I don' t really
lec l th at bad beca use God wants 11
li ke th iS ·
Mana. too. knows lhm the trail er
1 ~ go ne She JUst docs n't want tti
admu H ..11 teall y got attac hed to tf
here.· she ~atd. her smile fadmg m

the darkenod shelter hall way 'ThiS
was gomg to he our home ..

Federal probe examin_
e$ buri·ed waste site
By JUDITH KOHLER
Associated Press Writer
DENVER - Back m 1991. the
Envtronmental Protection 1\gency
thought the problem at the old Shattuck Chemtcal Co plant had been
latd to rest
lnstead ofdtgging up the contammated sml and haultng 11 away. the
EPA, dectded to mtx the more than
50,000 cubtc yards of radwacttve dtrt
Wtth concrete and ny ash and bury 11
on the spot under rock and clay, ereaung a tomb designed to last hundrcds of years
Now that dec1saon may come
back to haunt th e agency.
City leaders and restd ents of the
blue-collar netghborhood surroundtng the Shattuck Superfund Stte contend the waste 1s stnktng and fear that
co ntammatton may have alre ady
seeped mtu water supplies. They arc
demandtng the tomh be du g up and
shipped oul ol state

.

" That's supposed to last 2.000
years," neighborhood reSi dent Irma
Zimmerman satd as she stood, hands
on htps. sur veymg the unmarkod
cham -lmk fenc e sunoundtng the 10
foot mound of rocks that stret"hcs
nearly two bl oc ks " Bu t tf'll cant
m.1ke it throug h one or tw o years. I
don ' t know what 's gotn g to happen '
Ne tghbors say photos and vtdcotape o t the " hot roc ks " - as Ms
Znnmerm an ca II ' Ihem - show lh aI
they are stnkmg
Th c EPA .s om h ud&lt;man I1as
launched an mvesugauon to determml! 1f t he h uncd was Ie rca II y 1s sc' I·
tItn " an d whether tl pose' a I1eallh
nsk- to thc netghh or h oo d , wh!C h 1s ·
about four mt' Ies f rom down tov.n.
In tts prellmllt,lf)' fmdmgs. an
mdcpcndent ftrm , S Cohen &amp; Assoctate s .at Mcl ean , Va.. found no
immedtate threat but satd the EPA
failed lo address long- term effecls,
the extent of groundwater contamt&lt;

natton and poss tble runoff tnto the
nearby South Plane Rtve r.
· "The maJor concern here IS the
protecuon ot the Ctllzens of Denver
and the people around the st te, nol
JUst m the near term. but al so m the
long term ,'' satd Ass iSlant EPA
Ad mtntstrator T tm F te ld s.
Ftelds satd he expects to dectde by
November what to do about he waste
"It'sc Iear to me rtght now , at a mtn tmum , som~ c hanges are gnlng to
have to be made,", he satd
From 1he earIy 1920s to 1984 ,
Shattuck operated a plant at the stte ,
processmg uramu m, rad 1um, molyb~
for sue h •h
·
denum and r hentum
, tng s
X
·
t
a
d
lo
as -ra-y eq01pmen n g w- 1n- the•
dark co
1 ck san d gauges The so 11 and
groundwat er became co ntamtnated
EPA and state health offictal s tnt ually proposed shtppmg the waste out
of state but dectded the best plan was
tu bury II on the stle The deciSion has
been cnuctzcd ever &gt;tn ce b~ rcstdents

'

and cny offt ctals
to waste removal, they JUSt do not
" We- re not at all conftdent we --:an t to pay tor II , satd attorney John
know wh.tt 's at the sue,' ' smd Celta Faught Shattuck patd more than '$2fj
VanDerLoop, a cny envtronmcntal mtlll on for the cleanup Removmg
health supervtsor The cit y of Denver the waste wo uld have cost $46 mtlhas ftled nouce of us tntcnt to sue
lton
Some netghbors bclt eve the waste
was hur1 ed rathe r than removed
The mvesugattOQ tl se lf has been
because tt IS a v. orktng -d ass netgh- fraught with controversy. EPA
bor~oo d. hom e to modest hun gal ows employees have re fused to cooperate
and such husme sses as lumber yard s unle ss the mte rv1ews are o JI ~ thc
and auto. rcpatr shop' That allcgatt on record · A11d Sen Wayne Allard , RIS pan of the EPA tn vcsttg atton
Col o. held up' Ftelds' appointment
Oftictal s wuh the EPA and Shat
unulthe agency agreed to mvesugatc;.
lu ck satd the dcmwn to bury the
Allard want s EPA executtvc s to
waste on the spot came down to cos t profmse 10 re lease all docume nts. on
and to uncertainty about the abtltl)' of Shattuck and to make staffers avat(the company that was managmg th e able for on-the-record tntervtews •
onlv' pl ace the waste co uld have been
.. Why IS It th ey ' re relw.:tant to
shtpped. a was te dump tn Utah Fed- shar:e that mform a u o n ,.. asketf
eral law also gave preference to Allard. who has n't taken a post! ton
on sue so luuons, satd Rebecca on wh at should be done' wtth the
Thomas. form er EPA proJeCt man ag- was te
er
Shauuck ofhctals wtll not objeCt
.
.

Sheppard's sQn ready to 'wa/k ·for justice'
By KATHERINE RIZZO .
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - While offictals prepare to exhume his mother 's
remains. Sam Reese Sheppard wtll
head to Ohio, on foot, 10 search of
peace ot mmd and pubheity for a
death row tnmate in Pennsylvanta.
Sheppard , 52, ts the son of Manlyn Sheppard, murdered tn her bed m
1954. Dr. Sam Sheppard reponed
chasing a bushy-hatred man out of
thetr home near Cleveland , then
spent a decade tn Jatl for the killing
before a second tn al found lum mnocent

'
It was the case that tn spired the
movte andTV senes "The Fu gtltve '
- about an unJustl y accused husband
chastng a one-anned ktller.
Sheppard arranged a rally today tn
front of the U S Supreme Court as a
high profile kickoff for hts walk to
the murder sue at Bay Vtllage, Ohtu
Speakmg by phone Fnday from
Oakland, Calif., Sheppard satd walk tng 20 mtl·es a day wtll be hts way of
prepanng for what he expects wtll be
a dttftcult expenen ce
" The walkmg ts for the good ol
my soul,'' he satd " I wtll walk and
mcd1tate and hope fo r peace and rec-

onctllau on "
AIong Ihe way. Sh eppard tntcn d s
tu slop .tl a pnson m Penn sy lvama to
vtsH James A Denn ts. a death row
mmatc who Sheppard belle~es was
condemned for a murder he dtd not
co mmu
Sheppard sched uled ht s walk and
ralites '" Was htngton. Cle veland and
Waynesburg. Pa • to conludc "'th the
ex pected start of a ctvtl trtal tn lm
wrongful tmpn sonmcnt lawson
aga111 st the state of Oht o. The walk
al so cmnctdes wuh the bro,1dcast of
a program about the case on pubhc
telev 1s 1on 's ''Nova..

and a retnal tn 1966. •
The trtal has been de 1aye&lt;t unit 1 Supreme Court.
h
JanuarytoaII ow the Cuyahoga Coun- acquuted
tm
The younger Sheppard contend s
ty prosecutor, whtch ts handltng the
h
k II d b
·
1
that hts mot er was 1 e y a man
he
DNA
defense, ttmc to gat r
samp es who washed the famtly's wmd ows
Prosecutor Wtlham MasoSnh satd d~e and late; dted whtle scrvtn g Itme for
c ~pect s to exhume Mrs
epp ar s
d
be
an ot11er mur cr ·
rematns tn ear1Y 0 cto r
To wm the wrongful nnpnso riSheppard has taken to the road ment sutt ' the &gt;On's lawvcrs muSt
be lore to prot es t the death penally. con\ln cc a Jury that the n;aJont y of
walkmg across Ohto tn 1997 and cvtdencc tndt cate s the doc tor wa&gt;
from Boston to New ,OFicans tn tnn occ nt If Shoppard wtns, d amag~s
1995
could reach 3 , much as $2 mtllt on·
Dr Sam Sheppard spent a decade
Sheppard " "' 7 when hi&gt; mother
m pn son after bemg convtctcd of was kt!lcd and wa' not t.tk cn Ill her
beatm g hts wtfe to death tn July 1954
lut;eral
That verd1ct was Gvcrtum cd hy the 1

Grand jury information in ~ripp case will remain private ·
ANNAPOLIS, Md (AP) - A
prosecutor does not have to release a
summary of documents and Witnesses he used to persuade a grand jury
to indict Lmda Tripp on wiretapping
charges, the stale's htghe st court has
ruled
The Court of Appeals on Tuesday
overtLrrned a judge's ord er mvolvmg

State Prosecuto r Steph e n Montan arelh .
A conservattve legal group, Judtctal Watch, had argued tor the matenlll to be made pubhc allcg mg that
polltt cal pressure froll) the Cltnt on
admmi stratton d rove the grand JUry to
mves ugate wheth er Ms. Tnpp broke
Maryland law by recordin g phone
conversatiOns w1th Curmef Whale
House mtern Mont ea Lew msky.
However. pubh ~ 1nl'o nn auon law
" does not trump o r ovcrr1dc the traditi ona l rule of grand Jury sccn::cy. 1 •

accordtng to the o pt nt,on wnllr n hy
Chtef Justice Robert ll'cll .
Tn pp was and n.:tcd 111 July on
charges ol Ill ega ll y tapt ng .1 Dece mber 1997 phcmc con \CI ~ auon w ith
Ms Lcwmsky and tm til egail y dtrcctang her attorney to d t ~ l l os c lis l Oll tent s to Newswe e k m.1 gat.lnC N1J 111-

The Tnpp tape s were the basts for Prcstdent Clinton's rcl auonshtp Wtth

Ms Lew tn sky

Kenne th Starr 's mvesl1gataon anto

- TALENT

SEARCH·

-

Localialenl for upcoming commercials filmed by MotionMasters (Charleston, WV) will be recruited
on Saturday, September 25, 9 a.m. to noon, al the Pleasant Valley Wellness Center. Partic1pan1S of
all ages ar~ needed. These individuals will fill-oul a resume, be photographed, VJdeolaped and added to
the MolionMasters' ialent book.
Several locals will be selected from this pool for the upcoming Pleasant Valley Hospital 40th
Anniversary commercial. Appointmen~ can be m~de by calling (304) 675-7222. All individuals
are as~ed to wear casual clolhing.

Now In

Stock

Furnace
Filters
&amp; Stove·

Pipe
'

This is the only date that will be scheduled for the talent search.
For more information please contact AmyJ Leach, MS, direclor of commuruty
relations at Pleasanl Valley Hosp11al, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326

PICKENS

HARDWARE
103 South 2nd, Mason, WV

Phone: 773-5583

a l d ate has been sc i

\

I

.

�Wednesday, September 22, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Composite materials win backers in construction trade
· By JAMES HANNAH

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tt ts used tn suc h dtvcrse products and
mduslncs often to cut cosb

.tis developed at Wnght Pallersnn Atr
Force Base and &lt;Xpand the reg ton s

Associated Pre.s Writer
For e)(am.ple D1ck s .!~porting tndu!&lt;.tnal ba~c
KETI'ERING - Term1tes and
goods
stl&gt;re m Dayton s10cks a few
The pn' ate not for profit ~.:enlcr
rust aren I where they used to be
Less and less wood and steel are compoSite fishmg rods that sell lor was born afkr c~ononm.: develop
$11 99 By contrast alummum pok&gt; ment olfic1als h~~.:amc tonccrned
gomg mto doors, shmgles, golf clubs
utlhty poles truck beds and h1ghway cost $99 99 and graphtte poles range about the crmnon ot ((.)( al JObs m the
bndges Composites of fiber restns from m pnce Irom $19 99 to $8~ 99
I'm I nary and auto mdu-..:trv
There s a whole mdustry ou1
and plastics- espectally glass ftber
The) came to T\:3lll!.: \Cry quJLk
and carbon fiber matenals - are there and ll s largely untapped nghl ly that ~.:ompnsllc: m ~tena l s was.
bemg used mstead, because they can now sa1d Yeager
somelhtn g \\C had l)crc that JUst
HoY. much the mdustr) grtw. ~ ~.:an t be found m th~ ~ lnli.i ~on~.:r,;n
be made hghter sometimes stronger
depe nd s on whether composllcs trallon natJOO\\ldt ~:ud 'h:ager
and they don t rust
I ve got a person who wants to become accepted tn fixtures suc h as
The cen ter rer..: nutcd 'll!jnlJ sts
bmld a composite storm shelter, satd street s1gns fences and guardrails that Irom Wnght Pancrson \1 hn had been
Mark Brandt v1ce prestdent of the are everywhere and whether the) '-'Orkmg on complh!ttcs for }t=ars and
find thetr way mto btg tt cket ttcms th~n mmcd wto a \a~o:a! ed Defen se
Nattonal Compostte Centers com
such
as m1htary am.:raft
Depm tnu:nt '.\ lrehousc State and
mercml sector
Center
offtctals
recently federal grants supply 80 percent of
Jean Yeager a semor engtneer at
the &lt;.:~,; ntcr s fundtng the n.:st ~.:omcs
the center tn tht s Dayton suburb satd announced that they have success
lrom d11.:n ts
compostte matenal1s not the flash full y made a tat! cone and fighter atr
Un l!h unnasll lt:s and 01hcr
tn the pan some had predtcted I0 craft panel out of carbon fiber com
years ago
posttes The) satd the parts can be gro ups \\OTklni! on lOillpO~IIC S the
It ts here to stay It ts a maten al made up to 85 percent cheaper than ~..cnt~.: r ha..,thc room md cq urpment to
u.:t ual l) dc h ::l op manul actunng
that ts a matenal of the future Yea compostte pans made through con
processes
and produ..:c prototypes
ger satd
ve nttonal processes
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'u.J
ll
.s
pr
es
rdcnl Lours Luedtke
At present tl s tmposs tble to say
The NatiOnal Composlle Cente r
Otltu,tl
&lt;
hope thut v.nlun the next
how much composite matenal IS WllS set up Wt\h state fundtng m 199b
three h .trS the rc.non bn ome.s
produced or sold ea•h year because to commerctallze compostte maten

~Mv.n

Trac that s schedul ed to go on sa le
early nc u year
A dcstgner model ran.h house m

as Compnstle Valle) the
lar£..:!1t center tor de,dopment ol

ul!npn ~lti.:~ rn tht: ~.:ountr,

The center wh tch cmplo) s about
2'i. pcoph.: h a squat 2ra) hwldmg
!&lt;.C\cral blncks long: It houses a

Cupcrtmo Cahf feature~ co mposrtc
shrngle srdmg that looks like wood
but wont fade rot ~md IS t1re rcs1s

I 000 ton tn)CCllqn muldtng pr&lt;" tant An An zona compa ny ~ays H~
(.:OtnposiiC utilit y poles ~.;o uld render
that slamps out molds for cornpostle
the wooden 'am:ly \ 1rtual l) cxtmcl
lruck beds
In Oh10 th e qatc Lc~p,larurc
Yeager pau~cs dunng ttour of thc
tcccntly approved fundmg to mstall
butldtng to JUmp on top of .m over
I00 ht ghway bndgc' wtth compost!•
IUrned truck bed wllh all of her 11 5 dcL:h 111 the next ~ r x yc 1rs EaL h of
pounds to demonstrate tts strength the st 1tc s ~K counln;s wt ll \!CI u lc l"it
nle bed bends but ducsn t break
one ol the bndgc&lt;
Yeager satd automakers are mter
Compostlc hndg es show the
estcd m the truck bed because the poten ti al tor two to t lm~c 11111~-: s th~.:
federal government rs requlfln g them
hfc of a current ce ment hndge sud
10 mcrease gas mrleage,
Yeager Concrete bndgcs arc 'cry
One way to do that ts get wetght susccpttble to weather cond ttt ons
out of the ve htcl e she satd You
Brandl sa1d I he center has gott en
get the wetght out by usmg compos mqumes lrom people tntcrc sted tn
lle matcnals and not giVIng up usmg compos lles fm motorcyc le
strength
fender s crash tes t dumm1es mserts
Ge neral Motors Corp plans to for shoes and eve n bulletproo l vests
otTer a compos llc plasuc cargo bed as
They go all over the map he
an opuon on tts 2001 Chevrolet Stl
\ erado full med ptckup And Ford sa1d We try to help them figure out
Motor Co plans to have a composotc how to make 11
Robert Glowm sko executl\ c
bed standard on tiS Explorer Sport

dtrec tor of the Amencan Wood Counctl smd many composnes onclude
v. ood fibers and that woodmakers are
usmg composllcs to tmprove thetr
own produ,ts
I don tthmk oor mdustry wtll see
tht s as a threa1 but an opportumty
satd Glowonski Our mdustry ts well
'"' oh cd m the de\ elopment of com-

posite matcnal
Davtd Jeanes sentor vice pres1
dent of markettng for the Amencan
Iron and Steellnstttute satd he does
n t sec composncs replacmg tron and
steel on a wodespread basos at thos
ume But he at;knowledged that com
pos 1tcs are being used 1n certa111
areas such as the construcuon mdus
try
Composrtes 1~ havmg a presence
there but 11 see ms more appropnate
to fillong m hnle mchc components
sa.d Jeanes
H o we, er he sa1d the steel rndus
try ts tntere~ted m how the benefils
of composites caq. be appltcd to steel
to make tl a be tter product

Wednesday, September 22, 1999

Business Services
Stop In And See

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By LISA CORNWELL
ASSOCiated Press Writer
CONSTANCE Ky _ Oran e
barrels along the htghway make m~st
dnvers grumble but Paul Anderson
thmks they re beauuful
'When I see those orange barrels
1 know that means my bustness wtll
be plcktng up he satd wtth a gnn
Anderson runs the Anderson Ferry
whtch plies back and forth datly
fr0 m th r.s north ern Ken Iuc ky com
munlly
the western edge ofCmcm
10
nau
The wtndmg nanow road that
d d
h K
k
d
1ea s own to t e entuc y 1an mg
ts JUSt a few mtles from two busy
tnlerstate htg hways b ut passengers
watlmg to board the ferry almost feel
lk h h
db k
1 e t ey ave steppe ac m ume
as they wau to cross the 700 yard
stretch of nver
Especoally on sultry summer days
the wtdc expanse of nver surround
ed by rolltng htll s evokes a seremty
that draws not only motonst s trymg
to avood clogged htghways but also
tounsts
A lot of tounsts say they have
never had a t: hance to nde a ferry
bef ore and they JU St want to nde for

the fun ol tl satd Anderson Some
say they JUst want a closer conncctton
wllh the '""' than «hat th• ) co uld
•ct fr om ht gh up on a hndgc
Passengers oflen act out ol the tr
cars dun;g the sox .;;mute ndc and
stand at the rathng where the) c.m
look more th m a mtle up or do« n "'
co at pleasure boats sltctng through
the blue green water or 11 towboats
pushmg barges ptled htgh "nh co.tl
The lerry whtch ts on the Nauon
al Regtster of Htstonc Places ts one
of onl y four left on the Ohto Rt ver
Fem es once could be fo und every
few mtle s As late as 1957 there were
34 on the Ohoo but the number dwtn
died wllh the constructiOn of bndges
and roads and the mcrease tn opera!
mg costs
The Anderson Ferrv has been
operaung contmuously on the same
stretch of nver a few moles we st of
downtown Ctncmnatt smce I 817
when George Anderson - no rela
t1on lo the present owner _ pur
chased a ferrv and I03 3/4 acres of
land from 'Ralctgh Colston for
$351 87
Actually there were probably
femes at thts slle even earher and the

crossmg was probably used by Indt
ltule over two acres of land that a Iat
ans before that but George Anderson er Anderson Ferry owner John Wtl
"a."he fits! to operate a ltcensed fer
son sold to Charles Konmyer tn
ry here and to keep tl gomg satd 1865 for $2 800
A.nderson
The stof) os that Konmycr was
The ferry nde has gotten costlier so frustrated when one of hts horses
smce George Anderson s days It now broke a leg that he bought ht s first
costs $] per;ehtde but records show steam powered ferry tn 1867 - \he
that th e tnno al charge was 9 cents for Boone No 1 satd Anderson
eac h person or horse and $1 for eac h
The Kottmyers added seven more
wagon and team A hog or a c()w boats all named for Kentucky Iron
\\ Ould mst an addtttona12 1/2 cents t1ersman Dante! Boone They kept the
G
~
eorge Anderson s latmly opcrat
Jerry
servtce m lhe famtly until Paul
cd the ferry unttl around 185 1 Whtl c Anderson purchased 11 m 1986 _
II rctaon ed the Anderson name tl attracted by the nver hfe not JUSt the
chan ged hands many tunes ftom comctdenceofabusmessthatshared
then unttl 1865
h
IS name
One man reponed!) won 11 '" a
The 52 year old Anderson began
k
d h I
h
po cr gan~e an t en ~sl lt ltn mot d working on the ferry after school m
crl!a m eauout lw flwcc "' s alt.:r
~J I
1961 Helatergotrntotheconstruc
A d
n crso n
uon busmess but sull worked on tbe
The lorst ferrtes across the Ohto \ rerry on wee ken dsand pt 1ote d excur
\&gt;etc probably ha\td ' ""cd sktll s ,md ston boats at mght
r,1fts fo llowed by sat! and paddk
Ftna11 Y he dect ded to buy the .er
'
boats Then horse fcrnc.s h~.: I! an to ry
uppc.1r Some had caps t 1ns 0 1
My famt 1y Jhoug ht I was crazy
carouse ls \.\lth horses walkm (T0 m a
fj
at trst b ut 1 h"'e ne'er regre 11e d t1
corclc whtlc others had tre tdnull s he sat d Sorne peop1e th tn k II wou ld
be rea 11 y bonng 1o go bac k an d forth
that horses trod conunuouslv
' to pow
cr the paddle wheels
11 day bu t r t s never bonng to me
a
It w IS l horse fe rry alone. wHh a y
ou meet so man) d1f".eren t peop1e

and the mer ts always changmg
espeuall y from season to season
l he largest of Anderson s ohrco
boats can carry up to 18 cars and
Anderson says II s not unusual to fer
f) more than 700 cars a d,ty 10 sum
mer
We tun as man y as 16 hours a
day tn summer and 14 hours a day m
wmtcr and the only ttmcs "e shut
dow n arc when the water le vel wmd
speed or tee gets too hogh sa td
A d
n crson who P11ots l he f eny h tm
self at least stx days a week
Don Mtll er 34 of Fl oren ce Ky
ndes the ferrylrequentlytoget to ho s
JOb m Dclh t Townshtp on the Ohw
Stde
It beats the tra ffic and II has a
I
f'
h
d A h
k
cammgeiCCI

esm

tl

e pea

of rush hour tt can cu1 an hour off my
trave.1 lime and II saves on gaso 1tnc
and - most tmporlantly - on
stress
Th e lhree other 'aemes on the Oh10
1
a so get a mtx o f commuters and
t
ouns 1s
The Augu sta Ky ferry crosses to
Brown county Oh to a bout 60 mt 1es
fC mcmnau It ts operated as a
east o
f
not or profiu b ustness that recetvc s a

•'

l

ventmg mass slaughter and dtsloca
Iars back mto the country
!ton
But the Sccunty Counctl rcmatns
When we arc faced wllh tHe deadlocked Rus sta Chtna and
delibe rate organtzed campatgns to France - each wteldmg veto powers
murder whole peoples or expel them - have expressed sympathy wllh
from thetr land the care of vtcltms IS Baghdad s call for an ommedtate
tmportant but not enough We should easmg of the sanctwns that have been
work to end the voolence he saod
tn pl ace smce the Pcrstan Gulf War
Among othet thm gs Chnlon satd m 199 1
we need mternauon al force&lt; wnh
In nearly three hours of talk s Mon
the tratntng to fill the gap hctw.cn day ntght Secretary ot Stale
loca l pollee and mthtary pe~c ek••P Madelcmc Albnght faded to hudge
ers
RusSian Foretgn MtntS tcr Igor
Our response on every case can lvanO\ satd a U S olftctal That
not or should not be the same he clouded the prospec t lor the Sccun
satd Somettmes wllectl\e tmhoary ty Counctl adopung a renewal of the
force tsbothappropnate and ieastble tnspccu ons that were halted tn
Sometimes concened economtc and December
poht1cal pressure com boned wtth
S.ud Chnton
Desplle all th e
dtplomacy ts h better answer as 11 obs1ades Saddam Husset n has place d
was m makmg posstblc the mtroduc
m our p&lt;tth we mu st cont tnuc to case
toon of forces to East Ttmor
tlte sulfcnn g of the peuple of lr tq At
Chnton touched hghtly on two the same umc we cannot all ow the
co ntentious 1ssues a dt sagreement government of Iraq to nout 40- arid
over Iraq and the fa1lure of the Untt
I say 40- succesm e UN Secun
ed States to make more than $1 btl
ty Cnunctl resolutmns and to rehutld
hon tn dehnquent U N payment s
ht s arsenal
The Chnton admtntstrauon IS wtll
Cion ton also apelogtzcd for the
ong to ease the sancltons only of Iraq US delmquency on back pavmcnts
agrees to allow UN weapons onspec
I have strongly supported the

•'

Anderson who docsn t get any
nut stde ftnanco al help plan s to keep
hos ferry goong as long as posstble
but he knows he would ha\ c to close
tltf a bndge ts e\er but It nearby
He Sa}s he mtght start an exc ur
ston boat then
~
I 11 ha\ C to Stay on the n\ er

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GOnERS

s;d;,, &amp; Sf/Iii
1·800·311-3391
Free Estimates
Contractors Welcome

I

'
I

'

0

••

•

,
l

I

''

•

'•

The Meigs County Commissioners mtend to apply to the Ohio
Department of Development, for funding under FY'99 Commun1ty
Development Block Grant (CDBG) M1croenterpnse Program, a federally
funded program administered by the State Me1gs County IS eligible for up
to $50,000 of F1scal Year '99 CDBG fundmg, provtded the County meets
applicable requirements On September 20, 1999 the County conducted
1ts f1rst pubhc heanng to Inform Citizens about the CDBG Mtcroenterpnse
program, how 1t may be used, what activities are ehgtble, and other Important program requirements
A second pubhc heanng Will be held on October 4, 1999 at 1 00 PM at
the Me1gs County CommiSSioners off1ce, Me1gs County Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Oh1o to g1ve c1t1zens an opportunity to rev1ew and comment on
the County's proposed CDBG FY'99 M1croenterpnse proJects
Ctttzens are encouraged to attend thts meet1ng on October 4, 1999 to
express the1r v1ews and comments on the county's proposed CDBG
FY'99 M1croenterpnse Application Written comments w1ll be accepted
until 1.00 P.M., October 4, 1999, and may be mailed to the Meigs County
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
If a part1c1pant w1ll need aux1llary a1ds (1nterper, bratlled or taped matenal,
ass1st1ve listening device, other) due to a d1sabhlty, please contact Glona
Kloes, Clerk, prior to Oct. 4, 1999, at (740) 992-2895 1n order to ensure
that your needs wJII be accommodated
Janet Howard, President
Me1gs County CommiSSioners
•

1n

It s

the world economy I 3 btl !ton pen•
pic ll\e on less than $1 a dt) Cltn
ton sa 1d
He ann oun ced he would convene
a While House conference of pub!'"
health experts phann.IC:c utll: al com
pam cs md foundation rcpresc ntauvcs
to enc ourag e productiOn o f v,tcc mc s
for dcvdopmg countncs

Other speakers also sounded Cltn
ton s call for m o r e ln\ o l ve mcnl tn
pre\ entong humanttanan catastrophe•
- but "llh a dtffcrent empha sts
Ivanov the Russ1an forcrgn mtn
tstcr suggested the mtemat10nal t:om
munlly do more to cnmbal mtcrna
uonal tcrronsm

COUNTY Molgo
PUBLIC NOTICE
The
lollowlng
applications and/or
verified complalnla wore

proposed action Written
comments, requests for

to REAC Pertains to 401
Carllllcallon, Grant,

received

following

and

the

dralt,

proposed, or final
actions were Issued by

tho Ohio Environmental
Protocllon
Agency
(OEPA) laat weak
Attlono Include the
adoption modification
the laauance denial
modlllcatlon
or
revocation of llcenaes
permits
leases,
variances
or
certificates, and the

approval or disapproval
ol
plana
and
apeclllcatlons
Oral\
Actions
are wrllten

requeste must be aant

to Hearing Clerk, Ohio
Envlronmttnlal

Protection Agency, P 0
Box 1049, Columbus,

Ohio
43216 1049
(Telephone 614-644·
2129) Final Acttona
are

actions

of

the

Director

which are
effective upon leeuance

or a stated effective

date Pureuant to Ohio
Rovlaod Coda Section
3745 04, a final action

may be appealed to the

Environmental Review

Appeals Commlsalon
(ERAC) formerly known
aa the Envlron~mental
Board ol Review) by a
peraon who has a party

etc Interested persona

to a proceeding befora
tho director by filing an
appeal within 30 days of
notice ol the final action
Pursuant to Ohio
Rovl'sed Code Section
3745 07, a final action
lsaulng
denying

may submit written

modifying, revoking, or

statements of the
Director
of
Environmental Protec

lion 1 (Director a) Intent
with respect to the
Issuance denial, etc of

a permit license, order,
comments or request a

pubic meeting regarding
draft actlona Comments

or

public

requeata

meeting
must

be

oubmlttod wtthJn 30 days
ol notice of the drat\
action

Proposed

Acllona are wrltta~
statements ol the
Director a Intent with
reopect to the losuanca,
danlal modification,
revocation or renewal of

a permit

license or

variance
Written
comments and requests

lor a public meeting
regarding a proposed
acllon may be submitted
within 30 days of notice
of the proposed action

An adludtcallon haarlng
may be held on a
proposed action It a
hearing
requeat or

objection Is received by
the OEPA within 30 days
of Issuance of the

Public Notice

Pertains to Huntington
District Copra . ot

Engineers Public Notice
(H) 199600843
(9) 221TC
Public Notice

No Hams Descrlpllon
45
HON Comlortaak
Taska Chalra with Arm Kite
5900 Serlea
HON
5903AB62T
(Burgundy)
HON 5991 T (Black)
20 Pagoda Stacking Guest
Chairs- 4070 Series
HON 4071 BP69T (Claret)
18 Guest Sled Base Chairs
2400 Series
HON 2403
WGG62
(Burgundy/Walnut)
The
Commtsalonors
reserve Jht right to reject
any and/or all bids or
accapl the best bid lor the

NOTICE TO OFFICE
FURNITURE VENDORS
The
Molga
County
Commlaelonera will receive
seated blda In their office
located In the Courthouae,
100
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until
1 00 pm on October 11, Intended purpose
1999 Said bide wtll be Meigs

opened and read aloud at

1 00 pm on October 11,
1999 lor the following lurnl
lure for use at the Meigs
County Department of

Commissioners

Gloria Kloos Clark

director within 3 daya
altar filing the appeal
with the ERAC
Final Iuuance of
Certification
Shelley Malerlata Inc
Lebanon TWp Ohio
laauo Data 09/10199
Receiving Watera Ohio
River
This final acllon not
preceded by propoaod
acllon ana Is appealable

I

•Eieetrlctl &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
·VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
•Pallo &amp; Porch Deeks
Frtt Est/mallS

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Pomeroy Ohio
22 yr. Local

BRAMHI COAL
COMPANY

Sr 124 Well ston OHto
740 384 6212

LUMP AND STOllER COAL
H.I.A.P. VOUCHIIS
ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAIUBLE
HOURS• 7am THRU 4pm
MONDAY-FRIDAY
7amTO NOON
SATURDAY

CONCRETE
CONNEOION

·

3/11/99 TFN

• Vinyl Sidtng
• Roofing &amp; Seamless Gu11er

• Replacement Wtndows
· Concrete
• Room Addtttorts • Garages
• Decks &amp; Boal Docks

Ja-IKH.. III
PH: (740) 992·2772

Sidewalks Pattos
25 yrs experoence
Free Est1mates

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

TREE SERVICE
• "{{\11'
·1'oP
"-~\111'9
• ~e"'o"al
• "
oll\9
(;fll\
20 Yrs Exp • Ins Owner Ronnte Jones

SELF STORAGE
29670 Beshan Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1
7 40.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7 00 AM - 8 00 PM

Posl467

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
4 2TFN

BAR-)
Portable
Welding Services
Gas-A&amp;C-M1g
Aluminum

A11yllme-Anvwloere

Take the pain out
of pamtmg, and let
me do 1t for you.

115 Salem St
Rutland, Ohio

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message After 6 pm

Hourly Rates

740·985·4180

992-9178

Free Estimates

FIREWOOD

UNIQUE
OLDIES
OPEN
10·5'00 Tues. Wed.

&amp;Thurs.
&amp;
By Appointment

Dump Truck or

BANKRUPRY

P1ck·up tn our 11rd

10n reheve a debior olltnonctOI obhgottons and arrange a latr d•trtbultOn of
mseh among credilm Aperson gotng through bonkruptcy may rt!OIOI certa101
pooperty known as "exempt' property foo ht&lt; or her pe.,onol use Th• may
tmludea car ahouse clothes and household goads You should dtrecl any
ques1ton1 regoodmg bankruplcy to an otlooney balare proceeding
For tnformatton regarding
Bankruptcy contact

Recently purchased
Graham s Wood Producls
Firewood OtVISIOn

Ball Logging
and !Firewood
Bob Ball
35215 Ball Run Rd
Pomeroy Oh10

1-740..992-8142

William Safranek, Attorney
(740) 592 5025 Athens

Leave a Message

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes·
Remodeling • Siding
·Roofs
25 yrs expenence

(740) 992·2753
or992·1101

Beech Grove Rood
Gun Shoot
Slug and Shot
Mulches
Every Sunday

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
·Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
7/22T~N

We Deliver
L1mestone, Gravel,
Sand, F11l D1rt,
Agncultural Lune ,
ll1ukh, Top So1l

(Low Rates)
740-992-3470

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

DISC OV ER THE ME ANI NG OF

YOUR

DREAM S'

hllp II

www dreamwJza d net 1 877 422
1234 (To Free)
STAAT
DATING TONI GHT !
HaYe Fun Meeting Eligible Sin
gles In Your A ea Call For More
lnlarmatwn 1 800 ROMAN CE
Ext 9735

~

90

Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

(740) 742-8888

County

Mums $2 oo
Pumpktns $1 00 $2 00
Paul Htll Greenhouses
Corner of 388 &amp;
Buck Town Ad Letart Falls OH
14th ANNUAL TOY RU N
Me•gs CounofB•kers Sept 25 99
Meet 12 Potneroy park&lt;ng lot
Leave 1 00 ends at Goad T mes
$10 per person or $15 couple

or toy

of

equal value Free Buffe; t L1ve M us1c

For mnre •n1o 742 3050 or 742 8510

St Rt 7

7 40-985-3813
Culverts 4'

8' Grovelless Leach
100 1000 Rolls1" &amp; 3/4" 200#Woler Ltne
Fulllme of Gos P1pe &amp; Regulolors Water Storage Tonks
Mon.- Frl 9 00 to 4:30
Sat 9.00 to 12 00

tt~~"~"ff~ 2~ Hr. Taxi

Md Delivery Service
We del1ver ALMOST anythmg

Sun 1 pm -6 pm

Beginning Sept. 26th

Call for details
740-992-0038

WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS
Pomeroy

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

CREDIT PROBLEMS???
No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dtvorded

All Makes Tractor &amp;
E1JU1pment Pa1 Is
Faclory Authonzed
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
1000 St Rt 7 South

WORRYING!!!

No Embarrassment
You're Treated wllh Respecll
Call Now for Instant Approvalll..

CALL MR. FORD
(740)44M. . •

Coolvfllo, OH 45723

74N87-G383

The family of Velma
BurriS express our
appreciation 10 all that
helped during tbe loss of
ourloved one
•
A special thank you to
Greg Kaylor of Cominued
Care, Holzer Home
Heallh Nurses and Aides
Pleasanl Valley Hospual
and Dr Alam for their
assastance
To fnends and relatives
who viSited d~ring her
long IUness
To Sherman and Mary
Gerlach who assisted
wtth planning Pastor
George Wetnck who
officlaled at the funeral
and Foglesong Funeral
Home To all that se nt
food flowers and cards

48 tn stock

4.DVANC'EO DRAINAGE SYSTEMS lf\IC

8:30am- 8 pm

Buy, Sell or Trade

Tuppers Platns OH

•

New Store Hours
For Deer Season
Mon-Sat

Card of Thanks

For

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

.......71-11171 •

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
Hauling
Bt~lldozer

&amp; Ra ck/we
Sen1ces
Huu s€ &amp; 1 rmlet Sues
Land Cleanng &amp;

lllllrtws

(740) 992-3838

"I'M BACK"
Ken Young former Owner of

KEN'S APPLIANCE SERVICE

30 Announcements

Gun Shoot
Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Every Friday
Night
1 pm beginning
Friday,
Septemb~r ·
24th.
~

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

Attention Crahers f Venders n
door craft Ia r Oct 16 rent tab le

33795 Hdcmd Rd.

Qual ty cl oth ng and househ ol d
tlem s $1 00 bag sale eve y
Thursda y Monday thru Saturdj)Y

Pomeroy, 0/uo

740-992-$2!2
B 24/99 I

mo

pd

MYERS PAVING
Henderson WV

We Do ...
• Parking L.ots
• Basketball Courts
• Drivewpys
• Grading Work
• Hauling Stone
(304) 675·2457 Ofll&lt;a
(304) 674·3311 Cell Ph
FREE ESTIMATES
Cont NWV003506

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION
New Roofs • Repatrs •
Contmg • Gutters •
S1dmg • Dry,. nil •
Pamtmg • Plumbmg
Free Estimates

985·3561
•\\'t•

\l'n itT

allmakt•' •

l " "~t'd

.\ppliann·'

' \\ ,. wll I'arh ' 1\ iII tkl ;, n
516..J5 Ui~h·~ l.(irlgt• H.cl. , Long Hollu111. Ohio

-

"Cut this out £or future use"

STONE
HAULED
Ltmestone
• Gravel
Top Sotl

MODERN
SANITATION SERVICE
740-992-3954

Pomeroy

Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT8 30 PM
Main St
Pomeroy OH
Paying $110 OD
per game
$300 00 Coverall
$500 00 Starburst
Progressive top line
Lie # 00-50

New To You Thr ft ShOppe
9 West Stimson Athens
740 592 1842

Now Open Poppy s f!la ce G It &amp;
Craf t ShOp 326 Man S tre et
P.o nt Pleasan r WV Across from
Post Office

40

Giveaway

Four cats to g veaway not wh te
740 992 9937
F ee Hay You Cut You Take A1o
Grande A ea 740 94 0 4009 After

5PM

Abso lute Top Doll ar All U S S J
ve r And Go d Cons Proolsets
D1amonas Ant que Jewelry Gold
A ngs Pre t 930 U S Currency
Sterl ng Ere Acqu1s 110ns Jewelry
M T S Con Shop 151 Second
Avenue Ga hpohs 740-446 2842

Used 18 OSS Sate te 0 sh &amp;
Rece ve r W II Pay Casn 800
982 2327 E-tens10n •5871
Wante.d To Buy Used Mob le
Homes Can 740 446 0175 Or 1
304 675 5965

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11 o

Help Wanted

$2 000 WEEKLY ! Ma1hng 400
Brochures! Sal slact on Guar
anteed Postage &amp; Supples Pro
vH1edl Rush Sell Addressed
Stamped Envelope GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOC H TN
37011 1438 Startlmmectately
S2 000 a month to slart wnn po
tentral ot S6 000 monlhly II you
wa~t 10 make money are will ng
to work ha d and 1 ke to help oth
ers we may have a JOb fo you
Local res denr E~ cel ent 1ncome
poss b I tes anel home oil c e
t am ng for pe sons se ec ed
Must have pleas ng personalty
and be w lllng lo meet the pub 1c
No exper ence necessary Fo
more mformallon call Clay Ao
ney at (304)6"75 60 19 o ma e
sume to 24t3 Jacks on ,4,venu e
Point Pleasant WV 2~550 EOE

$800 WEEKLY BE YOU R OWN
BOSS' PROCESS NG GOVERN
MENT REFUNDS NO EXP ERt
ENCE NECESSARY I BOO 854
6469 Ext 5046
$800

WEEKLY

POTENTIAL

Cqmplete S mple Gove nrnent
Forms At Home No E11pe r ence
Necessary CALL TOLL FREE
1 800 966 3599 Ext 2601 $34 00
Refundable Fee

Two H ouse K nens to a good

home

{304}675 6720

Found B ack!Wh te iBrown Pup
py nea r entrance of Old Town
Campground R oad ( 304)675

7878
Lost Black Chmese Sha r pa
Los t n the SanCIH I Ar ea
(30 4)675 3822
Answers
to
Bear $25 rl)ward
Lost Br oad Run Ad A ea B g
Back Dog Lab M )( Male Very
Frena y Red Collar (304)882

7 40-992-2068

70

Yard Sale
Galhpohs
&amp; Vicinity

Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer
Scn1ces
Sofc PreparatiOn
Sepftc Systems
RODNEY KELLER
Owner/Operator

1·740·985·3949

2277 Graham School Road Fr
day September 24th And Salur
dqy September 25th Stat onary
Exerc se 8 ke Bedspreads P
lows D shes Clothes Buck F re
pacelnse t 900 AM 500PM

A1J. Yerd

Sales Mutt
Be Paid In Advance
pEADLINE 2 00 p m
tM day before the ad
Ia to run Sunday
edition 2 00 p m
Fr ldey Monday edition
10 00 am Saturday

2mo pd

Ga age Sa le 4867 Slate Route
850 9 ? 9!23rCI Thru 9f25th

DOZER WORK

Thursday F tday September
23rd 24th 8 5 836 Sk dmore
Road Fenc ng Books Cl oth ng
M see aneous Lowered Pr ces &amp;
Added Marchand se

Reasonable Rates
:.!0 )r •trl".'ll J-.".rfH't"it•Ur't'

(740) 388-9686

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.
New Homes • Vtnyl
Stdtng • New Garages
•Replacemen1 y,'•ndows
•Room Addtttons
•Roofing
COMMERCIAL ond RESIDINTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

ASSEMBLY AT HOME !! C ails
Toys Jewe lry WoOd Sew ng
Typ ng Great Pay CALL BOO
795 0360 Ext 1201 (24 Hrs)
Have A Computer?
Put it To WorK
$25 $75 Hr PT FT
1 888 890 3481
www ~ ncome com

Free K ttens 6 Weeks Old To
Good Home Cal After 5 PM
740 44, -{)391

3292

KCB

ACCOUNTING
CLERK
We
Have A Full Ttme Open ng In Our
Accounting Depa tment For An
lnd v dual That Ha s A Sl rong
Computer Sk lis And An Ac
cotJntlng Background Or Degree
In Accou ntmg Or Related F eld
Exper ence In M crosoft Office
Wou ld Be Very Helpful Success
ful Candidate Must Have Good
Commun cat on Sk tis And EnJOY
Workmg W1th Peop e n A Team
Atmo sphere Bene! s Include
Heal th Dental V son &amp; L fe In
su ance 40 k And Vaca t on
We Are A Long Estabt shed Gal
pols Area Busme ss For Inter
view Cons derallon Please Send
Your Re sume With A Cover Le
te Staling Why You Are The
Person For Th s Post on To 8 011
DH 24 c/o Gall pol s Oa y Tr b
une 825 Th1 d Avenue Ga lhpohs
OH 45631

ATTENTION

Joseph Jacks

\ou

THE APPLIANCE MAN

$10 00 call 304 675 3842 1304
882 2489

900 530

EXCAVATING

tJrnedplwao=eU

Gradtng
SeptiC Svstems &amp;

30 Announcements

Pomeroy
Mtddleport
&amp; VICintty
All Yard Sates Mu st Be Paid In
Advance Deadline 1 OOpm t he
day before the ad Ia to run
Sunday &amp; MOnday editio n
1 OOpm Friday
Garage sa le Fr Clay ana Satur
day 9 10 5 truck c amper cro ss
bo w bath oo m cabmet aquar
ums Home lnlenor e)(erc se b ke
e•er c se steppe r grav ty edge
[ e~erc•se ) et) ld s k tc nenelle
childs van ry small gas heat ng
stoves bedsprea ds lay c he sl
b kes and et c Roma C eme ans
es den ce Rut a n-d 3 m le s ou t
Beechgrove ACI \C f Rd 10 be ge
hOuse on letl

trl.ldl com

Finance
BRANCH MANAGEMENT

TRAINEE

Wanted to Buy

DANCERS

Now Renting

Cnvers
Hornacty Truek lin
Starli You Up To ).i.e/Ml PI
Bonuses Ra•sas Tarp &amp; Up o
$ t 200 Or ent Pay Top Flalbeq
Miles All Pa dl A~Signed CohY'
You Take Home BCfBS Ins Rip.
er Famtl~ Support Prgms V.aca
bon &amp; More 24 Hr Turn Around
On PhOne Apps 1 800 441-42Vl
EKI ET292 Or www hornady

Wedemeyer s Au cnon Se.rv tce
Gall pols Ohio 740--379 2720

1:00 P.M.

985-4473

WICKS
HfiOLING INC.

A ck PeafSon Auct on Company
lull lime auct oneer complete
auct on
ser ... 1ce
l censeo
166 On o &amp; West 11 rgm a 304
77:J.5785 Or 304 n3 5447

Clep.n Lale MaCiel Cars Or
T u c ~s Low M1 tes 1995 Mode s
0 Ne..,er Sm th Buck Pon11ac
t 900 Eastern Avenue Gall1po~s

American legian

B/11/99 1 mo pd

Linda's Painting

2623

Rutland, Ohio

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

JONES'

Oualtty Droveways

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

CLASSIFIEDSI

the final action ERAC
appoata mull be filed

muat be served on tha

·Room addttlons &amp; Remodeling
•New Garages

in the

(9) 22

(10) 4 2 TC

30 days of Issuance of

R e v Ie w
Appolals
Commlealon, 236 Eaal
Town Street Room 300,
Columbus, Ohio 43215
A copy ol the appeal

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Co Rd 19

Human Servlcea

renawl ng. a perm It
llcanae, or variance
which Ia not preceded by
a proposed action, may
be appealed to the ERAC
by filing an appeal wllhln

wllh Environ mental

740·742·2138

992-1717

YOUR

Rutland , Ohto

Pu bile Notice

public moetlnge, and
adfudlcatlon hearing

10 X 20$60

Bill Mo0d1Spaugl'l Auctlot'eer ng
Complt!IIB Auct1oneenno Ser'o' c
es Consignment auclion M II
Street M ddleport Thundays
on o L cense 17693 7'40 989

HILL'S

Howard L Wrttesel

A &amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

Public Notice

'
I

Tara) a Kaanna Fmland s foretgn
mmoster told the General Assembly
the Untted Nattons needs a stable
financtal basos
and unco ndtto onal
payment of co ntnbuttons to the UN
by all
Untlateral dec1soons and acttons
to the contrary are not allowed she
satd Fmland currently holds the
rotatmg pres odency of the European
Unton
Chnton proposed that the world
communtly wage an unrel• nung
baulc agaonst poverty as ll enters the
nc" mtllennoum
Dcspllc quantum advance s tn
technology and the globaltzatton of

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

J &amp; Llasalotloa
&amp; Siding

Auction
and Flea Markel

l op Dollar (740)992 6387

Public Notice

or repeal of orders (other
than emergency orders)

••

•

Umteu States mecttng all lis hnanctal
obltgauons to the Umtcd NatiOn s and
1 wtll contmuc to do so he satd
We wtll do our very best to succeed
thts vear
The admtnoslrallon has pledged to
pay the anears some daung 10 the
1980s but has been blocked repeat
edl y by congressoonal conse rvatives
If a stzable tnstallmentosn 1 made
by years end the Umted States wtll
lose liS vote m the General Assembly
Its Secunty Councol vote would not
be affecled however
The us tardmess on payments
wasn 1 lost on other members even
alltes

4ar

10 X 10 $40

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel

.

Clinton urges U.N. to do more to prevent mass killings
By TOM RAUM
Asaoclated Press Writer
UNITED NAnONS- Presodent
Clinton challenged the Untted
1\latlons and countnes tn Afnca Asm
and elsewhere on Tuesday to
strengthen their abollty to stop mass
killings like those m Kosovoand East
T1mor
The Unned State s
cannot
respond to every humanttanan cata
strophe on the world he told the
General Assembly We cannot do
everythmg everywhere
Chnton also urged the world body
to engage tn an all out battle agamst
poverty for the 21st qentury and 10
'assure that weapons of mass
destruction woll never be used on our
children
Lei us resolve Jn the bnght dawn
of th•s new mtllenmum to bnng an
era tn whtch our deme to create wtll
overwhelm our capactly to de stroy
Chnton to ld the 188 member body
Hos votcc hoarse apparently from
allcrgocs Clonton co ughed and
cleared ht s throat as he spoke
Cion ton suggested the Untted
N tllons play an expanded role 1n pre

ST. RT. 7

7/27/99 2 mo pd

substd y from the state of Kentucky
and depends on 1oun sts for most or
lis busmess
The So stersvoll e W Va ferry that
trave ls to Monroe m so utheastern
Ohto ts owned and operated by the
cny of Ststersv11le It has daoly com
mutcrs but also gets tis share of
tounsls
The founh lcrry connects Cave
In Rock 111 With Cnllenden Coun
ty Ky Tite pnvate owner ts patd by
the slates of llhnot s and Kentu cky to
operate 11 free of charge as a connec
tor between htghways tn those two
state s

some wa) sard Anderson
been a htg part of my ltfe

Larry Schey

750 East State Street Phone (740) 593 6671
Atfiens, Oh1o 4570 I
"A Better Wa , £1 et

Albany, 0/uo

For tourists, residents alike, ferry ride is step into the past

SAYRE
TRUCKING

S a le s Repre se nt at iv e

80

Toplaceanadcan~~.~,-~ 15 ~

HARIWElL
SIDRAGE

Steve Rtffle

The Datly Sentinel • Page 1g

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Attn LPNS ANs EMTs And Par
amedtcst Become An RN Or BSN
Graduate AM Increase Your n
come W lhOut Gomg Back To
School To SchedtJie Yo u Inter
v ew In Hun l ngton Ca Angela
Copeland By Oc 7 t 800 737
2222

Avon P oduc s Start your own n
Home Bus ness Wo r k F ie ~ be
Hours EnJOY Unl m led Earn ngs
(304)347 8838

Amer ca n General F nance A
Leader In The Fmanc al Se v ces
Industry Win Over $11 81110n In
Assets And More Than 1 300
Branches Na!lonw Oe Has An lm
med ate Need For A Bran ch
Management Tra nee I n Q(l r
Jackson Ofl~e
nd vtdual s W1 l Part c•pa\e lo /ltn
l nlens ve On The Job Tra1mn g
Prag am Oes1gned To Prepa e
You For B anch Manager Re
sp o ns 0111 es The 18 Monltl
Modular Tra n n9 Program I n
struc ls Yo u In All AspeCis Ql
Manag ng Cred 1 Extensron Ac
counl AdJ ustment Bus1ness De
ve !opmem And Pe rso nne Staft

ng
Appl cants For ThiS Entry LeVel
Opp or1un ry ShOuld Have Fok!r
Years Pos1 Htgh School EdUca
t o n Tan ng 0 Work Exper
ence ~Sa l es E)(per ene:e P e
lerreCI ) S1rong Wr ten And ll.er
bal Commumca1 on SK lis AntV'A
Vahd Dnver s L cense Must .fie
Open To Re l ocat on And Ha~e
The Des re To Assume Manage
r1a Respons t&gt; llty
Amer can General F nance Offers
A Compel 1 ve Benelts Package
lnclud ng Med cal Denial And A
401 (k) Pan For lmmedrate Con
stde at on Pease Send Yo'ur Rv
surne To Amer can General
F nance P 0 Bo)( 702 Jackson
OH 4 5640 0702 Please V s 1 Our
Web S te AI www agf nance coR"1
Eqi.Jal Opportun ry Employer

LEGAL SECRETARY
Needed to llusy Atnens Law 01
t ce Must know or qu1ckly be able
to learn Corel (Word Pe rfect) 7 0
Ae lremenl pla n ava lable A great
opportun ty lor the matur e hard
work ng ndtv dua w II ng 10 make
a ong term commnment Safary
commensura te w1th eKpe ence
R~spond to P O Box 729 88 cJo
The Da ty Sent nel Pomeroy bH

45769
L nle Caesars Is Look ng Fof
Mot vated ndtv dua l s Fo r The
Fo low ng Posit ons A 1 levels 01
Management De very Dr ver$ &amp;
In Store Personnel Please Appl)
At The Gall po lls L ttte Caesars
861 Second Avenue Ga I po s
MEDICAL BI LLI NG Ea n E)(G9
ent Income Ful Tra n ng Com
puter Requ red Call To Frae
BOO 540 6333 E)(t 230 I
Off ce seekmg Med ca Data en 1r ~
rep s lor En y Level Pos on FT
PT E)(ce len Pay PC Reg Call t
800 298 8506

MOTHERS &amp; OTHERS llrORK
FROM HOME! Ma1l Order P~ t
T me &amp; Full T me $650 $3 sqo
Month Fu Tra n ng P ov d~d
For FREE Booklet Cal 1 888 234
9897 www cash-9 1 comhorp"'
Now H r ng E)(per enoed B '-t1 1
Cterk PT FT For Home Hea lt
Agency MAKE YOUR OW l
HOURS! Send Resume To CL .o;
482 c o Gall pol s Da ly T Ou n.,.
825 Th rei Avenue Gal po s Orl
4563 1
Now laKing apphcat ons lor Cla s:.
B COL dr vers Send re sume t1.
Ba um Lumbe
P 0 Bo • 67
Chest er Oh o or ca 74 0 9B ...r

3301
OFFICE MANAGER
A Progress ve Lu ng Ter m Ca e
Company Is Curre n y Tak ng l\p
pi car ons For An Qfftce ManagP
We A e Seek r g A Cha l enge Dr
ven lnd v dua W th Supe v so ~
Exper ence r ne Appl ca1 1 Mu t
Have AT Least Th ee Ve a rs ~)
per ence We Ofte An E)(cPpt en
al Compensatton Packa ge If
terested n A Challe ng ng Po!
1 on Send You Resume And So
ary Requ remenr s To Otl ce Mfl
ager 32 112 We st Stale S ~r P e
Athens Oh o 45701
Now H rmg &amp; Ser v c ng Ga l a
Jacks o n &amp; Me gs For AN C N-.A
PCA ~des E~per en ce Preferred
Tan ng Ava labte Ap pty M F 8
A M 5 PM AI Fam ly Se r c
Care 266 Upper A \9 Road Ro
ute 7 Gall pols Ac ro ss Fro m
F ench C !)' Homes

Ca re For Elder y Gentleman
Room Board &amp; Sa a y 740 446
405

Computer Users Needed Wo 11
Ow n Hrs $25K $80K/ Yr 1 800
536 0486 X 7777 www lcwp com
DENTA L BILLER Up 10 $15 $45
Hr Den Ia B tlmg Sol ware Com
pany Needs People To Process
Med1ca Cla1ms Tra n ng Prov d
ed Must Own Comp Jter I 800
223 1t 49 Ext 460
01 ector of Pe lormance Improve
men and R sk Ma nageme nt
Plan mptement and manage the
performance mprovement ana
fiSK management prog ra m t'Je
s gned to enhance the quahly of
pat en! care reduce pat1ent m]u
res and prevent patient c a ms
lor an 80 bed acu1e care tacllty
Th s post on a sO prov des d
reel on to the ut•hzaUon ev ew
ana so c at serv1ce funct ons
Qual I eel cand al es w111 possess
a Bachelor ol Sc ence n Nurs ng
(Masters Degree n appropr ate
I eld o r&amp;ferred ) prevtous e~per 1
ence n chn cal hea !h care n
ctud ng d ect exper ence n
ouahty assurance and tam 1ar ly
w1th JC HAO standards Pease
sub m I esume and sa a ry e
qu rement s 10 Human Resourc
es Jackson Gene al Hasp tal
PO Box 720 A ptey WV 25271

EOE
Dr ve /Owne Operator Ch cago
Area Truck Company Needs
Owne Operato rs To Operate
Easr 01 Rock es G ea.t Pay New
Tra lers Maxtmum Mtles Sma ll
f leet Owner We come Call 888
782 5400 Ext 207
Dr ve s 2 Week Pad COLT a n
ng No E)(p Needed No Mo nev
Nor Cred f? No Prob eml Earn Up
To $32 00 0 li st 'f r W /Full Bene
1 ts P A M Transp o t Call Toll
F ee 1 877 230 60J "' www ot
d vers co m

Overt&gt;roolo; Cen l e 33J Par,e
Street M dd lep o 1 Oh has f"' a
time past o ri s l or ST NA s a" il l
able tor all sh Its &amp; wel"kP.M!=. ~r
yone 1nte ested please s en by '
f II out an appl cat on EOE
Pas 1 on Ope n ng Cl n cal As!&gt;!
rant For C !; s ImP vent on Un
Galhpot s Oh o ShIt Wo 1&lt;. H ~
Sc hoo G adllate Equ ~ale rll
Val d D ve !&gt; L~..ense Req~..; EtJ
Pa r ti e pat on In F st A d AI'
CPA Ta n ng W I Be RP q u ;.11
Upon Em p oymen Re$ dert1u
Exper ence Y.. th Emot an al y 0'1 ~
turbed :Ad ul ts P efe ~d $6 ~7
Per Hou r Se nd Re sume To Md
age r O f Human Res. ou ~.. 8 .,
Woodland Ce n e 3086 State l=-1
1te 160 Gal pols Or o 45o31
Pos 1on Open ng Res dent ~ ~
s sta nl s Fe ca r Streel A pap
men rs Jackson Ohto Sn II Wor ~
H ah School G aduate Equ \8
ent Va l d Dr ~er s L cense R'l:&gt;
q u red Pa I cpa 0'1 In F rs1 4 1
And CP A Tr~ n r.g ~ 1 1 Be R1
qu re d Up on E'T1D oyment AP~
dent a E, pe t~lC e W th Enol~
ally D s urbed Adu ts P eler l!r
$6 67 Pe Ho r Send Re!;UmA f..,
Manage r d t Human Resou rces
Woda and Cen ers 3086 S al P
Route l oO Gall pols Oh o A5631
S a es Rep Ne eded For Local
Co mpan y Es tatl l she d Accounb
l rt Ga l a Me g s A11d Mas on
Coun y Mu st Have Own Veh c e
And Be a Se t St:t er For MorP
lnlo ma11on Call 74(}.446 4109
S1NGERS GOSPEL OR CLE A'N
COUNTRY Cal Nov. Toll Free I
800 339 4204 or 1 Boo 469 e 6&lt;1
Fo Appo thtme nt To Co me To
Na shv llo ren ness ee And Aud
1on For Ma1 0 Record P oo ucer'S
lntemet v.ww wcm ae

�Page 14 • The Daily Senttnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohto

t:·

:-:.Wedneaday, September 22, 1999

•
The Datly Sentmel • Page 15

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohto

OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGIE

1 -lly
6 Former •
10GrM"*
12 Drcwe

ALDER
540 Miscellaneous
Men:handln
POST~L JOBS To SIB 35 IHR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPERI
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CALL I 800 813 3 585

E)(TU21 0 8 AM
DAYS IdS inc Fee

9 PM

7

Preventton Pos 1 on - An Alcohol
And Other Drug Cousetl ng /Pre
ven11on Agency Located In Ga lla
And Jackson Counlles Is Seek
lng An Amblttous lnd vtdual To
Fill A PrevenltOn Pos 1 on Th s
Person W II Work W th All Age
Group&amp; In Both Commumtles Re
sponstbthtles Include Coo dtna
ton Of A Drug Free Commun ty
Coalition .Awareness Act vtt es
Educat on Programs Train ng
Programs And Development And
Implementation 01 New Grant
Projects Send Re sume By Sep
tember 30 1999 To FACTS
1770 Jackson Pike 8 dwell Oh o
45814 Or FAX 740 446 8014
MIF~

EOE

WANTED
63 People To lose 30 lbs In 30
Days &amp; Earn SSSSS Wh le Surfing
The
Nel
1 888 229 8427
www 8Vitahty neVfeelgood
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 IHR
INC BENEF TS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY
MAIN
TENAN~E PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL 1 800 813
3585 EXT 14211 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS Ids tnc r-ee

140

Business
Training

O.lllpolla C.reer College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 74D-446-4367
1 800 214-0452
Reg 190-05-1274B

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A lEGAL COLLEGE DE
GAEE QUICKLY Ba chelors
Masters Doct ora te By Co e
spondence Based Upon Pr or Ed
ucat on And Sho t Study Course
For FREE Informal on Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVER&amp;ITY I 80().964 8316

180 Wanted To Do
Custom w ndow treatmen1s coun
lry ruflles festoons swags &amp; cas
cades shades upholstered co
n cas 740-949-2202

MEDICAL BILLER Up t o $15
$45 !Hr Medical 8 II ng So!tware
Company Needs Pe ople To Pro
cess MediCal Cia ms From Home
Tra nmg Prov ded Must Own
Computers 1 800 434 5518 EKI
667

220 Money lo Loan
US NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remain ng Payments
On Prope r ty Sold ! Mortg.,gesl
Annu 1 est Settlemenls lmme
date Ouolest
Nobod y Beats
Our Pr ces Nat onat Contract
Buyers 800 490 0731 Ext 10
www natlona contraclbuyers com
$$$ OVERDUE BILLSIII $$$ Con
sot date Debts Same Day Appro
val NO APPLICATION FEES 1
800 863 9006 E11 936 www help
pay btlls com
SFREE CASH NOW$ F om
Wealthy Fam I es Unload ng M 1
hons Of Dollars To Help Mintm ze
The r Ta11es Wr te lmmed ately
Wmdlal s B4 7 A SECOND AVE
SUITE 1350 NEW YORK NEW
YORK 10017
GUARANTEED APPROVAL
Bank Card No Cred 1 Check No
Up Front Cash Security Deposit
Requtre d Must Be 18 + And
Have Vahd Check ng Acco unt
Pre App oval By Phone 1 800
689 ,556
FREE MON EY II s True Neve:r
Repay Gu aran eed
$500
$50 000
De bt Conso 1dat on
Pe sonat Neecls Bus ness 1
800-511 2640
BANKRUPTCY $79-+ Stops Ga
ntshment s 0 vo ce $99+ Stop
Foreclosure $350 Bu s ness Op
po tuntl es + Tra nmg F eshSta t
1 888 419 9417 wwwlreshstartu

sa com
CASH Or LOAN Farm Capttal
W1ll Purchase Or Loa n Aga nst
Your Governmenl Farm Pay
ments (CAP PFC ) Call Farm
Cap ta 1 888 FARM ACT (327
6228)
CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monthly Payments 20 50°. Save
Thousands Of Dol ars In Interest
Non Prot! TCC BOO 758 3844
CREDIT PROBLEMS Stop Here
we Can He p Loans Ava abe
$3 000 And Up No Fee 1 877
663-9269 EKt 221
CREDIT PROBLEMS
STOP
HERE! WE CAN HELP LOANS
AVAILABLE $3 000 AND UP
CALL TOLL FREE I 877 663
9269 Ext 231

Mother of 4 w II babys 1 m her
home reasonable rates lo more
lnlo call Angela 74Q-985 9806
Opening For 2 Elderly Or Hand
capped Persons tn Country
Home Prwate Rooms Cat Bet
ween 9 AM 6 PM 740 388
0118
We do tra er demolttlon&amp;so me
homes&amp; trash ptck t.JP 304 773
6 67
Will Do Babysln ng In My Home
O!l'f Or Noghl Sh H Bdwe I &amp; Ad
davilla Schoo Olstncts Aelerenc
es 740 446 6373

Will P•lnt Hou111 (Inter or Elite
rior} Berna +Tin Roof• EKpen
enced References + F ee Esli
males 1304)895 3981

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opporlumly

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBL SHING CO
recommends that you do bus
ness w II'\ people yo u know and
NOT to send money through the
mal unt I you have nvesligated
tl'le otter ng

2 g Cents /Min PHONE CARD
Rte EASY $$ MONEYI! FEW
Hours Earn $500 $5 000 / Wk
CASH' FREE Sttes 1 800 997
9888 24 Hrs
ARE U L.AZY? I Am And Earn
S 000 A Oay No Sa ng Not
MLM Compute And So rtware
0 str butorshtp For F ee lnforma
hon Package Cat 1 BOO 786
8849 24 Hrs XT 27
AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
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Income
All
CASHI 100"'. Finance Alia lable
1-800 380 2615 24 Hrs
Cigar PlantatiOn Needs local
0 st 0 Down 0 A C No Selt ng
S150K Poll Premtum Cga s 800
514-9365
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Great Income Opportun y W/
Computers low Investment 1
800-449 2926 Code 03
EARN $75 000+ In You Ow n
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EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR
Send Us A One Pag:e Form We
Oo The Rest No Direct Selling
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Neceasary Free Information &amp;
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$8 995 Financing Ava table Is
land Aulomated Med1ca1 Se vtc
es Inc 800 322 1139 Ell 050
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Tra n ng To Help You Succeed
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TCt28586

GET YOUR CASH NOW• 0 dest
Buyers Of St uctured Sen aments
Annu ties And Go11ernmen1 Farm
Payments Also Purctlas ng Lot
tenes And Pr vale Mo 1gages
Call Sen ement Capt1al 1 800
959 0006 www settlementcap
tal corn
Need A Loan? T y Debt ConS() I
daltOn SS 000 $200
Bad
C edt OK Fee 1 800 770 0092
Ext 215

ooo

RECE VING PAYMENTS? In
vestor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Se ler F nanced Mortgage
Real Estate Contract Insurance
Annu1ty Htghes1 P cas Free
Quotes Why Wa t? Call Rtch 1
800-8886450

230

Professional
Services

Mount s Tree Serv1ce Ttle Tree
Bucket Truck
Profe ss onals
Serv ce Top T m Rem ova
Stump Gnnd ng Fee Estimates
Fully Insured Works Comp B d
well OH Call And Save 1 800
838 9568 740 388 9648 Owner
RICk Mount
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnt
I 888 582 3345

SO DOWN' HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED!
GOV T
FORE
CLOSU RES CALL NOW FOR
R EG ISTAATION t
I 800 434
2434 EXT 3205 (NO FEE)

'

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Dow n! Gov t AM Bank Aepo s
Be ng Sold NOW ! F nancing
Ava il able Ca Now! 1 800 730
7772 Elil 8040
HOME FORECLOSURES NO
MONEY DOWN NO CREDIT
NEEDED TAKE 0\/ER \/ERY
LOW PAYMENTS I 800 916
9191 EXT H5023
House lor sale by owne can be
used as 2 apartment renta n
M ddleporl 74Q-384 7803
House ocated n M nersv ne tour
bedroom LA FA ult ty room
bath basement w th bath a r wa
ter sottener newer root beaut tul
vew ot the nver 740.992 90121or
appomtment
Off Aou e 2 88 Meadow Lane
Ap• 2 Level A c es lovely
Ra ncher Fpl 38Rs 2BA 2c ga
rage Deck Porch $79 900
Che Brown Realtor Ullom Re
atty!BHG (~1733 7119
Rental Propettv A 2 Apartmenl
Duplex In Galhpot s Ctty l m ts &amp;
2 Acres W th Ti a fe r &amp; 2nd Trail
er Hook Up Near Holzer s 740
441 0720
Three bedroom 1 &amp; 112 story ce
dar and stone home stone chim
ney large wmdows two bathS
basement covered deck arge
garage
8 1/2 acres private
near Pomeroy 740 992 6176

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1 1999 Fleetwood 14x72 2BR
2BA A r Sk rt ng on Rental lot
2 1995 Skyl ne 14x70 38A
2BA V ny S dtng Shtngles

3 1996 Redmond 16K70 38A
2BA 6 walls N ce F nanc ng
Ava !able (304)675 6055

1978 Mob te Home 14170 3 Bed
rooms 2 Baths $5 500 740 446
6251
1982 W ndsor :2 Sdrms 2 Full
Baths Wllh Add On 112 Acre of
land
Ne ghborhood
Rd
$;.t8 000 00 7 40-446-0785

Close 10 Toyota Plant/ Buffalo
3BR S ngie Story bu It n K1tch
en w/Oouble Oven and Garbage
D sposat OneBathroom Ul1lty
Room La ge L1vtng Room w!F re
place Gas Fur nace w/Propane
and/or Natural Gas Hook Up Two
Ca Garage(Unattached) One
Sto age Bu d ng
Cha nl nk
Fence around the Back Yard
(304)937 3646

Three bedroom house near
Rae ne n vtllage ol AnttQUity
central a r $335 month S200 de
post call 740 384 3B45 or 740
384 2537

420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent
Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes atr
conditiO ned $260 $300 sewer
wa ter and ash tncluded 740
992 :2167

Tara Townhouse Apa rtme nts
Very Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
FlOors CA I 1!2 Bath Fully Car
paled Adult Poot &amp; Baby Pool
PatiO Start S350 /MO No Pets
Lease Plus Secur ty Oepos 1 Re
qulred Alter 5 740 446 0101
Before 5 740-446 3481
Two one bedroom umts ava table
mmedtately newly remode led
HUD app oved no pets $250 a
month plus security deposit ca ll
614 449-9469
Unlurn shed c ean apartment In
Middleport $350/mo p us utilities
740-384 7803
Upstairs Furn shed 3 Rooms
Bath Clean No Pets• References
&amp; Depos 1 Requtred 740 446
1519
\/alley Vtew Apartments Rio
Grande Oh Now Accepting ap
p leal ons tor lmmedlale occu
pancy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apts A r
Cond t on ng Kitchen app ances
Fenced In Playground laundry
On Slghl Management Water
Sewage and Trash Paid Full lime
Students must meet Otlto Hous
ng F nance Agency Quat f ca
tons Senior C 1 zens Welcome
EHO For more Information call
(740 ) 245 9170 Monday thru
Thursday 9 00 12 00 noon

460 Space for Rent

2 Bedroom Centra Atr &amp; Heat 1
Mile On Hannan Trace Road Oft
Route 218 Ca 1740 256-620:2

Mob e Home Space Centenary
Area $100/Mo 740 446 5053

2 Bedroom Natural Gas Furnace

Sand Fork Court GIIUpcMII Fer-ry New Mobile Home Lots s n
gle wide double w de mcludlng
eo ft models Tak ng appt ca
ttons can (304 )675 6908

1\tr Very N ce In Galllpo t s 740
Bedrooms $250/Mo
pos t 74D-367 0632

P us De

2 Bedrooms 2 Full S ze Bath C/
A $250 Mo Deposit Aeterenc
as 5 Mtles From Rio G ande
740-245 5677

3 Bedroom Trailer For Rent In Ato
Grande References No Pets In
s de 740 379 2720 No C•ll•
Unlll After 7 PM

490

For Lease

Pomeroy SA 124 600 square ft
customer parking carpet a r con
dltioned calling fan modern $3SO
per month S350 deposit 740
949 2093

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

1986 2 Bedrooms 1 Bath Car
port Stoarge Bu td ng Et c On
Rented Lot Must See! 740 446
8617 For Appel ntment

3 l vmg Aoom Tables New Futon
Bed Rocker Microwave Ottoman
&amp; Mise Items 740 256 6753

198B Clay1on Claiborne AI Elec
trlc 2 Bedrooms 2 Baths E11tras
SIO 000 740-256-6938

Mobtle Home tor Rent Call (740)
44&amp;1279

Applian ces
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers Fla,Ages Ref~l
g ators 90 Day Guarantee•
F ench Ctty Maytag 740 446
7795

1989 L be ty Mob teHome 2BR
1BA Central A1r Gas Heat Lo
ca ted on Rental Lot near Pt PI
$8 000 (740)38&lt;! 9971

1993 Clayton 16x80 Very Nice
Super Clean 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths With Big Round Bathtub
Heat Pump E ectnc $21 000
740 256 638:2
1999 Doublew de Repo Never.
L ved In New Home Warra nty 0
Down II Ouahl ed 740 446 3093
Oakwood Gall polts Ontyt
Want A Home Don I Have Land'
We Do Hu ry Only I 0 Lots left
800 383 6862

HUO Homes Approval By Phone
Stngles 0 Ooub es 740 446
3583
Ideal Starter Home 14,;70 1979
FJiendshlp Mob te Home EKcel
teht CoM ton Brand New Wmd
ows Copper Plumb ng Asktng
$10 000 OBO Call740 388 8915
MOVING OUT OF AREA Must
sen At sacraf ce 1998 sw L ke
New 304 733-9102
New 3B R 2 Bath 14 W de $500
Down $210 permo Free At 1
800 691 6777
New 4BR 16 w de $500 Down
$245 per mo F ee Atr 1 800
691 6777
Spectal 28•80 3 or 4BR $1000
Down $349 per mo Free De v
ery &amp; Setup 1-800-69t-6777

26 Acres M L With 6 Sta t Horse
Barn County Water 3 Bedroom
House 740.38&amp;.-a504

340

Business and
Buildings

STEEL BUILD NGS New Must
Sell 4 1:2 PitCh 16x24K10 Was
S 7 500 Sell $3 990 24124•1 0
Was $8 500 Se $4 990 1 800
406 51:26

Brtck
Ranch
3Bedrooms
2Balhs 2 Car Garage 1 2Acre 1
Year Old Pt Pleasant $125 000
(304 )675 8959
Buy Homes From $ 0 000
1 3 Bedroom loca Governmen
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Finane ng
Poss bte For L st ngs Call BOO
319-3323 Exl 1709

Pomeroy three bedroom house
IWo bedroom apartmenl relerenc
es security partly turn stled 740
992 68ll6 after 5pm

Now Taking Apptlcations S5
Wesl 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments
JnciLJdes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740
446-0008

Plus Depos t 740-367..0011

3 Bedr oo m House W/3 Acres
land Few Fruit Trees 2 Bed
ooms Bath Upslatrs 1 Bedroom
Front Room D n ng Room Ul t ty
Room K !chen Bath Downsla rs
SIs On Storys Run Road Off Route 7 lnlormatton (740) 367
7576 Afle Noon $47 500 00
OBO

3 Sed ooms $400/Mo Depos I •
Utlti8S No P&amp;tsl 740..44&amp;4313

f

330 Farms for Sale

310 Homes lor Sale

2 Bedrooms S3501Mo"' • Uttll es
and Oepos t No Pets 740 446
4313

1972 Redman 12li70 tn Good

Bg Selection Used 10Ft 12Ft
14 Ft W1de Kanauga Mob le
Homes 740-446 9662

REAL ESTATE

I Bedroo m House No Pets! 28
L nco n Ave $:275 00 mon1h
(740) 446 9342

446 2003 740-446 1409

Cond ton New Fu nace $4 800
Cat Between 4 &amp; 8 PM 740 245
5788 Or 740 245 9029

Nic e ona bedroom lurn shed
apartment In Middleport no pets
eferences and deposll reQu red
740.992 5633
Nice two bedroom apartment tn
Syracuse $275 month tnctudes
trash 740 667 3516

Condo Ltke L v ng W thou!
Hav ng To Purchase Over 2000
SQ Ft Unturn shed :2('1d Floor
Apartme nt W th Cha t l ft 2 Beel
rooms :2 BathS Laundry Room
W th Electric Washe /0 yer
K tchen W th Electnc Range Re
1r ge ato D shwasher D sposa
Cent a Gas Heal With Electnc AJ
c Otr Street Parklt'lg \lll.rN Of C iry
Park And Ohio Riv er $600 1
Month Plus Ulllt es Depost Re
qutred Dtscount For Lease 740
446 9636

14170 moble home $1000 call
740 949 2072

1

Th s newspaper wtll not
know ngty accept
advertisements for rea estate
wtlteh tS In vtotat10n of the
law Our readers are hereby
nformed that all dweUtnQs
advertised n th s newspaper
are ava labia on an equal
opportunity baSIS

RENTALS

Roof 6 was

Ooublewtdes Free Deco &amp; Furm
lure
~---lllioliilllilioi-~~~
HURRY HURRY HURRY!
OAKWOOD HOMES
BARBOURSVILLE WV
BOO 383 6862

AI reat estate advert sing n
lhts newspaper s subject to
the Federal Far Hous ng Act
o11968 whteh makes tt t legal
to adverttse any preference
m tat on or d scnm nat on
based on race color r~ glon
sex taml tal status or nat ona
or g n or any nlent on to
make any such preference
hmttaUon or d scr m nat on

We Buy land 30. 500 Acres
We Pay Cash 1 800 213 8365
Anlhony Land Co

3 Bedrooms $250 00 Per Monlh

Two bedroom mob te home wtth
two baths tn Racine $3:25 month
740 992 5039
Furn shed two bedroom a r con
d toned no pels $150 deposit
$325/mo also spaces lor ent
$90/mo $90 depos I R ve Park
Pomeroy (lo mer y Brown sl 740
949 2093
Two ... 2 Bedroom Trailers In Sma t
Trailer Park References &amp; De
po,s I Requtred 740-446-1104

440

Apartments
for Renl

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
n shed and unfurn shed secur ty
depostt equ ed no pets 740
992 2218
1 bed oom apartment n Mtddle
port a t ultlltles pa d $270 per
month $100 deposit 740 992
7806
1 Bedroom Apartment Cali After
500PM 7404461765

1 bedroom apt n Henderson
$200 per mo + depos tlreferenc
es required (304)675-1 972
1 Bedroom A/C WID Hook Up
Near Arbo rs Nursing Home No
Pets Quiet Local ons $279 Mo
• UtNtes 740 446-2957
I Bedroom All Uti! es nc\uded
$385/Mo 740-441 0120 r-

2 br kit appliances&amp; A C &amp; car
pet fu nlshed 304 675 4302
2bd m apls total eleclr c ap
p lances furntshed laundry room
lacii t es close to schoo 1n town
App cat ons ava !able at v age
Green Apts 149 or ca n 740 992
371 EOH

Apphcat ons Now Accepted For
Sma I But Extra Special One Bed
room Very Clean Stove Frig
Washer Dryer Tota Elect c l AC
Non Smokers Only No Pets
$300 Depos 1 $350/Mo 740 446
2205 740 446 9585 Ask For
Vlrg nta
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 5:2 Westwood Dr ve
!rom $279 to $356 Wa k to shOp
&amp; movies Ca 740 446 2568
EQual Hous ng Oppor un tv

FOR RENT large lwo bedroom
apartments stove and refrlgera
tor $250 mon th plus $100 depos
1 n M ddteport one bedroom a
elecT[ c uttl ties paid $375 month
$125 depos 1 Pomeroy Ohio
Apartment home &amp; tra iiVrentals
740 992 4514

23 ACRES
2 M es Off SA 7 &amp; SA :218 South
01 Gallipo s Stng ew des A lowed
Rough Mostly Wooded Road AI
ready Cut In Land Con ra ct
Ava table Only $27 000 1 800
213 8365

360

Real Estate
Wanted

3 Surveyed And Deeded Ac es
Sec uded Wooded W1th Mo e
Land Ava labia Must Have Bu d
ing S te And Be Access ble Pre
ler North Or West Galha County
740 446 2317

For Lease One Bedroom AC
Apt Corner Of Second And P ne
$260/Mo Plus Ut t lies Secur ty
And Key Depos t References Re
qutred No Pets 740 446 4425
Grac ous ltVtng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V llage Manor and
A vers tde Apartments tn Mtddle
por From $249 $373 Cal 740
992 5064 Equa Housing Oppor
tun 1185
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartmen t
740-446-0390
Nice Ground Floor :2BA WID
Hook up Reference Depos1t No
PelS (304)675 5162

For Sale Aecona oned wash
ers dryers and refrigerators
Th o mpsons App lance 3407
Jackson Avenue (304)675 7388
GOOD ~SED ~PPLIANCES
Washers drye s refrige ra tors
ranges Skaggs Apptances 76
Vine Street Call 740 446 7398
I BBB 818 0128
New And Used Furn lure Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga Stop
And See Us 740 446 4782
QUICK CASH
A&amp; 0 s Used
Furniture Buytng Part al Or
WhOle Estate 740-367-0:280
Dryer for sate 3112 to 4 yrs old
(304]675-6693

530

Antiques

COMPUTERS $0 Down low
Monthly Payments V2K Compll
ant A most Everyone Approved
Call FIA OCOM Aelva nced Tech
noiOgi&amp;S I 800-617 3476
Elecu c hosp11al bep S100 re
chntng lift cha r $75 1993 Chevy
S 10 61 000 mtles standard PS
a r tool boK $4500 740 992
2019
Ftrewood tor sate All Ha dwoods
Ful S ze 314 Ton Truckload De
1 vered &amp; Stacked $45 (304)882
2555
Far Sale Btg Whee l Stroller
H ghCha r Ca rSeat BabyBed
Ployf'ofl (304)675-2801

Btack sectional couch wllh end
tables coltee table to match very
good condition $300 740 992
2906
BOTTLED WILLPOWER
Up TO 30 lbs 30 DAY MO'N•Y
BACK GUARANTEE! Natural Or
Recommended 740 441 1982
Free Samples

Regtsterec English Coon Hound
Pups 740 256 1517

570

Musical
Instruments

For Sale Yamaha Alto Suo
phone
E•cellent Condition
ssoo (304)882-3338

580

1ti4 Pontiac BoMa'llllle Color
Rtd Executtve Car Eacellent
Condition New Tires Badery AI
IOfnaiO&lt; $&lt;19M 7&lt;111-«&amp;-1969

Large Oak Enterta nment Center
F ts 32 TV Never been used
(304)675 4612

Red AaspMrr es Now Avatlable
TaylOrs Berry Patch Call In Evetngs 740 245 9047

720 Trucks for Sale

LOSE WEIGHT! As Seen On
TV 112 The Cost 01 Mal Brands
All Natu al Q etary Welg1'111oss
Supplement lose Fat Gatn Ener
gy FREE SAMPLE Ca I I BOO
613-0790
METABOLIFE 356N II Works!
Burns Fall Increases Metabo
!ism Ra ses Energy Level Call
For Pats Pnce Toll Free 877
311 DIET Mastercard IV sa I
Otscover /AmeK Metabohle .. )n
depenoent DistribUtor
IIOBILE HOME OWNERS
Furnaces Installed As low As
$28 00 A Month W th Approved
Cred I Ea sy Over The Phone
Sank Fmancing Huge Inventory
01 lntertherm Mtller &amp; Coleman
Furnaces Heat Pumps And
Pa IS V nyl Sk ling K IS $299 95
Doors &amp; Windows Water Heat
ers Ancho s Plumbing &amp; Elect t
cal Parts Bennens Mob le Home
HTG &amp; ClG 740 446 9416 Or 1
800 872 5967 Gal !pol s 0~

N ce Coffee Table End Table Set
Plus 4 Leg Round Table W th
Cover $75 Web TV &amp; Keyboard
Used 6 Months $50 740 388
8676
N ce Glass Jewel y D splay Case
740 245 9315
Pe let Stove Quadra F re 1 000
C ass c ltke New To Make In
qu nes 740 245 9218
PRIMESTAR-

Iree
D recTV Summer Promo! on CaM
now 888 265 2123
READY TO LOSE THOSE UN
WANTED POUNOS? FREE IN
FORMATION
Log
Onlo
www provenptan com/lose
Aolltop Desk Needs Hardware
$125 Mernllat H ckory K tchen
Cabinets Stl In Bo~es $1 200
740 379 9038
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Cia m Den ed? We Spec a ze In
Appea s And Hear ngs FREE
CONSULTATION Benefit Team
Services Inc Toll Free 1 888
836 4052

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
One Owner 1980 400 Jotln Oeere
Lawn And Garden Tractor Hydro
slat c Onve With 60" Mower
Deck 2 600 Hrs Excellent Cond
t10n 740-446-32n
Used ltlt Truck Fork $75 To $125
Per Set Firewood Any Ouamty
140-379 2757

630

Hay &amp; Grain

1000 lbs ol round bales of oat
straw wtth muo;ed hay asking $10
a bale 740.992 5072

TRANSPORTATION

71 0 Autos for Sale
$500 CARS FROM 1500111 Buy
Pollee Impounds &amp; Repos Fee
CALL NOW For Listings! 1 BOO
319-3323 K2156
CARS $100 $500 &amp; UP POLICE
MPOUNDS Honda s Toyola s
Chevys Jeeps And Sporl UttU
ltes Fee ReqUired Call Now! SQ0772 7470 EXT 7832
1993 Chevrolet lumina 4 dr se
dan 3 1 V-6 auto 8/c new 1 res
non smoker. 53 000 m es pas
sanger door damage (runs &amp;
drives) ask ng $3 000 740 992
1506 days 740 949 2644 eves
1983 Olds 2 Doors Cutlass Su
preme Brougham Black One
Owner Full Power AfT 5 0 liter
V 8 Motor Good Condtllon 740
446 3277
1984 Pont1ac Bonf18v1Ue 4 Doors
BoC:y Great Shape Runs &amp; Or,...
able Needs Vatve Pan Gasket
$850 OBO 740 .. I 9864
1985 Cnevy Celebr ty station
wagon runs good $450 740
992 1493
986 Buick Regal Umtted AC
Fu ly loaded Automat c Very
Clean 7 40 245-5991

986 Uhevy Cavalier AS 2 0

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY We F nance 0 Down! Past
Cred t Problems OK I! Even 1
Turned Down Befo e Reestab ish
'Your Cred Ill 1 800-659 0359
WARMUP
92•o Gas Fu naces Heat Pumps
Duct Systems Free Eshmates If
You Don t Call Us We Both Loss/
740 446 6308 1 BOO 291 0098

Wh te Kenmore Washer &amp; Dryer
S 125 Both Will Separate G E
Washer $60 Almond Kenmore
Dryer $60 Ca I Alter 5 30 PM
740 446 9066
www dtamondsellers net WE SELL
DIAMONDS FOR LESS! THE IN
TERNETS BEST PR ICES NO
COMPUTER NEEDED LICENSE
INSURED BONDED CALL
726 3753

an

550

Building
Supplies

Bock br1ck sewer pipe&amp; wind
ows I ntels etc Claude w nters
Am Gr!lnde OH Call 740 245
5121
STEEl BUILDINGS
Over
stocked II Must l qulda te Now!
251C30 40•50 45•72 50x100 W I
Oethi&amp;r Cat 1 800 211 9594 •51

560

Pets for Sale

6 Fu ~l St ooded Boston Terrier
Pups $75 Each Father AKC
Reg stared Mother Ful Blooded
74Q-388 8743

Buckstove Insert Med Size Ex
ceH ent Condit on Brass T lm
,(.304~~:7~5~3~71~4:___________ 1
AK C Basset! Hound Pupp es
Collectors Item Ge man 35 MM Red &amp; While Tn Color 1st Shots
Plate Camera World war II &amp; Wormed $200 740-256-1686
Ltoyd E Esque PhOne 304 773
AKC
Boxer
Pups
$2?5
5479 Mason WV
(304)675 5786
Grubbs P ~no tunmg &amp; repa rs
Problems? Need Tuned? Ca 1 the
AKC Lab Puppies For S&amp;te Cho
Ptano Or 7&lt;40 446 45:25
co late And Black First Shots
GIY8n $200 Each 740 388-9398
Hardy Stainless Steel Wood
Burntng Boller Outside $1 200
AKC Mtmature Cotlte 10 Weeks
740 388 8743
Ve y sma t Crate Tramed $150
740-256 6162
Hawa an Te r yak Recipes $3
SA S E
Kama ana
Foods
AKC Reg sterad Female Shth
PMB522 4224 Walatae Avenue
Tzu Puppy 7weeks old 1st
15 Honolulu Hl96816
sho slwormed Vet Checked
(304~75 1275
HUSTLER Commerc at Mower 5
Deck 1tl HP Engne Good Condi
AKC Reg stered German Short
I on ! S3 500 In c tudes Tra er
Haired Po nter Pups Ready To
Snow Plow &amp; Chatns Also Con
Go $200 Each 740-256 1105
tract 740 2~1216
AKC Regtstered Pomeran1ans
JET
Sh h Tz us
and
MIDI
AERATION MOTORS
Dachshunds (304)675 331;1
Aepatred New &amp; Aebutll In Stock
Can Aon Evans 1 800-537 9528
German shepherd pupp es for
sale call 304 773-5810

Aut o AC Ttit Cru se 76 000
or gnat m les Catt (304)458
1997 After6PM
1988 Mercury Sable Stat on
Wagon
Needs Tran sm ss on
Work" And M n mat Bod~ Work
Fu y Loaded $375 740 446
12110
1989 Olds Cutlass
1304)675 6693

$1200

1991 Cad1ilac Sevtlle Loaded
SS 900 OBO (304)675 5571
1991 Mercury Cougar Black New
Pant A/C PW PS PL Cru1se
T t (.ow Miles $6 500 740 446

1619
1991 Mercury Tracer 5 dr
T7 96t'ltllties auto att amlfm s1er

eo wh te w ttl blue Interior mtnm
left fronl fender damage runs &amp;
dr ves ask ng $1 450 740 992
1506 d~~ys 74Q-949-2644 eves
t992 Ford TemPQ Auto /Air Runs
Great Good Work Car $1 750
740 446 4782
1992 Oldsmobile Ach leva V 6
Auto 58 000 M liS $4 295 1990
Be rena GT $2 495 1990 S 10
$2 795 Cook Motors 740 4460103
1992 Oldsmobile Cutlass Su
preme loaded 69 000 miles
New Tires $5 800 (304)675
3986
1993 Ford Escort GT 5 sp 2 dr
au light blue/gray Interior 90 000
mtles clean $2 400 080 740
992 1506 days 740 949 2644

eves

54 Edgel

HERE'S A

&amp;IT-WELL CARD
FER MY

000 miles very clean S4995

1993 Ford Escort Wagon a/c
amflm e~~ssette Nee car $2395

1992 Otds Cutlass Supreme two

door sport red ate am/lm cas
Sette loaded OICB ride $3995

1989 Pont ac Lemans good wo k
car $995
Rutland Car Sales
740 742 3311 or 740-742 1400
t997 Ford Taurus Gt... 4 dr sa
dan 3 0 V 6 auto 27 000 miles
black w lh camel leather nte or
ale CO ptayer sunroof ps a loy
wheels asking $10 200 740 992
1506 days 740 949-2644 8\feS
1999 FORD EXPLORER $100 I
OBO Se zed AM Sell g Loca ly
Fee 1 800 409 7511 Ext 9935

North

2 NT

Pa ss

6 NT

Holmes Ire m Oshaw a

MacLachlan
22 t~lock
(continUOUS)
23 Dupe
24 Legends etc
25 Racetrack

Rose - rose"

numDers

27 Actor Balctw1o
28 - -do well

East
All pa:ss

29 Sea eagle
31 Cunnon~
33 Donkey s cry

40 Eucalyptus
eater
41 Slippery

42 Alps e g
(abbr)
43 Ireland

44 Anctent
Fterstan

Onlano

46 By the ttme

- - to
Phoemx
47 A1dge on the

skin
48 Approxt
mately
(2 wds)
50 Asian
52 Dawn

holiday

goddess
53 Wh1te House
imts

CELEBRITY CIPHER

and

Paul Dcnms from Wmh:r Spnngs
Fia and J o hn Long lrom Cassel
hcrry Fla 1 hey scored I 731 mstant

by LUIS Campos
Celebnty C pher cryp ograms are created rom quotabons by tamous peop e past and
present Each letter n the c phe stands for anothe

Today s clue 0 equals 0

matchpotnts wh1ch 1s JUst over 72
percent ( Aller each deal' the pam

....

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Tf\OSE. '1'0:. li'll\1"-~
oo '&lt;c~ Sf!.l n

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-'W:: CNl KIP
'(E!Z ~Tllff

Off I

BIG NATE

Wantmg To Trade Complete Sal
e!lite System For 4 Wheeler
2oocc Or Smaller 740-387 7117

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

consulted the sL:mc sheet and trnme
d1atcly rccC'I\ Cd thc1r potnt scores
wllh 100 hcmg the maxtmum)
H ,(mc s pllVcd thts SIX no trump
contraLt 'cry vn.: II
\Vhcn you ~lanu.:: only at the
N mh South hands there seem w be
12 ~.:as) t m .: k!'t t\\to spades tw o
he tns ! 1ur d1unomls md four ~..:luhs
Th~.:n 'ou 111 tt ct.: th~.: h 1d dtamond

G

L NYNH

Y N

B Z R

S B

G L

ZWGLGZL

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MTB

J

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K U Z R J

K

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West \~ nh m un cn\ tllblc L: h o1~..:c
of k td s 1pkd fm th~.: ht.: art liv e
thre e q ue en k1n0 lll c dtamond
qut.:cn \\qtl u L:k t\\.0 tht.:n 1 dt nnnnd
t1 dumn y s 10 '" on hut E 1st dts
umJcd 1 1 \\ p1Jc H lmc s -.on II n
unl h\ ~ tsh n h s ! Jur d uh tncks
\\.~..: L 1 d lum 11y dts~ 1rdcd a dta
111 1Tid E l:-.1 the ht.: lfl two West was
ld "tth t\V sp u.k:-. tv. o hearts and
two d uno llls Rc H..ltni! the. end
posttton ClUrt.:l.:ll} dc~.:luer took hts
al:c kmg Jf padcs md dummv s
heart a~..c hcl &gt;rc cxlttn i! wtth t heart
Weo.;L hH.I t, \\ t i l " th th~.: JK k and
lead a dtamond a\\ I) lwm hts ktng
mnc mto dul)li11Y s a~,;c Jal k ten ace
Plu s 990 w" worlh 85 match
potnts to Nonh Sou1h (and 15 to
EaSI West )

G E

TKYN

Z L N

T R S U A N

U N

UKNV

FZ K L

GJ?

TRSUAN

AGE N

PREVIOUS SOLUTION MA great name ha s been lost from G erman sports
Formula One dr ver Ralk Schumacher lament ng Steff Graf s et1rement

hrcak

,~~:~;~' S© \\.~ \'\.Illite II lloy CLAY I

"t

POLlAN

tr~·

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"

WOlD
GAM I

0

Rearrange letters of t~e
four Kramblad words be
low to form four s mple words

I

LUTMEA

I NS0 Y

I tI I

.
rI r

1..;',

DORRE

1 am fond of an old adage tHat
says Consult the w1sdom of
.------~~~....,your heart as well as

I_

I

I
_

_

_

_

NOYHIM
1--~r.-7

1995 17 Hydra Sport 90 hp
Johnson Itt trim trolling motor &amp;
trailer read~ to go $7 800
1997 18 Sass Tracker Pro TeafTI
60 hp mariner with trolling mo1or
&amp; trailer $6 700
1998 18 800 Series Nitro 120 hJ&gt;
Mereu y Dual Conso le bu 1 In
banery charger Ira ter S8 900
1998 24 Sweetwater pontoon 90
hp Johnson tandem ute wlttl
brakes $13 700 740.992 6520

.

.

I

...::;lr-,lr...::;lrorrl ()
.

.

.

_

Co.,pleoe

the

chuckle

quoled

by I II ng n the m u ng wo ds
L.-1--'--..l..--'--'----' you develop from step No 3 be low

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

1995 Pro craft 17 112ft bass
,boat w/1998 mercury 100 hp !;o
thrust dual battery trolling motor
$1 0 000 or trade 304 882 3652

Damty Wh1le Irony Length ON any LAWN
Last summer I concluded that 1f dandelions were hard
to grow they would be most welcome ON any LAWN

Aula Parts &amp;
Accessories

IWEDNESDAY

Budget Prtoed Transmlsstons
anct Eng nes All Types Access
To Over 10 000 T ansm•sstons
eve JOints 740-245-5677
New Rep acement Gas Tanks D
&amp; A Auto A p t e~ WV (304)372
3933 or 1 8Q0-~73 9329

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1981 H Lo Carnper In E)Ccellent
Condition Call 740 388 9869 AI
ter4 PM

SERVICES

Home
Improvements

Res dent at or commerc a w r ng
new servtce o repatrs Maste U
censed ele ct tc1a n Atden o ur
Ele ctrical WV000306 304 675
1786 I

18

Neal

Aclor

21 Conce•ve

grade

Sandwich sllop

Actor 0

20

ston trum Apx Ontano and Nell

Motorcycles

Electrical and
Relrlgerstlon

12 Pester

13 Poor

on
Sawrday Nonh South flfst place
ended m a uc bct"een Hckn Joh n

i981 Honda CX500 Custom Mo
torcyc le tid Tires Battery
Plugs &amp; Brakes Mllei&amp;gJ. 21 700
$800 Includes 2 Fu ll Face Hel
mats Call 304 773 5723 Ask For
Rusty

840

Close relative
Reddish dye
loraell airline
(2 wds l

Jat

1994 F 350 4K4 fully loaded
naw t res chrome wheals tot of
e~ras 740.992 5532

Ltvtngston s Basement Water
Proofing all basement repa rs
done free e st mates ltfet me
guarantee 12yrs on job e~perl
ence (304 )895 3887

aHirmaltve

By Phillip Alder

1 993 Chevv Che~enne 4WO )!•
ton pickup 350 automatiC runt' &amp;
toO;ks good must sell $10 000
OBO ca\1740--992 2665
~

C&amp;C General Home Matn
tenence Pa ntlng vinyl siding
carpentry door$ w ndo ws baths
moo 18 home repair and more For
lree est mate call Chet 740 992
6323

s.-·

Basinger

5 Slangy

Tim. Y. t.: l:k we ha\l: been loo ktng
at th e Mlll t:nn1um Game s t rgam1ed
hy the Anwman Con1rau Bndgc
League lwo u mt csts \\Cre held on
June 4 and 5 11 5&lt;i0 sllcs across Nonh
Amenc 1 More 1han $ 16 800 was
ra~&gt;cd for the A.CB L Education Foun

1992 Chevy van 314 ton 350 engine 52 000 m les extra clean
runs good 7 40 992 3348

Appttance Parts And Serv ce All
Name BraM s Over 25 Years e~
per enca AI Wo rk Guaranteed
French City Maytag 740 446
7795

3 Grad
4 Actross

27 One (Scot l
30 Lolo and Jots

Millennium
Sunday

SISTER
Z.ONIE

1991 Dodge Grand Caravan Ex
cellfnl Condition Must See To
Appreclalel 740 2&lt;5-5043

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond tlonal tlletlme guarantee
Local references turn shed Es
labllshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446 0870 I 800 287 0576 Rog
ers Waterproofing

1994 Buick Skylark Cus tom one
owner ate amlfm cassette 72

West

WELL BY THEN U

1987 Bronco II V 8 automatle
air 4Ji4 excellent shape $4100
call740.742-8709 EMtnlngs

1996 Pontiac Grand Am SE 4
door ate amflm cassetle great
car $5995
1995 Pontrac Grand Am SE two
door coupe a/c amlfm cassette
nceca $4995

South

SHE COULD BE

(304~75-5909

810

person
2 ltaliln money

38 Cease

1987 Astra Van 4 3 v 6 ACI
Good condition $2700 080

1996 Jeep Cherokee Auto trans
mtsslon 49 000 miles S12 500
304 937 2805

DO~N
1 Old fashooned

Openmg lead • 5

1980 Toyota 4K4 S1 200 OBO..
Runs Excellent Great Truck For
Th s Coming W inter! 740 3888461 740-992-6976

790

the bar
57 Fr•c.a•

Vulnerable East West
Dealer South

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

760

s-

pototo
11Br01dc111
19 T~nlo pill'*'
HaoiiiH
20 Retolive
23 Rock a Ptnk 26 -Lingus

11

6
35 Soup dloh
7
36 Guitarist Paul
8
37 Naullc:al rope
39 M--ol-pearl
9
40 Pan of JFK
11
42 Olllce note

• A K J 2

1995 Ctlevy/4X4 Exl Cab PS
P B Anti Lock TlltWheel AMJ
FM Stereo 12Disk/CD Player
Pr Dr lod&lt;s/Pr Seats&amp; lumbar
Control Keyless Entry (304)882
3506

740

Doc • friend

34 experience

• 9 5 3
South
• A K 8 5
• K I0 8
• Q1

1988 SIO Truck 4X4 Automatic
GOOd Condn10n (304)882 2625

1997 GMC J mmy SLT Gold Ed!
lion loaded only 16 000 mtles 1 1
months of factory warranty re
matn ng $20 000 cart 740 661
3226 after 7pm

Booldc-•

record

32 Grander

• 5

fiE~

1986 Ford F150 pickup $1200

1994 GraM Am GT 64 000 Actu
a M tes A 1 Power EKcellent
Condition 740-446-4604

Fee

111£ UIJ(OW

ASTRO-GRAPH
Thursday Scp1 23 1999
Even though 11 1s fine that you
m1gh1 prefer partners'" most every
thrng you do your greatest success
es m the year ahead ue hkely 10
come from mdependcnt perfor

mances
LIBRA (Sepl 21 Oc1 23) Watch
how you respond It others toda)
cspectally af you re ltred or under a
lot of stress You L:Ould come off as
rather tactless and w1thoul regard for
others tf you re careless m your com
ments Know where to look for
r omance and you II find 1t The
Astro-Gmph Matchmaker Instantly
reveals wh1ch s1gns are romantically
perfect for you Mall $2 75 to Ma!Ch
maker c/o th1s newspaper PO Box
1758 Murray Htll S1a11on New

York NY 101%
SCORPIO (Ocl 24 No v 22) Even
your financial ptcture looks preny
good for now be leery o f any leaks
lhal need l o be plugged up 1odny
~ uc h ao.; cll. tra\lasancc Ll 111 nesscnttal
cxpcnJ tlurcs

,r

SA(o!TTARIUS IN&lt;' 2l Dec

r

51

(alrtlnel

• Q 6 4 2

Livestock

2 B Year old Mares and a one
Horse Tratler (740) 367 7227

640

1983 Chevy Blazer New Pamt &amp;
Tires 414 Automatic AJC $2 300
Or WtK Trade On Later 4x4 Truck
Chevrolet

AJI086

N&lt;£ ((JIJ(ERIJED Af!CXJT

1978 Ooclge Slep Side 4 WO Autbmallc 318 Red Wilh Chrome
Bumpers Excellent Shape Inside
~ Out Show Quality Must See To
Appreciate 740-446-978C

1982 Chevy S 10 excellent con
d 1on S2300 (304)675-1550

•

4&gt;JI093 2

Fee

1978 Ford 4 Wheal Drive
ShortDed Truck 4 Speed 4 Inch
Llll Now Tires 740-245-5991

7 4

A 7 3

MUSil&lt;'~~

t996 Jeep Cherokee 4WO Auto
Air 4dr 49 000 miles $12 500
304 937 2805

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

•

•

• Q 7 4
East

1995 Monte Carlo Z34 70 000
miles &amp;JiC cond rtd wl llntad
wtndows 304 675 2714 or 3C4
576-2092

Formal Dresses Short &amp; Lo.ng
S1zes, To 9 740.379-2311

LOSE WEIGHT FASTI Metabol
1e 1000 2 Month Supply $15 95
Buy 2 Get 1 FREE E:xtra
Strength Bacted By Nat onal 0 a
betas Research Counc 1 COOICC
I 800-804 0436

092299

1995 Escon LX Automatic Wllh
A r Cond t1onlng AMJFM CU
sette Wlttl Only 8 700 M Its
Asking $7 500 740-379--2766

U91 FORO MUSTANG 1100 I
OBO Seized And SeiHng Locally
Fee 1 aoo 409 7511 E•t 9938

Wale hne Special 3/4 200 PSI
$:21 95 Per 100 1 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 AI B ass Com
press on F n ngs In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 800 537 9528

Bedroom Suite Hardwood Dark
Finish 9 Drawer Dresser 5 Draw
er Chest 2 Draw Nlghlstand
Queen Stze Bookcase waterbed
$800 For Entire Set S600 WilhOul
Waterbed 740 388 9445 Alter
630PM

AKC German Shep,trd Pups
Whllt And Sll\ltr Available
Snow Cloud &amp; German ltn-es
740..245 9213

Pumpk ns Pumpk ns over 300 to
chOOse from 1 m le soulh ol T•
pers Pans Oh Howe Caldwell
740 667 3&lt;493

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Bassett crib solid maple with
mattress $125 304 675 3440 al
ter 4 pm

buy

oldewayo
55 Swill oongo
15 Blrgoln words 56 Without Ice II
14

wash ng Ma cn ne 6 yrs o d
$100 Kings ze Walertied w th
Fa me $75 Glr s Hidden Treas
ures B ke $25 Child Hockey
Table $20 Call (304)675 2927
after 6PM

20 Gallon Copper Kettle library
Table Milk Can Mise Iron Items
Horse CoJtar VIctor an Picture
Frames 740 44&amp;0639

411- Jlma

49Ho-

(I whlele)

Buy or sell A verlne Antiques
1124 E Main Street on Rl 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm Sunday100to
6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner

1/2 Carat Olamond Solita e A ng
VS 2 Clarity t4K Ye11ow. Gold 6
Prong T1ffany Band Appraised At
$2 000 Less Than One Year Old
Sl 100 OBO 740-446-4548

45 Dutch ta.n

ACROSS

PHll..LIP

2 1) Thts

mtght be one of tho'\c days
when you can get your hack up over
a rnvml matter If you start snappmg
at the farmly you can ex.pccl the same

treatment tn return
CAI'RICORN (Dec 22 J m 19)
1 compamon s hchav~nr 1m

Sh&lt; ull

v u tntlay find a way to resolve
m explode over I ( r hold
m ) 1 mgcr In ctthcr r.:asc tlu: Its
cr v.uuld he you
AQUARIUS (Jon 20 Fch 19]
When n comes. to gcu ng mvul vcd tn
an agreement today that rcqutrcs a
cDsh uutlay be extremely cauttous
tn!C

tl rather th

even tf your assocti.Jicli are sm:mll;

related
PISCES (Fch 20 Mard1 201 If
; ou wanttu make a deal wa tch your
step hat you don t become so nggrcs
SI\C o r cnme oiT too self sen. mg that
you chase all your prospects &lt;~way Be
cog ntunt of the1r mtcresls as well
ARIES (Marc h 21 Apnl 19)
Because you mtght tend to be m ore
•dcall!itiC than practtcal today you
could come up qune shon m he ng
ahlc to execute your 1dcus and pro
grams Get your head out
the
clouds

"r

TAURUS (Aprol 20 May 20] Be
on guard today of a competitor prob
tng around to find out e.11actly wh u
you re dotng !hat she &lt; r he ~.: uld
fault you on or steal your thunder
Protect your tntercsls
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) You
could castly be cnuccd to do sumc
thmg aga nst your better JUdgment
todav 1f you do not stand up under
pressurl! fo r what you know to be
nght and prudent SttfTcn your bm:k
bone
CANCER (June 2 1 July 221
You rc rm ght end up shouiJ cnng the
en tire load at work today m a proJC~o:t
t~at reqUires teamwork because nf the
mcnmpetcnce of another 1 ry not to
let 1t up set you
I I 0 (July 21 Aug 221 Alih&lt; ugh
a cohort may merely he tn ng 1 pre
teet hr~; or hero" n mt c rc~; t o,; 1 ld 1y !he
fallout cnuld land nn you Be pre
pared to ward ul f be ng 1 ltsy
VI ROO (Aug Zl Sq 1 221 D n t
he the rru C ric~ lknJ ~.:r ' ' I t.:o.:rn g
th srupl!t ns t n tht: tu n c lr nl t1 da)
d tc. tt tnt nh me nhcr hc g t11 \\ til

r

Hli! 11 pn pt:rl) t lt) l cr IL \\111
11n thcr Pul l t ~~:\ her 1 I 1 ri

nit.:

SEPTEMBER 22

I

�•

•
,.Page 16 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

.

WedMaday, September 22, 1999

••

.

crt. 1rrrrrrrrrrrrrrr1
.

1 1.1.I 1. l r1

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•

•

September 20th thru 25t~ l
.
~ -· ,!·tq_ . Mon-Tues-Wed 9AM til8 PM~ . ·'\~......
Thuts-Fri-Sat 9AM til9 PM
~

FREE".

. .

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.

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•

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I

.

.

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: YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO BUY UNTIL YOU STOP HERE ! r ·:
. Special Pri.ces on All Hom~s * Special Financing * Fantastic S·a vings
r
'

.r ,

Over 25 ·Hom_e s on Display * Factory Rebates on Select Models
Complete Land .Home Financing Available * Total Drywall Available
....

r ·:
I

·...... .

'

·

.

"'
~·
,

•

•

. J /' '
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'

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. }''• :"' ;
I

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"FREE DELIVERY"
150-MILE RADfUS

//

1uppfen1ent To: . ,

.

.

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, September 22, 1999 .
(

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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="26681">
              <text>September 22, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="207">
      <name>fox</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="513">
      <name>hunnell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
