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Page 10 • The Daily" Sentinel

Pomeroy •"Middleport, Ohio

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

Humane Society: Deer-Auto Collisions
By Alden Waitt, President
Me igs County Humane
Soc iety
Ce rtainly we are all aware of
the stati sti cS on dcer·vehi clc cnl·

lisions. This is uot the pl ace to
lake on those who maima in that
the deer popul ati on is the proh-

lcm and ir there just weren't so
man y of them. we wo uld be rim::

Let

tt

suffice to say that the

deer were he re fir st, and we
·humans ( whr1 lmvc no business

The best th ing to do is to be
parucul ariy watchful for wildlife
at daw n, dusk. and in the first
few hours after darkness falls .
Man y spec ies of wi ldlife are
most acti ve at these times.
In add ition, most deer-car Collisions occur because the dri ve r
has slowed to preve nt hilling the
first deer, then sped up, just in
time to hit a second _
. Female deer trave l in groups
and the fawn s will foll ow their
mothers whereve r they go. for up
to a year arc they are born. The
hahy )s me rel y foll owin g the

popul ating th e Carl h .ott thi s rat e.
an~ cm: roal: hing on the ir
territory. nOt \' il'c VL' rsa.
mothe r ·s cue .
\Vha l foll ows arc so me sug Edges of roads that arc bor·
ges ti ons for av01dl ng hiltm k! dcr,,.'d by ag rkU it ura l field s or
dee r. as we dn \'C the higlwvayS natura l habitats arc plat:es to be
a nd hac k roads ill our L'tl llll t\~.
p:utic ul arly
watc hful
for
Ohviously the first· s u ggC~ r in n wi ldlife.
is to cu t J m , n o n yo ur spe!.! d . No
And si mply &lt;~s:-. um ~ that the ani on~: nee ds In dri \'l' ftth miks a n
mal s yo u c nnJU ntcr .d o not kn o w
hour on Ro uh.' 6~ 1~ to ge t 0U l 1)f .your way. Youn g
(f yo u' slim J own . \llU wi ll a nim a l ~ l:sp~t..: i a ll y do not rccog'also ~~,·· oid lw rmt rH! or: ki lli ng
ni/.!.:'. that ca r.-. an: a threat.
\'.·il d ltl'c anJ in(· n:.;;;e the tim ~
\Vhat clsC· h ~ lp !i'? Loy-.•cr your
you ' ll ha \'C Ill bra~ ~: f11 r llt hl..'r uas hhoa rd Iig ht' slightl y. !You' II
ha1anls . suc h a~ IHncli~ r s. L'h il - he more Jikc lv to .see the reneedren :.H pla!. anJ ~ll;\\ l ) !llP\ in g l inn o f vnur . headlights in the
ve hi cl es·.
ey~~ or ~nim al...: n~ar~ l h e road .in
Dri ve slowly. c:..;pccia ll y o~ ft~r time to gn·c wildlife. a br01kc.
. d~t r k . Mar) y t~ ninw ls n cc JI ~ss h
The i nsUlllltin n of. roads ide
t1eCom L' v i ~ t i m ~ si mp ly bc l' au . . ~ n: lkclors a rc cffcc1ive. partiCuP~'l) pl c arc dn\·rn g t llll ra..;t to
la'rly if you have the Stricter-Lite
a vo id hnti ng th••.'lll .
hran d of rc Oet to rs.
anyway)

CO DY. \Vyo. (i\P J - Pnnccss
Diarw made .h~ ~uJ ii m:!'i ~v hcrc_\'&lt;..' r sh..:
and her hair made al mos t a ~ .1
much news JS she drd. ·
Over Ihe years. the man behind
the hai r. Richard Dalton. learned a
le w tric ks aho u,t hmv to keep the
prr nccss in style \\ ithout giving her a
\\-c nt.

media headache.

Every apple core, French frv,
and smell y sand wich wrapper

POMEROY Meigs Local
Boqd Issue Campaign Comm illee
Monday, 7 p.m. at the Meigs High
School caretcria. Architec t will
attend' and campaign strategies will
be discussed.

tossed out o f a car attraCis
wtldltfc to roadside s ·Q oft en

with fatal results. So never thro w
littcr .o f any kind from your \.'ar.

Remember thai where there

IS

one animal ..:mss in g. there m.ty
he more: young anin1als fo ll owing lhc ir mothe rs or m a l~ animals
pursuing a male.

Dalton. who allendcd a l)esig n'aid he used to snip off ttny amounts
of her hair everv few davs to avoid
the drastic st yle" changes .that would
create an instant buzz.

,

" I really qidn t want to be pan of
the mcd i a .all~ n tion . " he said Friday.
The Scottish-born sty li st met

in rorming the l,.adics or the Grand
Army of the Republic.
POMEROY - Drew Webster
American Legion Post 39 Au•iliary
meeting Tuesday, 2 p.m. al the
Legion Ha ll in Pomeroy.

·what do you if you do inj ure
an animal '! Unl!.!ss yo u c.an mo\c
the animal out of the road tn

abso lute safe ty. do not a11cmpt to
do so.

DILLON SWATZEL

Use yo ur hazard li g hl ~ or
cmcrgt:nty road flares ro warn
onl'uming 1raffi c of the inj ured
nn imal.
Never attempt -to hand le a
large a nim al like a deer (!hose
sharp hoo\'CS flai ling in fe ar and
p.:tin ~:a uld do you sc ri nus Llam agc) or one that could gi\'C a SL'ri ·'
llUS hit c_. li ke a raccoo n. ·
Call so mc o n~ with prll pt: r
tr aini ng and equipme nt li ke lh c
wi·ldl ifc o fficer.
Whe n )'t) U nee d a ss i s tan ~:c .
ca ll the non-emergency numbe r
o f the local r o ,i l't.' J cpa rtmcnt
and de.saibc the ani mal's l o ~ ~l ­
tion. Emp hasi Zl' that the inju red
anilll'iJ I iS a tra l'fic hazard to h!!lp .
en sure that

TURNS ONE • The first birth·
day of Dillon Brooks Swatzel
was celebrated on September 5
at the Forked Run State Park.
Attending were hii parents, Don
and Amy Swatzel, and sister,
Erin; grandparents Mike and
Kathy ·Swatzel,' Barbara Young
and Paula and Jack Welker;
great grandparents Fritz Swatzel
and Brooks and June sayre.
Also attending were Philip
Swatzel and Shauna Clark,
Steven .and Tara Swatzel, Mickey
and Cindy Winebrenner, David
and Shellie Barr, Angle and Troy
Rigsby and Madison, Bresty and
Scott Utt, Elizabeth, Rebecca
and Vanessa, Helen Jones and·
Marge Reuter, Roger and
Christina Sayre, Katie Gabler .
and Tom Summerfield.

Lady Diana Spencer at a London ·arri veq at 7:30 cv'ery morning for
their appoi mmcnt. Sometimes he
Charles. In I982 , Dalton became her styled her hai r twi ce a day.
personal stylist because she liked the
On occasion, Dalton cut lhc hair
way he styled her hair and she knew of Princes Charles, William and
he liked to trave l.
Harry. He eventuall y quit in 1991
During the nine years he worked ·while Diana was going through a
for Diana, Dalton lived a 10-mi nule di ffi cult personal period.
drive fro m Kensington Palace and
salon be fore ' she marr ied Pri nce

MIDDLEPORT - Oh-Kan Coi n
Club meeting Monday at the Trolley
CHESTER
Winding Trail
House, located behind the · Dairy · Garden C lu b meeting Tuesday, 8
Queen in Middleport. Refreshments p.m. at the home of Addalou Lewis.
will be served.
POMEROY - Immunizati on
ATHENS- O'Bicness Memori- clinic at Meigs Count y Health
al Hospital will hold a support group Depanmenl T~e sday . 1-3 p.m. at the
meeting for family and f riends of Meigs Multipurpose Center ai 11 2
those affl icted with Al zheimer's dis- E. Memori'al Dri ve, Pomeroy. Every
ease and related disorders Monday, child must ~ accompanied by a par6:30 p.m in the hospital conference ent/legal guardian with a copy of the
room B- 10. Joan Lawson Stroh, child 's immlin iwli on record.·
LPCC and David Stroth, D.O. wil i
be guest speakers. The topic will be
SYRACUSE Me igs Area
"Taking care of yourse lf as a care- H oli n~ss Associalion holiness rall y
giver." For more information, those Tuesday , 7 p.m. at the Syrac use ·
inter\)sled may conlacl O' Bicness : Nazarene Church. District SuperinHospital at 592-9337 . .
tendent Dr. Richard L Jordan will
pc the speaker. The public is we i-.
POIN'f PLEASANT, W.Va.
co me.
Second annual Tri-County Camp
Meeting Monday through Oct. I, 7 WEDNESDAY
p.m. nightly at the Point Pleasant
TU PPERS PLAIN S - BloodNational Guard Armory. Evangelist mobile, Eastern Hig h Schoo l, 9:30
will be the Rev. Roger Duncan with a. m. lo I :30 p.m.
·
special singing by lhe Duncan 'Famil y.
TUPPERS PLA INS - Eastern •
Local Board of Education regular
RACINE · - · Southern Local meeting Wedn esday, 6:30 p.m . in the
Board of Education regular meeting Eas tern Elementary cafetorium.
Monday, 7 p.m. at the ~igh school.
POMEROY - Meigs ·. Co un ty
TUESDAY
Emergency Pl ann ing Comm illee
MIDDLEPORT - . Sons of (LEPC) regular meeting Wedne.ctay,
Union Veterans meeting Tuesday. II :30 a.m . in the conference room of
7: 15 p.m. at the annex of the Hope the Multipurpose Se ni or Citizens
Baptist' Church in Middleport. A Building on Mulberry Heights,
meeting will be held at the same Pomeroy.
time and place for women interesied

Prices Good Tuesday, Sept. 28th 8 Wednesday, Sept. 21th only

WHILE SUPPLIES

TONY'S ITALIAN STYLE PASTRY

Spare Ribs

CARNATION

Pizzas

Hot Cocoa Mix

2/$

c

(Ass'I Flav)
10 ct.

KITCHEN PRIDE

·sTOKELY
.
.
,

Sticed ·Bacon

$

'

Tomato Juice

C

49

46oz

6Lb.

Lbs.

FRESH CHIQUITA

BOUNTY PAPER

Bananas

'·Towels

4/'$

c

• .USSELMAN

SNY,ER'S OF BERLIN

Appiesauce

Potato Chips
Reg. $2.79

oz.

$129

13-14 oz.
(Ass 't Flav)

UNITED VALLEY BELL

SUNBEAM

PEPSI &amp; MT~ DEW

2% Milk

Big Bread

Products

$1''

j

c

24 pk.
Limit 2 please

I

$ 99

298 SECOND STREET·'
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPT. 28, 29TH 1999 ONLY

'

.

-Page 4
•

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohto

Volume 50. Numb er 78

Single Copy· 35 Cents

-

Commissioners .set' meeting to discuss Saturday courthouse hours
By 'BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newa Staff
The debale over cxtcndod courthouse hours will be
the subject of a .public,meeling to be held next Oftober 5
al lhe Meigs County Courthouse. The Meigs Counly
Commissioncffl sel the dale for the discussion al their
regular meeting on Monday aftemocln.
Commissioner Jeffrey Thomto11 suggested lhat the
commissioners, county officeholders, area business owncis and members of lhe public meeltogetber to discuss
whether extendod hour~ are necessary, whellier office
holder~ arc willing to open thei r offices for longer periods of time, and if opening lhe courthouse, especially on
Saturday morning, would benefit tbe business climate in

town.
'
.
Commissioner Janet Howard said yesterday lhal the
George Wrigh~ a member of Pomeroy Village Coun- · commissioneffl support ••tended hours, either on a specil, met with·tbe commissioners last week to urge their cific week night or on Saturday morn ings, and said that
consideration of Saturday hours, sayina that evening next week's meeting will give the public the opportunity
hours would likely be less convenient to the public in to voice lhcir opinions, and will give office holdeffl a
need of courth!JQse services.
chance to • •press any concerns that they mi ght have
Wright noted lhat extcndod hours would likely give a about extended operating hours.
boost to local merchants, and said .thai such efforts will
. In other business, th ~ commissioners approved seve rbene&lt; ! !ary if local business people arc; to compete wilh al appropriatioris l!djuslments, including transfers into
large retailers like Wai-Mart, set ;10 open a store · in their supplies item, the autopsy line item and the publ ic
Mason, W.Va. early nexl year.
ddender account.
The commissioners actually have no coillrol over the
Howard .said thai the board had been notifi ed by lhe
operating hours of various courthouse offices. Office Ohio Pi vision of Liquor Control or a requested transfer
hour~ are set by individual officeholders. ·
of a C1 and C2 carryoutliquor license in Orange Town-

ship from Will iam and Doris Buchanan to Bill Buchanan,
doing business as Bill 's Market. Howard said that public
comm ents can be made to the commissioners, bu t th at no
public heari ng will be requested.
T)lc board also approved a conlracl with Mobbs Telecom ror a telephone system for the Department of
Human Services, in the amou nt of $5,350 pit year, and
accepted bituminous bids for October from Asphalt
Materi als, Inc.; Mariella, and Midd leport Terminal, Inc.,
Gal li polis.
Bills in the amount of $57,348.08 were approved for
payment.
Present, in addition lo Thornton and Howard, were
Commissioner Mick Davenport and Clerk Gloria Kl ocs.

More charges leveled against driver in Oktoberfest a.ccident
Police said Cowperthw aithc had a blood-alcohol
level of .209 - more than twice the legal limi t in Ohio
-when he drove his car through a barricade and struck
27 people before collidin g with alaxicab and inj uring its

ONCINNATI (AP) - A man accused or injuring 28
pcaple when he drove through crowded streets at the
city's Oktoberfcsl celebration has been indicted on additional felony charges.
The Hamilton .County indictment against Michael
Cowperthwaithe includes ll charges of ~ggravaled
vehicular assaull; three·of felonious assault, two of fail ing lo obey a police officer's order and one count each
of inducing panic and leaving the scene of an accident.
!( C911Victed, he could spend as much as 48 years in
prison. Cowperthwaithe, 25, of suburban Union Township in Oermonl County, remains in jail. He pleaded
innocent lasl week to lhe initial charges frol" lhe Sept
19 accident.

Plans moving
forward on center
dedicated to John
and Annie Glenn

manager with lhe Quandcl Group, lhe
By JIM FREEMAN
. finn overseeing ccnstruclion of lhe
S1nllnl! Newa Staff
driver.
"'
Construction manager~ for lhe new schoo~ said Sept. !!!that pices
All of the injured, including Cowperthwailhe, were
NEW CONCORD (AP) fulUJ'e Soulhem Elementary School in genenllly go up when projects arc
treated al hospitals and released.
Space ex ploration will be tme part of
Racine were inslnlcted Monday night rebid. Prices submiued were about
Cincinnati 's 24-yell'r-old Okloberfesl event is pat- a museum honoring John and Annie
by lhe Southern Local Board of Edu- · $65,001 lc:5s than anticipated, il was
terned after lhe traditional Oktoberfest celebration in.. Glenn, but the center's focus will
calion 1o contact !he apparent low bid- noted.
Munich, Ge rman y. ~ve ral downtown Cinci nn ati bl ocks ex tend beyond the former senator's
der for preliminary site work at lhe
Earlier bids were as follows, with
are closed to veh icles to make room for food and beer accomplishments as an a•tronaut
added price for gravel road construcnew school.
The project will include an
stands, bands and pedestrians.
,
Prices reflected on three bids tion in ( ): Roses' Excavating,
Organizers say as many as 500,000 people attend lhe emphasis On his hometown of New
opened Monday afternoon for lhc $274,453.25 ($18,000);Anco Mining,
Concord and the Great Depression,
yearly celebration during its two-day· run.
work showed an average decline of $14,243.75 ($14,243. 75); T. L Slililh
museum organizers said Monday.
$34,306 oompared to bids opened two . Excavating, $326,231 ($19,020).
" We will have space attractions
in
this
museum, but it is basicaJ iy an
weeks ago today. Those bids were
Quandcl will meel with lhe lowest
attempt to explain the atmosphere
rejected by lhc school board on Sept. bidder for scope review and then prethat produced lhal generation," said
sent its findins';to lhe Ohio Scl)ool
16 and lhe project rebid
Lorle Porter, a reti red Muskingum
The apparent I~ bidder yesterday Facitities Commission for approval
College historian who is active in I he
was the Anco Mining Company of · and lhen back· to lhe Southern Scl)oo)
project.
Belnionl which submitted. a bid of Board for final approval. If the lowes!
"The (project's) trusiees. want to
$244,125 plus an additional bidder is not approved. the tiextlawesl
make sure there is an emphasis not
S14,243.75 for lhe optional construe· bidder will then be oonladed about lhe
just on history as a set of exhibits.
of a gravel road on lhe site which job.
but also ad ive education," said Matl
would allow work lO continue through
Board members questioned how
Elli , via! president fo r deveiopment
Monday's lowest bidder could reduce
lhe winter.
at
Muskingum, the Glenns' alma
Also submilling bids were RC6es' its price by more lhan $66,001 in less
, mater.
Excavating of Racine, $265,750 plus than two weeks.
The museum about 70 mill'S east
$16,001 for gravel road c:onstruction,
Jacld'cumeycr, architect for MarrSept
19
that
left
2B·people
injured.
Cowperth,
of
Columbus
is to consist of a fi veDRIVER INDICTED and T. L Slililh of West Virginia, ~ Associates Inc, New
waite
could
serve
up
to
48
year1ln
prison
If
con·
bui
lding
complex
wi th G l~nn 's
$298,629 plus$19,000 for gravel road l!hiladclphia. .saiCl"ffillts .for lhe new · Eleven t.lony counts have been brought agelnst
construction.
·" · building have been mpleted and .., Michell , Cowpettttwltlltlll" flllclwlng the ztnzln- viqtad on.the charge&amp;. Cowpet1hwaite pled in no· childhood home at the center.
The Glenns donated the house to
Construction managers recom· being submitted to "lhe OSFC for 111111 Oktoberfest drunklll driving Incident on cent lest week to the Initial charges.
'
the
college, which wiU allow the
approval.
He
said
lhe
projccl
wuld
be
mended lhe board approve construe. lion of ihe optional gravel driveway probably be let out for bid on Nov. 23.
.which will facilitaJe construction. The
The $9.8 million elementary school
pasl year. includin.g three said his sorrow extended beyond the style of the 1930s, whe n Glenn
driveway will be left in place, covered . will replace three elementary schools, By ANNE GEARAN
Auoclated
Pre..
ministers
who have kepi hi s ·famil y, friends, staff and Cabi- was grow ing up there.
'
with lOpliOil and grass seed.
the junior high school and kinder·
Writer
a
promise
to
meet
with
nello
Ms.
Lewinsky
and
her
famiOrganizers
hope
.to
attract
$5 mil ·
The initial site work includes lhe garten. The school is funded by stale
WASHI.NGTON (AP)
him " bolh lo help me and ly.
lion 10 $10 million for construction
removal of topsoil and lhe installation money matched locally by $4,042,001
-A
year
after
confessing
lo
hold
me
accountable."
il
was
lhe
fir
st
time
he
had
of
the center and for programs.
of more than 10,001 cubic yards of fill from a 23-ycar, 5.39 mill bondllevy
lo
sin
and
apologizing
for
A
somber
Clinton
lowexpressed
any
remorse
ror
hi
s
affair
Major
don ations received so far are a
dirt lo raise lhe entire site ·approxi- issue approved on May.5, 1998.
Ointon
ered
his
voice
and
bowed
with
lhe
fdrmer
White
House
intern
·
$600,000
grant from the state and
scandal,
Pres.ident
The elementary school, which will
niaiCiy four feeL Also included in lhe
said
today
he
has
.been
his
head'
atlhe
lectern
lo
not
hal
(
his
age.
$50,000
from
the Longaberger Co.
site package is lhe inslallation of some be buill ncar the high school in
profoundly
moved
"by
address
the
Lew
insky
He
admilled
he
·had
a
problem
of
Newark,
which
ma~es handwoutilities and gravel aa:ess roads and Racine, is scheduled to open lhe
lhe pure power of grace"
scandal. The audience of and promi sed to see k " pastoral sup- ven baskets.
staging arc&amp;'&gt; for further construction. 1beginning of the 2001-2002 school
and forgiveness from his
about 130 listened quiet- ·port " and help from others.
Elli said a major fund -raising
Jim Swartzmiller, construction year.
family, associates and
ly. Some nodded the ir
Today, th e president also cal.led drive for the project is expected lo
American cili~ns.
heads as he spoke.
on religious leaders to help America get under way in the next several
"Last year was one of
" I would like to say combat vi(') ience and gun deaths.
months .
the most difficult years in my lire," only this about that," Clinton said,
He said !hal 13 chi ldren die
Several sources for f&gt;ote ntiat
Oinlon told ministers gathered at wilhoul naming Ms. Lewinsky. " I every day in America from gun s.
donations may be targeted, including
lhe White House for Clinton's annu- have been profoundly moved as
" If America is to be good,. al corporations, foundations, individual prayer breakfast. " This occasion, few people 'have by the pure power least accordin g lo my faith, we must als, ·and potential state and federal
beca~se of what il has come to mean
o ~ grace. Unmerited forgiveness do more lo preve nt and overcome
resources.
to me, was a very dirficull one....
through grace." ·
ev il with good, ••' the president said.
""We think there's a lot of interest
Al the same evenl lasl Septem·
He owes thanks, he said, " mos l
" I am convinced !hal lh e fai th · in this and we think there will be a
ber, ·a moist-eyed Clinton apolo- of alllo my wife and daughter, but community can pl ay a major role in · lot of interest in it," said Doh McK.shooting his wife to death in Ohio last month has been arrested. ,
gized for the Monica Lewinsky sex- to the people I work with, to the protecting our children from vio- endry, another project organizer.
John Finley Namclh, 64, of Switzer, was arrested Monday nighl in Vir- and·covcr·up scandal lhat later led legions of American people and 10 · lcnce, in s upporting comm onsense
McKendry, administrator in the
ginia Beach after police received a tip from his son, sajd Brell McKitrick,
to his impeachment in lhe House the God in whom I beli eve."
gun legislati on, in · partici pating in college's education department and
'chief of police in Mariella, Ohio.
and acquittal in the Senate.
~iniste rs of a,) I faiths appl auded our campaign agai nst youth vio'
forme r pri ncipal at John Glenn High
Police say Namclh shol Shirley Nameth, 60, several times at close
" I have sinned. ... I have rcpenl· as Clinton. concluded: " I am very lcnce, in rorming commun ity part- School, said Glenn is nol involved in
range Sept. 13 in Marietta.
ed," he said lhen.
·
grateful to all &lt;Jf you wh6 had any nerships lo identify and intervene in the day.-lo-day project details, but
Authorities in Ohio, Wcsl Virginia, Pennsylvania and Virginia had been
Today, Clinton thanked people role in that. "
the lives ·of people berore it is too wi ll have final approval of all major
searching for Namelh, who apparently was headed to Canada, McKitrick
he said have helped him over the
At last year 's break fas t, Clinton late." Clinton added.
detai ls .
said.
L_~~----------~
Al lhe lime of her dealh, Mrs. Namelh had a court order to keep her
husband away from her.
son crili ci.zed Republicans for "severe cuts" in Labor, Ed ucation and 1ieallh and Hum an 'Servi ces
An extradition hearing was scheduled for today, and Nameth could be
By ALAN FRAM .
Clinton 's requests for security of plutonium and for fiscal 2000. It is the most controvers i al ~ and
returned lO Ohio later this week, McKitrick said.
· Aa1oc!ated Pr... Writer
'
the last - of the 13 annual spending bills to begin
and other areas.
·
·
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Republicans computers
making its way lh roug~ Congress.
In
another
step,
House-Semite
bargainers
arc easing House-approved cuts in President O inMost of the measure would pay fo r au tomatiCANTON (AP) - A 19-year-old man who said'hc was paid $300 lo kill
ton·s plans for education and other social pro- . approved a compromise $1 2.6 billion fore ign aid .
·a woman has been sentenced to life in prison.
call y approved benefits such as Medi caid. The
grams, but they stili face clashes over many of the measure for the new fiscal year.
Joseph Wilkes of Ravenna cried and apologized Monday in Stark Coun- While House 's priorities.
The negotiators dropped language barring aid portion that lawmakers fully con trol totals $91.7
ty Common Pleas Court for slashing
The Senate Appropriations Commillee lo groups thai lobby lo ease ove rseas abortion billion- $4 bill ion more than th is year but $1.4
lhe lhroal of Yvonne Layne, 26. He
planned to vote today on a $324 billion social restri cti ons, a· defeat for anti,abortion conse rv a, billion below Clinton's request.
Of thai money, the Senate bill would provide
pleaded guilty lo aggravated murder spending bill for fiscal 2000, which begins Friday. lives. But the bill contained $2 billion less than
$200
million less than the $1.4 billion Clinton
and an accompanying provision that The me~ure, approved Monday by a subcommit- .Clinton wanted, cuts that prompted an adm inishe was hired lo kill. He will be eli- tee, would outspend Oinlon on education by trati on veto threat when th ey were proposed in wanted for hiring thousands of new teachers; $60
million below the $240 million he sought for
gible for parole in 30 years.
$500 million, but provide less than be wants for earlier versions of the bill.
GEA
R-UP, which helps disadvantaged students
Wilkes
agreed
to
testify
against
With
Congress
certain
lo
fail
lo
send
Clinton
,hiring teacheffl,.after-school centers and some of
·
2 Sections • U Pages
prepare
fo r .college; and $200 million bel ow th e·
David Thome, 26, of Atwater, who
all
the
spending
measures
by
Friday,
lawmakers
his other ravorilc initiatives.
$400
million
he proposed for before- and afterallegedly paid him to. kill Layne so
"There's a very tough line between what I planned votes· as early as tod~ on a stopgap bi ll
_ _..c"'a.,le..,n.,d,.ar,__ __ _7.__ . he could avoid paying child support. think lhc president will sign and whall can sell'' ,lhal would keep agencies functioning th rough school programs.
It also would provide $35 .2 billion for educaC!ass!O!;lls
9&amp;10
" I just "'antto say I' m sorry for
lo congressional Republicans, lhe sub!:ommillee Oct. 21. While Hbuse budget chi ef Jack Lew said
Comics
11
whal we've done and, more imporchairman, Sen. Arlen Specter, R·Pa., said in an lhe president would sign the bill , but warned that tion, $500 mi llion more than Clinton; S H .4 bi ltantly, say I'm sorry for whal I've
2
iftterview. " It is a devilishly difficult' judgment Republicans should be under " no illusion" that lion for labor. prosrams, $200 mi lli on less than
Editorials
Clinton wanted; and $37.5 billion for hcaltb and
done,"
a•
sobbing
Wilkes
said.
he would sign several short-term meaSures.
play, bull think we 're on the right track. :' ,
3 .
I.oca!
.human
services programs, S1.6 billion below
The president has already th reatened to ve lo
Hoping 10 complete as many of.lhe 13 annual
4&amp;S
soons
bills as possible by the new fiscal year, the House 's version of the education-health-labor Clinton's req uest.
Meeting postponed spending
The bill wou ld provide $17.6 billion for th e
3
Weather
GOP
leaders
planned lo push a compromise $21 bill, citing its cuts ·in hi~ plans ror job training for
The regular meeting of MidNational Institutes of Health, $1.7 bill ion more ·
teen-agers,
hirin{
teacher.;,
and·olher
programs.
billion
energy
and
water
projectS.
measure
through
dleport Village Council was post·
The Se nate biil eased many of lhe reductions, than Clinton; $6 bi llion for ed ucation for handi,
Lotteries
·
poned until Tuesday evening al 7 . lhe Senate today.
but
nol ali. But its numbers pushed it far closer lo capped students, or $600 million more th an ClinThat bill , which would be lhe fifth 10 be sent to
p.m. The meeting ~ as continued
OHIO
Clinton, was likely to get his signature after what an eventual compromise between lhe White ton; and $7.8 billion for Pell grants for lowdue to a lack or quorum or memPick 3: 9-3-1; Pick 4: 2-4-2-2
income undergraduates, $300 million more than
ReP,ublicans dropped language· thai would have House and Congress was likely lo look like .
bers last night.
Buckeye 5: 9· 11 -13-18"24
"
Maybe
our
bll.l
is
not
perfect,
but
it's
a
heck
Clinton.
helped
develope"'
and
.
local
governm
ents
fi
le
Council will e•ccule docuTo help Republicans claim the meas ure would
w.yA.
quicker legal appeals when . the gove rnm ent of a lol better l han whallhe l·louse did, " said the
ments relating to lhc stale Issue
not eat into Social Secur·ily surpluses, they would
subcomm
ittee's
lop
Democrat,
Sen.
Tom
Harkin
blocks
Dally 3: 3·5·1; D.ly 4: 4-5-5-3
them
from
building
on
wetlands.
·
Two program as well as other roudelays 16.5 billion or the bill's spending un til fio·
The House approved the meas ure Monday by of Iowa.
(I 1999 Oliio Yt lley J\lbll1hing Co.
tine business.
·
The measure would finance the departments of cal 2001.
327-87. Even so, Energy Secretary Biil Richard-

Clinton: 'Moved by grace,' forgiveness ~?,:. ~~h~~~ ~~ym~·~~~~~~~

·Police arrest man wanted In

.

. ·3/$

2~10

Regional Briefs

Single roll
Limit 2 please

20 oz.

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

the Arizona C8rdinals

tioo

LA T

BOB EVANS .PORK

Lb.

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a

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c

Meigs volleybalters victorious, Page 5
Out of control sports fan, Page 7 ·
Time Out For Tips, Page 7

RACINE - Racine Area Community Organizati on meeting Tuesday. 6:30 p.m. a1 the American
Legion Hall:

'

NO RAINCHECKS

Today: Cloudy
High: 808; Low:

•

Sports
San Francisco doWns

Sept.rnbw 28, 11180

Weather

"

Princess Diana 's hairdressers shares secrets
..:n;' l'onfe.rence last week in Cody.

Tuesday

Monday, September 27; 1999.

•

:W~!~I!A ~~~H~!!.~~'!!~i'J.i!-!~~!~!!~t

·Senate GOP .eases House cuts in education, social programs

Man sentenced to life In prison
Good Afternoon

Today's

Sentinel

..

•

•

'
'.

.

·-

�Tuesday, September 28, 1999

·commentary

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
-

Death· Notices

The Daily Sentinel ~~~.~rmsJr?.!!~..!!~!!~~...~~~!.

Celebrittes regularly waft on and off ~pttol encourages pnvate research
HIII to promote one cause or another, bu next
The arguments should appeal not only td
week champiOn btcychst Lance Armstro and Members of Congress, but also to prcstdcntlal
111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
actor Mtchael J Fox w1ll be here wnh es Cl&amp;l· candtdates So far only Republican Elizabeth
740-082·2158 • Fax: 11112·2157
ly compelling messages.
Dole has come out 'for doubhna NIH's budget
Armstrong, wmner of the Tour de France, wtll
Vice Prestdent AI Gore proposes only dou·
test1fy
Wednesday
before
the
Jomt
Econom1c
bltng
the cancer research budget, so there's an
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
Commtttee about how the frUits of medtcal opportumty for former Sen B1ll Bradley, D N J ,
research saved hts hfc from testtcular cancer, and Tens Gov George W. Bush (R) to trump
CHARLES W. GOVEY
formerly a certam killer
h1m and gam favor poltttcally among the m1lhons
Publisher
fox, currenUy star of the TV comedy, "Sptn of people wbo suffer from dtseascs other than
Ctty," wtll appear Tuesday before a Senate cancer
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANE HILL
Appropriations subcommittee to urge that more
The economic case for expanding research
General Men~
Controller
research money be devoted to cunng the malady wtll be made to the Jomt Economtc Commtttee
Parkmson 's dJSease, whtch threatens h1s life m by, among others, mveshnent guru Peter Lynch,
the long term
CEOs of several btotech compames and Arthur
,.,.. Sentinel
to 11w ~or)ro, ~on a bn»d ~ ot top,__ lllotr ,.,.,.. (3110 MJrtde 01 M•J haw , . bHt ch.nc. rA ~lng pu,.,_.,
As celebnues mvariably do, the two w1ll Ulhan, chatrman of the Task Force on Sc1ence,
J)7Hrd .,.,_,. ~nfwrwi Md •U ,.yIN editH EM:h Mould lndut» • -'fJIUfUN,
attract medta, spectators and, probably, a full Health Care and the Economy
1 ., • ..., Mtd ct.yflnw phoM numb-. Sp«;lfy • tht• If th.,. • a ,.,~ lo • ~
l/lall fQ utt.... to , . «&lt;ltor, The ~ntinel. 111 Court st.
complement of Members of Congress Other
Ulhan contends, tn fact, that a new look needs
,_.,_.,., OIJJo U718, or, FAX 1o TtiiJ-.gfl2-2f51
wttnesses at the heanogs wtll dnve home the to be taken at the value of health care to the
pomt that research not only saves hves, but also economy overall. Instead of bemg seen simply as
boosts the U S economy
a cost, he asserts, health outlays should be valued
Both messages are timely because Congress as a contnbutor to econom1c growth
faces the dects1on whether to continue on track
Had there been no health tmprovements tn the
New school information exciting
towarddoubhng the budget of the Nat1onal lnstt· Umted States smce 1900, when average hfe
exp&lt;;,10lancy was 47, he argues, the US populaI attended the Bond Issue Meetmg on Sept 16 at the h1gh school Mr tutes of Health, or slack off the pace
Armstrong and other w1tnesses on Wednes· han would be half what 11 IS today and gross
Buckley, supenntendent of Me1gs Local, pres1ded over the meetmg I'm
writmg With the hope that you Will Include some of the Information I day . mcludmg a breast cancer survtvor, a bene- domestJc product would be Jess than half
obtamed m an upcommg 1ssue of your newspaper It was a very exc111ng ftc1ary of breakthroughs '" arthnttS treatment
Healthter people produce more, consume
meeting'
and a formerly deaf chdd who can hear thanks to' more, pay more taxes and cost less m terms of
If the bond 1ssue passes on Nov 2, the money Will be spent tfi three ways cochlear 1mplants . should convmce Members lost produc1tv1ty and chron1c care outlays
I $8 2 mlihon w11l be spent on Improvements to the extstmg htgh school
that S2 btlhon more for NIH thts year ts worth 11 Dechnes m chrome dtsabthty among the elderly,
Including asbestos removal, tnstallallon or a central atr·cond•llomng system,
Fox and other wttnesses Tuesday should con- some ~tudtes mdtcate, may keep the Medtcare
Dew wmdo-.ys and doors, parttal reroofing and additiOns and rearrangements v1nce Members that the mtracles produced by
of classrooms.
research mvestments tn cancer and AIDS are
2 $8 8 mtlhon wtll be spent to construct a new mtddle sc~ool near the poss1ble for Parktnson 's and other neurologtcal
extsllng baseball field at the htg~ school It w11l be a 70,000-square·foot d1seases, too
buildmg and be Situated!.!" approximately 20 acres
Neurosctenllsts, tncludmg the top neuroscten·
3 $6 8 mlihon w1ll be spent (each) to construct two new, tdenllcally butlt list at NIH, have declared that Parkmson 's can
elementary schools
be cured w1thtn 10 years and that what's learned
One proposed s1te could be located on Route 124 between Rutland and m the process can help cure Alzhetmer's, Hunt
Route 7 and would mcorporate Salem Cen ter, Middleport, Rutland and mgton 's and other neurodegenerattve diSeases
Bradbury elementary schools The second stte could be located on Route down the Ime
143 near Wolf Pen Road and would mcorporate Hamsonvtlle, Saltsbury and
If that's the case, the obvtous questton JS ,
-Pomeroy elementary schools These two schools would accommodate the Why not do what 11 takes to achteve the cure and
.eshmated 450 students who would attend them
prolong one mtlhon lives? An mcrease of JUSt
The renovations at the h1gh school could be done as early as next sum- $75 mdhon a year m Parkmson's fundtng could
mer and the completton date for the new schools could be for the 2002·2003 also pay dtvtdends m the btlhons.
school year How exc1hng 1
As readers of th1s column know, I care about
The plans for t~e old butldmgs are as follows Salem Center and Har- thts because my wtfe, hke Fox, suffers from
nsonvtlle, deed problems 0 , Rutland, to the Rutland Ftre Department, Brad· Parkmson 's
bury, to be demolished, Mtddleport, converted to VIllage offices, Jumor htgh,
Fox, who's had the dtsease for etght years,
central butldmg demolished, seek new tenants formam building, Salisbury, expenences tremors and sttffness every day My
converted to schqol board off1ces, Pomeroy, probably demolished
wtfe, who has had tt for 13 years, can't walk and
They w1ll be closmg etght schools and butldmg three and 1mprovmg one, ts Josmg her abtllly to speak
so cost factors for operation wtll be reduced and all schools wtll have cenPersonal mterest astde, there are multtple ecotral atr-condtttontng for hot weather comfort Special attenhon wtll be pa1d nomiC arguments to be made for doubhng. the
to secunty tssues at the schools that have ansen by recent events at NIH budget over a five-year penod and extendColumbme Htgh School and elsewhere
All teachmg staff wtll keep thetr JObs' Taxes will not be mcreased'
The neKt bond tssue meetmg ts Monday at 7 p m at the htgh school
. The only way thiS wtll happen IS tf people regtsler to vote and then to vote
By Joseph Perkins
tence
"yes" thJS November People must be regtstered by Oct 2
How fearful are you about cnme m your
Clearly, the scales of JUS!tce are ltlted agamst
netghborhood?
The
Jusltce
Department
posed
cnme
vJchms And that ts why lawmakers 10
Debra A. BuUmgton
thiS
questton
to
randomly
selected
residents
of
Washmgton
who truly have the mterests of the
/(Ulland
I I Clites, both btg and small, throughout the nauon's 31 m1lhon yearly cnme vtcttms (mcludcountry
mg 8 mtlhon vtcttms of vtolent cnme) at heart
Where are the volunteers?
Forty percent or more were quakmg m their wdl support a conslltutwnal amendment settmg
Dear &amp;lttor
boots m cities rangmg from Washtngton, DC, forth the nghts of cnme vtcttms
Are our county's cthzens really that apathettc? It would appear so, Judg· and Los Angeles to Spnngfield, Mass., and Tuc·
DemocratiC Cali forma Sen Dtanne Feinstcm
mg by the low numbers mvolved m volunteer work these days The VICson, Anz Thtrty percent or more were cowenng ts once agam champwnmg such an amendment,
tims of this apathy are the least powerful m any communtty- the agmg,
tn cttles rangmg from San Otego and Kansas along wtth Republican Artzona Sen John Kyl
the very young, the poor and the am mals
Ctty to Spokane, Wash, and Savannah, Ga
The measure IS slated for conSideration by the
Volunteer work provtdes opportumtles for Jeadershtp, skill testing, honThe cunous th1ng about these figures ts that Senate Jud1c1ary Commtttec next week
tng talents and abthttes prevtously unknown It can often lead to paymg
they come amtd cheery reports of the contmumg
If 11 clears the comm1ttee, as expected, femwork, often wllhm the organization or elsewhere, m part.time work, whtch dechne m the natton's cnme rate It stands to stem and Kyl w1ll try to muster, yet agam, the
turns mto full lime work, m mternshtps, and practtcums- parhcularly
reason that, tf the mctdence of cnme is dtmm· two-thtrds vote they need to move thetr prowhen the way ts paved by a great letter of recommendatton Best of all,
tshmg throughout our fatr land, the Jaw·abtdtng posed amendment forward
volunteertsm makes a dt fference
ctttzenry should be far less fearful of becommg
In Its current form, after 62 prevwus drafts,
' We have proof of this wtth the Metgs County Humane Soctety where a en me vtcttms
the amendment would guarantee cnme victims
small ctrcle of dedtcated volunteers and one part ttme employee held
But anyone who has any knowledge or the these nghts:
,
together the Metgs County Humane Soctety Thnft Shoppe Through thetr
cnmmal JUStice system, e1ther dtrectly or mdt·
.. To be notlfted or proceedmgs,
dedicatton, we have been able to keep our Spay/Neuter program altve, pro- rectly, knows that the system ts dectdedly tmbal·
.. ro not be excluded from tnals and related
VIde a cleannghouse for ammal welfare concerns, and serve the mtcrests of anced m favor of cnmmal offenders
proceedmgs,
the county's ammals
.. To be heard at certam cructal stages m the
Indeed, the three to four out of 10 restdents tn
B,ut these volunteers are getting ttred and won't be wtth us forever
those I I ctttes surveyed by Justice know that, tf process (hke release of an offender, acceptance
Dorothy Davts, for example, acttve wtth the Thnft Shop smce tis foundand when they become cnme vtcttms (a one-m· of plea bargatnmg, sentencmg),
ing, ts able to help only very occastonally, and her expertiSe and knowlseven chance), the prospect that thetr assadants
.. To be nottfied of an offender's release or
edge are sorely mtssed
ulttmately Will be putushed to the fullest extent escape,
In general, what ts puzzhng to me JS the lack of volunteensm at any
or the law ,IS remote
.. To constderabon for a tnal free from unrealevel in the county And I am not JUSt referrmg to a lack of volunteers
Justtce Department figures bear thiS out
sonable delay;
wtthtn the society Desptte welfare-to-work mtttattves, a new crop of
Of 100 felony complamts filed by pnvate ctt·
.. To an order of reshtulton from the convtcl·
graduating h1gh s~hool students seekin g expenence and se ntor ctttzens
lzens, only 30 result m arrests Of the 30 arrests, ed offender,
who, now reltred, still aren't makmg good on thetr promtse to get
only 20 are prosecuted Of the 20 prosecuted,
.. To have the vtcttm 's safety constdered in
mvolved m commumry acttvtttes, people are not choosmg to volunteer
only 15 suspects are convtcted Of the 15 con- determmmg a release from custody,
anywhere Is tt lethargy, cymctsm, despatr?
lobe no1tf1ed of these nghts and the standvtcted, only five are sentenced to pnson lime of
Do dayttme soaps w1th their fantasies of unrealtshc love and mtermore than one year And of the ftve, not even mg to enforce them
personal relattonsh•ps present a more attracttve alternative? I know that one serves out the full length of h1s or her senEven some lawmakers who profess to
mvolvement 10 one's famtly alone doesn t occupy THAT much lime
(plus most ramtltes are Simply not that mterestmg) And 1t's not as tf
the churches and socJal serv1ce orgamzatwns are turnmg workers away
Why the Jack - the total absence- of any sense of soctaf responst·
bthty, of helpmg those who are less fortunate?
By Joan Ryan
JOg humankind
Is it some form of phtlosophtcal malatse, a diSappomtment 1n one's
My favontc -dust-up of the year so far IS the
In other words, I don't hke the new gutdehnes
life, 10 the human race? What has happened to the admtred Appalachtan battle Wlthm the Mtss Amenca ranks about allow- because I don't want real hfe creepmg tn and
self-help eth1c, the tns1stence on survtval and atd m the face ad adverst· mg dtvorcees and women who admtt to havmg rummg my campy fun It's hke watchmg the "X·
ty?
had an abortton mto the pageant pext year
Ftles" Analyze 11 too deeply (or examme the
It may be that they years of reliance on social services has left many
Next thmg you know, they'll be lettmg m Jes- make-up Jobs too closely), and the fantasy's gone
people tn our area wtth no sense of "ctttzenshtp" Havmg been depenbtans, and then contestants who weren 't always
What a delightful exerc1se m tmagmatton to
dent on the state for years, are they now so beaten down, embarrassed,
female, and women who are marned and maybe thtnk that not one of the 51 contestant&amp; ever had
disappointed at thetr treatment that the idea or domg somethingeven mothers
an abortton Or that none of them has ever hved
Without expectatiOn of payback - IS burted and forgotten?
"Shocked," 1993 Mtss Amenca Leanza Cor- wtth a 111an, forgomg marnage certtficates m defnett told a reporter when asked about her feeltngs erence to the pageant Or that unmarned, non·proI believe that we have only one chance at ltfe lnd that we had better
when
the new gutdehnes htt the papers last week creating women wtth firm thtghs and $500 m
do me best we can, stnce there are no second chance•
Mtss Delaware Kama Boland couldn't believe Chntque products on thctr faces represent AmenSo I a,m bewtldered that there people are not mterested tn 1mprovmg
her ears, etther "The word 'Mtss' stands for can womanhood
the environment, alleviating suffering, or stmply gtvmg back In a
someth1ng," she satd, Without elaborating
In some waysr we can look at M1ssAmenca as
c':unty as beautiful as ours, whtc1.has seen !IS share of explottatton,
The
femmtst
m
me
probably
should
call
for
a
way
o(Jevehng the playmg field for beauttful
and probably makes Mountam To Removal CEOs sahvate even now,
dtsmantlmg
the
pageant
I
always
figured
11
was
women
who mtght otherw1se be shut out of the
~hy arc people not more concern d wtth the effects of stnp mmmg and
no comctdence that Mtss Amenca began a year Amencan dream becommg famous See, tf
the out·of county buymg up of farm land to be made tnto "developafter the rahficahon of the 19th Amendment But you're smart, you might mvent someth mg clever
ments?" C1t1zens mourn thetr chtldren movmg to Columbus for work,
I don't have a problem w1th Mtss Amenca It 1s or found your own start-up If you're cocky and
but they don't gather to dtscuss alternatives or work for change
stlly, ehttst, arcane and full of ttself .. quahttes I controlling, you could run for office. If you're 6The result of domg nothmg 11 a negative sense that all JS hopeless,
appreclate m a pubhc spectacle. Why else would 10 with a JUmp shot, you m1ght play for the Lakwhich generates sttll more lethargy and dtsappotntment The way to
1 watch royal weddmgs and golf?
ers
lircak the cycle ts to make oneself producttve Jmagme the htgh that
I
agree
w1th
those
who,
m
opposmg
the
new
But 1f you only have long legs and clear skin,
&lt;;omes after organizmg a protest (and do call me), or a boycott., comrelaxed gutdehnes, argue that Mtss Amenca you etther fltp letters for Pat Sajak or you saunter
mltttng to four hours a week at a battered women's shelter, volunteerought to hold tiS contestants to the htghest stan down a runway mAtlanttc Ctty
JOg to teach someone to read, or putllng tn a few hours at the Thnft
dards, pre$ervmg the pageant as a contest to
Thtnk about II What kind or hves could these
Shop
crown
"the
tdeal
woman"
Exactly
What
fun
young
women hope for tf we took away Mtss
Just remember that there are those ·- among them ammals - who
would
tl
be
to
watch
women
who
are
hke
most
of
Amenca?
They'd probably end up as the wtves of
are neglected, 111 treated, starvmg - who cannot ask for help
us?
I
admtt
to
a
twiSted
fascmallon
wtth
women
nch
guys
who'd expect them to hold dmner parWe ask you to help us help them
who, as adults usmg thetr real names, parade ties and know who Kofi Annan ts They'd be subAlden Waitt, President around m Barbte gowns and wtth perky earnest· JCCted to Jumor League fashton shows, doubles
Mergs County Humane Society ness explatn how they fit m exerctse and beauty matches and tnps wtth the gtrls to the Golden
Pomeroy treatm~nts wtth their pnmary occupation of sav- Door

for NIH

In add11lon, he argues, fe~ral and pnvate btosctence mvestments · espec111ly tn genet1~ and
high·tcch 1magtng · are paytng huge d1vtdends
not only m pbanmaccuttcals and medtcal dev1ccs
that can be sold worldwide, but in the chem1cal
and computer mdus1 •es and m agnculture.
Prestdent Chr•nr often says that whtle the
20th century has b&lt;;:n the century of pbystcs, the
21st wtll be t e century of btology lromcally,
however, his budgets for NIH annually ask for far
Jess than Congress approves
Last year, thanks to such advocates of medtcal
research as Sen Arlen Specter, R-Pa, whose subcommtttee ts heanng from Fox, and Sen Conn!•
Mack, R-Fia .. chatrman of the Jomt Econom1c
Commtttee, Congress approved a 14 6 percent
mcrease for NIH, ' et!mg the agency on a five.
1
year track to double
Omton's fiscal 2000 budget, however, caDs
for only a 2 4 percent mcrease Last week, anoth·
er leadtng champiOn of NJ H, Rep John Porter, R·
Ill., managed to get a 9 percent mcreasc through
hts House Appropnatwns subcommittee
Specter 1s reported to beheve he :an match
last year's bump, but he face~ opposttlon from
Senate Majortty Leader Trent Lott, R-M1ss, and,
espectally, MaJOnty Whtp Don N1ckles, R-Okla
Lance Armstrong and M1chael l Fox, after
they fimsh testJfymg before advocates of med1cal
research, need to also to tell the doubters how
1mportant t! IS that hves be saved
(Mot1on Kondracke ., executive editor of
RoU Call, tht ntwspttper of Capitol Hill.)

'£sto.Dfi.slita 111 1948

•*DmN,.,.,..

.,.,_ .... «,.,.,

' etttrs to the Editor

JoAnn Boitnger, 56, Pomeroy, dted Saturday, Sept 25, 1999, at her restdence
A retmcd nurse, she was bom Dec 26, 1942, 1n Pomeroy, daughter of the
late Harry and Joscphtne Moranty Bohnger
Survlvmg IS a s1st_er, Mary Sheets of Orlando, Fla, and several nieces and
nephews
Bunal w1ll be m Sacred Heart Cemetery, Pomeroy A memonal serv1ce
w1ll be announced by Ew1ng funeral Home, Pomeroy No VISitation w11l be
held.

AccuWeathe!e for11C881

I

-kl

lu·11r I •

Albright hopes for stalled peace taJks to resume

·0 ~-~~-·~·

&amp;lnny Pt. Cloudy

Qoudy

sr.ow..a

T-tt0tm1

RMt

Flumes

Snow

Ice

Showers, chance of storms
will linger into Wednesday
By The Associated Prase
There's a httle good news for parched areas of Oh1o.
Showers and thunderstorms are predicted for most of the state tontght
and Wednesday, w1th the oposs1b1hty that a half-mch or more could fall m
some areas

What about the rights of crime victims?
empathize with cnme vtchms questton whether
Congress should go so far as to enshnne a VIc·
ltms' nghts amendment m th~ Constiiulton An
of the nghts that Femstetn and Kyl propose can
and should be covered by statutory Jaw, they
argue
But statutory Jaw ts madequate to balance the
scales of justtce between cnmmal offenders and
cnme vtcllms Because the nghts of the cnmt·
nally accused (mcludmg the nght to counsel, tQ
due process, to a speedy tnal, to an tmparttal
jury of peers, to confront Witnesses, agamst selfmcnmmatton) are protected by the U S Conslttutwn
So, whenever the constttuttonal nghts of the
cnm1nally accused come mto confltct wtth the
statutory nghts of cnm~ vicllms, the nghts of
VIChms are subordmated
Thts lack of constitutiOnal rights, says Sen.
Kyl, "has caused many vtctlms and thetr famt·
hes to suffer tw1ce once at the hands of the
cnminal, and agam at the hands of a justtce sys·
tern that fat Is to protect them "
Never m thetr w1ldest dreams .. or nightmares .. could thts oauon's Founders have imagmed that so many of thetr countrymen (and
women) would be vtct1m1zed by en me year by
year Otherw1se, they almost certamly would
have mcluded vtcltms' nghts m the Const1tu1ton
along wllh the nghts of the cnmmally accused
So 1! ts up to the present-day Congress to reettfy the overstght &lt;Jn the part of the natwn's
founders
The 31 milliOn yearly cnme vtcttms deserve
no Jess
Joseph Perkms rs a co/umnrst for The San
Drego Unron-Tnbune.

There she is ... hopefully forever
If femmtsm stands for anythmg, tt's opportumty By preservmg M1ss Amenca as 11 15, these
women have the opportumty , to utti 1ze the gtfts
God gave them And the rest of us have the oppor
tumty to enJoy a tradttton so dehctously out-of·
date and amusmg 11 has lost all power to offend
Joan Ryan rs a 'olummstfor the San Fancrs'o ChronU:Ie. Send comments to her in care of
this newspaper or send her e-mail atjoanryansfgate .com.

r=------ - -7"-,-------,

cools, time
clarifies; no mood can
be maintained quite
unaltered through the
Course of hours."

Woman shows jury scar on throat
SPRINGFIELD (AP) A
woman who prosecutors say was
severely beaten by a man charged
wtth three slayings showed hts Jury
the results of her tnjunes
Hazel Pterson hobbled off the
wttness stand tn Clark County
Common Pleas Court on Monday,
stood m front of JUrors and lifted
her head to expose a 5-mch scar
across her throat
Jurors also saw photographs of
tnjunes to her head and fate and a
stab wound to her abdomen
Wtlham Sapp, 37, of Spnngfield, is charged wtth the attempted
aggravated murder of Pterson He
also ts charged w1th raptng and
murdertng 11-year-old Martha
Leach and 12-year-old Phree Mor·
row m 1992 and ktlhng Behnda
Anderson, 33, whose body was
found buried m a garage m 1995
He faces the death penalty tf

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS lll 960)
Communil)' Nnr•p•pcr Holdlnp. Inc.
Published every afternoon

Monday through

fnday 1t 1 Coon St Pomeroy Oh1o by the
Ohro Valley Pubh5hmg Company ScC(Ind dw
postage pa1d 11 Pomeroy, Oh10
Mcmbtr: The .Msoc1atcd Press and the Ohm
New5paper AssociatiOn
Pollmastu Send addreS!i correchons to 1bc
Da1ly Sent1nel lll Coul1 St, Pomeroy Oh10
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MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
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13 Wtetu
$29 25

Thought for Today:
~~rime

The thunderstorms w1ll be strongest across the eastern thtrd of state, the
National Weather Servtce satd
The NWS srud th1s could be the last chance for measureable ram fall for
lhe month of September m Ohto In Ctncmnatt, only 0 03 of an mch of ram
had been measured tn September through Monday
Cooler temperatures were expected by Thursday, when h1ghs wtll be tn
the 60s, forecasters satd
The record-htgh temperature for thts date at the Columbus weather station was 92 degrees m 1959 whtle the record low was 32m 1942 Sunset
tomght Will be at 7 19 p m and sunnse Wednesday at 7 25 a m
Wealber forecast:
Tomght Becommg mostly cloudy A chance of showers and thunderstorms after mtdmght Lows m the mtd 60s Ltght southeast wmd Chance
of rain 50 percent
Wednesday OccasiOnal showers, wtth a chance of thunderstorms
Htghs m the mtd 70s Chance of ram 80 percent
Wednesday mght ..A chance of showers until around mtdntght Part tal
cleanng and cooler late Lows tn the lower 50s
Extended forecast:
Thursday...Mostly clear Htghs m the lower 70s
Fnday Partly cloudy lows from the upper 40s to the lower 50s, and
htghs m the mtd 70s
Saturday. Partly cloudy Lows m the m1d 50s and h1ghs m the lower
70s

.

26 WecO
.52 Weeks
'

1

- Thomas Mann,
German writer
(1875-1955).

S56 68
.S109t72

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our mala coacrm in 111 slorlts i1 to bt
1ccunte U you know or 10 error In a
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end m•kt • corrtCIIon ir wunnted

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ByTOMRAUM
Associated Preas Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- Secretary
of State Madeleme Albnght satd
today the Chriton adm1n1strallon
sit II hopes stalled lsraeh-Synan and
Israeh-Lebatiese peace talks can be ·
restarted although obstacles to an
overall peace remain dauntmg.
"The tssue · here ts whether we
can find the way to restart negottaltons that wtll match the w1ll that all
s1des profess to feel," she told an
audience of leaders of Jew1sh orgamzahons

Albnght suggested that both
Israel and Syna, m parllcular,
"clearly want to find a way for·
ward Both are treatmg the other
w1th unusual trust and respect "

Albnght also denounced con·
gresstonal efforts to slash foretgn
atd, saymg a spendmg b11l m Con·
gress that would cut $2 btlhon from
Pres1dent Clinton's budget remams
a veto ~ndtdate.
"Dtplomacy 1s Amenca's ftrsl
Ime of defense," Albnght satd "It
should be treated as a budget pnortty," she satd.
Then, as an astde, she added, "I
have ehmmated the words 'foretgn
atd' from our vocabula'l.:1 These
two words don 't seem to exc1te a lot
of people "
.The $12 6 btlhon btll makes
deep cuts in many mternattonal
programs
The admtmstrahon also ts
unhappy that negotiators reJected
1ls request to provtde funds for carrymg out the Wye Rtver Mtddle
East peace accords.
Not only has Congtess 1gnored
the admtnistrallon 's request for at
least $500 mtlllon for Israel and the
Paleshmans to carry out the accords
tn the fiscal year that begms Oct I,
but foretgn atd negotiators also cut
$100 mtlhon that ~ad been
promtsed to Jordan
The final vers1on of the btll has
been held up over a House-Senate
d1spute over an unrelated prov1s1on
denymg U S funds to mte{nahonal
famtly-plannmg programs that support or advocate abort1on nghts
Albnght, here for the two-week
opemng sess1on of the U N General Assembly, made a breakfast
address to the Conference of Prest·
'dents of MaJor American Jewtsh

Pterson told the Jury she remembers leavmg a tavern after havmg a
ftght with her boyfnend Dec. 8,
1993. She sa1d she then remembers
crawhng to some ratlroad tracks,
wakmg up m a hospttal and seemg
that some of her toes were m1ssmg
But, Pterson, who glanced at
Sapp from lime to ttme, sa1d she OrgantzatJons
She expressed ophmtsm for
had no memory of who assaulted
peace
talks, nor only those between
her.
IsraeliS
and the Palestmians, but
the
Police Detect1ve Sgt Barry
also
efforts
to resume Israel's sus~
Eggers testtfied that Pterson kept
pended
negottattons
w1th Syna and
trymg to tell htm deta1ls about her
attacker by holdmg her hands as 1f Lebanon.
Albright has met tn New York,
she were Jookmg through bmocuon
the stdehnes of the U N meetlars Eggers sa1d she was trymg to
mgs,
With the foretgn mtmsters of
tell htm that the person who
assaulted her wore glasses
Sapp used to have large, dtstmc·
live, black-framed eyeglasses
COLUMBUS (AP) - A teenFtreftghter Ernest Whttehead .ager w1th tuberculosts was locked
testified that when he arnved at the up wtth other youngsters at a
scene, tl was hard to tell Pterson 's JUVemle detentiOn center although
race because her body was so black offtctals knew he mtght have TB,
and blue and her face was covered a Judge satd
w1th blood Wh1tehead sa1d the
" It does appear we had the
wound to her throat was so severe mformahon, the parole offtcer
he could see her trachea
wrote on the arrest warrant that he
Dr Wtlham Smtih satd he ftrst may have TB," satd Judge Yvette
saw Pterson m the Commumty McGee Brown of Frankhn Coumy
Hospttal emergency room after she Juventle Court
had been severely beaten and
The Columbus Health Departexposed to freezmg temperatures ment on Monday gave sktn·pnck
for several hours. The doctor satd TB tests to all 107 pnsoners and
she was close to death He called staff members at lhe center who
her recovery "almost miraculous " could have been exposed to

both Syna and Israel.
On. Monday. Israeli Foretgn
Mm1ster Dav1d Levy told reporters
after hts meetmg wtth Albnght that
any efforts to hnk wtder Mtdeast
peace talks to progress made m
resum1ng talks wtth Syna was "not
acceptable to us "
Albnght today asserted that "the
key ts to establish a basts on whtch
to resume negottahons that netther
stde sees as preJudteing the negott·
auon."

Both she and Chnton W11l
remam "acltvely engaged wtth
both s1des," Albnght satd "If we
d1d not thmk an agreement were
poss1ble, we would not be maktng
the effort to bnng them together"
Over the weekend, Egypt's foretgn mtmster, Arnr Moussa, sought
to pressure Israel to make concesstons by saymg Arabs would not
resume multtlateral peace talks
unt1l Israel resumed negohattons
with Syna and Lebanon.
The mulhlateral talks were
launched m 1992, covenng such
key tssues as d1sarmament, Paleshntan refugees, the envtronment
and econom1c cooperahon before
bemg suspended m 1996
Levy sa1d that whether the talks
wtlh Syna are resumed should have
no beanng on the multtlateral talks
Dunng a closed-door port1on of
today's meetmg, Atbnght was
queshoned about the Egyptian posttton and told the audtence she d1d
not agree with it, satd a semor
admmtstratlon offic1al who spoke
on the condttton of anonym1ty,
Albnght urged that the multtlat·
eral talks go forward regardless of
progress or lack of progress tn other
negotiations, the offictal sa1d.
The offictal satd that, dunng the
closed sessmn, the subjeCt of new
construchon tn West Bank Jewtsh
settlements, a diVIstve tssue m the
Israeh-Palesltman talks, dtd not
come up Nor d1d Albnght mention
the settlements tn her pubhc
remarks
Although Israel! Pnme Mtmster
Ehud Barak, who took power July
6, has calfed for the resumphon of
talks, Syrta's mststence that the
Golan Heights be returned first has
placed new obstacles tn the way of
new talks
The Golan He1ghts were cap·
tured from Syna m 1967
Albnght satd the Clinton admtn·
IStrahon remams commtlted to

worktrtg wtth the parttes toward a
comprehenstve peace
"But we cannot make the hard
dec1s1ons that w11l produce peace
ttself," she added.
"Only those who hve m the
reg1on can do that "

Boy with TB held with others

Stocks
Am Ele Power ........... . 34 ~
Akzo.. .. ... ... ... .. .. ..... 41 ''•
Ameritech ............................66%
Ashland Oil ..... ....... .......... 35 ~
AT&amp;T ...................................42'~•
Bank One ........ .. ........ ... .34'1•
Bob Evans ........................... 20'.1
Borg-Warner. . ... .. ... .. 42'h
Champion ... ........ .... .. .. .. S't.
Charm Shps .. ... . . ... .. .. s"t.
City Holding ...................... 18'1.
Federel Mogul. . .. .. .. 25'h
Flrstar ... .. ... .. .. .... ... .23'1•
Gannett...... ... .. . .. .. .68"1.
Kmart . .. ............... 11 /.•
Kroger ... ... .. . .
..23 /w
Lands End... ......... .... . . .. .63'1,
Limited... . . . .. .. . . ... .37},
Oak Hill Flnt ................. .16'.1
OVB ... .... ... .. ... . . . ..... ~2
One Valley...... .... ........ .. .34 1•
Peoples.. . . ... ... ... ... .. ... 27'1.
Prem Flnl. . ... .. . ....... . .11 't.
Rockwell ......................... 52'(•
AD/Shell . .. . . . . .. ... 581•
Sears .... ... ... ......... . .. ... 30},
Shoney's .......... ....... t,.
Wendy's . .. .... .. .... .. ..25' 1•
Worthington ...... .
...... 151.

_._.._

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

Lo al Briefs
DHS extends hours

Jo Ann Bolinger

Wednesday, Sept. 29

-

Thomas Henderson
But health offtc1als satd only
those m the hvmg area With Hen derson- about 20 teens - are at
nsk of contrachng the dtsease
"The diSease IS spread only
through very close personal contact," satd Theresa Long, medtcal
director and assiStant health
dtrector at the health department
" He (Henderson) was apparently
not coughmg m the detentiOn center, and he was there only a
week "
Henderson, 17, whose last
known address was m Columbus,
IS bemg treated for tuberculosiS at
Chtldren's Hospttal
Henderson was mtssmg for
about ftve months, unhl Scpl 16
Units of the Metgs County Emer· \\-hen he was charged wtth a delingency Medtcal Servtce recorded 10 quency count of carrymg a concalls for asststance Monday Umts cealed weapon and a parole vtolarespondmg mcluded
llon, court records show
CENTRAL DISPATCH
10 07 am, Brownell Avenue,
Mtddleport, Atricta Randolph, Holz·
er Medtcal Center;
12 01 p m , Vtllage Green Apart·
SPRING VALLEY ClllEMA
ments, Pomeroy, freddte Nease,
&lt;'l !! ' I' l I
' 1
446•4524
!A&lt;~· ON 1'1~1
Pleasant Valley Hospttal,
MON 9127 · THURS 9/30/99
7:44 p m , Pomeroy Football
lOX OIIICI WILL OPIN AT
Fteld, Shawn Ratchff, HMC
6.30 PM lOA IYINING SHOWS
POMEROY
THE SIXTH SENSE (PG13)
8:16 p m , Abbott Road , Aries
7 10 DAILY
Abbott, HM C.
STIR OF ECHOES (R)
RACINE
7 DO DAILY
11 28 p m , Bhnd Hollow Road,
BLUE STREAK (PG13)
Pauhne Wolfe, HMC
720 DAILY

The: Me1gs County Department of Human ServiCeS w1JI beg1n offenng
extended office hours on Thursdays, begmn1ng thts week
Keeptng offices open unul 6 30 p m on Thursdays wtll allow the
agency to bener serve 1ts chents and wtll keep the agency m comphanc&lt;
wtth new legtslahon passed tR the Oh10 General Assembly, accordtng to
an agency news release
Hours of operat1on on other weekdays wtll remaJn the same, 8 a m
unttl 4.30 p m
,
Dunng the Thursday extended bours, DHS staff '-'II accept apphcattons for any program from employed tndiVIduals who have gone off the
cash asststance roles but are cons1dered "work1ng poor " Those md1v1duals may st1ll be ehg1ble for programs such as Food Stamps, Medtcald, and
day care scrvJces, and the extended hours wtll enable them to apply for
these scrv1ces Without taktng t1me off from work
The agency also has a new webstte that provtdes tnformauon conccmmg all current programs, w.htch wtll scrv~ as a source for the pubhc
to learn about all new servtces that w1ll be prov1ded m the future The
webs1te ts found at w-.meigsdjfs.nrt.

Legion membership dues due
Membership du~s for the year 2000 for Racme Amencan Legton Post
602 are due New members ate welcome

Arts &amp; Craft Fair planned for Saturday
The annual Arts &amp; Crafts Fatr Wtll be held Saturday, 9-3 p m at the
Wilkesvtlle Commumty Center For booth mformatmn call (740) 6693120 or (740) 669-3915 after 5 p m

Letart bake sale planned
Letart Falls ts havtng a bake sale Fnday, Oct I, at the Home Nahonal
Bank, Racme, 8 a m to 3 p m

Hemlock Grove homecoming planned
Hemlock Grove Chnst1an Church w1ll hold homecommg servtces on
Sunday The momtng serv1ce will begm at 9 30 a m , wtth AI Doster as
speaker Dmner wtll be served at noon, With afternoon services at 2 p m
The W1lhams Fam1ly of Vienna, W Va w1ll present spectal muSic

Pomeroy Zoning Appeals Board m11eting
The Pomeroy Zomng Appeals Board w11l meet Thursday, 7 p m

CAA meeting slated
Galha-Metgs Commu~1ty Achon Agency's montly board meetmg w1ll be
5 p m Wednesday 10 the Galha County One-Stop center, 322 Second
Ave , Galhpohs

and emergency
suspended for delayed response
CLEVELAND (AP) Ten
emergency personnel were suspend·
ed after paramediCS were slow to
respond to a fatal shootmg because
call takers and dtspatchers were
makmg personal phone calls, ctty '
offictals satd
A ctty mvest1gat1on found
Tiffany Dunnmg, 10, had to wall 15
mmutes tw1ce the average
response hme -

for an ambulance

after bemg shot 10 the heart on Aug
17. She d1ed 10 surgery about an
hour and 15 mmutes after a 13-year·
old boy allegedly shot her
Bruce R Shade, ch1ef of the
ctty's ambulance corps, and nme
other Emergency Medtcal Servtces
workers were suspended wtthout
pay on Monday Call takers and d1spatchers were too busy wtth personal phone calls to do thetr JObs properly when Tiffany was shot, the
mveshgahon found
The suspenSions ranged from
three to 10 days
Supervtsors fatled to move extra
ambulance crews Into ne1ghbor·
hoods where paramedtcs were busy
wtth calls, Jeavmg Colhnwood,
where Dunmng was shot, Without a
nearby crew And paramedics
responstble for covenng Colhnwood

were dawdhng at a hospttal, too far
away to reach her qutckly, the mves·
ttgallon found
"Thts ts an Isolated mc1dent, but
one whtch warrants sw1ft actwn,"
Mayor Mtchael R Wh1te sa1d m a
release announcmg the pumsh·
ments "Neglect of duty cannot be
tolerated, espec1ally 1n a cnttcal
operallon such as EMS The hves of
our res1dents are at stake "
The Cleveland Assoctatton of
Rescue Employees w1ll appeal th e
suspensiOns, vowed Prestdent
Robert Laux The umon represents
paramediCS, call takers &lt;md d1spatch·
ers, but not supervtsors
The suspensiOns wtll be stag·
gered, satd Whtte's spokeswoman,
Nancy LeSJc
Dolores Broach, Dunmng's legal
guardtan for five years, satd she
approved of the d1sctphnary acttOQ
"At least the ctty d1dn 't (orllet
about Tiffany and they dtdn't forget
about us," she sa1d " The slow
response from 9-1-1 , tt 's a common
complamt Th1s time, things went a
httle btl too far "
Broach sa1d she and Dunmng's
biologtcal mother, Pamela Wtlson,
have not ruled out the posstl:nhty of
legal acuon

Court rejects jury's finding for prisoner
CINCINNPJI (AP) - A federal
appeals court has thrown out a JUry's
dectston that a guar~iated agamst
a pnsoner for giVIng adviCe-to anljlher
mmate.
The findmg could not stand
because the Southern OhiO Correci!On·
al Facthty m Lucasvtlle provtded a law
hbrary and other matenals that could
be an alternative to "Jatlhouse
lawyers," the 6th US Orcutt Court of
Appeals ruled Monday
Inmate Charles Watktns had wntten
an afftdavtt for another prtsoner,
descnbmg guard Frank Phtllips as dan·
accordmg to court test1mony
saw 11 and ftled false

charges agamst Watkins, who was con·
fined for 21 days dunng a "secunty
control mvesugat ton" and lost h1s
pnson Job, the mmate satd
The JUJ;y concluded that the acuons
were retahatton
A federal tnal judge awarded
Watkins $235 m compensatory dam
ages and a total of $50,253 tn attar·
neys' fees and costs The appeals
court's dects!On on Monday wtped out
;.•:;:ha:::t..;v,;;erd=:•c.:;.t---..,...~---.

EMS logs 10 calls

~

~'•l

7

!.'IH

RUTLAND

6 13 p m , Pamter R1dge Road,
Doris Canterbury, treated at the
scene
SYRACUSE
10 44 a m , Wtllow Creek Road,
Pomeroy, James Pnddy Sr, Veterans
Memonal Hospllal,
I 2 32 p m , Ftfth Street, Racme,
Nondus Hendncks, HMC,
I ·IS p m, state Route 124, Gary
Hysell, VMH

biJIIllY IIIHIIGIIf ~ 7:00, 8:00

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

[Cnljj Bomn Fe Allllll.IOOI, S.~ '""' Parlei

R11W11Y 111111 " ' 7:00 8:40
fCnly) IE~ llill1rn Go~ Heao ~ ~em

DOUBLE JEOPARDY (R)
7 10 DAILY
FOATHE LOVE OF THE GAME tPGI3)

700DAILY

RUNAWAY BRIDE (PG)
7 DO DAILY

STIGMATA (R)
7 IS DAILY

lll.UE S11IEAK "'~ 7:46, 10:00

[Comedy/Action) Mallin laWJence Lule l'li~ ,
~-Ott

s..n.......,.,

SlltuMY 17

Hoi..,,.• Ottly

Pomeroy Office
992·2588
McCoy ore Funeral Home
Gall' 's 446·0852
Vinton 88·8603

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

)
•

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel

..

.

Peget
T..sdly, September 28, 1 -

'

Niners down Cardinals 24-10
pn:tty good ...
. , 11011 8AIIIt
with two minutes or so to go."
The 49ers (2-1) improved to 7-0
Instead. the 49ers got a first down,
• TEMPE. Ariz. (AP ) - Steve
Young said il was no big deal. Just a under Mariucci on MOIIday nights. · then Phillips broke free for the
Law...nce Phillips' 68-yard touch- biggest play of his troubled brief
mild concussi011. Nothing to worry
llbout. .
down run with I :42 left in the founh NFL career.
Phillips, given a chance by the
But for lhc San Francisco 49ers. quaner provided the exclamation
lhc sight of Young crumpled on the point to Manueci 's s~vcnth victory 49ers after a big season in NFL

IIIJUIId

Monday night was an anx-

ious "'minder that the 37-year-old
quarterback can't keep taking hits
fu...ver.
.
Young helped lhc 49ers take a 170 lead befa... he was knocked out of
lbe game by a blitzing defense with
28 seconds left in the first half, and
San Francisco held on for a 24-10
victory over lhc Arizona Cardinals.
" I was just saying 'Get up, get up,
get up,"' 49ers coach Steve Mariucci

said.
: Young got up. slowly, and insisted
he was fine, But Mariucci had seen
'
enough.
"'I just wanted to be conservati ve
ond keep him out," Mariucci said.
"He was not going back in under any
circumstance, whether we were winning br losing or whalever the outcome was goillg to be in the second
half."
San Francisco would have to go
the rest of the way without him.
" I told tt&gt;e team at the half that
Steve• is not coming back in . 'You
have to bow up and get il done,"'
Mariucci said.
It was Young 's founh concussion
since 1995, but he ms1sted this one
was -nolhing close to as serious as hi s
most recent one two years ago
against Tampa Bay.
.
.. This one was like a shoCk ... he
said, " like you he:ir bo•~rs talk
about a llash. I sat there a while. got
my wits about me and actually felt

Detroit

in as many tries on Monday nights.
'' I didn 'I get touched," Phillips
said. "Anybody could have scored."
Jake Plummer, the quarterback
San Francisco passed up in ,the 1997
draft , has rallied ·Arizona to victory
10 times in his 29 games with the
Cardinals. But thi s one fell shon.
" We're repeating the same patter
we've repeated so many times."
Arizona coach Vince Tobin said.
"falling behind and fighting like
heck llying to catch up at the end. It's
not a pattern that 's conducive to win'
ning on a consisient basis. " ·
Young threw a 13-yard touchdown pass to Jerry Rice before he
was knocked o ut of the game ,b y the
blitzing Cardinals, the 85th time the
two combined on a scorir,g pass .
Artzona (1-2) rall ied with 10
points in the third quarter to make it
17-10. but C had Stanley's 49-yard
punt pinned the Cardtnals on their
own three with 9:17 to play.
Arizona moved the ball down the
field. but Adnan Murrell lost six
yards, then Plummer was sacked for
the fifth 11me. forcing the Cardinals
chose to punt on founh-and-11 at the
San· FrancLsc.o 40 with just over 2':
minutes lefl "and all their timeouts
remainmg.
.
" It was fourth -and- II and we 'd
been playing very well defensively.''
Tobin said. " TI1ey had their quarterback in there. We felt if we pinned
them back, we'd get the ball back

win~

American League
roundup
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
· They opened on .the exact same
day - April 20, 1912 - and once
again, both old ballparks Were filled
with cheers.
'
At Tiger Stadium, a sellout crowd
bid a tearful goodbye Monday for the
final game attbe corne.r of Michigan
and Trum~ull. Detroit did its part.
beating Kansas City 8-2.
" This is a good day, but a sad
day," said U.S. Sen. Jim Bunning of
Kentucky, a Hall of Fame pitcher for
the Tigers.froin 1955-63.
AI · Fen way Park , fans saluted
Pedro Martinez and prepared for the
immediate future . Boston clinched at
least a tie for the wild-card spot by
beating Baltimore ~- 3.·
Red Sox rooters chanted "M-V-P'
M-V-P 1" as Martinez struck out 12.
At 23-4, he leads the majors in wins
and ERA (2.08) and tops tbe AL with
312 strikeouts.
The Red Sox hold a six-game lead

Europe. burst through the line and
raced to the end zone for the gameclincher. He finished with J02 yards
on ojne carries.
The 49ers, averaging just 91 yards
011 the ground in the first two games,
rushed for 210 yards ag.ainst Arizona.
Jeff Garcia, who led Calgary to
the Grey Cup in the Canadian
Football uagne last season, replaced
Young. and though he wasn' t spectacular. he was good enough until
Phillips finished things off.
. The Cardinals took the secondhalf kickoff and went 80 yards in II
play in a five-minute. 15-second
drive that ended with Mario Bates
leaping over from the one to make it
17,7 with 9:45 left in the third quarMurrell gained 50 yards in six
carries on the drive. Chris Jacke 's
43-yard field goal made it 17, 10 with
I :09 left in the third quaner.
Plummer was 16-of-3 1 for 176
yards and two interceptions. In three
games. Plummer has one touchdown
pass a nd nine in1erceplions.
Turnovers t;t~ined what was only
the third Monday night game for
Arizona 'si nce tbe Cardinals moved
from St. Louis in 1988 as the 49ers
scored twice in 54 seconds.
"We got a turnover and got nothing out of it," Tobin said . " lbey got
two turnovers and scored two touch"'
downs. Basic'ally. that was the ball
game."

r

night's NFC game, in Phoenix,
- San Francisco quarter- quarteF
the
49ers
won
24-10. Young went down and
where
back Steve Young
hit low by Arizona defensive
did
not
return
altar
this
play. (API
back J.J. McKieskey (44) and hit high by teammate
Andre Wadswonll (behind Young) in the second
Rookie David Boston muffed Walker into the hands of Lance 0 with 5:4 1 left in the first quarter.
Moore aggravated a sore ham ~
Stanley 's punt , and Joe Zelenka of Schuhers. who returned it 18 yards In
·
string in the first quarter. The
the 49crs recovered at the Cardmal s Arizona's II .
Charlie Gamer, carrying a· couple Cardinals expect him to be o ut for
37 to set up Rice's first touchdown
of would-be tacklers · with him , IWO week $...
c:ltch of the year.
.
Two plays larer, Plummer threw score~ on the ncx[ play to make it 14· hi s eighth interception of the season.
The pass, ihtended for Rob Moore.
was knocked away by Darnell

over Oakland in the wild-card race.
with both teams having six games
left. Unless Boston needs him,
Maninez will probably pitch only a
few. inning s in a playoff tuneup
Friday or Saturday at Baltimore.
That. cou ld be an interesting
matchup.
In the fifih inning, Martinez hit
Bflld)' Anderson in the back with a
pitch. In the eighth. Maninez covered the plate on a passed ball and
brushed with Anderson as he scored.
Martinez glared at Anderson. and
umpire Gary Cederstrom stayed
between them. But bilth dugouts and
bullpens emptied onto the fi~ld. .
Later, Orioles manager Ray
Miller unloaded on Martinez in an
· expletive-filled tirade.
" He didn ' t cover home plate, or
he would have, gotten knocked into
the stands," 'Miller said.· "He start~
thmgs and he hides behind people ."
. " I've been watching him fo'r 10
years. All he does is run behind peopie and cause fights," he said.
Told of Miller' s comments.
Martinez countered , " He 's fru strated. He's going to say all kinds of
things."

" I know he would like to have me.
o n his team." he said.
In other AL games. Tampa Bay
to pped New York 10-6, Texas defeated Seattle 3-2 and Chicago beat
Minnesota 3-1.
Tigers 8, Royals 2
Rookie Robert Fick, w~aring , the
No. 2~ of former Detrml favonte
Nonn Cash, hit a grand slam in t(te
eighth inning to highlig!lt the win
over Kansas City..
The Tigers fimshed 3,764-3,09019.at the stadium. Afterthe final out,
home plate was dug up and carried a
mile to Comerica Park, ' where
Detroit will play next season.
. In a fitting touch, Detroit's
starters wore the numbers of the
Tigers ' all-time team .. Cent.er fielder
Gabe Kapler had a umform wtthout a
number to honor-. Ty Cobb, who
played at a time before uniforms
were numbered.
Some 65 former Tigers, including
AI Kaline, took pan in a postgame
celebration.
Devil Rays 10, Yankees 6
Fred McGriff homered to reach
100 RBis, and Tampa Bay beat New
York for the third straight day at

Yankee Stadium.
Bubba Trammell also homered
'for the last-place Devil Rays. and
Dave Martinez drove in three runs.'
The Yankees made three e_rror~
that led to four unearned rons.H1deki
lrabu ( 11 -7) lasted only two mnmgs ·
for the second time in f9ur starts,_
puttmg m Jeopardy hts spot on the
playoff roster.
Rangers 3, Mariners 2
Texas move~ 30.l!arnes over .500
for the first \tme 10 team htstory
when Lee 'Stevens hit a sacrifice fly
in the bottom of the eighth inning.
The AL West champion Rangers
('.13-b3) have won four in a row, John
Wetteland broke his own club record
set last year with his 43rd save. .
Rau! Ibanez homered to eX:tend
Seattle s team record of 19 stratght
games with at least one home ron.
,
While Sox 3, Twins I
1!-ookie Kip Wells held Minnesota
hitless until old college rival Chad
Allen s'tngled to lead off the sixth
inning . as Chicago won at the
Metrodome.
Brook Fordyce hit a tiebreaking.
(See AL on Page 5)

Scoreboard
'

.

AL standings
Ea~lrm

~~~w York
Bosmn ....

Tl)fot'llo ..

77

1'&lt;1.
60.1
577

4

""' "

A94

17

... 68 8&lt;.,1

-I.U

16'

..95

......

61

24

92
.62 95

.W6

"'

:tl' ·
.U'·

.ft5 91

Western Oh·ision
~-Tc.11as
93 63
Oakl:~nd . '··· . ..,...... ........ 84 72
~aule . . . .. ..•... . .
..77 79
Anaheim ..................
..6S 91
ll·clioc hed diviswn lit~
y·clill(:hcd playoff benh

22

. 96 60

,..

.195

l96
. ~J8

494
.4 17

'9

16
28

Monday's scores

su

I]

.. 74

82
s~

474
.uiM

!2
2.1

87

-146

lb

Toronto (D. Wells I ~- 10 ) at Tampa Bay (Wheeler

,
Wednesday s games
Ronda (Burnett 4-2) at Montreal (l11ly (I..JJ.
7:05p.m.
~~
.

I

NL standings
Easttm Division

X•Ailani P ..

N\:W Yortc: ... ; ... .
Pbil.wklphia ... .
Mo~tt~real

.......... .

f-1orii.la .

ll' L , 1'&lt;1.

.. 99
...... 92
.. 74
.... 6.5
. 62

~7

6JS

64
82
92
95

. ~90

.474
41.4
..i95

Crnlral Di,·ilion .

CINCINNATI .

.. 9~ 6.\

.599

.!ill
7

ll
14'
17'

Football
NFL standings
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
EalltUn Division

1um

N~w ~n(lland

.. .
M1arru . . .. .
BuffahJ ., ........ .
lndiAMpt'llis .
NY Jets .....

W L :I l!lL £1:: !!A·

. .. J
... 2
.2
...2
.. 0

0 0 1.000 77
0 0 1.000 57
I 0 667 .57

I 0 .667 86
J 0 .000 .5 1

Crnlral [lhiilon
TeoO&lt;««
...... .J 0 01.000
Jacksonville
., .... 2 I 0 667
P111SbUf8h .... ..... ······ ... 2 I 0 .667
Ballimore ... ..
. I 2 0 ~i~
C INCINNATI
.0 .\ 0 .000
CLEVElAND. ...........0 \ 0 .000

8l
R2
76
47
4'
IIJ

Wrstrrn Divl!iiutt
1 l 0 .667

74

Kmuas Ci1y .

70
37

34
64
74

61

.n

49
60

97
86
51

42
K2

51 · 67

l lOJ.l J:'il79

0.\00001970

2. I 0 607

72

60

. ......... ,. .. 2 I 0 667 66 67
.. 2
.I

.. I

I 0 607 45 .12
0 JB 50 5l
2 0 3.U
59

Basketball
Nalioual Baske1b11111l A.wxialion
DETROIT P...ISTONS. Signed , G

"

17

12
.18

Pooh

Ri chardson

MIAMI HEAT: Named Rob Wilson assistam
dtreclor , ot med ia re l atio n ~ anti Michael Pres t ~ n
media relations nssis tan l.
.
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS Re-signed G Do ug
Overton.

Football

2

.,

12·11). 7o0l p.m.
Toronto (Escobar 1J. JJ J Ill Tampa Bay (Witt 7, 1-4), 7:05p.m.
·
Boston (Mercker 1·0) at Ch1cago (Myette 0-2).
8:0S p.m.
Detroit (MI•ck..i I J -12) al Minnoes~o (Mays 6- 10).
.. ,01 p.m.
'
· CLEVELAND (Nagy 17·10) at Kansas Cily
(Roudo 9-14). 8:0.5 p.m.
Scaltk (Meche 7-4) at Texas (Sele 18-8). 8,0.5
p.m.
Oakland (Olivares I ~- I I) at Anaheim (Coopef J.
1). 10 J:'i p.m.

... I 2 0 .HJ

MimleSO!U .........

·
:
Ch1 ngo Cubs (Bowfe 1·6) Ill Pb1ladelphi~
Boston (Rapp 6-7) at Chicago (Parque 9- 14), 8.05 (loewer 0-0), 7 '05 p m
p.m.
,
,
A1lant:~ (!"faddull 19-8) at New York (l.ciler II ·
Detroit (Blair 3- 11) 31 Minnesota (Mi!ton 7- 11 ). 12).- 7·"\.S,p.m
8:0S p.m ,
Pitt, burgh (Peten .S-3) at Milwaukee ( Be~ 4-0),
CLEVEI. AND (Wnght 8-9) at Kansas City 8:05 p.m
..
•
(Witas1ck 9-11), 8•05 p.m
CIN CINNATI (Parri s 11 -2) 111 Houston
Scaule (Halama 11 -8 ) at Te:\u (Faueru .5- 14). (Hampton 20.4). 8 .05 p.m.
S:O:ip.m.
San 9u~gn (Andy A~hby 14-10) at Si Louts
:
OU.Iand (Huibon 10-2) at Anaheim (Washburn). (Jime nez S-14), S. IO p m.
-4), 10:0.5 p m.
Colorado (Astacio 16-1 1) at Arjzona &lt;Reynoso
10·5). 9:3.5 p.m.
loll An&amp;eles (Brown IR·RJ at San Francmo
Wednesday's games
New YOfk (Clt:mc:m 14-9) at Bnllimore (Pon ~n (Hernandez7·12). IO:O.S p.m:

0-J), 7·05 p m.

.. .1 0 01.000 6:'i
. ... 2 I 0 ~7 112

Florida (Nu"nez 6· 1Q) at Monrreal (Hermanson 9·
1.' ). 7.05 p.m
·
.
WrStrm Division
Chi cago !Trachsel 7-17) at Ph iladelphia (Wolf 6· Sl Loms
.. 2 0 01000
8), 7.05 p.m.
San Frnnc1scO
.. " .. 2 I 0 .607 s~
Atla.nta (Gla\'1 111;" 12·1 1) at Ncw .York. { Her~ lu ser New Orleans .. ............... I I 0 ·.lOO 40
1 ~· 11) , 7' 10 p.m.
Carolina .
...... : I 2 0 ..'D l7
P1U sburgh (R1 tch1e 14-9) a! M11waukrc Atlanta ... , ..............
..0 J 0 .000 28
(Woodard 11· 71. 8:0S p.m.
CINCINN ATI (HarntsC'h 14-10 ) at Houston
Mofiday's score
(lima 20.9). 8:0.5 p.m.
San FrMCiscO 24. Arizona 10

Tonight's games
Nrw York (Yatnall 1-0) a1 Bahimol"!: (Ponson 12·
II), ?:O, p.m.

full

Dall!IS ..
WDSh ington .
Aw.ona ....
NY Giant~
Ph1ladelphia

Crnlral Division

Toniglil 's games

TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS: S1gned C Juhn
Aaher1y to a three-year contract exte nsion.
.
N.tionall...ugue
SAN DIEGO PADRES Nnmcd Tye Waller
i1in.'Cior of pla~·cr dtv~lopment. and· Btll Bryck. sp.··
cull asmmm to tbt ge neral m:mager/minor league
fidd coordmmor

ll' L :I 1'1.1. £1:: !!A .

fum

Detrflll
Green Bay ...
Tampa Bay
Chicago .....

San Diego (Clement I0- 12t at St. Loui s
(Luebben 2·3). 8 10 p m.
Colorado (Hackman 1·0 a1 Arizona (Andy
Benes 12- 12). 9 · ~5 p.m.
Los Angeles (Valdes 9- 14) m San Francisco
(Nathan 7-3), 10.0.5 p.m.

~atde 2

0 667 70 62
0 607 6.1 l t
0 j ()() 5J .14
0 000 41 77

Entrrn Di•·ision

7~

. 70

I
I
I
.1'

NATIONAL COI!JIFERENCE
615

1n

.. n

-·-

N'

t:INCINNAn 9, St Lotns 7
Monuenl B. Florida 4
Anzona 10, Colorado \

.10

rktroit II, Kansas City 2
Boston 5, Baltimore 3
Tampa Bay 10, N~w York 6
Olitago 3. Minncsola I

Texas 3.

1 1'·

4l8
410

.2
..... 2
.I
.0

Oakland
Seattle ....
Sa n D!ego .
Denvc:r

· Monday 's scores
455

.. 6.1

Minne-sota .
Ka.IU11s Cuy

92

%2

li·Chnched UiVI$10n t1tlc

.fiJI

.. 71 85

llttruil

"

64

'-· Anz!)na .~
Snn fcanc,sco
Los Ange les .
Sap D1ego
ColOrado

Cwl r•l DMsivn

~ -tLEVELANO

Cliica30 .

L

71}

.....

,

... . 72 ' 84
..71

17

WH irrn Divi"'ion

Division
94 62
90 60
79 77

'fl•nra Day ...........•...

94 61 •l99
.)6 79 .490

Chi ~ago

ll'

Dllllnlur~

,...

Hou ston .
Pittsburgh
St. Louis .
M1lwaukl-e ..

Ba seball

National FootbaiiLtagur
CLEVELAND BROWNS· Wa1 ved TE Ryan
Co llins.
MIAMI DOLPHINS : Signed PTom Huuon.
WASHINGTON "REOSKINS: Stgncd S Toby
Wnghl. R e lease~.! S J ;m~l Williarm.

44

Hoc: key

76

Nati01111l tltKkry Leagur

ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS: Acqu1rcd RW
Lad1slav Kohn from Atlama for an 2000 eighthround dmft pick. '
DALLAS STARS: Assigned F Aaron Gavey and
Week 4 slate
F Jamie ~riBht lu M1chigaft of the IHL
Sunday, Oc::L 3
EDMONTON OILERS: A.ss1gned D Todd
Anzona at Dallas, I p m
Reirdon and LW Ben Robertswn to Hilfflilton of tl~
Ballimore at Atlan1a. I p.m.
AHL Released F Jeff Dawe.
Jacksonville at Pinsbutgb, I p.m.
FLORIDA PAN'TliERS: Assigned D Dan Boyle
New England at CLEVELAND. 1 p.m.
to lou1sville of the AHL
New Orleans ~~Chicago, I p m
LbS ANGELES KINGS: AssigDed. C Nmhan
Ptn ladelph1a al New York Giants. I p m
LaFayette, C Eric Belanger and RW Scon Barney to
St. Loui s at CINClNNATI, I p.m
the Low~ ll lock. Moruters of 1he AHL. Assigned RW
Tampa Bay at Mmnesota. I p m
Scolt Thomas to the long Beac h Ice DogS of the
Carolina a1 Wash ington, 4:0S p.m.
' IHL Relea§C:d D Paul Dyck
. ·
Kansas Ci ly at San Otego, 4. 15 p m.
MONTREAL CANADIENS: Auigned G Evan
New York Jets at Dt:nver, 4.15 p.m.
lindsay and D Ala1n Nasreddine to Quettec of the .
Tennessee at San Francisco, 4:15p.m
AHL
.
Oak.land at Seat(le. 8 20 p m.
NEW JERS EY DEVILS · Assi~n~d D Josh
OPEN: Detroit, Green Bay, lndiana~lis
DeWolf. F Jiri ,Bicek, F PierTe Dagenrus and F Sashn
Lakov• c to Albany of the AHL.
·
Monday, Od. 4
NASHVILLE PREDATPRS. Rc-s1g ned G Mike
Buffalo at Miami, 9 p m
·Du11ham.
· OTIAWA SENATORS. Assigned LW Pctr
Sc hasthvY tu Grand Rapids of the IH L.
PHILADElPHIA R..YERS : Traded RW Pau l
Healey 10 Nashville for F Mall Hendeison.
BasebaU
ST. LOUIS DLUES: Signed D Barret Jack.man
American Luaur
WASHINGTON CAPITALS: Assig ned C Mau
BOSTON RED SOX: Acuvated itHP Tom Hen to PQrtland or the AHl and Michal Pivonka to
Gordon (rum the 60-day disabled ll sl.
K:msas Ci1y of the IHL.
SEATTLE MARINERS: Named Howard
Lincoln ~;hn im1an and CEO.

Local varsity sextets
sweep matches

Marauders beat Federal Hocking
Meigs defeated Feder~l Hocking 15-4. 15· 11 in TVC vo)leyball
action Monday evening at Federal Hocking.
Tiffany Halfhill led Meigs with nine points on 12 of 12 serving and
six kills. Brooke Williams scored seven points·on 10 of 10 serving with
three aces and three kills, Tangy Laudermilt scored six points on nine
of nine serving with nine assists and one kill, Tawny Jones scored four
points on six of six serving. Shannon Price scored three points, and
added nine assists . Amy Hysell scored a point on one of three serving
and si'x kills and Marjorie Brauon-added five kills .
Meigs (9-1 both overall and in the Ohio Divison) will host Miller
Tuesday evening at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.

Eagles knock off Belpre in two games
The Eastern 'E agles continued to soar as they rolled to a 15-8, I S- 12
win over Belpre pus hing Eastern to a 9-3 overall mark and 8-2 league
slate,
!(risten· Chevaher. was 11 -11 serving with seven points and 14- 18
spiking with two kills and a block; Alison Rose was 9-9 with six
points; Damelle Spencer was 8-8 with six points and 7-9 spiking with
a kill; Sarah Clifford was 5-5 serving with four points, J.J spikmg and
a kill: Cinda Clifford was 4-5 serving with three points: Becky Davis
was 2-4 with iwo points and 2-3 spiking: Leah Sanders was 2-2 serving with apoint, and Sarah Frank was 1-2 with a poirit.
Amber Qturch was 7-10 setting, Amber Baker was 2-3, Whitney
.
Karr was 1-1 setting with 3-4 spikes. a kill, and a block.
Eagle coach Don Jackson said. "It was the best team 'elTon that we
have put out all year. We will have to continue this if we want to be
successful the rest of the season . Not everybody scored, but in one way
or the otherthey contributed, and that is all a coach can ask for. We will
see how good we can be tonight when we play Alexander."
The Eastern reserves also won to remain undefeated at 11 -0.

.Tornadoes down Vintop County
The Southern Tornadoes defeated the Vinton County Vikings 15-6
and 15- 11 Monday night in Tri-Valley Conferen ce volleyball play.
Fallon Rou sh had '10 pomts for Southern w1th an 11 - 12 setting night
and 11 - 12 serving mght with an ace. Kati Cummins had five points
with a 6-7 spk ing night and a ki ll with four blocks. Stacy Lyons had six
points with an 8-8 serving night and an ace with eight blocks and a 99 spiking night and a kill. Heather Dailey had seven points with a 10·
II night, Kim lhl c had three points and an 11-15 setting ni ght , and
·
.
Laraine Lawson had three points.
Southern lost a close reserve match 14· 16 and 7-15. Emily Stovers
had six for Southern, Stacey Mills had five , Amy Lee had two , and k1 i
Hill had two.

Protect ~~-: .inioortant
people jt) ~Y.P.Jl.l' Jife.
~ ou t~w bave ~ optloh of proteclll1g your f.nnjly menil:.,rs

1J

ur a business partner with low-cost

10-or ZO·year level term life

By JOE ,KAY
CINCINNATI (A P) _
Mark
~cGwire has a bad case of playoff
oovy.
~ After hitting No. 61 to draw even
.Wth Sammy Sosa in · their sequel 10
t[e great home run race of '98, all
N(cGwire wanted to talk about was
L c·
. · s' joyride ll&gt;wards
t~e
1ncmn
on.
tile
Who co
blame him' Three
improbable co backs. · each more
a:uonishing tha the last, have made
thtm the talk of aseball .
: Eddie
ben see
trumped
~cGwtre 's per-deck shot with one
of his own Mo nday. completi ng the
lteds' rally fro m a five-run deficit 10
a 9-7 victory over the St. Louis
Cardina ls.
- The Reds' sixth victory in seven
games left them 1', games ahead of
the ' New York Mets for the NL wild
card . They also drew into a firstplace tic in the NL Ce ntral with the
Astros. then headed 10 Houslon for a
t:vo-game series that could decide
tke division.
From McGwire 's perspective, it
was m·uch more riveting than match·

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champtonshlp banner at Ba~k One

Diamondbacks. ,

Ballpark before the game, then beat
Vinny Castilla homered for the
Colorado for its si~th straight victo- Rockie s into the pool area beyo nd
ry.
the right-field fence . ·
Expos 8, Marlins 4
Brian Anderson gave up nine hits
in a complete game and Bernard
Felipe Alou recorded hts 600th
Gilkey drove in three runs f~r the victory as a manager when Mo ntreal

behi~d
.

ralhed for s1x runs m the etghth
inni ng at Olympic Stad1um. ·
Michael Barrett 's three-run dou-·.
bl e key ed the comeback. Florida
used five pitchers in the inning .
.'
Alml is 600-588 as a manager in
the majors, all ,with the Expos.

player's suicide attempt ·
.

mother of his twin 17-month-old
children. He was staying there during
the Dolphins' off week .
No one in the home saw him cut
himself, -but several people in the
neighborhood · saw him running
(!own the street afterward ,
· Hall said physical evidence al the
scene and witnesses' statements co nvim:ed ·police Underwood used the ·
knife on himself. The officer would
not describe the knife, other than to
say it was a common household
knife. He declined to say if
Underwood wrote a suicide note .
Underwood was listed in fair condition Monday at Sparrow Hospital ·
after undergoing surgery Sunday.
The 22-year-old player cooperat·
ed with police·wheh they found tlim
about 12:45 p.m. Sunday. and has
spoken with police since, Hall said.
He declined to say if Underwood
gave them a reason for his actions.·
but said police are close to co mpleting their investigation.
" Our anention is turned toward
safeg uarding hi s good mental
health," Hall said .
Underwood played defensive end
at Michigan State. for three seasons
before sitting out his se nior year with
·a sprained ankle . The Vikings made

him their 29th draft pick overall. ·
f;le signed a five-year. $5.3 mil-.,
lion contract Aug. I. b~t walked out• :
of train ing camp th e next day;,
Underwood told coach Dennis GreerrJ
he had no desire to play football .
~
The Vikings released him Aug~•
II. UnderwooJ &gt;acnliced a $1.75·.
mtllion sig nin g bonus by leaving.
" Hopefully, ·hC:ll be fine and then :
fi nd the kind of assistance. help that .
he needs to do a good job . and I'm ··
not talking about football. " Green
said Monday. " Because when yo u' re ;
in the hosp ital m serious cond itio n,· •
then football 1s very secondary for. ·
the things that· he needs as a young ·.
man of 22."
He was cl~imed on waivers by ·
Miami a(ter 23 other teams passed :
on him , and IS now gelling a base •
salary of $395 ,000 in the first season
of a five-year contrac t with Miami . · :
On Monday. Do lphin s coach
Jimmy Johnso n said he spoke . with
Sparrow Hospital nurses abo ut
Underwood's conditio·n .
. "I have passed on the word that
we are 100 percent supportive of·.
him . Our No . ·1 co ncern is his health .. ,
and well -being. and the No . I thi ng ·
we want to do 1s for him to get we! l .''
John son said

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thf benefit o f a rare ru ling. Alter sm ghn g, he m oved up when Mark
Johnson was cal led for a balk lor
lc,ving the catcher's box too earl y
lo r a p1tchout. Corey Koskie then hu
a 1~ RBI sin gle for M innesota's only

In the last s uccessful defense 6f h is world heavywe1ght Iitle, Tommy
· Burn s knocked out Bill Lang in the SIX th rou nd in Me lbourne in 1908 .
The expansion Jacksonvi lle Jaguars made their National Football
Lea gue debut in 1995 by losing to the Hq usto n Oilers 10-3. .

ru ~ .

1

I.

Lansing from her Philadelphia home,
Underwood's . mother,
Eileen
Underwood, said she wanted to
speak .out against " a cult that's posing as a church," which Underwood
hegan auending while he was at
Michigan State. .
"There are controlling spirits in
there," Eileen Underwood , an
ordained · minister, told The · Miami
Herald. "l visited one linie and the
pastor was talking about if a young
man and woman in the church are
dating and then they break up. he
won 'I let them date anyone else for
six months.
"That's not in the Bible. I know,.

CASEY SCORES - The Cincinnati Reds ' Sean of Monday's National League game in Cincinnati,
Casey (right) reacts.altarbeatlng Sl Louis catcher where the Reds won 9-7. Casey came home on
Alberto Castillo to ihe plate In the seventh Inning · Greg Vaughn' s hit. (AP)

the Bible. That's just someone llying football and serving God.
to control people. It's a den of witch"It just seems like Dimitrius is
es siUing up in there .~:
fine until this man shows up, and
Eileen Underwood declined to then he stans doing all these bizarre
name the church , but said she might things," Andrea Underwood said.
take legal action against it.
Underw~ gave football another
·Underwood 's sister, Andrea chance in August when the Dolphins
Underwood, said one member of the claimed him on waivers, but attendchurch who recruited Dimitrius ed only two pract.ices before dislo- .
Underwood always seems to 'be cahng his left shoulder in a preseaaround when Underwood acts in a ·son game. He had been expected to
bizarre manner. ·
'
begin pFactiCing again with the
Underwood was the Minnesota Dolphins this week.
Vikings ' second first-round draft
On Saturday, Lansing police
pick in April. but left training camp arrested Underwood on a warrant
after one day. saying he could not accusing him of nonpayment of child
resolve the conflict between playing support. A $500 bond was posted for
him about three hours later, but
Underwood refused to leave the jail
for another hour, spending the time
talking to anQther inmate, Hall said.
"I think Dimitrius' behavior over
a little bit of time here has been a little bit unu sua l, " Michigan State
coach Nick Saban said Monday.
By RUSTY MILLE!'! · .
Few things are going right for the right now," Cooper said.
" We tried 10 help the guy last
: COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) .- It 's Buckeyes right now. de spite the . That should send chills up and year: I know the Dolphins have tried
hard to conv ince Ohio State's players string of victories . Judging from their down the backs of Ohio State fan s, io help him now, and _I've talked to
tti.!t they can ·r afford to keep falling past .two games- surprisingly close since the Buckeyes this weekend will him on several occasions ..... Maybe
bphind early in games.
calls againsi a pair of in·slate under- be tryin g to tackle Ron Dayne, nowdso:e~~~~ can help htm anQ he
• After all. the 'only game in which dogs- the Big Ten could mean big arguably the nati on's best running · c~nH~I s~id Underwood slashed hi s
ttie Buckcy c.s ha ve led after o ne trouble .for the Buckeyes.
back.
neck with a knife ai the hoine of the
q~arter this season is the 0 niy game
"I' m not a happy campet," coach
He needs three more yards to
they ' ve lost .
John Cooper said at his weekly news mo ve past Ohio State 's Archie
: But fallin g behind early, as they co nferen ce Monday.
. Griffm into . fifth place in NCAA
h~ve in three stra 1ght viclorics, ,is
Ohio Slate has won three m a row Divi sion I rushing. With · 85 yards,
gellin g monotonous. It 's a luxury at home since losmg 23 - 12 to Miami Daync - averaging 150 yards a
tHey probably can't afford when they in the Kickoff Classic, but has almost game - would slide past Georgia's
step up in class this weekend in the perfected the art of winning ugly . Herschel Walker into fourth.
B)g Ten . Confere nce opener against The Buckeyes rebounded from a bad
" Don ' t get me wrong , I'm not up
Wtsconsm.
.
start to beat s usp e nston ~ plagued here singing the blues," Cooper said
: " That's the backwoods road to UCLA 42 -20 . Then in their first con- after berating almos t every aspect of
vjctory... linebacker Na il Diggs said secutive games again st in-state oppo- ' hi s team . " But we 've got to improve,
of the carlv deficits. " That 's not the nents in 73 years. they looked sloppy We 're playing a better football team
road you ~ant to take at all. "
before subduing Ohio 40-16 and · this week than we played the last
: De spite a winnmg strea k and Cincinnati 34-20 .
three weeks. We 'd better step it up a
d.spite playing a fourth straight
Some fans booed Saturday in notch ."
· g~ me at friendl y Ohio Stadium, the Ohio Stadium when the Bearcat s
The Buckey es know it ·After
Buckeyes ' recognize that what piled up a 17-3 lead and were march- Wisconsin comes No . II Purdue and
they've been doin g isn't good . irig for ano1her score in .the second quarterback Drew Brees and then the
e ~ ou gh .
quarter.
team 's first road trip in almost two
• " Right now. we're makin g a lot of
"We '.re not looking at where months - at second-ranked Penn
n)i s takes."
cor.nerback Ahmed we ' re at. We're looking at where we State.
•
Plj.Jmmer sa id Monday. "Teams are want to go," linebacker Courtland
"You start playmg ~gainst
· c!tpitali zin g on th ose mistakes and Bullard said.
Wisconsin, Purdue and Penn Stale,
the only thing const stent about you've got to get on those guys."
that's " 'hat hurtin g us."
:No one is mistakin g thi s defense the Buckeyes this season has been said fullback Matt Keller, who is
fat the 1998 version. led by Antoine the air attack of Steve Bellisari to expected to return after missing the
W&lt;nfi eld and Andy Katzenmoyer, Ken-Yon Rambo.
past two games with an ankle sprain .
"That's the hesr thing we've "We can't rely on our defense holdwbich ' finished second in the nation
in'total defense. The offense also has done, throw some bombs down the ing them to I 0 points'."
· One week after allowing 525
p0:.ed compared to last year's field and let Ken -Yon run under
olfense, which was guided by the them," Cooper said. ''I'm not happy yards to Cincinnati's run-and-shoot
s t~ady hand of quarterback Joe with the interceptions. the turnovers,• offense, that kind of defensive perGtrmaine .
'
the fumbles ... I'm not happy with formance seems far-fetched.
,Last year's defense allowed more . the run blocking or the pass block- .
" Right now we' re making a lot of
thtn ' 17 points in only one game. ing.l'm_not ha~py withanythin&amp;;' '
mistakes," Plummer said. ' "Teams
T~ree opponents have already done
Atid tt's not JUSt the offense. ·
are capitalizing on th 0se mistakes
it lhis year. Last year the Buckeyes,
· " We're not a goap tackling team and that's what hurting us."
w~o finished Il - l and were ranked
'
·
SefOnd in the nation , never trailed by
m()rc than seven po ints. Ohio State
h~ trailed by 10,1 and 14 points in
thf first half of eac h of 1ts last three
.
g!¥JleS.
·Ohio Division champion Wellston an 84, was followed by Chris
:." We can get to that point," won the TVC Interdivisional Randolph 's 89, Brandon Wolfe's 92.
Plpmm er said of the heights reached Tournament held Thursday eve mn g Joe Corne ll 's 95 , Ju stm Connelly's
bJ~Iast year's team , " but it's going to at Oxbow Golf Course.
97 and Bill Coe's 101. •
b'f harderroad ... , .
.
Well ston posted a 332 for the 18
For Meigs Nick Dettwiller fired
hole event. Waterford came in sec- an 82 to place him fourth in the 36
and with a 342 Behind them were player field. He was followed by
games ...
Belpre, (353). Trimble (354) , Tommy Roush's 90, Zach Me adows'
Southern (360) and Meig s (372) .
99 , Thad Bum gardner's 101 , Andy
(Continued fro;n Page
Patto
n
carded
a
four
over
75
,
'
Davis' 102 and Carso n M1dk1 ff 's
Trent
tJ)-run double in the ' ninth innin g ·
fo.r
m
atc
h
medali
st
ho
no
rs.
•
.
For
105.
t~f C hi cago.
·
Southern,
Kyle
Norris
.
who
carded
IAIIen scored for the Twin s with

i

Lil e Honie Car 8us1ness
7},illofla6flj,i~·

992-7834

By KATHY BARKS HOFFMAN
LANSING. Mich . (AP)
Dim itri us Underwood's · mother
claims her son's apparent suicide
a)tempt and hi s recent erratic behavi~r have been inlluenced by a "cult
tuat's posing as a church ."
; Underwood. a defensive end from
Michigan State wl]o walked away
from a multimillion-dollar NFL cont(act with Minnesota, only to resurface in Mi ami, slashed hi s own neck
Sunday and was found bleeding on a
L;ansing street, police smd Monday.
· " He was somewhat despondent,"
pblicc spokesman Lt. Ray Hall said.
'1fe was upset. physically upset .''
. : B efore she left Monday for

1L

v#uto-fhltnen ln6urtuu:e

DIAL

Underwood's mother says cult

.

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Transactions

ing homers with Sosa.
" That's not why I play the game
of baseball," McGwire said. " They
(lhe Red s) arc the perfect example of
,,Jh 31 the game is all about .''
Just as McGwire and Sosa oave
broken new ground in home run
~rby , the $35 million Reds have

made folks think twice about what a Young said. "We don't have a go-to
small-market team can accomplish.
guy like sOme teams. We have who"I've been getting a lot of calls ever.''
lately from all over the country."
II was Tauben·see's tum to be
manager Jack McKeon said. "I think whoever.
,
1
After Young's RBI single off
we're the sentime•
favorites.
" I think everyL, Jy would like to Garrett Stephenson cut it to 6-5 with
see us go far, all the way to the World two outs in the seventh, Rick
Series, because we're scrappy and Croushore (3-7) relieved and left a
we have an inte..,sling bunch of guys ·pitch over the plate for Taubensee.
Taubensee hit it square, but
and we have a low payroll. I don 't
think the big-money guys would like thougl]t he's swung a. tad early. He
tO see US 'gel in." '
watched the ball start hooting and
If they keep playing like this, no thought it would just be a long fouL ·
He should have known beuer.
one will be able to stop them.
" I didn ' t bother jo turn and
McGwire ~tlNo. 61 into the
watch
," said Yoong, who was on secupper deck j left field as the
ond
base
. "I threw my hands up."
· Cardinals sur ed to' a 6-1 lead
the
drive
straightened out. stayed
Monday an,d s enced a crowd that
fair
and
landed
in the first rows of
had expected m
magic.
·
Taubensee
The homer came on the one-year upper-deck · seats.
anniversary of McGwire hitting Nos. punched the air. Reds spilled out of
69 and 70 against Montreal to estat&gt;- the dugout and the fans erupted.
They' d done it again . ·
lish the .record, four better than Sosa.
" This is the supreme comeback.
'Ibis year, McGwire has been doing ·
the chasing - Sosa had led since hit- no question about it," McKeon said .
"There were 28,000 people who
· tmg his 48th and 49th on Aug . 20.
lltey get to settle matters head-to- thought we were dead in the water.
head. The Chicago Cubs finish with We 're going to have a se tback once
a three·game series in St Louis next in a while, but just give us an openweekend .
ing and we'll come through."
Tell the Mets about it.
" Well , we've got a week left,"
" Thi s is a very special team."
McGwire said. "As long as we 're
playing games and I'm getting in the Taubensee said. ' 'I'm having more
box, I have a chance." .
fun thi s year than I ever have.
All the Reds ne eded was· one Whether we make the playoffs or
chance to get the electricity flowing not, it' s something I'll never forget. "
In the only other NL games,
. again. That came when Dmitri
Arizona
beat Colorado I 0-3 and
Young. hit a two-ron home r in the
Montreal
defeated
Florida 8-4.
sixth for the first of hi's five RBis ,
·
Diamondbacks
10; Rockies 3
cutting it to 6-3.
"It's someone new every day." ·
Arizona unfurled an NL West

Meigs golfers take last place
in TVC interdivisional tourney

iru;ur,mce limn Auto-Owner.;

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Reds defeat Cardinals 9-7,
tie Astros for first in Central

t'

ter. ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Diamondbacks win Western Division crown

National League
roundup

final game
in
Tiger
Stadium
.
'

~. September 28, 1999 ·

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. ltegea• The Daily Sentinel

.Tuesday, September 28, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:McCain launches presidential bid by issuing challenge
By RON FOURNER
. AP Political Writer
NASHUA, N.H.-· Republican presodenlial candodate John Me-cam Mon. day iSSUed a "new patri011c challenge" for Amenca, promo sing to return dig,: nity to the White House, strength to the U.S. molitary and honesty to a go•:: emmentthat is now " a spectacle of selfish ambuion."
Formally opening the campaign he began nearly 10 months ago, the war
hero and Senate mavenck also pledged 10 protect SOCial Security. CUI taxes.
' veto pork-barrel spending, improve access to the Internet and test the merits of spending government money in pnvate schools nationwide.
His top lssues· reronn political campatgn laws and tmprove Amenca's
. national secunty. McCain said both issues are examples of how he wants to
, challenge Amencans to champton a "cause greater than self-tntercsl."
~
Speaking to a crowd of about 500, McCain said, " It is because I owe
• Amenca more than she has ever owed me that ! am a candtdate for president of the United States."
,
As McCatn concluded, confetu and miles of streamers was dropped on
!he crowd as a recordtng played of Chuc~ Berry 's "Johnny B. Goode"
'The son and grandson of Navy admirals. the fanner Navy polot and Vietnann prisoner-of-war scheduled h1s day 's start woth a VISit to the U.S. Naval
Academy in Annapolis. Md. A poor studen1 and troublemaker. McCatn barely graduated from the school but later dt stmguoshed hunself as a flyer and
pnsoner of war.

systems and ocher po~ projects wh1le 12,000 (mihtary ) pem&gt;nnel- proud
young men and women - subsist on food stamps "
.
And he saod no other candidate was as qualified to be commander-tn-&lt;:htef,
a clear reference to the lack of foreign poltcy expenence held by Geo'l!e W.
Bush, the Republican front -runner
.
''There comes a ttme when our nauo n ·s leader can no longer rely on bnef·

mg books and talking pomts, when the cxpens and the adv1sers have all
weighed m, when the sum total ol one 's hfc bewmcs the foundation from
wluch he nr she makes the ded stOns that dctcnmnc the fulure or our democ-

racy," McCai n said
Bush , a 1wo-tcrm Texas governor who served statcstde m the Te xas Air

Naloonal Guard durmg the Voetnam War. has made no secret of his ~ed to
bone up on foreogn policy and rely on advosers
•
In Tex:os, Bush said he looked forward td a "spin ted race" With McCatn .
"John's a enoo fell ow. He 's also a fnend ," he satd " He'll be tough competition. I know that. He 's a hero. He's served the country well."
Bush holds a healthy lead over all GOP nvals in polling and fund-raising, though McCatn has closed the gap '" New Hampshire. 'The Arizona senator has. gamed attentiOn m recent weeks woth the publication of a family
memoir that recalls hts tonuous 5-112 years in a Vietnam prison.
"I don 't thtnk the pnmary here is over," sa1d Steve Duprey, the state GOP
cha1rman
An unonhodox ~htlcian by nature, McCain is expected to take the unusu' Lo~iter, in New flampshue , lhe leadoff pnm.iry slate. hls speech 10 volers
al step of s~ippmg Iowa's caucuses and focusing on the early New Hamp'was laced with references to his mtlitary record - " I have passed from a shlfe and South Carolina pnmanes. New Hampshire is loaded with inde: young ~an to an old one tn the serv1cc of my ~;ountry"- and with cnu- · pendent-mmded voters who moghtlike the underdog McCain, while South
ctSm of his political foes.
Carohna has a huge population of veterans.
Presodent Clmton, he saod, broke a promose to protect Socoal Securny and
McCam confronted another ISSUe Monday before ' his announcement He
weakened the U.S. molitary. By promising to "respect the dognity of the, satd on ABC's "Good Momtng America" that he wants the Supreme Coun's
office," McCam suggested I hat Cl mton has not
decosion legahzmg abonwn ovenumcd.
He satd both parties m Congress wasted money on ·unne&lt;dcd weapons
"But I also want to change the dynamics of thiS debate, which has kept
us gndloeked mto posuoons wh1ch caused people to shoot at abortwn elm-

Mrs. Dole
discusses
overseas
policies

By SANDRA SOBIERAJ
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Democratic
preSidential cand1date Boll Bradley
.offered a $65 billion plan today for
umversal access to health msurance
that would requiTe parents to get coverage for their choldren. woth substdtes gotng to those who cannot afford

longer ts faced wuh maJor threats
to its narmnal secunty
"Our abthty to advance our
interests wuh the world 's maJor
powers and contam Its rogue
regimes has waned , ·• she sa1d
"The world remams a very dangerous place, and we Amencans

theater defense miss1le systems .

ty."

Dole vowed all that would
change if she were in charge
"In the Dole admtntstratwn,
this era of wtshful thmking, vacollation and eqvtvocatwn woll end."
she said.
·
She sa td her admmiStratlon
would treat "authontanan and
totalttanan states, such as North
Korea, as rogue rcg1mes, not as our
equals "
'
Dole also saod she would
• End the United States' adherence to the Anto - Ballist~e Mtsstle
Treaty, whoch she sa td os outdated
and invalid.
• Oppose makong the United
States a party to the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, wh och she
said is neither ef(cctlve nor venft able.
•

Improve secunty at the

nation's weapons labs.
• Work, to forge new re lauons

with other m!Jor powers. In China,
she saod, her admomstratwn would
try to promote pohtical refonn
while opemng that natwn 's markets to more U.S. goods and farm
nroducts
.
She cri~cized Presodent Clinton
for granung clemency recently to
a group of Puerto Rican mihtant
nationalists, saymg she " could not
disagree more strongly" woth the
Iaction.

'

.

- wtll later be revealed in the context of a balanced budget. ,
Bradley disagreed w11h that
approach.
" I beheve it IS trresponstble to
commit to· new programs wtthout
also laymg the costs before the public so that we can decide together
how to pay for them," he sa1d
With hiS long-promised health
plan, Bradley was fleshmg out what
he's called his "big tdeas" policy
agenda at a tome when polls suggest
a tigh1ening race agamst Gore.
And, as of to guard agamst association with first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton's unpopular and bureaucratic plan in 1993 for universal
health care, Bradley aides emphasized that hiS proposal would not
change the private health insurance
system.
"People who are happy with their
plans can keep them. Our sole objec-

f!

By DENNIS PATTERSON
Associated Press Wrn,r
RALEIGH. N C Htt by
depressed pnces and the floodwaters
of Humcane Floyd. many eastern
North Carolina fanners may decode
ot 's time to try something else
" The repons that we're puttmg
out estomate that fully 15 percent of
the growers affected by these floods
w11l probably go ahead and get out of
the business," said Jim Kmght, a
spokesman for the state Depanment
of Agnculture.
"A farmer can make a whole lot
more money raJsmg houses and trailer parks than he can corn and cotton ," Kmght saod Monday
Offtctals estimate agricultural
losses due to Floyd will exceed $1
billion. At least 47 people m North
Carohna dted after the stonn dumped

Previously
By BETH GARDINER
Associated Press Writer
.
NEW YORK - Scientists have
tpssed out their origmal doagnosiS of
a mosqu11o-borne aolment that has
k1lled four people and infected 33
others m the New York City region.
Now they say It's a vorus never before

Federal agncultu~ offictals have
been told that fanners need direct
mated 2,100 people remaon in shel- assistance, not loans. Most already
ters.
*
are carrymg all the debt they can hanEnvironmentalists have suggested dle, Kmght said.
the floodwaters may persuade the
In all, more than 39,000 people
state to ompose restrictions that could have registered for state and federal
remove ammal waste lagoons, as well assostance so far. The Federal Emeras municopal sewage plants, from gency Management Agency said it
tlood-prone areas.
has approved more than $3.8 million
But fann advocates say that would m d!Tect aod to humcane victims in
be complicated and expen~ive
the stale.
• '" It 's easy to say you're gomg to
Preliminary estimates show Floyd
move people," said Ann Cohen of the caused $70.2 million in housing
North Carolina Fam1 Bureau "The damage in eastern Not;th Carolina,
quesnon os. do they owh land to move wtth more than 3,000 homes
to? Whal would be the parameters for destroyed or heavily dannaged.
a move, if it was required? And
Tobacco sales on North Carolina's
would that put them m a condotwn flue-c ured markets resumed Monday
where they could not meet other for the first time since they were haltrules, like dtStanc,es from property ed Sept. 14 as Floyd bore down on
hnes or-public gathering places?"
the region. State officials estimate
20 inches of rain and flooded pans of

an l8,(X)() square-mile area An esll-

~nknown

seen m thiS hemisphere.
Th1rty-seven people have tested
positive for the West Note-like virus,
Mayor Rudolph Gtuliani and state
hFalth officoals saod Monday. Many
patients - including the four who
died - were thought to have St.
Louts encephalitis. ·

The Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention reclasstfied the cases
as West Nole-hke fever, which is usually found tn Africa and Asta. 1be
dtsease's symptoms - fever and
headache- are similar to those of St
Louis encephalitis but are generally
molder.

M•ddleport;
Orange;
Deed, Thomas W. Jones to Paul
Roght of way, Carolyn Kay
Eugene Ham s, Sutton/Syracuse G.Jhlan to Tuppers Plains-Chester
parcel s:
Water D1stnct, Chester;
Deed, Judith Kay McHaflie to
Right of way, Charles and Ma.ine
Larry M Smoth, Middleport,
Goegletn to TPCWD,'Chester; ·
Deed, James R. Jr and Knstln C . Right of way,- Dorothy D. Hall to
Acree to Hennan T and Sandra K TPCWD, Ohve,
Right of way, A.W. Jr. and Donna
Stzemore, Sahsbury:
Deed. Steven R and Brenda K. Nease to TPCWD, Sutton;
Right of way, Ri ck and Cheryl
Hand to Herber\ F. Nef~ Jr.. Ohvc:
Deed, Brian E. and Brenda K. Lawson to TPCWD, Orange;
R1ght of way, Nicky Ray Barber
Johnson to Randy B and Freda L.
to TPCWD, Olive ,
Perry, Rutland Village,
R1ght of way, Carleton and Ellen ,
Deed, Betty Baronock, Betty A.
Thomas
to TPCWD, Olive;
Baronock to Calvin L and B LouiSe
of way, David L. and DebRight
Mitchell, Saltsbury :
Deed, Carol .Wolson to Fred W. orah S Weber to TPCWD, Orange;
Roght of way. Thomas and Diana
Ayers. Orange;
S.
Karr
to TPCWD, Ohve ;
Deed, Audrey Gnffitts, Audrey
Roght
of way, Geneva C. Maxson
Neece to Charles Edward Gtlkerson ,
to
TPCWD:
Chester,
Rutland;.
Deed, Ralph E. and Madelme L
Right of way, James N. and ConPamter to Audrey Griffitts, Rutland ; stance C. Smuh to TPCWD, Bedford;
Deed, Ctndy and Douglas Sands,
Right of way, Nonnan E. and
Jean and Gerald Wells to Kenneth A. Patricta Hysell to TPCWD, Chester;
Turley and Betty Wise, Sutton,
Rtght of way, M1kel K. and ChrisDeed , Lee Roy Stmpkins Sr., Jane tine B. Young to TPCWD, Olive;
Doe , Komberly D Simpkins; Joseph
Deed, Wtlham Dye, Wtlliam J.
P Gdben to Homestde Lending Inc., Dye, Linda Dye, Linda K. Dye to
Rutland;
Komberly S. Lee, Salisbury;
Deed, Tommy R. Hood to ElizaDeed, William Dye, William J.
Pomeroy :
beth J. Hood, Bedford ,
Dye, Linda Dye, Linda K. Dye to
Deed, A Mary Hawkms to Kml Deed, Audrey Nee ce, Audrey Ktmberly S. Lee, Salisbury;
bedy Ohver, Lebanon,
Griffitts to Wesley D. Manley;
Deed, Leona Hysell to ChristoDeed, David B. Baum to Secretary
Deed, Linda and John Dauben- pher T. and Connie L. Taylor, Salisof Housme and Urban Development. mtre to Phollip and Virginia J. Sorrell, bury

' In rare cases, the virus can cause
neurological disorders and death.
The elderly, young and those with
weakened immune systems are most
vulnerable.
"This is a question of two very,
very rare diseases. and there was just
some confusion about it, " GJUiiam

said "If anything. the dtsease we're
dealing with now is somewhat less
severe than the one we were dealing
with before.",

I4

tive is to expand options," said one

BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family
and
Consumer
SclencesfCommunity DeveiQ!:!ment

adviser.

Bradley nOied that an estimated 45
mtllion Americans are uninsured 34 million of them adults without
access to affordable health coverage
- and suggested the administration
was at fault for being too easily
scared away from the problem.

Food safety stans at the store. To be a
safe and sman shopper, read labels when
purchasing foods . You need to know what
you are buymg, especoally if you are trymg
to avoad ' certain mgredients because of
health problems. food allergies or tntoler-

"I know that making health care
available to all wtll not be easy. But
the difficulty is a challenge not a reason to avoid engagement," Bradley

ances

Foods which have the word "sodium" as a component, baking
soda, bnne, MSG (monosodium glutamate), NaCI (sodium chloride), soy or teriyaki sauce all have salt in them. Ingredients that
tnclude words ending in "ose," such as sucrose, lactose, maltose,
fructose. glucose and galactose and sugars, syrups, dextrin, honey,
sweeteners, malt and molasses each have sugar:
For people who are lactose intolerant, the offenders may be nvted
on the label as milk, cream, marganne, whey, casein and cheese.
Gluten or gliadin intolerance can be detected on the label in the fonn
of flour, modified food starch, MSG, HVP (hxdrolyzed vegetable
protem), cereal, malt or · cereal extracts, malt flavoring , diStilled
vinegar, emulsifiers, wn_eat, rye, oats, barley, buckwheat, stabiljzers
and wheat starch.
·
,
Additives, such as sulfites, MSG, FD&amp;C Yellow No. 5 colori ng
(tartrazme) and tnlense sweeteners such as aspaname, may also
cause problems for some people. Ingredient infonnatif is provided
on the label to help people know what they are eatinl!&lt;,
Consumers can continue their use of safe practices when purchasing foOds by checking JUgs, jars, cans and canons. Make sure
seals are unbroken and that vacuum-packed jars still have the button
down. Avmd cans that are bulgtng, have dents, are rusted or damaged. They may indicate spoilage, such as botulism. Packages
should be in good shape wuh no tears or holes
, ,
Observe "sell by" and "use by" dates. If the sell by date or use by
date Will be up before you have eaten the penshable food, don't buy
it
Make your penshable food selections (meal, ftsh, poultry, eggs,
etc.) JUSt before checking out. Place the raw poultry and meats in
plastic bags to prevent the JUice from leakmg onto unprotected foods
in the catt
When buymg frozen foods, check· the package. The food should
be frozen solid. There ·should he no sogns of thawong , dtscolored
packagtng or softness . The package should be completed closed.
Foods that are refrigerated should feel cool.
.
Pack co ld foods together so they' woll keep each other cold durmg the tnp home. Immediately take grocenes home and store them
properly. If it will take longer than thirty mmutes to get home, bnng
a cooler wtth tee or ch11l packs to keep the foods cool. Remember
that refngerated perishable foods should not be out longer than two
hours at room temperature ThiS tncludes the nde ho~ from the

said.

Gore, tn addition to expandmg ehg•bihty for the Children's Health
Insurance Program for low-income
families, has proposed gjving senior
citizens and self-employed people a
25 percent refundable tax credit for
health insurance premoums of they &lt;jo
not have employer-based coverage.

m1ssion office in Rocky Mount.usually handles 75to 100 unemployment'
applications per week. But last week
alon,e it was swamped with 900 to
I .200 apphcations.
"It ain't our fault we caQ't go to
work," D.J. Jones, 22, said Monday
at the Rocky Mount office. "I want
to work."
Some people' can't get to work
because they lost thetr cars or because
flood-damaged roads are still closed.
Others have to stay home with their
children because day-care centers and
schools are closed.
Shaun Caner, 23, of Princeville
ti:ied to he patient as some waited in
line for two hours to apply for bene·
fits. He said his workplace was
flooded and he couldn't contact his
bosses.

....

store.

Be sman when grocery shopping. By followmg these suggestiOns, you can ehmmate safety and health problems that may occur
when purchasmg foods.

But the disease scien11sts are deal-

Ing With DOW may exist in a far Wider
geographtc regoon that previously
behoved
"It's not on the level of New York
Cuy anymore," state Health Commissioner Dr. Antoma Novello

smd

Monday. "It's on the level of New
York state. "
Dr. Ned Hayes, a CDC eptdemt~
ologtst, satd the West N1le-hke maul
probably entered the United States i~
infected buds. ·

POMEROY - Drew Webster
American Legion Post 39 AuXIhary
meeting Tuesday, 2 p.m . at the
Legion Hall in Pomeroy.
RACINE - Racine Area Community Organization meeting Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at the American
Legiorl Hall.
CHESTER - Wtnding Trail
Garden Club meettng Tuesday, 8
p.m. at the home of Addalou Lewis.

• Jazz Production
• Thursday, September 30, 1999
• 8 p.m.

• State Theatre (Main Street)
• Tickets Are $10/Person &amp;Available At The
Door The Night Of The Perfonilance

POMEROY - lmmumzation
clime at Meigs County Health
Department Tuesday, 1-3 p.m. at the
Meigs Multipurpose Center at 112
E. Memonal Drive, Pomeroy. Every
chold must be accompamcd by a parent/l egal guardian with a copy of the
chold's immunization record.
SYRACUSE Meogs Area
Holiness Association holiness rally
Tuesday, 7 p m. at the Syracuse
Nazarene Church. Distnct Supenntendent Dr. Richard L. Jordan will
be the speaker The pubhc IS welco me.

WEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Bloodmobil e, Eastern · Htgh School. 9.30
a. m to I :30 p m.
Pel•t

PLIAIAIIT

Artist Series

POMEROY - Meigs County
Emergency Planmng Committee
(LEPC) regular meeting Wednesday,
II :30 a.m. tn the conference room of
the Multipurpose Senier Citizens
Building on Mulbel'!l, Heights,
Pomeroy.
;r;

'

f."•

SATURDAl'
'•:
Sayre,
·RACINE - The
Smith family reunto
aturday,
American Legion h , Ra1=ine.
Potluck dinner, I p.m.
e service
and drinks prov1ded.
SALEM CENTER Star
Grange 778, Saturday, potluck supper at 6:30 p.m., meettng, 8 p m.
Installation of officers, calender for
1999-2000 to be completed.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Poplar Ridge
Free Will Baptist Church, gospel
s on g, State Route 554. , The Joe
Lester Fanuly, the Brody Famoly,
Parkersburg, W Va. Public invited
by Pastor John Elswock

.

and your children against his outbursts.
Play deaf. and instruct your children to do the same. Just let h1m
scream his fooli sh head off. One of
, these days, his doctor is going to say
something to him about his ulcers or
his hogh blood rressure , and then, he
will have to listen.
Dear Ann Landers: I am wnting
to ask for the proper way to deal
with neighbors ~~d fnends who
attend joyous celebrations and never
send a gift
Our daughter was mamed several weeks ago. The wedding was elegant - a full smorgasbord and five
course dmner, with a choice of red
or white wme. We had a 12 ptece
band and flowers everywhere There
were 400 guem.'
We were surprised at the number
of people who attended but dod not
send a gift

Am ong them was the daughter of w1fe abou t this. Your attitude os terour next door netghbors, for whom nble
we purchased a very expensive g1ft
Dear Ann Landers: My problem
1s not of earthshakm g proportions.
last year wh'en she was marri ed.
Our son's wedding will be com - bul l" m CUriOUS about something
ong up '" three months. and we are Please enloghten me What " the
preparmg a hst offnends and fam1ly proper way to answer the telephone
members to be invited.
10 someone else's home?
Whenever I call a fncn"d and a
I told my w1fe that under no m cumstanccs should we invne the strange \'OICe says. "Hello:· I thmk I
cheapskates who dod not se nd a have the wrong number Sun1e11mes ,
wedUtng gtft to our daughter. Am I l"m not sure about the voice. and I
JUStified? We are ha vmg arg ume nts begm ta lkJf)g a~ 1f he or she 1s the
about th1s.-- STIFFED IN MON- person I called Then. I' m embarSEY. N.Y.
rassed to fmd out otherwbe \
DEAR MONSEY: You can' t do
Euher way. I often .hav e to take
anythmg about "those cheapskates, " the tune to venfy the phnnc number
but you can do somethm g a bout
I have called .
your anger. Get over at.
When I answer ~ omeo nc e l ~e\
You don 't mv1te people to share phone, I always say, '"Smuh rcso·
the JOyous occaswns of your lofe so de nee . George Jones spcak1n g ·
they Will send gifts You 111 \'Jie them Granted , It takes longer than
be cause you want them to share · "Hei lo." but 11 avo1d s any m1s undc'r+
your joy. Slop argumg wilh yo ur stand mg

Ke1th Ashley of Rock Spnngs
was one o( the Civol War reenactors
who converged on a mthtary traming range at Rmggold, Ga., on Sept
17- 19 for the reenactment of the
famous Battle of Chockamauga,
whoch occurred m 1862 JUSt
moments from the reenactment site
Ashley panicipated tn the event
as a Umon fifer m Company B, 91 st'
Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry
for the Western Bngade , whtch
included all the Ohio units present
The Tennessee National Guard
assisted m directmg the event. Over
10,000 CIVIl War soldoer reenactors
attended along woth hundred s of
CJVJhan reenactors.

Mu socians played the same mthtary fife and bugle mustc u~ed then
(or waktng soldiers at 5.30 a.m ..

Alfred
United
Methodist
Church held Its annual homecomong on Sept. 19 with regular services m the mornmg. Pasta'
Sharon Hausman gave the grace
before the basket dinner. Afternoon
. servtces featured Sonshme Smgers
and local talent.
Sonshme Smgers chtldren
singers, Travis and Kacsey Walker
and Tyler Glassburn, opened the
program by singmg "Got the Dcvi'l
by the Tai I"
Adult smgers ' songs mclud ed "I
Go to the Rock of Ages", ''I' ll Fly
Away", "What a Day that woll Be",
and " In One Eternal Moment"
Alfred Chotr sang "Old Account
was Settled Long Ago" and "Home
of the Soul".
Alfred Men 's Chorus sang "Bye
and Bye" and "Just a Little talk
woth Jesus" Gary John so n sang
"Jesus Took my Place'' and ··t Am
Redeemed" Pastor Hausman gave
a farewell speech.
Churches represenled were
Alfred, Lancaster Mills Memonal.
Manetta, Bearwallciw, Lnng Bot·
tom, Grove C11y, Caldwell , Belpre ,
. Athens, Tuppers Plains, St . Paul.
Chester and Caldwell
Present were Wilma Hend erson,
Nma Robinson , Sarah Caldwell.
Thelma
Henderson ,
Rus se ll
Arc.her, Richard, Florence and Tom
Spencer, Dave and Mary Jo Bar-ringer, Clair and Oste Follrod,
Kathy, Stacte, and Alan Watson,
Lloyd and Doris Dollinger, Dan,
Shelia, Tiffany, Danielle, and 'Kort
Spencer.
John Taylor, Melvm and
Gertrude Tracy, Eva, Gary, and
Brenda Johnson , Laune , Joe,

announ cmg camp duucs, and lead·
ing so ldt ers off to hattie Dunn g the
battles Ashley and other mustctans
dragged. stmulated wounded and
dead soldters off the finng Ime while
chaplams prov1ded re ligwu s Lom-

fon.
Rcenactors camped m woods.
slept on the ground, and cooked on
wood campfires JUSt ltke CIVIl War
soldiers dod Several Covtl War balls
were held durmg the event. Artillery
duels continued until 3 am Suriday
mornmg after the mght assault
The event consisted of a mock
battle on Fnday, three mock battles
on Saturday wllh the thud one bemg
the reenactment of Cleburne 's no ght
assault. Night battles ,being rare in
the C1vJI War gave recnaclors a rare

look into the problems associated

Janae, and Jessica Royles, Sandra
Massar, Lloyd and Ruth Brooks,
Debbie and Kathlyn Barber, Man lyn and Wolber Robmson, Roberta
Henderson , Juanita Guthrie. Dori s.

a.nd Roland Eastman, Dorothy
Cominsky , Anme Calaway, Janet
Connal!l', Barbara Sargent, lnzy
Newell , ~r~? Caldwell , Betty

AEP rep talks about
possible Y2K problems
A program on "Preparation s
for Y2K P-roblems" was presented
by Bill Sheets of Amencan Electrtc Power at a recent meeting of
the Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter
of Beta Sigma Pht Sorority
Since the problems arc
unknown , he said that simple
preparations are of utmost omportanc e.

The meeting opened wnh th e
ritual , roll call, mmutes of the
previous meung . and the trea s ur-

er's report. New bu siness m c luded action to lower du es to $20 a

year and to pay th e liabili ty in surance

Plans were made for an exc urSio n to Dre sden Ann Rupc and
me nt s to Clancc Kr autl er. Joan

Corder. Ca ro l Ad ams .. Shorl cy
Beeg le, Jane Brow n. Vera Crow,
Carolyn Gruescr Carol McC ul lough, Martha McPhatl. Ro&gt;C SIS·
so n. M argare t Stew.trt. and ~~

p m with The Southern Gospel mrs
South, Bethel " located twp nules
fro m Route 7 on Silver R1dgt Road ,

guest. Mary B owen .

TUPP ERS PLAINS - Eastern
Local Board of Ed ucation regular • across from Eastern Schools
meetin! Wed nesday, 6 30 p m m the

/

•

I

,

t

ators Syndicate web
www crcators.com

p .tg ~

,tt

sw.: h batt les. Pyrotl.!chmcs wen:
used m the event to s1mulatc exp loSions at targets after the finng of
v,.Jih

full -me models of Ci vtl War cannons Along with Infantry nllemen .
ex tens1ve cavalry, med1cal personne l. c haplams. samta ry comm1~
s10ns. s1gnal corps. and mu stcal
reenactors part iCipated Par11c1panl s
mcl udc those who travel ed from
Great Britam where Amencan C1v1l
War SOCietieS Oounsh.
The kmg of Norway lra,eled
from Europe for the event to honor a
Umon leader who was Norweg1an m
the battle. The kmg rev te\\ed Unoon
troops and was serenaded by Covtl
War mUSJL:Ians
A battle was also held on Sunday
to st mulate the assault on Snodgrass
Htll. Proceeds from the event woll he

used fo r Civ1l War hall lcflc ld pl c..,c r\ a11 0n Th1:~ eve n! IS called a .. m~t x l ·
mum effort"" even t. wh1ch mc J n ~
that rccnactors around the co untr)
are asked to try to altcnd Thb h th ~
largest even! s1 ncc last y ear' ...
record~ breaklng 1 3 St~ annJ\ CP.ary

Battle of Getlysburg . whtch on clud ed an estimated 35.000 C'Jv!l W.tr
rcenactors.
.
Anv mal e~ age. 8 or uhkr mter •
csted on learnmg to pia) Cl\ tl Wa r
fife and drUm mu s1c to pdnra) Ct\ II
Wa1 mu ... JCJan ... may call 992-7X7-t

Brooks-Grant Camp No 7 Suns of
Un10n Veterans o f Mu.ld!cporl

1"

workong to fonn a fofc and Jrum
corp s dressed 1n Unwn &lt;,old 1cr
apparel for parades and reen act ments

Alfred United Methodist Church holds homecoming

South Bethel

mg, Sunday Sunday sc hool at 9

Several people have told me tht&gt;
is old fashoo ned and "hokey " What
do you think. Ann '' .. GEORGE IN
BRISTOL, R I
DEAR GEORGE: G"·e me' old
fashwned and hokey" any old J.1y I
prefer 11 to the S.u squc rudenc ll-, \'-'C
encounter on a da1ly ba'-I S Pl e~ ~ e
don 't 'hange
,
When plannmg a weddmg. who
pays for what.. , Who ~ tands wh ere ,
"The Ann Landers GUide for Bndes"
has all the answers Send a ~e lf
addressed , long. bu su1'€s~ SII.C cnve+
lope and a Check or mon e) ord er l or
$3 .75 (thiS mcludc&gt; pmtag&lt; and
handling) 10 Bnd1=s. c/o Ann l".mders. PO Box 11 562. Chtcago Il l
606 11 -0562
(In Canada, se nd $4 55 ) To lmJ
out more abo ut · Ann La nders u.nJ
read her past column s \ 1 ~ 1\ I he Crl'

Local man attends national Civil War event

New Testament Church. homccom-

am., worship service ar 10:10 a m
Carry-m dtnn er at nou n Mus1 c at I

Page7

Tuesday, September 28, 1999

Nelloe Brow n served refres hEAST MEIGS -

·

•

E&lt;tstern Elementary cafctonum .

-.
•

ter's bOliketball team last season, and
had several outbursts, oncludtng
swearing. One embarrassing performance resulted 'In a stem warning
from the referee.
'
My husband behaves this way
only when spons are involved, but I
cann.ot deal w1th this much longer.
He thinks I am crazy and says I
don't understand because I never
played team spons. I need your
advoce.'- DESPERATE IN THE
NORTilEAST
DEAR NORTHEAST: Your
husband is not going to change, nor
will he tum down the volume, so
you must learn to protect yourself

!Time .Out for Tips!

encephalitis strain grows in N.Y.

Meigs recorder posts land transfers
The followmg land transfers were
recorded recently m the office of
Meigs County Recorder Judy King,
Deed, Cheryl L. Rames and
Matthew Boivin to Gerald Vernon
Arnold and Ronald Edward Arnold,
Pomeroy ;
1
Deed, Mtchael J. and Mindy Hill
to M1chael J. Htllll, l)utton,
Deed. Kathleen M and Henry E.
Cleland Jr to Ross A Stefke. Minersville,
Deed, Roscoe and Sandra I. Mills
to Brenda L. Koser, Sutton;
Deed, Karla S. Witherspoon to
Kenny H. and Carmelita Osborne,
Sc1p10,
Deed, Harry H. Cleland to Charles
and Alice Withams, Sutton;
Deed, Mary B. McCune to Joey
Damel, Columbta,
Deed, Kaaren E. Stafford to
Kaaren E. and Joseph H Stafford,
Columbia.
Deed, Stanley E. Shannun to
Kaaren E. and Joseph H. Stafford,
Columboa;
Deed, Stanley E. S~annon to
Kaarcn E and Jo seph H. Stafford.
Columbia, ,
Deed, Danny M. and Nancy L.
·
Griffith to Dons and Fred Taylor,

tobacco losses at $98.5 million nearly 10 percent of the value of last
year's crop.
Doug ~)Vis, his eyes req and
moist, said his com, soybeans and
cotton all were destroyed by wind
and flood mg. The 59-year-old farmer
from Tarboro managed to get most of
his tobacco crop into cunng barns by
the time Floyd hit.
He already owes more than
$400,000 for his wife's bone marrow
tra'nsplant.and other medical bills.
"The government is talking about
loans. I've got all the loans I need. I
can't pay hac~ what I've got," he
said.
Unemployment offiCes m the
hardest-hit areas have witnessed a
huge surge m applicatmns for benefits.
The Employment Securuy Com-

~

I

Dear A!,ln Landers: My husband
and I have been married I 2 years
We have t\YO children, an II year
old daughter and a 10 year old son.
Both have been involved m spons
smce first grade, mostly soccer and .
basketball.
The problem is my husband. He
has very high expectations of our
children's perfonnance m sports He
lectures them before the game, tells
them what to do dunng the game,
and criticizes them afterward. He
screams so much has vo1ce beconles
hoarse.
He made both kids cry when he
was asSistant coach for my daugh-

Floyd's impact may put farmers out of business

are today even more vulnerable to
missile attack than we were seven
years ago.
Dole promosed to rebuold the
military and develop national and

"Everyone's mv1ted to the

doomed since t~e Clintop-Gore
admimstratoon 's fiTs I term, Bradley
would requtre parents to obtain health
msurance for thc1r ch1ldrtm and
would offer full or partial premium

as housekeeping and transponation
~ that would cut down on nursinghome admissions, Bradley maintained
"We can commit ourselves to the
subsidies to low-mcome families . proposition that, when it comes to
Poor adults also would be eligtble for health care, everyone will have the
subsidies
Amencan dream," Bradley said in
Indo voduals of all ages and draft remar~s.
1ncomes also would be able to
it.
Aides said the plan's estimated
exclude
from theu taxable income annual cost of between $55 billion
'' When It comes to Amenca' s
health, thos is not the time to be whatever they pay for health premi- and $65 billion would be paid for out
ttmid," satd the fonner US senator ums, and all adults would get the of the projected federal budget sur·
from New Jersey, who was outlining option of buymg onto the same health plus, leaving the Social Security
plan provided to members of Con- trust fund's surplus protected and
the proposal in Los Angeles
gress
"It reqmres bold action and a
reserved for the retirement program.
Roundmg out hts "' hfe-stage "
national commitment from the presBradley took a veiled swipe at
Ident on down to make certam that approach to health refonn, Bradley's Gore, hts only rival for the Democevery Amencan has what should be plan separately would expand ratic nomtnation, who has not yet
Medicare to prov1de semor CJhzens provtded cost esttmates for any of his
a baste bmhnght," he said,
Ponions of Bradley's plan were wuh an uncapped prescriptoon drug major policy proposals, including a
described to The Assocoated Press on benefit for catastrophic and chrome narrower plan for health coverage of
Monday night
ollnesses. Medicare also would pro- · all children by 2005.
Danng tn hts contest wllh Voce Vtde a new S)'Stem of integrated
Gore o1des have promtsed that
President AI Gore to take on an issue medocal and social servoces - such such costs - and how to pay them

commumsm, the Umted States no ·

White House, nght?" Dole satd as
she held up the book up to applause
from the students.
In the thud foretgn pohcy
1 address of her campaogn,
Dole
accus~d the Chnton While House
of tummg a blind eye to humanrights abuses in Chma and domg
httle about Chmese thefts of U.S.
military secrets or threats to Taiwan.
_A(
"And we need to do tiro~ even
here at home to protect the American people from the posstbthty of
foreign attack. " Dole srud " Both
China and Nonh Korea can dehver nuclear bombs on Hawaio and
Alaska . Iraq and Iran have very
nearly ach1eved the same capaci-

ics IUid other Americans to vtcw 11 as the only issue in American politics,"
McCain satd. "lbere are areas we can agree on. .. We need to work together to eliminate abort1on."
McCam's stgnature tssue in Congress - campaign finance refonn - has
failed repeatedly and is bein1 debated again in Washington this fall . He said
the cause must be won to give Americans faith in government agatn.
"We can continue to watch as the American people grow ever more alienated from the practice and institutions of democracy. We can continue to tolerate a government that has become little more than a spectacle oi selfish
ambition, a government auctioned to the htghest bidder. Or we can take a
stand.
'
"We can fight together to reclaim our government from those who corrupt it Thts IS our new patnotlc challenge," he s~id.
Mc-&lt;:ain said American foreign policy must be more conststent and meaningful. "We cannot htde behmd empty threats, false promises, meamngless
rhetonc, and photo op dtplomacy," he satd
A strong military requires sman spending. he added.
"As president, I won't ask how much secunty we can afford I'll ask how
much security do we need, and I woll find the resources to pay for 11. But I
won '!tolerate one dime of our defense budget being wasted to re -elect shansighted poltticoans who put theiT own ambitions before the national mtcres!,"
he satd.
McCain also proposed .
,
• Repealing the tax penalty applied to married couple s. sla•hing the tnheritance tax, ending the earnmgs test penalty for senior citi zens and mcreasing the number of Americans who quahfy for the lowest tax rate of 15 percent.
• Paying teachers on ment and testing theu competency
• Conducting a nationwide test of school vouchers.
·
• Using new technology to help lower-class Amencans hft th~mselve~ up.
"The information revolution will hasten the end of a two-tiered society of
haves and have-riots," he satd

Bradley issues $65 billion health care proposal·

By BRUCE SMITH
Associated Press Writer
CHARLESTON, S.C. - Elizabeth Dole said Monday that
America's reliability is an ally and
, global power has eroded under the
' Clioton admmiStratwn, wh1ch
appears to rely on opmoon polls
. rather than leadership to craft foreign poltcy.
In a speech to a standong-roomonly crowd of about800 at the College of Charleston, the Republican
presidential candidate satd Cltnton
seems to thtnk that with the fall of

The themes were s'omolar to
those sounded by fellow Republt ·
can Texas Gov. George W Bush
during a speec h last week acros.s
town at The Citadel. the state milItary college
Following the 25-mmute
speech, Dole was goven a copy of
a cooking and entertammg book
wntten by Zoe Sanders, the wofe of
college President Alex Sanders

.

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

-

------ - - - -- -- -

Chevalier, Helen and Homer Wolson, and Nelloe Parker, all local
Joyce St Claor, L a n ca~t er ;
Norma and Gerald Swartz, Manet'
Ia , Joe and Mary Lou Boy les.
Wa shmgton, _WJrfa . Berm ce
Meeks and Cla\ence and Ed na
Warner, Athen s: Bob and Janet
Robmso n. Belpre, Lee Ann Ftck,

Grove C11y: Lon Mormo n and
Larry Rot c h~e , Caldwell The new
pastor and her husband. Jane and
Dav1d Beattie a lso att ended
During the morn1ng scrv1cc
Wtlbur Roh1n so n presented 'l 5
roses to h.1s wlfe, Manlyn. hon or·
Ill£ the1r 35th weddtn g annl\ 1!' 1sary

Fall

.Bunting
Edition
To Appear _In The
THE DAILY SENTINEL
GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE,
&amp;POINT PLEASANT REGISTER

.On

Friday, Octo·ber 22, 1999
Reach Over 18,000 Homes
In The Tri-County Area!

AD DEADLINE
Tuesday, Oct. 12, 1999
.

.

Call Dave Harris
For ·More Information
992·2156

�•

Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Plan~ lu

th~

Clrc h:

Ladtcs of the Grand Arnl) ol tho

Republu.: were

d1s~us~ed at a r~(.;Cnl

meettng of Brooks-Grant Camp No

7.

'The Rev Charles Swtgger. evangeltst for the Mtllcnmal Crusade

for Chnst held m June at Metgs Htgh School,

lornung 3

Son~

of Unum

Veteran~

of the

Ctvtl War. at the annex of Hope Bap-

ts the new pastor at the

b1 \OCUtlonal mamstcr H~ has pa~torcd etght

churches m West Vtrg: mta one m M1...tuga n .mJ sc' cral m Ohw
Whtle employed wtth the Amencan Electnc Power Corp at the Cook
Nuclear Plant tn Bndgman Mtch l1e p.tswrcd the Ntles Natarene
Church for seven years
After h1 s retire me nt hC and ht s \'-de. Lln~l Lou a ~c moH·J to lh ~

group~

·-

•

Nazarene for more rha n a vcar
Servaces at the Lau r~l Cltfl ::tr~ Suni.l.\\ Slh~)ol at 9 'U am m 1m1
~'cnmg,\n t ~hlpathp m

and prayer meetmg ut 7 r Ill

.uu.l

&lt;.:nn~1de rcd

the.!

alhed

orders" of the G A R as '' the Sons

Flatwoods area of Mc1gs County Smu~ mo\ mg h.ll.: J.. . here s&amp;: \ era I
years ago he has held num erous n. . , ''.tis m M~tgs .tnd Ma .. on Coun·
ue s, as well as servmg as mtcn rn p.tsiO I ot the Rutl.md Ch urr.;h of th~:

mgworshtpat 1030am

m.mdt.:r. pre ~ 1drng apphLallons tor
mcmbcr')hlp m •' ladte.., cm: le were
g1vcn to members of th~ Lamp "llh
\\-1\C~ WhO Wl~h W JOin
The Ladte' ol the G A R was
urganucd rn I SK'; to support tlu:
Grand Anny uf the Rcpuhhc the
large st orgam~atmn o l Umon vetcr·
ans of the Cl\ tl War It "one ol ft\'c

Laurel Chff Free M cthodtst Church
The mtntstcr has a long htstor; a&gt; a teacher of Gods word a
church pastor and evange l tst fur mer 40 years he has been '"' oh ed
;J

'"'t.'hurch tn Mtddleport
Wnh Ketth A,hle\ Jr 'tc~ wm-

B1hk· 1.•• tud \

of Umon Vctcr.m s
AppltL 3tlons arc ~u\1 3\ (lt lable to
.my \\om.m age 12 nr uldcr wuh
c1thcr .1 drr~L:t .mccstor or blood
related undc who fou2h1 m the
Un1on for~.cs ol the C 1v ~ War Illc
name l)l the new ~.:m.:k ha !&lt;~ not yet
hccn (.:hosL~n and l h&lt;lrter mc mhcr
~h 1p 1s o,tlll 1\arlilhlc Tho'c rntcrestcd 11M\ lall I.J•J:!. 7~7 -l !or m!ornM·
uon .111d applK.ttl on~

f

J.tme~ 01k r

p.~llr ot 1~.: m~t ru &lt;: t or

pre:..r:nt~.;d mt orm.H tnn on the hutld
Ill £. of a mununll: TH o n tile Mall .n
Y/.p;lun~tun D L hi honor the partl l:' IJ'~llll~' 'ol \Vor ILl W,u II I he mon·
urncnt rs be 1ng hudt ~.;nt Hl'i y hy p n ~
\ate don.ll!l)ns AJ,~) m~nthmi.!J was

CASEY RIDENIJUR

the 22S th .tn n l \ cr~.u] ul the l1rst
hdule of thl.' Amenum Revnl uuon .u
Pt Plc a~.mt W V.1 Ccrc nwn t l.'~ wr ll
he held llll Octnhcr 2· i

the S U V '" M tddlepon that were
IUrned over to that post s youth
group tn 1936 as reported '" an old
newspaper
A diSl:USSJOn on the attempts
Ctvtl War rehc dealers to buy ongtnal cannons was brought up due to
recent attempts to buy some tn thts
area It was pomted out that most of
the Ctvtl War cannons were ongmal l y prope rty of the G A R and
became property of the S U V at the
demtse of the G A R Rehc deal ers
try w say th at no one really owns
thesr &lt;:annons. wh1ch 1s false~ tt was

or

1cported

•

Keith Ashley ann ounced gtvm g
assis tance to two people w hose
Mctg&gt; County Un10n ances tors have

un cla1med C l\' 11 War se rv1ce medals
He also reported rece1vmg a large
p1u urc o f Col Emerson Powers
Brooks-one o f the men for whom
the ~.:amp 1s named The camp IS

workrng 10 locate h1s ong mal house
.Jt H.1rn sonv11le
It was announced th,u the Soc tcty
nl P11Soncrs n l Andersonvtllc wtll be

mc e11ng ,,, 2 p m O&lt;:t 31 at
Uh11d lsv1lle TI11 s soc 1e1y IS com
pn scd ot m ~ n an d women \\hose
ancestor" .u:l!Jally were 1mpnsoned

TURNS TwO • Casey Lane
"' the pmon at Anderson\lllc. GeorRtdenour. son of Floyd and
gra durmg the war Anyone w1 shmg
Jeante Rtdenour, celebrated hts
to attend and needs to obtam trans
second birthd~y with a Blues
purt atton may ca ll ' Colburn of
Clues party on Aug 2 at the
home of his parents in the Y111to n -..~ th presented h1 s mcmhcr- Po me ro}
Chester area
' hlp t.:CitJl tCJIC rh~ tr,m~lcrs of
Th e c ;~mp ha ~ ,co mpleted the
Paternal grandparents are M ll h.1c l fro'\ hnJgc .1 nd Da\ td
me.lSurcments of the Metgs County
Ketth and Lila Ridenour, long Nolth ot G.llhp ll ll ~ we re .lll:e pt(!d Ct\ rl \\'ar statue m order to rcgt ster
Bottom, and the paternal great- t n1111 G(\v Wrlh .un Den111:-;on Ca mp tt with the Save Our Statues Com·grandmother ts Luctlle Ride· No 125 \ll Alb.my
mlttec a nallonal pn vate orgamza
nour, Tuppers, Plains. Maternal
\ Dale C\Jihu1n .1~k c d lor mc mht:Js tron commrtled to preservtng all
grandparents of Elmer and Dar- to ,lltc nd the rnrettng ot Feeney ~
kmds nf monum ents Tom Ball. Jtm
lene Newell, Chester, and the Bennett Pos t Amc n l an Le!l iOn
O iler .tnd Kctth Ashley have worked
maternal great-grandmother, is
con~.:c rmn !l the loc;-ttmn of 1econls td
on the proJect
lnzy Newell of Chester.
Attending the party and presenting gifts were Leah Justts of
Orlando, Fla.; Meagan Hall, GarLOS ANG~ L ES (AP) - Mtn or- ' smd he can count on one hand the
rett Hall, Gwen 'H all,
Lucille
tty stuntw orkers are accustng H olly- number of days he's worked as a
Ridenour, Dorothy McGraw,
wood of d! Slf lnl lnat Jon ~ay 1ng the ~ tuntman lh1s year
Anqte Huxley, Trtsttan Huxley,
mdustry
1s h1rrn g wh1tcs tn stand m
In tndustry parlan ce. a 'patnt
Crystal Ridgeway, Cody Ridgel
or
black
actors
such
as
Eddtc
Murdown"
refers to a whtte stuntworker
way, Hannah Ridgeway, Evelyn
phy.
Samuel
Jackson
and
L
outs
Goswho
dons
dark make- up and wtgs to
Hoffman, Dalton Hoffman, Kayla
sett
Jr
st.md m for a rmnonty actor
Hoffman, Shawn Wtlfong, John
I
At a news conference Monday
' When you have patnt downs
and Mary Newell, Charlie Bissell
and Mtsty Newell, Rex Justis, se \er~•l stuntwo1kc1 s asked \Iewers you re takmg JObs away from
Curtis Justis, Kaleb Werry, lnzy to boyL: ott all V1aL:tllll pmrlm:: ts Oct
Afncan Amencans ," smd Marvm
Newell, Patsy Chadwell, Jordan 8 10 VJacom owns CBS MTV, VH- Walters a rcured black stuntman ' I
Chadwell, Crystal Bailey, Sabra
1 and N" kcl odeon, as well as the don' t care what they sa~. thts ts dt s·
Batley, Elmer and • Darlene Param oun t stud 1os and the Block
L:flm1natron "
Newell, i&lt;eith and Lila Rtdenour, buster ch,un o f v1deo rental stores
I he protest fo llows the cntt ctsm
Matt and Jenny Rtdenour.
W,.aync Ktn g Jr v.ilo doubled for of TV networks for thetr largely
Sending gifts were Ttm and Mtchacl Jordan tn Space Jam · whttc casttng thts season The lack
Karen Smith, Stacy Smtih, Eric
Smtih, Teresa Wilfong, Kpty Wilfong , Andrew Moore, Brooke
Chadwell, Heather and Charlte
Cleland, Jessie Cleland, Cassidy Cleland, Brett Cleland,
Kerla Casto, Christy Mills, Josh
Casto, Mar4:ella and Keith
Weber, Derek Weber, and Jeremy Casto, Laura Brown, June I
and Roger .Epple.
1

C lm:~1~n

lh..,Lu~~e~

'Saturday Night Live' 25th anniversary
brings back former cast members
NEW YORK (AP) -

NBC w ,lS

more than ready fo r pnme time
• An csttmated 22 4 mtllton people
watched the network's 25th annl\er
sary show for 'Saturda y Ntght
Ltve" on Sunday mght the ht ghcst
rated entertainment spec tal &gt;tnce the
Academy Awards tn March
The show opened wHh Btll Mur
ray, tn hts loun ge smger gut&gt;c bc lt!ng out Bruce Spnngstecn s Bad
lands, • among other songs Btll y

Crystal later resurrec ted h1s Fc rn.m
do ta fk ·show character v.nh the
famous line, " You look mah \ elous
w6tle comedtan Chns Roc k poked
tun at all the bad mo\-IC S fu1 mer cast

members have m.1de

SN L

Las t mcmhcrs v.ho have

dtcd Gtld,t Radncr Phtl Hartman,
Chn' P.trlcv and John Belusht. o f the

'
Nl)t Ready- fnr Pnmc Time Players
Irom the shows prem terc year, 1975 ..

unul 1979
A l te r the &gt;how the &gt;tar studded
c.1o, t .md gue ... ts took elev ators to the
R.unhow Room where a makcshth

Blu es Brothers band v.tth D an
Aykro) d John Goodman and Aerosmith s Jnc Perry and St e\t~ n Tyler
per lmmcd
riJcr~.;

\\CrC a u &gt;Upk ol we ll·
knm\ n no·o, hO\Vs Edd1c Murphy and
D. tn.l C.lt\Cy. both d1dn t .1H~nd and

.m 1\ Br spokesman (hd n 1 h.ne
L'X plan.HJOn !m the1r ab~cnccs

~m

- The show also patd tnbute to

,

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SALE
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 98CV112
HOMESIDE LENDING,
INC., PLAINTIFF, VS
D0 NAL D
R
RICHMAOND, et al,
DEFENDANTS
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

links, thence South
seventy nina rods and
filly links, thence East
five rods; thence South
forty eight rods and filly
links to the center of the
public road; thence
easterly along said road
to tho east line of said
fraction. thence North
about one hundrud and

acquired by tho said
Grantors, or their
successors, heirs and
asslgnns, the Grantees

hereby

waiving

with tho right to enter
upon the aurfae of said
real estate to explor• or
111111 drill for said coal ,

In purauance of an

twenty one rods to the

Order of Sale to me
directed from sold Court
in the above entitled

place of beginning ,
containing thirty five
acres , more or loss ,

provided

•ctlon, I will expose to

EXCEPT, however, from
the above deacrlbed
premises, a right of way

damages In said test
drilling
RESERVING
FURTHER, the right to

eale at public auction at
tbe courthouse on 10·15,

•1899 at 10.00 a.m. of

through

tho

same ,

aald day, the following
cteecrlbed real estate ·

heretofore conveyed by
one Luman Brine to one

The
fotlowl ng
dtocrlbod premises ,
altuatsd In tho Townshl~

John E Stansbury
FURTHER EXCEPTING
all coal, oil, gas &amp; other

of Rutland, County of

minerals now known to

Meigs and State of Ohio,
Tho following real

be under tho real estate,
or hereafter determined

estate situate In the
- Townehlp of Rutland ,
COUf"ty of Meigs, and

to be under said real
estate, together with the
rrght to mine and remove

State of Ohio, and being

8

a 1d

co a 1

by

a part of Fr~ctlon No 3,

underground

Town No 6, and Range
No. 14 of tho Ohio
Company'a Purchase

processes (strlpmlnlng
not Included) and tho
right and privilege of

and

bounded

and

daocrlbed ao follows
Beginning six rods

mining

· mining , removing and

transporting
underground and under

north of the northeast
corner of said Fraction

the surface of the above
described premises, coal

No. 3, thence West forty

from other lands now

elghl rods and fifteen

owned

or

---=----

hereafter

Announcement

tho

Grantors herein shall not
do
unnecessary

enter
upon
said
premtses , prospect ,
explore and drill for,
develop , produce, stor,e
and remove oil and gas,
or either of them, use a/!
machinery, structure

derricks, tanks , pipe
lrnes ,
equipment,
fixtures, machinery, and

Umon pnson m Chtcago The ltst of

mduded some children
and several women mcludrng AramInta Palmer a w1do~ from Great

pnsoncrs

Bend tn Metgs County She was a
wtdow and the daughter of a loyal

Unron fami ly She wa!l.

cook1ng

for

Confederates on l &gt;land No 10 tn the
M tsstsstppt Rt'fr when raptured
lnformauon ts la&lt;ktng on how1 she ·

came to th.tt plat.:e and that occ upa
uon

We need lots ofprayer.
We appreciate all the sympatlry
and help our frr ends have given us .

Robert R.

Durst

action, I will expose to
sale at public auction at
the Courthouse on Oct.

15, 1999 at 10·30 am of
said day, tho following
described real estate

Township of Salem ,
County of Meigs, and
State of Ohio
Beginn ing 401 leal

RESERVING FUTHEfl
the right to prospect,
explore and drill for,
mine, eKcavate and
remove such other
minerals as may be
hereafter determined to
be under said real
estate, by deep mining
methods,
without
encumbrance to the
surface
Dead References :

Property

We are not sure we cati gel Ol'er lhis.

In the ubovu untltlud

thmgs ne Cessary or
convenient therefore and
the right to use so much
of the surface as may be
necessary lor the
purposes aforesaid

Page 545

59 Years of Happmess untr/ we lost our son Tom
(On the right) Thrs year of 1999 rs a sad year.

In pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me
directed from said Court

other appliances and

Records
Prior
instrument
references: Volume 306,

6MIIW·t··w~.

SHERIFF'S SALE, REAL
ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 98CV087
NORWEST
BANK
MINNESOTA, NATIONAL
ASSOCIAT I 0 N,
AS
TRUSTEE , PLAINTIFF
VS PAUL J HATFIELD,
et al, DEFENDANTS
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

address

36694 Peterson Hollow
Road , Rutland, Ohio
45775
"
Appraised
at
$3P,OOO.OO

Terms of Sale : 10%
Cash day ot sale and
balance by Confirmation
of Sale
James M
Soulaby,

Sheriff, Meigs County
Heather E Peters
Lerner, Sampson
Rothfuss

Situated

In

the

r1~~~~;~,~:~~:s;

Ave Dept
N W , CR
SUite
DC 20036

MEDICAL BILLER
Up to $15·$45/hr
Process medtcal clatms lrom home
Tratmng provtded
MUST own comouler

one foot North of the
Northwest corner of Lol
No 20, as described In

the plat ol Longstroths
Addition to Martinsburg;

750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better Wa , Eve

bcr d1nn er 111 honor of the f1rst
n.ttlonal prodam.J1Hm ul Thanks.g1v
tng by Pres Ltnroln and the
annI\ cr!iary or the Gettysburg
~' e

£1\Cn on work to
Bulltn•ton J,J.md Battlefield It

needed tu du It 1 help A lcncr' hao, '
hcrn sent to hun to ask hun 10 wnrk •
to oht .un m.111;; h rng fund s lor .llcd~.;r ·
al !!rant now .H a ll.thh: h ) Mel\!.., ,
'
Count y
i\ rcpo rt \hi' g 1\ en on th e reL:cnt ~
C1vd V.'.tr J..:cn.ld ment ul th e Battle ,
ut ChKk.un.lUI!.I It W&lt;l!&lt;~ als o ~
.mnoun ~L'd th.n I he recn.rumcnt of :
the R.ud on GU\ ilndotte at Hunu ng
Inn W V.1 \\ Ill be h!.' ld un Nm 11· •
14 Abo Rerncrnhr.uKc Da) wtll he
held a t Getho,hurg P3 on SatUJd.ly

-

Nov 20

A bnllf dtsl: usston 1m o h ~d the
pm g1ess on the M c 1 g~ Coun·
t; monum ent to vet erans oJ all "·Irs :
Due s for 2000 arc now payable :
~.: um: n t

I

''"

Beech Grove Road
Gua Shoot
Slug and Shot
Matches
Every S1nday
1:00 P.M.

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel

992-1717

740·742·2138

l j l wiT•
Amdlrts
.

Grad1ng

Sepric Sysr~nu &amp;
Utilitw•

1740)992·3131

BfiR-J

Portable
Welding Services

·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing &amp; GuHors
•Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
·Patio &amp; Porch Decks
FrH Esffmlftl .

Gas-A&amp;C-Mig
Aluminum
A rr ytime-A11ywh ere
Hourly Rates

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-9178 .

22 yro. Local

of role s for nunorlltes tn Holly wood
h(.lS been a l:Ontcnll ous tssue

Walters eslrm aled thai of so me 65
black stun'tworkcrs tn Holl y" ood,
onl y 15 work on a reg ular basts
Walt ers satd ''we hold SAG ultt matel y responstblc refcrnn g to the
Screen Actors Gut ld, wl11 ch' repre -

sents nearly 96 000 actors mdudmg
st untw orkers ndttonwJde
Kathcnnc Moore ,; SAG spokeswoman satd the guild has an aggres-

si ve d1&gt;'ers1t y c.lmp.ug:n

a nd

BRAMHI COAL
COMPANY

.

Reasonable Rates

Recentl y purchased
Graham's Wood Produ cts
F1rcwood DIVISion

Ball l.ogglng
and Firewood

DEliVERY IYIIllllE

BobBall

I

HOUIS: 7am THRU 4pm

352 15 Ball Run Rd
Pomeroy, Ohto

MONDAY-FRIDAY
7amTONOON
SATURDAY

Joe N. Sayre

Rutland. Oh1o

Truck seats . car seats, headliners.
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops.
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets. etc.
Mon - Frl 8:30 • 5:00

• 'TOP

Take the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message After 6 pm

740·985·4180
Free Estimates

All types ol portable generators

Bankruptcy contact:

William Safranek, Attorney

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply
St Rt 7

800-900-8856
Sawmtll $3,795 Saw Logs tnto boards
planks, beams Large capactty
sawm tll value anywhere FREE tnlor
malton 1·800·578·1 363 NORWOOD
SAWMILLS 252 Sonwtll Dnve, Bu ffalo,

740-985-3813
Culverts 4" - 48" 1n stock

8" Grovelless leach
100' . 1000' Rolls I" &amp; 3/4" 200#Water Une
Fulllme of Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators Water Slorage Tanks

R. L. MASH
CARPENTRY•
New Homes

Garages
Replacement
Doors &amp; Wmdows
Wood &amp; Vinyl Stdtng
Custom Work
Kitchens &amp; Baths
Insured
24 Y rs Expenence

992-0437

&amp; ne1gfibor&gt;
wfio were

In

ln Lovmg Memory of
El1 Ebenbach, Jr.,
who paned awny

a specwl rfia'nf&lt;;

s~pt.

Weekly'
Home ' FREE
IPost1age! Bon uses' Start I
To Oet Started

Call for details
7 40-992-0038

Address·

CREDIT
No Credit • Slow Credtl • Bankt·up•icy
Repo • Divorded

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

Call Now for Instant Approval II ..

CALL MR. FOlD
(740)44N. . aa

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

28, 1993.

left U.f,
it s~enu like only
ye•terday,
for each day you are
.ail/ wirh us
l1ving 011 forever ir1
our memoriea!
Sadly ,...,ed by
Family &amp; Fnemu

.

Featured tn Fortunes Top 100
Jorn our hot new legal servtce
opportumly Commtsstons patd datly
l1fet rme res1dualmcome

-888·645-3657

CASH LOANS!
• Bad Credtt OK
• Easy Oualtlytng

n :o" ' ft'r

UUtlf

Sl1up rhe dq\~lf,.

J

s' r1101

740-992-3470

Now Renting

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio ,

740-992-5232
9127/99 1 mo pd

•Fast Servtce
• Low Payments
• Conltdenltal
1-800-478-()410

AMAIZ ING
PREDICTIONS •
COMPLIMENTARY READ ING'
Solves ALL Problems ! LoYe Ca
reer And Money ' Call Now I 1
954 n2 0796
STA~T
DAT ING
TONIGHT •
Have Fun Meetmg El1g1ble Sm·
gtes In Your A.rea Cart For More
Informa t ion 1 800 ROMA NCE
Ext 9735 ,

Start Dalfng Ton1ghtl Have fun
play•ng the OhtO Datmg Game I
800 ROMANCE extenSIOn 9681

30 Announcements
$100 00 Rtward for Saddle laic·
en from my barn In Galllpol ll

Ferry 304-675-2856
Attention Crarter• f Venders n
door craft la~r Oct 16 ren t lable
$10 00 call 304 675 3842 / 304
662 2469
New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 Wesl Sttmson Athens
740 592 1842
Ouahty clothmg and househo ld
11ems $1 00 bag sale every
T hursday Monday tttru Saturday

NYERS PAVING
Henderson.

VN

Parking Lots
Basketball Courts
Driveways
Grading Work
Hauling Stone

ROBERT BISSElL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Gllrages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

985-4473
7122(fFN

DEPOYSAG
PARTS
&amp;

Eqmpment Parts
Factory Authonzed

Case-IH Part s
D eal ers .
1000 St. Rl. 7 Soulll

Coolville, OH 45723

1-800-730-7772, ext 801 0

STONE
HAULED
I

•

'

'

Limestone
Gravel
Top Soli

MODERN
SANITATION SERVICE

740-992-3954

•

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6 ·30 PM
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500 00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie N00-50 " """'"

INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Std tng • New Garages
•Replacement Wtndows
•Room Addtttons
•Rooftng

COMMIRIIAland RISIDINnAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·7643

Help Wanted

SS$ Uakt $35 ·65 / Hour S.t
Your Schedule Be Your Ow n
Sou And Work Out Of Vcur

Home , Anywhere Grell P1yt
P1 ld VICitlonll Cell 1·80G-721·
9172
$1 000 s PAID WEEKLY For
Slulfmg &amp; Ma ll1ng Envelopes
Vour Own H ours! COMPANIE S
NEED MORE MAILERS!! Exc:1t1ng
tnlo R ush S A. S E Keystone
Box 951 INO Joplin MO 64802
$2 ,000 WEEKm Ma&lt;llng 400
Brochures ! Sa1 tslac11on Guar
anteedt Pos1age &amp; Suppt•es Pro
vHHtdt Rusn Self Add ress ed
Stamped Envelope' GICO DEPT
5 Bo• 1438 ANTIOCH TN
3701 1 ·1438 Start Immediately
$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN
MENT REFUNDS NO EXPERt
ENCE NECESSARY 1 800-854
6469 Ext 5046
$800 WEEKLY
P OTE NTIAL
Complete S1mple Government
Forms At Home No E~~:pe n e nc e
Necessary CA.LL TOL L FREE
1 BOO 966·3599 Ex! 2&amp;0 1 $34 00
Retund4ble Fee
' DANCERS '
Top Dollar (740)992 6387

ATTENTION
Have A Computer?
Pu111ToWork '
$25 $75/H r PTIFT

AM· 6 PM Stteryl Mcelermott
owner 304-895-3728

40

3 cals &amp; 3 k1t1ens to gtve away
740 992·99 37
3 tong haired k1t1ens 7 wks old

304 675 50&lt;1,1
6 P upp1es 6 Weeks Old To A
GoM Home 4 Female,s 2 Males
P ari Cocker Sp an1et 740 245

5291
Commode 304·675 5324
Female Blue Healer dog 14 men
old 304·576 2174

Moaer T V Neeels T int Re
pair 740 366 6676

Four bobtatl kttlens call 740 742
1412

Lost and Found

949 9006
Found Black &amp; Brown Terner
Storys Run Road 740 388·9357
Fo und Black &amp; While Femal e
Boston Terr ier On LeGrande
Bou t8\lard Can Jenmler 740 446
7465
L osl VW Pa ssa1 manual on
S tde H 11l Ad Rulland ThursCiay
evemng 740..742 1312

70

1-886 890-3481

Giveaway

Found beagle m1x ve ry friendly
Racine viciniTY no collar call 740

FREE ESTIMATES

110

Sheryl• Diner Letart WV Open 8

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vtctmty

1 2 M•les out R oute 2 1B Sep t
29th thru Oct 2nd
2 Fam•hes 6 Miles South On Ro
uta 7 Large Vartety 1 Sepl embe r
30th ThroUgh October 2nd

ALJ. Y•rd Sales Must
Be Paid In Advance
QEADLINE 2 00 p m
the day before the ad
Is to run Sunday
edition· 2 00 p m
Friday Mond8y edition
• 10 00 a m Saturday
3 Fam• ly Garage Sale Fnday &amp;
Saturday October 1st &amp; 2nd 9 00
A M ·6 00 P M 247 KeltQn Road
Behmd Alp ine Motel Wur t•tzer
Orga n, Furnll ure Car Appllan c
es D1shes Cookm~Uiensds
Beddmg Curtams l nens M1sc
Items Arts &amp; Cratts
Gara ge Sale September 30th
Oclober 1st 2nd Ra•n Or Shme
H ousehold Collec; tabtes Good
Clo th ing " Don t MISS ThiS OntW
2nd House On Lell Eladen Road
From 21 8

Pomeroy, . . ,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

X-Large 3 tlem $12 99 or
try Two large two 1tem $19 99
WE DELIVER
Open 4 00 p m Oa1ly

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

ASSEMBLY AT HOM Ell Cra fts
Toys Jewelry Wood Sew•ng
Typ1ng Greal Payl CALL 1 800
795·0380 E~~:t N201 (24 Hrs)

60

(304) 675·2457 Offkt
(304) 674·3311 Cell I'll.

Ail Makes Tractot

b•ke w•lh pedal
anyttrne 740

Now Open Poppy s Place Gift &amp;
Crall Supplie s 326 Ma tn Streel
Potn t Pleasant wv Acro ss from
Post Office

Ttres to g•ve away vanous s•zes
truck &amp; car mu st take all or none
304 675 2440

We Do•••
•
•
•
•
•

motor

304-675-5965

9 oo-5 JO

O ctober 1 sl October 2nd 1st
House South Rver Vartay H•gh
Scnoot Ceramics Greenware
Btsqueware Mtsc

&amp;

by htgh pnces r

I

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dm,
Agricultural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soit
(Low Rates)

Low or 0 downt Gov t and bank
repo s betng sold NOW I
Ftnanctng Available Call Nowl

Terms of sale· Cash

Rothfuss
120 E Fourth Stroot, 6th
Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 241-3100
OH Sup Ct #0055402
(9) 14, 21, 28 3T

We Deliver

740 BI7-G383

James M. Soulsby,
Shariff, Meigs County
Sara M Petersmann
L.erner, Sampson

WICKS
HfiOLII'tG ll'tC.

Cont. IWV003506

)OU

'Roclispnng&gt;
'Reliablilfanon Center.
'Dr 'Douglas J{unter,
'F1sher 'Funeral J{ome
&amp; 'Roger Wat&lt;Oll

.ooo·s

Longstreth&amp; Addition to

Property

L----------J

Personals

Floor

Si.x yean ago

fo tfie sfafJ a1

l~ .~m

Memory

-w;

;a ffiaugfitfill
dunng our loss

1

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

I'-.

We deliver ALMOST anything

'ilie 'Famdy of
'Bermce )I{ J{awk
wo"ld /die fa tfianK
all of tfie friends

Debt Soluttons
Consolidate All Btlls
Borrow~ng Made Easter
Cash Avatlable Call Nowl

Tuppers Plams , OH

Beginning Sept. 26th
Pomeroy

ANNOUNCEMENTS

(740) 592-5025 Athens

tte~"~"ff~ 24 Hr. Taxi

WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS

'.$

Now rs the I~Jt~e (or g.r H--t«
buys ., t~ cl•mifi&lt;ds

(740) 992·2753
or 992-1101

can 11~eve o debtor of fman"al obligutiotK and arronge a lao d~tttbutian of
mso~ among uedtion Aperson gotng through bonkruptty may retam tOIIam ,
property, known"' "mmpl' prol!"rty. lor ho or her per10nol ust Tltb moy
mclude a car, ahouse. cloth11 ond ho'"'hold goods You should d111!1 any
qu.,ltotK regardmg banktuptcy lo an Dllorney before prot~odill!l
For tnformatton regardtng

Mrl Delivery Service

Card of Thanks

ADsolmt Top Dollar All U S Sd
ver And Gold Cotns Proofsels.
Otamonds Aohque Jewetry Gold
R•ngs Prt·1 930 US Currency
S1er11ng Etc Acqu •sfiiOt\S Jewelry
M T S Coin SMp 1 S l Second

J ....

·New Homes·
Remodeling • Siding
• Roofs
25 yrs exp,erlence

By Appointment

8:30am· 8 pm
Sun 1 pm -6pm

CLASSIFIEDS!

Size• 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
HOUI'I

Wanted to Buy

Wanled To Buy Used Mob•le
Homes Call 740.446-0175 Or 1•

CONSTRUCTION

ADVANCED DRAINAGE SYSfEMS INC

New Store Hours
For Deer Season
Mpn-Sat

Wedemeyer s Aucu on Ser11•ce

Gal- Oillo 7&lt;0-319-2720

lutn Around

rUO&lt;"'"'
Dt•vers 2 Week Pa td COL Tra n
1ng No E xp Neeoed No Money
Nor Credit? No Prot;jwnl Earn up
To 532 000 1111 Yr W /full Benefltl pAM Transp ort Call Toll
Free' 1 877 230 6002 www o1r
4

""-'e'
EAAN S5 0K A. Year Comp U·
Mad SMks Full /Part T1me Metll
c:at Processors PC FleQwed NQ
Exper~e nce Necessa•y
W 1tl
Tram Cal 1·S00.458... 135
ELECTRICAL JOSS
No E1penence Aeqw ed A.ttra e
uve Salary 8enef 1IS Wtth Travel
And RelocatiOn Pa.a H1gn SchoOl
0 1ploma Graduales 17 30 F oe
lntervew Cal1 800-533-1Ei57

992 1703

OLDIES ·

BA:NKRUPT£Y

I

lull 11me 1uc tton eer complete
IUCI 1on
ser~•c•
licensed
i66': OhKI &amp; West Vtrglnll 304
77~5785 Ot lO'·TT'J.-5"7

Seek•ng

SMITH'S

110-5:00 Tues. Wed~
&amp; Thurs.
&amp;
I

Ina 11/0
Prgm! Vaca

a uort 24

bon

stan up eau Mike

UNIQUE
OPEN

'1\Hl T""' Hon'O

On Phone Apps 1 800 4-ft-4271
Eu ET292 Or wYI/• hornady

90

4/2 TFN

115 Salem St.
Rutland, Ohio

Ouv•r•
Hornady Truc:ll Une
Starti You \Jp To 3ACIMI PWs
aonun• Raises T1r &amp; Up To
$1 200 Onent P•y
Flilt.bect
MMI Atl P.atd' M
Conv

Rtell Pearson Auetton Company

740-949-2217

005

Linda's Painting

Help Wanted

ef Family"

Clean Lale Mode l Cars Or
Trucks Low M11es 1995 Mooers
Or Newer Smlln 8UIC11 Ponuac
1900 E.asiern Avenue Gal.lipots

94g;.2168
20 Yrs Exp • Ins Owner

110

21523

FREE ESTIMATES

• p.elt'o"el

'
I llu1u
A
ll I II 1
I

Buy, Sell or Trade

45n1

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

TREE SERVICE

Leave a Mes..-.age

CotnrM••• AueiJOnHnno
Servtc
1uction M1ll

11 Con11gnmen1

A'"""' GaH,..;• 740-«6-2842

JONES'

••7 40.992-6142

Co Rd 19

Racine , Ohio

IIEW·REPAIR

Being all of Lots Nos 28
and 29 as described In

31435 Bowles Ad.
Daxtor,&lt;DH 45726
Appraised at $5,000 00

le•etlHIMII
PH: 1740) 992·2772

3111,99 TFN

A &amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

h.t s

publt shed l or tlt c second yea r a
dtrcct ory call ed Stu nt Perform ers
of Color "

Ou111p Track or
Pick-•p i1 our yud

740-384-6212
lUMP IIID SIOIEI COil
H.E.I.P. YOOCIIERS
ACCEPTED

29670 Blehan Road

• Decks &amp; Boat Docks

FIREWOOD

Sr. 124 Wellston, Oh10

North 100 feet to the
place of beginning.

Page 903

• Roofing &amp; Seamless Gutter
• Replacement Windows •
• Coocrete
• A0011 Addrttons • Garages

the next rn cet1 ng

thence East 99 feet;
thence Soulh 100 feet t
West 99 teet, thence

Martinsburg
Pr i or
Instrument
reference• Volume 19

• Vinyl Sodtng

ROOFING

r

&amp; Badcho~
Se.:r,ice•
House &amp; Tra1ler Sttcs
Land Cleanng &amp;

·Room -Ions &amp; Remodtllng
·New Garages

SELF STORACE

Howard L Wrrtesel

Brdhlo•~r

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

New camp officers wtll be elec ted at

stmple low !l'IOnthly payment
t~ttmtnat:A Htgh Interest Save
debt
IFls,~,;j~~.;w~~htle
lor renters. hotmeownet·sl

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

HILL'S

&amp;SWI..

EXCAVATING CO.

American Legion
Post 467

~a~

w.t s noted tl;at U S Rep Ted Stnc k-.
land &gt;tated he dtd knm\ what he

SAYRE
TRUCKING

J &amp; L l•nhlflo•

HOWARD

R1tland, Ohio .

Address

An upd.uc

HARfWEIL
STORAGE

'

In the

even people wtth credtt diftlicul-1
Sales
Brochure s'
Spectaltzing tn credtl caras,J
Suppltes, postage' Sta~ ;mmedtate- IC(1IIe1:titc'" accounts, medtcal
1
GenUine Opporlunttyl
unsecured loans Call 1
AS E
GSECO, 11220
189&lt;'·2200 Ext 340 A50t(c)(3)
PMB 108, Flonssant,
roltt Orgamzatton.
www cambndgecredtt erg

South of a corner stone

&amp;

t 20 E Fourth Street, 8th
Floor, Cincinnati , Ohio
45202

THE GOVERNMENT
BUSINESS. Grants.
Tracer $800/wk Free
lincoroot·atit'n Free check
IAcce·ot checks by lax, pho)1e. or
180·0-4 · 6:0712 Fax Demand
doc#413 Send SASE lo

f --

the cap 'oted to htrc a Ltn coln
Impersonator to attend the Nove m·

STRUGGLING WITH BILLS?
CONSOLIDATE INTO ONE LOW
PAYMENT"
Reduce or Watve Interest
Stop Late Fees
r.ii¢nrrl Stop Collector Calls Avotd Bankruptcy
CONTINENTAL CREDIT
COUNSELING
1·888-455·2227
NON PROFIT

Public Notice

LEGAL DESCRIPTION

Volume 198, Page 605
and Volume 229 , page
979, Meigs County Deed

C.ll&amp;lll'leToN... 1'111b Aaaltw 'J
Portland, Ohw
Mr. II Mr. ••• at L Dlll'lt
recently celebrated th etr

(513) 241-3100
OH Sup. Ct. 110069144
(9)14, 21 , 28 3T

for

themselves,
their
successors,
rights
above set forth , together

that

POLICE IMPOI:JND Honda's
Toyota's, Chevys•. Jeeps and
Spo~ Uithttes Fee Requtred
Call Nowl
800-772-7470, ext. 7833

Public Notice

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

8&amp;1 UOOCI&amp;~ptUQh AuetlonMflftQ

St1111 M•ddl tpo rt ThurtdiYii
Oh•o L•cenn t76t3 740·989·

I

the

Black stuntworkers c;:omplain of hiring discrimination in Hollywood

REV,.ICHARLES SWIGGER

Call992-215~

To place an ad

A nc\1 CIVIl War b\lok cnutled

'To Dre 10

Auction
end Flee Market

10

Business Services .

S.U.V. works
to
form
ladies
organization:
or

Rev.
Charles
Swigger
" named new pastor at Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church

10 Chn~·tlan work as

Tuesday, SeAtember 28, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 28, 1999

A ll Yard Salel Muat Be Paid In
Ad vance Deadline 1 OOpm the
d•y before tne 8;d 11 to run,
Sunday &amp; Monday ed i tion·
1 DOpm Friday
Ra m or sh•fle· garage sale two
raml1y Thursday September 30 &amp;
Fnday October 1 FOtmerly Jo s
G1ff SMp 3202 Syracuse Bally
sw•ng like new baOy cloth ing dtl
ferent SIZes walke r toys worn
ens ctothmg coats dresses
sweater blue jeans shoes n1ce
tots of diShes b•rd cage what
nols brass lamp oil pamtmg re
prOduCiton spmnmg wheel glass
tables

www pc tncome com
Ann LPNs RNs EMTs And Par
am&amp;d iC:St Bec:ome An AN Or BSN
Graduate And Increase Vour In
come Wit hout Go•no Back To
Schoolt To Schedule Your Inter.
vtew In Huntington Call Angela
C opeland By Ocr 7 1 800 7 37

2222
AVON' All Areas ! To Buy or Se ll
Shirley Spears 304 67 5-1429
Babys ner For 2 Bo~s Ages 4 &amp;
9 For Second Sh It 2 30 11 30
PM Prelerably G reen S chool
D1stnc1 , 3 Days A Week Refer
ences Req w ed CaB 740 446 0440 740.446 0513
Bartender
1428

Wanled

740 441

Care For E ld erly Gentleman
Room Board-&amp; Salary 740 446

405 1
C hurch Treasurer 24 Hr s Pe r
Week D omg Bookkeepmg &amp;
M•sc olhce Ghore s Must be
Comput er Ulerate SeM Resum.e
to G race Un tied Met hoctls t
Church 600 Second Street Gallt
pohs OH 45631
COMMUNICATIONS
REPAIR TRAINEES
On The Job Trammg Wh1le
Earnmg $$$ Wo r ld w1de Trave l
And Relocation Patd 30 Days
Patd vacat1on Earned Each Year
Exce ll ent BenefitS Ages 17 29
H1gn SchOol Gra ds Call 1 800
533 1657
Computer Users Needed Wo rk
Own Hrs $25K ·S80KJ Yr 1 800
53&amp;0486 X 7777 www 1cwpC(lm
Orver /Owner Operator Ch1cago
Area Truck Company Needs
Owner Operat ors To Opera te
East 01 Rockies Great Pay New
Tra11ers Ma•lmum Mtles Small
Fleet Owner We lcome Ca ll 888
782 5400 Ext 207

Full

lime

conSIIUCttOn POSI110n
catJ 740

e•pe r~enc: e reQuired

742 3411

Gatha Me•gs Communlly ACtton
.t.gency Is Accep ting App l1C a ·
11ons For A STAFF ACCOUNT•
Afil Assoc 1ate Degree In Busl
neas / Acc ountmg Wttl'l Twa
Years Nonprohl Account mg Ex·
penance ReqUi red Computer Ex·
penen ce A MuS! Oetad Onented
With .At! I tty To Work lnctepen·
den!ly And As A Team P l ayer
W1ll Mamlatn Genera l Ledgers
Journal Entr~es Cash Rec:e•pts
B udg ets Cash F lo w Invent o ry
Rec:oras P1epa re PayrOll Reports
Ano Ftnanc1at Repons To Fund·
mg Sources Re sumes Aru1 Ap·
phca1 1ons Wtll Be -.ccepted At
T he Cheshire Ott1ce 8010 North
State Route 7 Un111 4 30 PM On
Oc:tober 8 19 99 GMCAA Is An
Equal Opportumty Employer

pertenc:e
penence A
With Ability
dently And As A Team Play Will
Process Ac counts Payable And
Payrot! Prepare Cash Receipts
And Ma 1n tam All Records R e
sume And App l•cattons W tll Be
Accepted At The Chesh re Ofhce,
801 0 N orth State Reu le 1 Unlll
4 30 PM On Oc tobel 8 1999
GMCAA Is An Equal Qpportu11.11y
Employer
•
He lp wanted canng for elele r ly
n•ght..shl!t 7pm·9am 740·99.2
5023
YOU HAVE 5 395 lbs TQ
Call To Ear n Extra Income
Around Your SChedule Call 1
800 335 9771

L

Immediate Openmgs tor hou'se
keepmg llau ndry a•de Pan t11,e,
A.ppty Po tnt
rota w ig sn1fts
Pleasa nt Center /G ene ~ts E ld er
care State Route 62 Route .1
,Box 326 Pont Pleasant WV
Equal Opportumty Employer
K&amp;L Catermg Now H1rlng SeM
Resumes 121 Green Terrace
Court Galllpohs OhiO
LEGAL SECRETARY
Needed for busy Atnel')s law Ot
lice Must knew or qu•ctly be able
10 learn Corel (Word Pe r!ect) 7 0
Retireme nt otan ava lable A great
opportuntty fo1 the nature hara
wor kmg md •v dual w1t1tng lo make
a long te rm comm 1ment Salary
commen surate w 11h expe nence
Respond 10 P 0 Box 729 88 olo
T he Da iy Senttnet Pomer-oy OH
45769
Local lax offtce needs pan 11me
rax p~aparers l or up comn1g t~u
season we w11l tram send resume
to Da •ly Senllnel PO BoK 729 89
Pomeroy Oh 45769
MEDICAL 81L!JING Earn Excel
lent Income Fu ll T1a nmg Com
purer Req u red Call Toll F'ree
800.540 6333 E.r 2301
MEDICAL BILLING Earn Excel
lenl $ S $ I Process ng Cla t m ~
Fr-om Home Full T atntng Prov1o
ed Compu1er Req u red Ca n
Medtworks Toll Free 1 BOO 5J IJ
6333 Ext 2Jt2
Medical Data
Entry Rep s
Needed Fbr Entr~ Lewel Por.l
tlon FT / PT Eu:ellent Pay PC
Req C8ll 800-298-8506

MOTHERS 6: OTHERS WOR K
FROM HOME I Ma 1 OtMr Pi r1
T1me &amp; Full Ttme $650 $3 600
Month F.ull Tratn tng Provided '
For FREE Booklet Call 1 888 23&lt;l
9897 www cash 91 1 com.homA
Need 7 Lad1es To Se11 Avo11 740
446 3358
Needed Calflers for Gall•a Cou n
ty Area' 1 (8001 896 9705
NOW HIRING

F nance

$170 00 PEA WEEK

BRANCH MANAGEMENT

TRAINEE
Amer •can Genera l Fmance A
Leader In The Fmanctal Servtces
Industry Wtth Over $11 Bllhon In
A ss~ts And Mo re Than 1 300
Branches Nauonw•da Has An hn
mMiate Need Fo1 A Branch
Management Tramee tn Our
Jadl.son Office
IndiVIduals W1ll Part•c•pate tn An
In lens ve On The Job Tra;m1ng
Pr ogram Des1gned To Prepa re
r You For Branch Manager Re
spons tbil llteS TM 18 Monlh
Modular Trammg Program In
struc ts You In All Aspects Of
Managmg Cred11 Exten!i 10n Ac·
C0 1Jn1 Ad]ustment Busmess De
vetopment AM Personnel Sralf

ng
Appl •canrs For T hts Entry level
Opportun•ty ShOulCI Ha ve Four
Years Post H1gh Sc:Mol Educa
110n Tra n ng Or Work E.pe r~·
ence (Sales Expen ence P re
!erred) Strong Wr 1tten Anel Ver
bat CommumC:B IIOn Skills AM A
Va l d Or ver s Ltcense Must Be
Open To RelocatiOn And Have
nLe Des1re To Assume Manag e
pat Responstbilit'f ,
Amer ican General Fmance Oilers
A Compel1t1ve Bene! 1ts Pa ckage
lncludmg Med ical O&amp;nlal And A
401 (k) Plan Far tmmec!late Con
s1deral on Please Sen(:! Your Re
sume To Ame r~can Gene ral
F nance P 0 So~ 702 Jackson
OH 45640 0702 Please V1s1t Our
Web Stte At www aglmanc:e com
EQual Opporll.lnily E/ll)loyer

PART TIME
(GUARANTEED SA LARY)
Men Ano Women Needed To
Do Te lepMne Opera101 Work Foe
LOCAL RADIO STATION
PROMOTIONS

• Day And Even ng
Shift Ava•laOfe
• Full And Parl Ttme ()pemngs
No E~per•ence Needed
WETRAIN
,..
• Opportun•ty For Advanc:emerl
• College Students Welcome
Apply In Person At
; 7 P ne Street
Gan pohs d'H
Tuesday September 28th
Wednesday Seplcmt&gt;pr 29th
Thursda~ September 301h
300 PM Tll600 PM ONLY ~
Ask For Ms Hammond
Now Htrmg E•penenced Btl lrng '"
Clerk PT ' Fl For Home Hea.Jtn Agency MAKE YOUR OWN
HOURS ! Send Resume To Cl~ ·
482 c/o Gall polls Da1ty Tr tlu,a
825 Thtrd Avenue Ga lhpoils Q.,
45631
•
Now H ~rlng 8 Serv Cing Galli a
Jackson &amp; Me•g s For AN CNA 1
PCA A1des Expenence Preferred
Tra1r11ng Ava ilable Ap ply M F
AM 5 PM AI Family Sentor
Care 266 Upper R•ver ~oad Ao
ute 7 Gal li polis Across From
French City Homes

a

Overbrook Center 333 Page .
Street tJ]Iddleporl Oh has part
time posLIIons ava•tabte lor AN s •
lor weekends &amp; on call salary up
to $ 17 SO an hour no benefits ~
anyone mlerested please stop by ~
&amp; fill ou1 an application EOE

�Pllglt 10 • The Dally Sentinel

./

'

....

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

•

September 28, 1999

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11.

Ohio

NEA
ALDER

:J7 Cell - - ...,.
31 FlrsV*

ACROSS

P,fUIJ.IP

I C

1 n'
1:1 A

CrOIIWOrd

, 12~1

•

40 f:.. 111

I

•r

., Q&lt;ll

Puzzle
•

to Pia tla •IPUIIIe

AI

•

ztloft

1

ce.u
M I 1!,
13&amp;::"-l..
14 I'm ' I .._ 44-0ynl'•
15 Tfpeaf

Regi1tered Pomeren.ant.
Shrh-Tzu5.
and
M tniOochlluldi.I:I04)S75-3381.

Ofttbrook center, 333 Page

StrMt, ...,._ ~I, Oh ., hal part
ttm. poaidona rot STNA' a •van_.. 1Jor al alif'l:l &amp; a I ds, an--

2.1 Conll lllln. PHONE CARD
Rio . EIISY $$ MONEV !I FEW
Hours' Earn $500 ·$5 000 IWk
CASH! FREE SUes 1-800·997-

- -··ted
-.Nin.ccm-

pleaE0E
. . '""' by &amp;
.. OUI Ill •IIPicatiOn

9888, 24th

OWN A COMPIJTER. PUT IT TO

Z.k.-.. PHOHE
CARD-.

WORK. $150 ·$3,500 MO PT./Ft
FREE Oelalla. log Onlo. hllp ./1

save_

Earn S750 ·$3.000 CASH! FREE locations

Coclo 5298
PHAIIIIAC¥ npl POSillON

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee UnleSS We Winl

Frao Card &amp; Video.

1·881H101H55 I, 24 Hrs.

Apply At Fruth Pharmacy. 299t

1-e&amp;8-582·3345

ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
S1 .00Q A Day No Selling NOI
MLM For Free InformatiOn Package Call 1-800-786·8849. 24 Hno.
XT 27

State Routt 160, GallipoliS:.
Acroas From Holzer Hospital No
Phone Calls Please We Offer A

car-. Not Ju$1 A Job

Mount's TrH Service rrl\t Tre.
Pro fessionals" Bucket Truck
Service. Top. Trim. RlmOVII ,
Stump. Grllldiog FrM Elhmatfl
Fully Insured. Wofks Comp, Bidwelt, OH Call And
1·800·
838-9568. 740-388-96&lt;18. Owner
Rod&lt; Mount

Full-Tome

Poaltion, W1th Possible Re•m-

EARN $90.000 YEARLY Repaor·
tog , NOT ReplaCing , Long Cracks
In Wtndshte lds Free Vtd eo 1800 -826 -85 23 US tCanaoa

POSTAL JOBS 1"o $18 35 IHR
INC BENEFITS, NO EXPERI·
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO. CALL 1-800 -813-3585 .
EXT 14210 8 AM .·9 PM ., 7
OO.YS Ida. Inc Fee

GET PAID Wh•l e You Surr Trie
Web- Go To http ll www.goto·
W&lt;llld oomlge"""""""ll·
Works asp ?r id~t031141662 Sign
Up for FREE, And Get A FREE

Fun T1m1 Poslt•on For CRTT r

RAT Will Consider New Graduate
Ponessmg Valid Oh.a L•cense
Or Permit Must Be t&lt;nowledge·
able In AI Aspect 01 Respiratory

Browse&lt;'

Therapy Including ASGs And
EKG1. Compeli .1ve Pay Contact

HUGE OPPORTUN ITY Wllh A
Revc luttc nary Te lecommumcatlons System Free Nattbnwtde
Votcema•l , Can Forwardmg , Call
Screening _ LD caus 1 9c /Mtn
NOW SELLING Gtve Away Free
Trta!s t -800 -310 6718. El(t 817442-o4-42

Doctors -Hospital Nelsonv•lle 0
740-753-193t Ed 6262

River Front Honda Galltpohs ,
Ohio, Serv1ce Manager And
Clean Up ""''"n Nllllded. Ca~ 1
800-982-9253. Or 7~·2240.

To Come To Nash~tlle,. Tennes see And Audtllon For Major
Record Producer~
Internet

---ac

MAKE MONEY FROM HOME
Wllh Th i s ProYen Tested &amp;
Guaranteed Program
Earn
$5.000• Per Month Wrth Mrntmal
Investment Ca ll 800 -811-2141
COCI&amp;I 100112 Vrs•t hnp mraelexIC conv'topseaelsl

TRUCK OIIYERS NEEDED
JCJTIIUCKING, INC

IS HIRING IN 'lOUR AREA
WE OFFER: OTA and Regional

--~Pay

MEDICAL BILLER Up lo $15 •
$45 IHr Med•cal Blllmg Sortware
Company Neeels People To Process Medtcal Clatms F(Om Home
Trammg Provided Must Own
Compufers t-800·434 5518 Ext
667

P.aid -'&lt;ly, ~ dope,. avai

Heallli ln$uranC8 &amp; vacaoon pay
Late modet Corwentionals Asslgned TractOIS

NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
Wednesday Sap! 29th '""" 2pm4pm Comfort lnn,605 E Matn St ,
Jad&lt;lonOh
For more Information Expertenced

MEDICAL BILLING Unlimited Income Potenttal No Expeuence
Necessary Free lnformal•on &amp;
CO-ROM ln\lestment $4,995 $8,995 Flnancmg Available Is·
land Automated Med1cal ServiCes. Inc 800· 322·1139. Ext 050
Void In KY, IN, CT

DrM!&lt;S caN I -(800)-86Q.7364
.

WANTED
63 people to lose 30.Ibs in 30
days &amp; earn S$$$$ while surtmg
the net. 1..a88-229-8427 www.evt-

lalily.nellleelgood

START YOUR OWN VENDING
Busmess For As Ltnte As S10001
All CASH BUSINESS'! 1-800·
220-2985, 24 Hrs

Wanlecl A Hard Worktng Honest
Person FOf Full-Ttme Carpet Installation Employment Salary Is
Dependent On Number 01 Yard
Excellent Job Oppor1umty Apply
At- 629 McCaaskey Road , Vtnton ,
Or
74o-388-9033

WE ARE ENGERGIZING E·
COMMERCE ON THE INTER·
NET II! Have 'four Own Turn -Key
Onlme 8usNss Through 'HAND
TECHNOLOGY' Low Sta ri -Up
Cost Gives You A Complete
Package With Menlonng And
Trammg To Help You Succeed
Ca ll Ivan Turner, 877-324-8135
TC,28586

ca•

Wanted Tractor Tratle r Drrver.
To Haul With A Coal Bucket. Experience A Must, It Interested
can Usa. 740-286-4951
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 I HR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR·
DENS.
SECURITY,
MAIN·
TENANCE, PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO. CAll 1 800-813 ·
3585, EXT 14211 8 AM ·9 PM
7 OAYS Ids, inc. Fee

220 Money to Loan
$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remaining Payments
On Property Sold' Mortgagest
Annu•tlesl Settlements! Immediate Quotes!! I 'Nobody Beats
Our Prices· Nallonai Contract
Buyers 800-490-0731 El(t 101
www.natiorWcontraclbuyers com

WORK FROM HOME I ExploSive
Mall Order Busn~ess• Earn B tg
$$$! PIT Eflort, FfT Results! Call
24 Hours Free Info.' t-888-3685tt8
Opt
1
www work·
atnorne conVnlcoleandkEI'Jin

$$$ OVE.RDUE BILLS!!! $$$ Con·
sol1date Debts! Same Day Approval NO APPLICATION FEES!! 1·
800·863-9006 Ext 936 www helppay-bills com

Business
Training

.140

$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Wealthy Fam:f!res Unloading Millions Of Dollars, To Help Mimmtze
Their Taxes Write Immediately
Windfalls, 847-A SECOND AVE ,
SUITE 1350, NEW YORK NEW
YORK 10017

Gelllpola c • ..., College
(Careers CkJse To Home)
Cai!Todayi7-I0-446·4367,
1·8()().214·0452,
Reg 190.05-12746

150

Schools
Instruction

"GUARANTEED APPROVAL'
Bank Card, No Credit Check, No
Up-Front Cash Security Depos1l
Required 'Must Be 18+ And
Have Val id Checking Account•
Pre-Appro~al By Phone 1-800689-1556

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Bachelors ,
Masters. Ooctorale , By Correspondence Based Upon Pnor Education _AM Short Study Course
For FREE lnfor mauon Booltlet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1-800-964-8316

FREE MONEY! II s True . Ne\ler
Repay Guaranteed
$500 $50,000 - For Debt Consolidation,
Per1onal Needs, Medical Btlls,
Education &amp; Business. Call Toll·
Free 1; 80!)-724-6047 (24 Hrs)

180 Wanted To Do
Georges Portable Sawmtll, don't
haul your logs to the m11t JUSt call
304-875-1957.

CASH Or LOAN! Farm Capita!
Will Purchase Or loan Against
Your Government Farm Payments (CRPJPFC) Cal! Farm
Capila! 1·888-FARM-ACT (327·
6228)

Jims Drywall &amp; Construction
New Construcuon &amp; Remodel !
Drywat! , Siding, Roofs Add !
lions, Painttf1g. etc (304)6744623 or (304)674·0155.
Klms Cleaning &amp; lnlert or Patnting Commerctal Residen tial
Reasonable Rates Free est!males caii304-674·4E23
we do !railer demolltJon&amp;some
homes&amp; trash pick up 304 -773·
6167
Will Do Painting &amp; Odd Jobs
$4 00 A Hour, 740-367·0140

FINANCI A L
'

210

Business
Opportunliy

!NOTICE!
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends thai you do busi
nell with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall unlll you have Investigated

!he offoring.
AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 ·20 L:-ocations S4K ·SIOK
$4,000 +IMo , Income • ALL
CASH! 100'f• Finan&lt;:e Available .
1·800-380-2615. 24 Hrs
CHRISTMAS IS COMING, Turn
Your Spare Time Into EXTRA
S$$ . PT/FT Men ·Women •
Homem~t~kers Average $200 To
$2,000 Per Month. Call Now! 1800-34().3202
DENTAL BILLER Up lo S15 ·$45
/Hr Dental Billing Software Company Needs People To Process
Medical Claims From Home
Training Provided Must Own
Computer t-800 -223-1149 Ext
460

the Federal Fa~r Housing N;t.
of 1968 whiCh makes il Hlegal
lo adVertiSe ·any prete•enoe ,
limttation or dlscnmtnatlon
based on race, color. rettgion,
cex farmhal status or nalional
~n . or any Intention to
make any sucn pref'efenoe,
limita1ton or discrtrmnatiOfl •

This newspaper will not
k00W0r9\' accept

advertrsements fol real estate
which tS 1n viOlatiOn of the
law 0... readers are hereby
tnfcnned that all dwelltngs
advertised In this newspaper
are avrulable on ar. equal
OI)JJOffunity baSIS

Pages! Go To r,np lfalladvan
tage com/go asp?r~tfldsARW579
For lnformatton And Free Sign·
Up!

COUNTRY. Call Now Toll Free 1·
800-.. 69-8164 For Appointment

EOE

AI real estate ad¥ettiSif'IQ in

this ne• spaper Iss~ to

Mike Money For Vlewmg Web

SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN

,

CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monthly Payments 20 -50% Save
Thousands Of Dollars In Interest
Non-Prollt TCC 800-758·3844
CREDIT PROBLEMS Slop Here
We Can Help loans AYal!able
$3.000 And Up. No Fee 1· 877663·9269 El!l 221
CREDIT PROBLEMS
STOP
HERE!! WE CAN HELP!! LOANS
AVAILABlE $3,000 AND UP
CAll TOLL FREE 1·877·663·
9269 Ex! 231

310 Homes for Sala
li t! A.S A P LIQU!OATION!II! Repossessed / Must Sell 4 Brand
New, Super Insulated. A.rtordable
Prefab Home Packages Highest
Quality Fast Easy Construchon Your FoundatiOn, 31o4/5 Bedrooms
1.Q00.874-0032 Sacnflee!l
$0 DOWN! HOMES NO CREDIT
FORE·
NEEDED•
GOV T
CLOSURES! CAll NOW FOR
REGISTRATION r 1-800-434·
2434 EXT 3205 (N\) FEE)
3 Houses. Fmancmg Avallatile,
$18,000 Each Discount For Cash
All Pomeroy Area 740-388859t 3:}4-633-8937
ARIZONA RARE BUVI Pnstine 40
Acre Ranches !n Northwesl Ari·
zona From Only $495/Acrel Lush
Vogetat•on, Mountam V1ews! No
Oualtfying, Low Down, Ask AbOut
6 Mo InspectiOn Program! 1-800711·2340
Br1ck
Ranch ,
3Bedrooms ,
28aths, 2 Car Garage, 1 2Acre, 1
Year Old Pt Pleasant. $125,000
(3041675-8959

Buy Homes From $10.000
• 1 -3 Bedroom Local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Ftnanclng
Poss1b!e For listings Call 800 319·3323 E•l 1709
Close to Toyota Plani/Bulla!o
3BR Stngle-Story, butll-ln Kitchen w/Double-Oven and Garbage
D1sposal OneBathroom Utl! lly Rootn large llvmg Room w/Fne ptace Gas Furnace w/Propane
andlor Natural Gas Hook-Up Two
Car Garage(Unauached) One
Storage Building, Chainlink
Fence around lhe Back Yard
(3041937·3646
FORECLOSED HOMES low Or 0
Down! Gov t And Bank Aepo 's
Betng Sold NOW! Financing
Ava•lable Call Now1 1-800-7307772, Ext 8040
HOME FORECLOSURES • NO
MONEV DOWN! NO CREDIT
NEEDED! .TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! 1·800·916·
9191 xH5023
House &amp; 5 acres, heat pump,
needs
remodeled.
asking
$30,000 two miles eas1 on Long
Aun !rom Bashan Ftre Dep't, 740·
992·7945
'

011 Aoule 2 88 Meadow Lane.
ApK 2 Level Ac res, Lovely
Rancher, Fpl , 3BAs. 2BA, 2C garage Deck, Porch $79 900
Chen Brown, Rea ltor Ullom Aeal1y/BH(J, (3041733-7119
Older home for sale, Dexter, prl·
vale. ftreplace, truit trees, great
place lor hunlers. asking $32,500,
740-992-3325
Must Sell! 4 Bedrooms, 3 Baths.
Brick Ranch On 2 12 Acres
Cathedral Cetllng· Full Basement,
3120 Sq Ft Of liYing Space. Attached 2 Car Garage Pool . located Between B1dwell &amp; Vmton,
A.sktng $114,900, 740-388·8074
Rac ine- lhree bedroom . $400
monlh plus uhlltles, $200 dapostt,
no pets references required,
74!1·949-2621
""HOMES FROM $1 0,0001" I •
5 Bedroom local Repos &amp; Fore·
closures Fee Flnanctng Possi ble. For Listings 1-800-719-3001
x1t85

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

14x70 trailer, t -112 bath6, 2-3
bedrooms some new carpel and
rem ooeung , must sell . asking
$11 000 740·992·5688

N.eod A Loan? Try Debl Consolidaha n $5,000 • 1200,000 Bad
Cr'\dll O.K. Foe 1·800·770·0092
EMt 215

1972 Redman 12x70 In Good
Condttlon, New Furnace , $4 800.
Call Belween 4 &amp; 8 PM 740-2455788 Or 740·245-9029.

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
Ollice VIsit Necessary Up To
$500 Instantly Call Toll Free
I (877)EARLYPAY
lsi
AO·
VANCE FREEl UCOOC&lt;:70036

1999 Doubtew1de Repo Never
Ltved In New Home Warranty 0
Down If Oualilled , 740-446-3093,
Oakwood, Gallrpolrs, Ontyll

WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS,
MORTGAGES , DEEDS
OF
TRUST NATIONWIDE CALL
BEN OWENS (TOll FREE) j .
888-399-1965

14x70 mobile hOme. $1000 call
740-949-2072

wanr A Home Don't Have Land?
We Do, Hurry Only 10 Lots Lell .
800·383-6862
Ooublewkles Free Decor &amp; Furni-

ture
HURRY, HURRY, HURRY!
OAKWOOD HOMES
BARBOURSVILLE . WV
800-383·6862
Btg Selecrron used 10 Fr 12 Ft
14 Ft Wide . Kanauga Mobile
Homes. 740-446·9662

7806

1 Bedroom. AJC. WID Hook-Up,
Near Arbors Nursing Home, No
Pets, Quiet Locations. $279/Mo •
• UtilitiiS 74()-.446.-2957

HUD Homes Approval By Pllono,
Singl es Or Doubles, 740· 446·
3583

New 48R 16 ••de, $500 Down,
$245 permo Free A~r . 1- 800 691-fim
Spec1al 28:..80, 3 or 4BR $1000
Down , $349 per mo. Free Delivooy &amp; $etup. 1 -~1-6777

340 Business and
Buildings
3.000 Sq Ft Commerc1al Butld mg m Henderson for rent, lease,
or sale Call Sonny Reynolds .
(304)67~123

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

-message

NICe, Ou•et 2 br k1t appliances&amp;
AJC &amp; carpet Rererences/Oeposil: 3Q.4-675-4:102
2bdrm apts • total electric, ap·
phances turnistted, laundry room
lac•ht•es close to SChOOl m town
Appllcattons available at Vtllage
Green At~ts 149 or cal! 740.992·
3711 EOH.
4 Room Apt. Newly Decorated,
$250 00 Month P.lus Deposll And
1 Years Lease No Pels . Appl!!ances Furnished Cal 740-4461163
Apartment lor rent '" Pomeroy.

no

Apphcarions Now Accepted For.
Exira Spec;ial One Bedroom , Very Clean, Slove, Fng· ,
Washer, Dryer Tota! Electric IN;
Non-S mokers Only No Pets.
$300 Oeposh. $350/Mo., 740-4462205 . 740·446·9585, Ask For
Virginia

Small BU1

2 4110 acres &amp; 3 4110 acres wilh
large garage on 681 Land c:ontracl, 740-384-3845
2 Acres of land out Eckard Chapel RO $14 ,500 llrm 304-882-

3346
Township. Galha County Scentc,
Quiet, Close To Galltpohs, Some
Restncttons. 740-245-5776

3 A Homesite . water tap, ready
lor building. Rtdgewood Estates
304-675·2564

23 ACRES
2 Mr5es On SA 7 &amp; SA 218, South

01 Gallipolis Singlewides Allowed
Rough. MosUy Woodecl, Road AI_.
ready Cut In Land Contract
Ava •lable Only $27.000. 1-800213-8365

360

1

2 br apt tn New Haven S275 a
mon. mcludes water ,trash,relng·
era tor&amp; stove 304· 773· 5577

pets, 7 40-992-5858

2 44 Acres, Homestte. Green

REAL ESTATE

GET VOUA CASH NOW! Olt1es1
Buyers 01 Structured Settlements
Annuities . And Gavernment Farm
Payments Also Purchas~ng Lotteries And Private Mortgages
Call Settlement Cap1tal 1·800·
959-0006 www setllementcap•talcom

RE CEIVING PAYMENTS? In
Yeslor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller t:'1nanced Mortgage.
Real Estate Conlract, Insurance
Annuity Highest Prices Free
Quotes Why Wait? Cal! Rich , t 800-888 6450

1993 Clayton 16•80 Very Nice.
Super Clean. 3 Bedroo ms 2
Balhs With Big Round Bathtub.
Hut Pump, Eleclflc. $21 ,000
7&lt;0-25&amp;-6382

1 bedroom apt 1n Henderaon
$200 per mo • dllpOSMelonlnc
es roqwod (304)675-19n.

New 38R 2 Bath, 14 WKie $500
Down. $210 per mo. ff'ee Atr 1800-69 1-sm.

www .~com

EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR
Send us A One Page Form we
Do The Rest No Direct Selhng
Free lnlo Package 1-800 -831 2385, 24 Hrs.. E•l 63

1 t&gt;eOroom aparrment tn Middleport. all uttllues paid. $270 per
monlh , $ 100 de~ostt , 740·992·

MOVING OUT OF AREA: Must
Sell At Sacraflce. 1998 sw. Ute
New, !)()tt.-733-9102

bursment 01 licensure Fees ,
Current Tech RagtstratiOn NOT
~-

1986 2 Bedrooms. 1 Bath, Car pon. Stoarge Sutldtng. Etc On
Rented lot. Must Seel 74o-446·
8617For_......

Real Estate
Wanted

3 Surveyed And Deeded Acres .
Secluded, Wooded Wtth More
Land Ava1table Must Have Butld·
lng S1te And Be Accesstbl&amp; Prefer North Or West Ga!!ta County

7-10-446-2317

w,

Buy Land 30 · 500 Acres,
We Pay Cash 1-800-213-8365,
AnthOny Land Co

B~AUTIFUL

APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Westwoocl Onve
ffom 1279 to $358 Walk to shOp
&amp; movies Call 740-446-2568
Equal Housing Oppor1Unl1y
CHRISTY'S FAMILY LIVING
FOR RENT large two betlroom
apartmenls, stove and refrigerator, $250 month plus $tOO depO$·
It, in Mlcldlepott; one bedroom, all
electriC utihlles paid, $375 month 1
$125 doposll, Pomeroy, Ohio
Apartment, hl::wM a trailef rentalS
740-992-4514
For Lease One Bedroom , AC
Apt Corner 01 Second And Pine,
$250/Mo Plus Utlliltes Secumy
And Key DepoSit Relerence;i Required, No Pots, 740-446·4425.
Grac1ous l1v1ng. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments al VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middleport From $249-$373 Call 740·
992-5064 Equal Housmg Opportunities
large modern upstatrs two bedroom apartment, applianceS, atr,
Alfred on 681 , 740-985-3504

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent

Ground-Floor. 2BR , W/0

28~-~~~~R~o~le~r~en~cr•~·~D:epo:s:n_N:o

1- Bedroom House, No Pets!
Lincoln
Avenue.
Gallipolis.
$275 00 mOnth 740-446·9342

N1ce one bedroom furntshed

2 Bedrooms. $3SOIMo , ..,. Utilities,
and Deposit. No Pets! 740 _446 _
4313

apartment In Midd!epolt, no pets,
relerences and deposit requtred .
74!1·992-5833

3 Bedrooms, $400/Mo , Oepostt •
Uttllttes, No Petsi74Q-446-4313
3 br country home available midOctober on Board AD Letart 304·
675-2484 leave message
94 Ptnecrest Drtve, Adjacent To
Arbors Nursmg Home. 2 Bed
rooms, CA. Gas Heat, Dishwasher, Range, Refngerator, Washer &amp;
Dryer Furntshed Avat !ab!e 10/ l f
99. $425 lease, Oepos!t Re Quwed 74~6-2957
For Lease . 2,000 Sq. Ft Executtve H.ome, Near Go!l Course ,
$750/Mo, 740-446-2957
Pomeroy- lhree bedroom house,
two bedroom apartment, references, security, partly lurmstted, 740..
992-6886 after 5pm

420 •Mobile Homes
for Rent
Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob1ie homes, air
condtttoned, $260-$300, sewer,
wa1er and uash Included, 740·
992-2167
2 Bedrooms $300/Mo , $100 De·
posit, Heated With Propane, You
Pay Electric, Hannan Trace Road
ON 218,740-258-6202

Pets

Now Taking App!tcattons- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water
Sewage , Trash , ,315/Mo , 740·

1446-0008
Tara Townhouse Apartments ,
very Spactous, 2 Bedrooms, 2
Fioors ~A 1 112 Bath, Fully Carpeted Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool ,
Pallo, Start $350/Mo No Pets,
lease Plus Security Depos•t Requrred, Alter 5, 740-446· 0101 ,
Be1ore 5. 740-446-3481
Upstairs Furnished , 3 Rooms
Bath, Clean. No Pets! References
&amp; Deposit Required 740-4461519
Valley VIew "partments. Rio
Grande , Oh Now Accepting 8'ppltcatJOns for Immediate occupancy t &amp; 2 Beclroom Apts Air
Condttlonlng, Kitchen appliances.
Fenced In Playground. Laundry
On Sight Management Water
Sewage and Trash Paid Full time
Students must meet Ohto HousIng Finance Agency Ouallflcallons Senior Citizens Welcome,
EHO For more lniOfmatlon call
(740}-245-9170 Monday -thru ·
Thursday 9·00 -12 00 noon .

460 Space for Rent

2 Bedroom Mobile Home , You
Pay Utnttles , &amp; Deposit. In Porter
Area, 740-388-9162

Large private mobile home lot at
Santa's Foresl on RT 87, waterf
sewer $90 00 a mon ,relerences
304·675·4138

2 Bedroom Natural Gas Furnace,
Air, Very Ntce tn Galhpolls, 740·
446-2003, 740-446-1409

Mobile Home Space Centenary
Area $100/Mo , 740-446-4053

2 Bedrooms S250/Mo , Plus De posit. 740-367-o632
2 br. elec heat w!th cenlral air
12M64 on mce tot, Mason Phone
3Q4-882 3287, leave message

2 br trailer on pu\late lot Hartford.$200 a mon + util • dep
304·675-1651
2 Trailer lots for rent, Sn each
per month. !n a trailer park near
New Haven Grade School
(3041982·2214
3 Bedroom Mobile Home, Large
Yard, Barn, $300/Mo , Plus De·
poSit &amp; Ulilities, 74o 256 1464
3 Bedroom Tratler 1 Mile Oil 160
Vtnton, Electric, New Cal'l)e:t. Prl·
vate Lot, $300/Mo , $300 Deposit
No Pets. 740.388-9326

3 Bedroom Tra1!er For Rent In Rio
Grande, References, No Pets In·
Stde, 740·379-2720, No Celtt
Until Aller 7 P.M.
Furmshed two bedroom. ale , no
pets, River Park, Pomeroy, $300
per month , $150 depos it , 740·
949-209:1
Mobtle Home. Nlc:e Clean 2 Bedrooms, Stale Aoule 775 , (740)·
256-6574
TWo- 2 Bedroom Trailers In Small
Tra1!er Park Aelerences &amp; De po~1 Required 7-10·446· 1104

440

Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
mshed a~d unfurnished, security
deposit required . no pets 740·
992-2218

Awer Park Pomeroy (formerly
Browns} , $100 per month. 740·
949·2093

470 Wante'cl to Rent
Wanted To Rent HUD Approved ,
3 Bedroom HOuse Or Trailer, Preferably tn Bidwell Porter &amp; River
Valley School District, Needed
lmmedtately. 740-388-0473

490

For Lease

Pomeroy, At. 124, 60Q sq. ft., custom parking, ale, carpet, cellll'\g
fan, $350/ month, $150 deposit,
740-949-2093

MERCHANDISE

510

Houtehold
Goods

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Relri·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 740·4467795
For Sate Recondtlloned wash ·
ers. dryers and refrigerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jackson Avenue (304)675-7388
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washefs dryers, refrigerators,,
rangeS Skaggs Appliances 76
Vtne Street. Call740 -446-7398.
1-888-818-0t28
Washer $95 , Dryer $95, Electric
Range $95, Aelrigerator $95 :
Washers ltke Nrtw 1205, Wrth 1
Year Warranty, Skaggs Appllanc·
es, 16 Vine Street, GallipoliS, 7~0.
446-7398, 1-888-818.0128
Dryer lor sale 31/2 to 4 yrs old
(3041675-6693

GOLF CLUBS · Foc10&lt;Y Olrocl.
Pro-Lin• Equ•valent .. ntan lu ~n
Onvers $89 , Iron S.tl S19t.
Save SSS Free CatakJg 1·800213·3584. ...... tgogOI.com

530

-

Antiques

300-f7HI :!12.

570

Buy or sell RIYerine Anrlques .
1 124 E Main StrHI. on AI 124.
Pomeroy Ho urs. M.T.W. 10!00
a.m to 6 00 ~m, Sunday 1:00 to
6 00 p m . 740·992-2526, Russ

--

Musical
ln•trumants

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

2 Beanie Bab1es . Fust One Got
From McDonald' S Ftrst Avon
~. 7~7571

,

Weal

· very doon. $4995.

- ·-'*'ride,

S..lll

1989 Ponuac Lemans, good&lt;21, $995

• A 2
• 9 4

•QJt654%
.. 10.

R&lt;Aianc!CarSaln
740-742· 3311 or 740-742· 1401)

· -· $2000, 7~·9098

One Owner 1980 400 John Doe&lt;e

Baby equtpment &amp; clothes, inlant
to 12 monthS. 740..985-4351

La•n And Garden Tractor HydroSialic Dnva, Wtth 60' Mower
Oeclt 2.600 Hfs. Exceilenl Conchllon. 740-446-32n

84 Ctmarron. good cond. clean;
xlra ltres&amp; rims $1,795.00 304•
675-4575

Frao Sarr'4&gt;1es
Collectors llem German 35 MM
Plate Csmera World War II,
lloyd E Esque, Phone 304-7735479, Mason. wv
COMPUTERS - $0 Oown Low
Monthly Payments Y2K Comp!l
ant Almosl Everyone Appro~ecl
Call FIAOCOM Advanced Tech·
no!Ogies HKI0·617-3476
EAR CANDLES, BULK HERBS ,
NATURAL PET SHAMPOOS
htlpJ/www arden .netlearcandlel t916· 203 ·2441, PO Box 41372.
Sacramento, California 95841
Electric hospital bed. $1 00' reclining ltlt chatr S75. 1993 Chevy
S-tO, 61,000 nriles, standard. PS.
air, tool box, $4500, 740-9922019

Far S1le: Big Wheal , Stroller,
H1ghChalr, CarSeal . BabyBed.
Playl'8n (304)675-2801
Grubb's Ptano· luning &amp; repatrs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call tne
plaoo Dr 74!1-446-452~
Hawaiian Ter tyakl Rectpes $3
SA S E
Kama ·ama
Food.s
PMB522 4224 Waialae Avenue
15, Honolulu. HI 96816

Klndlewood Stove Stove In·
eludes Thermostat Dural Blower.
Glass Doors. Cot or Sky Blue .
S3751Mo , 740-245-5350
MAKE BIG MONEY• Top Money
-Maker's Secrets! S1mple Easy &amp;
FREE' Send E~Ma t! To more·
4u2 o aweber c:om
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Furnaces Installed As Low As
$28 00 A Month Wtttl Appro\led
Credit, Easy Over The PhOne
Bank Financing Huge Inventory
or lnterlherm. M11!er &amp; Coleman
Furnaces , Heal Pumps And
Parts Vtnyl Skirting Ktts $299 95,
Doors &amp; Windows water Heaten;, Anchors. Plumbmg &amp; Electrica l Parts Bennetts Mobile .,.orne
HTG &amp; CLG 740-446·9416 Or 1800-872-5967 Galllpol~s Ot-t
Premium Firewood Oak &amp; Ash
$50 Load, Full Size Pick·Up, De·
livered, 740-992-4568
Rolllop Desk , Needs Hardware
$125: Merrlllal Hickory Kitchen
Cabinets, SUII In Boxes, $1,200,
740-379-9038
SOCIAL SECURITY OISABilllY
Cla•m Denied? We Specialize In
Appeals And Heartngs FREE
CONSULTATION Benefit Team
Services, Inc Toll -Free 1-888
836-4052
Solld wood table tops. 8 d!lferent
stzes to choose lrom , $75 each
080, 74Q-949·2644
WANT A COMPUTER7?11 BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
G Y We Finance. '0" Down! Past
Credtt Problems OKI! Even If
Turned Down Belorell Reestablish
Your Creditii1 -800-659-03S9
WARMUP
92% Gas Furnaces, Heat Pumps,
Duct System&amp;, Free Estimates, 11
You Don r Call Us We Both Lose /
7 4().446-6308, 1-8QO-291-0098
Waler!lne Special. 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100, 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 , All Brass Com·
pression Flnlngs In Stock
RDN EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jaci&lt;S&lt;ln, Ohio, 1·800-537·9528
Wood spllner 5 hp 10 112 ton cal!
:K}4-675 1206

Building
Supplies

Pets for Sale
PUps,

Club Calf Sale Saturday October
9 , 1999 12 00 PM Lawrent:e
Country, Fair Grounds, Steers &amp;
Hellers Born &amp; Raised In La·
wrence County For !ntormauon
call e\le 1(740)-533-9186 or
(74!11·643·1027

$275

AKC German Shepherd f'ups
Whtte. A nd Sliver Available ,
Snow Cloud &amp; German L ines ,
740-245·9~13

tl

I••
•

730 Vans &amp; 4-WO.

c"""rotet
1984 CJ7 Wilh Hardtop 321nch

Mickeys With Ultra Rtms, $5.150. :

OBO 7~1.fl688.

1986 Chevy Srlverado 4WO 350
4 Speed, Body And Suspenlkm
ltfl 38 Tires $4 000, 740-4 41- ·
8022.
1987 Ford full SIZe convertkMI
van, 302 auromatlc, Ivory COIIl
Conversion (Houston, T••••).
gray \181our lnter101, lront and ,_,. .
air, all extras. $3750 080, 740· ·
992· 1506 Clays or 740-949-2'644

•

CARS $100 , $500 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUND Honda' s Toyota 's
Chevys, Jeeps, An&amp; Sport Utll•:
ltes Fee Requ1red Calf Now' 800772-7470. EXT 7832
1983 Chevy Cavalier runs good,
$500 OBO 74!1-992-9190
1984 Ponttac Bonnevtlle 4 Doors,
Body Grfal Shape. Runs &amp; D~lv­
able Needs Val'ole Pan Gasket,
$850. OBO 74!1-441 -9864
1985 Mercedes 190E Grey With
Leather Interior, New Mercedes
Engtne With Remaining 48 ,000
Mile Warranty Good Condition,
17 700 7-10·446·8657
1986 ~utck Grand National, Excellent Cond11lon , $7,500 080
7 40.446-4819
1986 Chevy Cavalier, AS 2 o
Auto , AC. Tilt , Cruise. 76 ,000
or~ginal mtles CaU (304)4581997, After 6PM
1989 Classtc Capnce, 350, Good
Tires. 740.245-9393
t989 O!ds Cutlass,
(304)675-6693

S 1200

1990 Grand Am 4 Doors, Auto,
Air, Clean Car $1,850 Or Best
Offer 7~1-f083
t991 Cavalier 5 Speed, 88 000
Miles, S2 195, 1992 Oldsmobtle
Achleva 58,000 Miles $4,295,
1993 Grend Am 88,000 Miles,
$4 395, Cook Motors , 740-446 0103
199t Mercury Tracer, 5 dr ,
77,967 mtles . auto. air amlfm stereo while with blue Interior. minor
left front fender damage run s &amp;
drl\les, asktng $1 ,400 080, 740·
992-1506 days, 7o40-949·2644

eves,
t992 Chevy Lumma, V-6 Au tomatic, Pwr. windows Pwr door·
locks Cold AIC, Clean lnal~e &amp;
Out, Euro Package Ask ing
$3,250 00 OBO 740-256-1288
1993 Cl'1e\ly Lumtna Euro, 2 dr
Red, extra nice $5200 304·675·
4893
1993 Chevy Lumtna V-6 AIT
New T'res 8. Wheels, PW, Excel·
lent Condition $4,500, 740·4468022
1993 FOfd Escort GT. 5 sp . 2 dr, \
atr l•ght blue/g ray lntenor, 90,000
mt!es, ctea(l $2300 OBO, 740 992 -1 506 days : 740 -949· 2644
1994 Ponua"c Grand Am GT 4
Doors 64,000 Actual Miles . FullPower, $6 995. 740.446-2957
1994 Oldsmobile cutlass Clera
V-6 Blacli: w/ Burgundy Interior,
mint cond S6,000 ·price negottatMe 304-675·6910.
1994 Plymouth Acclaim 66 000
Miles Aulo. Air Cruise Tilt, Alumtnu(Tl Wheels, $3.600, OBO 740256-6169

AKC Lab Puppies, Call 740 388
9398

t995 Escort LX Automat ic: With
Au Conditlontng AM/FM Cas
sette. WH h Only 8 700 M1 ! e~
Asking $7 500, 740-37~2766

AKC Re!ii slere~ Female Shth Tzu Puppy, 7weeks old 1s1
sholsfwormed , Vet Checked
(304)675-1275

1995 Monte Carlo Z34 70 ooo
miles exc. cond red w/ llnted
wmdows 304 -675·271 4 or 304576-2092

T:~E

t992 Chevy van, 314 too. 350 engtne, 52.000 mtles, tlltra clean. runs good, 740-992-3348

740

TRANSPORTATION

&amp; EA~NESJ'

1983 Chevy Blazer. New Pfinl
,Tires,4x4, Automatic , A/C, $2,300
May Trade On Later 4x4 Trucll ~

640

13 Acres Of Corn At CentefPQint,
"'"Pick Or Chop, 304-372·9681

!

••

1993 Chevy Cheyenne 4WD 31•
ton pickup, 350 automatic. runs &amp;.
looks good. must sell. $10.000·
080, call 740:992·2665.

Hay &amp; Grain

BORN

L'Uo~LI'I

~0

1-.ill..faf'OCC£ TIIOCNI-.PI't£ ,

.I'U.~

...l'l:'!&gt; M

~

VIC£~Dt:t-ITOF

..,

T1'i. \.l'IITED ~T"-T~!

OEm&lt;t. ' NJ...E(,()i:.'&lt; •
f(){{ n\E C.LII:&gt;:. !

Motorcycles

-::r-··

Con.dlon
c:opltal

57 llaOm porto
5I Food ..,.pier

m-

DOWN
1

30 D' $ I aging

w.. ......

--

9 Bank·

•• 1....

31 ~Ill

33

to be

:::1'

10 Type of lrip
11 Sun. ._ch
13 Too much
18 Foil upon
19 Wllori

36 """ of • -

20 Wild • . _
22ActreADehl
23 City In
25 Compuler ltey
27 Prellxl.."pod"

32Same
Ioomb. form)
34

By Phillip Alder

!rep

43AclreN
Yeuerday, I mentioned there are
Burke
good days and bad . Well, East· Wesl
45 Uvelyda~
had a red-lener day m this deal. Eas1
471naand48 Solemn
f011nd lhe best defense, and West had
lhe necessary cards to defeat lhe con49 c::..~bbr.
lracl. How du~ the play go'
so Penguins'
If you look at only lhe NonhDl'll·
52 Traitor
Soulh hands, four spades IS a frur bet.
53· R.-.~
but shouldn"l succeed here.
54 GIMnllan
oplrH
After wmning the first trick with · r.....;...,~.-.I.....L-.1..­
the hean ace, declarer conunued
wnh the ~ce and another lrump East
stepped 10 w1th his king, then
CELEBRITY CIPHER
returned his smglelon club, West covby Luis Campos
enng South 's 10 with the queen
Celebnty Ctpher ayptogtams are csuted fJ'Ml QUOtations by lamous peopM pasl and present
Stranded 10 the dummy, declarer
Each letler n 11'18 opher stands for another Todlly't ciue w ~Is R
tned a bean, but West won wtth the
Jack. An immediate club ruff 1s fatal ,
, B p
because East can ex11 w1th a bean, but
P F H P
J y w
LMALWBLCIL
B R
West switched lo the diamond queen.
cJ p
TJ
ELHTLWR
AJEBPBIHE
covered by lhe,king and ace. Back in
with the dJaJnond Jack, Wesl gave h1s
J 0
J AA J R B P L
P F L
ZLHC
HENHGR
partner the club ruff- one down.
•
Dtd you notice lhat declarer could
'H V V H
LV H C
R H G .'
NFHP
P F L G
have done better? He should have
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ~we' ve all been blessed wtth God-gtven talents Mtne
ducked lhe first lnck, opemng up a
lUSt happens to be beat1ng people up ~ - Sugar Ray: Leonard
route back to his hand w uh a he an
ruff. Suppose, at trtck 1wo, West
sw11ches lo lhe dtamond queen. W1th
WOlD
th1s l_ayoul, declarer must play low
lAM I
..... "'CLAY I, POLLAN_.,;,..._ _ __
from the dummy (If he covers with
the k1ng, Eas1 wins wuh the ace and
Rearrange ltn•n cf rhe
returns h1s club, making lhe club ruff
four acrvmbled -d• b.
unavoidable.) Now, lei's assume West
low to form four almple words

reverts to hear1s. Declarer wms wnh

thG NATE

\..._..
I

C.OULD &gt;lAVE WAIT-

t996 Yamaha Wolve riM 4 wnttllf· :
er with 1998 tilt trallet, new mild-,.
deno, 52800. 74().992·4163
•

ED T1 L 5C.HOOL, OF
C.OURSE, BUT I 'W"NT

1999 Honda 4 -wheeler 450 Foreman ES 4x4 $ 5,400 00 ::K).4 8122936

WHOLE PICTUitE!

TO BE THOlOUGH!
I WANT TO GET THE

FIVE A.M.

For Sale Q.8 4 wheeler Yam.Breeze 12~CC $2400 ltke ni'IJ
~-675-413213)4-675 5914
""e

h1s ace, lhen continues wuh the ace
and an01her spade Eas1 may wm with
the king and lead h1s smglelon club,
bul declarer wms 10 the dummy, ruffs
a heart, and draws lhe missing 1rump.
Here, an overtrick accrues, so perhaps Easl should cash lhe dtamond
ace when 10 wnh lhe spade king

I
I

I

WARPSL

r1

1 1 1

I

'

ALFNI

1--r:-t,;;,..-..t1....:.-

-.:-u_o,...H-.-o
. . ,G. .- -~IN:,'
~ I I I

FL
5

Two 1992 Yamaha Jet Slu'a arpd
Trailer Excellent Cond\11~ .
$3,800 (740)-446·4766 .,.., ,
500p.m
,:,

.

. . .

L-...L....J-.1-...J.._.J.,

GNT H I

Wanting To Trade Complete Satellite System For 4 WheeltF.
200cc Or Smaller, 740-367-7117.

I tent1on is to - - Comple(o

QL!ICK, MARCIE,

AN5WER5!

lh~

- - • -."

chuckle quoted
in the miumg words
you develop from step Nc 3 below

IF 'f'OU GET 'f'OUR
PAPER IN FIRST,
'f'OU EiET ISXTRA

I NEED SOME

t989 20' Skipper Crafl Ponloon
60 HP Mariner low Hrs Bimini
Top S3800 740-2561906

1&lt;

Mother of three young ch•ldren to ne1ghbor, "The qu1ck·
est way to get your chtld 's at-

.l---.1-..,1,--.-l.;_.:,l...:.:...,r---l
G)
1• _ _ • _ _ _ by l•lltng

PEANUTS

750 Boats &amp; Motora
for Sale

CREDIT_..:..---~
•

t998 Sea·doo GSX ltmlted wilh
cover, red and purple, brand new
cond•tlon, 130 horsepower, with
trailer. $5895 080 must sell, ·
740-742-3802 evenings

SCIIAM-LrTS ANSWERS
Don·, get Slung by lo;gh prom 1

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Shop the c/omfiod n•c!Hlt'l

ITUESDAY

Budget Priced Transm1ss10n1
and Engines AU Types. Acce"ts
To OYer 10 .000 Transmtsstona, .
eve Joints, 740-245-6677

Edgmg · Mumps · Ga11ze ·Annals· SAME MIND
"Its ea. 1er to find two of the same face " lhe professor told h•s class. "than two of the SAME MIND "

SEPTEMBER 28

New Replacement Gas Tanks. O·
&amp; A Auto Ripley, WV. (304)372· •
3933 or 1-800-273-9329
.

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

20 Ft Pull Camper. Wlldernesa
Tandem Very Good Condition
Awning , 740-361. ·7133, 740-3&amp;7:

7927.

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

- ASTRO·ORAPH

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondttional lileUme guarantee
Local reteretr ces furnished El·
tabllshed 1975. Cell 24 Hrs (74!1)
446-0870, 1·800·287-0576. RO(I ·
ers Waterprooling

~

ltvingston 's Basement Water
Proottng , an basemen! repairs
done free esttmates, IUetlme
guarantee 12yrs on job experl- ,
ence (304 )895·3887

840

Elpctrlcal and
Refrigeration

Residentra l or commercial wiring,
new servtce or repatr!l \ Masler U·
censed eleclnctan Ridenour
Electric al , WV000306. 304-67~
1786

Wednesday, Sept 29, 1999

~ , Knowledge you acqurre m the
~ear ahead can be utlhzcd to your
advanlagc m the limes ahead. Don't
overlook any opponumues you gel to

Appliance Parts And Service -All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E1·
penance All Work Guaranteed .
French City Maylag , 740·446·
7795.
C&amp;C Genera l Home Main
tenence- Patnllng, \llnfl sldinu.
carpen1ry, doors ~indows, baths,
mobile home repair and more FOt
tree esUmale. call Chet. 740·992·
6323

.,kUlher your sk. rll s tn your chosen
field of endeavor.

'

LIBRA (Sept 23-0c1 23) That
Whtl:h olhers conce1 ve can be

I?

irilprove;d upon or adapted
enhance
your own endeavors. Be open-mtnded to all the 1deas and sugge st 1ons of

...

~verybody IO&lt;iay Ltbra, lreal yourself
10 a b~rlhday gtft. Send for your
A stro-Graph predtctions for the year

ahead by matltng S2 and SASE 10
Astro-Graph, c/o lh1s newspaper,
·PO Box 1758, Murray Htll Stauon.
New York , NY 10156 Be sure 10

21) Although you work very well
tndcpenden!ly of o1hers, your great·
est success today is more hkely to
come from P,ar1nershlp arrangements .
Team up for bett~r results
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) If
you 1ruly bel1e ve m yourself today.
you"ll have the abihty to nccomphsh
whatever )'0\1 set your mmd tu . Set
USide any llRXICIICS you might foster
and accentuate the posttivc.

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19)
Working wtth too many assiStants
could dilute your effectiveness lodny
Chances are you'll fun~tum hcSI
when actmg m tandem with a hnHIcd number of people. Resrr~cr the
IR\Oivcment

TAURUS {Apnl 20-May 20) It's
totally unlike you to lean on others 10
get what you want tn ltfe, yet today
you could be tnclmcd to do JUSt thai

Look for rewards solely from your
labors
GEMINI {May 21 -lune 20) Take
charge of events today mstcad of let~
ung 1hem control you and the desirown

able results you're scckmg wtll not
elude you Forge your own destmy.

Stay lhe course!
CANCER {June 21 -July 22) Thai
whtch needs t o be orchestrated today
is best done from bchmd the scenes,
cspectally 1f you 're lookmg out for
the mtcrests of those under your protection
.yo...u should have a few slacke rs in
.....yc&gt;ur mtst today, you'll be exception~

.state your Zodrilc s1gn

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) Set
saghts and prionties strictly on
what you know is attainable and not
on what others hcllcvc yuu l:an do

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov' 22)
Espec tally tf you are dolng somcthtng

Yo ur assessment is far more accurate
ttian thc1rs.

managing those who lend to dodge
responsib1l11y

IRl portant where you are ullhztng
tnformauon, y our success toda y wtll be dcrcndcnl upon
)':()U r ab1hty to be secretive_ Seal your

Cbnfidcnhal
ltps

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec

your

LEO (July 23-Aug. :!2) Even tf
ally sktlled al headmg up a team and

ARIES {March 2l·April 1-!1) If

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpl 22) Don't

you want to mHucncf 9thers today,
communicate wath them m ways that
msr,ue them and bnghtcn thctr sptrJts. Pomtmg out where lhey're gmng
wro ng wtll be viewed as ct'illclsm

treat indifferently something you're
success fully rursutng thm you think
co uld enhance ynur fmancml pc.lSI·
tt on The posslhthly to do so IS better th an usua l

,I

•

'

•

rzr.:...

35
39 Fllh

0

199&lt;1 Yamaha 250 WR Racing dl(l
brke , runs I looks good. askktg
$1200 or wtl trade for 4 wheeltr of
equal vatue, 74D-992·641o4

790

a--u

'::~:t:~' S«:it~lA -l&amp; £irs·

1981 Honda CX500 Custom Motorcycle tie Tires , Battery.
Plugs. &amp; Brakes MDillgl 21 ,700,
seoo Includes 2 Full Fac1 He1meiS Call 304-773-5723 Asl&lt; fof
Rusty.

760

21

56

Again a good day

HANDED

3506

evonongs

I

21
23 lluolly cl,..p
28 Clllnl.-.ey dir1
211--

Opening lead: • K

EMPTY

Regtstered Hamp Boar Ritz
BlOOdline Call 740-245·5672, Or
740-367.0583

""'s

Block , brick. sewer pipes windows, lintels, elc Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Cell 740-245·
!)121

AKC
Sour
(304)875-5786

2 baby Pygmy goats 6 weelts
oiCI I 81tly 5 yrs Old 1 pr Emu 5
yrs, old 304-675-6236

$500 CARS FROM 1500111 Buy
Pollee Impounds &amp; Repos . Fee
CALL NOW For ltsUngsl 1·800·
3t9-3323 Jt2156

Kindlewood Stove Stove Includes Thermostat. Dural Blower.
Glass Doors, Insert Color Sky
Slue, $375/Mo . 740-245-5350

560

2 3yr old cows &amp; 2 calfs 304675 4029.

710 Autos for Sale

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Reparred . New &amp; Rebuilt In Sleek
Cal! Ron Evans. 1.eoo-537-952B

550

1 Appaloosa Geldtng 3 Years
Old, One 4 Year Old Paint Mare,
One 3 Year Old Appaloosa Geld
IRQ One 112 Quarter 112 Morgan
11 Year Old Mare, 2 Arabian
Geldings One 3 Years Old. One 7
Years Old. Installment Plan To
Gooct Homes Wtth 25'4 Down
740-388 8358

•• I
HOME

.

610 Farm Equipment

Livestock

~0

1995 Chavy/ 4X4, E1t Cab P.S •
P.B -Anti locll, TiiiWheel. AMI
FM Stereo 12Dtak/CD Player.

PrDrlod&lt;S/PrSNIS&amp;LtJrmM

~~Got**

Wahington
24Woodoorrol

1992 Chevy S· 10 Pock -Up For
Pay 011, 66,000 Or1gtnal Ml~l.
740-379-2386

Control KeyJass Entry (304)882•

.. bactiwl

51 Mol .......
55 A tJdun•

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

720 Trucks for Sale

Antique dining room set. hutctY,
corner cabir'l8t , claw-legged lable
&amp; 6 charrs. S2000 ltrm. 74o-7421019.

630

••A 8 7 3
• 5

•Qtl3%

1992 Olds Cutlass Supreme two
doqr aport. red. ale. amlfm cat·

Walnuts Bough! At Troyer&amp;
Woodcraft Open Monday Anel
Thursday And Saturday, Starung
9125 Ttll 10/30199. 9 Miles West
01 Galipoili On 141

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

• A 7
• 10. 5
• K 10 5
6AKJ74
EaR
6 K 8 S
et87t3

• QJ 6 2

87 Olds 9 passenger SW. new
motof and tlllrtSffW$Sion, 1/c, PW.
PL. PS, crui'S8. till, •xat~~en~ coft~

~388-5314

BDTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 lbs . 30 DAY MONEY
BACK GUARANTEE! Natural, Or
Recommended 7•0-441-1982

10

•KQJ

amo'lm casant, f'IICe car, $2395 ·

Reel Raspbenin, Now Avallab'l,
Taylors Berry Patch, CaM In Evelf'IOS, 740-2 .. 5-9047

30,000 BTU vent less gas heater
already on sland or can wall
mounl304-862·3970

•

1993 Ford Escort Wagon . ale,

$3995.

AptJies- Red &amp; Veltow Oelick&gt;us .
QlimnosQoldon$400""'Bushel
For Drops, $10 Busnel P•cked .
740-367 7..01 •

1f2. Carat Diamond Sofi\aife Atng.
VS-2 Claro1y. 14K, Yellow Geld, 6
Prong, T!tlany Band , ~ At
$2,000, Less Than One 'IN:r Old.
$1 100 000 740-446-4541.

nEe

45 -1..-olictn
41 Supwft lei

17 Uncle

N-

...,-·ale.
am/1m....-.
atr, 14995.
000 -

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

---- :u•
-

•

I !194 1k1k:1t Skylarl&lt; Cu..... Oftt
owner, ale, 1m11m casHne. 72,

Arllay Clarinet 3 years old
$450 .00 Or Make and OHerr
17-10)-367-(1512

580

2- All STEEL BUILDINGS 40•36
Was $1 0.818. Sell $3,900. 50•90
Was $22,800 , Son $10,800. Do\01l

ca-, $58911.

t995 Poftuac Gtand AM SE -

Squ•rrel dogt , ntw large dog

.....
~~==-. ........ -.

1996 PontiaC Grand Aln SE 4
door. tic. amlla~ cauen.. gnet

\

.'

I

�•

Tueeday. September 28, 1999

,

P-. 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Wedne$day
September 211, 111118

Weather

Cleveland edges Royals 2-1 , Page 5
Code of conduct from delinquents, Page 7
Family Medicine, Page 8

·Tod-v: Showera

High: 70s; Low: 501
Tomorrow: P. Cloudy

High: 801; Low: 40s

-Page 4

Meigs County's

Big ·send Sternwheel Festival plans finalized
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel N-. Staff
.
Plans are being finalized for the annual Big Bend
Stemwheel Festival, set for October 7-9.
Uve bands, contesls, and the majesty of ~lemwheelers
of all sizes lined up along the Pomeroy levee have made
lite festival one of lite area's most popular annual evenls.
Once again, owners of majestic stem wheelers from
across lite region have been invited to attend thdestival,
which includes lltn:e days filled with activities for tbe
captains and cn:ws of lite stemwheelers, as well as the
public who come to Pomeroy to see the boals.
Mary Donna Davis of the Big Bend Stemwheel Com·
mittee said Tuesday that 18 boat owners have expressed
.plans to aitend the festival, and it is likely that even more
will visit this year, since the Tall Stacks Festival in
Cincinnati gels underway the 'following weekend.
.
The Meigs County ·Clamber of Commerce plans to
hold Casino Night in the former Office Service and Supply SIOn: on West Main Street on Friday night, beginning
at 7 p.m., and the Pomeroy Merchanls Association will
once again sponsor the RulJ!&gt;er Ducky Derby, with a vari-.
ely of prizes, on Saturday at 4 p.m. .
The official festivities gel underway on Thursday
evening, with an opening cere"'ony at 6 p.m., follo'l'ed
by a performance by Silverthorn Band, on the stage area
·of the Pomeroy parking lot.

On Friday, the Meigs High School Band will perform
at I p.m., and at 7 p.m., the Big ~nd Cloggers will
dance. Karaoke by Jeff North and Slarbound Entertain·
ment will likely attract a big crowd on Friday night.
Saturday's activitieS will include the annual chili
cookoff, sponsored by Stewart-Johnson Post, VFW, of
Mason, W.Va., kiddie tractor pulls, sponsored by the Festival' Committee, and It line• handling contest, sponsored
by Ohio Lottery.
.
The Stemwheel Parade will lineup at 1 p.m. at the
Pomeroy ballfield area, and will take off down Main
Street a.t I:30. Preregistration is not necessary for ihe
parade.
·, A !OK Volksmarch, sponsored by Flusstalvolk AVA
804, OH #50, and the Village of Pomeroy, will begin at 3
p.m.
.
.
The Captain's Dinner, hoste&lt;! each year to honor
ste"!wheel captains with various awards, will be catered
. by the Lunch Line of Pomeroy on Saturday, with location
to be announced during the festival.
·
On Saturday night, the OK Bayou Band will perform,
and fin:works, sponsored by the Ohio Lottery, will conelude the festival. .
·
Stage entertainment throughout lite weekend will be
sponsored by Budweiser.
Other evenls planned for the festival are an herb fest
in the Court Stn:et m·ini park, lunches served by Trinity

.

..,;._:,.;, ·. ,'

L.:;;;.__-""'-'~=

PLANS
Plans have been finalized lor the Big Bend Sternwheel Festival, to be held
October 7·9 at the Pomeroy levee. 'TWo of the boats from last year's festival are ple1ured cruising
plat Pomeroy.
Cllurch, and beans and cornbread served by the Meigs Thursday through Saturday, and the public is invited to
visit the fire and meet captains and crews.
County Senior Citizens Center, also on Court Street.
Davis said that this year, electricity, ice and water will
A variety of concessions and other vendors will be set
be provided toall boals, but said that small excursion
up along .the parking lot area. .
·
·
A bonfire will be held at the levee on each night, boats will not be accommodated.

Eastern district
receives timbering .
funds from state

Regional Briefs
SPORT .UTILITIES

,.

'·

~~0~!~~4 ~~-~~!i~~a::~~ . . . ....:•18~99 5
-~!o.Fv~.~~T.~~~~~-~~-~ ~-~~~,~ $171995·
~!o.FV~~~~~~l~~!~Nm;::~~~: $261995
1

..

"

21 1995·
96
$
18I 995
':JY
~~f:,~~s~~.~:. ~~-~~~~~~. . . . .$121995 ·
5

96

..........

.. .

141995

5

...... ....

91

CHEVROLET SUBURBAN
#996762 '
..
auto, 454 VB, loaded, only 89,000 miles ..... .".. . I

59 995

Y, SEPT. 29

• EARLY BIRD SPECIAL • .
9:00 am - 10:30 am Take $1500 off advertised price
10:30 am- 12:00 pm Take·$1100 off Advertised price
·12:00 - 4:00 Take $800 off advertised price
On All

THURSDAY
PT.
.
.• FLASHING u&lt;!n SPECIAL •

Take $ .1500 Qff the.price of the used car that
has .the flashing light on top of Ughts will be
moved throughout the day so stop by and .

'tl

GM VEHICLES
0

~~~~~~: 5 131

!~ !~~~0~~~~~~~-~. ~~~. .

995
~~0~!:.~,~'!!~~~~-~~~~: . . . . . . . s10199 5.·

.

~:N~~::M~=~~-~ ~- -~.:.~.:.·
9

.. ;... ......

$13199 5

LI.NCOLN TOWN CAR #3563o,

$23I 995

Auto, VB, CO changer, opal pearlescent,
only 21 ,000 miles ................ :............................

FORD BRONCO #3~2o, Auto,
VB, A/C, AM/FM cass,
25,000 miles........

~!/v~.~~T.~~~-~~~ ~~~~~~

TOWN CAR #3ss1o,
Senes
.;................................ :.... ........
,,

CONTINENTAL
136680, Adlo,
changer, leather,
23,000 miles
,, ..................................................... .

.....

~!o.'v~.~~~.~:!!~~!t#:::. . •

LUXURY CARS ·.
~~ LINCO~N
$28
995
gnature
I
97 LIN~LN
s23
9
va, co
1 95

S

..........

30

Man killed, officer wounded In shooting

DAY,
OCT.
I
"WV MOUNTAIN GETAWAY" .

PUrchase any used car or lruck over $4000 and receive ~
trip that includes- First class seats on ltotomac Eagle Railroad aver night accomoclations at South Branch Hotel and
$1 00
IIIOIHIYI
the beautiful fall colors that

SATURDAY, OCI. 2
·TAURUS, TRACER &amp; SPORT UTILITY DAY!!
Jake $1500 off the price of any
Taurus, Tracer or Sport Utility '
ALL DAY TUESDAY!!

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

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

'

95 LINCOLN

$ ·
.

MARK VIII 11993801.
Auto, VB, leather, only 42,000 miles .................
\

'

171995

,,

TRUCKS
521199 5

99 F.. .D f·250. #997371,

$

.......... :.........

29 995
4x4, ~lat.
99 FO.D F·ISO
$ .
A1f" 4x4, ~00
·&lt;· ......._
...... 201995
~~. ~=~·!:! ~=!~~::. . . . ..:. . . .:591995
Ext Ceb,

Auto,

_*3ll35o.
miles .... :....

.

I

.

97 FORD UNGE·R SUPERCAB s
#9970~1, A/C. XLT pkg ................................. 11199

5

.~.t~~~.~~~~~-~~~~~:. . . . 171995
5

:!ar~~~. ~!:~~ver':2.~~.'. . . . . . . . . 5l7199S.
94 ftaRD UNGER #990741,
XLT, A/C, AM/FM

$

cass.:.................................

Psrent{llfCCUsBd of starving 5-yesr-old boy
OBERLIN (AP) - ·A couple are accused of-starving their 5-year-old
son who was 25 pounds when he was temoved from their cafe.
. Gary Crow, 41, and his wife, Doreen, 33, were In lite Lorain County
Jail on $10,000 bonds after being aiTes'ted Tuesday. They wen: to appear
today in Lorain County Common Pleas Court on charges of child endangering and felonious assault.
. "This is an example of people who did not take advantage of the gift
lltey were given," said county Prosecutor Gregory A. White. "It gets so
frustrating when people do this 10 children...
,White would n'!l discuss a n:ason.for the alleged abuse of Corey Crow.
He did say lltatllte boy's twin sister and older brother, who is in elementary school, wen: not abused.
Con:y has been placed in a foster home and his siblings are in the cus' tody of family members. . ·
·
Nutrition isis say a 5-year-old, depending on height, should weigh about
.50 pounds. White said Corey suffered bruises and malnutrition so severe
lltat he fell in the bottom 20 percent of children on growth charts.

PLANNING SESSION - Members and officers
of the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce got
together recently to mull plans for Ute Oct B Casino Night event to be held at the former omc:e Ser-

vice &amp; Supply In Pomeroy. Shown are, from left

Mlck Davenport, Gene Triplett, Hal Kneen, Nancy
campbell, Sue Malson and Jlril Birchfield. Tickets coat $15 each Include $5,000 In fun money,

Pollee search for suspects In slaying of cab driver

:!~~!.~!a~~~~~-·

.
Oteseh .............. :...........

CLEVELAND (AP) - A man was killed and a police officer was
wounded slightly in a shootout early today during a t'affic stop on the
city's east side. , ·
·
·
The victim's name was withheld. The officer was treated at Mt. Sinai
Medi~l Center and released.
Officers had pulled a vehicle over for a traffic violation. The shols were
fired as officers chased a man who fled on foot, police said.
The victim liad fired at the officer, police spokesman Lt Edward Thiery
said. He had no other immediate details on the shooting.

· ·

7I 99 5

CINCINNATI (AP)- Two men in their 20s and a teen-age girl were
seen fleeing a taxicab after the driver was killed, police said ..
Police declined to eomment Tuesday on possible motives for the shooting of John Arcady or whether any property or money was taken.
Arcady, 49, was killed Monday .night. when he was shot in the head,
police said. Arcady was found in his cab after police received a telephone
_tip that there had been a shooting in a cab north of downtown. The cab's
engine was still running when police arrived.
I
The killing and apparent robbery of Arcady was senseless because
"They don't carry that much money," said Bill McCoy, one of the owners
of Towne Taxi.
Another Towne driver was wounded in June 1998 but has recovered
and continues 10 drive a cab. In August 1990, a Clifton Cab driver was
killed after taking a fare from Cincinnati to Hamilton .
Dale Smith, who owns and operates his own cab, driving for Towne
Taxi, said he has been robbed !VOice in the . ~o years he's been driving.
"The guy who robbed me in&lt;Pebruary Pill a gun to my girlfriepd's head,
who was in the cab with me," Smith said. ,
.
"I told him I'd give him every penny I had. I wasn't going to die over

monCy:"

' ·,r

.

Six Ohio communities receive anti-drug grants

HEART WALK- Charlene Hoeftl!)h, wife of
was joined by the staff of The
Dally Sentinel aa she cut the ribbon starting yesterday's Heart Walk, conducted by the Meigs
County Unit of the American Heart Association. The walk honored long-time newspaper column) at
and edltor BOb Hoeflich, who aerved for many years as 1 member of the unit's board of dlree1ors.
PIC1ured with Mrs. Hoeflich, far right, are members of the newspaper's walking taam, Including
emplo~ and femlly members: Jim, Mary, Chelaea and VIctoria Freeman, Brian J. Reed, Judy
and Ron Clark, Debbie Call, and Leanne and Kall Cunningham.
.
.

WASHING10N (AP) - Six Ohio communities were among the recipienls of federal granls intended to bols,ter programs that fight teen drug
use.
,
The grants, announced Tuesday, included $100,000 for Community ·
Action for Capable Youth, Mansfield; $100,000 for the Lucas County
By BRIAN J. REED
the water improvement fun.d in the amount of
Community Pre~ention Partnership; $100,000 for Toledo's Teen Theatre
Sentinel
News
Staff
$5,200,
for water system maintenance items
Institute; $99,555 to Coalition for a Drug Free Greater Cincinnati; $99,938
The
Village
of
Middleport
will
be
decked
out
·
which
had
been purchased and paid for from the
·
. for Comm~nity Council on Alternatives for Substance Abuse, Perrys- for Christmas this year, following the approval of fund.
new street decorations at Tuesday night's meeting
The water improvement fund is fed· by a $5
burg; and $93,250 for the Franklin
of
Middleport
Village
Council.
monthly
payment made by each water customer,
Qlunty Education Foundation and
Mary
Wise
of
the
Middleport
Community
and
council
last night held an .extensive discus·
.Safe/Drug Free Schools Qlalition.
Association presented council with a proposal for sian on the purpose of th.e fund.
Hospital to name
lighted decorations, banners and hiiJ'dware needed
Council man Steve Houchins said that, when
2 Sections , 12 Pages
education center for to decorate.the downtown business district, which the fee was first established earlier this year, it ·
council subsequently approved.
·
was to be used to build a matching fund pool to
7
polio researcher
Calendar
The
village
will
spend
$6,705
for
the
decoraallow the village to seek grant and loan funds .for
CINCINNATI (AP) - The edu9&amp;10
C!assiftec!s
lions,
to
include
15
lighted
snowflake
pole
deco·
improvements to the system, rather than to pay
cation, and conference center being
11
Comics
rations, Christmas banners aod 30 brl;lcket sets, to for system maintenance and infrastructure ·
built by Children's Hospital Med·
2
Ec!itorla!s
ical Center will be named in honor include additional ·brackets for other seasonal improvemenls.
banners;
which
may
be
purchased
later.
"We
have
committed
to
the
water
customers
to
3
· J..ocal
of polio researcher Albert B. Sabin,
The
new
decorations
will
be
placed
on
South
have
these
.fuqds
available
for
capital
improvethe hospital said Tuesday. ·
4&amp;S
.Soorts
The six-story center, whiCh Second Avenue from Hudson Street to the :rr," .ments," Houchins said, "to provide matching'
3
Weather
funds. These expenses that have been paid are
includes a 300-seat auditorium, is and on Mill Street to the Post Office.
Last
year,
the
village
was
criticized
for
its
lack
maintenance expenses."
part of a $155.2 million project that
of
decorations,
'
a
nd
council
pledged
early
this
The expenses that Houchins referred to include
Lotteries
was begun in October 1998.
year to commit up Jo $11;000 for the new decora· cleaning of wells, and the installation of a new
It is expected to be completed late
OHIO
tions.
Original plans called for decorating the generator and chlorination system, although the
next summer.
Pick 3: 9-4·5; Pick 4: 7-4-4·3
lower
end
of town, near Vaughan's Supermarket. chlorination system cost was not reimbursed last
Sabin worked at Children's Hos·
Buckeye 5: 13-18-22·27-30
However,
those
plans will wait, at least until next' night.
pita! Research Foundation from
W.yA.
The fund currently has a balance of $50,078,
1939-70 and developed a break- year.
· and a total of $9,971 has spent Irani the fund to
DaUy 3: 2-3·0; Dally 4: 8-8-8-4
The
old
decorations,
used
for
many
year.;,
are
through oral polio vaccine during
date. The reimbursement approved last night will
C 1999 Olliu V.lky Publi1hing Co.
no longer usable.
that time.
·
In other business, council voted 10 reimburse come fr om the regular water account.

Middleport to buy new Christmas decoration's

Good Afternoon

Today's Sentinel

''

''::'.

The Eastern local School District is one of 17 districts in the
state to receive ·funds . from the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Division of Forestry,
representing proceeds of timber
sales in state forests. ·
The Eastern Local district will
receive funds from the sale of timber and other ·products from the
. Shade River State Fore~t, located
in the school district.
The districts will receive a com·
bined sum of $703,993, but East·
em Treasun:r Lisa Ritchie said
Tuesday that the district has not
been notified of the amount of pay·
menno be received.
According to State Senator
Mike Shoemaker, D-Boumeville,
40 percent of the funds generated
from the sales will go to the school
district, ·another 40 percent to l.ocal
government, with 20 percen.t to the
county, 20 percent to the township
and the n:maining20 perc~nt to the
state's general revenue fund.
In all, more than $1.4 million
will be distributed this year as the
result of forest management activities in Ohio's forest, according to
an ODNR news .rolease. Revenues
generated · from state forests
include royalties from the produc1tiQn of Tninerals, such as oi I and
g.S, on state land.
Selected timber management
projects help to improve the health,
vigor and productivity of state forest lands like the Shade River State
Forest, according to the ODNR.
Last year, a total of 1,425 acres
were managed through timber bar·
vesting on stale land, comprising
less than one percent of total -state
forestland. In fact, forested land is
on the increase. Ohio is more than
30 percent forested, compared to
. just 12 percent in the early 1900's.
Counties receiving the largest
allocation of funding from the pro·
gram are Scioto County, Pike
County and Vi~ton Couniy.

.

'

-- -----,-----.,...----

..

Also participating in the discussion were Jean
Craig, Myron Duffield and Don Stivers, all members of the Board of Public Affairs, which oversees the operation of the water and sewer sy~tems. .
Stivers noted that the expenses paid from the
water improvement fund were, indeed, water system improvements, and said that the resolution
passed by council authorizi ng tHe $5 charge on
the ' water bill did not restrict expenditures,
although he supported the reimbursement.
'Council also approved an emergency resolu tion authorizing the village to seek Issue Two
funds for water system improvements. Mayor
Sandy lannarelli said that a· speci fie. o,rnount' ,has
not been determined. ·
lannarelli said that•County Economic Development Director Perry Varnadoe and Mike
Mullins of the Ohio Arts Council will meet with
village officials next month to discuss improvements to the downtown business district.'
The upcoming opening of a new Wai-Mart
store in Mason, W.Va., and the planned construe·
lion of a new bridge between Pomeroy and Mason
make downtown revitalization a priority, she said,
and both Varnadoe and Mullins commented to her
on the potential of the downtown area for devel·
opmcnt.
Continued on page 3

•

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    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="26697">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="26696">
              <text>September 28, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3104">
      <name>bolinger</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
