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                  <text>·Thursday
S.ptember 23, 11111$

Weather

Football previews, Page 5
Ann deals with domestic violence, Page 7
Twain named Entertainer of Year, Page 12

Today: Sunny
High: 70s; Low: 40s
Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 70s; Low: 40s.

evE~al1td

hands

Detroit s-1 loss

-Pag~4

•

at
Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 75

Stngle Copy - 35 Cents

1999-2000 _- HEAP applications now available
Regul ar HEAP applications for the 1999-2000 · tered by the Ohio Department of Development,
Home Energy Assistance Program are now avail- Office of Community Services. It is desig ned to
ab le at area businesses and public offices· through- . help low-income Ohioans meet the cost of home
but Gallia and Meigs counties, according to the heating. HE;AP pays a one-time payment for most
·
Galli a-Meigs Community Action Agency.
POCO-regulated utility customers reflecting their
Among the places applications are a\!ailabl e: the usage for the winter heating season. Vouchers are
Community Action offices in Cheshire, Gallipolis issued to non-regulated utility custom ers, master
and Pomeroy, JTPA offices, Department of Human metered and other applicants who do not have a
Services, senior citizens centers, Social Security, utility bill in their name. Applications will be
Veterans Administration, courthouses, post offices, accepted through March 31, 2000.
bulk fuel vendors, pharmacies, banks, grocery
A household applying for HEAP must report
stores and other business locations.
total household income for 'the past 12 months for
HEAP js a federally funded program adminis- . all persons 18 years of age and older. The total

household income is defined as the gross income of
.
'
dependent min ors under 18 years of age.
Written verification of the previous 12 months

eltctric · bi~l if you d o not have ele~tric heal.

1

Community Act ion ,s ta ff are available to assist

all househo ld members, except earned income of

pe ople with th eir application at the Galli a ·Coun ty
CAA One-Stop Office, 32;2 Second Ave., Gallipoincome is. required .
·
·
·
lis, and the Meigs Coun ty One -Sto p Office, 33091
Fail.ure to provide the required documentati on · Hiland Road. Pomeroy.
will delay the processing of yo ur application.
Fu rth'er information is available by calling ComThe tota l house~old income of an applicant must munit y Action at 367-7341 or 446-6849 in Gallia
be at or below 150 percent of the 1999-2000 feder- County; 992-6629 or 992-2222 in Meigs County;
al poverty guidelines.
Gallia Count y Senior Ci tizens Center, .446-7000;
A copy of your- fuel bill or a document showi ng Meigs Co unty Senior Citizens Center, 99 2-216 1;
your prim ary fuel and primary f~el supplies must the HEAP hot line at I (800) 282-0880; or TTD for
be prov.ided. Also, please include a copy of your the hearing impaired at 1-800-686-1 557.

Area lawmaker applauds state's ·farm relief initiative ·

..

Page Eight-Fall Car Care Edition-The D!IIY Sentinel-Sept. 22, 1999 .

Car-Care Service _Centen Take Disposal Of.Used Motor Oil Off Yo• Hands ·
J U.~ whnt do reople do wirh rhut tL-.ed
motor 11il1 "K'e thc;y· re done with il?
Well. the Environmental Pmtection

to provide qukk and ensy.maintenance
for their cars without dealing wi th the
disposal issues associated with . old
tires und used nil.
"Not tH1Iy is a car-co.1re service &lt;.'e nter
like.. Firestoile .a ha!islc-frcc option in
lcnns of gelling mutine maintenance
pertOrrncd un your car. hut it aiM takes
.the responsibility ·of di~po!\intt of used
oil out of consUmers' hani.Js. while
ensuring the oil will be dis posed of
pn~rly ur recycled and refined to make
new motor uil,''.~ys Jnhn frcancy. marketing mnna~cr for Kendall Motor Oil.
While cl ose to 60 perce nt of
American motorists changed their own
nil in 19K9*. thul figure ha.t.; dropped
10 about 50 percent over the lust 10
years .•• .: ·We're secing ,a growing
trend Inward people taking :~e ir cars
to ~crvicc centers becnuse more and
more people these days would rother
ha ve somenne else change their oil

e~ti ml\te~ that, while
million gallon.' or motor
oil is sukl annuully in the United Stales,
nhnut 200 million gallons or used motor
oil is improperly disposed or eDFfl year.•
("Improper disposur· ,,r motor oil is
defined as dumpin!! " ,, 1he ground.
tossing il in the lrJsh, or pouring it down
storm sewers and drains.)
· ,
This is astoni!~hingly significant,
con11idering the fact that used oil
frum 01. single oil change (alx,ut I gaiJun ) can pollute and ruin I million
gallons of fre .~;ih water- a yenr's
supply for SO people - if poured
down a s tor1m dr;~in .•
·
·
Engineers ul Kendall Motor Oil
suggest car-care centers, like Firestone
Tire &amp; Service Centers. as a convenient st~lutinn fnr CtHlsum ~rs who want

Agency (EPA)

more lhan

6(W}

1han do it lhem selver;," ~ays Pe te
Pistone. manager or public relat ions
for ~irestone Tire &amp; Service Centers.
However. for those do-it-you.ulrers
who like to change their own oil.
Kendall Motui' Oil offers the following
tips fm disposing of used oil properly.
• Cnll e&lt;.·t used oil in a di sp(lsu ble
container or ..;peciully designed oil llrain container.
• Take the contoiner of used oi l1o n
designated collection center.
Pi s tone emphasizes that peop le
s~ould not di spo!\e of used oil by
pouring it on the gmund or thrnwing
it in the rrash, spreadinglit on mads,
or pouring it Into .~;iewer or . storm
drain s.
• 1997 figures cnurtesy of the EPA
Web site.
.. Courtesy of lhe Cou11cil fur
Automorive Reliability.

·DON ,.ATE OTORS, INC.•
308 E. MAIN _ST.

POMEROY, OHIO 45769
-(740) 992·6614. (800) 837·1094
.

on

H-r line projtK:t to extend H-r.llnH
Main Street
from the Middleport Corporation Une to Legion Terr1ce. The
$1.1 million projtiCt Is funded largely by a $300,000 "'ppalachlan
Regional Commission grant, a $375,000 state grtmt and a $5,000
.Community Development Block G..-nt. Workera are shown here ·
covering a n - - r line In the Monkey Run araa.

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. acquisition of Century Aluminum
rolled products unil at Ravenswood has been completed by the Paris-based
·
.
·
manufacturer, Pechiney.
Along with the Ravenswood facility, Pechiney has purchase Century's
.
cast plate ~nil at Vernon, Calif.
Completion of the acquisition followed !he signing of a definitive-agreement on July 26 and the obtaining of ~tandard governmental and regulatory
·
approvals.
The rolled products unit at Ravenswood has the capacity to produce up
to 600 million pounds of rolled aluminum products a year on some of the
largest rolling equipment in the aluminum induslry.
The cast plate unit can produce 15 million pilunds a year of cast aluminum plate. The u.nit is the world's ·second largest producer of these products.

Five Tips fo.r .Buying
That New _Car
~-

I. LEARN THE INVOICE COST
Wind uut whlilt lhr dealer
· pa id for the rar) ·
Here's th e: J'C:al key to you r deal :
you must find out what the ~ealer pa1.:
for the car so ynu cnn negmiate the
price you' ll pay for it. The hcsl way to
• do this is to make a quick ca ll to the
Consumer Reports New Ca r Price
Service to 'order your per.~;ionn l reporl
-you' ll be glad you did . New car
buyers who have used' the report SaYed
on average $ 1,700 on thei r purchase.

l. GET REAVV TO BARGAIN
. Yt,ur homework i .~ dune . h 's o1ll
there ir: plain . En~li sh with an e-J.sy-mfnllnw .repun. The invoice- nnd sticker~
prk·L• cmnpari.~;u n s give ynu a dea r
unc.lerstan&lt;.ling uf ynur negotiating
room. You nr.e ready.
3. START BARGAINING
Ask the J&gt;alesperson for lhc lleulcrship's lowest markup over lhcir cusl.
And ·always hargain using: the invoice
p1i. .. 11cver dtl\\ n from the sltckcr p~it:e~.

4. PI.AV THE GAME
The· advit:e yu~ receive wi th your
· report to•kes you through the hard part.
ncgutiating a l'air prK:c. And, it takes
yuu step-by-slcp lhruugh the rc."il ur the
negotiatin~ . gume with pml'essiom1l .
new -car-hUying ad\'icc sut·h a10. "Rc

l'

~llgnm.ertt$;;-

wary ." 1he dealership's "bu:; iness m:ma~er" may lry to ~II you undercooting,
ru ~tpmofing. fli.bric prolcctioo, ex:ended
warrunty. wind!'hiclll etching. ~c. 'lltey
generJlly are all worthless or overpriced.

~ G'4o
~ cars lig~. ~uty ttueks
. •• .-,:f; . . . .
any re~1rs extra
I

·~

,,,

1-

on u pri ce fnr }'our pew l:ar.

When il' s time to talk trade-in.. you •
should k.now what your tr ade-in is
wurth. whether you sell it pri valely or
to a dealer. You can get th01t inronniltinn from the service, too - it costs
just an ndditional $ 10.
1- K00 -258-0 327

or

c~~;d~·g~;;;t' op;e.;ti;;gurot'eiiaeiloiJ;~n;OAf~;m;... s t o r e
Ames returned as a retail presence in ing, which occurred after a traditional ribGallia County today when store _officials bon-cuttirag ceremony: The ribbon was cut
held a grand opening ceremony in the 'Ohio by Lilly's wif• Shei la and daught.e r McKayRiver Plaza site formerly occupied by Hills. lab.
Founded in 1.958, Ames, based in Rocky
The opening was among 56 Ames
Hill,
Conn., expanded in the 1980s with a
scheduled for today in Ohio, .Connecticut,
Illinois, indiana, Kentucky, Massachusells, new store program and the acquisition of
Tennessee and West Virginia. Twenty of the other discount chains, usuch as Ncisner
openings are in Ohio, and Gallipolis is Brother&gt;, King• and G.C Murphy. Ames
among four in southeastern Ohio, the others originally ·operated in Gallipolis in the former Murphy store in the _Silver Bridge
being Ironton, Chillicothe and Marietta.
Plaza,
.but closed _In the early 1990s when
''This is what we've worked for 2-1/2 .
months," Gallipolis store manager Rick Ames filed for bankruptcy. That building
Lilly told employees prior to the grand later became the base for Quali ty Farm &amp;
~leet.
.
opening. "I dedicate this store to you."
Ames
returned
to
prolitabilny
in l993
Covering about 60,000 square feet, the
and
has
continued
an
improved
fin
ancial
local Ames has 125 on its staff. Lil ly said
. that all former Bills staffers who wanted 10 s tandi~g since, accor~ing to a company
release . Und"cr a targeted expansion prowork for Ames are employed at the store.
. "We wan'ted (o maintain local jooo and gram,' Ames purchased 155 Hills stores -'- ,
we took care of the current help;: Lilly said. including the Gallipolis site- in December '
" fhese people have worked very hard to 1998. .
Of the stores opened today. 47 are the
make th is day pnssi ble."
Crowds ~ nakin g into the parking lot last of the (ormer II ills and nine were previwere on hand for the store's official open - ously Calder outlets.
Conversion of the lOCal ;;tor~ into an
OPENED TODAY - Sheila Ully,
Ames
began during the summer after Hills
wife of Gallipolis Ames store manclosed.
ager Rick Ully, helped her daughter
The grand opening was one of two for
McKaylah cut the ribbon this mornIng for the store's grand opening In ' ancho r stores at the Ohio River Ptti?a. 1l1e
the Ohio River Plaza. The store, new Kroger ope ned last week at the shopwhich employs 125, Is In the former ping center in the buildi~g formerly occupied by Big Bear.
·
Hills outlet.

,

~ i s it

www .consu me rreporls. org/Fu nc t i oils/
Murc/Pnx.lserv/newt:ar.html nn the
Internet. and for' $ 12, ynu' ll rel·eivc a
IU- tu I S-pugc report by fax or mail
tlt&lt;1l indudcs:
•the invoice pri r.:c 111 guide tn whu t
the dealer paid lOr the cur); ·
• the sti.:ker price (what the dealer
wants you tu pny);
• invt,ice and slider prices fur all
uptions and pao;:kages;
• current rc'tHtles, um1llvertised
inccn.ivcs omd htl!Jllacks :
• Cun:;.u mcr Rqu ~u~ · cqu ipmc nl
rccumm cndati11nS; anll
• snlid advice on how to negotiate
ynur hc..;t deal.

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated Presa Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presented with an open-ended question
about plutonium ~ontamination at_ a .government-owned weapons
plant, a row of mi~rophones and a captive audience of House members, Energy Depanment, officials- looked straight ahead and said
·
nothing.
" It's the first time I've seen a panel -speechless," quipped Rep.
Edward Whitfield, R-Ky.
Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Ohio, asked the DOE officials Wednesday' for
explanation of why it would be fa ir to provide compensation for
exppsed workers at the Paducah ,Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Kentucky
but 'to excl~d~, workers at sister plants in his Ohio district and in Tennessee:
In recent weeks, Paducah workers have learned that they were
exposed to dangerous levels of plutonium but were never warned or
. for tvio State Highway Patrol troopers, it w.S a
given any special protection.
case of being in the right·place at the right time, as
Some plutonium-laced uranium· also was handled at th~ Portsmouth
their response to an incident along U.S. 35 last
Gaseous Diffusion Planl in southweekend was instrumental in saving a heart attack
ern Ohio, but the amounts and
victim's life.
.
exposure levels have not been
"Irs something we're prepared to do, but don't
determined.
do on a regular basis, so we were lucky to be
" We have a large investigative
there," said Trooper Keith A. Fellure of the Galli astudy going on which wjll lry to
Meigs Pos~ who along with Trooper Robert-J.
look
at
'that
issue
as
well
as
other
Jacks
administered cardiopulmonary resuscitation
2 Sections - 16 Pages
issues," David Michaels, the DOE
to Kenneth fry, 50, West Columbia, W:Va., which
assistant secretary for environment,
kept him alive until the G_allia &lt;;:ounty EMS to get
Calendar
10
safety and health, told a House
to the scene.
Classifieds
13&amp;14 Commerce Committee panel .
For Fellure, a 7-1/2 year patrol veteran, and
Right now, he said, "The best_we Jacks, who graduated from the patrol academy on
15
Comics
can do is estimate what the expo- , July 30, it had already been a hectic Sunday.
Edilorlals
2
sures were."
Both had investigated an accident on State
3
Local
Michaels didn' t promise that
Route 7 North ·near Gallipolis when they were
there would be identical treatment called upon to help· local police catch two men
of workers at Paducah, Portsmouth
who allegedly stole several hundred dollars worth
and Oak Ridge, Teu.1., but said his of merchandise from K fllart and fl ed on foot north
boss, Energy Secretary Bill
along Upper River Road. I
Richardson, made a commitment
Fellure and Jacks caplured the suspects and
"to see thill e~ery aff~cted worker
turned them over to police. The_ troope~ were
Pick 3: 1-1-6; Pick 4: 0-5-7-1
is covered."
returning to the post at 6:53 p.m. when they
Super Lottq: 4-9-16-21-26-46
"We're just trying to figure out
noticed two vehicles parked partially on 35 and
Kicker: 2-6-4-0-4·3
how to get there," he said.
·
saw
three people standing around a man lying in
W.VA.
DOE expects its investigators to
the
roadway.
They stopped the_,crui ser they were
Daily 3: 8-7-1; Daily 4: 1-0-1-0
start work in Ohio in mid-Decemriding
in,
positioned
it to protect the victim and
C 1999 Ohio V.ll... y Publishing Co.
ber, Michaels said.
bystanders from traffic, and directed on~ individ-

a
· state troopers
response -keeps area man alive

~'

S.IF VOU IIAV.: A TRAIJE-IN ...
Oun ' t even menlion it until yo u' ve

Cu ll

-_,Rep.

Officials silent on reason for Piketon,
Ridge Department of Energy exclusion

.

a~ reed

state 'were less affected.
"However, because of this uneven occurY~r~s yield IS
renee, overall yields around the co·untry will
tQ be
be unaffected,'' he added. "Besides having
to mBny
less to sell, farmers from this area will also
'
be unable to get an overall higher price for
reg on •··
their product."
funding package Is
In response to the problem, Carey said the
method that Cliff
Taft administration is increasing effons to
'thetn surVIve."
find new profit' opportunities for ex isting
products. One strategy is to devel op a one-.
'
John A.
year pilot program !O utilize'Biodiesel . made
' ' commenting 011 Gov.
specifically from soybeans. to power Ohio
Tllflll' droughU.Uef
Department of.Tiansportation vehicles.
, Additionally, the Drought LINK program
created by State Treasurer Joseph De ters
"This year's yield is going 'to be economically
wou.ld make $10 mill ion in Slate funds avai l- .
devastating to many farmers i.n the region," said able to reduce interest rates for farmers on existi ng
&lt;:arey. who represents the 94th House District of agricul tu ral loans.
.
.
Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and eastern Lawrence ·
Meanwhile, congressional negotiators a~
counties. "This funding package is one method that weighing 'a Republican proposal to provide $8 biican help them survive."
liQn to help farmers hurt by drough t and other natCarey noted that the aid package includes a $1 ural disa•ters.
·
million commitment to help farmers meet their coU.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Lucasville, said he.
share of the USDA Emergency Conservation Pro- is working with one of the negotiators, Rep. Marcy
gram, which helps farmers _develop penmanent Kaptur, D-Toledo, to provide djrect cash reli ef to
water sources. The funding will be used to assist farmers .
livestock farmers pay tap-in fees for access to rural
Strickland said he wants' to ensure that the farm
water systems.
aid bill"includes significant direct relief to farmers
"On the positive side, not all of Ohio was affect- - not just more loans. I am also encouraging the
ed by the drought," said Carey. "Saine areas need state of Ohio to do everything in its power to hel p

Century expects to repon third quaner 1999 earnings on Oct.-26. A conference call discussi.ng the earnings has been established for Oct. 27 at 2
p.m. and can he accessed at 888-273-9885.
,
A playback nuniber has been established for those unable to participate
in the conference call. Playback begins at.5:30p.m. on Oct. 27 and ends at
11;59 p.m. on Oct. 28.
·The playback number is 1-800-475 5701 and the access ~ode is 472453.

ACCORDING TO ENGINEERS at Kendall Motor Oil, cat-&lt;:are centers, like
F.irest.one Tire &amp; Service Centers, are ._ conveilient solution lor consomen:
who want to provide quick and easy maintenance for their cars without
dealing with the dispooal iii8Ueo a.-ialed with old tires and ...00 oil.

The co~t of a new c&lt;~r h;~ s
increase&lt;.! $2,000 over the past fiv l!
yea rs-:- a lea p nf II percent. Th01t's
the ball news.
The g&lt;xxl ne.ws i .~ that the hene fi 1.~: nf
savvy ne.gotiat ing have1far outpaced
the rate of the pri~.:e increase. A recent
survey or Consumer Rerxms New Cur
Price Service cmtomcrs rcvcalel.l that
their average savings (biT the. llealer's
lisl price) was almost $1,700. up from
$ 1, Ht0 in 1994 . Thou's ri .savings of
more than 50 percent in just five ye;~rs.
· PmviJed by the inlleJlCnden •. nunprofit expert s who publish Consumer
Report.q, the Cummmer Reports New
Car Prke Sen·icc rccom menJs ynu uw
thc:o;.e fi ve tips to help you negutiollc
'your best lleal.

From AP, OVP Staff Reports
Farmers hurt by t_he drought would be
able to look for new sources of water and
buy hay to get them through the winter
thanks to a $5 million relief program proposed by Gov. Bob Taft.
Of the reliefmoney proposed on Tuesday, $4 million will provide a suooidy to
farmers to buy hay to get their livestock
through lhe winter. The money should
cover approximately 80,000 tons of an estirna~ 300,000 tons of hay needed by
farmers.
·
The rest will provide matching funds for
famiers trying to develop permanent water
resources by digging deeper wells or devel- ·
oping springs.
Taft said damage estimates to Ohio farmers
from the drought are now projected to reach $60&lt;i
million. He said there are limited state disaster
funds available but added that State Agriculture
Secretary Fred Dailey felt that $5 mill ion was a
good step.
Taft ·will ask the State Controlling· Board as
·soon as next month for the money, which has been
previously appropriated into state emergency relief
funds, said Taft spokesman Scott Milburn. He said
he doesn't e~pect the request will need separate•·
legislation.
Taft's efforts were applauded by State Rep.
John A. Carey, R-WeiiSton, who said "there are

As'your: GM Parts

supplier, we're ygur
- sO,urce for GM
GooctWreoch•·new and_
MiMk'¢-_

'~

I

. l .. ·'·&lt;Ji

,'$

&lt;

'

•

remanufactured engines
a~,;,new transmissions.
:; .

-Au Prices Are Subject to Sales TaX-* ·
CALL ~OR AN APPOINTMENT, 992-611_14 • HOURS ·a:OO AM to l):OO PM MON.-FRI.

@
BWCK"

.

'

Mon.-Fri. 9-5

Good Afternoon

Today's

,,

Sentinel

ual to direct traffic around the vehicles
parked on the road.
The.troopers checked on the victim's
condition, which initially appeared to .
be a seizure or convulsion. Fry had a
, faint pulse and was still breathing.After
getting a first responders kit from their
cruiser and notifying the EMS, they
returned to find Fry no longer had a
pulse and was not breathing.
Fellure and Jacks then began CPR
on Fry and continued with the procedure after the EMS arrived and prepared th~ ~ictim for transport. He was
taken to Holzer Medical Center, and
was later airlifted to St. Mary's Hosph
tal in Huntington, W.Va., by MedFiight. IN THE RIGHT l'uu.;~;
Fry was admilled to the cardiac Inten- Troopers Keith Felhire, left, and
Jacks
sive unit and the status of his condition
described circumstances that led them to adminiswas un available today.
ter CPR to a heart attack victim last Sunday. The
The patrol later learned that Fry had
troopers' actions have been credited with keeping
suffe red a heart attack while driving. He
the victim alive until he could be taken to a local
had been traveling westbound when the hospital.
. at\ack occurred, causing him to drift off
the right side of the road and strike a guardrail.
Fellure, who is origi najly. from Gallipolis,
Dr. Joe Crum, lhe attending HM C emergency 1joined the G-M Postlasi february. Previously, he
room physician, said "that withuul the quick had worked at the Athens Post. Jacks, who was
actions by Troopers Fellure and Jacllf, Mr. Fry assigned to Gallipolis following his graduation
would not have survived.'' according to a patrol from the academy, is originally .from Meigs
'release .

C'OUf\ty.,

'

I

•

�,'•

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

P9 · 2
~.

Death Notices

Smart cookie? Crackpot? Which is Buchanan?

East Timor

:- Cgtters to the Editor

·. Washington monument needs some work

Prime Mm•sler TOJO and Re1chsfuehrer Hitler
were misunderstood.
When World War II began, the Japanese had
already mvaded China, Korea and Manchuria,
slaughtenng m1lhons of civtlians. Americ;a put
on trade sanctions But, says Pat, the Japanese
would have " lost face" if they backed down And
so, on December 7, 1941, Japanese forces killed
Amencans and sank Amencan battleships at
Pearl Harbor To further salve lheir wounded
pride, they invaded the Ph1hppines, Malaya, Singapore, Thailand, Bunna, the Dutc~ East Indies
and many Pacific islands
H1tler? Also m1sunderstood. In 1939, 10
cahoots with the Sov1ets, the NaziS invaded
Poland, 1o the East But, says Pat, Hitler prObably
never would have turned West. Alas, England
and France bad an alliance With Pol;und. World
War II formally began. But there was no fighting
m Western Europe until the misunderstood Naz1s
occup1ed Norway, Denmark, Holland, Belg•um,
France and then the rest of the Europc;un mamland, as well as a good piece of North Africa
Three days after misunderstood Japan attacked
Amenca, misunderstood H1tler declared war on
Amenca and accelerated his nuclear weapons
program. As Buchanan sees 11, the Nazts wert'
"1mpelled" mto such actions.
Who d1d the 1mpelling? A sneaky American
pres1dent, Frankhn D. Roosevelt, who "maneu-

ver(ed) the Un1ted States i~lo ~-" How? Pat
compi&amp;Jns that Roosevelt dtdn 1 rcll the whole
truth du~na an ~lection year• (~chanan .worked
for Pres1dent Ntxon for all of h1s one and a half
tenns.)
Why did 11 happen? Of course (all agree) there
were blunders. But the real rttiSon, says
Buchanan, was thai ~mer,•,can ~hies were
enthralled by "W•Isont&amp;ntsm, the v1ew held by
President Woodrow Wilson that the world would
be 1 safer and better place, for America, if more
people were more free.
.
Buch;unan has never accepted the tdea that the
principal threat to humanity m the ~Oth centurr.
was the l?talitari"!l. forces of bot!' nght and left,
and that, m opposttlon, the pursu1t of democratic
values has been in the Amencan mterest. (Such
pursuit, he says, gets us i!lto Kosovo)
So, seekmg the presidency, Buchanan purposefully takes on two of the most profo~nd
Amencan ideas -- that we stand for ~o'?ethmg
great and that our heroes fought for. pnn~1ple.
Not tactically smart. Does he th!nk h!s v!ews
will not be challenged? Does he thtnk h1s v1ews
do not tarntsh the American experience? Does he
think h1s views will not anger those who sacnficed for hherty, and their descendants wh~ honor
that sacn_fice'
.
.
Th1s ts not a smart cook1e. The needle IS
swmging toward crackpot.

•

••
:' Bob's column will be missed
•
•

•

Martha Lee
•
I T.,._ lw.-·1
[!ina11e1d isoi!i] •

~
.~buo jso•m•

•

J

1.•''I
.•
WVA.

(,) ~--·~}~~~-~~

Sunny Pt Ooudy

Show.s

Cloudy

T 11orms

Rain

Aumes

Snow

k:a

Warmer daytime highs
forecast this weekend
Tha Assoclatad Pre..
Temperatures are warmmg up across Oh10 after several unseasonably
cool days
H1ghs Will he in the mid· 70s on Fnday and possibly 1n the 80s on the
weekend, the NatiOnal Weather Service said.
Lows tonight w1ll be 45-55. Clouds bmldmg over northern Ohlo could
produce some ram.
The record-high temperature for th1s date at the Columbus weather station was 91 degrees m 1945 wh1le the record low was 33 '" 1995 Sunset
tomght Will he at 7:28pm and sunnse Fnday at 7 21 am
'
Weather forecast:
Tomght...Ciear. Not as chilly, w1th lows m the m1d and upper 40s
Southwest wmd 5 to 10 mph
Friday. Mostly sunny. Highs m the m1d and upper 70s.
Friday mght ..Clear Lows from the upper 40s to the lower 50s
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Mostly clear H•ghs near 80
clear Lows m the m1d 50s and h•ghs near 80
cloudy. Lows m the m1d 50s and h1ghs near 80

",, AIEET THE

CANDIDATE
NIGHT

..

ates
Spokesmen for the U.S. Committee for and then Indonesian-backed mtlitias went on a
Refugees testified before Congress in May 1998 rampage, leveling the capital of Dili and slaughterthat "U S. leadership m support of the withdrawal ing persons suspected of favonng independence.
Wh1le the world dithered, Ointon's nat10nal
of U N peacekeepmg troops as soon as the genacide began effectively condemned . hundreds of sect•rity adviser, Sandy Berger, declared, "You
thousands of Rwandans to certain death ;und gave know, my daughter has a very messy apartment up
the killers confidence that the world community at college. Maybe I shouldn't mtervene to have that
would allow the genocide to proceed uninterrupt- cleaned up"
Berger's dismissal reveals just how shallowly
ed.
"Even after the U.S. government reversed 1tself held the Otnlon doctrine ts, even in the White
and belatedly agreed to authonze add1tional U.N. House. Eventually, Otnton was shamed tnlo prespeacekeepmg troops, U S officials delayed the sunng Indonesia lo accept the Australian-led force
troop deployments for months, effectively givjng The United States will fum1sh only 200 soldiers,
the kiilers a grace period to complete their cam- stnctly in logistics, intelligence and communicapaign of genoode "
tions roles.
Humanttarian groups cb;uge that the United
This ltmtted U S involvement was so political·
States was ttying lo avoid a repeat of the pohtlcal- ly easy that even arch-JsolationJSt Pat Buchanllf!
ly-damagmg 1993 disaster m Somal1a, when 13 swd 11 was OK, as d1d Texas Gov. George W aush
U.S. soldiers were killed in a vain effort 1o stop a (R) and Sen John McCain, R-Ariz., who have crit·
civtl conflict
tcized over-commitment of U.S. forces overseas.
Th1s year, the Umted States did better by KosoMeant• me, blood has been Howing all over
vo, mtervemng with alf power to drive the Serbs Africa -- most of 11 out of the v1ew of the world
out --but only after allowing them to devastate the media. Nigeria-led forces have put a temporary
province, kill some 10,000 people, and drive about stop lo hand-chopping in S1erra Leone.
1 mllhon from their homes
11Jere is a frag1le cease-fire in Congo, but civil
The admmistrat10n's tardy response 1o lndone- war and famme rage on in Angola and Sudan, and '
sian massacres 1n East Timor seems 1o reflect po$t· 10,000 soldiers can be killed in a weekend of
Kosovo reluctance to commit U.S forces, although trench warfare between Eth10p1a and Eritrea
Austral13 and various Southeast Asian countries
It IS not up to the United Slates to be the
are beanng almost the ent1re burden.
world's police force, but 1f Oinlon is going to
Legally, there was more JUSiificallon for inter- assert a U S "doctn ne" to stop ethnic massacres,
nallonal mtervenbon , m Timor than m Kosovo then he ought to see that regional police forces are
Kosovo is recognized as part of Yugoslavia. East organized, tr;uned and ready to stop bloodshed
Timor, largely Roman Catholic, was seized by early.
Mushm Indonesia m 1975 and subjected to oppresIf the Umted States can't do better than it did in
ston that has killed 200,000 people over the last 20 East Timor, Ointon should just qu1t saying "never
years
again " He doesn't mean 1l
lndonesl8 agreed to a Umted Nations-super·
vtsed tndependence vote last month. The popula(Morton Kondraclu is executive editor of Roll
lion voted overwhelmingly for tndependence -- CaU, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

The year 2000 presidential biography battle

•

.• .

-·-·

By Ban Wattenberg
Once agrun, the question. Is Pat Buchanan a
'E.s11J6lislid in 1948
smart cook•• or a crackpot?
The case for smart cook1e concerns Pat's 01ftauon with the Reform Party, founded by Ross
111 Court Sl, Pomwoy;Ohlo
Perot (speaking of crackpots)
. 740-802-21 se • Fax: 11112-2157
ln'August, Buchanan got 7 percent tn the Iow1
straw poll, behmd rehg1ous conservative Gary
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
Bauer, among voters once beheved sympathetic
\.
to Buchanan It wasn't that Pat wasn't wellCHARLES W. GOVEY
known, his recogmt1on factor is 84 percent. It
Publlsh!lr
wasn't that he ~1dn't know how to campa.gn 1n
small venues, he won the 1996 Lou1siana caucuses Fact IS, of prospect1ve candidates,
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANE HILL
Controller
Genenl Manager
Buchanan has the highest negauve raungs A July
survey
shows Buchanan at 21 percent "favor'
able" versus 50 percent "onfavorable."
n..Sentinel wwlcoo•w,.,.,. to,. ~tN trvm ,...,_"" • bnMd ~oft~
So Pat announces that Republic;uns are JUS!
loo - - . ptiD _ . or -1 """" rho bNI .,.,.,. ot bolng , . , , _
.,
cop1es of Democrats and courts the
Xerox
1)pld Mftwe.,.. ,.,.,,N end .. IMY be_.«&lt; EM!II ~ld JnclrM:N a a/~
1,
Reformers and thtlf $12 million in public camlfi&lt;!chl-.. MWI ,.,.,.. phtiM tMMrtbw. Sp.dfy • Mt• If ,,.,.,. • • ,..,., ., Jo. to • ,_.
.,_ _,.. or 1«1w. M.u fo U«.,. to 1M «lltot, Th• ~ntin~l. 111 COllf1 st.
paign
funds He sticks with h1s old themes· a
,._...IO)fl , _ .-m, or, FAX to 7«J.-.z.ZfS7.
" lime-out" on •mm•grallon, and protectionism to
'•'
"save Amencan JObs" 1 thmk these v1ews are
The clemency politics of President Clinton wrong-headed but they are surely w•thm the
amb1t of c~rr~nt Amen can thought. Trymg to
i ' An AP N-s Analysis
turn adversity to good fortune is the mark of a
By WALTER R. MEARS
smart cook1e
• AP Special Corraspondant
To see the crackpot case, turn to Buchanan's
WASHING!'ON (AP) - Absolutely, Presulent Omton saJd tw1ce, for
· emphasts, when he demed that pohllcs was mvolved 10 the clemency he offered new book, " A Republic, Not an Emplfe," pub16 Puerto Rican separaltsts, m what COngress call~ a deplorable concess1on to hshed to comc1de with his presJdln'tial run Pat ts
~ terrorists.
runnmg for pres1dent by oppo$mg America's
Whatever the reasonmg hehmd h1s dec•s•on, 11 has absolutely not heen good v1ctonous role m World War II' (Wh1ch ended
pohbcs for h1m, or for h1s Wife's Senate camprugn m New York
'
55 years ago ) Pat 1s runmng agamst encourag·
In a five-page letter exphumng his deciston, Omton s&amp;d he did net mm•· ing democracy' (Just when It IS spreadmg to
• mize the "cenous crimmal conduct" of the people he granted clemency, but every corner of the world ) Better to run agamst
' that lhelf long pnson sentences were out of proportion to thelf cnmes
motherhood
World War U holds a powerful place tn
In his letter to Rep Henry Waxman, D-Cahf, on Tuesday he repeated that
he acted on the advtce of his White House counsel. "HIS recommendation and Amenca's soul More than 16 mtllton Amen·, my deciston were basc4 on our v1ew of the ments of the requests," 01nton saJd. cans fought the war. Count the• r spouses,
"Polillcal oons1derat•ons played no role m the process "
descendants and close relatives About 80 per"
CongressiOnal Repubhcans see a law-and-order 1ssue th~y can press m cent of ltkely voters have a profound and direct
' · House and Senate investigations, although a president's clemency decisions are · famihal connection wtth the war
not subject to review there
How do Americans feel about 11? The title of
No problem Sen Orrin Hatch, chrurman of the JudiCiary Committee and a Tom Brokaw's book "The Greatest Genera' ' long-shot cand1date for the 2000 Republ1can pres•denllal nommallon, saJd he tton" sums 11 up Voters are proud that they, or
• intends to look mto the process, questionmg whether the rules were followed. the If parents or thelf grandparents, played a cen. He also said m a Fox TV mterv1ew that almost anybody with brains would con· tral role 10 destroymg reg1mcs that were casting
clude that Omton offered clemency to help H1llary Rodham Omton m New totahtanan darkness across the earth Coupled
York, home to about I 3 million Puerto Ricans And Rep ' Dan Burton, R-Ind, with a later VICtory in the Cold War, Amencans
• SaJd he'll show taped evidence that two of those who got clemency made believe they have been instrumental in the sur·
bombs in 1983
v1val of human hherty. The story IS remembered
If any of thiS actually was mtended to benefit the first lady, 11 hasn't Three m fadmg photo albums on most every street m
, weeks after 01nton's clemency offer, Mrs Omton sa1d she was opposed to 11, America Books and mov1es about World War II
and that it should be wtthdrawn New York City Mayor Rudolph G1uliam, the attract huge audiences
· likely Republican ncminee for the Senate, had called clemency a m1stake, and
Buchanan says Amencans were tncked mto
there was Democrabc cnllcJsm, too Among the Democrattc opponents was entenng the war It was all a temble m1stake
1 Sen. Daniel Patnck Moymhan, whose retnement IS opemng the New York seat
&lt;
Mrs Omton 's tum agrunst clemency angered leade~ of the Puerto Rican
• political commumty in New York. Both Clintons saJd they had not d1scussed
· the matter before the pres1dent granted clemency on Aug II
By Morton Kondracke
.
Fourteen of the convicted Puerto Ricans got clemency - freedom for II,
Austral1an-led troops are on the way to East
' forg~ven lines for three others Two rejected Ointon 's conditions, wh1ch mclud- Timor, bul the place already has been ravaged by
cd renouncing VIolence and avo1dmg association w1th people who advocate 11. pro-Indonesian militias In the process, the so' So it may still be an ISSue m the Senate campa•gn And 11 could come up m the called Om ton Doctnne has proved to be empty
' camprugn for New York's pres•dent1al pnmary next March 7
talk
Vice P=•dent AJ Gore has sa1d only that he won't stand in judgment of
Pres1dent Omton enunc1ated the doctrme m
Omton's clemency dects•on, and has neither endorsed ncr opposed 11
June m the aftermath of NATO's success m dnvmg
1
Bill Bradley, challengmg Gore for the Democratic pres1dent1al nommatlon, Serb•an forces from Kosovo.
'
s;ud he wouldn't have granted clemency He sa1d on ABC that Omton should
"Whether w1thm or beyond the borders of a
explain h•• dCC1s1on to Congress
country, 1f the world commumty has the power to
The House and Senare already have declared their opf&gt;O$iUon to clemency, stop II, we have to stop genoc1de and ethmc cleansby overwhelming margins. In the House, 11 was 31 I to 41. The Senate vote was mg," Ointon told CNN's Wolf Bhtzer
95 lo 2 Those are poht1cal statements, nothmg bmdmg because Congress has
"That 1s what we d1d, but 11 took too long m
' no role m clemency, the Consututton grants that power to presidents alone
domg m Bosma That 1s what we d1d or are domg
"Making con~1ons to terronsts IS deplorable," the resolutions declare, m Kosovo. That is what we f;uled to do in Rwan· "and ... President Omton should not have granted clemency to the FALN ter- da, where so many d1ed so quickly. And what I
" rorists .,
hope very much we'll he able to do m Afnca 1f 1t
That ts the abbrev1ation in Spamsh for the Armed Forces of National Liber- ever happens again "
ation, responsible for some 130 bombmgs and robbenes between 1974 and
Well , ·•t has happened again, both in Africa and
1983. S1x people were killed, scores more InJUred, some of them d1sabled, m As1a -- m S1erra Leone, Congo, Eth10p1a, Sudan,
those ep1sodes.
Angola and now East Timor
The good news 1s that m some places there has
been some mtemational response. The bad news is
that hundreds of thousands have died and, even
when mtemational interventiOn has occurred, it's
Back in the 1930s a memonal was set about one-fourth of a m1le below heen late. It rem&amp;ns 1o be seen whether the slaughthe Shade R1ver Bndge Th1s was set commemorating the t1me that George ter can be stopped pennanently.
The real Chnton Doctnne seems lo be If the
Washmgton and hts party surveyed this part of the country. The party stayed
world media make Jttmposstble for the U S govovem1ght at lh1s locat10n
, • A reenactment of thiS was held m the 1930s after the monument was ernment to 1gnore a massacre, th1s countty may
·~placed. The group m the reenactment landed by barge and came ashore and take act1on -- slowly In East T1tnor, the Ointon
adm1mstration hesitated 1o get involved-- much as
'• did things as Washington would have done m 1770
~: Th•s area had grownup by brush and was ba{ely VISible I contacted Jeff tt d1d in Rwanda in 1994, when up to one milhon
people were butchered with the c1vihzed world
~·Thornton, one of the Me1gs County commiSSioners, and asked him tf be
looktng
the other way
,: could h~lp get th1s cleaned up. He got'" touch w1th George Arnott and h1s
Vis1tmg
Afnca last year, an apologetiC Ointon
: 1=rew d1d a magnificent JOb of cleanmg up the SJte
:
I understand some older ladies had been keepmg it clean but old age takes cla1med that the Umted States hadn't been aware of
: care of a lot of thmgs I hope somebody w1lltake respons•bll1ty for th1s and what was unfoldtng m Rwanda But tndependenl
observers charge that claim is stmply false.
• keep it cleaned up m the future
:
There is still some work that needs to be done on the legs that hold the
: monument up, but I am workmg on getting this done
•
Thanks to the lad1es that cared for 11 over the past years and to everyone , By Chns Matthews
: else that helped in any way.
WASHINGTON --The 2000 presJdenllal battle
he
longs
on "B1ography"
••
Denver 0 . Curtis
B•II
Bradley
takes us back to the basketball
DAV service officer hoop he mastered out back of hiS MISSISSippi
•••
Bidwell River home John McCam cheers the heroes wtth
whom he shared those harrowmg years as a POW
m North Vietnam George W Bush, the oldest son
of a respected father-pres1dent and the beloved ,
the death of Bob HoeH1ch, Me1gs County lost a treasure'
• With
He was an honorable man- •ntelhgent, talented, canng and humble He Barbara, sparkles m the legacy of a fam1ly that left
•; knew
and enjoyed mus1c and must have sung, to h1mself, " I love those dear the Wh1le House w1th no less honor than 11 came
These are the stones that are selling m the
, hearts and gentle people who hve tn my hometown" For he d1d
:
He was deeply devoted to h1s home county and mtensely resented out- country today Tell us more, B1ll, about wbat1t was
: Siders who came 1n and, after leavmg, wrote derogatory thmgs about us like to fight for positiOn In Mad1son Square Garden agamst the likes of ChamberlaJn and Russell.
• here 1
Tell us, John, of what •t was like to tap on your cell
:
The fir5t thing we, at our home, d1d when the Sentinel came was look for
walllo a fellow .A:mencan whose face y6u yd never
: hts column. (Lately there's been a b•g vmd That w1ll now rema•n') Through seen, to feel the JOY of such wondrous, daunting
: it he mformed, encouraged, entertamed and even amused us
brotherhood.
•
Gossip is, sadly, all too easy to hear Important, needed information IS
Tell us, George, about that rousmg "ch1mes at
hard lo come by I With his contnbut10n to our lives we knew who and when m•dn1ght" youth, that more rousing still conver·
1 to congratulate, cheer or console
s•on to manhood when you, like the grand Henry
; , Without h1s help I, personally, will be lost How will I know of all the V h1mself, accepted the fam•ly call to duty.
i. folks who need a ltft of spirits or a pat on the back?
1 asked John McCam to explam th1s, why two
:
Bob was a "people person" who I beheve could see some good m even three-term senators and a two-term Texas gover·
; the worst of us. And I feel he thoroughly enJoyed bemg out among us gath- nor are saymg so much of their b1ograph~, so little
; enng, news and v1sitlng- in hiS quiet. friendly way - shanng that ever- of thelf actual work m government Caught off.
; ready sm1le.
guard, he sa1d it may result from the way people
'· We were ricbl9 blessed to have such a special man w1th us. I'm proud and view the impeachment proceedmg, the "embar·
~ grateful to have had such a fnend
rassment" 11 caused. This may explain, he suri: Sadly, ·the 11me has come to say "So long, dear fnend, for a httle wh1le m1sed, why Amencans "want to examme people's
~ Enjoy the rest and rewards you have earned "
,
credent1als a httle more as far as thelf background
•·
For us who rematn (without h1m to remmd and urge us) 1t's not go1ng to IS concerned ",
': be easy! But, 10 honor of h1s hfe, let us all try, really hard - to "keep sm•lIt may also explam why the only three cand1': mg ..
dates grabbmg voter Interest are the three With
backgrounds apart from government, why the
Allegra Will folks havmg the toughest t1mo-are those who have
Rutland spent thelf hves m the cocoon of pohtlcs

'• '

lsptemlln 23, 1ftt

AI Gore hves today m the vice president's res- try to "spm" your way out of it. Besides, 1f
1dence along Massachusetts Avenue, the same Bradley says he wouldn 'I qu1t pract1cing as a
avenue where he grew up and went to school. Eliz- young kid "till he'd hit25 set shots from five difabeth Dole can potnt to her experience at the ferent spots on the court," you don't suspect him
Department of Transportation but what red-blood- of taking those "Mulhgans" a middle-aged Clin·
ed American voter would want to look with any ton uses to shave h1s golf score
interest, appetite or excitement at the Department
"Slick" That's whpt these candidates are runof Transportation -- or Labor, for that matter.
nmg agamst the shck talk-- "It depends on whtlt
Patnck Buchanan has spent his years working your defimt1on of 'is' is", the slick ring that
between the Old Executive Office _Building, where bUilds up around the bathtub People want a
he wrote snappy words for Richard Ntxon, Gerald breath of fresh air th1s time around. They want to
Ford and Ronald Reagan, and the TV studios sec some stOicism, some authenticity. They prewhere he snaps towels on ''The McLaughlin fer the M•ss•ss•ppi to the Potomac, the Hanoi
Group" and the "Capital Gang "
H1llon to the Jockey Club, old money to the new
To most Amencan voters such hves, spent m politics
the world of Washington desk-jockeying and chll·
That explains why guys hke B1li Bradley,
chat, are at best a v1rtual ex1stence, at worst a John McCain and George W Bush are trym_g to
putrescent one Who would they choose .as their poSition themselves as far away from this city
commander-in-chief: Bill Ointon's teammate or and its over-exposed denizen as physically possi·
Earl "the Pearl" Monroe's? Which hotel would a ble.
·
hero&lt;andJdate most wish to claim as his forma"I'm a small town boy," Bradley sa1d · in
live residence. Washington's grand old Fairfax announcmg his campatgn from Crystal C.ty !lao.
where the Gores got room service from the Jock- "I had a paper route, and every afternoon I deltvey Club? Or the "Hanm Hilton" where McCain ered copies of the D;uly News Democrat to tl\e
and h1S band of noble brothers spenlthelf years in doorsteps of my neighbors. I could tell the ume of
defiant sohtary?
day or n•ght by the trains that passed near our home.
As McCain suggests, seven years with Ointon
"As a boy, I used to explore the bluffs to the
did nothmg to make such decisions difficult. The south of town, looking for fossils and arrowheads.
2000 contest IS not to prove yourself so much a When I was a httle older, my grandfather and I
better man than Chnton as it 1s to show yourself, somet1mes took a22 and went down to the river and
as early as poss1ble, a straighter guy If you once shot at logs Hosting by We watched the great nver
drank too much, as McCam and Bush both con- ebb and flow. We felt 1ts mcred1ble force and marfess, so much the better. If you were the cause ofa veled at its beauty."
marnage to fail , as McCam admits, we can live
Th1s camprugn isn't about perfonnance It's about
w1th that, too If you won ' t admit to using cocaine punficatJon
as a young man, which George still won't, at least
(Chris MaltMws, ch~f of the
Francisco '
refuse to he about 11. If you're caught pandenng E.JturUner'f Washington Bumw, is 1I05f of "Hardto Iowa farmers, as Bradley's been, at least don't baa" on CNBC cable clulnnels.)
.

s.m

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

,. " Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

: Thursday, September 23, 1999

throws out

charges against V

• CLEVELAND (AP)- Mederal
jiidge in Columbus has thrown out
.. l))OSI of the fraud cla1ms agamst a
. company owned by Sen. George
Vomovtcb's brother.
A lawsu•t accused the V Group, a
Cleveland-based archttectural and
,construction management busmess
" owned by Paul Vomov1ch, of breach
of contract, negligence and fraud m
, t~e bu1ldmg of a Jail m Steubenv1Ue.
, Much of the lawsu1t, filed by Jef.. (erson County com miSSioners,
'hmges on cost overruns for 1the pro_)ect origmally estimated to cost $15
million but ended up cosung more
' than $25 m1lhon.
·
U S D1stnct Court Judge
, Edmund Sargus Jr. d1d not rule on
~wo fraud claims that rely on the testimony of Vmcent Zumpano, a
Steubenville-area polihcal opemhve
convicted of att~ mptmg to bnbe a
, ~ounly commiss1oner on behalf of
the V Group.
· He1d1 Armstrong, a V Group
attorney, told The Plain Dealer on
.Wednesday the finn was " thnlled"
' tiy the ruhng
" We think 11 supports what we've
been say mg all along That th1s 1s a
construction dispute" that mvolves

county commissiOners who are

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52 Weeks • ............ .... .SlO.S 56
Rata Outside Melp Counl)
13 Weeks ................ .... .S29 lS
26 Weeks... .. •
52 Wf:cb •

$56 68

. • .$109 72

Reader Services

unhappy about decis10ns made by
the1r predecessors, she sa1d.
Shll unresolved IS the county's
cl31m that V Group officials chose
the Jail s1te so Paul Vomov1ch could
henef1t from a related landfill deal
At the lime, the s1te contamed a
brick building that bad to be torn
down to make room for the new Jail
Debns from the old bUJidmg was
placed m a nearby landfill.
The cou nty contends that the
landfill's former owner agreed to
pay Paul Vmnov1ch "llppmg fees"
on debns hauled from the s1te The
county also argues that Paul
Vomov1ch helped obtam a perm1t for
the landfill from the Oh10 Envlfonmental ProtectiOn Agency dunng a
ttme when h•s brother served as governor. The governor appomts the
EPA dlfector
Paul Vomov1ch has demed the
charges.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .... ,................ 34'1•

Akzo ............................. ,. .... .41 ~.
Ameritech ...........................64'.1
Ashland 011 .........................36'!.
AT&amp;T .......................... 44).
Bank One ..............................35'Bob Evans ....., ...................... 20'1.
Borg-Warner ......................... 43'.1
Champion ............................... 5'.1
Charm Shps ........................... 5~.
City Holding .......................... 18'Federal Mogul ....................... 25~
Firstar ...... ,.... ............ .. ....... 22'!.
Gannett ............................... 69'&gt;
Kmart ..................................... 12'!.
Kroger ........................ v ........ 26'•
Lands End ...........................63').
Limited ................................. 37'•
Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 17
OVB .................................... 32
One Valley .............................34'!.
Peoples ......... ....................... 27'!.
Prem Finl .............................. 11~•
Rockwell ........................... 53'1.
RD/Shell ...........................59'\'..
Sears ............................. ~ ••.••• 32'1,l.
Shoney's ...................................2
Wendy's ............................... 26'1.
Worthington .......................... 15'!.

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided
by Advest of Gallipolis.

I

Other Services
Advrnlslng. . .
Circulation
Classlned Ads.

.E~t.

1104
Ext. 1103
Ext. 1100

.,. pubtl- M roq- to
I* provldoCI tn tho occomponylng DMth Nollcoe.

Obltua~oe
IIIII!)

·
-ring"""" lnformotlon

Martha Lee
Martha Ann Lee, 64, of Bashap Rd , Racme, d1ed on Wednesday, September 22, 1999, at Fatrfteld Medical Center m Lancaster.
She was born on January 19, 1935 m Chester Townsh1p, daughter of
Ethel Theiss, Rae me, and the late Wilham Arthur Orr
She marned Robert E Lee on October 2, 1962 m Pomt Pleasant,
WVa, and he preceded her m death on February 21, 1998 She is also
preceded m death by a son, Bob Bll I Lee, who d1ed m March, 1986, and
a SJster-m-iaw, Evelyn Ingram
She was a lifet1me member of Sutton Un•ted MethodiSt Church, the
Me1gs County Farm Bureau, was a Sunday school superintendent for several years, and was a secretary of the Me1gs County HJStoncal Soc1ety
Surv1vmg, bes•de~ her mother, are a daughter and son-m-law, Rebecca
and Kctth Bentz of Racme, two grandchildren, Amy Beth Lee and John
Robert Bentz of Racme, two s•sters and brothers-m-law, Janet and George
Mara of Canal Wmchester, and Marilyn and Edward Newman, Mt.
G1lead, a sister-In-law, Ruth Swepston of Columbus
Funeral serv1ces wtll be held at Sutton United Methodist Church (Lee
Chapel), Racine, on Saturday, September 25, I 999, at 2 p m , w1th Rev
Dwayne Stuttler off1c1atmg Bunal w1ll be m' the Sutton MethodiSt Cemetery
Fnends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Home m Racme on Fnday,
September 24, 1999, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
The hody will he m state at the church one hour pnor to the sefVIce
Memonal contnbutJons may be made to the Sutton United Methodtst
Church, c/o Rev. Dwayne Stuller, 48411 S R 124, Racme, Oh10 45771

Meigs EMS logs 8 calls
Umts of the Me1gs County Emergency Med1cal Serv1ce recorded
e1ght calls for ass1stance Wednesday
Units responding mcluded:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1 28 a m , Arbaugh Add1tton,
Tuppers Plams, Rose Peterman, St
Joseph's Hosp1tal;
8:26 a.m , Flatwoods Road,
Pomeroy, Teric1a Cogar, treated at
the scene,
5:22 p.m., Mam Street, Racmc,
W•lham Fmkenbmder, Veterans
Memonal Hosp1tal
RACINE
6:22 a m., Lee Road, Martha Lee,
VMH;
3:56 p m , Johns Road , Phyihs
Glasco, St. Joseph 's Hosp1tal

RUTLAND
1 51 p.m., Me1gs Mme 31 , Ronme Vance, O' Bieness Memonal
Hospital,
11 29 p m • McCumber Road ,
Beulah Col her, treated at the scene.
SYRACUSE
12 47 p m , Co ll ege Road ,
George Schnider, treated at the
scene, Central D1spatch squad
aSSISted.

AND

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446-:?494

Rutland Garden Club meeting
Rutland Garden Club w1ll hold 1ts regular meetmg Monday, 1 p.m. at
the home of Marc1a Denmson, Rutland

Year 2000 party suppliers say
cevelers should start buying
CINCINNATI (AP) - Waiung
until the last mmute to buy clrampagne to mark the new m•llenmum
could leave your celebrati on a little
flat
Demand has been so h1gh for
pnce.y champagnes that some brands
- mcludmg Dom Pengnon - are
becommg •ncreas• ngly difficult to
find, sa1d Mary Valle Dorr. w1ne
buyer for the Party Source, wh1ch

age "
Th•s December, the diVISIOn
expects to sell a m1lhon gallons of
hquor before the hohdays are over
- nearly 23,000 gallons more than
last year.
Sales are likely to mcrease
because of a calendar fluke that
g1ves December live Fndays -typically the bus1est day for liquor
sales And New Year's Eve falls on a

operates two stores m northern Ken -

Fnday

lucky
Jungle lim's Market '" Fa1rf1eld.
wh1ch spec1al 1zes m foods and beverages for eclectiC tastes, already has
sold out of a few champagnes from
small French vmeyards
" There 's nothmg hke champagne
for the m•llenmum," sa1d Dav1d
Schmerr, the wme and beer dlfector
f•n the store north of C.ncmnall
"That's th e b•g boy nght there It s
gmng to dommate my busmess for
November and December •
L•quor d1stnbutors expect th e
strong economy and anticipatiOn
over the new millcnmum to mcrease
the demand.
" People are not only buymg
more, but they are buymg better,"
s\ud Patty Haskms, spokeswoman
for Ob10 DIVISion of L•quor Control
" People are purchasmg the more
premiUm-type products, so our dollar sales are greater than the gallon-

The diVISIOn has been stockmg
extra alcohol m 1ts four warehouses,
.Xpecung that people will be consummg more th1s year
State offic1als plan to sell two
products markmg the new age: a
globe-shaped decanter filled with
bOurbon and a spec•al m1llenn•um
blend of cognac
Lmda Kern, who co-owns Spmts
of Madella m suburban Cincinnati,
has been stockmg extra hquor every
month m ant•c•pat1o~ of demand for
New Year 's celebrations The shop
hkely w1ll stay open un11110 p.m. on
New Year's Eve, she said.
" For some reason. liquor is the
last thmg people buy at Cbnstmas
't•me," Ms Kern sa1d "I thmk 1t's
gomg to be w1ld We're pJanmng on
gomg home and watchmg the ball
drop on TV - that's probably all
we II be able to do on New Year 's
Eve "

Uranium plant workers claim no
~nowledge of radiation dangers
By H. JOSEF HEBERT
Associated Prass Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Man agers at a federal uramum plant m
Paducah, Ky, for years Withheld
mformal10n from employees that
they were bemg exR"sed to h•ghly
dangerous plutomum. workers told a
A umon representmg the workers
on Wednesday prov1ded 1he House
Commerce subcommittee documents- one as early as 1952 and
another from 1985 - suggesling
specJal precautions m1ght have to be
taken because of exposure to
''transu ramc " matenals, 1ncludmg
plutonmm
" What lS clear 1s that (government) contractors knew of the need
to· protect workers from plutomum
and other transuramcs w1th specml
safeguards. as early as 1952," J1m
Key, an offic1al of the umon repre-

workers were dlfected to dump the
wastes outs1de plant property or be
flfed, the memo s:ud
It was not kno~~on what achon, 1f
any, resulted from the mvest1gator's
memo to a supenor
''I'm JUSt stunned," Rep Fred
Upton, R-M1ch , the subcommittee's
cha1rman, sa1d after heanng several
employees descnbe workmg condl·
!Ions at the Paducah plant m western
Kentucky dunng much of the Cold
War years
A recent Energy Department
mvcsligauon concluded that wh1le
some Improvements sull need to be
made, there IS no tmmtnent· d3nger
to plant work~rs today
However, a draft report from the
Centers For D1sease Control and
Prevenlion obtamed by The CounerJournal m Lou1svalle, Ky., says a
host -of chemicals and radioactive
matenals - reflected m groundwa-

sentmg atom1c workers, told the

ter samples contamtng. tnchloroeth-

lawmakers
But he sa1d no addltJonal precaut1ons were taken until much more
recently
Meanwhile, Tum Cochran of the
Natural Resources Dctensc Council,
sa1d documents obtamed as pan of a
lawsu1t on behalf of Paducah work·

ylene and lead - "posed a pubhc
health h31=ard for Children "
Wells near the Department of
Energy plant are not bemg used, but
the CDC summary states that parents who beheve thelf ch1ldren may
have mgested SJgnJflcant levels of
lead m dnnkmg water should alert

ers shows that managers of the plant

thetr pedmtncaans.

congressional heanng

also wtre aware for years that
rad10act1ve matenal was being
buned on land outSJde the plant
fences m v10latJ on of the law
Cochran produced a memo from
a Kentucky state pollee mveshgator
m 1991 compla•mnglhal rad10act1ve
and toXIc matcnal was be1ng buned
outSJdc the plant fence, 1ncludmg at
a stale pollee fmng range Plant

446•4524

0\'&gt;llOUif

I~WI''

7

1,11-IJM•'ON"I"

MON 9/20 • THURS 9/23199

lOX OFFICI WIU OPEN lT
6:30 PM FOIIIVINING SHOWS

Tolay 111ttn- S.23J ~ 1111 r1111 111y For !Iii ScWtll
Doors 0/Jtll AI 6:30PM .llo&amp; tbro Fri.

* * ,__~ * *

BUI811IEAII "'~ 7:46, 10:00
(Comeily/Adion) Marti! La"""', Wie ~
...... ft1llly • 7:41i 111:11

Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal
ADMITIED WEDNESDAYNone
DISCHARGED WEDNESDAy
- Larry M1lle r.

,

........

The Thomas and isabel Weaver Stoban reun1on wtll be held Saturday,
noon at Star Mill Park in Racine. Bnng covered diSh and family pbolographs.

Hospital News

(Publislled by permission.)

Have Your Favorite Little
Farmer' a Portrait Taken
On Our Genuine John
Deere Pedal Tractor

.E••· 1101
.................... !':•'- 1101

or E11L 1106

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Just In Time For The Fall Harvest Season

IR.

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Obituari'es

Kid's Tractor Days

News Departments
the maiD oomb&lt;r It !192·1155 D&lt;partGrnenl Managu

Charles Thomas Napper, 51, of Ba1ley Run Road, Pomeroy, d1ed on
Wednesday, September 22, 1999, at Holzer Medical Center in Galhpohs.
He was born on September 14, 1948 '"Rutland, to the late Dav•d and
Mary E Searles Napper
He was a laborer and was affihated With the Rutland Freew•ll BaptiSt
Church
Survtvtng are hts wtfe, Ernestine Napper of Pomeroy, a daughter, Kasey
Napper and two stepdaughters, Candy Lambert and Heather W1throw, all at
home, four brothe'rs: Dav1d E Napper and Raymond Napper, both of Rut·
land, Darrell Napper of Harrisonville, and Leonard Napper of Waverly,
three SISters· Shlfley M1ght and Betty Taylor, both of Harnsonville, and
Dolly Brite of Columbus; and several meces and nephews
Bes•des h1s parents, he was preceded'" death by two s1sters, Mary Sttll
and Vtolet R1ggleman, and three brothers. Jerry, Elmer and W1lham Napper
Funeral servtces w1ll be held on Saturday, September 25, 1999, at 1 p m
at the Blfchfield Funeral Home m Rutland, w1th Pastor Paul Taylor officiating. Burial will follow at Bradford Cemetery in Pomeroy
Friends may call. on Fnday from
. 2 to 4 p m and 7 to 9 p m

SPRING VAI IFYCINEMA

Our main concern In all stories b lu bt
accun~le. If you know of an error In 1
story, call the newsroom al (740) 991- •
21~~. We wUI ch«k your tnformallon
and make it corrutlon ir warranted

~x.lr•sions

Charles Napper

-·-·-

Correction Polley

mrnl

Martha Ann Lee, 64, of Bashan Rd , Ractne, d1ed on Wednesday, September 22, 1999, at Fairfield Medtcal Center in Lancaster.
She was born on January 19, 1935 m Chester Townshtp, daughter of
Elhel Theiss, Ractnc, and the tale William Arthur Orr
She was a ltfehme member of Sutton Untted Methodtst Church, the
Metgs County Farm Bureau, was a Sunday school supenntendent for several years, and was a secretary of the Me•gs County H•sloncal Soctety.
Surviving, besides her mother, are a daughler and son-tn-law, Rebecca
and Keith Benlz of Racme; two grandchildren, two s1sters and brothers-tn
law, Janel and George M,ara of Canal Wmchester, and Marilyn and Edward
Newman, Mt. Gtlead, and a sister-in-law, Ruth Swepston of Columbus
She was preceded m death by her husband, Robert E. Lee, a son, Bob Bill
Lee, and a sister-in-law, Evelyn Ingram
Funeral servtces w1ll be held at Sulton United MethodiSt Church (Lee
Chapel), Racme, on Saturday, September 25, 1999, at 2 p m, wuh Rev
Dwayne Stuttler offictatmg. Bunal wtll be tn the Sutton MethodiSt Cemelery
·
Fnends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Home m Racme on Fnday,
September 24, 1999, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p m
The body Will he in Slate at the church One nour pnor to the servJce.
Memonal contnbutlons may be made to tHe Sulton United Method1st
Church, c/o Rev Dwayne Stutler, 48411 SR. 124, Racme, OhiO 45771

Stobart reunion scheduled

MPECTIII GADGET •

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Sports

r

· Th~rsday,

The Daily Sentinel
.

·

196

• This week , Metgs County's
coach
Scott
· honest
team ,
: Christman's Eastern Eagles. will face
· another West Virgi nia opponent In
· ihe Hannan Wildcats
Hannan defeated Eastern fast
year, but this year the outlook is
much brighter for the up ami com ing
: Jiagles. With its only loss to an unde-

Braves down Mets
5-2; Astros also fall
National League
roundup

to the team and gave us a little bil or
a com fon zone' .r
Terry Mulholland worked out of a

, By DAVE HARRIS
· Sentinel Corrupondent
The Me1gs Marauders will be trying to bounce back from a tough loss
to second ranked Newark Catholic
last w'eek. when they travel to
: Proctorville to tangle wllh the
. Fairland Dragons.
Jack Harris returns to the helm of ·
"the Dragons after a one-year
. absence. The Dragons are 1-2 on the
: season, Fairland lost to Portsmouth
··west and Win field sandwiched
: around a 35- 12 win over Ri ver
: 'valley.
"
In last weeks game against tfie
: -Generals, Fairland was only able to
muster 70 yards rushing and 95 total
yards. The Dragons jumped out on
top 6-0 tn the first period, but
Winfield scored 22 points m the sec-

'•

1

...::·

GOTCHAI - Detroit catcher Brad Ausmus lays the glove on the

~ :Cleveland Indians' Manny Ramirez for the sixth-inning out during

• 'Wednesday night's American League game in Detroit, where the
: )ndians won 9-1. Ramirez tried to score from second base on Harold
- : ~aines' single. (AP)
.'

.

:Tribe tames Detroit
~ Tigers in 9-1 rout
:. By HARRY ATKINS
and ge t us
'
DETROIT (AP) - Smcc cl&lt; nch· It :"\ .1 acJrt
·; tng the AL Centr al lttlc on Sept X.

ihc Cleveland lndr -.m-" mtf!ht

li'U H'

: ~one inHr cru1se coru rol ·fhat the:
~ drdn ' l 1S probably a testament Ill

Jarr t \\ nght tht)

l\)

\'YL'tcn ' t .1hlc l u dn that ·
The I\V'l: l hn ~ wc.n· a

~ca~~J n - lo\\'

for the l'lg:t:'r.s. thcu· kw11~t ~;r n cc
~rng held w o n~.· h11 by Toronto's

:. manager Mtkc HargroYc.
Roy Hall aday m the llnal garne pf
. He made it knO\vn that pl"yas th~.· Jl.N8 sca .. on
who wanted key rules in the pbJ u!h
had better earn them That l!ol Jarl't

: Wnght\

attentiOn

.__

Wnght allowed two hlls in SC\C n
1nnmgs and Jtm Thome'!'~ t\.1.-o~ run

- double keyed a four-run Cle,cl.md

" You c.lll ' t win m.my b.tllg.tmcs
g:t.' tltng l\Hl htts. ·· Dctrmt manag..:r
LLrry Parr1sh ~cud ·· tt Sl'l'mcd llke
\\ C JU~o,[ llattcn~d

OU L,.

sc~ kmg · h1 &gt;~ fm;t w1n
~ m cc Aug. 30. gave up ~ in glc runs m

Moc hkr.

-first as the Indrans pounded the- the second . f1lth .:mU Sl\th . lalhng

. Detrml Tigers 9- 1 Wednesday night
"There's nothmg like the postseason," Wnght SaJd. "That 's the best
the game gets I want to go out there
. and do my thing in the postseason."
Hargrove satd Wright's performance against the Tigers convmced

· htm the nght-hander IS ready
"Jaret pitched a very fine ball; game," Hargrove said. "It was an
· important ball game for hJm . He had
go out and dommate, and he dtd.
.: He threw stnkes."
Wnght (8-9), who was winless in
six starts smce July 6, allowed one

:to

unearned run

H e ISSued one walk

behmd 7- 1 Mochlor allo"cd seve n
ru ns ' and 13 hils m SIX mninu:s. He
bl amed It on a i,lck of control." ·
" I JUSt kit helpless," Moe hler
said.
In the first. Roberto Alomar had
an RBI smg lc. Thome drove 1ri two
with a double up the gap tn ce nter
and Harold Baines had an RBI sin.
gle.
"Gettmg up by four was great,"
Wnght satd. " I didn ' t mind wmung
on the bench. If they want to hit for
~ n hour and a half, 1t's fine by me "
Altnnar had another RBI smglc m
the second , Travts Fryman drove m
the fifth-Jnning run .wnh a groundout
and Batnes had an RBI smgle in the

-and matched hts season-high with
· eight stnkeouts. Steve Karsay and
_Ricardo Rincon finished up , each SIXth.

Orioles defeat ·rexas
7-4, win '13th straight
American League
roundup
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
The Baltimore Onoles will get
thetr c han ce to set the longest wmning stnng m team history Only
they'll have to do it without Mr.
Streak.
During thetr 13th straight vtctory
- 7-4 at Texas on Wednesday night
- the Orioles announced Cal R1pken
would miss the rest of' the season

Juan Encarnacion, who reached m because of back problems

.. with a perfec t inn mg.

' • " We really have pitched pretty
: well for the past week." Hargrove
· satd. "Obviously. we didn ' t pitch
. yery well ' against the Yankees, but

Ripken , JUSt ntne hits shy of
the Detrott ll fth when right·fielder
3,000,
was to undergo surgery today
Manny Ramirez misplayed his routine fly for a three -base error, scored m Cleveland to relieve pressure o n a
an unearned run on Da1m on Easley's

RBI grounder.
:tiOn "
Sandy Alomar had a two-ru n dou; The Indians JUmped on Brian ble m the ninth.
·Mechler (9- 16) tor four runs on five
Al ornar co ll ected ht s 2.000th
:bits in the first.
career hit in the second off Moe hler.
:: . "You go out in a ball&amp;ame like That made Alomar, whu turm:d 3 1 on
: ih1 s .and score, earl y, yuu Still hke to Feb 5. the youn gest to reac h 2,000
, ~core o! tcn , ·· Hargrove sm d " They smce Robin Yount d1d It at the age of
: ~t ill had ntnc mnings to come back 30 in 1986.

: I'm happy with our startmg rota-

Gil Hodge' of the Brooklyn Dodge rs tt ed a majo r- league record
in 1950 by hitting four home runs in one game. a 19-1 win vs I he
Boston Braves.

nerve that has been causing him trou-

bl e.
" I feci bad that Cal's hun because
I wanted htm to get 3,000. but he'll
get it next year," Orioles manager
Ray Miller said " If 1\e gets hi s back
taken care ol , he might have 1,000
more h1ts 1elt m h1m . "

wmnong'

The Ortoles' longest
streak in club history is 14, accomplished in 1973 Baltimore also won
13 tn a row In 1978.
Despite several htghhghts - his
400th career home run and 'his 17th ·
All-Star game appearance- it was a
difficult year for Rtpken
· H1s father, Cal Sr.. died during
spring training. Then, on April 20,
Rtpken went on the disabled list for
the first time 1n a career' that began m
1981. And all along. the Orioles
struggled in quickly falhng out of
contention.
1
A rush of recent hits put R1pken in
position to jom Tony Gwynn and
Wade Boggs in reaclung 3,000 this
year. But after feeling back spasms
overnight, Ripken traveled to
Cleveland on Wednesday to see spe.c1ahst Dr. Henry Bohlman. The
Onoles have 1! games left.
" It says a lot about the guy that he
went this long without surgery,"
Onoles reltever M1k.e T1mlin smd
" You see a guy m pam and yet con-

tmuc to play at the ,level he was. you
Rtpkcn. who ended hts record admire that . He 's an tron guy."
streak of' playing 2.632 consecu1Jvc
Charles Johnson and Brady

games 11\st Se pte mber. was battmg
340 with I R homers and 57 RB!s At
19,

the third baseman also made tnc

l1rs1 two lrlps of his career to the di S-

abled list.

Anderson h1t consecutive homers lor

the Onoles Albert Belle hil his 35th
homer and Jes us Garc1a conn ected

for hiS first

tn

the maJors.

(See AL on Page 5)

Scoreboard
f"lonJa

Baseball

Hou ston
CINC INN ,\rl
f&gt;III Sburgh
S• Lout s

...

Ea5h•rn lkr isJUn

•fum

ll'

'New York .
'ftm!on

L
59

I!&lt;!.

""'" "'76

5M~

91

~Tomm o

74

.Baltimore

•..

•Tamrm Bay

""

(ill

609
111
49 '
425

4
14'
17';

,.

Ce ntntll&gt;1•b1on

60

601

') ~

Cht ~.Jg{•

"'61 89 "" ":!9'
.,
""

Mmnes01 a
-Kansa~

Ctt)

'·
'·

410

9JJ

ol04
\99

S9 61

'Anahetm
X-bltnched dt vu •o~ utlc

'-'
71

••17

''4

8'1

1&lt;6
150

l '·

491

,14

m

8, Tamp1.1 Bay

An zona
San I r,tnusco

• Knnsas Cuy 12. Seattle 6

·.

'

Today's games
DH O akland (Lax ton Q.Q and Olt~at ~s ]'\. )0) at
Balumore rPnnsnn 12 - 11 and Rr!cy 0·01 4 U~ p m
Turopt11 (Wells 14- 10) at 8os10 n ( M crc k ~ r 1·01
HJ5 p m
CLEVELAND fNagy 17-91 nt Dc1m11 nll.1~r l·

KO . -P 4

•II

20

-l5U

2'

"OJ

" ""
7!
~.1

Sttn Du;:go
Los An!!cl~ s

"

•.01

;

&lt;;J(l

69

m
467
m

"

71 ,&lt;J
68 :-15

Wednesday's scores

""

'1,

: Cht cago {Parquc 9- IJ) at New YofldC ic mcm 1 ~

9). 1. ]5 p m
~

Friday 's games

Bnlumo:e !Mussmu 16-7) m B0510il IS,!bcrll(lg!! n
IO·:'il. 7.05 p n)
• Kansa5 C1ty !fto~ndo R- 14 1at be1m11 ( MILCkl I,_
11 ).7.05pm

" CLEVELAND (Bro'4cr 1-1)a1 Toronto ( H ~I I a J ay
8=1) 705p m
.. Tampa Oa ) (Wllt 7- 14) a1 New Yt•rk 10
l-{ernnndez Ifi -91. 7 J:'i p m
, Chicago tStrotka 10- P l Jl Mmneso1:1 (Muys ~
IQ), 805pm
• 011klnnd (Heredltl I 'i 7) at Tel.as (St'lt• 17·11) 8 U5
I=
"AniV1e1m (Cooper 1·1) ,,, Seattll.! (Mcdlc 7-4 ).

1Q05pnl

.l8

41

· 2'1

4b

lM

12

2

-l-t
41
ll

47
J7

10
11
4r.l

~ - Cimagn

Snn ~usc
1\. .m~ ,ISC tt)

~ -c hn c hc d

ll'

Allnnla
r'ftw York
!'h\lndclphl,L

'5

~onlrctLI

li4

9l

71

L

"
"'

..
60

621

f.l05

Wi
)

'67

24

421

"

45

2 2:0 .\i

~~

plnynf! bcnh

!SOW) r ~

.1 ~uhs.•t

nf 1dn•

Wednesday's srore
' San Jn5e :' Nc .... York ·Nc" Jenc} I
I

Tonight's game
lo~ rida y's

game

Transactions

Today 's games

Baseball
Amuinn L~ague
CLEVEL,\ND IND IAN S- Alttvat.:d RH P
SJC\'C KMsay from the 15-day d1sabled hsl
TEXAS RANGERS- Sene OF Adnun Mym lo

Friday's gaml's
Pmsburgh rSchnudt 1 ~ 101 m Ch1cago
(fatnS\\ Or!h 4-9) 1 20 f' nl
1
Atlanl a (Mtllwootl Iri· 7) 111 Montreal (I JII V0- 1),
70~ pm
•
Nt:u. Y01k (Yosh u 11-11.\ a1 Phtl a(kl p h~.~ t Gr.Ute
U-J t 7 0'ipm '
Coloradll lAstaLtl1 15·1 1l ut l"l o ml:~ ( 1"-.k :•d ow~
11 ·1-l-}, 7.05 pOl
St Lmn ~ (Oit vcr R-'-n .11 ('I NC"lNN t\TI fP,um 8~~

705 p m
H o u ~ lon

{H!Impl nn 20.4 ) at P.. lllwmJkl"t' (Nnmo

111 1 f!O~p m
S:~o D1ego ( H1 1~hcoclc.
Umwn 17·8) 10 10 pIll

11· 1:'.lolLLos Ml!!t'k&lt; I K

"rllOna (R Johnse n 15·9) m San
( bt c.~

h .~nm~ o

11 ·9) , 10.15 p,nl

Soccer

to .1 two- ye.tr t ontra~t
( lfJC..: AGU
ULACKHAWKS-S tjl.ned
Andcrs Enksson

FLORIJ)A

PANTHERS - A ~s 1 ~ned

0

, Reds cut Astros' lead to 2~2 games

By BERNIE WILSON
SAN DIEGO (A P) - Two forrner
San Dtego Padres ganged up on thw
nld team to help the Ctncmnott Reds
gam a game tn the playoft races.
Grej! Vauj!hn hit his 42nd' homer
and Ron Villone earned the victory
despite committing· two errors as the
Reds beat the Padres 4-3 Wednesday
mght.
· Cmcinnat1 closed within 21.
games of both Houston in the NL
Central and the New York Mets m
the wtld-card race. Houston lost 3-2
at Pittsburgh and the Mets lost 5-2 at
Atlanta.
·
" We just have to wm, win, wm,"

said Vaughn, who last year helped
the Padres reach the World Series.
" If we don ' t win, it's all _irrelevant
anyway.
" We played well tomght. We ' re
in lhis position because we haven't
bee n making many mental mi slakes ."

Sean Casey agreed
"The intensity was there . You

" He's strong . I mean. 1 saw htm
do It last vear ... Ashby Said of
Vaug11n "I ·give up a run on lhe
ctrur. then ( tned to ge t a cutter down

and awuy. and he put a good pass on
It and h1t It out ..
The Padres tried to put on a good
show for the fans in their final home
game. rallying to 4-3 in the sixth
Damtan Jackson, who Cltme over

from Cincinnati with Reggie Sanders
in exchange for Vaug.\ln on Feb. 2, hit
an RBI double and then scored on
co nsecutive throwmg errors.
The first was Villonc's pickoff
throw that sailed mto center field ,
then MIke Cameron threw the ball
away trymg to get Jackson at third. It
was Villone's second error of the
night on a pickoff attempt.
·
"We would have loved to have
won that game . but I think we played
very good baseball." Sanders said.
" It's a tough team and they' re playmg ex tremely- good baS&lt;;ball. They
never d1e . It wasn't an easy one for
them but they won, " '
After the game, the Padres came
back out on the field and gave away
their jerseys 10 fan s who had been
preselected Wtthm minutes of the
llnal out. workers began configuring
Qualcomm Stadium for football for
the rest of the fall.
Dann y Graves pttched two
Innin gs for hi S 25th save in 3~

could feel tt. That's what we need 10
maintain over these last nine games
to .make a run at it. "
Villone (9-7). who prtched for the
Padres in parts of the 1995 and '96
seaso ns, got the wi n. in ·" his first
appe~rance against h1s old club. He
was one pf three players the Padres
sent to Milwaukee on luly '31, 1996,
for Vaughn.
chances,
Vaughn' s two-run homer o lf
Vaughn also connected in the
Andy Ashby ( 14- 10) with one out in Reds' 12- 1 win Monday mght and
the fifth inning gave the Reds a 4-1 has 13 homers and 2~ RBi s m 2)
le,\d.
games th1 s month
It was a frustratmg night overall
Althoueh Vau ghn had career bests
fo r Ashh y H1 s throw111 !:! error wJth 50 homers" and 119 RB!s m

}our

1'/ttl'l'

(See REDS on Page 5)

to Hur

DIAMONDS

G Rtdl

and D Jeff W,tre In t nuL WIIk of lilt! AHL
NEW JER SEY OEVILS - Stg ncd F Sr.:u u
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Ass t g n ~d G M tko.: Ru lak G Fr~;: den c Henry. G Jcnn·
l:rancms Damphousse, D Sascha Goc . 0 Al e:&lt;
Jo hml onc. D VlasiHJILI Kro upr~ . 0 AnJre Lakos 0
\1.&lt;11111." Mttchcll D Lll!:as Nehrhng F Cri..·orgc= Aw~dn
F M ath tCu Ren o!\ F Da\ld Cunntff F Bryan Ducc F
Sum rtorek F Stnnts lav Gron F Carlyle Lewu F
Wes Mnsn n F Rtchard Rochefort F Roh Skrlnc F
Cims Thumpl&gt;un .mJ F N1kolat Zav:arukhm to
Albany of the AII L lt eturncd F Scot! CaiTM!ron to
Barne of the OHL. F Ryan Held 10 Kuchener of the
OHL .md F Bren Clooduer to Kmguon of 1he OHL
Retumo.:LI D Teemu Ke!-1 to li ves of the Fmmsh

Bob Errey and D D!Wtd Wtlk:JI" Amgl"ll.'d F Mnrtm
Sonne nberg tO Wilkcs -Barre-Scramon of the AHL
VANCOUVER C ANU C KS - A~51gned D Chm&gt;
0 Sulhvnn~· LW Ja rko Ruu1u D Brent SOflCI anJ C
Lub om1r Vn1c to Syral·use of the AHL

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&lt;n

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und FB

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For more information please contact Amy). Leach, MS, director of community
relations at Pleasant Valley Hospital, (304) 675--4340, Ext 1326.

•

ond period. In the a1r. the Dragons
were 3 of 16 in the atr, w1th an interception for 25 yards
Leading .the list of returnees for
the Dragons are two-way tackle Jay
Capper
(6-foot-4.
250.)
guard/defensive end Kyle Patton (6foot , 175), tailbac k/linebacker
Jeremy Lbuden (5-foot-9. 165). and
wide receive r Adam Burcham (5foot-10. 165).
The Marauders are sll \1 hurtm g
from last week 's .loss to Newark
Catholic. The Marauders lost the services of all-conference quarterback
Grant Abbott for the rest of the season .
Ahbott hroke hi s cla' icle (co llar-

at St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington.
W.Va. A plate and screws were
mserted to a1d the healing process ,
Adam Bullington and Matt Stewart
were ,also banged up in the contest.
Their status is unknown at press
time. Aaron Van ln wage n will probably get the nod at quarterback. The
senior pl a~cd well in place of Abbott
last week.
In the loss to the Green Wa~e. the
Marauders spotted' Newark Catholic

c.J.Il. he \. Brent Rudie\

\.\a~

1- l and

dcaUk....J . v.1th an mter..:eroun rdurn

L111te " l.no~n abour lh1~ }tar's

at the begtnn1ng of the &gt;econd quar- Hannan Jearn . hu'Ae, er. man) of the
te r The t~o-pomt con\er~.ton pa"'!t o,ame faces return to the lmeup
fat led. hut Eastern led 6-0 Later m Coach K&lt;nt Pnce ·" sull the coach of
the frame . Chn~ Lyun., punched ll the Wtldcats. who are hath capal:ile
through for a ~i.·ore from one ~ ard of runmng and pa.ssmg the football.
~1\e 'land limned \Vm to JU!J.l 145 out. then he added c&lt;tr:&gt;; on a run for
Game nme ts 7:30 p.m. at East
total ) ard&gt;.
a 1~ -0 tall\ . a smrc that stood at the Shade Rn er Stadium .
·
Ben Holter broke the scoreless half.

Schaekel 1- 1~
0' ~rai L E., tern netted .t44 total
yard,. 122 pa.&gt;mg and 322 ru&gt;htng
on a great offcn&gt;J\C display Eastern
tallied 11 first dmln&gt; A good defen -

bone ) when he was hit late

on Newark Catholll" Se \'en

10

the first

half. He underwe nt surge ry Tuesday

Green Wave 35-yard !me. but ' the semor has can1cd 106 ttmcs for 764
Marauders \\ere only able to hit pay- yards. an a&gt;erage of 7 2 yards a pop.
dirt o nce.
Bullington has pulled m eight
Marauder all state candtdate passes for 102 yards. Vanln\\agen
Justin Roush pocked up 174 yards in had five for 70 Jonathan HaggeJt\
30 carrie;;; and .;;cored the M ara uder~ had four catches for 196. Matt
o nl j tuuchduw n, For the season. the Ste\\art had four for 76

'

week.

the

tng 10 pull to within 12-6 early in the
second period Newark Catholi c
scored late tn the game to make the
fi nal score 20-6.
Meigs wa:s a hie to mO\ c the ball
ume~

the

Marauders had the ball In&gt;idc the

Souther~ Hill eac h had tw o touchdowns apiece

I S ~ till

Wahama

MOTORS

"mall m num be r".

for the Tornadoes m las t week's ·but has tradu mn and a lot of

suffering a tough loss agamst state•
ranked Alexander.
·
Southern put forth a great second
half comeback effon last Fnday. but
the rally fell just shan as the 22nd
ranked DivisiOn IV Alexander
Spartans defeated the Tornadoes 4633 m an emotiOnal thnller at Roger
Lee Adams Memorial Field.
For Southern. Matt Warner was 923 rushing'. Tommy Smith 7-3 1, Matt
Ash was 10-36 , Adam Cummgs
caught four passes for 130 yards.
Brice Hill 2-50, Brandon Hill 3-17.
Ryan HIII2- 19. '
Sophomores Matt Ash and Bnce.

offen sive explosion that nened 3~
potnts and good stati stics across the
board Southern's defense. however.
continued to g1ve up the b1 g play.
Thts week. Southern finds Jtscll m
ns best positio n to beat Wahama 111
years. If the Tornad oes come ready
t,o play m Fnday's game m Mason.
W.Va. they have the potenlial.
Beau Gerlach ts the part-time
Wahama quarterback and was the
firs.t game'1 leading rusher as well.
Eran Branch. Brandon Hankmson.
Robert
Brinker and Johnny
McKnight shared duttes m the backlleld.

NL action ...

AL games...

(Continued from Page 4 )
35th, off Luther Hackman ( I- I) Jay
Bell and Steve Finley added two hits
each for the Dtamondbacks.
Giants 5, Dodgers 4
Brent Mayne singled to drive in
the go-ahead run in the eighth innmg
off Pedro Borbon (4-3 ) as San
Francisco kept Its sltm hopes altve io
the NL West race by winning at Los
Angeles.
Mark Gardner (5 - 11 ) pitched one
mning of rehef for the wm and Robb
,Nen earned ht s 37th save. Rich

rcs p~ ~· t

among bend area teams
Gerlach. lkmch. M1ke Northup.
Tyler Roney and Brandon Hankinson
the
Wahama

are

defen sive

Waham a
Hankinson.

for

stoppers

rccc n crs
McKnight.

D1 vmcen zo and Robert Bnnkcr
\Vahama

LS

now fJ-4 , but has been

gctnn g better each week. Last week.
the y lost 14-2 at Rave nswood. The
14. points were the only Wahama
pOints all year Hankinson had a 1050 ru shm g mght, M c K~i g ht was 842. and Branch, who also quarterbac ks wa ~' 3-6 P,ass1ng
·

The Ran gers lost their third in a
row . Texas magtc number for
clinching the AL West was at SIX
afier Oakland lost.
Today, Baltmiqre was at home fnr
a doubleheader agamst Oak land .
In other AL games , New York
defeate&lt;j Chicago 5-4, Toronto beat
Boston 14-9. Mtnnesota downed
Oakland 5-4, Kan sas City heat
Seattle 12-6 and ,Anaheim topped
Tampa Bay 8-5
Yankees S, White So• 4
Paul O 'Neill drew a bases- loaded
walk in the ninth mnmg giving New

f1ve games m the wi ld-card race .
Toronto wtll be ehmtnatcd from
playo ff contention with one loss or
one Boslon wtn.
Green and Vernon Wells each had
four of Toronto 's 22 htts, and the Red
Sox made a season-high five errors.Nomar Garciaparra. the AL's
ieadmg hitter at :359,,struek out for
the first tnne smce Sept 2. He went
62 at-bats wi!hout fanning unul
Toronto's Kelvim Escobar got him .
Royals 12, Mariners 6
Ken Gnffey Jr. hit IllS league leading 48th homer In Seattle's loss

Yankee StadJuni
The Yankees magic number for
clinching a playoff spot ts lhree over
Oakland . New York ,auld w1ap up
It s fifth stra1 gpt postseason herth
tllday, If il beats Chtcago whtle th e
Athletics lose a doubleheader at

Griffe y homered tn all three
games of the series He leads Texas
Rafae l Palmciro by three homers for
the AL lead
Gnlfev\ 39Hth homer li ed lum
wnh Dale Murphy for 31 st ,rlace on
the caree r ltst.

homer hitter Brian GileS, who wJ II
miss the rest of the season with a

Baltimore. ,
Darryl Strawberry homered _._ he

111

broken fin~er. took two of three at has 334 in hi s career. the sa me total
home from the NL Central-leadmg as Sammy Sosa - as the Yank ees

Je rmame Dye' home red a nd drove
foUJ runs fm Kansas Cuy

twins 5, Athlelics 4
Oakland p11ehc rs Issued three

mcrcased their AL East lead over bases-loaded walks during a ll\ 1.":-run
Bo sto n to fo ur gamc !i
Chn s seve nth inning that g~vc the gam ~ to
Singlelon . traded aw~lY hy the M1 nnesota
Yankees for a mmnr lc&lt;Jg ucr las t
The A's w; cd l1vc p!tchl'rs duung
December, had tho fir st tw o-homer the Tw ms' bi~ mnin~ . and al l of the

game of hi s caree r
runs scored \\~ith . two' out&gt;
A crowd of 27.549 raised the
John Jaha and Ben Gncvc hiL snlo
Yankees' season total to 3,072.009 homers fc&gt;r Oakland.
'
- that' s a record for a New York
A crowd of onl y 9.895 brought
team . topping the Mets' total of tne total for the three-game sencs In
3'.047 ,724 in 1988.
Oakland tn 22.9Q5 The Athletics
Blue Jays 14, Red Sox 9
drew 59 . 9 5~ for u six -game homesShawn Green hit hiS 40th home tand that started wllh three dates
run, and every Toronto batter had an agamst Kan sas C1ty.
RBI at Fenway Park. The Blue Jays
Angels 8, Devil Ra)s 5
stopped a seven-game losing streak
Mo Vaugh n homered. doubled
(Contmue~ from Page 4)
and ended Boston's stx-game win-· and drove m five run s to reach the
ning string.
100-RBI mark for the fifth time as
1&lt;998 - the homers were a club
·
·
·
&lt;ecord - the Padres traded him to I~~T~h~o~R~e~d~S~o~x~s=l~tl~l'~ie~a~d~O~a~k~l~aJ~ld~b~~A~n~ai~1c~'I~nl~be~·a~t~v~t~si~ti~n~T~a~n~l~a~B~a~·~
tbe Reds because they didn 't thinkhe'd repeat hts numbers. And if he
DEAR
CUSTOMER,
did, they reasoned, hiS aski ng price
TAKI ADVANTAGE OF
1
':r7:~ be more than they could

Reds ...

PRJMESTAR

GREAT REWARDS

With nine games left- mcludmg
two at Houston - Vaughn needs
eight homers imd 10 RBis to match
hts '98 numbers.
·
Villone allowed three run s on
seven hils in 5~ innings, struck out
six and walked four
.
Ashby lost three straight starts for
the first time since last September.
He allowed six hits and four runs,

NOW!

•• lEI

in the second inmng. Tauhcnsce
Urow 1n one wtt h a d o uhlc nnd
Poke y Reese 1'\...;orcd from f 1 r~;t ·w h cn

Ashby fielded Viil oncs ¥rounder
and th rew "over the head of f 1rst base man Joy ner lor an error

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two earned ,' m six Hmmg s:

The Padres loaded the bases with
one out in both the first and third
mnings, but scored only one run.
Wally Joyner hit a comebacker off
Villpn e's glove in the first , but
Villone recovered to throw ou t
Quilvio Veras at home Ruben Rivera
then struck out .
Joyner sin gled in Sanders m the ·
third and Ri vera walked to load the
bases .Yollonc got Ben Davis to pop
up and struck out Jackson .
The Reds scored two unearned

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four runs.
Pirates 3, Astros 2
Todd R1tch1e ( 14-9) pitched a SIX httter to outduel Jose Ltma (20-9) as
Pittsburgh slowed Houston's run at a
third strai ght dtvtsion title.
The Pirates. playing Without 19-

Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa
_;,ere both held hitle~s with the wmd
blowmg out on a perfect day for
homers at Wrigley Field.
; McGwire went 0-for-3 with two
SValks. Sosa, who still leads the
nomer derby 61 -59 , al so walked
iwtce in an O-for-2 day.

99 MODEL CLOSEOUT SALE
All New 99 Models Priced To Sell

were
Joey

(Contmued from Page 4).

Auriha drove in San Francisco's f1rst- York a v1ctory ove r Ch1 cago at

Aslros
Houston 's lead fe ll to 2' :- games
over Cmcmnall .
1
Cubs 5, Cardinals 3

"Fatrland has tremendous sat.e.
and arc a good football team ,'
Marauder coach Mt ke Chancey said.
'We ha\ e had a good \\ cck of pra&gt;uce. and I thmk our kids will ee
ready to play."
. Kic k-off is Fnday at 7 30 p.m

two early touchdown s. before scor-

Tornadoes are eye1ng a vtctory after

1 un s

1\II NNLSOlt\ \ !KING S StF.n c,l C" ll Chm

",,

-

Local !alent for upcoming commercials filmed by MoUonMasters (Charleston, WV) will be recruited
on Saturdar, September 25, 9 am. to n!)on, at the Pleasant Valley Wellness Center. Partidpants of
all ages are needed. These individuals will fill-out a resume, be photographed, videotaped and added to
the MoUonMaslers' talent book.

Football

MLS standings

Expart Jewelry
Repair

the Sean le Manners to .: omplctc rhc Jeff Fas!lero

tmdt!
SEATJ"LE MARINE RS- A5s1gneJ OF i\dnan
l'vh~n 1o T~com ~ of the PC L •
Nadonallugue
NL- Suspcnded Ch• ~ago Cub 21J M~tkt' )'
MorandJm fnr lw o games. effective Sept, 23. and
lined h1m an undisclosed amoulll , fur overly aggres·
stve behav1or and mak1ng contact wll h an ump1rc
dunng a game wnh M ilwaukee on Sept 17
NEW YORK METS-Emered 1nto an agreement to purchase St Cathermes ot the Ne.,., Ynrk·
l'enn l.c. L ~ue
·

This

Cincy tallies 4-3
win over Padres

Shulr1u ~ lra

Le ague
N[W YORK RANGERS-Autgncd C Derek
Armstrong nnd G Jean·l:rilncoJS L1bbe to Hnrtford of
1he AHL
PlTI'S BURGH P[NGUINS - Rel~::ue d LW

Dall as .u N,•w EnglanJ 7 10 p m

Montrea l (Hermanson 9 I ~ I n1 fln m l.1 rBumell
.~·2). I 05 p m
Neu.· York (l..c tlcr II · II ) :11 Atl.mtn {foladJux. 18·
8) I IOpm
Plnladelph1a 1Gmcc I i) a1 Md.,.,~ukt.."t" (lkre \0).20S p m
Pm sburgh !Peters 5-2 1 al Ch tcugo 1B0wk 1: 6J.
80~ pm
San Franc1scn (I.. Ht"rnandel I- l l) at los
Angeles (Pilrk II 101. 10 10 p m

\-1)('

I!&lt;!.

I
10

NOTE Th1ee pom1 s fur ~·1 c t ory one fHltnt for
~hnvt o u t wm and l~·ro pomts 1m luss Shuu10 ut

Ph1ladelplna 12. M1lv.aukce'
San rranCISCO 5. Lns A n ~o!k~ ~
CiNCINNAll -' S m Di~ gn I

Tuln

Ea\lern DI\ISinn

16 12
16 l l
17 12
f\2: \

~ Dall.1 ~

Wtn ~lll\1

NL
. standings
.
fum

~

IR 9 4

H o us t o n ~

Montrenl 5 Fl ond.t J
All amn 5 New York 2

,

11 ), 705"pm

1~ 10

~

CO! UMH US ,11 Chic 1go M p m

Lou• ~ J
Am.ona II Co lnr.tJ o ~

P ltl ~b urg_ h

o\n11.eh:s
Color.Jdo

~ - Lo~

20

Chtcago 'i S1

,

~

.'iNK

Wt st~rn I)" ismn

25

• Mmnesota 5, Ouk!and 4
• CLEVELAND 9 Detrmt I
• s~ ltmwn: 7. Texas 4
: · Toronto 14 Boston 9
,: New York 1i Ch1cogo 4
Ant~h eun

hi

JO'·
1 1'

Wednesday's scores

•

M

National Hockty League
llOSTON BRUINS- S•gned LW P 1 i\xclsson

Western Conference

W1rt Count) Is 0-4
Matt Bisse ll ru,hed for 165 )arth
on 23 catl-Jc,, "hlle Brad Parker " as
5-95. Brad Willford "as 7-7. Aaron
Schaekel 6--31. and Chris Lyon• 339. Lyon; .-as 6-7 passi ng for I 22
yards
.
Leading Eastern receJ\'ers ~ ere
Ben Holter with 105 yards on fou r

Wahama to host Southern
in Bend Area clash Friday

EX-PADRE SHINES - Cincinnati pitcher RoD Villone delivers a
pitch during Wednesday night's National League game against the
host San Diego_Padres, who lost 4-3. Villone struck out six and
walked four in 5~. Innings in his first appearance against his former
team. (AP)

allowed a run 1n the second Then he
al lowed the homer.
'

\1

"i h ''"
m ,,,'

""

M ll v.t~ u kec

Clw.:agu

Welllern l)n I'&lt;IUn

:r~:\J~
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q-enule .

.

81

411
71

Coh1raJn

K-CLEVI"LA.ND

beuon

,, ,,,

W5

• Ccnl n l Oi\ i~in n

•

AL standings

60 '1

feated Symmes Valley club. Eastern
has dommated 11s other three vJcl&lt;&gt;ncs.
Last week. the Eastern Eagles
bro~e a scoreless deadlock in the
lirst quarter. then lambasted the Win
County Tigers 47-7 here last Fnday
night in a non-league football contest. Eastern is now 3-1 overall and

:·Meigs seeks to crack .500 mark in bout with Fairland Friday

bases-loaded, one-out Jam in the

eighth with the Bra\'CS clingi ng to a
By JOSH DUBOW
3-2 lead. Mulholland struck out
AP Sports Wriler
Bobby
Bonilla before retiring Todd
After all the Atlania Braves have
Pratt
on
a grounder.
been thrOugh th1s year. It takes more
The
Braves have defeated the
than a pennan1 race to knock them
Mets in SIX of eight games this seaoff their game.
The injury-plagued Braves beat son Atlanta has won 12 of \he last 13
New York for the second ntght in a meetings at Turner Field.
"They definttely have our number
row. winnmg 5-2 Wednesday to build
the
las t co uple of years." Matt
a three-game lead 0 \ er the Mets 111
Franco sa.Jd . " But.- we ' re n g ht there
the NL East wtth lU rematnt ng.
o~f we can JUSI g~: t over that
The Braves haven 't played such -hump
·•
mt.!aningful games at this time of
New
York 's lead m the wild-card
year smce 1993. when they beat San
fell
to 2', games over Cincinnati .
race
Francisco by one game m the NL
In
other
NL games. Anzona
West. Atlanta has won fo ur :ilra1g ht
reduced
Its
magic
number to win the
East utlcs by an a~·cragc ·marg m of
NL West to two with an 11-3 wm
14 games .
'" This JS c .X I:ltiOQ, .. sa1d Tom over Coluradu.
Elsewhere . H was San Franc1sco
Gla,·inc l i ~ - II). who won for onl v
the sl!cond t11nc an eight starts '"I{s 5. Los Angeles 4: Pittsburgh 3.
Houston 2. the Cubs 5, St. Louis 3:
c'&lt;cltlllg to Lome to the park when the
Philadelphia 12. Milwaukee 3: and
g am e~ mean something ."
Montreal
5. Fiot1da 3.
Chipper Jopcs h01ncrcd for the
·Diamondbacks II, Rockies 3
th ird umc 1n two games. pin ch-hiller
~latt Williams homere~ and drove
Ke ilh Loc khart brnke a 2 - ~ tic with a
In
four
runs and Andy Benes ( 12· 12)
sacrifice lly and Brian Jord.In hil a
pllciJed
eight stror g mni~ g! and had
two-run smglc k1r Atlanta. whach has
three
RBI
S as Arizona won at
(i\c phlVers out lor the season w11l1
Colorado and dJCw closer to clinchlnJUfi C~
Ing the NL West
· I almost cned ." smd Jordan .
William s. 23- for-(ll wuh lc&gt;ur
who didn't stall the two previous
home
runs and 14 RB!s in hts last 14
games bec ause of a sore r·1ght hand.
games. hll a three- run homer, h1 s
" I ;e not been producing lately. To
p10Jucc 1n that sit ua tion me ant a lut
(See NL on Page 5)

The Daily Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Eastern.to put 3-1 record on line in home game with Hannan

P.,4

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September 23, 1999

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�P • 6 • t:he Dally Sentinel

•

Thursday, September 23, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend

~ollege football morning. l,ine favors Michigan, Florida, Marshall
~

0)

RICHARD ROSENBLATT .

li.P FOOiball Writer

·What's a jladger to do?
Bany Alvarez can't coach from
the sideline because he needs knee
replacement surgery. Heisman
Trophy hopeful Ron Dayne is nursing a sprained ankle. N9w the big
question is wbether Wisconsin can
stay with No. 4 Michigan after losing
lO lowly Cincinnati .
Don't worry, wide receiver Nick

Davis says, No. 20 Wisconsin will be
ready to open Big Ten play against
the Wolverines at Camp Randall
Skadium.
, .
, AI varez is to have surgery Oct. 5
and probably will coach from the
press box Saturday.
" We're just going to support him
and get through it," "Da.·is said.
And Dayne. who had 231 yards in
last week 's 17-12 loss to the
Bearcats. says hi's ankle is fine.
" It's feeling good,'' Dayne sa1d.
''I'm able to run .··
But how is WisconSin (Z- l ) to

Last vear, Wisconsin traveled to
· Ann Arbor with a 9-0 record and No.
8 ranking . The 15th-ranked
Wolverines won 27-10 and ran fJc
257 yards against the nation 's best
rushmg defense. Dayne was held to
58 yards.
Michigan coach Lloyd Can: does-" 't sec much change in the Badgers.
but he certainly expects a closer
game .
"Essentially. Wisconsin has the
same team it had a year ago. with the
exception of the quarterback. •· Carr
said, referring to Kavanagh replacing

Mike Samuel. "They have a strong,
powerful offensive team. They have
a strong defense . They have a great
punter: They want to play ball conITo!. field-position football . They
have the . kind of people that allow
them to do that. ..
Mic~igan needs ·to get its offe nse
untracked. too. Jeff Del Verne kicked
,three. field goals in an 18-13 win over
Syra&lt;use.
suppqrl Dayne's brui si ng run s?
Carr. says h&lt;'ll continue alternatAgainst
the
Bear&gt;Cats. · Scott ing quarterback•· with Tom Brad y
.Kavanagh threw for 85 yards. That start ing and Drew Henson playing
won't do against the Wolverines (3- the second quarte r. He also " rants

Golden Eagles .... TEXAS A&amp;M. 31 more touchdo" ns.
··We missed out on some opportu- 24.
No.6 Nebraska
nitie s." Carr said. ··Our first dri•c.
tminus 17) at !\lissouri
we have the ball for 10 plays, then
Hu&gt;k&lt;r&gt; return to the.s&lt;:ene of '97
we drop a pass. Then we get a field
m1racle &lt;atch .... MISSOURI . 24-21 .
goal bl ocked,
Memphis (plus JO ',)
" In these hig games. the line
at No. 7 Tenaessee
between winmng and losing is \'Cry
Vols tak~ out fruslrations on
small. You have to take ad•·antage.
Tigers .... TENNESSEE. 41 - 13.
The picks:
Oemson (plus ll' •)
No. I Florida State
at No. 8 Virginia Tec:h (Thursda~)
(mitius 20) at North Carolina
Tigers upset Cavs. now look to
Seminoles hit the road for the first
take out Hoki_es .... VIRGINIA
time .... FLORIDA STATE: 35-10.
Indiana (plus 26)
TECH. 28-21.
Np, 9 Miami (minus II)
at No. l Penn State
O at East Carolina
Good chance for Lions to find a
(at Raleigh. N.C.)
running game .... P!ONN STATE. 42Pirates are 3-0; 'Canes looking to
10.
rebound from tough loss to Penn
No. 3 Florida
State .... f;AST CAROLINA. 27-24.
(minus 20) at Kentucky
,
Central Florida
Gators secondary better be '"
27'
,) at No. 11 Georgia
(plus
shape .... FLORIDA. 45-21.
Golden
Knights
will be happy
No.4 Michigan (minus 3)
when
this
one
·s
over
...
. GEORGIA .
at No. 20 Wisconsin
4514
.
Arc the Badgers for real after
Cincinnati (plus 32)
s hoc king loss at Cincinnati '.' ....
at
No. 12 Ohio State
MICHIGAN. 24-20. .
First
the
Badge rs. now ·· the
Southern Mississippi
Buckeyes·• N:d1 .... OHIO STATE.
·(plus 10\ ) at No.5 Trxas A&amp;M
Second s trai ghl 10ughie fOr 52-10.

Northwestern (plus 28)
at No. 13 Purdue
Don ., get caughtlookmg ahead to
Mich1gan. fell as .. PURDUE 49-13.
No. 14 Arkansas
(minus 3) at Alabama
Hogs' QB i hurting : Tide's whole
. program is hurting .... ALABAMA,
·

27-26.

No. IS Kansas State
(minus IS',) at Iowa State
Cyclones RB Darren Davis needs
a hig day..... KANSAS STATE. 3121.

battle of unbeatens. .. MICHIGAN
STATE. 27-17.
Temple (plus 211)
at No. 21 Marshall
•
Thundering Herd plan to ftay 11(
Top 25 awhile . ... MARSHALL. 42 10.
No. 22 Tesas
(minus 16) at Baylor
::
Longhorns, beware of wounded : .
Bears.... TEXAS, 34-30.
South Carolina (plus 13)
at No. Z3 Mississippi State
.
Gamecocks looking at 14th loss ili c
a row ; Qulldogs lookin g for 4-0....
MISSISSIPPI STATE. 31-13.
Wyoming (plus 9h )
at No. 24 Air Force
Falcons have 11 -game winning
streak.... AIR F,ORCE 27-17 .
No. 25 North Carolina State
(minus 6',) at Wake forest
Demon Deacons set sprin g trap on
napping Wolfpack.... WAKE FOREST, 21'17. '

The the triple crown. taking the Cane
first elimination of the 5--J.th L1tlle -Panderosa ·s Joh n CJmpbell to Pace three weeks ago by 2'. lengths
Brown Jug is a mile long but could explc&gt;de from the stan like a sprinter• over Heartbeat Mindale. The horse
be dc~..:illcd In the firsl few reel by the com ing out of the blocks. It 's no has won eight of II starts with two
two fa vuritcs .
secret that on a hanked. half-mile seconds this year . and has earned
The Panderosa starts out of the trac k such as the Delaware County $529,395.
" He 's qUite a horse right now.
No. 6 hole with Bli ssful Hall outside Fairgrounds the early leader has a
He's a gori lla:" Pierce said. "When
him in t&lt;&gt;day's firs4&gt;f three divisions particularl.y big adv imtage.
"We're leaving ... Campbell. said you let him p~ce . he can really go."
of the seco nd le~ of pacing's triple
Pierce still wishes he wasn't outof his plans. "We ' re not dropping
crown for thrce-ycar-olds.
side The Pandcrosa at the post.
" The Ponderosa has the drop on hack ...
him." trainer Brei Pelling said of his
''I'm . not really happy with the
Pierce said he hoped to make up
horse ... What 's going to happen ground immediate ly.
draw," he said. " Hopefull y we' ll
"It'd be nice if we could step overcome it. ''
\\hen they get tu the 4uarter'1 Doe'
1llere have been questions about
one turn the other loose'! There are a aro und The Panderosa before we hit
lot of questions there . That's why the first turn," he said. " We'll have The Pahderosa 's mental and physical
to see what happens." ·
fitnes s after he broke stride in two or
these drivers get the big bucl\s."
The pressure will be on Blissful
Blissful Hall won the first leg of his last three stans ~ including the

DELAWAP-E. Ohio (A P)

~ The

Hall' s

Ron

Pi ere~:

and

" He lrK1 ked great.'' trainer Brct
Cane as he Was making a move al
Pelling said. " He sent chill s down
the '.ths pole.
. " We &lt;ertainly got a break when my spine .··
A year ago. Pierce ended up in the
-The Panderosa broke ... Blissful Hall
sulky
of Shady Character when
frainer Ben Wallace said after the
Mike Lachance ~ who had dri ven ,
race.
Boh GlaLcr, The Pande.rosa.'s Shadv Character to an elimination
owner, is anything hut tocky even "ictory by four l engthS'~ elected to
though h.is· horse has \\'on more than dri\'e Arti scapc . in the final.
Lachance cn&lt;jed up four(h . \vhiJc
$1 million thi s year.
" We certain ly ar~n-t brimming Pierce got Shady Character off to a
fast stan and then held on to beat stawith confidence:· he said .
Still. Glazer sent The Pandcrosa. blemate Cam Knows Best by a head.
" I' ve beell thinkin 2 about it the
winner of five of eight starts with
last
couple of week s." Pierce said.
one second, out in a non-betting.
non-purse qualifier Saturday at "I loved the experience I had last
Garden Stale Park and he won by l 0 year but it wou ld mean a lillie more
io· me with this Blissful Hall colt
lengths in I :53.

hccause I have been driving him all .
along."
Island Fanta\y. wiJh Lac~ance
see king a fifth Jug win. is the
favoritC in the second division.

The favorite in the third division
the 54th annual Ju g · is
Grinfromcartocar. riding a two-game

of

win.ning

~trcak

including his most

recent start Sept. II in the Brown
lug Preview.
The top three fini shers in each·
division advance to a second heat. If

a divi sion winner wins that. he wfns'
the Jug. Otherwise. the four winners·
decide the Jug champion in a raceQff.

Ripken scheduled to have back surgery. today; will miss rest of year

.
CLEVELAND (AP)...:. In a year
"I feel bad ·that Cars -hurt because
in which Cal Ripken went on t~e dis- I wanted him to get 3,000, but he 'll
abled list for the first thne 'in his get it next year," Baltimore Orioles
career. back surgery will end his sea- manager Ray Miller said Wednesday
son early and delay his pursuit of night.
3.000 hits.
Uni verisity
Hospitals
of
Ripken . nine hits shy of 3.000. Cleveland spokeswoman E1leen
wa~ scheduled for,back s~rgery today Korey confirmed lha: Ripken was
at University Ho~pita l s in Cleveland being prepared for surgery this mornand will miss lhe final 12 games for ing at about 10 a.m. , ·and she said the
the Baltimore Orioles.
' surgery \"ould .likely last two to three

'

.

hours.
Ripken visited specialist Dr.
Henry Bohlman on Wednesday after
experiencing back spasms overnight.
The surgery will relieve pressure on a
,nerve that has been causing him pain.
"He is in a lot of discomfort and
felt that it was time to get it done. "
general manager Frank Wren said.
Baseball 's Iron Man, who played
in 2,632 straight games before volun-

-

tarily ·ending the streak a year ago.
twice was placed on the DL this sea'
son because of back pain.
·
."You expect him to come back
and play well bct·ause of. who he is,"
teammate Mike Timlin said. "II says
a lot about the gvy that he went th is
long without surgery. You see a guy
in pain and yet continue to play at the
le vel he was, you admire that. He \ an
·,ron guy."

NFL, Cleveland cops see fake Browns goods selling
CLEVELAND (AP) ~ The new
Cleveland Browns might not be hot
ori the field but sales or unlicensed
· team apparel are brisk.
·
The. demand for Browns paraphernalia has been so great that
Cleveland now has the biggest NFL
cou nterfe iting problem short of playoff scams for tiCkets and apparel fn r
Super Bowl -bnund teams. said David
Proper. a n aiiOrney w ith NFL
Properties Inc:, the league's marke tmg arm .
·

The NFL had four people checking out Browns merchandise on the
day of C lc ~e l and's home opener
Sept. 12 and confi scated unlicensed
items with a retail yalue of $20.000.
including l,JOO T-s hins.

·'We' re out there to protect the denies teams a rightful share of merThose selling counterfei t equipfans." ~roper said Wednesday.
chandise sales.
ment usually haul a van full of goods
.One item that was confiscated
Browns fan Bianca Brackins. 19. IQ Clevel~nd on game day· and leave
was a T-shirt that showed a. cartoon of Cleveland,_said reliable quality is after the ga~ sa id . ,
character urinating on a Pittsburgh one reason to buy licensed merchan NFL Pro11ert1cs ex:pects Browns
Steelers player. Proper said. .
.
di se.
it e ms to rank among the top I 0 teams
All thOse selling unlicensed mer"I would rat her buy . it here in the teague. Even in the years when
c handi se agreed tQ surrender the because it's the real thing ," she said the Browns didn ' t play, from 1996
ite ms and to provide information on Wednesday while walking past the unrilthis m onth , the team's merchanth e manufaclUrer. Proper said . He new Cleveland Browns Stadium .
dise outsold I I. of JO NFL team s.
was n' t sure ho w many individuals
Police Lt. Edward Thi ery said the
One of · the hi gh-e nd · Brow ns'
had been selling co unterfei t good s first priority for police is that ve nd ors ite ms come s with some protection
and said the NFL still was trying ,to have city licenses to sell on down- agai nst counterfe its: A ·· No, I
id entit y the manufacturers.
town St•reet cofilcrs near the stadium Selection 1999 NFL Draft" football
· Offi cially licensed goods carry an and baseball's Jac obs Field .
sig ned by quarterback Tim Couch
NFL label with .a hologram.
Ci ty-licensed vendors . typ ically out of the University of Kentucky
Proper s.aid buying counterfei t avoid counterfei t items such as caps se lls at the stadium for $199 and
goods encourages illegal activ11y. q n and T-shirts and the le gal problems comes with a certificate of authentic-.
mean gelling inferior goods and they &lt;an create, Thiery said .
it y.
.
.

Eastern varsity, JV volleyball teams beat Waterford
The Eastern Eagles defeated the The Ohio Div ision seems to be pr~t­ spikes: 7/9: w/5 kills; ·1blk 7pts.
Waterford Wildcats "15-9. 15-0 in ty strong this year with exception o f Kristen . Chevalier- 9/9 WII Ace:
posting their seve nth volleyball win a couple of t ~a m s. I think the league Setting ': ,12115 sets w/5 ass ists ;
o f the seaso n. Eastern is now 7-3 is open thi S year to who ever plays Spiking: 517 w/3 kills. 5 pis . Leah
overall and 6-2 in the league.
toget her and most co ns iste nt. it co uld Sanders- 414 w/ 3pts.; Whitney Karr'
The Eastern reserve's a lso won in be anybody's any give n day.
415 wl3pts.; Amber Church 3/4 w/
two games to remain undefeated .
Fo ll owi ng arc lndividual stats:
3pts. ;
9/ 11 settin g' w/5 assists;
Head coach Don Jackson said,
Julie Bailey- serves 7/10 .w/3aces; Danielle Spencer 4/4
w/2pls. &amp;
"This was definitely a team effort
tonig ht . The points were spread
throughou t the whole team. We .have
-a lot of talent out on the fl oor at
Eastern's junior high vo lleyball had four.
times. but we have to be more Co nFelicia Sexton scored ,the only
SIStent and be patie nt with our serves. teams knoc ked off Kyger Creek in
Wednesday's doubleheader at Ri ve r point for the Bobcats (0-2).
V.alley High Sc hool.
The eighth-grade Eagles won 15The seventh-grade Eagles won the 13, 16-14 behind six-point efforts by
first match 15-0, 15-1. Jessica Kehl Katie Robertson and Stacy Smith
led the Eagles with 15 service points, and .four-point efforts by Aly ssa
all collected in the first game. · Holter and Kass Lodwick.
The Bobcats (5-1) were led by
Teammate Dusty 'Murphy had seven,
Well ston continued to pull away all in the second game. Carrie Mayle Jenna Zerkle's match-high nine
from the rest of the fi eld in the Ohio
'
Division golf race in the TV,C , afler a
match held Tuesday at the Pine Hills
I
I ~
Golf Course.
I
I
Well ston won the match with a .
150, foll owed by Meigs (160),
Belpre ( 161), Alexander ( 167),
Vinton
County
(18 8)
and
Nel sonville-York (2 12).
Jason Warren of Alexander fired a
two under par 32 for match medalist
honors. For Meigs Tomm y Roush
had a 39, Carson Midk1ff and Thad
Bumgardner had 40's, Ni ck
Octtwillcr a 41. Andy Davis a 44 and
Zach Meadows a 50.

lace.
Spiking: 415
w/2 kill s:
Mend y Guess 3/3 wl 2pts.; Al ison .
Ruse J/3 w/ 2pts.; Becky Davis 616
w/2pts. ; Sarah Cli fford 2/2 'wi "I pt .;
Spiking : 4/4 w/2k llls; Cinda Cli fford
- Played some good defense.
Eastern will host Southern tonight
at EaStern High School.

Eastern junior high spikers beat Kyger Creek

Meigs golfers
take second
in OD match

I

The 39-year-old Ripken ,· whose · his 400th career homer the next day.
career began in 198.1. went on the ·He has si nce been on a binge at the.
disabl ed list on.April 20 because of a plate, upping his batting average to a
ba&lt;! back, missing three weeks. He career-high .340.
was again forced out of action after
He appeared on hi s way t&lt;;&gt; joining
experienci ng more back pain Aug. I. Tony Gwynn and Wad&lt;: Boggs this
" To have it reoccur was disap· year as members of the 3,000-hit
pointing and frustrating. I was down club. II would have been lhe first time
for a long time.'' he said recently.
three players reached-the milestone in

points. five-point efforts · by Kandi
Sanders and Erica· Taylor and Nicki
Traccwell 's three.

R,ipken returned on Sept. I and hit

the same seas.on.

Cedarville · cross country runner
Hadler dies in m.o torcycle wreck ·
. CEDARVILLE. Ohio (AP) - A
memorial .se rvi ce will be held
Thursday evening in Menomonee
Fal ls. Wis .. for Man Had ler, a
Cedarville College cr0ss country
team member w ho di e d ,vhe n his
motorcycle crashed.
·
The
one- vehicle
accJde nl
occurred early Sunda y pn IJHerstate
75 near th e U.S. 6S interchange m
Hancock County.
Had le r
wa s
headed
fro m
Cedarville lll Pontiac. Mich .. where
he was 10 nicct member s of his fam Il y at the NFL game between · the

Gree n Bay Pac kers and the Detroit
Lions.
Hadl er. a junior electrical engineerin g major fr om

Menomonee

Falls. · had run for Ceda rvill e on
Saturday at the Midwest Co llegiate'
Championships in Keno sha. Wis:,

and placed 43rd of 320 runners.
He had trans'ferred to Cedarville
1n

Januarv

from

Cedarville cross country coach Elvin
Kin g. ·~ H e was very coachable and
responded positively in every way.
Man became a signifi cant part or our.
program in the shOrt time that he was
Ihere ."

.. -

IDIAI~N J'Is I
Tile Plnce For Work nnd Western

•Scrubs

··carharts
•Lee &amp; Levi's
•Embroidery Sel'vice
•Knives, Belts &amp;Boots

Wisconsin -

Mi lwaukee. · He ran for the' Yellow
Jackets' indoor and outdoor track
teams and was in his first year on the
cross country squad. He qualified for
the NAJA Indoor Nationals in the
mile run and was a member of the
American
Mideast
eonference
4x800-meter relay champion ship

290 North Second Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Jcam.

"Man was a quiet example t,o
everyone

on

the

team ,"

said

740·992·3684

wlhmawand

sl.

Ohio Division
standings
(After nine matches)

Imm

&amp;

Wellston.... ............
.. ............. ..42
Me igs ..
.. ... .......... :·..... 30
Belpre ........................................ 30
Alexander ................................ 21
Vinton County ._.................. ..... , ..... 11
. Ntilsonvi lle-York ............................ !

Dick &amp;Ruby Vaughan Invite
You To Stop In Before
/Jtaziel &amp;After The Game For Their
·
~ Friday Night Specials.
MIDDLEPORT DAIRY QUEEN BRAZIER

992·3322
'

Domestic violence is 'death of a soul' for victims - unless they can escape control

.'

at it. -- THE EMS IN DOllfAN.
ALA.
DEAR DOTHAN: It pays to
check even the most ordinary bills.

Am Landers

$ince a million dollar mistake means

1,7,

los~~naelts

•

'.ate and

v ·Htors

Dear Ann Landers: I am a
Domestic Violepce Outreach specialist/advocate and I assist vict1ms
of domestic violence. I read your
column in the Alexandria "tLa.)
Town Talk, and believe you understand this problem well .
Too often the question asked is,
"Why does 'she stay'" instead of .
"Why does be batter?" Victims of
domestic violence are like puppets
on a string, and invariably. the
abuser sadisiically toys with his victim. I refer to domestic violence as
"the death .of a soul."
The ph ysical abuse is bad. but in
time. the bruises go away and the
bones heal. The emotional abuse is
someihing that does not go away.

would have ·been paid autom~tically
by the bank had· we been out of town
when it carne through.
We framed the bill, and it gives
us a good laugh every time we look

nothing to a computer. It's just a few
more zeros.
Dear Ana Landers: After reading the story about the man who
soaked his infected toe in the crock
pol. 'r d like to tell you about what
happened to a 'friend of mine.

Years ago, "Dora" took 1 turkey
out of the oven, set it on the stove to
cool, and left &amp; her husband for
church. When they returned, Dora
found the cat on the counter. enjoying the turkey leg.
Knowing her husband would go
ballistic if he knew what the cat had
done ," she quickly cut the leg off.
When she brought the turkey to the
table for carving, her husband asked,
"Where's the other leg?" Dora

replied, "Kroger's had a special on band did more of the grocery shop.
one .. legged turkeys, so I bought ping, he never would have boup,t
one.,
that story about the one legged
Her husband actually believed turkey. How lucky for her that bD
her, and proceeded to carve . A few hn&gt; a ...:nse of hl'mor. I trust she
·days later. she felt guilt)' arid told prvuu:teJ mm there would be no
him the cat got the other turkey leg. more Tom foolery after that.
What' s the ·truth about pot,
He roared with laughter, and it has
been a family joke ever since. -- cocaine, LSD. PCP. crac~ . speed and
~RS .
W.. CHATTANOOGA , downers'' ''The Lowdown on Dope"
TENN.
o
has up to the minute information on
DEAR TENN.: If Dora's hus- drugs.
'

'·

I am a survivor of do mestic vio-

lence. I am glad I can say these
words. because too many victims

aren ' t around any more 10 say them.
I would like to tell every woman
and man who is gelling · knocked
around, you must get help. Outside
intervention· is your key to freedom .
It could save your life. If you try to
fight this battle alpne, you wi II prob-'
ably lose .-- A.P., LEESVILLE. LA.
DEAR LEESVILLE: Thanks
for encouraging all victims of
domestic vioience to . seek help
immediately. Shelters for battered
women (and battered men) are listed
in the telephone book, or you can
call the Domestic Violence Hotline
at 1-800799-SAFE (I -800-7997233) 0r, for the hearing imprured,
call TTY: 1800-787-3224 for a
referral.
Dear Ann Landers: I hope you
will let me share one more story on
ridiculous bills. My husband is in
the process of retiring, and we are
planning several long trips in the
near future.
I suggested we have our utility
bills paid automatically through our
bank so we wouldn 't have to be at
home to take care of them. My husband refused.
He insisted that he see every bill
· that comes in . I argued that it was
totally unnecessary to see such mundane bills, but he was adamant.
Two days after our discussion ,
we received our electric bill .. The
amount 'due was $233,6(3.29.
When we called the utility company and ex pressed our shock, we
were told th~ company had just
acquired a new computer system
and our actual bill was $40.
Our banker said that bill certainly

.
. . ...

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s~sOO. C~h

·NEW YORK (AP) ~ Planning
big family picn.ic in Central
Park? Don 't forget th e sandwiches and soft drinks ~ and a ci ty
permit that 's going to se t you
back $25 .
· The city wants to enforce a litile-known ,· law requ iring any
group of 20 or more people to pay
!he. fee and apply for a permit 30
days in advance , the Daily News
reported today.
: Hearings were s,cheduled ioday
!&gt;n a measure to clarify the regulation and its enforcement.
: The new proposal would
tequire permits for any "conte st,
~xhibit, ceremony, parade, athlet_ic ·competition, reading ot picnic
involving more than 2 people,"
! he paper said.
Fewer than 2,000 such pe ... ~....._
w.ere issued last year .for the 326 .....___
parks in Manhattan ; no figures
were. available for the other four
·boroughs.
· · Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said
'today the story is false and there
:will be .no change in the city's
·long-standing policy on large
:groups in parks.

a

Giuliani de clin ed to elaborate
:on how strictly the limit is
'e nforced,· but Parks Co mmission . :O r Henry Stern said it g ~n erally
:targeted organized events like
co ncerts or theatri cal p~rfo r­
mances .

" It 's enforced by the rule of
reason," Stern sai d. " If there's a
pri vate soc ial gatheri.ng, yo u ' re
not disturbing: anyopc . !here's n o

o ne that's going arou nd wi th a
clicker to sec when the 21 's! per-

••

.

New York's Central
.Park now charges

so n arnvcs .

. I

Thu...ciay, Saptember 23, 1...

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"The Parks Department has
had for. at least 15 years the same
policy," he said. " The same policy will remain in effect. ... If you
want to have your children in the
·park, you're not going to have to ·
.
pay." . .

*Credit Terms _
*Layaways ·
*Visa/Mastercard

The Daily Sentinel
.,.,.

•

· No. 16 Southern Cal
(e•·en) at Oregon
Ducks lookin·g for two in a row at
home over Trojans. ... USC. 35-30.
Virginia (pi~ 6'·•)
at No. 17 BYU
Ca••s go west of Mi ssissippi for
just lith 1i111e in I ,074 games.
BYU. 27-24.
/
No.I8UCLA
("" _ (minus I) at Stanford
Bruins needed two founh-quaner
Last week: 13-6 .(strairht up): 7touchdowns to win last year.
11-1 (vs. points) ·
STANFORD. 35-28.
· Season: 49-I&lt; (slrai•ht up ): 30,
Illinois (plus 6',)
26- 1 (vs. points)
at No. 19 Michigan State
Believe it or not. this is a Big Ten

Grinfromeartoear stands among favorites to win Little Brown Jug-

•

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'

Thursday, September 23, 1999

Thursday, September 23, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

- -·Oscar winner George C. Scott dies at age 71-By CYNTHIA L. WEBB

Super 3-Dav Celebration Continues .
Now Through Saturday,· Sept. 251

Associated Press Writor
LQS ANGELES (AP) - George
C. Scou, whose eagle profile and
gra&gt;·el-voiced, commanding air
brought life to Gen. George S. Patton and . earned him an Oscar he
refused to accep.l , has died .. He was
71.
Scott died Wednesday at his
home in Westlake Village, about 40
miles northwest of Los Angeles, said
Pat Mahoney, the wife of Scott's
publicist
·
She said today she didn't . know
the cause of death. ·
·
' "They just found him and are try-·
ing to find out what happened, " she
said. "He was on again, off again for
'! w_hile. He just expired." ·
The answering service for the
Vent~ra County Coroner's office
confirmed Scott had died but had no
other information . The coroner
planned to release a statement this
morning, Sheriff's Sgt. Paul Higgason said.
Scott 'captivated audiences in
roles ranging from the dangerously
exp losive, yet sympathetic Panon in
1970 to lhe fatuou s blowhard Gen.
Buck Turgidson . in . Stanley
Kubrick's' 19.64 classic "Dr.
' Strange love."
The two were opposite ends of a
spectrum of memorable film characters : the shark on' the sidelines who
tries to ·devour Paul Newman. in
' "The Hustler"; the high-powered
ringer brought in to steamroller
small-town ·lawyer James Stew an in
"Anatomy of a Murder" ; the dedi·
· . cated doctor ground down by red
tape and institutional incompetence
in " The HospitaL "
For all hi·s suc,cess in motion pi&lt;;·
lures, Scott disdained moviemaking,
saying it was tedious and he did it
only ror the money.
"I have to work in the theater to
stal' sane," he said. "You can attack
the stage fresh every night." . ·

When Scott rose from a sickbed
at age 68 to star in the 1996 Broadway revival of " Inherit the Wind,"
one critic said it was like watching a
horse buggy powered by a Ferrari
engine . .
In private life. Scott was for years
a bellicose drinker whose profile
was marked by a nose broken five
times, in four barroom brawls and
one mugging . He was married five '
times - twice to the same woman,
actress Colleen Dewhurst.
When Scott played in "Plaza
Suite " in 1968, co-st¥ Maureen Sta·
pleton reponedly told director Mike
Nichols at rehearsal, ''I' m so frightened of George, I don't know what
to do. "
"My dear, :· Nichols replied , " the
whole world is frightened · of
George ."
Scott was hom in Wise, Va .. on
Oct. 18, 1927, but grew' up · in
·Detroit. He joined the Marines in ,
, 1945. too late f'Or action in World
War II, and spent his four years in
service burying the dead · at Arlington by day and boozing at night
' " You can't look at that many
widows in veils and hear, that many '
Taps' ·~i thout taking to drink ," he
· said.
He left journalism school in 1950
without a degree and threw himself
into acting, spending seven years
performing more than 100 roles wllh
· stock companies in Toledo, Ohio;
Washington and Ontario, Canada.
His breakthrough came. when he
·. was 30 years old and caught the eye
of Joseph Papp, impresario of the.
New York ShakesP.,are FestivaL
In rapid succession, the unknown .
Scott played the title role in
"Richard Ill" in November 1957,
Jacques in "As You Like It" in January 1958 and a poisoning peer in
the off. Broadway "Children of
Darkness" in March\ 1958.
.
For his work in all three ·produc. tions he received the off,Broadway

.

.

Preservation group's perfect
batting average now. at ,Jisk

best actor Obie and a Theatre World
awMd as a "promising personality."
For the Shakespeare performances,
he won a Clarence Derwent Award
as most promising actor and a Ver.non Rice Award for contribution to
off-Broadway theater.
Later in 1958, his Broadway
debut in '.'Comes a Day" earned ihe
first of hi~ four Tony Award nominations. The others were for "The
Andersonville . Trial " in . 1959,
"Uncle Vanya" in 1974 and "Death
of a Salesman," which he also
directed. in 1975.
· In his career, he also won a second Obie, two television Emmys out
of five nominations and was nomi -

nated for Oscars four· limes.
His film debut caine in 1959, as a
charismatic loon·y who stirs up a
lynch mob against ·Gary Cooper in
"The Hanging Tree." ·
.
The ' 'same year, "Anatomy of a

Murder" brought hi s first Academy
Award nomination. He said nothing
about it.
When he was nominat~d again in
1962 for "The Hustler ;, he wired the
academy ''nO' Lhanks." The academy

did
not .withdraw
hi sI name, but he
.
'
dtdn't WIO.
.
Scott said later he didn 't think
he 'd be nominated again and regret·
ted only that "I wasn 't able to shock
the academy into doing something
constructive" about what he viewed
· 1ess popularity contest.
as a meanmg
The academy. ignored his with·
drawal again in 1970 and gave Scott
the best-actor Oscar, 10 go along
with Golden Globe and 'New York
Film Critics honors fdr " Patton."
As the film co'llected ·seven Acade- ''

DEATH COMES TO Actor
George C. Scott at age 71.

1971. He also was a nominee for
acting in Hallmark's 1976 "Beauty·
and the· Beast."
Early marriages to Carolyh
Hughes and Patricia Reed produced
two daughter~, Victoria and Devon,
and a son, Matthew. Scott also
acknowledged a child horn out of
wedlock during his school years.
He met Dewhurst when they
my Awards, Scott spent the evening
appeared
together in "Children of
watching hockey.
Darkness"
and they -.\·ere m_arried in .
His last nomination was for "The
1960,
divorced
in 1965, remarried in
Hospital " in 1971 :
He . won Emmys for directing • 1967 and divorced in 1972 . They
"The Andersonville Trial" on PBS had· two sorls, A,le•ander and Camp·
. GEORGE C. SCOTT IS shown in his most famous role · that of
in 1970 and. acting in " The Price" bell. He married actress Trish Van Gene(al George S. Patton. !jcott won, and refused the Academy
on the Hallmark Hall of Fame in Devere in 1972 .
Award for his performance.
··

News Hotline

By SCOTT SONNER ·
Associated Press Writer
· RENO, Nev. (AP)- The National Trust for Historic Preservation has not
lost a major fight for a structure since it started 4isting the most endangered
buildings and places in America in 1988.
. .
·
A demolition date (or one of the most historic casinos. the Mapes Hotel
in Reno, and fading hopes for Tiger Stadium in Detroit, one of the. oldest
majooleagu~· ballparks , have the nonprofit group 's leaders fearing the worst
"We've never lost one on our list and now we have two that are· at very
great risk ," , said Richard Moe, president of the 50-year-o ld national trust
based in. Washinglon, D.C. "I suppose it was inevitable we'd lose one at
some point."
The Mapes, a 12-story brick building built in 1947 on ,the banks of the
.Truckee River, was the first in the nation to ~ouse a hotel , a casino and other
entenaininent u'nder one roof. Its art deco style earned it a listing on the
National Rpgister of Historic Places in 1984. ·
During its heyday in the ·50s and '60s, entertainers such as Sammy D,avis
Jr.. Mae West and the Marx Brothers headlined there. But since 1982, tbe
Mapes has. sal boarded up and vacant. much to the chagrin of city officials
who view the v.roperty as key to 'the city'&amp; downtown rede~elopmcnt :
· Local preservationi sts have fought three years to sa'-'C the Mapes. They
suffered their btggest setback earlier this month when the City Council
approved a $1 million contract to demolish the building in February.
"Tins would be a tragic loss not just for·Rerio but to the country. It is a
very significant building," Moe said.
Like the Mapes, Tiger Stadium is on the National Register of Historic
Places. Its future is less cenain.
·
·
,
The last Tigers game will be played there Sept, 27. They move to a new
stadium next season . The city governmentwill fl)aintain control of Tiger Sta·
dium for at least another year.
·
I
.
'
Leaders had hoped to pick a developer by now but extended the deadline
this week after gelling only three partial bids.
.
.
' "It is being flmit~d with the understanding it is never going to happen,"
Dave Malhalab. a Detroit police officer who has been active in the fight to
save the stadium, said Wednesday. "It is nothing but a camouflage to the end
·
·
ofTiger Stadium."

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GAP·THU

!

SWIIPIII.ISipramiiiDnal gi"IWIYI .l lllldllln RIW 11'11111 lltlenlng dins DIIIJ. Employees of Ames, partlclpali"!! veneto~&lt; &amp;their lmmed~te famlies not el~ib~. Seo store for complete details.

By LARRY McSHANE

Piggy Stayed Home," which rea'
tures
dissected pig floating In
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP)
The formaldehyde.
Brooki'yn Museum of Art may lose
Likely to anger others was Mar$7 million in city' funding unless it cus Harvey 's painting "Myra," a
cancels an upcoming exhibit featur- .13-foot rendering of a British child
ing m~tilated pigs, a dung-splat- killer created from children's hand
te~ed paiming of the Virgin Mary
prints.
and a portrait of a child killer. ·
The museum has .acknowledged
: Mayor Rudolph Giuliani vowed that · "Sensation" is R-rated, and
Wednesday to cut off annual sup- said no one under 16 will be admit·
pon for the museum if il goes ahead ted unle ~s accompanied by a parent
with October's exhibit
' The exhtbit IS scheduled to open
"If somebOdy wants to do that · Oct 2.
privately and pay for it privately,
The much-hyped collection drew ,
well, that's what the First Amend· 300,000 visitors when it debuted at
.: ment is. all about," said Giuliani. a London's Royal Academy in 1997;
Republican who is considered ·a three academy membernesigned in
potential U.S. Senate candidate for protest when it· opened.
2000. "But to have the government · In addition to cutting off month·
subsidize something like thai is out· ly funding .. the city also suspended
rageous.
'
talks on a proposed $20 million capThe mayor is the latest - and ital expansion project for the museloudCst- voice in a a wide-ranging um.
crowd opposi ng the upcom ing
Last June , the U.S. Supreme
. "Scns'ation: YOung British A~tists Court ruled that the .fcder;:tl governFrom the Saatchi Goll ection ." ·
ment can opt not to subs idi ze art it
The co lle cti on - 90 pieces by co nsiders indecent. That nap. ·
J2 different arti sts· -;- was already involving the National Endowment
under fire from Catholi c groups and for the Arts, began over funding of
animal right s activists.
homocrntic images hy photo.graphcr
The Catholic, League wa s Robert Mapplcthorpe and Andre s
incense d by Chris Ofili 's ·" TI.tc . Serrano's photograph of a cruc ifi x
·
Holy Virgin 'Mary," a painting of immersed in urine. ·
the religious icon splallcred with
Mu se um
director
Arnold
c l~phant dung. The People for the Lehman , in today's New York

Glider Rockers

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- Lifetime Limted Warranty
·- Beautif!JI upholstery

szggoo

All Flexsteel Recliners ·
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Startidg,
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Titncs, said .. it is th e museum's job

upset by the exhibit " Thi s 'Linlc
Ptgg y Went to Market, This Linlc

to support th e rig/lt of [Jrti sts. lo
express thejll se lvcs freely."
.

I

·

-- ---

@mstrong

Serta MaHress Sale ·

VINYL FLOORING

$14,00 Initiator ............................ s11. 99 installed
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CHEST OF DRAWERS
Ecorwmical Chests far your Ext met. Storage :Vet&gt;tl.&lt;.
.. ~ · Wardrobes und 4; .5,, 6 D.rat&lt;Jer Cht&gt;sts

a

Ethical Treatment of Animal s wCrc

'

'S

ANDE

Museum's city funding ·in jeopardy
due to ·controversi'al exhibit
1

To offer story suggestions, report late
~breaking news and offer news tips ·

Reg. $99 to $269

BRASS BED SALE
REG.

$209
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Sale $79 to $·2 19

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TW'IN B D•·················•·····················
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SALE.BEDROOM SUITES WHIRLPOOL LAUNDRY
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Reg.

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�'Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Diana Ross describes
.~I was upset'
~ltercation at London's Heathrow Airport
Jy MELANIE CARROLL
Associated Preas Writer

announce meetings and special
e \ ' C nts . The calendar is not
designed. to promote . sales or
fund raisers of any type. hems
are printed only as space permits and cann ot be g uaranteed
to be p•inted a specific number
of days .

RUTLAND
Rutland
Bicentennial Committee cookout Saturday, 6:30 p.m. at the
civic center for those who
helped in the Bicentennial celePOMEROY - Town and' bration. Bring dessert·.
Co~ntry
E&lt;po CommiHee
PORTLAND ~ Lebanon
mcc.ting Thursday, 7:30p.m. at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds . Township . Trustees regular
All persons interested in the meeting Saturday, 7 a.m . at the
Expo are invited to anend.
iownship building.

CHESTER ~ Ewing Chapter of Sons of the American

SINGER DIANA ROSS is shown leaving London 's Heathrow .Air~
port_after being held by London poli~e after an altercation with a
security guard.
·
reporters and photographers into a eight hours after she was scheduled
·
limousi ne. nanked oy five London to leav.e .
"
I
have
been
through all the air- .
police officers.
She told reporters she felt like a pons of the world and never hccn
prisoner. "I sat in the police station su bjected to such an intrusi ve
like a crimin al for five hours. I was search, .. Ross said earlier in the day.
frightened. I was scared."
"I am"' huggy person. I don' t mind
She returned to Heathrow in time being touched. but not in this wayfor a 7 p.m. night to New York - · it was far too personal. ''

-

. Star Grange activities
Star Grange . 778 and Star
Junior Grange 878 held their
annual hayride and wiener roast

Ladies Missionary Fellowship
The Ladies Missionary Fellowship of the Racine First Bap-

recently with ' Over 50 memhcrs
and guests in attendance.

Church met Thursday
evening in the church fellowship

Final plans for the Chicken ·
barbecue 10 be held Sunday from
II a.m .. to 2 p.m. were made. It
will be held at the Grange Hall
located on County Road I three
miles north of Salem Center. It Is
open to the public.

hall.
The meeting was opened by
Cookie Salser who welcomed

Salser read scripture from I Pe\er
.pertaining to sisters. Refresh-

everyone . Marge Grimm had

Cummins and Cookie Salser.

prayer.
Cookie Salser gave a reading

Roush reunion

Wood personal
Je:.m

and

Norman

Dominican Republic , Germany,

ti s t

"Give as it is Given."' Vicky
Culnmiris read the minutes of the

last meeting and Dortha Salser
read thank-you note s from those
the group is helping.
Vicky Cummins haP a reading

Wood.

'Thin gs We do for Others." The
needs of several familie s• were
discussed and acted upon. Using

Pomeroy, recently entertained
with a family dinner. Attending
were Kenneth. Carrie, Donna a map of the world , Cookie
Wood, great-grandson Tyler Salser. a»isted by Cathy Rule
Anderson of Columbus. Carolyn and Tcmja Hunter. read of t~e
Sue and Steve Brickles .of Ger- millions throughout this world
mantown, Md.. Ronald Wood that do not know Jesus. It was
and Lee Drake of Pomeroy.
· noted that we ·all nc.ed to pray
·carolyn Sue and Steve Brick- · 1ha1 someone will reach these
lcs of Germantown spent several people and tell them about Jes us
days with their parents, Jean atid and his love for us
Norman Wood , and Lona BrickTh.e group help s support mi s. les.
. sionarics in Africa. Australia .

.

6:30p .m. at the Chester 'Courthouse.
FRIDAY
POMEROY -

Ladies for

the · lord Interdenominational

Ladies Ministry will meet Friday. 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Riverfront Amphitheater with
ftee food, singing and preaching. For more information call
Betty
Johnson
at
4411415/992-b443 or Jan Swigger
at 992-6667.
SATURDAY'
CHESH.JRE ~ · well family
reunion Saturday at the Kyger
Creek Recreation Center. There
will be a basket dinner at 12:30
p.m . All family and friends are

.

be Oct. 2 with installation of offi cers to be held.

T~ursday, .

R,cvulution _meeling

---,---------,----- Society
Scrapbook---'--.

The next regular meeting will

Philippines and the United
States.
Secret sisters were revealed
and 21 ladies participated in the

invited .

drawing of new ones. Cookie

CHESTER
National
Hunting &amp; Fishing Day Satur-

tographs mid inc-idents that happened to family ancestors.
Prizes were given to the oldest

~1way, Wanda and Steve Jenkins

ol' Kentu cky; youngest child,
Dana Roberts.

ment Tonight '' television pro gram.

ally plans 'to drop the Cox from

" It feels like. wow. I'm changing my identity. It was sca ry. It
feels good, like I' m really committed . It feels beHer than ryot

"The reason why is hecaus'e it
was -r~a lly important for ,David ,

·

for me .. too," she said.

4 miles past Southern HiQh School on right

Free Beans ·&amp; Corn Bread. Beans cooked o"er open fire.
Hot Dogs a"ailahle - SOC each.
·
FALL DECORATIONS: Fodder Stalks,
·
. ,
· Gourds, Pumpkins, Straw, ~ndian
Now's the time to get Corn, Lawn ornaments, Slates, Bird
those Mums planted. Baths, Unique yard sculptures
New shipments of pottery
.

1 Gal. Mums
$2.99 e~chor 4

/$1 0

Visit our new gift shop.
Hay rides starting Sat. Oct 2,1999
.Call or stop In for complete details.
Open Mon-Sat 9:00-6:00 Sun Noon -

~~::...;;;;;;iiiiiiii

.AN , . _ Eatom

p.m. •

7 ;3Q

Cc1mMJ up ~ MBNA Gokl 400
- . : Po-ot Cllel.) """"'

International SQeedw'8'J' {1 mhe·

1 p.m. • Saturday • TNN
• Wlnoton Cup, MIINA Gold 400
_12:30 p.m. • · Sunday • TNN

tracki. 400 laps/miles

WMn: Sunday, sept.. 26

MIDDLEPORT "- Oh- Kan
Coin Club meeting Monday at
the Trolley House , located
behind the Dairy Queen in
Middleport . Refreshments will
be served.

J....n. 3.97:7:
..,
3.111

!WI E.-nh.-&amp;1: X., 3.7!1'9
.... ~ 3.1SM .
Jflf Gtwn. 3 ,4«
Todd BdW, 3.279
Elton,_,...., 3.112

"'*""""·

...n Ma-t~n. 3.700

4. .,. Statwt. 3.683

51/H/,;
~·llhluu.c.om

· I.
&amp;.
7.
&amp;
•·

•t

lUton, 3,576
..., Got*-. 3,.554
Dale ~- 3.41.5

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

- FV\41.. 3.&amp;01 .
Jason t(def. 3 .031
OM&gt; a.n.,. 2,872

IM!)'W.... 3.113

R~

l«ry Ulbonle, :2.966

•

.

.

Martin, Ford , 155.966 mph. Sept .

'

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

m

13)
(11
(4)
(51
· 6 . (6)

Milu!

Jolt Burton
Bobby Ubont•
Dalo Jorrott
Tony Stewart '
Mark Martin
· Jeff GordOn

Willi«.&gt;~.

..

CheotrOiel, 130.152 mph, May 30,

1998

D I IIAIC dWiijlluCI; Man

Your
Tum
i.eltln m. 0. II J

Solid top five"
Never got it going
A Quiet eighth

Arui hUt' S a

,_NT

first victOfy with his first runner·
up f)ntsh . Joe Gibbs' drivers
finished 1·2 at Rlcnmond and
Sabates, nor his parents were
on hand in New HamPshire, but , 2·3 at loudon.
Next were the two drivers
Joe Nemechek won his first
who had dominated tt"le 1.058Winston Cup race anyway, holdmlle oval in recent years. Jeff
ire off Tony SteWart in the
Burton. whO Won the July 11
Duralube/ Kmart 300 .
race, finiShed fourth, and Jeff ·
It was a rare moment indeed
tor tne 35-year-old former Busch Gordon, two-time defending ·
Grand Nabona l Champfon, who · Champion of this race, was fifth .
Nemechek's uoset win .
Md finished in the top 10 onty
marlled the ninth of the ' season
once in Ills previous 14 starts .
for a Chelll"ole( drto.oer. Fords
Thirdillace finisher BOOb)'
labonl:e passed Man&lt;" Martin t.o have won 11 times and continue to lead the manufacturer
take second place in thQ points
standings.
standings, and Pontiac teammate Stewart followed up his

Oct 24

0c1.11

Ta-~
No1t1 Corohna Speed.y3f

-.Ill.
ra-.Ata.
....

Noot.
New. 714

M i~
Homestead
Motorsports C~x

Homestead , Fla.

Doo.ef. Del.

__

Concord, N.C

- . N . C.

Hlric&gt;ton. Ga.

FIUD OHHE WIIK

tkrll-lllatlnt.-M..,..DetllewH

BJ Monte DuttOtl.
NASCAR Thla Week

Tho nldcname ·Front Row Joe. had mor11
than a little s8rcasm attached beCaUSe Joe
Nemec:hell had boiXlme knowt[ rcr quali~I'C
-.vetl. then tamnc back on race day. ,
That rap bit the dust et New Hamps~tlre ,
where Nemechel4. pulled off one of the bigger
upsets In NASCAR hiStOry.
Nemechek dedtcate&lt;l the Ylctory 10 the ,
memory of his youneer brQther John, wl1o
died foiiOwlf'C a craSh In a Homestead, Fla..
truck raee In the spnng of i997.
AQI; 35
·
HOMETOWN: Born In Napfes, Fla.. raised in
1

'

1999 WINSTON C•P SCHEDULE

Lakeland, FJa,, resides In MooresVIlle, N.C.
WIFI: Andrea
CHIUI: John Hunter C2l
CAR: No. -42 BeiiSoulh Chevrolet Monte
Car1o. owned by Felix Sebates
RECORD: 180 S!Brts. 3 poles, 1 win, • tot&gt;
5 flniShel, 18 top.lOs, more than S5 million
In career ea~nlnes
FIRST$: stort Uuty 11. 1993, at New
Hampshire), pole (June 22. 1997, at
Cslifomla), win (5ept. 19. 1999, at New
Hampshire) .
·
WHERE WIU. YOU II NEKT VEAJn' •I'm
· SJIIIIOOfdl'll tor a jOb for the year 2000. I don't"
kooN what I'm gotrc to be dOtrc. Hopefully

llhiN.

The luckless Labonte weathered one mator crash, was
· competitllle for most of U'le csay at New tt!l!Mpshlre and kKI 37
taps. Whal rele&amp;ated him to 8 31st-place finish was a tap
from iookle Elliott Sidler's Ford In lap 297 . •rm Ured of getting run r:Ner, • said Labonte. •tt was JUSI sorilethlf1ll dk:ln't
really want to do.· sakt Sadler.
'

HASCAll Wook'o M""" Dutton l(hw 1111 O[llnlon:
•Sadler, his own rookie year obscured by the unpteeedente(l
i aucc:ess of Tony Stewart, 11 ~en(fll better and better. The
lnckient. cost him a top-10 tlrljeh and certalnt,r wasn't
Intentional. but It's small consolatiOn to LabOnte.·

-that

CDirC to
111in(las hard .as I can no
matter tf It's a lap In jX"a:tlce, qualil'yifli. a
race orwtlateo~er....
had some good

A

.....

l.ibertll, Kan.

runs and Mwn't been able to capitalize on
tnem this year. Finalty (Stnday~ thif"Cs went
our way:
I
HOW DID VOU MANAGE TO WIN? 'l'Ye got
to tnank mt wno~e· ream . They.tud a ilood..iOb
on pit stops today. We had tne whOle P8Cka&amp;e
today. 1don't care who )'OU are or what team
you're with, If you dOn 't have the whole
package, )C)U're f!Ot e;o1na to win. Today was
our day. We've aot a IIOOd drtvlrC race car,
,.00 motcxs.... The guys oqri&lt;ed hard. and
'M!I ended up In vk:tQry lane .. Thars hard
to do . •
WIRI YOU THINKING OF YOUR LATE
IROTMEII, JOHN, ON THE FINAL &amp;,AP?
·Be11e't'e me, leets were com1rc out of my
Ol'IS pretty he"'Y comtna around that last lap.
1 miss him a lot. I wish he was here. I know he
was up there watchll18 out for me today. The
Lord was watching out for us. I just wtsh my
mom and dad could have been""bere and my

Dear NA$CAR This Week,

After I !i3w" the Goody's
Powder 500. everyone I
talked to ""id ll ga~·e them a
headache as 11 d1d me.
Headach~

Evtlyn £ . W•rnrr
F•)ttlt,illt, P•.

Amt&gt;n You \"ho~.Jid h1we read all
1he f~tll~rs. In rhe 10 day~ fol!o M'ing rhe roc~!, -we fl.'f~tin•J 17.~ lettt'f'"S amcerrung tlt i' mmlent By
our talfy, 12!) M-'t"rt" arr11-Earrthard1.
~1 well! pro-Eurrrhardl, aml orrt'

was sornt'"&gt;l-hat neutrol

brotl'ler and siStet'. •

Fan Tips

••••••••••••
Who's Hot-

Who's Not

•IGI': Who has more oolnts
then anyone in the last si~
races? Tony Stewart.

1.

"The Uttimatc Stock Car
Trivia Book.· by Dave and
Matt Lindsey. hypes itsetl with
the notation. ·1.044 fast and
furious facts every true fan
should know.· It Is available
from Rutledge Hilt Press .

•

Whal is the record for most cars fin ishing ·

on the lead tap?
2. What speectway hOsts the annua l pit-crew

competition?

IIi NOT: Dale Jarrett ma intains
. a ccmfortable lead, but t~e · s
had three bad races in the
last tour.

· WEillluDPOtt le ~"'PMCIS eunoJe:J lllJON ·z:
"Jea,&lt; Sfi.H U3t!) SU!&gt;JleM
le pue 8661' pue S66t U! lU!Od sJeas 1e ·sz: ·t

211 Sevel'lth Ave . N..

SIIJMSNY

Nashville , TN 37219

(www.rutiMf&amp;ehllpren.com).

a·, Montt Dutton
NASCAR This Week

Wlltrlp

. -builtoiiM
II not tho reca,L

J,

·~ - Potty won ·nino.

.

_ , _ _ DeWld

. p..,...';"-AitMd Byobbf 11110- c:ould

tor

*"' to oniJ - '

!I. • • victory.
r:~ r ''"

'

'"

·

~. H . -

With Ken
Schrader oow o,flicially in the
MB2 No. 36 Pontiac for next
year, NASCAR 's annual game of
musical driver seats is intensify·
ing at roughly the same rate as a
hurricane churn ing through the
Caribbean.

TluH of NASCAR'e ....

.

AROUND THI GARAGE

.

NASCAR drivers continue annual

-oft "!""&gt;

Schrader is apparently taking,
crew chief S11mmy_Johns with
him, ltavinK Ryan Pemberton
open to make !l move with!Jerry·
Nadeau to the Hendrick
Moto~portli No. 2.5 Olevy.
Established driVers such as

c ~t

/he

••••••••••••

•

ltol\ll....t Ylllll by

from

Mary Ulery

we·w

•••• IIi •••••• .•

LOUDON,

I 'U!I'I'

N.C.

Dt.ar NASCAR Th 1s Week ,
How much longer IS Earnhardt
going to be allowed to g~t by wtth
hts dtrty tricks and hes? Worse yet.
NASCAR aiJowstt to contmue. He
and hn (tram) Mould M balttd
from all racing.

!Ills (wlnnif'C the Dotalube/l&lt;mart 300) will
defloltet; help. I'm talllOC to a few pecpte out
!here. Who knOws what's &amp;oli'C to htlj)I)On?·
DESCRIBE VOUIIIIW AS A RACE CAR
DRIVER. •Every time I get In that race~ I'm

. Elliott Sadler vs. Terry Labonte·

i'FIIrpoi~ hoolod"'"' 1158 -1184,
ondtl\e.1191'&lt;ll110troek

-

otltt-r sidt&gt;

. W!NSIOH CUP SERIES
Neither hts can owner. Fell•

\;

0

Ill

Richard Albert
Hilllbo~u&amp;b ,

FROM LAST WEEK

\

'

· Dear NASCAR Thi1 Week,
I want to know why dtcre 11
· such 1 b11 s11nk about: Oak
Earnhardt t1k1ng out T~rry
Labonte. If it had bef:n Terry
be:hind Dalf and he had 1 chan~e
to do it. bt:-wookl have. An.yone
ebe would have done 1t also, and
NASC AR ~ld rule 11 JUSt turd
racmg. lf.you do not bcheve me,
go back 0\&gt;er 110me or thr: 1apes of
~IOUS racoes.
As f11 as my op1nion goes_ Dale
Eamha rdl won the race fa1r and
square. 'Why was there nolhing
~aid about Terry h1nlng Dale m th ~

honest driver

AUa-la""""'-

I

.

see Jarrett

Sept. 26 ""'"'""""' '"""""""" _ ,
Oct.J . ......,..,... _
Oct 10 Cha&lt;lotte Motor ~

a:

••••••••••••

Another bac&gt;tuck-day

Quite the surprise

·

\

EvreM q ·t;ttc NOOI'd : Jact..
SP""acue. Chi!Vrolet.t6t .749
mpn. NaY. 1' 1998

1998 .

From 3711110 fourll1
Teaming up with Tony

(-1 J.. Nomoctlok

"""· 21 .

s,....,.

Chevrolet , 130 .901 mph, Now-.

Mlllt BIISI, 2,836

Sport's

Caii992·215S
Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext• .105
For more
information

Soeeow~rt (1 .!5 mile-tnlckl. 167
lao$/250.5 mite$
_
, ....... Sept. 24
Dele ' II dl ;1 :Jack

Race'"-* Jadl Sprague,'

Joe Nemechek·

2.981

Advert;,r this

...

International Speedway (lm.letradl). 200 Laps / mlle$
.._..: Saturday. Sept. 25

J/lrWit1 Het'lsle)', 2,691

WOn another pole

•

·•

:W: ClllW Of Til Will
rotat1ons . •wtio-,.rtr....

No ~ponsor has been amlOW"ICed.
"one of1he best driverS in the
Johnny Benson and Joe
. X
~~rage ." Schroder, 44, ha s four
Nemechek are angling forth~
Winston
Cup
victories.
but
none
best options. variously considered
BICKLE'S TUR.J'I: Rich
since 1991 .
as the open sl.ots with ~ndy
Bickle, fired recently as driver at
Petree's established No. 33 Chevy
Tyler Jet Motorsports, too k over
(vac8ted b)l Schra der) and new
the Mark Melling -owned No. 9 ·
teams being established by A.J.
INSID[ DOPE ON COPE:
Ford on an interim basis beginFoyl and southern Caliromia
Dcrrike Cope ha s latched on as
ning with the race at New
businessman Cal Wells.
driver or the new Spananburg,
Hampshire lntemation~l
' For now, Dav id Green has
S.C.. team bemg rormed in Bud
Speedw11y.
moved from Lari"y Hedrick's No.
Moore 's old facilities. Fenley·
Bickle replaced Steve
41 Chc:vy to Tim Beverley's No.
Moore Motorsports {Moore will
Grissom,
but the assignment is
4S, with Dick Trickle taking O'(er eventually be boughj out com- .
not
yet
pennanem.
said Melling.
the Hedrick car ror the remainder . plctcly by a Calir\lmia businessof the season.
man) will resurrect its old No. 15 , ''We are simpl y ~a lunting di;;
vers in an effort to find the nght
TotTI Beard. one of the three
ond 'try to run the schedule with
co.
mbinat ion;'· said Melling.
pnnners in MB2, called Schrader Cope in 2000.
"'

.k f -t&gt;mbe• 20 1999 •

1999 The Ga~ton [N .C.I Glllt&gt;ne • Dlstri&amp;Jted DY un1Yet"S81 Pr~u Syndlctlte !800) 25~7 34 • For r~lea~ wee o

.

·

De!l(n:

.

Sabco? Joe N..,..chek
put Felix Slllm:11 In

vtct.,.y..,. for the first
tlmt llnc:l Myit Petty'e
Do\'• vlctOfl' on Juht ...
1995. Actlftl CfiW·cblef

lOftY G-"""'" at lOIII
two ............, plt ...,.

•

tMt put NIIMChek In

potltlon to win.

CanaGrBPhlcs lOt: .• S.-esote, fla

,

_,

Tuesday, ·oct. 12, 1999
112·2198

8USCH lUND NATIONAl.

· - .PROFIU ·-

,.. s.uw. 2,.814
Ntl6t l-tauStOI\ 2.884
Ron Mottlldlt". 2.85Q

Ruoty WaHoco
8. ( 7) Dale Elrnhardt
9. (-) Ward Burton

otiU

Call Dave Barris
For Mora Information

Grubb. Che\'rolel. 153.498 ~ .
Seot.·18. 1998

Last week 's ranking Is In parentheses.

tltl8ulcllGIIndNaltooal

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£ - •t-Rbn~IIIC NelON: Kevin

• Weekly rank ings oy NASCAR Th1s· Week writer Monte Dutton .

10.

Reach Over 18,000 Homes
In The Tri•County Area·! .
•

132.719mph. 5ept., 21. 199'1

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TOP TEN

7. (81

Friday, October 22, 1999
'

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Grf181Me. 3.232
.... Sprlilua. 3.107
Dennis s.u.. 3,G86
suey~ 3.047 '

L.a.IOtt , 2,797

Mb ~'ft. 2.$1

10. Milw Skilner. 2,933

See us for Your Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;
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R11ce NCGf'd: Mark Martin. Ford,

1999 POINTS STANDINGS

1. Dill!

a.a.

15.1998

-...:Ower (Del .) Downs

• EW'IIIt 'Ill RfJII .. NCOfd: Ma.11.

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CooMol ""' M8NA Gold 200

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ON THE SCHEDULE

WINSJON CUP SE:IHES

Friday • ESPN

• Butch $erln, MBNA CloW 200

On

Saturday, Septem~er 25, 1999
1l am· 4pm
Racine

•

• crottsni.n Truclla, ~a vee- 250

POMEROY - Meigs Local
Bond Issue Campaign Committee· Monday, 7 · p.m. at . the
Meigs High School cafeteria.
Architect will anend and campaign strategies will be di s-

...... --

. ... ....

•

,

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

Customer Appreciation·Day

Special

MONDAY
POMEROY- Veterans Service Commission, 7:30 p.m.
Monday, 117 Memorial Drive.

•

·.To Appear In The

No doing' it and ·it made him happy. "

740·949· 2682

992-2825

CARPENTER - Christian
band Earthen Vessc.ls performing Sunday, 10:30 a.m. at Carpenter Baptist Church off state
Route 143 and at 6:30p.m. at
Poplar Ridge Freewill Baptist
Church, state Route 554. Pastor
John Elswick invites all to
altend .

Bunting
Edition

man , Harold Roush of Rm:"ine;

oldest woman . Eileen Buck of
Racine; largest family. Carrie
Roush of Racine ; the farthest

CDx Arquette said she eventu-

50447 St. Rt. 124

(740) 44&amp;-2412

Fall

for dinner. The afte·rnoon 'Vas
remini sc in g over old pho-

·· KAREN'S GREEN HOUSE·&amp;COUNTRY
GARDEN CENTER

106 North Second Ave.· Middleport, OH

•·

hyphen . ·• she told the. " Entertain-

•

668 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis
Aaoss ' - 66 We W.S .. IId lie. 3S Wist

·

~pcnl

her name .

~1

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

carry-in dinner at noon and
afternoon services at I · p.m.
Special singing by the Bissell
Brothers and Harvest Time. All
welcome.

PORTLAND
Outdoor
hymn sing Saturday, noon to
dark at the Sti versville Community Church, Portland, in
ATHENS
O'Bieness
conjunction with a bake sale to
help funds for a new shelter' Memorial Hospital will hold a
house at the · church. Singers support.' group me~ting for fam e·
performing are : Delivered, ily and friends of those afflict Dave and Debbie Dailey, Mary ed with Alzheimer ' s disease
and Blaine Dailey, Two For and related disorders Monday,
The Gospel and Joe McCloud. 6:30p.m in the hospital conferFood and drinks will be avail- ·ence room B-10. Joan Lawson
able . The hymn sing IS free . Stroh , LPCC and David Stroth,
D.O. will be guest speakers.
Bring lawnchairs.
The topic will be "Taking care
of yourself as a caregiver." For
more information, those interSUNDAY
ANTIQUITY ~ H. A. Fred ested may contact O'Bieness
Hayman and Garnet F. Polk Hospital a,t 592-9337.
Hayman family reunion Sun. day, I 0 a.m: at the home of C.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va .
E. Hayman Sr. Dinner will bl! ~ Second annual Tri-County
at noon with games to rollow. Camp
Meeting
Monday
All relatives and friends wel- through Oct. I. 7 p.m. nightly
come.
at the Point Pleasant National
Guard Armory. Evangelist will
RACINE ~ Homecoming at be the Rev. Roger Duncan with
the Eagle Ridge Community special singing by the Duncan
Church Sunday with morning Family.
service at 10 a.m. followed .by. a

The Gideon and Artemis
Roush family reunion was held
Sept. 19 at Star Mill Park 111
Racine with 110 allending.
Hwold Roush. oldest member
attending. gaye the invocation

.Actress Courteney Cox to be known by' new married name, Arquette
.
Security ca rd . everything.

.,..._CIIIGIQ-1111-1• WwCIIIII'--a.

ments were served b¥ Yicky

.

, LOS ANGELES (AP ) ~ She
is the actress formerly known as
tourteney Cox. .
: The "Friends" star, who wed
actor David Arqucue on Jun'e 12,
has officially changed her name
io Courtcney Cox Arquelle.
"It's for real. It's on my Social

RACINE - Thomas and
Isabel We aver Stobart reunion
Saturday. noon at Star Mill
Park . Bring covered dish and
family photographs.

Wars Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Naine drawing
to he held.

given a leaflet about compl aints pro·

Ms. Ross said.
· She boarded the Concorde, but
was led off in tears. She was
detained for hours. then released
after being cautioned by police . She
was escorted throu.gh waiting

Tup-

pers Plains Veterans of Foreign

given a body search by the guard.
· Ms. Ross tried 10 protest to sec udty staff at Heathrow Airport immediately after the searc h, but was

·•1 reacted b-ecause I was upset."

Door prizes.

REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club meeting Thursday . 7 p.m. at the home of Mary
Alice Bisc . Installation of offi ce rs will beheld .

TUPPERS PLAINS -

The Daily Sentinel • Page U

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

in hunter safety and ethics,

archery, canoeing, fly fishing
and ny. tying , fish filleting,
shot shell reloading, trap shooting, .22 riOe shooting, muzzleloadi ng, coon dogs demonstra ti on. turkey calli ng and trapping . Lunch will be furni shed.

THUR,SDAY

~nd somet~ing_ she was wearing
apparently activated it. She was then

cedures. said Phil S~mes. her publicist.
· Outraged, ."she then went back
~nd approached 'the girl again and
said, 'How would you feel in this
situation?' and actually touched the
girl," Symes said.
The guard complained to police.
.accusing Ms. Ross of assault . .

day. 8:30-3 p.m. at the IKES
Farm on Boy Scout Camp Road
near Chester. Includes instruction. demonstration and participation for youths ages 6 to 16

September 23, 1999

NOTHING RUNS
UKEADEERE'

....,..------,.--....,.-~
. Community Calendar---! !
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to

: NEW YORK (AP) ~ A wearylooking Diana Ross said she was
~'treated like a criminal" by airport
efficials in London. after they
aetained her for more than four
bours following an aller'cation with a
~urity guard.
' · The entertainer arrived at
Kennedy . International Airport on
Wednesday night, hours after leaving Heatlvow Airport. She will not
face charges for the incident. which
ltappened after she was frisketl hy a
female security guard.
: " I travel a lot. The sec.urity
¢hecks usually use metal detectors: ·
said Ms. Ross, 55 . ''This woman
went all around my body and' up and
down my legs. I felt very uncomfortable. I wanled to complain. but
i10 one listened to me.:·
·
: The problems started shortly .
before Ms. Ross was to hoard the
morning flight to New York. She .
passed through the metal detector

~ )'hursday,

Thursday, September 23, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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•

�.
Page 12 •lbe Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 23, 1999

Thursday, September 23, 1990

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.•

80

Shania· Twain finally gets recognition from peers at CMA Award~f

BUI Mood1spaugn Auct1oneeung
Comp~te A.ucllonHrmO Servtc·
t1 Con,tgnmenl auction · Mi!l
Street, Mu:ldleport . 1 hundays
Ohio license 1769 3 740-989-

Stop J n An d See
Steve R iffle
Sales Represe nt ative
....,
Larry Sc h ey

f"
750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

WilliS'
·sEAMLESS
. GUnERS
$i4i"f &amp; Sf#li.l
1·100·311·3391
Free Esrimates
C01treetors Weloome
Albany, Ohio
1

7/27(99 2 mo. pel.

SHANIA TWAIN KNOWN for
her sexy outfits, wore hot pink
shorts for a musical number. -.

BROOKS AND DUNf'l took home the best vocal duo award for the
eighth stra ight year.

SINGER ALAN JACKSON . is
shown walking off stage after
singing a few lines from the
George Jones 's ong 'Choices.'
Jones was upset when asked to
perform a shortened version of
his song, which was up for best
single.
By JIM PATIERSON
Associated Press Writer
NAS HVILLE. Tenn. (API She's been honored at the GrammV&gt;
and slies been on MTV. Yet for
. years, Sha 0 ia Twain's sexy brand of
country music didn 't get much
. recognitio n from her peers.
Until now.
·
On Wednesday. Twain received

long-overdue recognition as the
Country Music Association honored
her as its Enrertainer Of the YCar. It
was the fi rst time

t~e

top-'scllmg

Twain had ever been honored by the
6,000 industry leaders who cast ballots for the win ners.

Two~legged,

countrv's share has declined each
ye~r si.nce peaking at 18.7 percent in
was presented wilh an un announce~
1993.
award for promoting cou ntry music
One country music veteran
overseas.
t•dgcd th~ co ntron.~~v· her midriffnoticeably
abse
ni
fr
om
thf:
awards
Two pup acts perfonncd. duets
.
haring image and pop-leaning music show was George Jones. He was
REBA MCENTIRE, LEFT, presents an emotional Shania Twain the wi th country singers : Merle Hag-.
angry that he was asked, along, wi th Entertainer of the Year Award.
ha~ . .:auscd in Nastwilk.
·
· gard was joined by Jewel on "That's
'
" Wdl. I'm not jU&gt;l a lap dancer other nominees. to perfonn a shon- because of a car wreck.
for "A Place in the Sun... He picked the Way Love Goes" and 'N Sync
after all. .. :-;he SllJd. referring to one ened version of. "Choices,'' which
"Alan said that had George Jones up a second award for producing the and Alabama performed "God Must
was up for best single. The CMA
of the nwro unkind jabs.
Have Spent a Little More Ti me o n
died there. there wo uld have been a album.
The a"ard for Twain. whose routinely makes such requem due to I 0 minute tribute lu hi m on the
Martina Mc Bride was named You."
..:ro~~o' er appeal ha.;;:, landed her on
time constraints.
In the audience were pop singer
best female vocalist. and Brooks &amp;
show."
West
said
.
"But
he
·lived.
Jones was watching the show
ttnd the' cover of magazines like
Spears and actors Billy Bob·
Britney
and they Wouldn' t give him three Dunn won their eighth straight troRolling Stone and People, comes at from home when Alan Jackson minutes."
Thornton
and Laura Dem. Thomtoit
phy for best vocal duo.
a lime when country music·s popu- brought the audience at the ·Grand
"Thanks. we know you're get- presented the 'vocal eve nt award to
Ed Benson. head of the CMA.
Ole Opry to its feet when he sang a
larity has dipped.
said
he
took
no
offense.at
Jacksons
ting.
tired of seeing us up here. but Gill. who won for " My Kind of
. Sales have naucn~d since peak-' few lines from "Choices" at the end
we
really
appreciate you giv ing il to . Woman/My Kind of Man," a duet
actions.
ing m 1995 at about$~ billion . After of his own perfonnance.
with Pany Loveless. Loveless. who
"Alan is a great traditional coun - us again," Ronnie Dunn said.
"He cried," said Evelyn Shriver,
an uptick of 2.7 perce nt last year,
is
taking a year off, did not attend.
Jo Dee Messi na won the Horizon
try anist, and he p~id tribute to
sales were down about 3 percent for president of Asylum Records, Jones· another g reat traditi onal counl ry Award for career progress.
Dolly Panon, Conway Twiny an~
record company. "He said ii was the
the first half of 1999.
The Dixie Chicks opened the Johnny B.ond were inducted into the
.ani st." Benson said. "That's fine."
Country music 's market share of greatest honor ever bestowed on
In other awards, the Di xie Chicks show with a . dy namic " Ready to Country Music Hall of Fame along·
sales has declined to 14.1 percent. him."
·
won their second straight award foJ Run.'' making their entrance from with Parton.
A Jackson ·spokeswoman, Kay
according to the Recording Industry
· "I fee l like I died and went to
best vocal group and their " Wide under ihe grass skins of three bac kAss1.x:i:..llion of America \ 1998 Con- · West, said the si nger was insp ired by
hillbilly heaven,'' Parton said.
up
dancers·
on
stilts.
Open
Spaces"
was
named
best
sin·
a visit to Jones earlier this year in
sumer Profile. That's still second Twain sponed a hot pink ensemgle and vide.o. Tim McGraw won
rock is first at 25.7 percent - but the hospital. Jones nearly died
best male vocalist and best album ble to sing "Come On Over," and

-

cattle-herding dog dies

.·

LI NCOLN, Neb. (AP) - State
officials, includi ng the governor. arc
puzzled o.ver why state cmployc,cs
married to other state employees
have not had to pay fur health msurance be nefits sinoe the early 1980s.
" I don't think you ' ll find tpany
plans out there anymore where the
. employer pays I00 percen t of the
premium co~t." Gov. Mike Johan ns
said Wedne,day. "I do n't understand where thi s came from ."
Single workers and those m'arried
to non-stale employees have paid
their share . hut slate employees married w· other state employees have
been exempt since 1981. accord ing
to a rev ieV{ of in surance nwn uals by
The Associated Press.
The .exemption \\lUS written into
state insurance manuals, hut no one
is sure exactly what prompted the
change.
The governors chief of staff.
Larry Bare. was budget direc tor fur
the state Trom IY8 2 to 19~6 . He said
he vaguely remembers the policy
being put in place bccnu:-.c it was
less expcnsi\·c for the state to pay fur
_ o married coup le;s p11 licy than to
pay for two individu,tl policies.
The practice got instituted when
it made sense financi ally. Bi.ire ,'laitl.
t;ut when the costs increased to
where it no longer saved thL' state
money it was ncvCr re vis ited.
It may take weeks to determine
how and why the change was made
and whether the current prat.:tit.:c i!-.
legal, Johanns ; spo~csman Chris
Peterson sai d.
A revi Cw of the current poli cy
shuw:-. the practice cost:-. the state up
to $270,000 per year. with 1.576
married state employees payi ng
nothing for health in:-.urancc.

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!Swisher &amp; Lohse Phqrmacy
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.

GREENFIELD. Iowa rAP) after hi s many accidents.
goi ng to be abl e to walk, 'we were
Ru sty was a 50-pound Australian
After los ing his legs in 1989, go in g to put him to sle ep," she
red h,ecler who never understood Rusty was run ovCr three times. sa'id.· " But -he got up on his two
the concept of surre nder_
shattt.!ring one of his two re mai ning good legs an d hopped ove r to us.
Desp ite loosi ng his two left legs legs and losmg part of his tai l. But , He was a mi racle dog . He knew
in a hay mowe r accident 10 y~:ars he always recovered. cap turing the one thin g, and that was to fig ht."
ago , the U{lg returned to pastures hearts o.f Iowans and att ra(.;ting
Families from a~ ross Io·wa .wen t
where he somehow resumed his . atten1inn from as far as Australia .
to Gree nfie.ld , population ,. 2,000.,
" He was a qog that wo ul d ncv&lt;.·r hop mg to breed their dogs with
call inl:!: to 'corral cattle.
Ru~ty was euthan.ized Tuesday say no." sai &lt;) Ph il Pearson. who Rusty. An 80-ycar-old Orego n man
afler doctors a t the Iowa State Uni- retired from lowa State's College trave led to the t oW n to catch a
versuv veterin ary hospllU: I in Am~s nf Veterinary Medicine in 1996. gl im pse of the wonder dog.
disc o~·e rcd a blockage in his intcs- " Wor king on him was a challenge
" He sti lll,!cls Ch ri stmas card s, ..
tine. They suspected cancer. and I'd MI'Cr had before. He was rea lly Mrs. Dads sa id. " He was our dog.
Rusty' s owners. Bill anJ Alice &gt;pccial to aI_I of us at Iowa Stale...
bu t he really belonged to Iowa."
Davis. did n't want to risk :-.urger)'.
The DJviscs. \vho received
Rusty Ru ger - the dog's fu ll
" He was in pain . We .dec ided Jt Rw(tv as a Christmas prcscnl. farm name- was buri ed with his mothwas time to say gooJhyr:." Mr s. oooancs-ahout50rnilcssnuthwc:st cr. Porky: ncar the farm · or Bill
Davis said .
·
of Des Moine s. Mr~ . Davi s reca lled, Davis' parents.
Rusty was I~ . an age no .vcteri- . th e Jog's 4u ick rcc on:: ry m JI}XlJ . ·
narian predic ted he wt1Uid rca(ft
"We decided that if he was n't

Nebraska investigates
free insurance for some
married state workers

YOUIII'S
CAIPEIIIIIR SERVICE

.

Tv.ain. who \\UO l\\0 Granunys
earlier this vear. ''as 1n tears aflcr
recci"inQ the CMA honor. Backstage. th~ Canadian ~Inger acknowl~

Expires 10-04-99

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

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
.' . . - - .

. .

.
.

Mon. thru Fnl. 6:00a .m. 10 9:00 p.m. Sat. 8:00am lo 6 00 pm

Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955
E. Main
Pomeroy, Oh .
'lill 9 .
,r

' "&amp;llmMH

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomoroy, Ohto

22 yn. Local

BRAMHI COAL
COMPAfiYr
Sr. 124 Wellston, Ohio
740-384-6212
lUMP AIID n0111 COil
ll.l.A.P. YOUCIIIIS

"" ACCEPIID
DEUYIIY IVIIlAill '
tDIISo 7am THRU 4pm
MONDAY·FRiDAY
7amTONOON
SATURDAY

NOTICE OF
PUBUCATION
Stephen D. Mlleo,
Attorney at Law

estate, of ·which said

Defendants, Estate of
Ronald E. Smith are the

18 W. Monument Avenue

ownaraof:

Dayton; Ohio 45402
Mlcha•t Eugene Wallo
and Linda G. McDaniel
Smith whose addraoiao
are unknown, will hereby
lake notice that on
March 1, 1999, USDA

Situated ln. the VIllage
of Middleport, County ol
Meigs and Slate of Ohio:
Baing Lot 1 of the
Betsy Rosa Subdlvlolon

Rural Development, tiled

Ito

Complaint

In
and
Marshalling ol Llana In .
the Common Pleas Court
of Meigs County, · Ohio,
baing Caoa No. 99·CV020 against Estate of
Ronald E. Smith, praying
for judgment In the
amount of $66,968.52
Foreclosure

with Interest thereon
according to the. terms

of the nota from January
13, 1999 until paid and
for foreclosure of said

Mortgoga Dead on the

as recorded

·

In

Plat

Cabinet, Pege 4B, In the
Ofllca of tho Molgs
County Recorder.
Parcel No. 15-0201 0·
000
· end that Oefendanto,
Michael Eugene Wallo
and Linda G. McDaniel
Smith be required to sat
up any interest they tltay
have In said promises or
be forever barred, that

upon .failure ol aeld.
Defondanto to pay or to
cauoa to be paid said
judgment within three
cjaya from Ita. rendition
that an Order ol Sale be
losuad to the Sheriff of
Meigs County, Ohto, to
appraise , advertise In
tho Dally Sentinel and
oell aald real estate, that
lha premlstl be sold
free and clear of all
cl&amp;lma, liens and interest

of ony of the parties
heroin, that tho proceeds
lrom the asia ol ,aid
premise be app!led to
.the Plalntlff'l' judgment
and for euch 'other relief

to which USDA Rural
Development Is entitled.

Slltd Defendants are

30 Announcements

Gun Shoot
Happy'Big
Forked Run
5-0
Sportsman Clqb
Birthday,
Every Friday
on
Night ·
September 2J,
to our' niece,
7 pm beginning
Pat Smith
Friday,
Draker
September
Love, Tom,
24th.
Janet, and Tom

Public Notice
directed
to .the
Complaint wherein
notice under tho lair
debt collection practice
·
act lo glvoti.
:;aid Defendants wll.l
take notice that It be
required lo anawer said
Complalr1t on or before
the 13th day of Nov. 1999
or judgment will be
rand•red accordingly.

USDA .
Rural
Development, Plelntlll,
Stephen D. . Miles ,
Attornay
(9) 9 , t6, 23, 30
(10) 7, 14 6TC
Public Notice
WWR 101606231
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNT)', OHIO
BANKERS TRUST
COM.PANY.
0 F
CALIFORNIA, Pj.A., AS
TRUSTEE, Plaintiff vo.
GREGORY MEDLEY, at
al., Defendants
CASE NO. 99CV036
JUDGE
LEGAL NOTICE

LARRY

R

ROTHENBERG 10011146
323 W. LAKESIDE
,tiVENUE, SUITE 200
CLEVELAND, OHtO
44113

Ruth Medley and John

Doe,

The

Unknown

Spouse ol Ruth Medley,_
whoae leat known pl~ee
ol raaldonca Is 80 Race
Street, Middleport, OH
45760, each of you will
taka notice that on 24th
day ol May, 1999, the
underalgned, Larry R.

Rothenberg , Iliad an
Amended Complaint for
Money, Foreclosure, and
Other Equitable Rollolln
tho Meigs County COurt
of Common Pleas,
alleging thil there Ia duo
to tho Plaintiff the aum
o1 $21 ,450.00 plua

SIURAGE

TRUCKING

ST. RT. 7
10 X 10$40
10 X 20$60

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates

992-1717

740·742·2138

Joe N. Sayre
3111/99 TFN

TREE SERVICE

-Serpice•

Utilitie•
(740)992·3131

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

• Vinyl Stdtng
• Roofing &amp; Seamless Gutter
• Replacement Windows
• Concrete
• Room Addit1ons • Garages
• Decks &amp; Boat Docks

Jatnas laasaa II
· PH: 1740) 992·2772

ROOFING
NEW·RlPAIR

JONES'

!leJpDpr
BuJldo• .,r &amp; Baclthoe

House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy•rerru &amp;

J &amp; L I•MI•tlon
&amp; Sllll•t

Howard L. Writesel

II

. 1)\111
" S\\II'II~­
G!III4\119
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

Linda's Painting
Take the pain out

of painting, and let
, me do it for yqu.
.
! ~TERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
mes sage . Alter 6 pm

Aluminum
Anytinte-Anytvlaere
Hourly Rates

740-985-4180

992-9178

Free Estimates

FIREWOOD

UNIQUE
OLDIES
115 Salem St.
Rutland, Ohio

OPEN
10-S:OO'Tues. Wed.

&amp; Thurs.
&amp;'

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATE$

949-2168
412 TFN

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

(740) 992·2753
or 992-1101

HILL'S
SELF STORAOE
29670 Baahan Road
Rac i ne ~ Ohio

4sn1
740-949-2217

S izes 5' x 10'
to 10 ' x 30'
Hours
7 :00AM • 8:00 PM

Rulland, Ohio
American legion
Post 467
Beech Grove Road
Gun,Shoot
Slug and Shot
Matches
Every Sunday
1:00 P.M.

ROBERT BISSElL
CONSTRUCTION
· New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATE.S
985-4473
7122/TFN

By Appointment

Piek.-•P io nr 1"~
Rccentl\.kurc:hased:
Graham '.s Ood Produc1s

ran relieve a debioi of fina"'ial obligations and arrange a fair disrribol~n of
asseb among credilo". AP'""" going through bankrupl&lt;y may re.1ain rertoin
property, known os "exemp1' P'OI!Orty,.filr hi&lt; or h!r
use. This may
~dude o &lt;ar, a house, dolhes, ond household goods. You shoulddirecl ony .
quMiiom regarding bonkruplry io on o«orney before prO&lt;oeding.
For information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand , Fill Dirt ,
Agric ult ura l Lime,
Mulc h , Top Soil
· (Low Rates)

William Safranek, Attorney

740·992-3470

Firewood Division

Ball Logging
and-Firewood
Bob Ball
352 15 Ball Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
1·740-992-6142 . '

Pf"""''

(740) 592-5025 Athens

Leave a Message

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply
St. At. 7

Culverts: 4" • 48" in stock

. 8" Grovelless LeO!h
100' -1000' Rolls I" &amp;3/4" 200#Water Une
Full line of Gos Pipe &amp; Regulators Water Storage Tanks

· tt'e~"t? ~ 24 Hr~ Taxi
Mrl Delivery Service
We peliver ALMOST anything

Call for details
740-992-0038

Pomeroy

'

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
·
Repo • Dlvorded

All Mak es Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH
P arts
I

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment...
You 're Treated wllh Respectl

Dealers. ·

the road or street and

1000 St. Rt. 7 Souflr

running back at that
width to .the roar of 1ald
Lot 158 1/2 feat. Saving_ :
and excepting the cool
and other ritlnorala ·
underlying oeld lot.
PPN: 18-00858
Addreae: 43270 St. Ri. ·
124,.Raclne, Ohio 45771 :
Tho Plaintiff ·furtheralleges thai by reaaon .of
the default of tho,
Defendant obllgort lrt :
the pllymont of aald nolo. -

Coolvllhl, OH 45723

Call Now for Instant Approval II**

''. CALL MR.FOilD
(.740) 441-1880 01

740 117-8383 .
'

Shop at home...

........,.....,.

Buy from the Classifieds!

Personals

DISCOVER THE MEANING OF
YOU R
DR E AMS !
hltp :/1
www.dreamwizard.net t-877·4221234 (Toll Free)
S TAAT
DATING
TON IG HT!
H ave Fun Meeting Eligible Sin·
gtes In Your Area . Cal l For More
lnformallon 1-SOO ·ROMANCE,

Exl. ,9731 .

Sta n Oaling ,Ton tghl! Have fun

Now Renting

30 Announcements ·

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

Attention Crafter! ( Venders in ·
door craft ta1r Oct. 16. rent !able
$10 .00 call 304·675·3842 / 304·

33795 Hila11d Rd.

·Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-S2U
8/24/99 t

mo. pd

MYERS PAVIN_G
Henderson, WV
We Do •••
• Parking Lots
• Basketball Courts
• Driveways
• Grading Work
• Hauling Stone
(304) 675·2457 Offlto
(304) 674·3311 Cell Ph.

FREE ESTIMATES
Cont. NWV003506

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTIO.N
New Roofs • Repairs •
Coating • Gutters ·
Siding • Drywall·
Painting • Plumbing
·Free Estimates
'

· Joseph Jacks
7 40·992·2068 .

882·2489

9:{)(}-5:30
Now Open: Poppy's Place. Gill &amp;
Cr aft Shop. 32 6 Main Street,
Point P leasant, W V. Across from
Post Office.

40

Backhoe &amp; Rulldozer
Servic es .
Site Preparation .
Septic Sys tems
· RODNEY KELLER
Owner/Ope rator

w

·

1-740-985·3949

:·
- ·.

Giveaway

2 mo pd

above be required to ·
answer and eel forti\

the same, for foreclosure-of ll ld mortgag• , •

7 Pizza Express
X-Large 3 item $1 2. 99 or
try Two large two ite m $19.99
WE OELIVER
bpen 4:00p.m. Daily

•

•

14th ANNUALT()Y RUN
Meigs' County Bikers ,Sept. 25 , 99
Moot: 12 Pomeroy parking lot
Leave. 1:DO ends at Good T1mes
$10 per person or $15 couple or toy of
equal value Free Buf1et Uve Music
For more info 742-3050 or 742·8510

:sTONE
HAULED
Limestone
Gravel
Top Soil

MOPERN
SANITATION SERVICE

740·992-3954

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays '
AT '6 :30P.M.
Ma in St.,
Pome roy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progress ive top line.
Lie. # 00-50 1111"""

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
•Replacemen1 Wmdows
·Room Addilions
COMMERCIAl and RES IDENTIAl
. FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·r643
(No Sunday Calls}

n3-57B5 ex »t-nJ-!!447

Wedemeyer' s Auclfon Servtce ,
GallipOliS, OhiO 740-379-2720

90

Wanted to Buy

·Absolute Top Doll ar All U.S Stl·
ver A.nd Gold Cotns . Proolsets.
Dtamonds, Anl tque Jewelry, GOld
Rmgs . Pre" 1930 U S Currenq,
Stertmg. Et t; . Acqutsltmns Jewelry
· M.T.S. C.om Shop. 151 Second
Aveni.Jo! , GaUII)CWtS, 740--445·2S42:
Claan Late Model Cars Or
1"rucks. Low Mtl es 1995 Models
Or Newer. Sm 1th Buid:: Pont1ac.
1900 Eastern- Avenue , Gal~polts .
Seek tng mo tor btke wilh pedal
start up, call Mtke ar'1ytime 740-

992-1703.
Used 18" OSS Sate llt te Otsl'1 &amp;
fl~cetver , Wtll Pay Cash , 800·
982-2327 Ex1.ension •5871
Wanted To Buy · Used Mob1le
Homes·. Ciill 740·446·0175, Or 1·
30~75·5965 .

'
Wanting Free Qirt , 740-3792989

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

52 ,000 WE EKLY! Ma1l 1ng 400
Brochures' Saltslact ton Guaranteec t Post age llo Suppt1es Pro·
videdt Rush Sell -Addres sed
Stamped Envelope! GICO. DEPT
5, Box 1438, ANTIOCH , TN ..
370 11-1438. Start lmmetllatellf.
$2.000. a month to start , wiJI'1 po·
tentiat of -$6 ;0.00 . monlhty. )1 you
want to make money, are wiiU~g
to work Mrd and 11~e to help oth·
ers. we may have a job for you,
Local resident. Excellent Income
possibtliltes and home o! ftce
!raining lor pe rso ns se lected.
Musl have pteasmg personaltly
and be wilting to meet the public
No expe-rience necessary. For
more information, call Clay Ao·
ney al (30 4)675·6019, or mail re·
sume to 2413 Jackson .Avenue .
Point Pleasant . W'V 25550. EOE

SBOO WEE KLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSS! PROCESSING GOVERN·
MENT REFUND'S , NO EXPERI·

ENCE NeCESSARY 1·800·854·
646~ Exl 5046.

$800

WEEKLY

POTENTIAL

Comp lete Simple Government
Forms At H.ome. No E•oe rience
Necessary.. CALL 1TOL.l FREE_.
i-800·966·3599 Eit 2601 $;34.00 ·
Refundable Fee.

'DANCERS'
Top Dollar· "-"40)992·6387
ASSEMBLY Af HOM E II Crafts ,
Toys , JeWelry, Wood. Sewing .
Typing .. _ Grea t Pay! CAll 1-800795-0380 Ext. 1120 1 (24 Hrs).

ATTENTION:
Have A Computer?
Put It To Work !
$25 ·$75/Hr. PT/FT
1·988·890·3481
www.pc·income..com
Ann: L~Ns', RN s. EMTs And Par·
amedlcs! Become An AN Or BSN
Graduate And Increase Your I n ~
co me Will'10l.ll Go ing Back To
Schoo l! To Sched Ule Your tnlerview In Huntirigton . Call Angela
Cope land By Oct 7. 1·800·737·
2222,

Care For Elderly Gen~leman,
Room, Board &amp; Salarlf, 740·446·
4051 .

5 P. M.
Free Kittens Litter Trairled, Many
· Colors. Some Long .Haire d. 740·
256-9209, 740·256-6780.

Computer Users Needed . Work
Own Hrs. $25K ·SBOK/ Yr . t-800·
536·0486 X 7777, Www.1cwp.com

Free Kittens· 6 Weeks Old. To
Good Home. Catt Alt er 5 P.M .

/Hr 'Dental Btllmg ~ofrware Company Needs People To Process
Medical Cla tms . Trammg Provid·
ed . Must Own Computer. 1·800223-1149 Ext 460.

74Q·44Hl391 .
Two H ouse K111ens to a
hOme. (304)67-?3?20

Lost and Found

Found : Black/W I'1 i,le/ Brow n, Pup·
py, near enrran~e ol Old Town
Campground Road . (304)6757878 ..
Lost: Black C1'1inese Sharpa .
Lost in tl'1e SandHill A rea .
(304)6 75·3822 . Answers
to
"Bear· $25 reward .

l ost:Bro~d R'un Rd. Area . Big
B lack D og.'l ab·Mix, Ma le. V.ery
Fnendly_ Red Co llar. (30 4 )882·
3292

70

I

Yard Sale

2277 G ra·ham School Road, Fri·
day September .24th And Salur·
day September 25 th Stalionary,
EKe'rctse Btke, Bedspreads . Pil·
tows, Dtshes. Clothes, Buck Fire place Insert, 9:00A.M. -5:00P.M.
ALL Yard Sales Must
Be Paid In Adva nce.
DEADLIN E: 2:00p.m ..
tt;le day before the ad
ts to run. Sunday
ed ition • 2:00 p. m.
Friday. Mondt!Y edition
·10:00 a.m. Sa turday.
Garage ?ate: 4867 Stare R oute
850, 9·? 91.23rd . Thru 9125th.

All Yard. Sates Must l3 e Paid In
Ad vance. Deadline: 1:00pm t he
da y be f ore th e ad Ia ·to r u n .
Sunda y &amp; Mon d_.y ed ition·
1:OOpm Frlelay.
Garage sa te. Fr iday and .Sa lur·
day, 9 to 5, truck camper. cross·
bow, bathroom cabmel. aquari·
ums. H ome .lntert:~r e~e•C1Se btke ,
P)'P ~ ~I&gt; ~!e&gt;ppP! qr-1V1ty edQe
~,,, '5-I" I chdC'I s KIIChPnetle.
chtld s van11 y. sm all gas heatmg
s to v~s . bedspreads . to y chesl.
bikes .· and etc , Roma Cremeans
residence . Rutland. 3 m11es oul
Beechgrove Ad (Ct Ad 16) betge
hquse on tell

DENTAL BILLER Up

to

EOE .
Dri-wer /Owner Opera Jor · C1'1ica9o
Area Truck Company Needs
Owner Operaiors To Operate
East 01 Rockies. Great Pay. New
Tra il ers. Maximum M11es . Small
Fleet Ow'ner We lcome. Call 888·

782-5400 Ext. 207 .
Or tYers · Hor nadlf Tr uc k Ltne
Starts You Up To .34c /ML Plus
Bonuses. Ra ises. Tarp &amp; Up To
$1 ,200 Orient Pay Top F.latOed
Miles . All Pa td! Assigned Con~· .
Yo'u Take Home. BC!BS Ins .. A1d·
er, family Support Prgms .. Vac~·
liOn' &amp; More 24 Hr Turn · Around
Dn Phone Apps 1·800·44 1·4271
Ext . ET292 Or www nornady ·
truck.com
•
Drivers. 2 Week Pa td COL Tram·
1ng No Elp . Needed. No Money:
Nor Credit? No Probteml Earn Up
To $32 .000 /ls1 Yr . W /Full Bene·
!its . P.A M . Transpol! Call Toll
Free 1·877·230-6002 ,www .otr·
dnvers com
Now H trmg &amp; ,Serv1c 1ng Gall1a . .
Jackson &amp; Mergs For RN, CNA I
PCA Atdes . EKpenence Prelerred,
train ing Avatlatlle. Apply M- F B
A M . ·5 P.M AI Family Senior
Care , 266 Upper Rtver Road , Ao·
ute 7 Gallipolis . Across From
F~en'ch Ctty Homes
Overb rook Center , 333 Page
Street . Mtddleporl. 01'1., Mas part
11me post ttons avatlable for AN 's
tor weekends &amp; on can. salary up
to S 17 50 an Mour, no bene ftt$,
anyone 1nterested please slop by
&amp; 1111 out an appltcaflon _EOE

,,

•.

'(

I

Help Wanted

F......,.
8AANCH MANAGEMENT
TRAIHEE
American Gener1l Fmance, A
Leader In The Ftnane•al Services
Industry, Wtth 0\1'18r $11 Billion In
AsseiS And More Than 1.300
Bl'anches Nallonwlde . Has An lmmedlale Need For "'- Branch
Management Tramee
JackSon Otl.c&amp;

In

Our

· lncltvlouals W1 tl Parlit:lpate In An
Intensive On · The · J.ob Tratnmg
Prog ram Designed To Prepare
You For Bran ch' Manager ~e ·
SP01'15ib tlltl eS Tl'1e 1.8 Mon th·· •
Mod ular Trainmg Progra.m In· ·
StrUCIS Vou In At! ·Aspects ot:
Managmg Credtl EKtenston. Ac·
counl Adt Ustment . Busmess Development Ancl Pe rsonnel Stall·

1ng

Applicants For Th•s Entry level
Opporluntty Shoul d He11e Four Years Posl H1gh SchOol Ec uc a··
tto n . Tram1ng Or Work.- Expeh· :
enc e (Sales E;~~pe r•enc e Pre·.
!erred). Strong Wnllen And Ver- .
oa t Communic atiOn Skills . And A•
vat1d Driver's Ucense . Must Be ·
Open To Re loca l ton A nd Have ·
The Dewe To Ass ume Manage· .
11a1 Responstbtllty.
American General Fina nce Oilers,
A Competitive 6eneltts Package.
tnclud mg Med1cat . Dental And ·A
40'1(11.) Plan. For lmmediale. Con-:
s1deration. P'lease Send Your Re· . ·
S;urrie To Amertca n Gen~rat ;
Finance . P.O. Bo• 702 , Jaclcson ,.
OH 45640·0702 Please Vtsit Our ·
Web Sile At · www .agltnance.com .,
EQual Opportuntly Employer.
LEGA L SE~ R ETARY
Neeaed fo r busy Alhens Law .01ftce , Must know or QUICkly be able ·
10 learn Corel (WOrd Per1ecl ) 7.0
Rettrernenl plan avai lable_A great
opporlunity lor the mature. MarC! ·
working Individual wilnng tp make
a tong·term com milment. Sa tarlf
commensurale w1th expertence
Respond to P.Q.. Box 729-88. ·c/o
TM Daily Sentinel . Pomeroy. OH
45769:
Ltttle Caesar's Is looking Fo-r
Motivated lndtvlduals For Tl'1e
Followmg Pos•IIOns : All Levels Of
Management . Delivery Drl-wers &amp;
In Store Personne l Please Apply
At TMe Galltpohs Ltttle Caesar 's.
861 Second Ave nue. Gallipolis
Local lax oii1Ce needs par111me
lax pn:fparer s fonup commg tax
season. we Wilt tra1n. send resume
lo Daily Sen tinel, PO BoX 729·89.
Pomeroy, 00 .15769
MEDICAL BILLING. Earn Elcellent lncom~ Fu ll Tra mtng . Com·
puler Aequ1red Call Toii· Free
800·540·6333 Ext . 2301
Office seekmg Med•cal Data-e.ntry
re ps for ·Entry-Level Position. FT/
PT Excellent ~ay PC Reg Catt: 1·

800·298·8506. '
MOTHER S I OTH ERS WO RK
FR OM HOM E! Maii·Orde r. Pari
Time &amp; Full Tim e. 5650 ·$3.600/
Month . Full Training Provid ed!
For FA EE Booklet Call 1·888-234-9897 www.cash·911 .com/home
Now H triOg E•perienced Billing
Clerk PT /FT For Home Hea lth
Agency. MA K E YOUR OWN
HOURS! Send Resume To. CLA
482 c/o Ga 111polls Dally Trioune.
825 Tl'1ird A'Jenue, Gallipolis , OH
45631 .
Now lakmg applications for ~ass
8 COL dr tYe rs. Send resume to.
Baum Lumber, P.O. BoK 67 ,
Chester, Ohio or call 740-9853301

NURSE PRACTITIONER OR
PH YSICIAN ASSISTANT
Oak Hill Community Medical Can·
re r's Au rat Health Clinic-s Have
An Immediate Open ing For A
Full· Time ·Fam~y Nurse Practition·
er Or PhYsicatn Asstslant . Man ·
day • Frtday_ Experience Pre·
!erred . Competll i-w e Sa lary And
Benefits . Send Ri!sume ;ro Oak
Hil t Communtly Medi Cal Center,
Atten!IO:n: Brenda Mct&lt;enz1e, 3SO
Chartolte Avenue. Oak Htll . p H
45656.

$ 15 ·$45

Otrector of Performance Improve·
men1 and R1sk• Managemenl :
Plan . implemffnl and manage the
pe rformance improvement and
mk management program de·
signed 10 enhance 1t1e quality of
patient care. reduce pat ient tnju·
ries. and prevent pa lient cta1ms
for an 80-bed acu1e care facility:
Thts postt1on also pro\lteles dt·
rac1ion to the utilization review
and soctal service Junct ions.
Qualified candiate.s wittl possess
a Bachelor of' Science in· Nurslilg
(Master's. Degree i·n appropr ia te
field preferred) pr.eviou~ experi·
ence in cqn1cat health. care in·
cl udtng direct expenence in
quality assurance, and lamiliartty
'wi l h JCH AO standards. Please ·
submit resume and sa lary re·
qutrements to : Human Resourc·
es . Jackson General Hospital ,
PO Box '720, Ripley, WV, 25271

(

110

Help Wanted

Free Hay, You Cut. You Take. Rio
Grande Area. 740-949·'4009 Alter

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
·•

auct •on
ser..,1ce
licensed
t66 .0n10 &amp; West Vtrg 1n1a 304·

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell .
Shir~y Spears. 304·675·1429.

Thursd ay, Friday September
23rd. 24th, 8-5 , 836 Skidmore
Road . Fencing , Books. Clothing,
MISCellaneous. Lowered Phces &amp;
Added Merchand iSe

their lntoroet In sold reol -.
estate, or be fa rever • ·
barred from oaaertinfi

R•ck Pearson Auchon Company,
lull t•m e auct1oneer complete

Four cals to gtveaway. nol white ,
740·992·9931.

Gallipolis

KCB

2623

New To'Vou Th rift SMppe
9 west Stimson, Alhens
740·592-1 842
Qua lit y ctothmg and household
it em s. $1 .00 bag sate every
Thursday. -Monday thr u Saturday

&amp; Vicinity

EXCAVATING

.
-.

marshaling of liens, and · :
· the sate of aald reel
eatata, and the proceed•
of said sale applied to
the payment of Plalnllff'o
lntereat at -the rat'e of
clatm In the proper. order
12.75% per annum from
ol It s priority, and· for .
Octobor 26, 1998, plua·
such other relief 11 11
iotl chorgos appltcable
juot and equitable.
.'
to the torma of the Nota
Th o Defondanto ·:
and Mortgage on a
named above are :
P rom luory · Nota
required to answer on or · .
secured by a Mortgage
befo re tho 11th day ol
De ed of even da te
Nov. 1999.
conveying the following
By La rry R. Rolhernberg,
deacrlbed proparty, to· · Attorney lor Plslntlff
wit;
Advanta Mortgage Corp.
Sll uslad In tho
(9)16 23 30
Township of Sutto n,
(10) 7 14 6TC
Cou nty of Me igs, and

005

60

.

CREDIT PROBLEMS??.?

PABft
•

Tuppers Plains, OH

740-985-3813

.WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS

33 dog. Weat 58 feel:
Thence Nonh 60 deg.
Eaot1581/2 fHI; Thence ·
South 33 deg. eut 58 ·
leal; Thence South 10
deg. West 158 1/2 feel to
tho place of beginning.
And lrontlng 58 faot on

We Deliver

AOVOCEO DRAINAGE SYSTEMS INC

DEPOYSAG

ANNOUNCEMENTS

'

playmg lhe Ohio Dating Game. 1·
BOO-ROMANCE. extension 96;81 .

Beginning Sept. 26th

Purchase; ThenCe North

·

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

8:30am ·8 pm
Sun 1 pm ~ 6 pm

Co. F.Id19

HfiULinG UtC.

BANKRUPT(;Y

New Store Hours
For Deer Season
· . Mon·Sat

.

WICKS

Datop Truek or

(740) 742-8888

to·wlt :

according tq Its tenor 1

I •ll

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

Beginning at the
Southwell corner 01 A.T.
Chepmon'a lot, In 180 ,
Aero Lot N·o . 1223,
Township 3, Rona- 13, ol ,
the Ohio Compony'o

the conditions of oald
Mortgage ·Deed have
been broken and the
•·ame has become
absolute.
Plaintiff prayo that tho
Defendants named

II

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

State ol Ohio : That
certain lot or percot of
.land
harelnofter
described, altuotod lri
the State ol Ohio,
;County o1 · Melgo, and
Township ol Sutton, end
bounded and doacrlbed
follows,

SAYRE

HOWARD
EXCAVAIIIIG CO.

Rutland, Ohio

Public Notice

as

6fl9/mo.

A &amp; D Auto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

Horn ace k was among tho u-·
NEW YORK (A P) - A man came al him whil e he was m arc h ~
has gone on trial for allegedl y ing and that he merely put · hi s Sands of construcrion workers trying·to ·march to a co nstruction site
hands up to protect ~. im se lf.
p~ nc hin g a police horse during a
He is charged with obstructi ng where non-union workers reportpmtest rall y.
James Hornace k. 35, of Hozlet, governmenl admini stratiorr, disor- edl y were on the job.
Prosec utors said that when
N..[,. denies that he hit the horse ·. derly condu ct and Jllcmpting to
Daily News One durin g a June injure a police anim al. The ·mounted police · moved in to stop
1998· protest rall y. The electrician charges carry a maxi mum one the demonstrators from impeding
tra ffic. Hornacek refused to move.
clai ms the 19-year-o ld ge lding year in jai l.

Public Notice
following· described real

Phone (740) 593-6671

HAKIWELL

I

Electrician goes on trial for allegedly punching horse

Public Notice

Auction
and Flea Market

EOE
OFFICE MA~AGER
A Progressive Long Terrri C.are
C6mpany Is Currently Taktng Ap·
plications Fo r An Office Ma nager.
We Are Seek tng A Challenge Dn·
ven Individual Wit!"l Superv,sory.
Experience. The ~pphcant Must
Have At Least Three Years Ex·
p~rtence . We Orler An Exceptton·
ar Compensation Package . t1 In·
terested In A Chat1eng1ng Post·
lion Send Your Resume Ancl Sal·
ary Requirement~ To· Ort1ce Manager. 3.21 1/ 2 West Slate Stree!.
Athens ..Ohio 45701 .
Ove rb rook Center . 333 Page
Street . Middl eport , Oh .. has part
time positiOns tor STNA 's .wail :.
able for all shilts a weekends. an·
yone Interested pleas e slop by &amp;
fill oul an apphcatton EOE ·
Retail sates clerk tn Pome10y.
must be able to work sorne Sun·
days and evenmgs. 26 hours or
more per week . Sertd resume Cl o
The Da11y Sentinel. P 0 Box 729·
84 . Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Sates Re p Nee ded For Local
Company Esta bl.tsl'1ed Ac coun ts
In Gattta , Me tgs And Mas on ·
Counly. Mus t Hawe Own Ve1'11c1e .
And Be a Self · Sterler . For More
Information.· Call 74 0· 446·41 09 .
SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY. Call Now Toll Free 1·
800·339·4204 Or 1·800-469-B 164
For · Aooomtment To Come To
Na shvi lle. Te nnessee And Aud!1ton For MaJOr Record Producers.
In ternet. wwY&lt; .WCII"' ac
Tl'1e Un1verS1ly Of RIO Grande Is
Takmg Appl 1c att ons For A Part- .
Ttme Nu rs e ln The Healtl'1 Services Department. Responslbtltttes
Inc lu de The Assessment 0!
S,ludent Health Problems And
Workmg Wtth Wettpe _
ss Educa llon Wtll Work 8 Hours Per Week
Wtlh A. Var tely 01 SluO~nl Popu·
lations
BSN I AN ReQu ired: Prevtous Expatience Wo rktng With Sludents
Prelerred.
Al l Cand1dates Should Subm1t A
Let ter 01 lnlerest. Curren! Re·
sume And The Names An A.d·
dresses of Three Refe rences '
Resumes Wtlt Be Aevtewed As
Received . tnt orm atton Mus t Be
Submilleq To PhlfiiiS Mason, PHR , .
Orr~c1or 01 Human Resources.
Untversily 01 Rio Grande . P.O .
Box F27 , Rio Grande, OH 45674 .
e · mail pmasonlyrgrrgcc edy
EEOIAA Emp!OVer

�•

Page14 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 23, 1999

•

·Thu,..day, September 23, 1999

The Oally Sentinel• Page 15

• Middleport, Ohio

OOP

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

-VN I 0 SE;TTf.R FIND
" ~ TO t&lt;OI.f. UP
FOR THE NIWHT' X

PHILLIP
ALDER
POSTAL JOBS To SIB 35 IHA
INC BENEFITS NO EXPEAI
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1 800 813 3585
EXT 14210 8 A M 9 PM 1

DAYS Ids Inc Fee
Prevenllon Pos1t1on - .A.n .A.Icohoi
And Other Drug Couse11ng /Pre
ventlon .A.gency Located In Gall1a
And Jackson Counlles is Seek
ing An A.mbit ous tndlv1e1uat To
F II A PreventiOn Poslllon Th•s
Person Will Wor~ Wllh AU Age
Groups In Both Commun hes Re
sponslblllt es Include Coordma
liOn Of A Drug F ee CoC1'1munny
Coalition Awareness Act v ties
EducatiOn Programs Tram.ng
Programs And Dave opment And
Implementation Of New Grant
Projects Send Resume By Sep
!ember 30 1 ~99 To FACTS
1nO Jackson P1ke Bidwell Oh10
45614 Or FAX 740 446 8014
EOE MIFn-1

WANTED

63 People To Lose 30 tbs In 30
Days &amp; Earn SSSSS Wh 1e Surfing
The
Nol
1 888 229 8427
www &amp;vital ty netlteetgoocf
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 HA
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY
MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL I 800 813
3585 EXT •4211 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS Ids nc Fe&lt;!
140

Business
Training

.,

Ga1Upoll1 Cereer College
(Career$ Close To Home)
Ca I Today 740 446-4367
t 800 214 0452
Reg 190 05 12748

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GREE QUICKLY Bache o s
Masters Doctor a e By Co re
spondence Based Upon Pnor Ed
ucat on And Sho 1 Study Course
Far FREE Informal on Book et
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800 964-8316
180

Wanted To Do

Custom wmdow treatments coun
I y ruflles festoons swags &amp; cas
cades shades upholstered cor
nlces 740 949 2202

19!14 Grand Am GT 64 000

STAAT YOUR OWN VENDING

Bus ness For As l ttle As $10001
ALL CASH BUSINESSII 1 800
220-298.5 24 Hrs

220

$$$ NEED CASH?? W~ Pay
Cash FOr Rema n ng Payments
On Property Sold Mortgages•
Annu1t es Settlements• lmme
c.hate Quotes• ~ Nobody Beats
Ou Pr ces National Contract
Buyers BOO 490 0731 E11t 101
www nanonalcontraclbuyers com
sol date Debts! Same Day App o
val NO APPLICATION FEE;SII 1
800 863 9006 Ext 936 www help
pay bills com

$FR~6 CASH NOW$ From
Wealthy Fam1 es Unload ng M 1
Ions Of Dollars To Help Minimize
The r Ta11es Wr le tmmed ate ly
W ndfal s 847 A SECOND AVE
SUITE 1350 NEW 'YORK NEW
YORK 10017
GUARANTEED APPROVAL
Bank Card No Cred t Checll; No
Up Front Cash Secu lly Depos•t
ReQuired Must Be 18+ And
Have Val d Checkmg Account
Pre Approva l By Phone 1 BOO
689 1556
FREE MONEY II s True NeYe
Repay Guaranteed $500
$50 000
Debt Canso dat on
Persona Needs Bus ness 1
S00:.5t1 2640
BANKRUPTCY $79+ Stops Gar
n shments Divorce $99+ Stop
Fo ec osure $350 Bus ness Op
portun I es + Tram ng! F eshStart
1 88B 419 94 7 www freshstanu
sa com
CASH Or LOAN' Farm Cap ital
W I Purchase Or loan Aga nst
Your Government Farm Pay
ments (CRP/PFC) Call Fa m
Capttal 1 888 FARM ACT (327
6228)

CREDit PROBLEMS Stop Here
We Can Help loans Available
$3 000 And Up No Fee 1 877
663 9269 Ext 221

CREDIT PROBLEMS
STOP
HERE'I WE CAN HELP LOANS
AVAILABLE $3 000 AND UP
CALL TOll FREE 1 877 663
9269 E•l 231
GET YOUR CASH NOWI O ldest
01 Structured Settlements
1-~•nno,III&lt;!S, AM Government Farm
Payments Also Purchas ng lot
Or Hand
teres And P vata Morlgages
Counuy
Call Settlement Cap tal 1 800
Call Bet
959 0006 www settlementcapt
740 388
tal com
Need A Loan? T y Debt Consoli
dat on $5 ooo $200 ooo Bad
Cred t 0 K Fee 1 800 770 0092
E•1 215

FINANCIAL
210

Business
Opportunity

INOTICE!
OH 0 VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends thai you do bus•
ness w th people you know and
NOT to send money through the
n a 1 untl you hay e nyestigated
the ottenng
2 9 Cenls /Min PHONE CARD
Rio EASY IS MONEYII FEW
Hours! Earn $500 $5 000 / Wk
CASH FREE S las 1 800 997
9888 24 Hrs
ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
$1 ooo .A Day No Selling Not
MlM Compute And Soltwart
Distr bulo sh p For Free lnlorma
ton Package Call 1 800 786
8849 24 Hrs XT 27

RECEIVING PAYMENTS? In
vestor Pays CASH NOW For
You'r Seller Financed Mortgage
Rea Estate Cont ract lnsu ance
Annu ty Highest Pnces Free
Quotes Why Wcut? Cal RICh t
800 888 6450

230

Professional
Services

Mounts Tree Ser11 ce The Tree
Profess onals
Bucket Truck
Se v ce Top Tnm Removal
Stump G nd1ng Free Est1mates
Fully Insured Worjcs Comp Bid
well OH Call And Save 1 800
838 9568 740 388 9648 Owner
RICk Mount

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless w~ W nt
888-582 334~

-

REAL ESTATE
-- -

310 Homes for Sale
$0 DOWN HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED!
GOV T
FORE;
CLOSURES CALL NOW FOR
1 800 434
REGISTRATION!
2434 EXT 3205 (NO FEE)

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 20 Locatlons $4K $10K
ncome
All
$4 000 :~-/Mo
CASH 100"• Finance Ava able
800 380 2615 24 Hrs
C ga Plantat on Needs Local
0 sr 0 Down 0 A C No Selhng
$1 50K Poll Premium CIQa s 800
514 9365

3 Houses Financing Ava lable
S18 000 Each Discount For Cash
All Pomeroy Area 740 388
8591 304-6:!3 6937

EARN $75 000 In Your Own
l;lome Based Bus ness Call I
800 806 7208 For Recorded De
ta Is
EARN $90 000 YEARLY Repa r
"g NOT Replac ng Long Cracks
In W ndsh elds Free v dao 1
SOO 826 8523 US /Cana da
www glassmechamK com

EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR
Send Us A. One Page Form We
Do The Rest No D rect Se hng
Computer &amp; E Commerce D str1b
ulorsh tps Fr~e Info Pkg
800
831 2385 24 Hrs Ellt 63
MEDICAL BILLER Up 10$1 5
$45 IH Medi ca B II ng Software
Company Needs P.eop e To P o
cess Medical Cta1ms From Home
Training Provided Must Own
Co mputers I 800 434 5518 Ext
667
MEDICAL BILLING Unlimited In
come Potenlial No Expenence
Necessary Free tnl ormat o.n &amp;
CO ROM investment $4 995
$8 995 F nanc ng Ava I able IS
land Automated Med cal Se VIC
es Inc BOO 322 1139 Ext 050
Vod In I&lt;Y IN CT

310 Homes for Sale
FORECLOSED HOMES low Or 0
Oownl Gov I And Bank Repo s
Bemg Sold NOW• F nancing
Ava I aD e Call Now! 1 800 730
7n2 Ext S040
Olf Route 2 88 Meadow Lane
Apx 2 Level Acres lovely
Rancher Fpl 3BRs 2BA 2c ga
rage Deck Porch $79 900
Cher Brown Realtor Ullom Re
alty/BHG (304)733 7119
Oide home lor sale Dexter prl
vate fireplace tru t trees great
place lor hunters ask ng $32 500
740 992 3325
Rental Property A 2 Apartment
Oup ex In Gelhpo s C tv l m1ts &amp;
2 Acres With Trailer &amp; 2nd Tra I
er Hook Up Near Holzer s 740
441 0720
Three bed oam 1 &amp; 112 story ce
dar and stone home stone ch m
ney large w ndows two baths
basement covered deck large
garage t.8 112 acres pr vate
near Pomeroy 740-992 6176

320

Mobile Homes

tor

1 1999 Fleetwood 141172 .2BR
2BA Air. Sk1n ng on Rental lot

2 1995 Sky! ne t4x70 3BR
2BA Vmyl Siding Shingles
Root 6 wals
3 199E Redmond 16x70 3BR
2BA 6 walls Nice !I F nanc ng
A11a1lable (304)6'75 6055

Si 000

Brick
Ranch
38edrooms
2Baths 2 Car Garage 1 2Acre 1
Year Old PI Pleasant S125 000
(304)675 8959

cal

1972 Redman 121170 In Good
ConditiOn New Furnace $4 800
Call Between 4 &amp; 8 PM 740 245
57B8 Or 740 245 9029
1978 Mob~ Home 14x70 3 Bed
rooms 2 Baths $5 500 740 446
6251
t9a6 2 Bedrooms 1 Bath Car
port Stoarge Bu id ng Etc On
Rented Lot Must See! 740 446
8617 For Appo ntment

19B8 Clayton eta bo ne AU E ec
Inc 2 Bel'lrooms 2 Baths Extras
$10 000 740 256-6938
1989 liberty Mob1leHome 2BA
1B.A Central Air Gas Heat Lo
cated on Rental Lot near Pt PI
$8 000 (740)388 9971
1991 1411x72ft 2 Bedrooms 2
Baths Sh ngle Roor V1nyl ding
Excellent Condit on $16 000 00
(740)4468113

s

1993 Clayton 16.1180 Very N1ce
Super Clean 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths With B1g Round Bathtub
Heat Pump Electr c $21 000
740 256 6382
1999 Doublew de Repo Never
~ ved In New Home Warranty 0
Down ~~ Quat f ed 7 40 446 3093
OakWOOd GaltpO Is Only •

Doutllewldes Free Deco &amp; Furm
ture
HURRY HURRY HURRVI
OAKWOOD HOMES
BARBOURSVILLE WV
800 383 6862
B1g Selection Used 10Ft 12Ft
14 Ft W de Kanauga Mob•te
Homes 740 446 9662

MOVING OUT 6F AREA Mus1
Sell At Sacral ce 1998 SW L ke
New 304 733-9102
New 3BR 2 Bath 14 W de $500
Down $210 per mo ~ree A1r 1
sao 691 67n
New 4BR 16 w de $500 Down
$245 per mo Free A r
BOO
691 6777
Special 28x80 3 or 4BR $1000
Down S349 per mo Free Dett;.:
ery &amp; Setup 1 fi00.:691-6777

HOME FORECLOSURES NO
MONEY DOWNI NO CREDIT
NEEDED! TAKE OVER VERY
lOW PAYMENTS! 1 800 916
9191 EXT H5023
House lor sale by owner can be
used as 2 apartment r ental !n
M ddleport 740 384 7803
New Ranch house 1500 SQ It
country porch &amp; back deck 3
br 2 ba torma d n ng room
cathedral ceiling m hvmg room
double car garage 1 19 ac 8
miles from Shell&amp; Toyota plants
304 576 2722

2 Bedrooms $350/Mo • Uhlt es
ana Oepos•t No Pets! HO 446

~omeroy three bedroom house

two bedroom apartment relerenc
es secur~ty par 1y furnished 740
992 6886 attar Spm
Three bed oom house near
RaCII'IB n v llage of Antlqu ty
central a r $335 month $200 de
pos•t cal 740 384 3845 or 740
384 2537

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Between Athens and Pome oy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes a r
coMtt oned $260 $300 sewer
wate and trash Included 740
992 2167
2 Bedroom Central Alf &amp; Heat 1
Mile On Hannan Trace Road 011
Route 218 Cali 740 256 6202
2 Bedroom Mob le Home Spring
Va ey References &amp; Depos 1 Re
qu red 740-441 0772

2 Bedroom Mob1te Home You
Pay Uht t es &amp; Depos 1 In Po ter
Area 740 388-9162

Plus Oe

Business and
Buildings

STEEL BUILDINGS New Must
Sell 4 12 P tell t6x24xl0 Was
$7 500 Sell $3 990 24x24x10
Was $8 500 Sell $4 990 1 BOO
406 5126

350 Lots

&amp;

Acreage

3 A Homes te water tap ready
for bu ldmg fhdgewood Estates
304 615 2564

23ACRES
2M les OH SA 7 &amp; SA 218 Soulh
01 Gall polls S•nglew des Allowed
Rough f.{ostiy Wooded Road AI
ready Cut !n Land Contract
Ava able Only $27 000 1 800
213 6365
Located Graham School Road
a 75 Acres Water Sept c &amp;
Electric Set Up For Trailer Or
Home Close To Green School &amp;
Close To Gall pots .Askmg
$27 500 740 446 0050

N1ce \wo bed oom apartment m
Syracuse $275 month mcludes
trash 740 667 3516
Now Tak ng Appltcallons 35
West 2 Bedr oom Tow nhouse
Apartments Includes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740
446.000S
Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 112 Bath Fully Car
peted Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pat1o Start $350 /Mo No Pets
lease Pius Secur ty Oepos 1 Re
Quired Aile 5 740 446 0101
Betore 5 740-446 3481
Unfurnished clean apartment In
M ddlepon S3501mo plus ut Utles
740-384 7803
Upstairs Furn shed 3 Rooms
Bath Clean No Pets! References
&amp; Oepos1t Requ red 740 446

1519
Va lley V1ew Apanments R10
Grande Oh Now Accepting ap
pi cat ons for lmmed ate occu
pane~ 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apts A r
Condition ng K !chen appl ances
Fenced n Playground laundry
On Sight Management Water
Sewage and Trash Pad Fu I hme
Students must meet Oh1o Hous
lng F nance Agency Qua i f ca
Uons Semor C 11zens Welcome
EHO For more Informal on ca
(740) 245 9 70 Monday thru
Thu sday 9 00 12 00 noon

460

Sand Fork Court Galllpolla Fer
ry New MQb le Home Lots s n
g e w de double w de nclud ng
80 It modes Tak ng apphca
tons Cal (304)675 6908

MERCHANDISE

A $250 Mo Depos t Referenc
es 5 M las From A o Grande
740 245 5677
3 Bedroom Tra•ler For Rent In A1o
Grande References No Pets In
s de 740 379 2720 No Calla
UnUIAIIor7PM

3 Bedrooms $250 00 Per Month
Plus DepoSit 74Ch367-o611
Mobile home ror rent In Pomeroy
area no pels 740 992 5858
Mob•le Home tor Rent Call (740)
44&amp;1279
Two bedroom mob le home with
two baths n Racine $325 month
740..992 5039
Two 2 Bedraqm Tra lers In Small
Tra ler Pa k References &amp; De
post AeqUI ed 740 446 1104

440

Apartments
for Rent

Condo Like L1vlng W thout
Hav ng To Purchase Over 2000
Sq Ft Unlurn shed 2nd Floor
Apartment W lh Cha r lit 2 Sed
rooms 2 Baths Laundry Room
W th Eiectr c Washe /Oryef
K tchen W1th Elect 1c Flange Re
tr gerator Dishwasher D sposal
Central Gas Heat With Electr c AI
C Off Street Parking V~ew Of Ctty
Pa k And Ohio R•ver $600
Month Plus Ut1l hes Deposit Re
qu red Discount For lease 740
446 9636
1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
mshed and unlurn shed secur ty
deposn requ ed no pets 740
992:2218
1 bedtoom apar men!
port all utll1t as pa d
month $100 depos t
7806
1 bedroom apt n Henderson
$200 per mo ... depos tlrel6 enc
es requ red (304)675 t972

Space for Rent

Mob Ia Home Space Centenary
Area $100 Mo 740 446 5053

2 Bedrooms 2 Full S•ze Bath C/

510

Household
Goods

3 Uvmg Room Tables New Futon
Bed Rocker M crowa11e ouoman
&amp; M sc Items 740 256 6753
Recondlt oned
App ances
Washers Dryers Ranges Rein
graters 90 Day Guarantee
French C1ty Maylag 740 446
7795
For Sale ReconditiOned wash
ers d yers and rerr gerators
Thompsons Appl ance 3'407
Jackson Avenue (304)675 7.388

2 br k t apR lances&amp; A C &amp; car
petlu n shed 304 675 4302
2bd m apts total atectr c a
piiances turn shed I
r m
laetl t es close to school n own
Appl cations ava table at V llage
Green Apls 149 or oall 740 992

3711 EOH
4 Room Al)t Newly Decorated
$250 00 Month Ptus Depos t And
1 Years Laase No Pets Ap
pt1arices Furmshed Call140 446
1163

Appl cat ons Now Accepted For
Small But E11tra Specla One Bed
oom Very Clean Stove F IQ
Washer Dryer Total Etectr c AC
Non Smokers Only No Pets
$300 Depos I $350/Mo 740 446
2205 740 446 9585 Ask: For
VIrgin a
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRIC ES AT JACK SO N
ESTATES 52 We stwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; moves Ca I 740 446 2568
Equal Hous ng Opportunity

CHAISTVS FAMILY LIVING
FOR RENT large two bed oom
apanments stove and relr gera
tor $250 month plus S too depos
t m M ddleport one bedroom all
e ectnc utlltles pa1d $375 month
$125 depos t Pomeroy Otllo

HUSTLER Commercial Mower 5
Deck 18 HP Engine Good CoM
I on S3 500 Includes Tra ter
Snow Plow &amp; Chains Also Con,
tract 740 256-1216

METABOLIFE 356M It Wo ksl
Bu ns Fall Increases MetaM
I sm Aa ses Energy le~Jel Call
Fo Pats P 1ce Toll FrJIB 877
311 DIET Mastercard /V sa I
0 scover fAmex Metabot le t• In
dependent D strlbutor

MOBilE HOME OWNERS
Furnaces lnsta ed As low As
$2B 00 A Month WUh Approved
C ed1t Easy Over The Phone
Bank F nancmg Huge lnvento y
Of lntertherm M er &amp; Coleman
Furnaces Heat Pumps And
Parts Vmyl Sk~rtlng K ts $299 95
Doo s &amp; W ndows Water Heat
ers .Anchors Plumbing &amp; Electr
ca Parts Bennerts Mob le Home
HTG &amp; CLG 740 446 9416 Or 1
BOO 872 5967 Gall pol s OH
N ce Coffee Table End Tabla Set
Plus 4 Leg Round Table W th
Cove $75 Web TV &amp; Keyboard
Used 6 Months $50 740 388
8676
Nrce Glass Jewelry
740 245 9315

o splay Case

Pe lei Stove Cuadra F re 1 000
Class c l k:e New To Malee Jn
qumes 740.245 9218

PRIMESTAR

tree
D recTV Summer Promotion Call
now t 888 265 2123
READY TO LOSE THOSE UN
WANTED POUNDS ? FREE IN
FORMATION
Log
Onto
wwW prtWenplan com'lose
Aolltop Desk Needs Ha dwa e
$125 Me nllat Hickory K Iehan
Cab nets St I In Boxes $ 200
740 379 9038

QUICK CASH
A&amp; D s Used
Furn lure Buy ng Part a Or
Whole Estate 740 367 0280

W.ANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? M~X TECHNOLO
GY We F nance 0 Downl Past
Credit Problems OK•! Even II
Turned Dowl'l Before!! Reestabl sh
Your Credit 1 800 659 0359

530

Antiques

Buy or se 1 A verlne AntiQues
t12:4 E Man Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hou s M T W 10 oo
am to 600 pm Sunday 1 00 to
6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

WARM UP
92% Gas Furnaces Heat Pumps
Duct Systems F ee Est mates If
You Don 1 Call Us We Both Lose
740 446 6308 1 800.291 0098
Washing Mach ne 6 yrs old
$100 Kmgs ze Waterbed with
Frame $75 G rls H dden Treas
Ures 8 ke $25 Ch ld Hockey
Tab le $20 Call (304)675 2927
alter6PM
Water! ne Spectal 3f4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per oo All Brass Com
pressiOnF•ttngslnStock
RON EVANS ENTEI\PRISES
JacksOn OhiO 1 80Q.53J 952B
White Kenmore Washer &amp; Dryer
$125 Both Will Separate G E
Washer $60 .lttmond Kenmore
Dryer SaO Call Alter 5 30 PM
740 446 9066

Bedroom Swte Hardwood Dark
F msh 9 Drawer Dresser 5 Draw
er Chest 2 D aw N ghtsland
Queen S1.ze Bookcase Wate bed
$800 FOr E:nure Set $600 Without
Waterbed 740 388 9445 Atter
630 PM
Black sections couch w th end
tables coffee table to match very
good cond 1 on S300 740 992
2906

BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 lbs 30 DAY MONEY
BACK GUARANTEE Natural Or
Recommended 740 441 1982
Free Samples
Buckstove Insert Med Size EK
celtent Condition Brass Tr m
1304)675 3714

Building
Supplies

Block buck: sewer pipes wind
ows tlnle s etc Claude Wlnte s
Rio Grande OH Call 740 245
5121

560

e- ~J(J! i .O.Pded

Co lectors !lam Ge man 35 MM
f! ate Camera Wo ld Wa r II
lloyd E Esque Phone 304 773
5479 Mason WV

Bo5lon Te rrier
Pups $75 Each Father AKC
Reg sterad Mother Full Blooded
740 388 8743

COMPUTERS $0 Down Low
Monthly Payments Y2K Compt
ant Almost Everyone Approved
Ca ll FIROCOM Ad vanced Tech
nolog es 1 800 617 3476

AKC
Boxer
(3041675 5786

Dinette tab e and 6 padded
chars call 304 675 3724
Erectnc hospital bed $100 e
cl n ng lift char $75 1993 Ch811y
S 0 61 000 miles Slf;lndard PS
a r tool box $4500 740 992
2019

Pups

$275

AKC German Shepherd Pups
Wh te And S1tver AvaH~bte
Snow Cloud &amp; German Lines
740 245 9213
AKC lab Pupp es For. Sate Cho
co la te And Black F rst ShOts
GIVen $200 Each 740 388 9398
AKC Mm ature Collle 10 Weeks
Ve y Small Crate Tra•ned $150
740 256-(1162
AKC Registered Fema le Sh h
Tz u Pupp~ 7weeks old 1st
shots/wo rmed Vet Checked
(304)67 5 1275
AKC Reg s terad Pomeran ans
Shih Tzus
and
Mm
Oachsllunds (304}675 336

Formal Dresses Short &amp; l ong
Sizes 1 To 9 740.379 2311

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

One Owner 1980 400 John Deere
Lawn Anct Garden Tractor Hydro
stat c Dr ve W th 60 Mowe
Deck 2 600 H &amp; Excellent Cond1
han 740-446-3277
Used lIt Truck Fork $75 To $125
Per Set F rewood Any Oualllly
740 379 2757

630
2

Livestock

a Year

640

Hay

•

•

&amp;

Gra1n

1000 lbs ot rouM bales or oat
st aw with m xed hay ask ng $10
a bale 740.992 5072

TRANSPORTATION

• Q 10 8 2
9 A
•KJ8&amp;3
• 10 53
Eut
9
•KJ65t
KJ10765
9 t 2
10 2
• 9 7
QJ 9 7
• K 8 &amp;2
Soutb

Fee

Fee

Trucks for Sale

1978 Dodge Step Side 4 WD Au
10cnatlc 318 Red W th Chrqme
Bumpers Excellent Shape tnslcle
&amp; Out Sh&lt;lw Qualty Must See To
Apprec~atel 740 446-9780

4X4 Automat c

Autos for Sale

$500 CARS FROM $500111 Buy
Pol ce Impounds &amp; Repos Fee
CALL NOW For l•st ngsl I 800
3193323x2156
CARS $100 S500 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUNDS Honda s Toyota s
Che11ys Jeeps And Sport Ut i
ties Fee Aequ1 ed Cat Now• eoo772 7470 EXT 7832

&amp; 4·WDs

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1991 Dodge Grand Carave1 E11
cellent Condil on Must See To
Apprecatel740 24~5043

•

g ne 52 ooo m les exira cloan
rUn.s goOO 740 992 3348

1993 Chevy Che~etme 4WD 314
ton p ckup 350 automatiC run'S &amp;
looks good mus1 se I $10 Ooo

OBO call 74()-992 2885
1994 F 350 4x4 lu ly IOadect 4
new tires cnrome whee s lots of
extras 740..992 5532

1997 GMC J mmy SLT Gold Edo
tlon loaCled only 16 000 m11es 11
months of factory warranty re
malnlng $20 000 call 740 8e7
3226 after 7pm

t993 Che11roletlum1na 4 dr se
dan 3 1 V 6 auto ale new tires
non smoker S3 000 miles pas
senger door damage ( uns &amp;
dnves) ask1ng $3 000 740 992
&gt;506 days 7409492644eves

740

983 0 ds 2 Doors Cutlass Su
preme Brougnam Back One
Owner Full Powe AfT 50 liter
VB Motor Good Condl11on 740
446-3277

1981 Honda CX500 Custom Mo
torcycle r:te.w T1fes Balle y
Plugs &amp; Brakes Mi.fug§ 21 700
seoo Includes 2 Fu 1 Face Hel
mets Call 304 773 5723 Ask For

THE BORN LOSER
r 6LW&lt;S !"'-~ fl.-f.

'

1991 Mercury Tracer 5 dr
77 967 m las auto a r amlfm ster
eo wh te With blue nte or minor
eft front fender damage runs &amp;
dives askmg $1 450 740 992
1506 dayS 74()-949 2644 ""'S
1992 Ch&amp;lly lumina V &amp; Au
tomat c Pwr w ndows Pvrr door
locks Col d A/C Clean lns•de &amp;
Ou1 Euro Package Asking
$3 250 00 OBO 740 256 1288
1992 Ford Tenipo Al.lto /A r Runs
Great Good Work Car $1 750
740 446 4782
1992 O ldsmob eAch eva V 6
Aulo 58 000 M os $4 295 1990
Beretta GT $2 495 1990 S 10
$2 795 Caok Motors 740 446
0103
1992 Oldsmobile

Cutlass Su

1994 Pontiac Bonnell I e Color
Red Execut ve Ca r E:oc.cellent
Condition New Ti es Battery AI
ternator S4 995 740-446 1969
1995 l&amp;ortlX Aulomal c With
AI C!hdlt on ng AMIFM Cas
setta W th On ly 8 700 M les
Ask ng $7 500 74()-371t--2766

1996 Pontiac Grand Am SE 4
door ale amlfm cassette great
car $5995
1995 Ponllac Grand Am SE twO
door coupe a/c arnllm casseue
n ce car $4995
1994 Bu ck Skylark Cus om one
owner ale am/lm cassette 72
000 m les very clean $4995
1993 Ford Escort Wagon ate
amltm cassette n ce ca S2395
1992 Olds Cutlass Sup eme two
doo sport ed a/c amllm cas
seue loaded n~ee de $3995

1989 Pont1ac lemans good work

car $995

ONl0~5

51-\t:.~

UV~N-&lt;OOOl~,

N-tt:&gt; lI \N£E:, II\'&lt;

7

mt.r

I

onlalope

Aocket.ller
12 Soy HI" to
19 &amp;clamllllon
22 VeryNrly
(2-)
24 Eolllem

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

.... lglon

26AHound
21 DHsertllema
30 Generous
giving
34 - end Clyde
35 Aviation hero
Clluck36 Code unit
36 Arc:tlc
lnllobllant
39 Enjoyed with

LOOK~

A LETTER FROM
OUR BROTI&lt;ER SPIKE 1

HE WANTS

TO KNOW

ot...,.

.0 Shafe

lar-t-+--

.28-

.w Anoint

Lor-+-+--t--t;--t-'---kr+-t-+---1f-+-

48Adlmsm•te
50 Book (flall)
52 HIA -ller
53 Paving
goo

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity C pher cryptograms are created from quotatiOns by famous people past and
r
pnJsent Each letter in the c: pher stands fOf another
TO&lt;Jays clue B equals Y

A H E

NHDLXE

J "

PHD

P Z W H

OZB

JVCHDAEZVCA
QHEEHD

VZEJDH
A p H

QJAXVHAA

PHD
0 H

E P Z V

El

Cl

LXYPHR

Lebensohl conventtan H1s two no

trump response forced parlner to
reb1d three clubs Then the three
heart cue b1d showed exactly four
spades and a hearl stopper (An
Immediate cue b1d demes a heart
stopper)
Wes1 led the hearo 10 wh1ch
promiSed Ollher zero or two h1gher
honors Waltenbarger saw eoght top

'' SOME PEOPLE SAV 0065
CAN'T WRITE LETTERS
I-lA I WHAT DO Tl-lEV
TI-l INK THI5 15 7 ''

W~AT HAPPENED

TO '(OU GUV5

'::!:~~, S@ttcillA-~£~s·

WOlD
lAM I

- - - - - - 141to4 loy CIA! I POLlAN
Rearrange Mtters of
0 four
scrambl.d words

the
below to form four simple wordt

II I I I r
I r r
SOPEMI

•

K L YN A
1

II
I

rI

·.

I ~..~'

ALOCK

BE J M U L

Have you ever not1ced "
one nch fellow told hiS date
that 1t s easy to be generous
lwlthsomeoneelses

1--.;.~oi....:;-_,15..,;...,.;.~~,..;:..,.1-1

Q

·?

Complete the chuckle quoted

NUMIU£D LETT£RS
THESE SQUARES

PRINT

IN

6 UNSCIAM8LE
TO Gfl ANSWER

ABOVE lEITERS

SCJIAM.I.ET$ ANSWERS
Amulet No1sy Order Hommy • YOUR MIND
Don r r&lt;~ 51ung by high prrc"' r
S~op

Budget Pr ced Transm ss1~ns
and Engines All Types Acptss
To Over 10 000 Tra nsm ssions
eve Jomts 740 245 5677
New Aeplac.,ment Gas Tanks• 0
&amp; A Auto Ripley WV (30413h
3933 or 1 BOO 273 9329

SERVICES
Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondlt on at lletlme guarantee
local referen ces fu n shed Es
tablished 1975 Ca 1 24 Hrs (740)
448 0870 1 800 287 0576 Rog
ers Waterproofing

ASTRO·ORAPH
Fnday Sep1 24 1999
the year ahead a goal of maJor
stgmficance you were unable to bnng
about 1n the past ~:an now be
ach1eved A res1dual benefit w11l be
raiSing your standmg m the eyes of
In

Appl ance Parts And Sery 1ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
P~'~ •ence All Work GUaranteed
French City Maytag 740 446

your peers

liBRA (Sept 21 Ocl 23) Your
magnettc charm may be more pow
erful than you thmk and today acuv
1t1es m1ght demonstrate th1s through
your soctal mvol vements You could
Oe the most popular one tn the
crowd Get a JUmp un life by under
standmg the mnuences that II go\ em

n9s

\

l v ngston s Basement Water
Proofing all basement repa irs
done free est•mates lifetime
glJa antae 12yrs on job experl
erke (304)895 3887

you m the year ahead Send the

requ1red

refund fonn and fur your
Astro Graph predtcllons by tna1lmg
$2 lo Astro Graph c/o I hiS newspa
per ~0 Box 1758 Murray Holl Sla

Electncal and

loon New York NY 10156 Be sure
to state your Zod1ac s1gn
SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov 22) It

Refngeratlon

'

hehoove s you to keep to yourself
somethrng good ynu have gmng for
you today NQ t ne wants tn tnp you
up 11 s more that y1 u II he uhle to
mternn h ze th1n gs he ncr 1n prt\ me

'

th• clo•~fitd •..:1100

ITHURSDAY

ROBOTMAN

&amp;

C&amp;C General Home Ma n
lenence Pant ng v ny s ding
carpent Y doors w ndo ws baths
mobile home repair and moe For
free est mate ca I Chat 740 992
6&gt;23

For our final look a1 the M11ien
mum Games we reach the E/ISI West
wmners for Saturday June 5 They
were Tom Mon from Lee s Summ1t,
Mo and J1m Wattenba.ger from
Kansas Cny Mo They scored 1741
mstant matchpomts 72 5 percent
The secret of success m pa1rs
events IS 1wofold gomg plus and
rakmg m ovenncks Afler a sessiOn
1f you check your matchpotnt s1=ores
on all deals you Will find that on
most boards m wh1ch you went plus
you scored over average In thos deal
though Mon and Wattenbarger d1d
well because they collected an over
tnck
If an opponent opens w1th one
strong no trump It pays to compete
Try to find a safe spot nonnally don t
thiMk about gettmg to game After
West s overcall Nonh employed the

bv f•ll•ng 1n the m•u•no words
L.....JI......I-..L-,.L-.t-....1 you deW"elop from step No 3 below

Accessories

810

29
Pass
Pass

-her

9-Klppur
10Airlc8n

11 FonnerVP

East

monds and one club At tnck IWo
declarer did 'cry well calling forthe
spade I 0 Jack ace mne As that
beautiful mne had appeared Wallen
barger returned the spade seven set
ung up three spade lncks
East led hiS second heart bu1 after
West took two tricks m the sun Wat
tenbarger cla1med an overonck for 88
mstant matchpomts out of I 00 How
ever 1f declarer had won only mne
tncks he would have rece1ved 60
malchpomts

sale

Auto Parts

INT

Nortb
Pass
2NT
39
Paaa

tncks one spade one heart ftve dta

Oh o Valley Bank W II Oller For
Sale By Publ C AuCtiOn A 1980
Champ on SUper V Boat &amp; Trailer
1148M80L &amp; 1111879 AI 1 0 00
A M On 10/9/99 At The OVB An
nex 143 Third Avenue Ga 11pQ1 s
Oh Sold To Highest Bidder "As
Where Is WithOut Ex
Is
pressed Or mp ed Warranty &amp;
May Be Seen By Callmg The Col
lee! on Dept At 740 441 1038
OVB Reserves The Right To Ac
cept /Retect Any &amp; All Bids &amp;
W thdraw Items From Sale Pr or
To Sate Terms Of Sate CASH
OR CERTIFIED CHECK

840
1997 Ford Taurus Gl 4 dr se
dan 30 VB auo 27000 mles
black with came tea the In er o
ale CO player sunroo ps alloy
wheejs asking $10 200 740 992
1506 days 740 949 2tl 44 eves

NO

WTU\Ia.'*IO

L.liJEit- ~O·OOl~
OlE.\ l\~~y
WOIZ:K.I 1'-l(o, \00 1

1995 17 Hyd a Sport 90 .hp
Johnson 1111 tr m troll ng motor &amp;
Ira ler ready to go $7 800 '
1997 1B Bass Tracker Pro Team
60 hp mariner w lh trollmg motor
&amp; tra1ler $6 700
1998 18 800 Senes Nl ro 120 hp
Mercury Dual Console built n
banery charger traYer $8 900
1998 24 Sweetwater pontoon 90
hp Johnson tandem axle with
bakes $13 700 74()-992 6520

760

r'(OJ fAT t'IO\f\li'1t:&gt;

rn It'.\~ ~e-.w

Rusty
1984 Pont ac Bonnev11i&amp; 4 Doors
BMy Great Shape Runs &amp; Oriv
Oh o Valley Bank w 11 Oller For
abe Needs Valve Pan Gasket
Sale By Pub! c Auct 1on 1\ 1997
~$8::50.::..:0:.:B:.:0.:_7.;:40:._44:.:.:_1::.:9864::_::__ I Suzuki 1L 1ooos M/C 11 0239~ AI
1986 Buck Rega l Limited AC
10 00 .AM On 10/9f99 .At 'the
Fu lly Loaded .Automat c Very
OVB Annex 143 Third Avenue
Clean 740 245 5991
Gailpo s DH Sold To H1ghast
B dder As ls Where Is With
1986 Chevy Caval er AS 2 0 out E11pressed Or impled !N.a
ranty &amp; May Be Seen By Ca Hng
Auto AC T 1 Cru se 76 000
The CollectiOn D&amp;pl At 740 441
or g nal m les Call (304)458
1038 OVB Reserves The R1ght
1997 .A"er 6PM
To Accept /Reject Any &amp; A I B ds
t988 Beretta GT Newer Eng ne 8
&amp; W•tMraw Items From Sale Prlo
Transm ssion $2 500 Neg 1992 To Sale Terms 01 Sale CA'SH
S 10 2 WO 4 Cyhoder 70 000 OR CERTIFIED CHECK
M les $2 500 Neg 740 446 0519
Wanting To Trade Complete Sat
Or 740 446 3407
elhle System For 4 Wheeler
200cc Or Smaller 740 367 7111
1989 0 ds Cutlass $1200
(304 )675-6893
750 Boats &amp; Motors

i991 Mercury Cougar ,Black New
Pamt A!C PW PS Pl Cruise
T• 1 Low Miles $6 500 740 446
1619

&amp; W1nla

siblings

By Phillip Alder

1980 Toyota 4•4 $1 200 OBO
Runs Excellent Great Truck For
Th s Com ng Winter 740 3888461 740 9926976

lor

8 Ugllt--

Last, but not
least, winners
like overtricks

1995 Chev~/4X4?"!k4 Cab P: S
P B Anti Lock T•I!Wheel AMI
FM Stereo 12Disk/CD Plaver
Pr Dr locks/Pr Seats&amp;lumbar
Control Keyless Ent y (304 )882
3506

Motorcycles

71,1..........

• "YH, Henri"
5 CIA torerun~~W

Operung lead • 10

992 Chevy Yan 314 ton (350 en

71 0

We"'

3NT

Goo&lt;1 Cond•on (304)882 ~

Vans

Soutb

3.

Ch~Nrolet

730

!amour

2

\1-ol~

Vulnerable North South
Dealer Both

1983 Chevy Blazer New Pant &amp;
T res 4x4 AUtomatic AJC $2 300
Or W11 Trade On later 4x~ Truck

o Truck

1~on

• A Q 5 t
• A 4

1982 Chavy 5 tO excellent con
d loon $2300 (304)675-1550

1988 S

DOWN

• A 7 3
9 Q 9 8 3

t97.B Fofd 4 Wheel 011\le
ShOrtbed Truck 4 Speed 4 Jnch
Uft New Tlres 740.245 5991

old Mares and a one

Horse Tra~ er (740) 367 7221

I
I

FORO EXPLORER $1110 I
Se zed And SeHing Locally
Fee 1 800 .. 09 7511 E111 9~35

720

1995 Monte Car o Z34 70 000
miles exp cand red w/ tmted
windows 304 675 2714 or 3d4
576:-2092

Pets for Sale

...

Pumpkins Pumpkms over 300 to
Choose trom 1 m le south of Tup
pars Plains Oh Howle Caldwell
74()-667 3493

preme Loaded 69 000 miles
New Tues $5 800 (304)675
------~-==- . 13~9-..:;
8'i:;__ _ _ _ __
www d•amondsel ers net WE SELL DIAMONDS FOR LESS THE IN
1993 Ford Escort GT 5 sp 2 dr
TERNETS BEST PRIC~S NO a r light blue/gray mterlar 90 000
COMPUTER NEEDED LICENSE m les clean $2 400 080 740
INSURED BONDED CALL 877
992 1506 days 740 949 2644
726 3753

550

ConditiM 74()-448..ot604

1991 FORD MUSTANG $100 I
080 Seized And Selling Locally
Fee 1 BOO 409 7511 Ext 9936

large Oak Enterta nment Center
fits 3"2 TV Never been used
(304)615 4612

LOSE WEIGHT As Seen On
Tv 112 The Cost Of Ma I Brands
All Natural IJ etary We•ghtloss
Supplement Lose Fat Gain Ener
gy FREE SAMPtE Call 1 800
61:10790

&amp;

A!liu-

al Miles All Power Ex~el[tnl

Apples- Red &amp; Yellow Del CIOUS
Gr mnes Golden $4 00 Per Bushel
Fo Crops $10 Bushell P•cked
74()-367 7401

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aepai eel New a Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528

LOSE WEIGHT FAST Metabol
lte 1000 2 Month Supply $15 95
Buy 2 Get 1 FREE Elltra
Strength Back~ By NatiOnal D1a
betas Research Counc I COD/CC
1 800-604-()436

Fruits

Vegetables

Hawa ian Ter lyak Recipes $3
SA S E
Kama ana
Foods
PMB522 4224 Wa alae Avenue
IS Honolu u Hl96816

New And Used Furr') ture Store
Belo'w Holiday Inn Kanauga Stop
.And See Us 740 446 4782

Dryer for sale 3 /2 to 4 yrs old
(304)675 6893

580

Hardy Sta nless Steel Wood
Burning Bolter Outside S1 200
740--388 8743

Two cemetery ots Me1gs Memo
ry Gardens Veterans sectiOn
w•th twovots 740 378 6347

Apa tment home &amp; ra ler entals
740 992 4514
For lease One Bedroom AC
Apt Corner Of S&amp;cond And P ne
$250/Mo Plus Ull es Secur ty
And Key Deposit eferences Re
qu red No Pe
446 4425

Gruob s P•ano tuning &amp; repairs

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dr~ers relr gerato s
ranges Skaggs App ances 76
V ne Street Call 740 446 739S
1 888 816 0128

Washer $95 Orye $95 Electr c
Range $95 Refrigerator $95
Washers l ke New $205 With 1
Year Wa ranty Skaggs Appl anc
es 76 v ne Street Gall polls 74(}
446-1398 1 888 818 0128

For Sale Vamaha Alto Suo
phone Excellent Condition
$500 (304)882 3338

Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Or 740 446-4525

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILIH
C a m Den ed7 We Spec•allze In
Appeals And Hearmgs FREE
CONSULTATION Benefit Team
Se v ces Inc Toll Free 1 888
836 4052

1 Bedroom AJC WID Hook Up
Near Arbors Nurs ng Home No
Pets Ou et Locations $279/Mo
... u~ Illes 740-446 2957

Apar1menl lor rent in Pomeroy no
polS 740 992 5858

340

Nice one bedroom furnished
apartment In M ddleporl no pets
references anct depos 1 reqUired
740--992 5633

1 Bedroom House No Pets • 28
llnco n Ave $2l5 00 month
(740)-446 9342

2 Bedrooms $250 Mo
pos I 740 367 0632

tun tlis
74~300

410 Houses for Rant

420

R verslde Apartments n M ddle
pori From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equa Hous ng Oppor
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

RH~TALS

,

Grack&gt;us I v•ng 1 and 2 bedroom
aparlmenls at VII age Manor and

N ce Ground Floor 2BR W/0
Hook up Reference Oepos 1 No
Pets (304)675 5162

HUO Homes Approval By Phone
Smgles Or Doubles 740 446
3583

Buy Homes From $10 000
3 Bedroom local Government
Bank Foreclos ures F anc ng
I For Ltsllngs Call 800
Ext 709
Close to 'toyota Plant/Bullalo
3BR Smgle Story bu It In K tch
en w Double Qyen and Garbage
D1sposel On1':Bathroom Utility
ROOO'J. large l vtng Room w/F r~
place Ga s Furnace w/Propane
and/or Natural Gas Hook Up Two
Ca r Garag19(Unattached)
Storage Bulldmg
Chain! nk
Fence around the Back Yard
(304) 937 3646

We Buy -land 30 500 Acres
We Pay Cash t 800 213 8365
Anthony land Co

2 Bedroom Natural Gas Furnace
Alf Very N1ce In Ga 1pot1s 740
446-2003 740 446 1409

Sale

14x70 mobile home
740 949-2072

fer North Or West Gall a County
740.446 2317

3 br country home available m1d
October on Boa d AD Letart 304
675 24841eave message

Want A Home Don t Have land'
We Do Hurry, Only t 0 Lots Left
800 383-6862

3 Bedroom House w 3 Aeres
land Few F u•t Trees 2 Bed
rooms Bath Upsta rs 1 Bedroom
Front Room D n ng Room Utlty
Room Kitchen Ba th Downstairs
S1ts On Storys RlJn Road OH Ao
ute 7 lnlormat on (740) 367
7576 Alter Noon $47 500 00
OBO

EARN $500 $1 200 I WK IN
YOUR BATHROBE &amp; SLIPPERS
G eat Income Opportun ty W/
Computers Low lrtvestment 1
800 449 2926 Code 03

Th•s newspaper Will not
knowingly accept
advert sements for real estate
which s mv10latoo of the
law Our readers am .hereby
InfOrmed that aPodwellngs
adVertised In tn s newspaper
are ava lab e on an equal
opparturuty bass

SIS OVERDUE BILLS! liS Con

Jtms Drywa &amp; Construct on
New Construction &amp; Remodel
Drywa I S d ng Roofs Addl
uons Pant ng etc (304)674
4623 or (304)674 0155

Will Pelnt HoyttJ (Inter oriEKte
r or) Barna + Tin Rgofs Exp,er
enced Reterences + Free Est•
mates (304)895 3981

All real estate ac:lvertismg n
this newspaper IS subfect to
the Federal Fa r Housing Act
of 1968 wh•ch makes 1t Illegal
to adver11se any preference
llmrtat•on or discrim na1100
based on race color teiiQIOO
sex tam lial status or national
ong n or any trnentoo to
make any sucl:t preference
i1mitat10n or discrimination

Money to Loan (

CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monthly Payments 20 50% Save
Thousands Of Dollars In lnte est
Non-Profit TCC 800 758-3844

W II Do Babysitting In My Home
Day Or N ght Shift 8 dwell &amp; Ad
dav le School D str cts A:elerenc
es 740 446 6373

ng S1te And Be Access ble Pre

WE ARE ENGEAGIZING E
COMMERCE ON THE INTER
NETIII Have Your Own Turn Key
On ne Bus ness Through HAND
TECHNOLOGY l:ow Start Up
Cost Gives You A Complete
Package W th Mentonng And
Training To Help You Succeed
Call Ivan Turner 877 324 8135
TCf28586

Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your logs to the mill tusr call
304 675 1957

Open ng Fo 2 Elderly
capped Persons In
Home Pr vate Rooms
ween 9 A M 6 PM
Ot18

3 Surveyed And Deeded Acres
Secluded Wooded W1th More
Land Available Must Have Bu !d

ACROSS

SAGIITARIUS (Nov 23 De c
21) Getttng wgethcr wuh large
grnups 11l pcnple tnday cnuld play m
you~ mlcrcsts Smncunc you meet
among the crowds could have tmpor
tant mfnnnallon to share wnh you
CAPRICORN iDee 22 Jan 19)
Alt~ough ~ou rc not g1ven to hn\ mg
wtshfulthmkmg govern your mah.:r
1al~ aspnauon" lanc1ful tmo.gmmgs
cnuld kud ynu In llcnelu.:ml !venues

TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20)
Credu re cogn1110n or acknowledg
menl you nghtly deserve m1ghl be
forthcomtng loday II could be tn lhe
way of a promouon bonus or even a
new JOb

GEMINI (May 21 June 20) Your
chansmauc manner and style wtll be
a standout tn any group wuh whom
you assoctatc today Th1s w1ll gtve
you the abtl1ty to draw people to you
who could mean somethmg tn your
ltfe
CANCER (June- 21 July 22)Thos
could tum out h.1 be a better 1han aver
age day spent wuh 1he fam1ly hlled
w1th meanmg warmth and lo ve
wh ch wtll ughten bond s even fun her

I!J grc II ('IOS'ilhthllC'i
AQUARIUS (J m 20 Feh IYI
Devote tune and study to long range
plaRfltng today Whl'lt ynU COVISIOR

lhlll h&lt;

lor yourscll 1.11 thts tunc and put tu
p01pcr will come 10 pass m a "U~
Cessful way
PISCES (Feh 20 March 201
Responslhlltttc" y&lt; u th{lught you h 1d
to shoulder alone could he all ~v tntcd

through someone who ts
extremely fond of you and was aware
of your presenl needs
ARIES (Mnrch 21 Aprol 19) The
help or dtrecuon you rc looktng for
may come today from a busaness
today

assoc tatc who may also he a goOd
fnend Hts or her mpul wtll be JUSt
what s needed lo get you on ~rack

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Gc1 your
head together tod ay wuh those you
'

share o co mmon mterest should an
nnp ulant dcctsJon have 10 be made
conccrnmg a JOmt cau se All will he
m 1 cmnp:.~llhlc md agrct.: 1hl c m 1 J
VIRGO (Aug 21 Sept 221 S tnc
!lun g) o u vc l1 ng dcstn.::d hut nh" tys
cnnstdcrcd to cxpcnswc nught he
m lllc tva I 1hk: t ) 1u 1 d \ )' at tn
all 1rd thlc pmc In 10n nc Lll'c" It

could

L

me ts a

~~~I

1 am fond of an old adage that says "Consult the w1s
dom of your heart as well as

YOUR MIND "

SEPTEMBER 23

I

�Page 16 • The

Daily

Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 23, 1999

Friday
S1ptM!ber 24, 181111.

Sports

East~rn . volleyballers

win, Page 5
Diagnosing autism, Page 6
Military news, Page 6

Today: Sunny
High: 70s; Low: 50s

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 70s; Low: 50s

llgers claw past 1he
Cleveland Indians 7-6

-Page4

•

Meigs County's
V'

v~~~.5c;. -~-~iitt~~~11 -

..

.

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Single Copy.

35 Ce~ .

Need for kindergarten readiness spurs learning opportunitie$
County preschool programs expanding
By BRIAN J. REED ·
Sentinel Newe Staff
Parents with a di~abled ~hild or those parents who would like to give
their child an early start on their education arc receiving more -opportunities through the public school systems and other public agencies.
An increasing need for such an early start or school work has prompted the Athens/Meigs Educational Service Center and other agencies that
work with children to begin working with children early - as early as
three years of age and even younger.
At their heart of the ESC's county preschool program is the aim or
worki~g with ~hildren ~ith learning delays, such as difficulties in speech,
Or d1frJcultoes ID acqumng basiC knowledge SUch 'IIS COlors.
Local school districts now recommend that children entering kinder:
garten know the small and large case letters, the numerals and numbers
through 20, ~olors; shapes and other basic Facts,
.
According to Bow, many children who arc "typically developing"
· often ent.e r schoo_l without knowing these concepiS. Why? Many parents
·don't read with their children, or discuss concepts like colors with their
children. As educators know, those children who are not regularly
exposed to reading often have difficulties in understanding all b~~&amp;ic concepts.
•
.
.
The county s preschool program, whtch operates classrooms at
Pomeroy Elementary School and Eastern Elementary School, are limited

EPA clears way for mining rights on
Buffington Island Civil War battlefield
COLUMBUS (AP) ·- Another state agency has given a company
the right to mine gravel in a Civil War battlefield despite the protesiS or
preservationists.
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency h&amp;$ signed ·orf on some
mining at the Buffington -lsland battlerictd 'site in southern Ohio.
The EPA on Thursday authorized Shelly Materials Inc. to mine the
Civil War battle site in Meigs County, about 80 miles southeast or
Columbus.
.
· ·
Earlier this year, the Army Corps or Engineers and the Ohio Historic
Preservation Office signed an agreement with S~elly, allowing the
company to mine gravel on about 400 acres along the Ohio River. Its
land includes much of the Burrington Island BattleField, where Union
troops clashed with ConFederate raider John Hunt Morgan in July 1863.
The Ohio .Department of N~tural Resources has already granted
Shelly a permit to mine the land.
.
The company plans 19 install!~ steel cells in 'the Ohio River to moor ·
and load barges that will transport sand and gravel.
Se.v eral groups had protested the mining saying the site is a monument and should be preserved. Others expressed concerned with the
environment and the water quality during the mining.
The EPA says _several precautions will be .taken to minimize the
environmental impact. These include barges being maneuvered by a
low-power shirting tow boat.
.
Forty acres or land will be preserved and donated to the slate aFter
mining has ended, _the EPA said.
·

;

SPORT. UTILITIES
$
181995
~~o~!~~- !!~~·~!!!~!e~~~~~~~ $301995
7
~~. Fv~.~~~.~~~~~!.~~oNm~==·~- ~· $26199 5
~~.Fv~.~~~.X.~P~~.~~!t ~~:~.· s21 199 5·
$
18I 995 _
FRI
~~o~!~!C~4~!.~!~o~f. ~~:!~~· $171995

LUXURY CARS
$28I 995·

98 JEEP . CHEROKEE #996921

Auto, NC , 4 WD, "Classic Package"..... ,. .....
'

~8

LINCOLN TOWN CAR 113551o,
Signature Senes ................................. ,.. .. :........

......

97 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL

....•.

#36680, Auto, VB,

23,000 miles ...... .... ,....................... ... ...... ....... .. .. ·

..... ....

96 LINCOI:N TOWN CAR #3563o ,

VB, A/C. AM/FM cass, only 25,000 miles ........

~~:~~T~!c~~~~~~~-~

$181995
$9I 995

352 41
..#. . . ... ... .. ..

91 CHEVROLET SUBURBAN

#996762,
'
auto , 454 VB, loaded , only 89,000 miles... ... ..

TAURUS -&amp; TRACERS
$1 41·995
C
·· ·

99 FORD TAURUS SE #3B22o.
·
autoV6
, . N , powerequ tpment.. .... .. .......... ....

·

!~/'!~~~~!~i!~!sC&amp;EI~k~s.- ~ . ~. ~· $121995
38 1

..

98 FORD TAURUS SE #3B13o , - _ .

$

Auto , V6, NC , power, 1900 miles ._.'.. .............. ...

97 FORD TAURUS GL #38210,.

.

·

141995

$ . •

Auto , NC , V6, power equipment, spoiler .:.: .. .. .

11 1995

.

Auto, VB, CD changer, opal pearlescent,
only 21,000 miles.............. ....... ... ........ .... .. .......

96 FORD BRONCO #3B32o, Auto,

..........

$23,995

cq chanQer. leather,

Y, SEPT. 2 4

* EARLY BIRD SPECIAL •
9:00 Oil! - I0:30 am Take S1500 off advertised price
I0:30 am - 12:00 pm Take SI_100 off Advertised price
12:00 - 4:00 pm Take $800 off advertised price
On All Used Cars Priced Over $4000
.

SA· * FLASHINGY
SEn.25
u&lt;fHT SPECIAL •
Take $1500 off the price of the used car that
has the flashing light on top of it! Lights will be
moved throughout the day so stop by and
.· SAVE 1500!!!

'

95 LINCOLN

MARK VIII

#993801,

Y, SEPT. 27

WV MOUNTAIN GETAWAY//

Purchase any used car or truck aver $4000 and receive a
trip that include5- First class seats on Potomac Eagle Roil •
rood over night accomodotions at South Branch Hotel and
$1_0 0 spending money! Enjoy the beautiful fall colors that
e mountains hove to offer! ·

p

Take $1 500 oH the price of ~ny
TQurus/ Tracer or Sport Utility
ALL DAY TUESDAY!!

LEIBANON (AP) -A former guard at the Warren County Juvenile
Detention Center was sentenced to six months in jail for coercing teen-age
inmates to expose their breasts.
Timothy Million, 31, of Middletown, was also ordered Thursday to
attend a program For sex offenders and placed on two years' probation following his jail time, He appealed the convi.ction and is free on $10,000
bond.
.
Million originally faced 12 charges in Common Pleas Court alleging
sexual misconduct with seven girls.
,
Seven Felony charges were dismissed and the jury found him innocent
of three others, including a sexual battery charge that he had sex with a 15year-old girl in a holding cell last year.
.
·
·
The girl and her mother ha~ filed a $2 million civil lawsuit in federal
court against Million and county officials, claiming authorities should
have more rigorously checked Million's criminal record ..
Million .has twice served priS&lt;?nlerms From 1991to 1993' for aggravated burglary, forgery and attempted drug trafficking.
Million was fired in January after the misconduct charges became public. Two other guards and the center director resigned. A video surveillance
system and other security precautions have been added.

! •

99 FORD F·250 #997371.

Ext Cab, 4&gt;\4, Lariat, Diesel .. .._. .. :......... ...... .. _..
99 FORD F·150 #3B35o,

Auto.• A/C, 4x4, 4300 mile.s............. . .. . .......

.

A/C, AM/FM cass, 64,000 miles: ....... .........
.

97 FORD RANGER #38331

.

4.0 V6, Ext cab, 4x4, XLT .... ... .... ... ...... ..... :.... .
97 CHEVROLET S·l

0 #996691

Ext cab, V6, A/C, 29,000 miles.'.. ... .. ... ... : ........

'

$131995
$1_21995
$
191995

Teen pleads guilty to attempted rape In church I
AKRON (AP) '--A 17-year-old boy pleaded guilty to the attempted
rape and robbery of a 71-year-old woman praying· in church.
.

Ext cab, lariat, loaded, . Bright red .... .._. .... :.. ..... , _
94 FORD UNGER #990741,
XLT,NC, AM/FMcass ........... ... .. .................

$71995

.

-

Donte Wilson, of Akron, faces up to 16 years in prison after entering
his plea ·Thursday in Summit County Common Pleas Court. Sentencing
was set for Oct. 20.
Police said Wilson had been drinking heavily when he went to
Martha's Church to pick up a relative who was attending an Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting.
When ·the woman resi~ted repeated attempts to assau'tt · ~er, Wilson
decided to rob her instead and made ofF with 50 cents, police said.
-Wilson was later round at the
Alcoholics Anonymous meeting
trying to blend in with the crowd,
police said.

ITCJ,dav's

Sentinel

2 Sections • 12 Pages
-·~c..,la2ss.,.l'-'fted~s'----9~&amp;~10"11
Comics
Editorials

z

HOURS: MON.- FRI. 9'-7; SAT.

.

740-446-9800 800-272-5 .. 7 9

Local

3

Sports

4&amp;5

CR.DIT SOlUTIONS
Colf'lftill!-lr~O.f

AfK FOR
MR. FORD

OHIO
PlckJ : 5-5-0; Plck4: 0-9-1-0
Buckeye 5: 23-25-28-30-37
W.YA.
Daily 3: 9-4- 3; Daily 4: 1-9-5-6
0 1999 Ohio \o'tlky Publi1hing Co.

i
•

f. ·

•

. Suspended Norwood
police chiet going to jan

•'

•

••

'
••

•

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I

171995

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

•

t
h
.
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·
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f
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IAI.

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TRUCKS
9 1
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$21 1995
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97 FORD F·150 #497267,

Y
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TAURUS/ TRACER &amp; SPORT UTILITY DAY!!

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95 FORD F·150 #995702

11

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to 12 studcniS each. Up to eight or
those students may have learning
delays, while the others are "typically developing peers," children viho
exhibit no problems in learning.
Those peers, ' Bow said, help
model behaviors and learning
processes for the students with
delays. Often, those studcniS, while
they arc developing on schedule,
still arc unprepared For the first day
or kindergarten .
Play is emphasized in the county
program . A wide array of toys, puppets, mathematic manipulativcs
(counting blocks, etc.), painiS, and
oversized story books are used in an
informal and Fun setting.
'
As an example, Bow said -that her
·
•• Betty Bow ayla Powell.
program now
claaaroom children arc learning about "apples teacher at the Athen8/Melga ESC'a preachooi work three daya a week, in order to help pr•
and the color red" this week, and program et Pomeroy Elementllry School, Ia pic- pare children with . Ieeming deleya, and their
apples will be used for several learn- . turad working with Savannah Capehart, Kim- typically-developing paera, •lump etart on their
ing activitie.s dur.ing the unit. .
berly Cunningham, J . .lca Hannan and McK- achool experience.
. Sounds hke kmdergarten, doesn't
.
peers is maintained throughout the school year.
11?
.
.
. .
The class meets for three ali-day sessions every week, and participate
Young children -as young as kmdergartners- arc .begmnmg 'o feel . in many activities in the school buildings 'including assemblies and other
'
·
the pressures of increasing arademic requiremcn~ set Forth by the state. events. '
CARLETON SCHOOL
While kindergarten was _traditionally seen as a socialization expedence,
designed to Familiarize youngsters with school routines. kindergarten is
At Carleton School, three classes provide services similar to those ,
offered through the county ESC. The program at Carleton School, hownow an academic_program. .
.Children with delays are often reFerred to the program by Head Start ever; is overseen by the Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation and
or Early Start, programs offered through ACCES~ .- while others are Developmental Disabilities.
..
·
·
brought to the county board office For testing, and then are placed in the
The Ciuleton .School program serves children who are deemed eligible,
program.
.
'
through a referral by the local sch~l district, due to developmental
However, seating For their "typically developing peers" is tight. and
ofFered on· a first-come, first served basis. Bow said that a wailing list of
Continued •pre•chool Progrem• Exp~~ndfng• on page 3

u.

Family members ....
Berenyl was abusive

LIMA (AP) - A man shot to
death by his daughter was threatening and abusive, family members
testified.
:
"He would slam you against the
wall," said Shirley Berenyi .about
her ex"husband, William Berenyi.
"He would bust hole into ihe wall
next to your head, letting you know
the next time it .was going to be
your face. "
, Mindy Berenyi has admitted
shooting her father four years ago
in their Paulding County home near
Antwerp.
She is using battered-child syndrome as a defense, saying she was
sexually and physically abused and
feared for her life . .,

a

•
AUTUMN OFFICIALLY BEGAN around
7:30 a.m. Thursday, bringing with It a nearly
parfact day with comfortable temperature•
In tha mld-70a. The day proved Ideal for tin

.2~~~!~Hbe

part of

Asaoclated Preea Writer
·
DAYTON (AP)- Gulf War veterans will not
likely be flocking to the first large-scale study of
possible treatments for their unexplained illnesscs. one veterans official says.
"1 think they're going to have a tough time
finding volunteers," Denver Combs, director or
the Montgomery County Veterans Service Center,
said Thursday.
The Dayton VA Medical Center is among 30
U.S. sites selected to test an antibiotic and among
only 20 .sites to evaluate exercise and another
non-drug therapy.
It's part or a $20 million efFort by the Defense
Department and .Department of Veterans Affairs
to·explore. ways to· improve the health of Persian

afternoon of basking on the riverfront and
watching the American Queen pilah her way
upstream past the Pomeroy L~vee.

CINCINNATI (AP)- A suburban police chief _suspended after he
wrecked his Jeep and then tried to
cover it up has been ordered to
spend 12 days in jail.
Timothy Brown, Norwood's
police chief since March 1996,
could have received up to two years
in jail.
"You ·know, as a law enforcement officer, this sets a horrible
example. If we don't do what we
expect others to do, it's 'a joke,"
Hamilton County Com.mon Pleas
Judge Norbert Nadel told Brown at
Thursday 's sentencing.
· Brown, 46, --:as ·convicted Aug. •
26 of four misdemeanor charges of
falsification. He drove after drinking
on Dec. 5, wrecked his Jeep, reponed it stolen and ordered his officers
to investigate even though he had
already had the vehicle towed to a
body shop.
·
"I drank out of Frustration over
my job, trying to make it ·a modem
police force. I'd been g 0tting opposition," Brown told the judge .
Brown said he has been attending
Alcoholics Anonymous meetings
since December.

6g~!!.r~ar Syndro~d!ngl!.'!e~}o~h~~~~~s~~¥.

About 700,000 men and women served in the
war. An estimated 2 percent of them have reported symptoms ,that have eluded traditional medical
explanation, including chronic fatigue, joint pain
and memory loss.
Many are convinced their illnesses may be
related to exposure to toxins or other chemical or
environmental factors.
But Combs said many suffering Gulf War veterans won't participate because they are distrustful or the government and fear such tests could
adversely aFFect their jobs.
· "Most or these people are young ·people," he
said.
. One study will' focus on exercise and cognitive
behavioral therapy, which teaches techniques For

ernmenl is see_king 1',350 volunteers nationwide_.
The other study will test whether the antibiotic doxycycline improves the health of veterans
infected with the microorganism Mycoplasma,
which some people think may be causing the ail ments. A total of 450 volunteers are be_ing sought
for that study..
Dr. John Feussner, the department's chief ·
research and development officer. said the volunleers will be treated by the antibiotic for about a
year.
'
"If this treatment were to work, that would be
quite remarkable," he said. "The possibility is the
patient would be cured."
Feussner said the drug is not experimental and
is available by prescription for certain ailments. -

GQP prepares bare-bones tax measure following Clinton tax cut veto
By CURT ANDERSON
·
AP Tax Writer
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Belie_ving they have
a 2000 campaign issue in President Clinton's veto
or a $792 billion tax cut, Republicans are turning
their auention to a modest bill that would renew a
handFul of popular expiring tax credits.
.
GOP leaders said Thursday's veto hkely
doomed any chance for a~road tax cut this year.
But the House Ways and Means Committee today
was scheduled to begin moving the "extenders"
package tentatively estimated -at $22 billion over
·
five yeais..
_"The president's veto has made it harder to
achieve tax relieF this year," said Senate Majority
Leader Trent -Loll, R-Miss. "We'll come back
.again next year."
.·
The package, part.of the now-dead $792 bil lion tax measure, has bipartisan support and
includes a five -year extension of a research and
development credit favored by the high-tech
industry and manufacturers. It also pennanerllly
would ens ure that middle-class taxpayers wh o
cl aim credit&gt; such as the $500 per-child credit do
not become entangled in the complex, costly

alternative minimum tax .
.
· tax breaks.
.
.
Despite its popularity, Loll said the extenders·
Ointon said the GOP .measure would underfate requires that members of Congress- partie- ~inc efforts to shore up the Social Security and
ularly in the Senate- have the discipline not to Medicare programs, to reduce the nahonal debt
use it as a vehicle to load up other pet tax items.
and to improve education. " The bill is too big, too
"We'd have to have a lot of cooperation," Loll bloated, places too great a burden on America's
said. "It tends to be the engine that pulls a lot of economy," the president s~id .
.
.
cats."
"II would force drastiC cuts m educat1on;
· In add!tion, GOP leal:lers struggling to pay for health care and other vital _a~eas," Ointon added.
next year's budget were developing a way to raise " It would cnpple our abthty- to pay down the
$3 billion or less to pay for the first year of the debt. _
It would not ad~ a day to the Social Securi extenders bill because no projected surplus ty trust fund, 11 would not add a day to the
money is available.
·
Medicare trust fund or moderniZe Med1care with
In a Rose Garden ceremony Thursday, Clinton prescription drug_coverage."
.
-.
followed through on his repeated promise to veto
Republicans dt~puted th~ P~~s1den1 and sa1d he
the larger $792 billion, 10-year GOP tax cut.
had killed tax rehcf for fam1hes, for educatoon
" At a time when Americ8 is moving in the and for low -income A:mericans. "I regret the
right direction, this bill would I urn us back to I he president has _stole.'!- thos tax :cut from working
failed policies of the past," the president said.
Amencan fam1hes, Loll satd m a remark echoed
That bill would have reduced all income lax by GOP ~olleague~.
rates by I percentage point, eased the marriage
GOP leade_rs sa1d t~ey would ~ow conce~tratc
penalty on many two-in come couples, eliminale on f1xmg Soc1al Secunty, prevenlml! $248 btlhon
estate taxes -and the a!len\ative minimum income in tax increases _u~ged by the admm1strat1on over
tax , reduce capital ga ins taxes, expand p&lt; nsion 10 years, _restralmng the growth of govern~ent
and 401 (k) ·laws and provide numerous business and reducmg the debt.

j

•

'

.. '

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