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                  <text>•

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

•

�'

The Daily Sentinel• Pag'e·3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
·The Daily Sentinel

Durable-goods orders rise In August

P-a- 2

Wsdnn:h]t, S•Ftlnlbet 21, tiiOO :

Designed for failure

WASHINGTON - It has been said that
that they would be paying down the princi·
thooe who understand inlerest earn il, and
pie of the loan. Refinancing. is called "upthose who don't pay it Subprime .banks ••
.selling" bcause the blink folds all sorts of
1tt Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
the newest legal incarnation of loan sharkoosts into the new loan every time the loan
740 8112-2150 • Fu: 8112-2157
ing -were created for people with less than
is refinanced
perfect cmlit, but they often are being misLenders, Jim Dough testified, are supused to prey on lhooe who dqn 't understand
posed to up-sell at least two loans a day and
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
the concept of interest. While there is a
call every borrower at least once a month
place for subprime banks- for people who
and ask lhl=m if they lleed more money and
CHARLES W. GOVEY
are willing to bite the bullet and pay cxorbithen push to refinance.
Publisher
tant inlt:resl rates (between 12 and 40 per"We were trained to sell the monthly savuntil they get their aedit rating back on track ings." Jim Dough said. "That is, how much less per
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DW!fOHILl
- the subprime market mainly targets unsophisli- · month the customer would be paying if we Dipped
Controller
a - . ! Manager
cated, low-income people in poorer neighbori10ods. the loan. In reality, the 'savings' were just an illuL.ast spring. the Senate held a bearing on uncon· sion. The uneducated customer would jump for the
scionable
lending ICChniques in the subprime mar- 'savings'thinking that he would have money to buy
n.SendM1 .,.,.,.,... ,.,..,. Ill lhe «~~tot.,_,_.,. an •
ket.
A
seven-year
veteran from the industry Olherthings. Whatthecustomerwouldn'tfigureout
- .,..,. ....... PI» ..,. tw ~ IMw , . ,.., ~ olbelng pili' .....
1)pod- _ , . ..... w~ _ .. ....,,. -·Each ohould- • ......,..,.,
addressed the commiuee with a paper bag over his and what we wouldn'IICII him is that he woold be
. . ._ _ ...,,.... ,_.. · Spedfy • .,.,__,... · · · - .... head (to avoid retribution) and told the banking
--"'- ID: ,__. ID
TIN Senlinol, Itt Cowf st.,
committee just how the burgeoning subprime
heuu., Olrlo ""'; or, FAX to 7fl&gt;o-.ztl7,
.
industry makes a buck.
·
''Finance companies 1ry to do business with
blue-&lt;:OIIar workers, people who haven 't gone to
college, older pt9ple who are on fixed incomes,
nOJl.·Fllglish·speakirig people and people who have
~narlan
dog's final da~
I would like to ICII a story about an JJ.year-old golden relrlever and a compas· significant equity in their homes," the witness
referred to as "Jim Dough".said from behind his
sionale velerinarian. .
·
I belong 1o Golden Endings Golden Relrlever Reserve, a group that rescues paper bag. "In fact, my perfect customer would be
an uneducaled widow who is on a fixed income ••
abused, unwanled or abandoned golden relrievers. Our dub is based in OJiumbus,
hopefully from her deceased husband's pension and
Since 1993 we have saved over 800 goldens.
social
security ·· who has her house paid off, is liv· Ginger came tome altO 1/Z yeaJSold, weighing 140pounds. ~lady that had
her could no longer take care of her. From the first day, Ginger stole my heart She ing olf or credit cards, but having a difficult lime
could barely walk and wuld not get up on her own. I put her on a diet of boiled keeping up her payments, and who must make a car
f'hid&lt;em and vegetables. As the weight came off, we started taking walks and final- .payment in addition to her cmlit-c8rd payments."
The equity "Jim Dough" speaks of is important.
ly I was able to take her swimming. She was enjoying life, bossing the other dogs
Many
shady subprime companies seek out unso&amp;round and keeping order in the house. She was the grand dame, and everyone in phisticated
homeowners and put them into loans
lhe house knew i~
·
designed
to
fail, and secure the loan with the house ..
· Ginger had a growth on her backside, and one day, a&amp;r she bad been with me
The
loans
are
made without regard rot the income
for about eight months, it burst open. I was at work, and my neighbor, Julie FJiiotl,
of
the
mortgagee,
and all sorts of hidden cost. are
got her to the Meip Vet Oinic quickly, helping to save her life. At the clinic, Dr.
tucked
into
the
loan
and financed over the life of the
.Kelly Gruescr put stitches in. The next day, it opened again and this lime it was
loan.
relllOYed. II was then, when we ~ell the lruge """" inside Ginger. Her incision would
Jim Dough ICIIs how he was supposed to refi1101 heal, her blood would 1101 clot. Dr. Grueser felt she had liver cancer. This proved
nance
all loans before the customer got to the point
~ I was heal1broken. Kelly doctored her for two weeks, keeping her at the
clinic several days. I found out later he set his alarm dock and came in the middle
of the night to the clinic to check on her.
·
·
. Last Sunday, her incision opened again. She was not healing at all and was losing blood inside..Dr..Grueser reslitched her and called me. I went to the clinic that By Red GI'Hn ·
still, say it d~sn't matte~ wh~t time it is; you'll
morning and Kelly said we needed to talk. He readily agreed to meet me at the clin·
A 1957 Chevy with a short block 327, 4-11 always make tome for a fnend m need: That 'II get
.ic that evening. This was the hardest thing I have ever done. I lOOked into Ginger's rear end and a Hurst shifter. Pure testosterone. her curious and off-topic. So now you make up
eyes aiJd I knew it was lime. Kelly Gruescr is the kindest, most compassionate and Just thinking about it makes me have to shave. some story about how yo~ spent the night helping .
caring velerinarian I have ever me~ Ginger's death was filled with love and digrlity. That was the car of my dreams back in bigh a friend. Who shall remaon nameles.s. Because he
Kelly took pains to ease my grief,111aking if as easy for me as he wuld. Looking school. At the time, I was driving a '51 Hillman is nameless. Just give him a really ~essy ~rson·
into Ginger's eyes for the last lime, it was obvious she was ready to aa;s Rainbow Minx with all the power of two-cycle lawnmower al problem. And you were up all noght talki~g to
Bridge.
.
. and all the sex appeal of the fat guy pushing it. No him about' it •• helping him get _his life straight:
There was no pain or fear, only love and peace for my beloved dog, Thank you nice girl would ever· get into a Hillman, and even ened out. Maybe saved hos marnage. Makes you
Dr. Kelly Gruescr for taking care of my dog, Thank you for the caring and friend- worse, neither would any not-so-nice girl .. Behind .look very sensitive. Women eat that stu.ff up. And
ship you gave her. Thank you for helping me. I will never f01gtt i~
the wheel of a '57 Chevy, I'd be stronger, smarter, · she'll believe you. She knows your fnends. She
cooler •. maybe even taller. Behind the wheel of knows they're all messed·up losers. And your
the Hillman, I was me. Who needs that?
pals won't mind you maJ&lt;!ng them out .lo be
.'
Last week I went to a local' antique car show, losers ~ either. Th~t's what fnends are for.
and .there she was:·A candy-apple-red '57 Chevy.
DO I LOOK OLD?
.
And I stalled thinking, OK, if I sell the house...
There's one other questi~n tha.tterrifi~ men. I.
:: My mother p8ssed away earlier this year, and both she and my father are buried But then 1 heard that little voice in my head --the mean even more than questiOns hke, "Can I help
one that sounds a lot like miwife. It said, "If you .you find the lingerie you're looking for, sir?" If
Jll Riverview Cemetery, and I like to go visit them and decorate their graves.
·: Since four months ago, I have had a shepherd's hook (which has been replaoed), get an old souped-up car al your age, some 20- you've lived with a woman for any length of
i!),djust recently, a fall flower anangemenl stolen. There are no words ·to describe something studboy with perfect teeth, a full head time, you know the worst question she can ask is,
I!K= way I feel, or about the person or persons who have done such a despicable act! of hair and no love handles will blast by you at "Do I look old?" Now; she's always told you she
This is the only thing that I have left to do for my parellls, and to whomever has 20() miles an hour in a brand new Porsche Carrera · wants you to be honest with her, but you know
stolen those ilems, you are not going to stop me from decorating my loved ones' with three or four gorgeous young women filling that there is no safe way to use the words ''wrin·
graves, or I!I)YOne el&lt;e who iS upstanding and with morals. I'm still grieving over the seats and other available spaces and make you kled" and "graying" in a sentence without the
my mother, and for this to happen makes il almost unbearable. Such a blatant dis- look like what you·really are ... an old wannabe." furnace kicking on. You can pretend Yf?U don' t .
So for once, I did the sensible thi~g: I went home hear her, but she'll keep asking: What you need respect for others is indescribable!
: · Morn and Dad, I apologize for this person, or persons, behavior which is way and put a hood scoop and some mag wheels on is Confrontation Avoidance: Try laughing the
question off. But stop laughing after three sec. beyond my comprehension. What goes around comes around, and this deed cer· my Tempo.
DO YOU KNOW WHAT TIME IT IS?
onds. A three-second laugh says, "No, you're not
· lainly will not go unpunished.
There you are, sneaking into the house about ' getting old." A tO-second laugh says, "Can you
Donrra PoweU-Frr~Ver four hours late •• and she's at the top of the stairs, say 'Methuselah'?" A 30-second laugh is technillDciM · asking that question .that makes men quake: " Do cally a suicide attempt on your part. The best
you have any idea what time it is?"
answer has nothing to ·do with the question,
•
Don't answer that. You don't want to be right. · because. the question has nothing to do with the
If you had any idea of the time, you would have question. She knows she's looking old. She also
' I'm a concerned resident of Tuppers Plains. I thought that as a citizen of the Unit· called, so she wouldn't worry. Instead, slide your knows that you know she's looking old. What
ed Slales, I had rights. It seems the sewer board of this &lt;Xlinmunity has different watch off and quietly grind it under your heel. concerns her is that you are unhappy with her
ideas. I've paid my sewer bill from the lime I was hooked up, yet they're saying thai Now you don't know what time it is. Or better because she's looking old.· So when she asks,
10 be in good standing in this town you have to pay for service you didn 'I receive.
They say that if you don't pay for that service that you are delinquenfand llnable to
cast a vote in their elections or ruri for the board. Is this democracy? Why are they
using such lactico? Maybe they're doing sOmething underhanded, or picking the
ones themselves to serve their own puiposes.
,
By Dian Vu)ovlch
.
·
has returned 15.68 percent, and its one-year total
·. It's 1101 fair what they have done to our town. The town has never been able to
Ir you look around for relatively new growth return is 64.05 percent. The Blue Chip. Growth .
. vole on decisions and been kept in the darK. Why? ,
and income funds that have come out of the box Fund's year;to-date toial return is 8.51 percent;
I pay my taxes in this county and I think everyone deserves to exercise their with a bang, you're bound to notice INVESCO's for the year, it's ahead 45.23 percent.
nghts and privileges. Why can 'I we get straight answers to our questions without Growth &amp; Income Fund.
With 50 stocks in the portfolio, its holding
liJeil)g labeled as troublemakers? We deserve to know the truth. After all, who is pay·
In June 1998, this fund was started to meet a include not only monster blue-chip companies
ij!g for this syslem? ·
·
couple of needs, the first of which was style. ' like Microsoft and General. Electric, but also a
'·•.
INVESCO, whose ijnderlying investment phi los- few smaller ones such as Teligenl, a $3 billion
Mary St:Dtblny ophy is growth-centered, didn 't haye a fund that company in the telecom field. The income the
·.
~Plains fit into the growth and income style box. Since fund generates comes from stocks only. Currentinvestors have become style·conscious and fre- ly, the portfolio's yield is about 1.5 percent ..
quently are advised to diversify their fund picks roughly the same as the S&amp;P ,500s.
Technology is the fund's largest sector weight·
: Another Expo has come and gone. Overall I was pleased with wliat seemed to among the types that make up the style box (i.e.;•
growth,
small·cap,
large-cap,
value
,
funds,
etc.),
ing,
as with most of INVESco:s other diversified
. ~ a bigger and betti:r even~ four yelllS old and growing.
there was il need for an entry into that field.
equity funds. It makes up about 30 percent of the
: I'd like to publicly thank my fellow oornmittee membl:rs for their hard work
The
second
reason:
.investor
interest
fund. After that comes heallh care, constituting
~dedication. I'd also.like to thank all tha;c who set up, demonstrated and pro,
"M.
a
ny
investors
have
an
·
interest
in
growth
about 15 percent; ,onsumet cycles, 12 percent;
vided entertainmen~ fun and games.
·
and
income
~unds vs. 100 percent. blue·chip
and communications services, 10 percent The
. . As·is always the case with any event there are some little "situations" that
growth-only
funds,"
says
Fritz
Meyer,
one
of
two
remainder of the holdings is spread among the
oa:ur. One such situation was that the transport vehicle for the Cyclone monster
portfolio
managers
on
INVESCO's
Growth
&amp;
·
various
sectors not represented.
trUck broke down in Pomeroy near Goodwin 's Auto Sales,
What Meyer says are "conspicuously absent"
: When I arrived, O!uck (owner and operator) was unsure of the problem, but it Income Fund. "Plus, they want some dampened
volatility
over
time.
In
some
of
the
big
company
from
the portfolio are things like transpcirtation
~med evident that the big rig wasn 'I going to move on it. own anytime soon.
dividend-paying
stocks,
stock
prices
don't
always
and
utility
stocks: "They are what we think are
We decided to put the big tires on right there and drive the beast to the Expo.
gyrate
as
wildly."
·
the
nc;
m
-growth
areas of the economy and happen
Everything was seemingly OK until one of Pomeroy's police officers showed
On
a
total
return
basis,
Meyer
hopes
that
the
to
be
a
Jot
more
cyclical by nature," he says.
up and told me that in NO WAY could we do this.
fund keeps up with INVESCO's Blue Chip " And we just don 'lthink we 're expert enough to
"Don 'I even think of driving that on the highway," were his words.
Growth
Fund. 'I;hus far, it's done belter. Year-to· time rotation in and . out of the cyclical cateI informed him of all who would miss the Cyclone at the Expo, but it made no
dale
(as
of
Aug. 31 ), the Growth &amp; Income Fund gories."
difference to him. ·1asked to speak to the chief, but he said that wasn't possible.
.
He then contacted the Stale Highway Pabol and soon a trouP,Ci was on the
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 29, the 272nd day
see~. He informed me that to drive the Cyclone on the highway would take per·
of 1999. There are 93 days left in lhe year.
mits that we obviously did not have lime for.•He did, howevet, confirm that the
Today's Highlight in History:
.
By The AMoclllted Preaa
·' &lt;lOOJity sheriff had the authority to escort us to the Expo. ·
·
On Sept. 29, 1978, John Pauli was found dead
In 1918, allied forces scored a decisive break·
When Pomaoy and the state trooper tried to stop the free monsler truck rides
in his Vatican apartment just over a month after . through of the Hindenburg Line during World
4tthe Expo, our local sheriff's department and Bob Beegle came to out rescue
.,
he w&amp;S installed as pope of the Roman Catholic War I.
' and escorted the Cyclone to the evenl
'
·
·
·
Church.
In 1943, Gen . Dwight D. Eisenhower and ItalAlso helping in the situation was Keith Searles of Ashland Servioe Center.
On this date:
ian
Marshal Pietro Badoglio signed an armistice
Thanks to these and others we overcame this linle situation so many could enjoy
'tn 1758; English Admiral Horatio Nelson was aboard the British ship Nelson off Malta. ·
the Cyclone.
born.
In 1963, the second session of the Second VatIf you apprecialed and enjoyed the Town &amp; Counlry Expo this year, get
In .1789, the U.~. War Department established ican Council opened in Rome.
involved. Our meeting&gt; are lisled in the newspaper and are held the last Thursday
a regular army with a strength of several hundred
l.n 1'979,John Paul II became the first pope to
of each month beginning in January. Let your area businesses, aafters, clubs,
men.
visit Ireland as he arrived for a three-day tour.
groups and organizations know about the Expo so that next year's event will conIn 1829, London's reorganized police force,
In 1982, seven people in the Chicago area died
~nue to grow.
•
which becam~ known as Scotland Yard, went on after unwittingly taking Extra-Strength Tyle~ol
duty.
.
capsules laced with cyanide. ~
Dalllu Weber
In 1902, impresario David Belasco opened his
In' 1988, the space shuule Discovery blasted
Rutland first Broadway thearer.
off from Cape Canaveral, Fla., marking AmeriTown &amp; Country Expo pnsident

'Lst4Dfi.s/id in 1948

oen11

braN,.,. ol,.

liN-.

Thurwday, Sept 30
By Jack Ander--. Md Dougln Cohn ' :
paying for a longer period of lime and in the end :
would pay a whole lot more."
·
:
The problems with the industry have not
escaped notice. Bad press and lawsuits, howev~.
have done little to push the bad lenders out .ofbuso-

.'

ness.

"I bave seen endl= creativity in the direction or'
trying to deceive people," says Earl Peattie, president of Mortgage News Company, a Caiifornia consulting firm. "They are getting people to refinance ·
who don't need to,. attaching extremely expensive
balloon payments to a loan, swilching I~ papers,
paying kick-backs to banks thai deny pnme I~
but then ·refer the consumer over for a subprime
loan." Shady lenders are able to do this, I'eattie ·
says, bcQuse many people are financially ignoranL
" A good perocntage of people who gel subprime
' loans actually qualify for a prime loan," he said.

.

ICY.

Inc.

.&amp;.•IIICIeases
tg.lhl f{/ftor

'1

Clearing skies will bring
...

:Tuppers Plains resldent ·wants answers

"Do I l'?"k ~ld? '~ put her mmd at e.~e :roth an
answer hke, You look ~rfect to me or Not to
my eyes" rather than saymg. "Don 't worry about .
.it-- I never look ·at you."
.
ONE S~L-MINDED STEPF~R .MAN _.
Sometimes on the ~eat of a dom~stoc dosagr~e-·
ment, a macho guy.w11I ~tomp outs1de, sl~mmm.g
the front door behmd tum. Th~n he reahzes h1s.
keys and wallet are on the kotchcn table. And .
don't look no~•. .but that "cli~k-dick" . was t~e ·_
f~nt ~oor lockon~ from the. ms~de .. Now he, ~.
shove~ong on the. front l~wn on hts shppers and .
there s ·a cold rao? ,tncklong down ho.s ~ack, No.I :
the strongest pos111on to start negotoatong from. ·
He should get down on his. knees, push open that ,
letter slot · ~nd as~ h~r f~r h1s. keys, pl~ase. Whoch ,
keys she goves hom ond1cates how senous a fighl .
this is: !"o keys at ~II is good. That "!!eans she .
wants h1m to get ~ httle wetter and a httle hum· .
bier -- then she'll let .him i~ when she feels he's
had enough. If she g1ves h1m the key to house, •
then she's saying, "Let y.ourself in when you feel ,
you've had enough." The keys lo the house and
his pick-up truck means she wants him tog~ cool •
down somewhere, and then come back. But of she:.
gives him the keys to just the pick-up, well ... that .
"!!eans things aren't going t.o pic~ up. So the next
t1me you make a manly ex1t dunng an argument,, .
first check. that you've got. spare keys.' Or at leas~
check the weather. .
. , ~·
Quote of the Day: "I'm not hard ofhltlnng,
I'm hardoflistening."·RedGreen
Red Green is tho star of "The Red Green
Shaw," 11 television series seen in the U.S. 0'! .
PBS and in. Calllllla on tllf CBC Network, and .
the autlwr of "The Red Green Book" and "Red .
Green Talks C~rs: A Lovo Story."
·

Technology is key to growth fun·d

..

Sheriff helpS monster tnJck

.

Today In l:listory

.

·I

Pt. Clouctt

COouctt

Sl'o:ooln

r-...

"""'

· ..._

Snow

""

cooler area temperatures

Love is a ·many-tendered. thing

Problems with cemetery vandals

0 --~· ~-·~·

s.n.y

. ~ut Meyer i~ confident about gtowt~ com pames. Does he thmk growth stocks are gomg to run ·
out of steam any l,ime soon? No.
·
.
What he sees driving this "extraordinary" .
economy more than anything else is technology, ·
and investments in it. Meyer says thai because we ·
are in a competitive global economy where,
worldwide, there are labor surpluses and an abun·
dance. of raw materials,. he. doesn't see corporate :
Amenca as able to ra1se pnces across the board. .
. "So, t~e way that !he~ improve t~~ bottom line ..
os to contmue mvestmg m productiVIty enhance- :
ments. And that's technology .. It's information :
technology, computing and communications tech· .
nology," he says. "Then, when you get . into ·
health care and things like that, there are huge
advances in technology in these areas as well."
On the side of cau.tion, while it's .hard to dispule the power of large-cap growth stocks, it's
good to diversify. Just because they've dominated
market performance since 1995 doesn't mean
they ,will do so year in and year out. Which is one :
reason why style matters·· it keeps you logical. ·
Dian Vqjovkh ~ most recent books include :
"101 MUiwll FNnd FAQs" (Chandler Houst) :
and "IO,Minute Guide to the StoCk Market" :
(Macmillan). To leam more about mutual funds, ·
visit her Web site at: www.diansfundfl'llebies.com~ :
'

ca's return to manned space flight following the
Challenger disaster.
.
Ten years ago: Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor was
conv.icted of battery for slapping a Beverly Hi lis
police .officer who had pulled over her Rolls·
Royce for expired license plates. (As part of her
sentence, Gabor served thr.ee days in jail.)
Five years ago: The House voted to end the
age-old practice of lobbyists buying meals and
entertainment for members of Congress.
.
One year ago: Former Los Angeles Mayor
Tom Bradley died at age 80. The Federal Reserve
cut the federal Junds rate a quarter-point, to 5.25
percent.
·
Today's Birthdays: Movie director Michelan·
gelo Antonioni iSI 87. Movie director Staqley ·
Kramer .is·86. Actress Lizabeth Scott is 77. Actor
Steve Forrest is 75. Actress Anita Ekberg is 68.

By The Aseoclated Press
·
Cool, dry air will filter into Ohio behind today's storm clouds, .the
National Weather Service said.
Showers and thunderstorms along with cooler temperatures will be the
rule
·
Lows tonight will be in. the 405 and.highs on Thursday only in the 60s.
· The cooler conditions arc expected to continue through the weekend,
forecasters said.
. The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather statii&gt;n was 96 degrees in 1953 while the record low was 31 in 1942. Sunset
tqnight will be at 7:18p.m . and sunrise Thursday al 7:'M a.m.
Weather rorecast:
Tonight. ..Showers. Lows in the lower 50s: Northwest wind 10 to 20
mph. Chance of rain 90 percent.
· Thursday... Becoming partly cloudy. Highs 65 to 70.
Thursday night...Mostly clear. .Lows 45 to 50.
Extended rorec•st:
Friday... Mostly clear. Highs around 70.
Saturday... Mostly clear. Lows in the .mid 50s and highs around 70 .
Sunday.. .Partly cloudy. Lows 50 to 55 and highs in the lower 70s.

FDA: Salmonella traced to Buckeye Egg

By JEANNINE AVERSA
despite decreases in some areas.
Aleocblted PrMs WI Itlli
Orders for industrial machinery,
WASH1NGTON (AP) - Orders includinc computers and machine
to U.S. factories for big-tid.et man· · tools, fell 2 perocnt in AugUSI, folufactured goods unexpectedly rose lowing a hefty 10.5 percent gain in
0.9 percent in Augusa, led by an July.
increase in demand for airplanes,
And, orders for electronic and
automobiles and other transportation other electrical equipment, which
equipment.
includes everything from semicon•
The Commerce Department ductors, circuit boards and telecom·reported today that orders for munications equipment to home
durable goods grew last month to a appliances, posted a 0.1 percent
seasonally idjusted $206.9 billion.
decline, followin)! a strong 7.1 perThe increase followed a revised 4 cent gain in July.
percent gain in July, better than the .
"lbat's pay~k for a very strong
government previously estimated. July," Zandi said of lhe decreases in
July's performance · marked the those two categoriC$. The trend
biggest one·month gain since going forward, he believes, will be
November 1997 ,when durable· continued improvements.
Excluding transportation, overall
goods ord6rs rose 4.4 peri::ent.
August's performance - th~ orders for durable goods would have
12th increase in the' Iast 15 months . fallen 0.2 percent in August, the fifth
- was bener than many analysts decrease in the last eight months.
had expected. They were forecasting
While on the rebound, American
orders would fall by 0.9 percent.
manufacturers have·been.battered by
"This report indicates that manu- a global financial crisis, which has
facturers, which have been suffer- cut sharply into their overseas sales
ing, continue to recover and the and also opened them up to stiffer
prospects·for the future are that they competition from cheaper imports.
The overall economy has continwill continue to improve," said
economist Mark Zandi with Region- ued to thrive, powered by strong
al Financial ASsociates.
·
consumer demand.
Despite the strong report, Zandi
One of the U.S. industries that
and other analysts said they don 'I has suffered the most from the globexpect the Federal Reserve to raise alturmoil has been steel.
Today's report said primary met·
interest rates for a third time this
year when it meets next week.
als, the category that includes steel,
Orders for transportation equip- saw orders fall 1.7 percent in
menl posted the biggest gain in August, down Jor the first time since
August, . rising 4.6 percent lo the . March. In July, .orders for primary
highest level since May, when metals rose a solid 2.9 percent.
orders rose 9.9 percent. This marked
Shipments of big-ticket durable
the fourth consecutive increase. In goods went up by 1.3 percent in
July, orders for transportation equip- August . ·This marked the 13th
ment rose 2 percent.
increase in the last 15 months.
The transportation sector is often
On Tuesday, the Conference
volatile froll) month to month ·Board reported that consumer confibecause it includes such big-ticket dence slipped in September by much
purchases as airplanes. The increase more than analysts had expected,
in transportation orders comes as the suggesting the Federal Reserve's
auto industry expects a year of higher-interest-rate strategy is coolrecord sales in 1999.
ing off the economy. The central
August's overall increase came bank raised rates twice this year.

Accidents Investigated
The Middleport Police Departrnenl investigated two accidents on
Tuesday, but issued no citations.
According to the department, Jason E. Boggess. 19, Middleport, struclc
from behind a vehicle driven by Shirley J. Kauff, 47, Middleport, while
Kauff was stopped on Mill Street yesterday morning.
Kauff had stopped to tum onto County Road 38, and Boggess was
unable to see thai she had stopped, striking her 1990 Chevrolet from
~~
.
Yesterday afternoon, Richard Vaughan, 63, MiddiCf&gt;Ort. struck a car
driven by Diana S. Mills, 43, of Syracuse, while Mills was backing out
space at Dairy Queen.

Southern Cheerleaders to hold snake lfRn,.,",
Southero Cheerleaders will qold an old-fashioned snake dance Fn.dov. 1
7 p.m. starting and ending at Southern High School. Bonfire will follow.

The public is invited to join.

.

Football tailgate party planned

.

A footba,lltailgate party will be held Saturday at 3 p .m. in the South·
em High School parking lot prior to the So~thern-Eastern football game,

Gospel sing set
A gospel sing will be held Saturday, 7 p.m. at St. Paul Tuppers Plai1ns1
United United Methodist Church, Tuppool; Plains. Featured will be
True Tone Trio, Yvonne Walters, and proclaim . A love offering will be
held to benefit Bend Aru Gospel Jubilee, May 18-21, 2000. For more-l
information call Evelyn Roush, 301-882-2049. .
·

Revival planned

·

A revival will be held Oct. 10.17 at Father's House Church. Hanford,
W.Va., 7 p.m. each evening. There will be a different minister and""'""
each night of the revival.

Sutton Trustees to meet
Sutton Township Trustees will meet Monday, 7:30 p.m. at I he Syracuse·
Village hall.
Salisbury Township trustees will meet Tuesday, 6:30p.m. al the town- ·
ship hall, Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy.

Revival set
Revival services will be held at the Pomeroy Church of Christ, Oct . 8·
10 at 7 p.m. nightly: There will be special singing. Danny Bias will be
preaching.

Conferences planned
Easte[ll Local School District will have parent/teacher conferences on ·
Thursday, Oct. 7, from 4 to 7 p.m. district-wide. Parents are to call the
high school at 985-3329 or the elementary schoo l at 985·3304 to sched·
ule appointments, Deryl .E.
announced today.

Newspaper accuses radio
Stronger laws urged to keep guns out of kids' hands.
station of stealing its stories By ANDREW WELSH-,HUGGINS . Guns,"
called for tougher laws to
prevent children from gening ahold
BY JOHN SEEWER

Associated Press Writer
· 1ULEDO (AP) - The Blade has .
filed a lawsuit accusing a radio station
and one of its announcers·of stealing·
the newspaper's stories and reading
them on the air without proper credit.
The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in
Lucas County Common Pleas Court,
accused WSPD·AM of violating the
. Ohio Deceptive Trade Practices Act.
The Blade said the radio station's use
of its p10duct hurt the newspaper's
circulation and ability to anract
advertisers.
The radio station's manager said
today he was very confident of
WSPD's programming practices.
"We would not intentionally
pirate any other journalist's work,"

CINCINNATI (AP) - 'The fed· kers.
"I want to understand how our
eial Food and Drug Administration
has warned Ohio's biggest egg pro- eggs got to a caterer in Massachuducer to correct unsa'nitary condi- setts," Jones said. ." I have not
tions at its Croton operation because received a Massachusetts health
of a link to a salmonella detection in department report. I cannot say that
Massachusells.
what. happened in Massachusetts was
In a letter to Elliot Jones, the caused by our eggs. I don't have, the
chief operating officer of Buckeye data."
Jo'nes did not return a call seeking
Egg Farm, the FDA said it traced
tainted eggs to the Croton operation, additional comment Tuesday.
Buckeye .Egg · has a 2.5-million
and during an inspection of th~
hen operation at Mount Victory, in
facility found salmonella bacteria.
Jones said he would meet with west-central Ohio, and a 4.6-million
FDA officials ·on Thursday to dis- hen operation at Croton, · 35 miles
northeast of Ollumbus.
cuss the allegations.
- The FDA's district ·office in
The company produces more
CinCinnati released the letter, dated than 5 million eggs a day that are
Continued from page 1
Sept. 9, but offic.ials declined to dis· shipped to grocery stores and restauAll council members, with the
rants in 20.states.
cuss Thursday's meeting.
... It's an open inwestigation,"
The FDA said the Massachusetts exception of Beth Stivers, voted
. spokeswoman Marilyn Zipkes said salmonella detectioQ happened in "no" on the second reading of an .
Tuesday. "We don't comment on .May, and that •government inspec- ordinance waiving the residency
tors visited Buckeye Egg's Croton requirement for the village street
ongoing iqvestigations."
Jones told The Columbus Dis- operation in July. The letter said that commissioner. A third reading on the
patch that Buckeye Egg does not in addition to salmonella, they ordinance will be held at the Octo- ·
dispilte that the tainted ,eggs may observed unsanitary conditions and ber 11 meeting. ·
. have come from the company. But objectionable practices.
Oluncil members discussed the
he said they were.nol shipped directIt cited manure three feet deep in need for an inspection of lwo under·
lY, and probably ended up in Massa- manure pits, cobwebs three feet · ground storage tanks; one on Rutchusetts through distributors or bro- .long, and live flies and beetles " in land Street, the other near the village
.
quantities too numerous to count."
garage, which the EPA says must be
addressed.
lannarelli said that a representa•
{USPS ZU·!I60l
live of Jeffers Excavating will meet
Community Newspaper Holdlnp. Inc.
with village supervisor Brent M.an·
The following couples were ley about the tanks, which must be
Published every afternoon , Monda~ through
· Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
issued ·marriage licenses recently in vented and fenced in in order to
Ohio V.lley Publi!Ihing Company. Second class
the
Meigs County Probate Court of comply with the EPA's mandates.
pmraae paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Judge Robert Buck: Charles Robert . The tanks do not require removal
Mtmber. Tbe Associated Preu and the Ohio
Newspaper AMociation.
· Bissell, 22, Pomeroy, and Misty unless they are leaking, which they
Ptw• •rfm Send address corrections to The
Dawn Newell, 24, Long Bottom; do not appear to be doing.
Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
4S769.
Todd Lee Farley, 22, Bidwell, and
Iannarelli also discusSed adding
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Heather Lynn McPhail, 24, SyraBy C..-fier' or Motor Route
several community leaders to a dis·
One :Weei ............................... ..S2.00
cuse.
play in council chambers which now
o... Mopto................................ $8.70

said Andy Stuart, vice president and Associated Press WrHer
Ohio of guns.
COLUMBUS (AP) market manager for Clear Channel
Institute spokesman Bill Crimi
Communications Inc.'s five Toledo needs to ·pass laws already enacted
said
Ohio has failed to implement
by
other
states
to
prevent
gun
viostations.
.
nine
of 14 standard firearm laws
lence
among
children,
a
new
report
A message seeking comment was
by several other states,
passed
said.
left today with The Blade's. lawyer, ·
including
a j~venile possession law
As
the
report
was
released
on
Frjtz Byers.
Morning show· host Mio.rk Sian· Tuesday, stale Sen. Eric Fingerhut passed by 30 states.
It is not an unreasonable standard
driff and Jacor Communications, the said Gov. Bob Taft hasn 't kept camto
require a mechanism that would
paign
promises
about
addressing
the
radio station's former parent compa·
prevent
a gun accidentally dropped
problem
of
children
getting
access
to
ny, also were lisled as defendants in
by
a
child
from firing, Crimi said.
guns.
the lawsuit.
The
governor's.
office
said
.Fin"WSPD and Standriff are effectively pirating from The Toledo gerhut, D-Cieveland, was guilty of
Blade for their own profit," the law- partisan politico and that Taft was
preparing legislation to deal with the
suit said.
issue
of children and guns.
Tlie lawsuit is seeking unspecified
The
Prevention Institute, a
damages and an order that WSPD
Columbus-based
. research center 1
stop broadcasting news or other
said 145 Ohio children on average
reports taken from The Blade.
are killed each year by guns.
~· speeding Bullets, The Deadly
COnsequence of Children and
honors jlasl police chiefs and officers.
~
Iannarelli said that retired police
chief Sid Little, former mayors Fred
IPRIIIG VALLEY CltlfMA
_,
Hoffman and Dewey "Mack" Horj
.
446 4524 1~1 ~~~ '&lt;i'ki •
ton, and former councilman Bob
Gilmore, who died earlier this year,
MON 9/27 • THURS 9/'JIJ/99
will be honored on the display. Their
lOX OfFICI WILL OPIN AT
6:30 PM fOR !VINING SHOWS
pictures and a plaque will be hung
on the wall in their honor.
. Bill ·Lambert discussed with .
council the possibility of purchasing
a truck for the Ohio Cooperative
Purchasing program. At their last
.meeting, council members discussed
purchasing a second-hand truck for
village street and water department
use, and Lambert. said that the vii·
·lage would not be required to adver(PG)
tise specifications for a purchase
lll.IIE llREJIK 1""' 7:45, 10:00
through the state program, since th e
(ComedyiActiolll MaJ!ill.lwrence.lllke WiW1
vehicles are bid by contract.
• . . . _ . 0..
Present, in addition to Iannarelli ,
S•ru~i~J! t'r
were council members Houchins,
HoiiMya Oltly .
Stivers, Rae Gwiazdowski, Roger'
ALL
ALL TIMES $4.00
Manley, Bob · Pooler, and' Bob
Robinson and Clerk Bryan Swann.

New Christmas Decorations ...

.

The Daily Sentinel Couples issued
marriage licenses

One Year................................... $104.00 .
SINGL~ COPY ·PRICE
O.ily. .................. ..................... 3S Cenu
Sublaibers not desiring to pay tht: carrier may

·remit in advance direa: to The Daily Seminel on
a throe, six or 12 month ba!is. Credit will be
Jiven &lt;:arrier each week.
No subsaiption by mail pennilled in areaS
.where borne carrier service is available.
Publishtr reserves tile right to adjust 1111cs during the ~ub$cription period. Subscription rate
chanp may be Implemented b)' changing the
duration of t~e subscription.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
IDikle Meip County
13 Week.s............................S:27.30
26 Weeb •.•••••••••.•~ ............. .$53. 82 ~
52 Weeb ,......................... .SI05.56
Rala OutiJde Melp County
13 Weeb ............................$·29.2.5
26 W..b ....... :....................SS6.68
52 'Neeb ..•....•..,._,,, •••••••• .$109.72

Reader Services
Correction Polley

·Our mal• concern In all stories Is to bt
accunte. tr you know or an error in a
itory, call the •e:wsroom al (740) 991·
ll!!. Wt will chCck your lnromiation
•nd atakt 1 col'ftdlon lrwarra•ted.

News Departments
T-e main a•mbcr is
mt:al extentlons aft:

991~21!5.

Dep1ni·

General Managec ........................Ext. 1101
Newi\.................................... ~ ........ Ext. 1102

Stocks

-*-'*-

'
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided
by Advest or Galli potts.

ll(H!TI

\,1

I

s,,,..,.,.,

Meigs EMS logs 4 calls

Big Bend Sternwheel Festival Parade

•

Other Services

(l('

Units ·of the Meigs County Racine, Gordon Weese, refused
Am Ele Power ..................:......34
Emergency
Medical
Service treatment.
Akzo ......................................42'!. · recorded four calls for assistance
.POMEROY
Amerltech ..................... ;....... 69\1
Tuesday. Units respondfng includ4:55 p.m., Condor Street, Sally
Ashland 011 ....................:...... 35}.
ed:
Ziegler, treated at the scene, CenAT&amp;T .................................... 43'1•
CENTRAL
DISPATCil
tral Dispatch squad assisted.
Bank C)na .............................34J•
TUPPERS PLAINS
11:06 a.m., Rock Street,
Bob Evans ...................;.......20 1..
8:11 p.m., Arbaugh Addition,
Pomeroy, ·Lillian Werry, Ve1e11ns
Borg-Warner .........................42~
Memorial Hospital;
Christy · Tucker, Camden-Clark
Champion ............................ :.. 5'.1
Charm Shps .................. .........sl..
2:42 p.m., slate Route 124, Memorial Hospital.
City Holdlng .......................... 19'lo
Federal Mogul ......................... 25
Flrstar .................................. 23"1.
Gannett ..................................69l.
Kmart ............................C-... 11 'J.
Kroger ................................... 23'J.
Landa End .................... :.....65"1,.
Umlted ......... _..., ................... 36~
Oak Hill Flnl ..........................16),
OVB ......... :............................... 32
One Valley ............................34'J.
Peoples ................................. 21t.
Prem Flnl ............................... 11 'J.
Rocliwell ..........................52'1.
·
October 9th
RD!Shall ................................58'b
Sears ........................ ,............ 29'J.
Line up 1 :00 pm Pomeroy Ball Field
Shoney's ................................... 2
Wendy's ............................... 25"1.
Walk ins welcome that. day, or register by
Worthlngton ...... :................ 15"/,.

or.ExL 1106

Adnrtislng. ................................ .ExL 1104
Cirntatt................................... .ExL 1103
CtasstO&lt;d Ado ............ ..................ExL 1100

'

calling Melinda McDonald at
(7 40) 992-2239!
will be awarded!
/

. • ]aiz Productjori
./

• Thursday, September 30, 1999

+ 8 p.m.

...

• State Theatre (M:Iin Street)
• Tickets Are $10/Person &amp; Available At The
Door The Night Of The Perfonnance

........

. . . .......... ~ .... dlr....,.
w. vq~N~ ~
a HMay

li61111ft

POI.T

P'IAI&amp;•1

Artist Series

j

�...
"

The Daily Sentin~~

Sports

Wednesday, September 29, 1999

whip Angels 9-3,
remain alive ·in playoff race

Reds beat Astros 4-1 , take
lead in NL Central Division

American League
roundup

By MICHAEL A. LtiTZ
HOUSTON (AP)
The
Cincipnati Reds. despite their presence all season in ·a tight NL Central
pennant chase. have a loose club:

he's 4-0 this seastin. He retired 12 in as the wild card," A'StroS manager
a row at one stretch and fimshed with Larry Dierker S8ld. "I just want us to
three strikeouts and no walks. It was get there ."
an efficient performance with 75
Scott Williamson pitched the
pttches that included 59 strikes and ninth for his 19th save.
bouse.
· ·
16 balls.
Sean Casey hit his 25th homer in
On Monday ~ight ; they made
" We· re down to a four-game sea- the fi,;t , and the R$ added !wo
their rookies d~ss like Dallas son" McKeon said. "We've come ••more runs m the second agamstLmaa
Cowboys cheerkaCiepi. .
Ion~ way to get this far. but we can ' t (20-10) on RBI singles by Eddie
Tuesday night, Pete Harnisch afforilto celebrate yet. We got where Taubensee and Pokey Reese ..
pilched eight strong i11ning and led we are by not getting distracted and
" When we _talked about L:tma, we
the Reds to a 4-1 victory over playing hard every day. We're not talked about JUSt betog pauent. and
Houston, giving them a one-game going to change now.".
try' not to get mto the e~ottonal
lead over the Astros with four games
And they ' re not going to relax .
game wtth htm "":;•use he s a very
l,~:ft in-the season.
"We' ve been cha.•ing them for so emotwnal_ptt~her, shortstop Barry
"They didn ' t look half bad," long, it definitely feels great to be m Larktn satd. We ";;re pauent and
Reds manager Jack McKeon said of first but it's not over.·· Eddte • waned for our pnch.
the dolled-up rookies.
Taubensee said. " It 's going right
. Lima was in !rouble again in the
The Reds looked more than half down to the end. We control our own thud. Taubensee s mfield htt scored
good on the field, wmmng their sixth destiny and that 's what we wa~!· but Barry Larkin for a 4-1 lead wtth two
. straight and regaining first place for .we sttll have four games to go
outs. Ltma walked Brei Boone lo
1he firsl time since Aug. 19. when '.
The larg'est baseball crowd in the load the bases. but Reese grounded
1hey were knocked out by the Astros. . history of the Astrodome. ~4 ,037 , out. .
.
.
..
Houston lost its third in a row.
saw the game. but they dtdn t have
. Ltma lost hts thtrd strmght dect-,
"These guys know how (0 have
much 10 cheer atJ&lt;;&gt;ut. although the StOn SinCe gelling hts ·201h VICtory
lot of fun in 1he clubhouse. l)ley're a Astros held their I ~game lead. over Sept. II agaonst the Chtcago Cubs.
CONGRATULATED -:- The Cincinnati Reds' of Tuesday night's National League game against
loose bunch. as you can tell. .. New York for the wtld-card spot Tite Ltma went stx tnnongs. allowmg four
Hamtsch satd.
.
Mets lost 9-_~ to Atlanta ._
. .
runs - three earned - and etght hus Sean Casey (21 ) is con atulated by his team- the host ·Houston Astros, who lost 4-1- (AP)
Harnisch ( 15- 10) has a 5~2 hfe- . " I' vc satd smce spnng tram mg. wnh ctght stnkeo~ts.
. males alter hitting a solo t'omer in the first inning
(See REDS on PageS)
time .record against the Astrus. and I'd be happy to get onto the playoffs

By ADAM NAZIIIIOWITZ

~aoclated Press Writer

a

Baseball
AL standings
Iwtt

y- N~w

Division!
Iwn

Easltrn Oi\'ision
•W L
95 62

Y()( k

Boston

90

Toronto
Balumore

~0

Tan1p3 Bay

68

77
Cmlnl

f&lt;l.

1il!

~ 77

4
15
IR
27

t\01

66
77
80
90

:; 1o
490
4~0

Di•l~

J.-CLEVELAND

. 96 61

Chaca8o
Detroit
MinntSOia . ..

71
66
. 6J

Kansas Cit)' . .

85
91
93

btl
455
410
.404

61 96
Wtsltm D1Yision
94 63

x -Texas .. ..

. Oakllllld
Seaule .. . ..... .

....85
77

72
80

Anaheim .. .. . . .
. 65
Ji -dioched dmsion 111lc:
y-clinchcd playo ff berth

91

m

14 '-

!0
J1 :
J.i',

1,1

Division II
599
541

490
41~

Imtt

17
29

'IUesday 's scores

Today 's games

Division Ill

(Rapp ~7 and Mercker 1..0) at
Oticaao (Pill'que 9-14 and Myeue 0-2), .S OS p m.
New York (&lt;knrns 14-9) 1111 BallllllOfe (Mussma
17-7). 1 OS p m.
. Toronto (Escobar 13-11) at Tampa Bay (Win 71,). 7:0.5pm
Detroit (Miicki 13-12) at Mmnesota (l&gt;l:ays 6-10),
80S p.m.
CU:VEL.ANO (Nagy 17-10) at Kansas Cuy
(Rosado 9-14). 8 05 p m
Seanle {Meche 7-4) 3l Texas {Sde 18-8), 8OS

Imtt
1-Uma Bath (13 ) .S-0

Oakland (Olivares I.5 -11) al Anaheam (Cooper 1-

p.m.

Thursday,'s games
New York (0 Hernandez 16-9) at Baltimore
(Riley 0-0). 1 05 p m
Toronto (SpolJanc 2- 1) a1 CLEVELAND (Coloo

Division IV

17-5). Hl5 p.m

Iaun

Boston (Sabtrhagt:n 10-6) at Chicago (Simtka 11 13), a·os P m
Det roit (NIIk,,w~ kr -1 51 at Mmnesom (Hawldn'
10-14), 80S pm
S!!allk mmchhffc 0-.H Jl fClii:lS !Burket! g. g)
8:05 p.m
Onldand (Ht&gt;n-:dra I ' ·Rl at t\nahcrm {Ftnle y 12
Il l 10 0:-i p m

Iwn

DiYisiun

n

100
91

x-1\tlanta.
New York
Philadelplua
Montrea l
Flonda

,.

65
61

L

f&lt;l.

!ill

586

8
26
15'
.H'·

57
65
8.1
91
95

b\1

471
411

J99

Central Di..-ision
95 6.1 601
595
94 6-1
76 79 '490
72 84 462
1 1 J!.l .411i 8
65 92 414

CINCINNATI

Houston
Piii Sburgh
St Luur ~
Mtlv. m1ke~
,Chk r~go

Wtstnn Divlslon
97 60
lii• Atizona
.. 8~ 74
San Frnnci!&gt;CO
.75 82
· Los i\ngcle!&gt; .
71 ·8.1
S&gt;tn Otego .
70 88
Cnlor.rdo
~ - c hn c ~d dtVISIOOtllfe

17'

Iwn

12'·

29':

14

468
441

Tuesday,s scores
Florida. .5, Montreal 3
Chicaao 8, .Phif!Mk:lpfua 2
CINCINNATI4, Houstoo 1
Atlanta 9, New Yod: 3
Arizona 9, Coloudo 3
Los Angeles 6, San Francisco 3
Pittsbur~h at Mtlwauk~. ppd , ram
San Diego 111 St. Louis. ppd .. nun

Division VI

.

Flortda (8umett.4-2) at ~ontreal (Ltlly 0-1 }. 7'05
p.m.
.
Ctlicago (Bowte 2-61 at Ptuladdptua (l.oc:wer 00), 705pm
Atlanta (Mnddul'l 19 8) at New York •Leitrr 11 12•. 7.35, p.m
CINCINNATI {Parm 11 ·2) at Houston (Hompton
2()..4). 8:05 p m.
.
Colorado (A slac•o 16-11) at Anzona &lt;Rey nolo
10·5 ). 9 .35 p m
l...os Angeles tBrown 18-11 ) :n San Fr;r;1cisco
(HernandcL 7- 121 10 15 p m

Thursday's games
Llu ' Angeles (Valdes 9- 141 at San (:rmu:mo
{Es tes 11 - IOJ, 4 OS p m
Ctn cago (McNic hol I). I ) .at Phlli!dclpht a (Person
-CJ-.5). 1·05 p m
At lama (MillWood 18-7) at Ne w York (Yo~hti 12·
8), 710pm
Piusburgh (Schmidt 13- 111 at MJiwnuk~ (Noma

p.m

S~rn DiegQ (Hitchcock 12- 1.1') at Anzona (R

.

Johnson 16-9). 9·.\S p.m

Ohio H.S. sports
Ohio H.S. football poll
COLUMB US . Oh1o lAP! - How a suue p:uwl
ul sport 5 wn ters and broadrasters ratt"' Qhlt) lu gh
St'hool fa&lt;.ub.rll teams 111 the tlmd ol c1ghl wedd )'

assutant coach.
Nf.W YORK KNICKS Wahed C lterb
W11lmms S1gned C Andrew Lang
. "IURUNTO kAPTORS S1 gnN! C Akk
Rikloje''IC 10 a thlft ·)t;:tr contrl)(:t '

Transactions

tJ.ll ~ - J2l0.
Division Ill
Region 9· !-Perry (5-0) 9 0000 2-0rrvtlk (4-1)
8 .1000 3-Aiuon Hoban (4-1 ) 8 2500. 4-Hubb:vd
(4 I) 1 9900 ~ - Cop-ley (~ ·0) 7 8500 6-Cic. Orange
(4.0• 6 (J400 7-Bay Vallage Bay (4· 1) 6 4000. 8Medina Buckeye {3-2) 6 .U50, 9-Tallmadge (4-1) 6, .
2:'i00 10-0lesterland W Geauga (4·1) 6 I SOO
Regtou 10 1-Col Watterson (4- U II . 5000 2Shelby H- 1I 10 4500 l -Lima Bath (5-0) 10. 2500
4-Col. OeSales (4-1) S 8.500 5-0uawa-Giandorf (4·
I) 7 7500 6-lkllevue (4-0) 7. 6250. / · Sunbury B1g
Walnut (4-1) 7 5500. 8-BeUefontaine (3-2 ) 7. 2&lt;'00. ,
9-Willrud (4-1 ) 6 6500 IO.Napokon 0 -2) 6 6000.
Reaion 11 : ! -Poland Scmtn:Hl (5-0J 12 :WOO 1MIIIersburg West Holmes (.5 -0) 10 4000 J.
Loursville {"-1) 8 1500 4-SieUben'lltlk (4-1) 6.
6000. 5-McCc nnelsvtlle Morgan (4-1) 6 5500 6Cnrrollton CJ -2) 5. 8500. 7-VINCENTWARREN ( \.
21 5 4500 B-THORNVILLE SHERIDAN t""IJ 5
) 500. 9-8e1on W Branch (J-2) 4. 8000 10-Usbon
Be&lt;l\'er ( 2-~1 4 4000
Reg1on \1 I-JACKSON (5-0J 10. 0500. 2. 1\SHVILLE TEAYS VALLEY (5 -0) 9 7500 l (tielLondon ((j ·OJ-Cm PurLtll Mamm (4-11 K 6000. 5lk llhtoo k (~ - 0 ) !! -1000 6 -Ctrdevtlle (4-1 I 6. 9500.
7-Gi\l.l. IPOI. IS GAU.IAACAD. (4-1I 6 7300, R·
MnrTowUttlc Mr&lt;r.mt('-2)6 2500 9- Eaton(4 - l)~
1Kl.X.1 10-New R•chmond [4-1) 5 -4500.
·

Fall

Bunting
Edition

Division IV

To Appear In The

R~ g•on

IJ ! -Atwater Waterloo (5-0) 9 8000 2Sandu sky Perllin s (5-0 l !! 2000 J -Akron
Manchester (-I - I J 7 9000. 4.:Gunrd (4-1 ) 1 .\500 ~ ­
Newton Fal ls l 4- ll 7 I{IX), 6-Akron St Vin~~nt - SI
Mary 0 -2) 6 6500 7-0ia,;na Falls {5-0) 6 2300. 8Wic kltfte (4 -11 6. (XXlO 9 -Castaha M:t.rgateua 0 ·21
5. 61))) 10- leavimburg Lo!Brae &lt;'· 21 5, 27'\0.
Rt:gion 1-&amp;: 1-Bell,dle Clear Fork {S-0) 10
-1~ 1-Manon Elgm t5 -0) 9 0000 3- Wauseon j4.
ll 7 74f0 -1 -Tonlogany Otsego 14-ll 7 JOOO 5Coldwater C' ·2l b -t500 6 Oak. Hnrbor (.5 -0} 6
2 ~00 7-Spana Hrgh!Jnd Morrow ( ~ - 2) 5 7'i00 Rtt rc)-Col .~aLly l-1-1)- Pimn C1ty Jonathan Alder (1~~ 5 I ~ 00 10-Kan sos lakota t~ I) 5 IOXJ ,
Re gion 15. 1-Suuchers {4- 1) 10 ,4000 2·
C.rmpbcll Mcmonal l5· 0) 10. 1040 .\-Nu,·orre
l·a1tless (4 - l) 9 6000. 4 Zmlt\'tll~ T1.1sc Valley (S -O)
9 ~ - 5- You . Mooney (4-1 ) 8 6790 6· Rellnire (4·
I ) 7 97 50 7- Utlca (5-0l 1 6000 8,ST£WART
FEDERAl. HOCKING (4-1I 6 6000 9· LAN&lt;;.
FAIRFIELD UNION 14- 1I 6 l500 10-Newar\.
L1..:kmg Valley C'-2) 6 1500,
Regton 16· 1-Ctn Wyorrung (5 -0l II . 5500 2·
Ctn Madeira (5.0 ) 9 1500 1-WH EELERSDURG
(5-0) B 6920 4-Ham Bndtn (4-1) M. 0.'60 5Portsmouth t4- l) 7 9500 . 6-Cin lndtan Hill (4-1 ) 1
1500. 7-Cin . Finneytown(4-1)7 IOOO. S· IRONlUN
t""l l 6 8500. 9·1RONTON ROCK HILL ('"II 5.
77 10 10-Gcnn:mtown Valley Vtew (4-1) 5 .\500

THE DAILY SENTINEL ·
GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE,
&amp; POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
•\

~
346
Division V
272
Regton 17 !-Massillon Tuslaw lS-0) 10. 7000
254
2- Bedford Chancl (5-0) 9 4500 .\-lisbon D'J'&gt; Id
. .. 210
Anderson {5-0J 9 0000 4-N lnllil S Range (5-0) 8
..... 164
4~ 5"Cle V!llaAngda-St . Joseph (5-U) 7 3020. 6158
0 rwcll Grand Valley (3-2) 5 6000. ?-Brookfield 0 ·
7- Mogl•do~4 - 1
121 · 1) S 4000 t!- New Middletown Stymgfidd {4-1) 4
8·Mmstc:r J-2. ...... .... . . ... ..
. ... 50
~000 9-Warren Kennedy {2-.\ ) 4 2000 10-SulhvM
9-C in Country Day S-O 1
•
44
Block R1ver 0·2) 4 0000.
10-Bcllatre St John 4- 1
,.
35
Regt on 18: I (tie)-Gtbsonbu'll (5.() )-Smith,·ille
Otherll recelvin~: 12 or morr po,lnts: II · {5-0J !l 7500 3-Metmnora Evergreen (5 -0) 8 28JO
McComb J3 12-Pandor.•-Gili:ll ia U 13-Kinl and 22
4-l.tberty Center (4- 1) 7. 6940 S- ~lphos Jdfer~on
14-Cuyahog&lt;r. Hts 21 15·Danvalle 19 16-Co"mgto n (4- 1) 6. !lOOO 6-Columbus Grove (4-1) 6 7.500. 718 17-lndependence 1~ . l S-Monweville 14 19- Jeron-.: sville H11\sdale (4 -1) 6 3500 8· Bluffton (4-1l
Antwerp D 20- HEMLOCK MILLER 12
6 {)000 9- Sycamo~ Mohawk (4-1) 5 · 6(XX) 10Crtstbne (4-1) 5 1500
Rc:gton 19: )-Woodsfield Montoe Ce n1ral (5-())
!! 1910 2-CHESA PEAKE (5 -0J 1 8J70 ~­
Balmnore L1bert y UnJo n t 5-0 J 1 1000 4LU CASV\ l LE VAI'~LEY t5 -01 1 ~SOO 5CROOKSV ILLE f')-0 ) 7 2000 6- BarnesvLIIe (5-0)
CO LUMB US , Ohrn (A PI - llerc M C' the O:CC1~nd
weekl y football computer mtmgs frum the OhiO Ha gh 1 1000 7-0 AK HILL (4- 1) 6 6500 8-BE\IERLY
School Athlclt c 1\ssoc t:mon ,Raltng!i ant by dJYtSiflU FU !H FRYE 14- 1) 6 ~tXKl 9-CHil.LI COTH E
HUNTING TO N 15·01 6 JNO 10- Johnstown
and regton with rc..:md anJ avemge b• · le"el po1111 ~
per ~.une {lop ctght Icarus tn e.1ch rcgton :rd vame In Notthndgt' (~ 01tJ lOOO
Rcg1on 10 1-Kod.ford Parkway {5-0) 9 5500
regiOnal qu nrterfinalst ·
Lr\t i lfnr d Ce mer l·narb anks (5-0J 8 1500 -' ·
WaytK'SV! IIe t-4-0) 7. 5260 4- W Aluandria Tw m
Division I
V&lt;~ llcy S. 15-01 I 2000 S;St Henry ~4 -(11 6. 9400 6Reg1011 I '1-Solon (5 -U) 14 0 500 2-Shakl.'r Sidncy Uhman (4- 1} ~ ,5;500 7-Versiulles tJ-11 6
Hetghts (5-0'1 f 2. 8~00 ~ - M a}'fie ld (~·0) 11 0500 ~­ ~000 1(.8roohil1e (4. 1) 6 2500 9-Cm. Deer Park
Cie St. tgmmus (4· 1) 10 1070 S· Mtddlebllf g Hts {l· ll (J 2000 10-New Albany t5-01 ~ 7{/1)).
M 1dp tuk (l- 2) 7 6000 6-Enstl nk.e North (4- 11 7
~ SOO 7 -Stron~ svllle (J-2 1 7 1'if)(l 8-L1kewood St
Division VI
i::dwatd {'\-2 ) 6 7000 9-Euchd ( 'I 21 6 .\ 790 10R!!p. ton 21 !-Mogadore (4 -1I 1 4.500 2·
Lukewood tl-2) 6 -~
lndepe ndt' nce I "·0) 1 2500 J-Toronto {5-0) 6 4760
Regmn 2 1-Worthtngtun Kdbo \lrnc (~·OJ I\
-&amp; ·Wmdham {4-1) 6 0000 5- Norwalk St Paul (4· I)
2500 2-Cimve Cr l ) ('i -0) I I 2000 l- T~1l Whrtrncr
&lt;; 4~00 6-MunriX' \'rile 14-11 5 1500 1· Kut land
(5·01 10 H~UU 4- lllomas I.Vo!lhmgwn (5 -0) 10
2J -1 11 / bO R-Cic Cuyn hoga Hts l4- I J 4. l 'iOO 9·
f&gt;UO() "i. Wesu; nrlle So uth 1-I - H IU 1 ~00 fl.
We.stcrvrll e North (l -2 1 q 1000 7-Dttbhn (otfm;m MdJona ld 11-J ) -1 OSOO. IO-N Jackson Ja..:l..son·
1 \ -2 ) 8 6000 8-Xenm (5 018 1000 9- Ftndlny (-I I I Mri iOn cl-11 J Q(){)(l
K~"m n 2~ 1-lirfm Cnh·ert &lt;5·0 ) II 4000 2·
7 1000 IO· Upper Arl rng.ton (-I- I ) 1 J'iOO
,
Antl'll'rJ, {5·01 b l liOO -~- Man a Stem M&lt;annn l 11\al
Re~rnn \ 1 - Bruno;wu:~ t"i-OJ 11 1500 -- Yuu
fJuar Jntan t.li -01 11 I "iOO 'I N Crntnn ll vtnc r (~ O J l \ -2) ~ l&lt;K-1 () oi -MrComb 1~ -0) ~ 6500 1-Po~ nthll ,l·
12. 1000 4- ~t:t~~ W.r~ htn~ lt \n l.'i-01 12 O'iOO ; . Gtlhn., ( ~- 1 1 5 4'i00 6-Lakestt.ll: Oanbu1y 1-t II '1\

._Reach Over 18,000 Homes
In The Tri~County Area!

AD DEADLINE
Tuesday; Oct. 12, 1999
'

OHSAA football
computer ratings

Call Dave Barris
For More Information·
992-2198

n-

'

'

'

·On

Friday, October.22, .1999

!-Delphos St John 's (33) S-0 ...
2-,.oronto Il l 5-0 ... .. ..
J,Toffin Cot,.n 5 ~0 ...... ..
4-Spnngfidd Cath· Ce11l 5·0...
5-Bealls.,.dlc 5-0
6-Newark. Cath, 4-1

Toclay's games

12 ~1), s , o~

n..

Di&gt;·ision II
Regron 5 1-M..Wson (5·0) 12 1000 2 Menc or
Lakt t'Jtth. {-l-1) 9 -1500. J-Macedonta Nordoma 15·
0) 9 .\000 4-0imsted Fall~ (5-0) 9 2500 5·
CuyaOO,.a Falls Wi.llsh Jesutl (.$-I J 9. 1430 6-Parma
Hts HoLy Name (~-0) 7. 9~ . 7- Ravenna (4- 1) 7
6~ 8-Richfield RC"vnr tJ-2 ) 6 5500 9-Akron
Buchtel (.\-2) 6 3000 10-Grttn (J-2) tl 2500
Reaion 6: I-Piqu11 (5..0) I\ 1000 2-Wads¥Vorth
(5 -0J 12 9000 3-Whitchousc Anthony Wayne (5-0J
9 5M80 4-Graf1on Mtdvtew (S-0) 9 1000 5S ylvama Southvtew (4-1) 9 £XXX) 6-A\'on L"tke (4·
I J 8 4500 7-Marysvllk t5-0) 8. 4000 8-Amherst
StCdc (4-1) 8, 0500. 9-0rcgoo Clay (4-1} 7. 8820
10-TtffinColumbian7. 1790
·
'
Rcgton 7 1-Do ...er {5·0) 13 OSOO. 2-Col.
Brookhaven (5-0) II .\500. J -Uruontown Lak.e (4-1)
9 0000 "-Col lndependrncr (5-0) 8 9360 5-Lc:wis
Cemer Olentangy (+I) 7 3500. 6-Col East t-t -1) 6.
~ 7 10 7- Ea.st L1verpopl (3-2) 6. 1~ . 8.Col · St.
Charles (3-2) 5. 6500. 9-Co1 Beechcmfl (J-11 5
6(X)O, 10-Col Fra~~llin Haghu (4-IJ S S.500
Rc,ton 8· 1-Cm. McNicholas (5-0) 10 7000, 2Trtnton Edgewood (S-0) 9 '910 3-Xuags t.·l llh
Kin8s (4-1) 9 2000 4 (lie)-Canoll (4-1)--l...cbanon
(4-1 ) 8. 3500. 6-Harrison (4-1) 7. ~180 . 7-Cin
T"')'in \3·2) 5. 8500 8-Day Colonel White (3-l) 5.
5000. 9-Vand&amp;lia Butkr {3-2) 5 4000. 10-l.ovt:land

Iwn

DH : Plttsburgtl {Ritchte 14-9 alld Peters S-3) ill
Mtlwaukee (Wocxbrd 11 -7 and Ben: 4-0). 5 05 p.m
DH. San D1ego (Clement 10-12 and An.Ashby
14-10) 111 St Louu (Oii~er 8-9 and Jimenez 5-14).
~.IOp . m .

n..

1-St Henry (19)4-0 .
.'1 4
2- BNford Ch&lt;mcl l7 l 6·0
25.'
1-C1e. VASJ (1) S 0
.
218
4-Mct amoro E n~nrree n ( I I 5-0
I R9
5-N Luna S Ran~e 5-0
lbl
6- Ub-ett y Or ~ 1.) -&amp;- I .
10-1
7-Mtlford Ct r r:urbanll s (1 1 5-0
62
8- Applc Cwck Wa)nCd.1k 4-1
,59
9-MaH tllon fu slow 5-0 .
41
10-WoQd&amp;!ickl MqnriX' c~ m ~-0
40
Sm•thvllle 5-0
·
40
Others rectt\'in~ ll or more p&lt;llnts: 12CROOKSVILLE J8
IJ -Rrnnkvtllc · .\0 14Raltrmore L1bc::ny Unmn 28 15- RocklonJ Parkway
27 . 16 (1\e )-Gl bsn nburg. CHILLI COTHE
HUNTINGTON 26 18- Am.and.t-Ciearcreek ll 19Johmtt)wn Northrtdge (1 ) 21 W &lt;tte)-Uitl:lYta,
. CHESAPEAKE 19 22 (lle)-Usbon Anderson {1~ W
Alexandria Twin .Vnllev S , 16 24-Hamkr Patric-k
Henry 15 25 (tte }-VtrSmllc:s. Orwell Gmnd V01lley
14. 2.8-Waynesville 12

22

22
ZJ ':.
27 ':

m

Division V

I

.61 8
529

.

1-Yoo Moolll!y (5) "-1 .. .'.
...240
2-Bellvtlle Clear Fork 18) 5-0
2~7
.I . WHEELERSBURG (4) 5-0
. 215
4-Gc:rmanhl'A'n Valle y Vtew (21 -1 -1
.. 190
5 Cha~nnFalls 15J 5-0
181
6-Uu e:l(! ) ~ -0
159
7-C ul Wymmng 11J 5 U
1~4
, 8-S:mdusky Perbns i 1)5·0 ,
Ill
9-Bell.ure (2) 4-1 .
, IO J
10-Campbcll Memonalt21 ~ U
,
58
Othtrs rrcrivinK 12 or morr points; 11 -0ak
Harbor 44 12-Siruthen .IZ 1.1 Ham Badtn 29 14lroncun 24 15- Manon Elgan I~ 16:-Tuscy Valley 14
17-Mamm ft&gt;O ) 12

NL standings
.: a~lrrn

. 2~80

2- Bellbrook 1S) 5-0 . ..
. .. 245
l -Polnnd Senunary {5) 5-0
.226
4!Copley (li 5 ~0
............ 179
5-Col Willtmonel)-'-1
... , .... 152
6 - Steu~n,.llle (2) 4- 1
151
7-Bellevue ill 5-0
... J.H·
•.
.... 122
8-0rrvJIIc 4-1 .
9-Cm. Purcell Manan 4-1 .
, CJ7
9-0rrvrlle- 4-1
... 84
t0-JACKSON ('I J 5 0 ................... 57
Others rKtMn1 I! or mono poinb : 11 -Perry
( I ) 39 12-Col. OeSaks (2) _ll P -M1IIenburg W
'Holmes H 14-ASHVILLE TEAYS VALLEY 22
IS -THORNVILLE SHERIDAN 21 16-AIIron
Hoban 17 J7 cWIIhard 11

pm

)1. JO·JS

n..

1-CoT Brookhaven (II ) ~-0
.. 18S
2-Do,·n- (II ) S-O .
2R'i
.l- Piqua(l)5.0
214
4-Trenton Edgewood ( 2) S-O
166
5-Ctn McNicholas li ) S-0 .
IH
6-Mentorl.akeCath (1 ) 4-1 .. ...
141
7-Cuy. Falls Walsh Jesuu {JI 4-1 .
. 112
8-Umont own Lake 4- 1 .
108
9-M•ymlle (I ) S-0
102
. . .. , 88
10-Mattdoma Nordoma (I) 5-0
Olhtn rKtivinl l l or mon points: 11 f\.hdisoo S4 1!-l.Aanon B I J-Col ln&lt;kpendence
27. 14-KIRJS M1lls Km,s {I ) 15 IS -Grafton
Madview (I ) 22 . 16 (tie)-liffin Colul,llhian.
Whitehouse AnrhOny. Wayne 11

y

Toronto 8, Tampa Bay 2
New Yod: 9, Baltimore: S
CLEVELAND 2. Kansas Cny I
Detrbit 7, Mmntsota 4
Tet;u 10. Seanle 0
Oakland 9. Anaheim 3
Bouon at Chicago, ppd., ram
oH ~ 8ost011

n..

1-Gro ' e Cr h t:!~l 'li -0
~_n
2-Cm St X1l\ 1er t ~I -l-0
~b I
• r oo Bo:uJA\an li.O
210
~- MM~rllnn Washrn gtCln II I li -0
106
5-Cm Elder (-1 ) S, 0
190
6-Can1on McKmle) -1- 1
166
7-Cenlenrlle 5-0
Jl&lt;;
S- H runsV~ td: 5-U
99
9-Cie St lg nattu~ -1 -~
80
IO- N Canlon H00\'(1' 5-0
-t9
Othrn rruiYIR• 12 or mort points: 11 Worthlngton Kalboum: -&amp;2 11-Solc!U JS I l-Shakcr
Ht.s 14 15-Tol. Whrtmn 17 1.5-Wt."Stemlle SOOth

NHL.1 Noo.rd Jame1 Horan dntttOf of c•~nrnm .
mcauons. Suspended Chicago D (b,~ ~bn•t• tt tur
One e\htbiuon game and finr~ t1Jm SIJK)I) _I•Jl a
malch penalty vn ~'fit 25
ATI..ANTA lliRASHERS· Assiglll"tt G Co•t'Y
Schw :tb and LW bSOtt Bot~rill to Orlando of thtIHI: Reki.lSCd RW Alne1 Yeger ov
Fool ball
CAl.GARY f-"LAMES · AniJned I.W Hn.11
Nat~! fool:balll..ear;ue
ATLANTA FALCONS: Wat,•ed C Allum J)om~mdtelh . [) Lee Sorochan and 0 -RW RiX·ky
Thompson to San\1 Jol)n of the AHL Announced a
s~· hrctbcr S•gned DL Shotwn Swayda
thret-)'t'ar tk-\'d oprnent a&amp;reemenl 'Atlb the Wc..tcr1•
DAL:fiMORE RAVENS: S1gned F8 Obafem1
Centre of Eu~lleure
i\~~ nl-tadeJ O. Placed RB Tony Vinson on 1he inJuml
A.ORIDA PANTHERS "mgned RW Iva':'
reW'nt'd lr~1
Nuvoselt sev. RW Marcus Ntlson and LW AIC"J. Htd.s
CHICAGO BEARS Released K Bn an Go\\ in s
to Loor ~ \"rlle of the AHL
from the prle'!l ce squad.
LOS ANGELES KINGS : Auigntd D Trevor
CLEVELAND BROWNS. Traded DT Jerry Ball
to BiloJ.i of the ECHL
to the Mmnesota Vtk.Jnas for DT S1alin Coltnet and a Gillaes
NEW YORK ISLANDERS· Sent G Roberto
fuluR" draft choice Agree-d 10 ti."ITIIS with WR DaYid
Dunn aOO RB· Ra4Jaan Sala."tm WOII\fd RB Sc-dnck. U!ongo to Lowell' of lhr AHL. I;&gt; Dallas Eabns to·
Cht cago of the IHL, and 0 Dr.unsJa,. MC"to 10
Shaw
DENVER BRONCOS Signed C Jason Watts to Bellevtlle of tlr OHL
NEW YORK RANGERS. -Auigned 0 Tomas..
1~ prac1ice squad . Rekased DL Vthami Maumau.
Kloucek and G Milan Hnilick.a to Hartford of tnc..
MIAMI DOLPHIJ"'IS: Relfased WR Marcus AHL
•
. ~ .
Baseball
Nash Signed WR -KR Ronde! ~t'nendez 10 the prac~
PHOENIX COYOTES . Asstgned C Dani e l--'
Ameriun Lt•1n
lice ~ad
, Briere IUld RW Tavis Hmn~n to Springfield of !he
1
NEW ORtEANS SAINTS ; Activatc:d DL AHI. Au tsrled G Roben Esche and R~ IJa,•(
BALTIMORE ORIOLES Stgncd SS lui s Aloo
to a ffilnOJ· Ieague contract.
Dam;n Mt clc.e\1 from Roster Exempt Ust Rek-asd.l Ohver to Houston of the IHL
..
NatioMI Leque
· DT Uhuru Ham1tcr. tennmated Jhc contract of CB
PllTSBURGH PENGUINS: Assigned G Jean-..
"11LWAUKEE BREWERS: Named ' Da\'id COJcy Harris. wruved DT Julian Pittman off tnJured &amp;baslillll Aubin to Wilkes BIUtt· ScrontOfl of dw
Wtlder Yice prtS1dent uf player persoonel.
re5erve
IHL. Returned C Mtlan Kraft to Prince Alben of thr
LOS ANGELES DODGERS Ftred Bob
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES Stgntd 1 E Ed WHL. Released RW Sandy Mogn and RW G•f~
Graziano . presrdent and chief e.tecUII\'C officer.
Sm1th to a OM-year contract Waived TE Jusli!'
.. It
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Reealled RHP Chad Snith Released T Gn-g Studdard from the pra.:uce Sbuchuk
ST I.OUIS BLUES· Assigned F L.ubos Bant.• ,J.-. q, •
Hutchmson from Meltllhis oflhe PCL
§(JUad
1
"' .. ~
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS . Named Bob Wtck and FReed Low to W«cester of the AHL
TAMPA BAY UGHTNING: DtstiJUIIed R!i~:
manager.
effecti'le
at
1ht
time
of
Sid
equtpmelll
BasketbaU
AleundfC Daigle and D lassen Cullimcft for assiJD ......
Brooks· mi~ITI("nl after the 1999 tea5Qn.
menl. Assigned LW Andy Bczeaw . LW Kyl~
· National Ba•etb:al AMad•tien
LOS ANGELES LAKERS· Named Kun Rambis
Freadrich and RW Ste\'t Walter to Detrott of th(
Hockey
adv1sor to the presidern-bask.etball.
IHL
N~lllodley l.t8plf'
MILWAUKEE BUCKS: Named Don Newman

0500. 7-Arhnf.lOit (4-1 ) 4 7500 8-0rrgon Stri1ch t4IJ 4 5500 9-Fon Recovery {J-l ) 4 . 2'000. 10Frtmont St Joserh (2- l ) .\ .lOOO
Rt'~tl nn 2 \ 1-Dealls\illc 1~ -0 ) 6 9000. 2N.:warkCathohc (4-116 6500 ]-WILLOW WOOD
SYMMES VALLEY (4- I J 5 1.500 .&amp;-Howard F~ 1
Knot (-1- l 1 :'i IDOO 5- Monal Rtdgcdak I l -1) 5
1500 6-HliMLOCK MILLER (4-1) 4 8000 7Bellatrt St John (4-1 ) 4. 2000 8-D-.rnv1llr n -21 ·'
ROOJ 9- NI:.\\' MATAMORAS FRONTIER U 1) -~
7500 10-PURl SMOUTH NOTRE DAME tJ-1) J
61 '!0
Rcp.ton l4 !·Delphos St John 's (5-0J S. 6000
'1-Cm Country Day (S· O) 7 9000. 3-Mechanrnt.urp.
(5-0 J 7 1000 ·4-Co vingloo t5 -0) 6 . 5760 5Sprmgfidd C:Jthohc Cenlral 15-0) 6 4.500 6-Dob
Hatdtn Northtra (4-1 ) 6 . 2.500 7-Ada (4-1) S l&lt;KXt
8-Ctdarvtlle (4-1) 5 0500 9-New Bremen 0 -2) 4
9500 10-Minster (J -2) 4. 3190

Camoo Mc Kmk)· (4-1) II .t;OO &amp;-Ptckenngton (41) 9 tS{X) 1 Mt. Vernon (4- 1I 8 4000 8-Sto• ·
Munroe F:tlls t4- 1J 8 20XI CJ-CaniUR Gk-nOo!).;; ~ ~ - 1 )
8 1{0) 10-SaftiJusky {4 1)1 98.\0
Re@IOn 4 1-Ctn E1der tS- 0) 11 7 ~ 20 2-Hubt-t
Hts W&lt;~y ne 15-0) 10 7500 .\-Fmrftdd (-I- I) 10.
5500 4-Ce nten•tlle (~ 0 ) 10 -1000. 5-Cin S1 Xo,·aer
(4L0 )9 71.\0 6-C.n MoeUer t.l-l t 8 R5'i0 7- L•bt-n)
T~t.p Lako1:. F.a.~t \ 4 - 1 l 8 8500 8-Cm. Syt: anM&gt;rt (J
218 \{0} IJ M:.son (.\ 218 1000 10-0n LaSal le
t.\· 2) 7 bOOO

'

. ..

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

~thletic~

Wednesday, September 29, 19t9

1999 Assoc.nle-d Pf"fis poll. by OHSAA di\Utons
wuh wo n - lo~ l record and 10(,11 romts ( fi nt - pla~·e
, nlr\ 1n p.are nthl·~· ' I .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

:: Wilh the playoffs just a week
away, the Boston Red So~ had \O
w4it at least another day before
clinching lhe last AL playoff spot.
· Oakland kept its slim hopes alive
and snapped a four, game losing
· streak with a 9-3 victory over
Anaheim on Tuesday night. Boston
- needing one victory or a loss by
the A's to clinch the wild card - was
l)lined out in Chicago and must play
· ~ aoubleheader today.
'
1. Jason Giambi hn his 33rd home
,.n, Ramon Hernandez ·had his firsl
N»lr-hit game in 'the majors, Olmedo
S~enz drove in three runs and the
Oakland pitching staff did not allow
l! hit after Mo Vaughn 's leadoff sin,
!!1~ in the third inning.
: · "I finally shut· up," martager An
Howe said. "I've been doing too
IDJICh talking. I think , trying to gel
these guys fired up over the last
week to 10 days - mainly because I
knew we were a little t1red."
Rookie pitcher Tim Hudson won
for the ninth time in his last .10 decisions for the A's.
:· Hudson (11-2) gave up a two-run
hQmer to Vaughn and tied a career
tiigh wtth si~ walks in five innings.
But he held the Angels to four hits
aqd struck out five .
Randy Velarde, playmg his tlrsl
game at Edison Field since lhe July
29 trade that senl. him to Oakland,
doubled wi.th one out in the fifth .
Giambi followed with hts homer off
Jarrod Washburn (3-5), giVIng
Oakland a 4-2 lead.
Oakland put it away with a fourrun seventh after loadtng the bases
against AI Levine. Saenz greeled
Mark Petkovsek ,with a two, run sin-

gle, Hernandez followed with an
RBI single and Miguel Tejada h....t a
sacrifice ny that made il 8"3.
In other AL games, it was Toronto
8, Tampa Bay 2; New York 9,
Bal1imore 5; Detroil 7, Minnesota 4;
and Texas 10, Seaul• 0.
Yankees 9, •ioles S
New York reduced its magic num,
ber to two for clinching its third AL
East title in four seasons by winning
at Baltimore.
Tino Maninez had four RBis 10
give the Yankees four players (Derek
Jeter, Bernie Williams, Paul O'Neill)
with at leas! 100 for the firsl time
since I 939.
"We can't measure up as home
run hitters, but we have some pro. ductive hitters," New York manager
Joe Torre said. "We're getting men
on base, getting deep in the count
and we know what to do wilh it."
The Yankees .trailed 5-4 before
batting around in the si~th for the
41st time this season. .D'Angelo
Jimenez capped the three-run burst
against Sidney Ponson (I 2-12) with
a two-oul, two-run single.
Jimenez enlered in the third
·inning as a replac.ement for second
baseman Chuck Knoblauch , who
injured his thumb.
Ramiro Mendoza (8-9) pitched 3i.
scoreless innings in relief of rookie
Ed Yarnall.

Rangers 10, M,arlners 0
AL: West champion Texas also got
ils fourth player with 100 RBis as
Rusty Greer, joined Rafael ·Palmeiro,
Juan Gonzalez and Ivan Rodriguez.
Palmeiro's 47th homer tied a club
record as tl:te host Rangers won their
fifth slraight.
" That's nothing I set out to do,"
Palmeim said afler lying Gonzalez's
mark set in 1996. "What '~ imponant
is that we' re playing good baseball
and we're keeping it up. Whalthese
records say is that we've had a good
season as a team...
·

The Rangers · won their 941h
game, matching the club mark set in
1977 . Texas trails New York by one
game and Cleveland by 1wo in the
race for the best record in the league~
Jeff Fassero, Mike Morgan,
Danny Panerson and Danny Kolb
combined on a five-hiller. Morgan
( 13·8) threw three innings or threehi! relief as Oates tries to fine-tune
his staff for the playoffs.
Texas took a 3-0 lead in !he founh
against John Halama ( 11-9) on
homers by Palmeiro and · Royce
Clayton, who had three hils.
Blue Jays 8, Devil Rays l
·,
Toronlo's Shawn Green hit his
.41st homer, doubled and tied a career
high with five RBis at Tampa Bay.
Brian McRae hit a three -run
homer in the ninth orr 35-year-old
Devil Rays rookie Jim Morris.
Jose Canseco hit his 34th home
run for Tampa Bay off David Wells
( 16-'10), giving him six against his
former team Ibis season . Wells
' allowed five hits in seven innings.
Rookie Dan Wheeler (0-4)
allowed three runs and eight hils in
si~ innings.
Tigers 7, Twins 4
·AI Monneapolis, Dean Palmer hit
a three,run hornet with two ouls to
cap a five,run ninlh for Detroit.
Detroit won its founh stratght for
lhe first time this season. The Twins
l_o sttheir founh slraight.
With the Tigers trailing 4-2, Deivt
Cruz started the rally with a one-out
stngle, and pinch- hitter Frank
Catalanotto doubled him home . Brad
Ausmus tripled, tying the game.
Afler Tony Clark walked, Palmer
hil his 37th homer. off Mike
Trombley (2,8).
Matt Anderson (2-1) pitched two
scoreless innings for the , win and
Todd Jones worked the ninth for his
27th save.
Clark snapped an 0-for- 13 slump
with his 28th homer.

.
SECON~ - The Kansas City Royals' the visiting Clevelan,d Indians, ·who won 2-1 .
carlos Febles makes his belly slide for the suc- Making the late tag is Cleveland second sacker"
cessful steal of second base in the third Inning of Roberto Alomar. (A!')
Tuesday night's American League game jlgBinst

Indians beat Kansas .City 2-1

· KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) then. to get him in ltne for the postMik e Jackson gaYe up a lcau ol l
~levcland manager Mike Hargrove season . I hated like crazy to take him stn gle to Scolt Pose tn the ninth. hut
took his starter oul of the game aflcr out because he was throwtng so well. got three out; for his 39th ;a' e in ~ ~.
five innings after he allowed just one I was curious to see how he would ,chances. He struck o u1 o,.c \\ llh
run and one hit. And Hargrove was- fare in the rest of the game. But it Pose on.thtrd 10 end the game
•
n't even second-guessed.
'
was something that had to be done."
Kan sas City start er Jay Witas ick;
Hargrove . trying to set up his rota· Although Wright understood (9- 12) gave up two run s in 1hc eight h•
tion for the postseason. pulled Jaret Hargrove' s decision , he wanted to innin g to take the loss.
~
Wright at the top of the sixth tnning stay in the game .
Omar
Vizquel
led
off
the
etghlh
"
.
Tuesday night wtth lhe Indians down
" When the game is going like wnh a double against Wt tasiek an d-'
1-0 10 Kansas City.
th~t . you want to stay around ," he advanced to thtrd when· Dve bobfl kd •
' Wright threw just 63 pitches. 35 said. " They told me before the game the ball for an 'e rror tn rtght liel u.
of them strikes, in what turned out to that it was gqong 10 be five innings.
Robeno Alomar singled thro ugh a
be a 2" I Indians victory over the
'.' As soon you start thinking, 'I'm drawn -in infield to ue it. and Mann ).
Kansas City Royals. He allowed one going to go JUSt five tnnings,' you ' re Ramirez walked .
unearned run and one hit, and walked out of there tn three I was goong to
Al vm · Morm an reli e , cd an d,'
one and struck out three .
go out and make them take me out retired Jim Th ome on a g: ruundt:r. ·
With a 24 ' &gt;-game lead over sec- when it was time .' '
Jose Santiago took over and gave up
ond-place Chtcago in the American
Wnght breezed through the first an RBI grounder to pim· h ~ h ttt cr
League Central Division . Hargrove three innings without giving up a hit. Richte Sexson.
has plenty of time to ,experiment in Carlos Beltran singled in the fourth,
"( Jay) pttched a good ball game."
trying to lead the club back to the stole second and went to third 0 n Kansas City manager Tony Muser
World Series for the third time on five catcher Sa.ndy Aloniar's error, and said. " That was a pretty good joh
seasons.
scored on Jermaine Dye's sacnfice against one of the better lineups m
"Jaret threw strikes," Hargrove . fly.
baseball. l think he' s put the tdea of
satd. "He. had good velocity on his
Hargrove's decision was justified us using him as a closer to bed.' ' ·
fastball .@nd threw some nice break- as three relievers gave up just two
"That lineup· is not one you
ing balls for stnkes. ·
hits in the final four innings. Jim expect to go 1-2,3 again st every
"We were only going to go five Brower ( 3-1) pitche'd two scoreless inning." Witastck said . " After the
innings with him. He's going to innmgs and was relieved by Steve speed of the ftrst twb guys. every gu y
Williams , Jay Bell and Luis come back on Saturday and pitch Karsay, who pitched a hitless eighth. in that hneup 1s like· a No. 4 htltcr. ..
Gonzalez with more than 100 RBis.
In the first defense of his heavyweight title , Joe the Whtte Sox 11-6.
Vinny Castilla homered and became
the fourth Colorado player with at Louis won a 15-round unanimous decision over Tommy
least 100 RBis, joining Dante Farr in 1937 at Yankee Stadium.
Bicheue, Larry Walker and Todd
Althea Gibson in 1950 became the first black .l T.S.
Helton .
The New York Yankees reached 100 wins on Sept. 4, tennis player to be accepted in compe1tt1 on f,,, The J
1998, lhe earliest in maJor-league htstory, by beating national championship.
·
__j
(See NL on Page 6)
~

Mets los~ 9-3 to ·Braves, push
1·o sing streak to seven games
National League
roundup
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
For the Cinconnati Reds, Atlama
Jraves and· Arizon~ Diamondbacks,
!fie wins keep coming iri buncjles.
\ For lhe New York Mets, the loss,
fs ·.are stackong up the saine way.
.- The l,argest baseball . crowd in
l\strodome history- 54,037 -saw
th!' Reds move· one game ahead of
ijouston in the NL Central race with
a·4-1 victory Tuesda~ night.
: Pete Hamisch pitched Cincinnati
!0 its sixth straight victory, improvin-g to 4-0 this year against his former
~lub, which has lost three in a row.
1 ·"It
beats being one game
~e~ind. " Harnisch said. " We ' have a
~~ of fun on lhis team. We don't
think too much about · anything
eeyond today...
: ..While NL West champion
Arizona
tied .a learn record w11h its
I
seventh stratght win , 9- 3 over
'olorado, a btgger drama unfolded al
~hea Stadium .
· • There. the Mets continued an
aniaziitg collapse by losing their sevonlh consecutive game, 9-3 to t~e NL
~ast champton Braves. As a resuh,
New York stayed I'., games behind
Houston for the wild-card spot
1· "I don't believe it's happened,"
Mets manager Bobby Valentine said.
: And tn the , big numbers depart-ment, Sammy Sosa hit his· 62nd
Ilome run to go one ahead of Mark
McGwire in Chtcago's 8"2 win over
t~e Phtlhes. ·
c Sosa played after learmng his
wife was ho.spitalized in Chicago foll~wing a strange reaction to prescriptiQ.n medication . Sosa said his wife
;(Ssured him she was all nght and told
him
. to stay .in Philadelphia.
.'

"I'm a strong man," Sosa said ... 1
had to go oul and do my job."
In other NL games, Los Angeles
beal San Francisco 6-3 and Aorida
downed Monlreal 5-3. There were
two rainouts: San Diego at St. Louis
and Pinsburgh at Milwaukee.

Braves !1, Mets 3
Ore! Hershiser was chased after
getting only o'ne out - his quickest
exit in 459 career starts - and
Atlanla made it another long night
for the Mels.
The Braves became the first NL
team to post lhree straight I00-win
seasons since St. Louis in 1942-44.
The last team in the majors 10 do it
was Baltimore in 1969-71-. '
New York returned· home from an
0-6 fOad trip and was greeted with
cheers. But the fans started booing as
the Braves took a 4-0 lead in the first
mning.
The Mets 1\eld a four-game lead
over Cincinnali for lhe wild-card
spot on Sept 19 with 12 games left.
New York, has jus! five games
remammg.
Tom Glavine ( 13·11 ) protected
the early lead and made the 13raves
the first team in the majors to reach
100 wins.
Cubs 8, PhiUies l
Slammin' Sammy homered for
the first lime in 30 at,bats since hitting No. 61 on Sept 19, connecting
for a two-run shot in the ninth inning,
Sosa's 62nd came before a sparse
crowd of 16,106 at Veterans
Stadium .
Cubs staner Steve Trachsel (817), who leads the majors in losses,
allowed nine hits in a complete
game.
Diamondbacks 9, Rockies 3
Steve Finre-y homered twice 10
reach a career,high 103 RBis as
Arizonll won at Bank One Ballpatic
· Finley joined teammates Matt

fJieigs golfers· take sixth piace
in·
. Division II sectional linkfest
'

• New Lexington, Wellston and
Sheridan advanced to the Division II
distnct golf tournament, while.Meigs
!ffarauder Tommy Roush was among
those individuals to advance in the
Division II sectional tournament held
M(mday at the Brass Ring Golf
Course .'
· .New Lexington won the team
dlvi~ion with a 310, followed by
Wellston with a 311 . Sheridan, which
finished tn third place with a 3f3,
w~ followed l;&gt;y Alexander (326),
F~irfield Union (330), Meigs (335);
ftelpre (337). Vinton County (360),
·River Valley (364), Federal Hocking
. .

.

Reds ...

(Continued from Page
: " [ onlv made one mi stake, the
f~&gt;ilball to Casey." Lima saLd . " I' m
dtsappo mted we d1dn't get the win ,
hut I'm not disappointed wit.h the
v.;ay I pitched . I was trying to keep
my team ln 'the ga me and I did ."
: Cratg Bigg io hit a leadoff single
ilt ' the Houston fir st. and Harntsc h
rqii rcd the nex t 12 batters. Bigg io.

'

(381) and Nelsonville-York (413).
The lhree low individuals that are
not on qualifying teams also
advance. They were led by Roush's
76, Brian Bartlett of Alexander and
Mau Preston of Belpre wilh 77s.
Shane Dunn of Wellston was match
medalist with a 71.
Other Meigs scores include Zach
M~adows ' 79, Carson Midkiff's 89,
Nick Dettwiller's 91 and Andy
Davis ' 98.
The district will be held on
Tuesday, Oct 5 at the Portsmouth
Elks Golf Course.

4)
however, scored on Jeff Bagwell's
grounder.
As for haling of the rooktes,
Taubensee said the veterans would
not force them to dress up again.
" But we got pictures and we may
have lo send them lo ce rtain peopl e,"
Tauben see said.

l

Gallipolis
Home appliances, Electronics, lawn &amp; Garden, Tools
Salo

pnc.. good Saptombo• 3D duough Oclcb« 2

•
Ker.more

Kenmore

Kenmore

Reg. 399 99, S.le 369.99

Ultra Wash- dishwasher ... America's best-cleantng
dishwashing system. 115669 Reg 379 99, Sale 329 99.

Electric range witt'! self-cleaning oven, e lectronic clock and
timer. 195582 Reg. 799.99, Sale 649.99

SuPer Capacity washer with 4 water' levels. t20612
=Price
Searscard

33299 """"
,..._

5

Final Price

67

with

Sears card

.:.-ncty., lirl0a:2~ 1/99t. VMtn..mg.;~'"

'

58499

when you use your $ears card, take ...

%

l

off

19.7-cu. ft.rt slda-by-slde refrigeratOf with factory
installed ice maker. #58062. Reg . 949,99, Sale 799.99 '

Final Price

with
Sears card

everything...
even sale prices

Thursday, Friday and Saturday only

Panasonice
27-•n lV w ith stereo reception and up to 500 lines
of resolution. 147519 (Mfr ICT17G14) Reg. 379 99

Fi!'al Price
with
Sears card

34199

TOTAL

,••,,., 53 8

_,
II

cfaftsman

Craftsman
5.25 -peak HP, 16-gal. wet/dry vac with accessories.
117789. Reg. 89.99, Salo 84.99

final Price
with
Sears card

7649 ["""'

,.,..,

13so

I

13-drawer pfof&amp;sSional chest and'cabtnet st orage
combo. 165904/S. Reg. 329 951 Sale 287.95

:~Price

Sears card

25915 TOT~

,••,..,

7 oao

. Craftsman
16-HP tract or Kohler Pro eng ane, 42-in. deck,
6-speed 127107 Rii!g. 1499.99_, Sale 1399.99

=·Price
Sears card

125999

TOTAL

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

OJJIIO'WI~"""2·"' eNd 124~ ~ l19W Wotl\101~ lt199

OWNED AND OPERATED BY: Boltby and Vaneua Muncy (13462)
ADDRESS: 430 Sdvlt' Bridge Plaza STORE HOURS: SUN 1H , M-F H , S8-6 PHONE: 740·446·1546
Ke nmor ~

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• wll red\oced • An tqual or better ot~ et !he .dvtfhted pr•ttt•f the •lem wa1 AOI ~c«&lt; IMPORTANT CREDIT TERMSt Sa~' 11~ del•ve')' or nstallarron not ,..,cl~ded 1n mont'lly payments ihown Auual morJthly P• tm•ml mty vary ~pendonq o,
your OJn"ftnl aa::ount b.l l•rqr anr;l may C. Jl•ghtly hogher 1n VT Sur. c.,dt fer~ Annc;al pernmt age r.at11 1\ 14 91r"' }':l ~'r\1, M oniiTIU"TI fo.n&lt;~nr• ch1''9" n1 1. SO SNriQ\Irge PlUSt Ter.n~• AMual percentage''"' &lt;5 21%' AR t£l'lli •~ ol tO ~li I• 11
1ate m1y vtl)' M onom11m montr.ly lm•nce ch1rge of S 50 l11ue-d by Sear1 Nttooo1l Bank Prrces are f::~t biJclr. '" d•~nwnhtrl And mrcrow avou , whote 1n Jlt o tt&gt;er •PP'""ces u.,ltst otl'!etwiH 1nd•CJ1ed Colors co,.,nectort, •ce m&lt;llt-r hoot. uc '"rl d &lt;-l•wdsh~r
on,l&lt;l11atoon extrl Gu model dl')'trl pnc.d ,rgh"" TV acreen sotes rneu... red d01gonally lr•ctors requo~ some usembly t"flotal c~pacoty C 1Q9c;r Sea" Roebl.ic~ end Co

I

'

�•

•

•

•
•

'
, . 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Tennessee starts probe into allegations of academic fraud
8y DUNCAN MANSFIELD
KNOXVILLE. Tenn. (AP) - An
illtanal review into possible academic fraud and coverup at Tennessee
might not be completed quickly
because it will be thorpugh, an official involved in the review said.
" We would like it over in a day.
But that is not realistic, is it?" Carl
Asp, Tennessee's faculty athletics
n:presentative, said Tuesday.
1be probe could take weeks. "It
just depends,·· he said. "YQU know it
is complex."'
Tennessee is reviewing repons
that athletic depanment tutors did
school work for athletes. in possible
violation of school honor codes and
NCAA rules. as far back as I 995. and
that administrators
were nol

informed.
If proven, the violatiotts would
bring a harsh penalty from the
NCAA, but the school would not
have to forfeit its 1998 national fULlball title . a former NCAA official
said.
"Academic fraud is one of the
more srrious violations because it
. really goes to the whole bean of the
student-athlete and the athletic program, .. said David Swank, immedi ate past chairman of the NCAA's
Committee on Infractions.
"Now, obviously you have different degrees of fraud," said Swank. a
law professor at the University of
Oklahoma.
New Mexi co State. Michigan
State. Texas Tech, Miami and

Minnesota ha•·e all been hun by
claims or academic violations in
recent years. Penalties have included
NCAA probation and Joss of scholarships.
Although the NCAA has with dr-awn championships from schools
that violate rules - such as the
UCLA women's softball champi-·
onship in 1995 - Swank noted the
national football title is created by
lhe schools and bowl games and .. is
not an NCAA c hampionship ...
So Tennessee 's 1998 football
crown would not be affected.
"regardless of what would happen,' '
he said .
The NCAA is aware of the silualio n at Tennesse~ . but is taking no
action uncil the school makes its own

findings.
Chancellor Bill Snyder said his
concerns go beyond sports.
.. Academic dishonesty and plagiarism. if thai is verified, we take a
very strott g positiott on that," he
said. "Regardless of who is involved
... wbe1her student-alhletes or not."
ESPN reponed Sunday lhat internal memos show high-level adminis,trators in UT's alhletic depanment
were told four tutors m1ght have
done schoolwork for at leasl five
unidentified football players, a baseball player and a female athlete .
Three of the football players have
transferred.
None Of this information .was
passed on to campus authorities
charged with investigaling possible

rules infractions. university officials
say.
ESPN quoted a 1997 memo from
Linda Bensei-Meyers, director for
composilion in the English depart·
men(,. to the Faculty Senate claiming
probl'2ms in 1995 with freshmen athletes.
.
She wrote .lhat ''several of these
athleles submitled papers lhat were
either co-wriuen or entirely wriuen
by tutors" hired by the athletics
depanment . These athletes "claimed
they had been told by their tutors lhat
this sort or intervention was acceptable," she wrote.
·
"The acts of plagiarism appeared
to be institutionally mandated by the
alhletic depanment," wrote Bensel·
Meyers, who failed to return calls for

comment Tuesday.

A.-...

.NL

contests...

(Continued from Page 5)
Chan Ho Park· earned his seventh
Arizona and the Rockies became
· hI v1clory
·
the sixth and seventh .learns in NL stratg
and G ary She ffi1e ld
hislory io. have four players with at hit two home runs as Los Angeles
won at San Francisco.
least 100 -RBis.
Walker, leading the majors in bat- · Giants outfielder Barry Bonds
ting at .379 wilh 36 homers and 115 will finish out this series, then miss
RBis, will have knee ~urgery lhe lasl three games to undergo
arthroscopic surgery on his inflamed
Thursday.
·
·
The Diamondbacks found . out' left knee.
Marlins s, Expos 3
catcher Damian Miller has a hairline
Florida ensured il would not lose
fracture in his right wrisl and has a
50-50 chance of missing the first 100 games for the second straight
round of tlje playoffs. Miller, who season by beating Montreal at
.
shares the ·starting job with Kelly Olympic Stadium.
'SiinneU, hurt himself blocking a
Marlins rookie Vladimir Nunez
(7- 10) pitched a ·season-high eight
pitch on Sept. 2 I.
innings and also hil an RBI single.
Dodgers 6, Giants 3

Ohio DOW
f
I"

f

·

N~ l

l

Deffenbaugh. who now teaches at
Lyon College in Arkansas, said \his
week he was satisfied with the alhlelic department's efforts to·address the
problem, which included more fie..
quent ,purges of the hard drives of

computers in academic services
areas.

I

•

Dear Ann tanders: I found this
column. of yours in my desk drawer.
It was daled April I 985. I can't
remember why I clipped it. b.ut the
message is one that rieeds to be
repeated. People hav~ a tendefl\:y to
forget I hope you will run ··it again
soon. Thanks, Ann.-- A.P. FROM
UPSTATE NEW YORK
DEAR A.P.: With pleasure. Here
it is:
The Rev. C. Galea was assigned
to the Guelph Correclion Centre for
his summer work . While lhere, he
developed an excellent rapport with
many young lawbreakers.
He asked the boys for cl ues as to
why they had ended up in that in slitulion. He then asked Ihem 10 'draw
up a code for parents to follow. zeroing in on . specific areas where they
had failed . Here is whal emerged:
I. Keep cool . .Don'l fly off the
handle. Keep lhe lid on when things
go wrong. Kids need to see how
much better things turn out when
people keep their tempers ~nder
control.
2. Don ' t gel slrung out from
booze or too many pills . When we
see our parents reaching for !hose
-crutches. we gel the tdea that it is
perfectly OK to re ach fo r a bottle· or
a pill when things get heavy. Chil dren are carefUl observers and great
. . '
~
1m1tators.
3. Bug us a liule. Be strict Show
us who's boss. We need to know we
have got some strong supports under
us. When you cave in. we get scared.
4. Don't blow your class. Stay on
thai pedestal. Don't try lo dress,
dance or talk like your •kids . You
embarrass us, and you look ridicu·
lous.
5. Light a candle . Show us the
way. Tell us God is nol dead or
sle~ping or on v~cation . We need to
believe in something bigger and
Slronger than ourselves.
I
6 . Scare the hell out of us . If you
catch us lyi ng, stealing or being
crue l. gel tough . Let us know WHY
what we did was wrong. Impress on

' us the importance of nor repealing
such behavior.
•
7. When we need punishment,
dish it out. But le i us know you still
Jove us, even though we have lei you
down. It will make us think twice

Co~munity

·Calendar
WEDNESDAY
TIJPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Local Board .o f E&lt;hl~atiori regular
meetin~ Wednesday, 6:30 P:m. in the
Eastern Elementary cafetonum .
·
THURSDAY
,
POMEROY - Pomeroy Zo nin g
Appeals Board , Thursday, 7 p.m.

.

.

.

.

'

c

Monday tllru
Sunday .
8AM-10PM
298 SECOND ST.
Accepts Credit Cards

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU OCTOBER 2, 1999

.

~oint ~Iea!)ant

l\egi!)ter • ~alltpolt!) 7aatlp ~rtbune • The ·Daily Sentinel .
(740) 992-215~

(740) 446-2342
. '

(304) 675-1333

.

'

"

PK. 12 OZ. CANS

PE I
MT. DEW

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SlE STORE FOR DETAILS

Iua I'

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SALE M CENTER
Star
Grange 718. Sat urday, potluck sup·
per al 6:30 p.m ., meelin g. 8 p.m.
In stall ati on of officers, calender tor
1999-2000 to be completed.

LAUREL CLIFF - Fami ly day
al the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Churd1. Sunday. Covered dish dinncr at noon. Featured will be the
Budk Family· fr om Virginia with the
Rev .. Bah Boclk preaching and the
family sin·g ing . The Rev. C harles
Young of Akron. supcrintcm.l cn t of.
the free Mclhodist Church of Ohio.
will visit. Charle ~ SWiggl!r invites
lhc puhlic.

GATORADE

1

SATURDAY
RACINE - The Shain. Sayre,
Smith fa mil y reu nion, Saturday,
American Legion hall . Racine .
. Polluck dinner, I p.m . Table se rvice
and dnnks provided.

. EAST MEIGS - South Bethel
· New Testament Church , hOmecoming, Sunday. Sunday school at 9
a.m .; worship service al 10:10 a.m.
Carry-in dinner at noon. Music at I
p.m with The Southern Gospelairs.
South Belhel is ·located. lwo miles
· from Route 7 on Silver Ridge Road,
across from Eastern Schools.
HEMLOCK GROVE - Hemlock Grove Christian Church, homecoming. Sunday. AI Doster, speaker.
Dinner at noon, afternoon services at
2 ·p.m . . Special· musi c by the
Williams. Family. Vienna , W. Va .

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Delicious Apples •••••••••
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SUNDAY
Poplar Ridg e
POMEROY Free Will Baptist Ch urch, gospel
sing. Slate Route 554 . .The Joe
Lester Family, the Brody Family. ,
Parkersburg. W.Va . Public invited
by Pastor John Elswick.

..

love ? "Alcoholism: How to RecogniLe It, How lo Deal With It, How to
Conquer It " will give you the
answers . Send a se lf addressed,
long . business ;ize envelope and _a
check or monel'{Jrder for $3 .75 (thts
iocludes postage and handling) to:
Alcohol , c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11~62 , Chicago. Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Canada. send $4.55 .) To lind out
more about Ann Lander~ and ~ad
her past colum n ~ . visit rhc Crcawrs.
Syndicate web page at www.crcators.corn .
--~---,

STORE HOURS

HARRISON VILL E.
Harrisonville Lodge 41 , Saturday; 7:30
p.m. Refreshments.

,.

hospital bill and saw a charge of$41
for a circumcision. I immediately
contacted the hospital and sa id
either they correcl thi s rnJ&gt;Iakc. or 1
would &gt;uc lhcm and the publicity
wou ld be devastating: TI1cy apolo·
gJLed, and removed the c harge at
once ... MICHIGAN MOM
DEAR MOM: 1 hope you put
thai bill in her baby book. It would
provide a good laugh for years to
come.
'
An alcohol problem? How can
you help yourself or someone you

P 0 WEll'S

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Rose of Sharon
Holiness Church. rcvtval Oct 1- 10 ,
7 p.m . Jac k Dulin , cvangelisl.
Dewey King. pastoi inwitcs puhlic .

Plaee1 o«J" eta.r.r/f!erll/1;1( Tu.e.rl"! ~ 1affl;olt~ Oat'ft T;-;Jal(~,· Potirt Pfeatfal(t Rf#'t~ter al(l
Tie Oatt, cfel(ttirefalfllt «J!ffl"v.l( rREEtir Tie T;-1-to(IJ(t/ /Ve«J.f
'

Wednesday, September 29, 1999

before we make. that same move away. The bottom. line is lhat we
again.
want you 10 tell illike il is .
,8 . Call our bluff. Make it c lear
10. Praise us wi1en we deserve it.
you mean what you say. Don't com- ·If you give us a few complimeniS
promise. Don't cave in . And don 'l once in a while. we will be ab le to
be intimidated by io~ r lhreals to drop· accepl criticism a lol easier.
Dear Ann Landers: A while
out of school or leave home. Stand
up to us , and we'll respect yeu. Kids back, you printed some letters from
don't want everything they ask for.
readers who reponed absurd mi s-9. Be honest. Tell us the truth no takes on bills they received. My
matter what. An~ be straight arrow experience is one of the 'weirdest.
about everything. We can take it.
When our second · daughter,
Lukewann answers make us uneasy. "Mary," was Dom. you can im.agine
W,e can smell . uncertainty ra mile our surprise when we received the

'

.

.

·
cote and ~

maJors
and
a
career
with
Philade lphia.
Cleveland
and
Chicago.
Jackson became one of baseball' s
best. linishing with a career batting
average of .356 and possessing a
swing Babe Ruth said he tried to
copy. But he will always be assodatcd with the 1919 World Series. in
which he and several leammates
were accused of taking money to let
the Cim.·innali Reds win .
Jackson. who earned his nickname for once playing a game in
Greenville without shoes, hit .375 in ·
the Series and didn't make an error in
the outfield . He was never convicted
in court. but commissioner Kenesaw
Mountain landis said he' d heard
enough to ban him from baseball.
"If you look at the way he played,
it just doesn'l make sense that he
cheated. " said Joe Thompson , 79,
one .of the neighborhood boys who
flocked aro~nd Jackson after his
return to the city.
Jackson laugh! them about baseball and doin g good works . He
would show them his trophies and
Joe Anders , another neighborhood
kid, s,aid Jackson once introduced
h1m to Ty Cobb.
If the weather was nice and
Jackson was in the mood , he would

.

ncJers
1.,(1

1.

form.

tell his wife, Katie, to mind lhe sh'o p ment . Anders said. On April , 24',
and he would drive to the sandlot and 1947, he wrote 10 Cobb: "Good of
pitch to the kids until dark .
you not ask about the raw deal the
"He said: 'You kic,!s need to gel crooks gave me . I think my playing
some exercise; you don' t need to be proved alllhat I done was to win for
spending precious nickels on pinball the Sox."'
machines . You need to stan learning
Anders ·gol the letter from
how to throw .and catch,' " JackSon's niece.
Thompson said.
.
He and Nola say people really
Jackson neither hid nor flaunled took notice of Jackson after the 1989
his fame, said Anders, 76. There movie "Field of Dreams," in which
were trophies, piclures and ribbons Jackson's gflost joins others of basein the store and Anders recalled hall 's past 'to play in the diamond
Jackson showing him a bat he thinks carved from an Iowa cornfield.
was the famous " Black Betsy." ·
Seven years laler, the Brandon
Every so often, folks would start a Mill field was dedicated "Shoeless
movement to reinstate Jackson. In J.,;, Jackson Memorial Ball Park.':
1922, a New York promoter for a The same year, State Highway 123
semipro team Jackson was on sent was renamed .. Shoeless Joe Jackson
Landis a re.instatement petition. · Memorial Highway. " ·
Landis ignored it.
There's
now
a
brochure,
In 1933, Greenville Mayor John "Greenville's Gain' Shoeless- Oo
Mauldin collected more lhan 5,000 the Road to · Cooperstown," with
signatures supporting Jackson 's case. Jackson's history and maps to his
"This application musl be denied," shop , field and grave.
Landis wrote back.
Baseball commissioner Bud Selig
In February . 1951', the , South bas promised to revie.w Jackson's
Carolina Legislature passed a resolu- case and Wesl Greenville, its mills
lion
asking
then-baseball mostly gone. hopes lhe revived interCommissioner Albert "Happy " estrevitalizes the area of boarded-up
.Chandler to reinstate Shoeless Joe . s1ores.
Chandler never replied.
Thompson says he never doubted
Jackson died of a heart attack in Jackson.
But many in Greenville had
.
Greenville on Dec. 5, . 1951. to be completely convinced before
Hundreds attended the funeral, supponing him.
·
announces continuation
Anders recalled. The Chicago White
"It has been oozing, blossoming
"t
Sox senl a flower arrangement aod fading since 1951 ," Thompson
0 SeaSOn 1m1 S Or VariOUS game an1m, S shaped like Comisky Park.
said. " This is as close as we've come
COLUMBUS. Ohio. The follow- rails and 15 moorhens .,
Jackson didn' t talk much aboul to seeing him back.''
'
ing species of wild game are "in-sea-Common snipe season open rth_e_B_I_a_ck_s_o_x_sc_a_n..,d_aJ_or_h_is_b_an_•_·s_h·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.,
7
·son" for Ohio hunlers:
through Nov. 28, and Dec. 11 -28.
In 1989, Nolan Ryan of lhe Texas Rangers became the first pitcher wilh '
-Mourning dov e season open Dai ly bag limit is eight.
career strikeouts, in a 2-0 loss to Oakland.
5,000
statewide through Oct. 16, a nd Nov.
-Squirrel season Qpen statewide
•
5-28. Daily bag limit is 12.
through Jan. 31. Daily bag limil is
The
first
televised boxing match was a 1933 exhibition belween Archie
·- Rail, moorhen seasons open four.
Sexlon
and
Laurie
Raiteri at Broadcas1ing House in Lond,on.
through Nov. 9. Daily bag limit is 25

say u is time to recognize hiS memory in this cily in the nonhwcst corner
of the state.
"Greenvi ll e ~eeded to reali1.e Joe
Jackson was a famous person. a
ce lebrity, .. said Arlene Marclcy. the
unofficial
spokeswoman
for
Jackson's local supporters.
·
They have made some progress .
The Brandon Mill s fie ill where
Jackson honed hi s ncar-perfc,·t swing
and powerful ann is redcdi&lt;.:atcd for
him . Signs at the Greenville Coun ty ·
border welcome you to "The Horne
of Shoeless JQC Jackson...
For the second-straight year. City
Hall dedicaled July, his birlh month .
to Joe Jackson. di splaying museum
treasures tracing his life. Petitions
there urging his reinstatement to
baseball now contain hundreds of
signatures .
"Joe would have never taken pan
in it . He would have been embarrassed," said Mike Nola . who nian·
ages ·lhe Shoe less Joe Jackson
Society and runs '' Shoeless Joe
Jackson's Vinual Hall of Fame" on
the lnlernet.
Jackson was a quiet man who
ne ver learned to re ad and write in
school but played on the Brandon
· Mill! team at age 13. Five. years taler,
Connie Mack brought him to the

Page7

Young lawbreakers draw up code of conduct for parents to follow

ESPN also reported lhat religious
studies professor Dan Deffenbaugh
suspecled in 1995 that aboul onethird of the papei:S turned in by foot·
ball players were plagiarized in some

'

.

side and grew up a "linthead ...
sweeping the cotton dust thai fell like
snowflakes in Brandon Mill where
he worked from age six. He returned
in 1929. a successful businessman
driving a big blue Packard. with a
dry cleaning business in Savannah.
Ga .. and a liquor store near l.he mill .
· In between. he. bet arne one of the
most celebrated and disgraced players in baseball's history. although he
repeatedly denied doing anything
wrong .
Jat:kson's old srorefront. about 2
111 miles from downtown. is now
covered in whitewashed bricks for a
furniture store. Across the street.
trash blows in an empty lot.
In Bolt's Drug Store, whe,re
Jack son used to line the neighborhood k.ids u[1 for ice cream. are tw.o
8-by-10 framed photos-of him in hi s
White Sox uniform . But they are
dwarfed by posters of the Al lanla
Braves.
'
Some of those neighborhood kids

aily Sentinel

•

South Carolinians resurrec.t memqry of 'Shoeless Joe' again
By PETE IACOBELU .
.
GREENVILLE. S.C. (AP) - To
t.he world. Shoeiess Joe wa.' a legend. I~ the o ld row homes of
Brandon Mill where h~ grew up and
first showed his baseball skills. Joe
Jackson wa.' just a man.
Jackson's storv of fame Jnd sud den bani shmen'i ·as an allc~cd conspirator in the \919 Chicago Black
Sox gambling scheme has been told
with passion, righteousness and bits
of fantasy ir. movies and books .
In recent years. there. has bccn. a
push to get Jackson inlo th~ Hall of
Fame, supponed by baseball siars
1ike Ted, Williams and BOb Peller. ·
and politicians like U.S. Sens. Strom
Thurritond and Ernest '"Frilz"
HQ~ings of South Carolina and Tom
Harkin of Iowa.
· - - - "Urui iJhis deeade. Ihough. about
the :l on ly tangible evidence of
Jackson's life here was hi s burial
plaque at Woodlawn Memorial Park.
He was born on Greenville's west

T e

By The Bend

Wednesday, September 29, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Wedneaday, September 29,1999

P.-ge 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

firn.tly
~edicin.eJohn C. Wolf, D.O.
~iale Professor
of Family Medicine

·Coryza? URI? A cold by
.any other name
is
still
a
•
·common nu1sance .
· Question: I'm fam1har with the general prinCiples of gettmg
plenty of rest. hand washing , eaung fruns and vegetables. takmg vn' amin C and antioxidants for preventmg 'the common cold. Can you
' give me additionfll infonnahon about cQlds'J This would he parHcuIru:Iy appreciated because my ch1ldren and I seem to have them all
winter long.
Answer: The common cold

IS

tuuon Week

l'ertamly a, significant hcahh prob-

lem. Having a "cold" IS the most lrequent cause for miSsmg days of
work or school and, consequently. one of the most common r~a
. ns
• for scemg the doctor BeSides makmg the sufferer miserable. · has
consequences for our soc1ety It results m great loss of work P. &gt;duc tivity - amountmg to seven workdays per per~on per year .. The
.' degree of absenteeiSm due to colds among school children " even
greater.
As you may know. the c'ommon cold is caused by a viral mfewon
of the tissues lmmg the nose. throat and upper bronchial tree - col, lectively called the upper resptratory tract. Consequently. doctors
often call a "cold'' a URI, short for upper resptratory mfectiOn . Doc·
·, tors even occasiOnally apply the more obscure term "coryza" when
obfuscation is the obJeCtive
.
,
There are a number of spectfic types of vtruses that cause colds
and even a few bactena that cause symptoms similar to URis. Fortunately, the human body has several defense mechanisms for deal ing with these threats The coughing and sneezing that accompany a
URI are part of the defense plan. These expel mfected mucus and
.. keep it from blockmg the respiratory passages. There are other
defenses rn the tmmune system that are erfectiVe atl11mlmg a cold to
its characteristic nuisance symptoms for almost all of us, but tt takes
· a little time for them to mount an effective attack against the germ
enemy- typically .five to seven days.
·
.
As you have ndt1ced. havtng orie cold doesn't give ·immu,nity
against the next one. With more than 110 diStinct types of Rh•· .
· novlrus, it's nearly impossible to develop Immunity to them all. Fur·
ther. there are other viruses, in addiuon to the Rhmov•rus, that can
cause the common cold. With so many coldproducing viruses. it's
not surpnsing that school-age chtldren often have One cold after
another and then bring them home to share wtth the fam•ly. This
. sounds like your household to me
'
Medical researchers are lookine for medtcines that Will prevent a
' cold or at least hasten recovery from one, but no such wondrous
product has been found so far. Consequently. the best preventiv.e
measures tnclude frequent hand washmg, JUSt as you mentioned.
This removes the infectious cold viruses you may have picked up on
your hands. It is also important to ·avoid touching the nose, mouth
, and face, since these are the places wheie the cold v1rus garns entry
into the body.
.
The use of vitamin C and the mineral zinc have been publicly
•
acclaimed for their cold-fighting abthues. Despne the general enthu·
siasm of the public for these products. there IS little scientific evidence that they help at all . Fortunately they are safe, so you can use
them if you want too.
·
Adequate rest and low levels of emot1onal stress do reduce colds.
· This occurs because of the complex mterrelauonsh•p between the
. . emouons and the body's immune sys tem. Understanding this concept is much CaSler than actually ellher ehminatmg the events that
; cause stress or changing our response to thorn.
So, I'd suggest that you keep a supply of Tylenol. decongestants
and Kleenex on hand. Col,ds wtll be wtth us for the foreseeable
future .
"Family Medicine" is a weekly column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteo·
pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio 45701.
'

.

Quilt show set for weekend
·The Harvest of Quilts Xlll will
be held at the West Vtrgmia State
Farm Museum Saturday from I 0
a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday from II
a.m. to 4 p m.
The show will be held during the
Farm Museum 's Fall Festival and is
~ponsored by Mason County Community Educational Outreach Ser·
vices
Some of the interesting quilts that
will be on diSplay 1flclude Bow T1e,
Wedding Ring, Ohio Star, Rainbow
Around the World, Chicken Scratch,
and t:one Stars, one of which was
personalized to depict events in her
husband's life. Quilts of all kinds

A rev1ew of the history of World
War II complete wtth personal expe·
riences given by veteran Victor Bahr
highlighted the recent Constitution
Week observance of Return
Jonathan .Me1gs Chapter, Daughters
of tbe American Revolution.
Regent Mary Rose noted that'
Consmution Week is celebrated to
emphasize the responsibiluy of pro·
tecung and defending the Constitu·
tion of the Unued States and pre·
serving · it for posterity: to under·
stand 1hat the Constilullon IS our
great hentage and 'the foundauon ol
our ll\•es; and. to study the histoncal
events wh1ch btcurred dunng September 1787. Gertrude Carraway,
while DAR Pres1dent General. was
responsible for the annual designa·
t10n of September 17-23 as Consti·

and sizes are needed to add to these
quilts to make a complete presenta·
tton.
..
"People's Ch01ce" awards will be
given to a full size qwlt and a small
quilt or quilted 1tem receiVIng the
most votes from the pubhc.- No entry
fee or admission fee ts required and
the show is open to everyone.
Quilts wtll be registered at the
Farm Museum "old kitchen" on Friday, from 3 to 6 p.m.

Rose satd that one of the most
outstandmg examples of defending,
the Consutuuon of the Unned States
an4 the freedom for which it stands.
is ·service to one's country in time of
war Such courage, she satd. was
derno,nstrated by Bahr, with his scr·
v1ce m World War II during the
allted assault on Germany whtle nymg on bombmg missions with the
15th A1r Force based m Italy.
Bahr was one of the many men
drafted from Meigs County. A p1lot
of a B-24 L1berator during the War.
he spoke of htS e&lt;periences during
hi s miht~ry service, mcluding hav ·
mg hiS B-24 shot down twice and
twice he and his crew survived
brutSed and shaken but Without seri·
ous injury. Lt. Bahr said that one of
the most protected Germati' targets
was Hitler's oil fields.
He expressed his pride in serving
hiS country and said that today he
works m ways to help veterans who
should never be forgotten.
Many soldiers made the ultimate
sacrifice, Bahr added, while others
dtd return but are now disabled. He
descnbed hts experiences as a privi lege of serving his country.
The United States' mvolveme,nl
in the World War II which ~egan
with the Japanese Army mvading
Chinese Manchuna. on September,
1931 were detailed at the meeting.
Chtna appealed to the League of
Nations who in tum requested Japan

Business Services

to withdraw lls forces. Japan ignored
the request. Great Bntam and France
asked tbe Un1ted States Government
to join the League in applying sanelions against Japan but President
Herben Hoover opposed tbe use of
sanctions or getting involved in
another World War.
In the meantime. it was noted that
Adolf Hiller, on March 10, 1935,
announced the ex1srence of a Ger·
man air force, decreed compu lsory
military service and spoke of a German army.
On Oct. 3, 1935, Italy 's Benito
Mussolini invaded the anc1ent ktng·
dom of Ethiopi a. The League of
Nations declared Italy an aggressor
and invoked limited sanctions which
were tneffective. On March 7, 1936,
three small German battalions
crossed the bndges over the Rhine
River and occupted the neutral
demilitanzed Rhineland. This de lied
both the Treaty of Versailles and the
1925 Locarno Agreements with
Fran(:e.
By July 1936 CIVIl war broke oul
m Spa•n which became 1he testing
grou nd for the weapons and tacti cs
of World War II
Ftghting broke out between
Japanese forces and a Chinese garri·
son near Pctp1ng on July 7. 1937
Shocked by the se events, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt urged the
Amencan people to face reahty.
He told them that no nation
cou ld "•so late itself from what goes
on in the rest ol the world. He
warned ~&gt;Let no one imagine that
Amenca wtll escape, that Amenca
may expect mercy, that this Western
HemiSphere wtll not be attacked."
In the war that continued to rage,
Japanese a1rplanes l:iombed Ameri can missionary churches. hospitals
and schools.
,
On March 13 . 1938, German
troops marched into Austria and
then moved into ~zcchoslovakia, at
which time Soviet Premier Josef
Stalin, sought commitments from
Britain and France to jam him in
defendtng that co untry.
. On March 15, 1939. Adolph
Httler, who had promised to stop
with the Sudentenland, sent German
troops marchmg into Czechoslovakia and occupied the entire country.

Stop In And See
Saies Represenlalive

Trump gets go ahead to
build world's tallest building
NEW YORK (AP) - A permit
that allows Donald Trump to bUild
the world 's tallest residential sky·
scraper tn New York C1ty has been
upheld
The Board of Standards and
Appeals on Tuesday voted 4-0 to
uphold the permit that the Depan·
ment of Bu1ldings ISsued rn April.
The $360 million building would
be 861 feet tall, 47 feet hi gher than
the Cityspire, tbe world's tallest residential building, also in New York.
The new butlding is to be bwlt in
midtown Manhattan, near the United
Nattons.
Opponents, who include former
CBS News anchorman Walter
Cronkite, say the permit violates
zoning regulations and they will sue
to stop construction.

to brmg house plants Inside checking
them for insects before doing so.
Frances Re~d presented the devotions usmg "I Pick More DaiSies"
and "Just For You."
The annual Christmas Tree light··
ing will be on Dec . 6. PlaQs were
made to eat out for the October

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Rutland, Ohio
Amerkanleaion
Post 467
Beech Grove Road
Gun Shoot
Sl~g IIIICI Shot

Matches
REVISITING WORLD WAR II - VIctor Bahr ol near ChesW talked
about his World War II active duty experience in a Constitulion
Week presentation at Return Jonathan Melg's Chapter, Daughters of
lhe American Revolution. He was introduced by Mary Rose, regent · '
•
In the month of August, 1939, Hitler mi ght of the United States, Great
astounded the world by concludmg a Bntam and the Soviet Russia to
ten-year nonaggress ion pact with the bnng Germany to her knees.
Meanwhile the Japanese were
Soviet Union.
moving
to take over parts of Asia.
At dawn on Sept. I. 1939, 56
On
Dec.
7. 1941 , 353 Japane se
German dtvlswns crashed mto
Poland. Russtan troops poured m planes flew in over the mountams of :
from the east and Poland was quick- Oahu and attacked the naval base '
ly crushed Two days later, Bntam where the U. S. Pacific neet lay at
and France declared war -on ·Ger· anchor. A total of ISS planes were
many. World War II had begun. In destroyed, and 149 more muulated
the spring of 1940, Hitler look over Over 2400 American men were
Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, killed.
Americans emerged from the ·
Belgtan , Luzenbcug and France.
rubble
of World War II a sadder and
These actions by Hitler shocked
wiser
people,
it was reported
Amencans mlo 'a hard look at their
Regent Rose announced that the
own defenses. So completely had
Amenca disarimed that they were by Ohio Soctety Daughters of the
then, according to General Dwight American Revolut1on w1ll hold its·
Eisenhower, militarily "as close to annual Southeast District meetmg at
zero as a great nation could conceiv- the Best Western Hotel m Lancaster.
ably be." President Roosevelt asked The next meeting of the Return
for a draft to raiSe an army; Con- Jonathan Meigs Chapter will be lu:ld
gress authorized the first peacelime on Oct. · 9 at the Meigs County .
conscripuon in Amencan history, Library followed by grave markings
and in October, 1940, the first nurn· of Margaret Dutton. Dorothy Ftsher,
hers were drawn. It took three and and Mae Mora at local cemeteries.
one half years and the combined

meeting. Roll call was answered by
members naming their favorite
teacher. The meeting was conducted
by the president, Maxine Whitehead.
1
Games were conducted by Grace
/ Weber and Nancy Wachter wtth
everyone
·
a prize. The door

Favors made by Mrs. Bise an~
refreshments were served by the
hostesses to the above named and to
Janet Connolly, Gladys Thomas;.
Delores Frank, Marilyn Hannum~
Wendy Hannum, Margaret Gross,
nickle, Marlene Putman and a guest,

tlon'a (Oiroctar'o) Intent
with roapecl to lha
llluance, dental, ate. of
a permll, llcenee, order,
etc. tntoraatod paroona
may aubmlt written
commanta or requ111 1
pubic mooting regarding
droll actlono. Commonll
or public moetlng
requeoto mull be
oubmtnod within 30 daya
of notice, of tho draft

may be held on · a
propoaad action II a
hearing
requeel or
objection Ia rocolvad by
tho OEPA within 30 dayo
of laauenco of the
propoaed action. Written
commonll, requaota tor
public meellngo, and
adjudlcallon hearing
requ11to muot be oent
to: Hurlng Clark, Ohio
Environmental

adoption, modification,
or repeal of order• (other

action.
"Propoaed
Actions" are written

ProtectiOn Agency, P.O.
Box 1049, Columbus,

renewing 8 permit, ~
llcenaa, or variance :

than emergency ordoro);
t ho loauonco, donlal,
mod Ill call on
or
revocation of llcenaea,
laaaea,
P ermlte,

tlatemonto of tho
Dlractor'a Intent with
reapoctto Ihe Ioouance,
denlat, modlllcatto n,
1 orrenewa1o1
revoc.ton,
a perm II, II canaa, or
variance.
Written
commonto an d roquotlt
far adl public meatlngd
regar ng a propooe
action moy be aubmlttod
within 30 daya of notice
al tho propooad action.
An ad(udtcatlon hearing

Ohio
43218·1 048
(lialophontl: e1•......,..
•••.
2128). "Final Actlono"
aro action a of the

which Ia not pracodod by
o propoaod action, may
be apputed to the ERAC
by filing ary appeal within
30 dayo oI laauanco of

Public Notice

Director which are
effective upon leeuanca

or a ototod olloctlve
dolt. Pureuant to Ohio
Rovlead Code Section
3745.04, a llnal action
may bo oppoalod to the
Environmental Review
Appoalo Commllllon

·•..
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Blue-Flame
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LP Gas·

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(for11er OHke S.nlce &amp; S•(!piJ)

Friday October 8, 1999
ncktts Now on Salt
· $15.00 ticket entitles bearer to $5,000
In Fun Money a•d the Chuckwaaon
7:00 • 10:30 pm "Ante Up" &amp; Coslao
10:30 p11 • 11:30 pm lvctlon
,

a-1

Dress W11tern
· B.Y.O.I.
~
Soft Drinks a•d·Keas Available.
Sponsored by The Melas County
· Chamber of Com11erce
For IIOrt lnfo;matlon call 99:t·5CI05.

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel

992. .1717

740·742·2131

Post 602
Membership dues for the year
2000 are due. Help Post meet
Nov. 11 'District turn in. NEW
MEMBERS '/VELCOME .
Please consider buying
Memorial Bncks as Chrislmas
gilts for family members
George Lawrence
Commander

Rummage Sale
Sacred Heart Cliurch Calholic
Church Parrish Hall
at 2222 Jackson Ave.
'rhurs. , Fn . &amp; S~;~t.
Sept. 30-0ct. 1 &amp; 2
9:0 m to 3 m

Every Sundoy
1:00 P.M.
YOUNG'S

CIRPIIITER SERVICE
•Room lddftlano &amp; Rtmodtllng
·New~

•EltctriC.l &amp; Plumbing
•Rooting &amp; Guttn
•Vinyl Siding &amp;P1lnllng
•Patio &amp; Porch Decks
Fftf ftfiiNIH

•

....,
•
1'

, •

tr.
M

, .

· ••

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre
3/11/99TFN

BullJo•er &amp; Backhoe
Service•
House &amp; Trailer Sites
· Land·Clearing &amp;·
Grading

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

Found . Black &amp; Brown Tamer ,

SIOrVI Run-· 740-:se&amp;-9357

&amp;ShU..

Found . .Puppy, Yellow LaO M ix,
Approx 4-6 MonthS Old, ROOney
Area. 740-245--5965

• Vinyl Siding
• Roolilg &amp; Seamless Gutter
• ReplaCement Windows
• Concrete
• Room Additions • Garages

Found: r.cj &amp; white bc»erf pit buN ,
New Lima Rd . P;ulland 'lictn1ty.

740-742·2237.

70

• Decks &amp; Boa! Docks

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

J•-IIH-11
Pl1 (740) tt2·2772

2 Miles out Route 218, Sept
29111, trvu Oct. 2nd
1

198 Atver Street, Kanauga , Oc't
Iober lSI, 2nd, 9 :CI0-5:00, Ra1n Oi"
Shine, No Early BwCsl

(7401 992·3131

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

Aluminum

Linda's Pcillntln'g
Take the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. Alter 6 pm

992·6215

Hourly Rates·

740·985·4180

992-9178

Free Estimates

Sr. 124 Wellston, Ohio
740-384·6212
lUMP AND 110111 COil

. H.I.A.P. VOUCHIIS
ICCEmD
DIUVEIY IYIIUILI
~

7am THRU 4pm

Public Notice
(ERAC) lorJ1(erly known :
the Envlron·mantat •
Board of Review) by a ;
paraon who hat a pany.
to 1 proceeding boloro :
the director by tiling an.
oppoal within 30 days of '
notice olthaltnal action. :
Purauont to Ohio •
Revloed Code Section ;
3745.07, a llnal action •
toaulng,
denying, :
modifying, revoking, or ,

11

.

Graham's Wood Products
Firewood Division

Ball Logging
and Firewood

ao• Ball

35215 Ball Run Rd.

MONDAY·FRIDAY

Pomeroy, Ohio

7amTONOON

1-740.992-6142

· SATURDAY

Leave a Message

appeals mull be Iliad
with: Environ-mental · .
R av lew
Appeals .
commission, 236, Eaat
Town Street, Room 300,
Columbua, Ohio 43215.
A
I h
copy 0 1 e appeal
muat be urvad on the
director within 3 days
alter filing the appeal .
wfth tho ERAC.
Final Joouanca of
Permit To lnotoll
Pomeroy Department of ·
Public Worka
Pomeroy, OH
toouo Oata: 09/20/1999
Facility Description: •

•

:Jfaynes
:Jfe bade no one
fiis last farewell,
:Jfe saidgood-bye
to none.
'I'fie fieavenly gates
were opened ·
a loving Voicnmd

Application No 06·5938 .
Thlo Final Action nat
preceded by propoaed
action and to appeotablo
to ERAC . Sanitary
Sewers and Manhotea
tor

VIllage

Apartment•

Green ·

at

300 ·

Mulberry·Avenue.

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

· CONSTRUCTION

115 Salem St.

Rutland, Ohio
OPEN
1 o-s:oo Tues. Wed.
&amp;Thurs.
&amp;

BANKilUPTt::Y
ran rtliove odeblor of linondol obligalions ond orrongo o fair distribution ol
ossels among creditors. Aperson going illrough bonkwplcy may rtlaln rorttrin
properly, known "' 'exempt' property, for his or her personal use. This lllCiy
indtK!e o atr, a house, rloilles, and hoosehold goods. You should dirid any
queslions regording bonkrupky lo an attorney alar. prO&lt;Hding.

For information regarding
· Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek, Attorney
(740) 592·5025 Athens

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

Tuppers Plains, OH

740-985-3813
Culverts: 4" • 48" in stock

8' Grovelless Leoch'
100'-1000' Rolls I' &amp;3/4" 200#Waler Une
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators Water Slorage Tanks

Beginning Sept. 26th

We deliver ALMOST anything

WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS

Call for details

Pomeroy

992-0437

HILL'S
SELF STORAOl
29670 Beahan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949·2217
Sizes 5' x 1 o•
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

7 40-992-0038

4 Family Sate. September 30th ,
October tsl &amp; 2nd, 11 Miles Out
141 From Will iS Funeral Home ,
lett On Gage, 1 Mtle On leH .
740-379-2130

A.LJ. Y•rd Sl~1 Must
Be P.ld In Advllnce.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.

HfiOUnG Inc.

tl1o dey before the ed
11 lo run. Sundly
, tdltlon • 2:00 p.m.

We Deliver

Frldoy. Monday tdHion
.. 10:00
Saturday.

•.m.

Lime3lone, Gravel,

Bidwell UnlteC Methodist Church,
Church Street October 1St 2nd,
9-5 PM Hot Dogs, Baked Goods,
Onnks, Lots Of Items!

Sand, Fill Dirt, ·
Agricultural Lime,

Mulch, Top Soil
(Low Rates)

Community Yard .Sate· 10/lst, 101
2nd, Ann Drive , State Route 7
South Before Rac coon Creek
Bndge.

740-992·3470

Garage 5ale. 1149 Bulaville P1ke.
Friday, October 1st, Saturday,

NowRentiag

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33195 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-$2!2
9/'ZT/99

1 mo. pd

IIYDS 'PAliNG
Henderson, WV
We Do•••
• Parking Lots
• Baskelball Courts
• Driveways
• Grading Work
• Hauling Stone

(304) 675-2457 Ollko
(304) 674-3311 Col Ph.
FREE ESTIMATES

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassmel)l...
You're Treated with Reapectl

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

ANNOUNCEMENTS

2 tamlly, H&amp;R Block parking lot,

005

Personals

AMAIZING
PREDICTIONS !
COMPLIMENTARY READING !
Solves ALL Problems! Love. arear, And Money! Call Nowt 1~

954-772.0796

..

START

DATING

TONI

Tl

Ha11e Fun Meellng Ehg1bl Sin gles In Your .Area Call For More
Information 1-600- AOMANCE .
Ext 9735.

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

Start Dating Tonight! Have fun

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

Sunday

6S2·2489.
New To You Thri ft Shoppt
740-592-1842
Quality ctothtna and housenotct

----:H7a...:.p-py-A:-d-:---.;.-

Items $1 00 bag sale ever~
Thursday Monday thru Saturday

IIAIYIII I til IIIDID
For New Local
Referral Se,ice
Malga, Gallla &amp;

g·I)0-5'30

11~~

Now Open. Poppy's Place, Gltt &amp;
Craft Supplies 326 Main Street ,
Point Pleasant, WV. Across trom

'

~

~

When you ••• "USA·')~

Comin' your wa}, (~
Wuh him a
Happy
"30th" Birthday! I
Lollf!,
.

:!!

~om, Dad &amp; Tom

':

~-·vf++±••
'

'

Post OffiCe

Sherylt. Diner letart WV Open 8

you..CONCRETE

CONNECTION
Quality Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios
Complete Garages:
masonary/wood
25 yrs experience
. Free Estimates

740·742-8015
877-353-7222 (loll free)

a

Monday edition·

I :OOpm Friday.
Big garage sate , Oct'ober 1-2,
former Betty Moore res1dence. SA
7 bypass between Pam tda and
Dave's Small Engine
Big garage sale- October 1-2, 94 Cleaned at1 1C and basement .
Nice Christmas tree , lav atory/
van ity, 1" ptast1c gasllne, hard·
ware, linens, ad ult ctothtng &amp; etc
112 m1tes oil 124 on Mtnersv1tte
Hill trO(TI Ashland Plant
Chur~h basement sa le , Tuppers

Plam~ Unlled Methodist. Oct 1.

(9·7). Oct.

2 19·2), cloth•ng, d;sh·

es. furniture. food. misc.

Surrounding areas
740-742-3119

mtd thin f. of you,
rrfie tfiings
you used to say;
I wonder wfiy
you fiad to dte
Witfiout a cfiance
to say good-bye
· rtfiougfi out of s1.9fit,

918 SOuth Tn1rd . Middleport Friday- Saturday October 1 2. 9am5pm Low priCes.

30 Announcements

Attention Crettera I Vend1rs irldoor crafllalr Oct 16 , rent table
$10 00 call 304 · 675·3842 1304·

7401117. .1

7 family yard sale Friday &amp; Satur·
day. October t-2, 9am-5pm. Ron s
Gun ShOp, Lasher Ad just out·
s1de Rut land Take 124 towarcs
langsville, f1rst road to tell, 1 2
mttes. 740..742-6412

All Yard Sales Muat Be Peld In
Advanc:e. Dead lin•: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad Ia to run,

Ferry 31)0.675-2856.

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

Oct 1st &amp; 2:nd 9-2. exercise machine. table &amp; lamps. b~s. dishes. clothing lots of m1sc

pla-;lng the Ohio Dating Game. 1800-ROMANCE. extension 9681 .

S1 00.00 Reward lor Saddle tlk·
en from my barn In Gelllpolla

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
,• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
985-4473
7122/TFN

STONE
HAULEP
Limestone
Gravel
Top Soli

MODERN
SANITATION SERVICE

740-992-3954

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo on·

Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. II 00-50 11~wn

Fi ve tam ll y garage sale · 1s1 &amp;
2nd, Basf"'an, 9 OO · S·oo Cralls.
baby 1tems, lurniture , much more

barage sate· three tamily, Octob·

er 1·2, Pine Grove Ad . , F1ve
AM·&amp; PM . Sheryl Mcdermott Points area betllnd old L&amp;L T ire
::ow::.:""'=::304:..:...:-6::.95-::..;;37::.2::1·' - - - - l J a rs. blc yc 1es. dresser, chest .
table &amp; chairs. bow. gall ctutlS-

Gl
40
,;·--,,...,..=v_e_a...,w_a_y':7-:--l
Play Station games. woodburner,
3 cats a 3 kiuens to glv8 away,
740.992.9937

Fnday &amp; Saturtlay. October 1-2,
three houses on Wr 1ght Stree t,

~

..

4--

--,--..:.:...-'-::-'-:--&gt;-.·•

ptr,.:

Attn. lPNs , AN,, EMTI And
amedics! Become An RN Or B~

Pomeroy

Graduate And Increase Your ltl-·
come Wtftlout Go1ng Ba ck To
Scnoott To ScP'Iedule Your Inter·
view In Hunllngton. Call Angela
Copeland By Oct 7 1-800 -7:37- ~

October 1-2. Bashan, near ftrehouse. Lots ot stuff Includ ing

blac:asmOh toolt;.
October 1st. 2nd &amp; 4th. Yellowbusl"' Rd . Racine

2222

•

AVON I All Areas! To Buy or 561&amp;. •

One day sate- Saturday, October
2, Tuppers Pta ms, nexl to Ctgo .
SOme furnrture, ra1n cancels

S"'rtey Spears, 304-675·1429

;

Avon Products Start vour own In· ,'
Home Bus1ness Work F lex 1bl e •
Hours, EnJov Unl1m1ted Earn ings

Ra 1n or shme- garage sale- two

famity. Tl'lursCay. September 30 &amp;
Fnday, October 1 Formerly Jo's

(304)347·8838
Baoysme' For f Boys Ages 4 &amp;
9 For Second Shift. 2 30 - 11 30
P.M Preferably Gr.een School
D1stnct 3 Da ys A Week Refer ences Reqwred , Call 740-4460440, 740-446-051'3

G11t Shop, 3202 Syracuse Baby
swing, like new. baby clothing. dffferent si zes . walker toys , women' s ctoth1ng , _coats , dresses,
sweater, blue Jeans, shoes, nice,
lots of Clshes tmd cage. what
nots brass lamp , 011 pa1n11ng : reproducnon sp 1nnmg wheat: glass
lables

Finance

BRANCH MANAGEMENT
.TRAINEE

Saturday. October 2nd only Bi g
church ya rd sale . three miles
south of Reedsville. 1 1~ mtle north
ol For~ed Run State Park on SA
124 Master's residence.

A me n can General Fmance . A
Leader In The Fmanc1al Serlo'lteS
Industry. W1th Over SII B1llion In
Assets A.nd More Than t 300
B ranches Nat10nw•de . Has An lm·
med1a1e Nee d For A Branch
Management Tramee In Our
Jackson OffiCe

Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Rt, 33
one m1te past 4 lane. to Ath'ens
New and used N1ke clothes, new
shoes. load of clothes &amp; m1sc
Cheap If ra1n w111 nave next dav
Yard &amp; bake &amp;ale. Sonshina Fel low&amp;hlp of Dorcas United MethodlSI Church. SA 124 1n Dorcas.

1

,
•
.
,
,

IndiVIduals W1ll Pa r11e1pate In An ·
lntens 1ve On - The Job Traming :
P rogram D~ts lgne d To Prepare '
You For B ran ch Manage r Re·'
spons•bd1t1es. The 18 Monl h ;
Modular Tra rn1 ng Program 1n-,
structs You In All Aspects 'Ot •
Manag1ng Credit ExtensiOn , .Ac· •
count Adjustment , Bus•ness lile - '
vetopment And Per sonne l Stall -

October 2t&gt;d. 9-4,

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Moodlspaugh Auc t1 oneermg.
Comp lete Auct1oneenng Services Cons1gnment auction- M1ll
Street . Middleport Thur&amp;days .
Onto License t7693 740-989·

Ing,
App licants For Th1s Ent ry level
Opportun 1ty Shou ld Have Fou r :
Years Post H1gh Schoo l Educa - ,
t•on. Tra tnmg Or Work Expe r•· •
ence (Sates Expenence Pre · ·
~erred). Strong Wr itten And Ver ·
bat Commun•caMn Sk1tts And A
Valid D ri ver's license Must Be
Open To Ret ocano n And Have
The Des1re To Assume Managerial Respons•b•ltty

2623
R1ck Pearson Auct ion Company,
lull 11me auct ioneer, complete
auction
service
L1censed
f66 ,0hlo &amp; , Wes t Virginia. 304773-5785 Or 30+773-5447.
Wedemeyer's Auction Serv 1c e.
Gallt~lls , OhiO 740·379-2720

90

. . ·•

Wanted to Buy

Amem;an General Ftnance Ot1ers :
A COmpet•ltve 6eneltts Package,·
tnctudtng MediCal, Dental And A
401(k) Plan For tmmed•ate Con·
Sldera!IOn . Please Send Your fle sume To American General
Finance, PO 8011 702. J'ackson,
011 45640-0702 Please Visit Our
Web S1te At · www.agfmance c'¢m
Equal Opportumty Employer.

Absolute Top Dolla r· All U S Si lver And Gold Coms. Proofsets .
Otamonds Anttque Jewelry. Gold
Rings Pre-1930 U.S Currency.
Stertmg, Etc. Acqu1sitions Jewelry
• M T S &lt;;om Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, GallipOlis, 74D-446-2842
Ctean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks , low ~1tes, 1995 Models
Or Newer. Sm1th Bu1ck Pontia C,
1900 Eastern AYenue. Galllpolis

Fu ll 11me constru ctiO n pos •ILOn,
experience requ•red . ca ll 740 - ·
742·3411 . "
'

Seeking moto r bike with peCal
start up. ca ll M1ke anyttme, 740 -

992·1703.

Ex

PROBLEMS???

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy'
Repo • Dlvorded

ATTEHTIOII:
How A~
PIJ: It To WcrtJ
S2!i ·$75/tir PTIFT
t-881-890-3A8t
www.pc-n:;omscom

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

80

Halp Wanted ' •

Gall1a -Me1gs Commumty Aci1on
Agency Is Acc eptmg A.pp nca·
! lOriS For A STAFF ACCOUNTOctober 2nd, 9.00 A.M. To 1
Wanted To Buy Used ,Mob•le
&amp;til ASSOCiate Degree In BUSI
Homes, Call 740-446-0175, Or 1ness 11\ccounttng W ith Two .
Garage Sale: 922 Jencho Road,
304·675·5965 \
Years Nonprof it Account mg
Chesl"'ire, Ohio, October 1st, 2nd,
per1ence Reqwred Computer Ex Rain Or Shine
perience A Must Detail Orisnted '
EMPLOYMENT
W1th Ab thl y To Wor k lndepi n· '
3 Fam1ty Garage Sale· Fnday &amp;
SERVICES
dently And As A Team Pl ayer.
Saturday October 1st, &amp; 2nd, 9 00
Will Mamt am Gene ral Ledgers .
A.M -6·00 P.M. 247 Kelton Road,
Journal Entrtes. Cash AeCEIIJH S,
Beh1nd Alp me Motel, Wurlitzer
Budgets, Cash Flow. In ventor y
Organ, Furniture. Car. Applianc110 Help Wanted
Records: Prepare Payroll Reports
es, Olshe&amp;, CooklngUten&amp;IIS,
And Fmancta t Reports To FundBedding , Curta1ns, Linens, M1sc. US Makt $35 ·$5 /Hour, Set
Ing Sources Resumes Aru:l Ap·
Items. Arts &amp; Crafts
Your Schedule, Be Your Own
plicatiOns W1ll Be Accepted At
Bou , And Work Out Of Your
Garage Sate· September 30th
The Chesh•re Olhce 8010 North
Home, Anywhere. Gre•t Payl
October 1st, 2nd Rain Or Shine ·
Paid Vecatlonsl C•lll-800..721· , State Route 7 Until 4 30 PM On
Household, Collectables. Good
October 8, 1999 GMCAA IS An
Clothing, •oon·r Miss Th is One!" ·~72
Equal Opponumty EmplOyer
2nd Huuse On Left Bladen Road. S1 .OOO's PAlO WEEKLY For
From 218.
Galtia -Me1gs Commuruty Acuon·
Sluffing &amp; Ma1hng E n'lelop es
Agency I s Acc ep tmg Apph ca -·
Your Own Hourst COMPANIES
Moving /Yard Sale October 1st • NEED MORE MAILEASII ~XCittng
t•ons For An ACCOUNTS fAY2nd, 8 .00 A.M. Till 5.30 PM 62 Info
ABLE /RECEIVABLE CLERK
. Rush SA S .E Keystone .
Ann Orl\te.
H1gh Schoo l D 1ptoma W1th Two'
Boll 951-INO Joplin, MO 64802.
Years Nonprof it .A ccounltng Ex·
October tst, &amp; 2nd , Clay Town$2,000 WEEKLYt Maihng 400
per•ence Reqw ed Computer Ex·
hOuse, 8·5 Take Route 7 South Br ochures ! Sattsfac!lon Guarper~ence A Must Detail Onented
To 218, Turn ' LeU On Lovers
anteed! Postage &amp; Supplies ProWith Abil 1ty To Work tndepe n
Lane
VIded! Rush Self-Addressed
dently And As A Team Ptay W1W
October 1st. October 2nd. 1st Stamped Envelop&amp;! GICO, DEPT .Process Acco unts Pa~able And
Payro ll. Prepare Cash Rece1pts .
House South River Valley Htgh 5. Box t436, ANTIOCH , TN
And Ma 1n tam Al l Re cords . Ae ·
School. Ce ra m1cs. Greenware. 37011-1438 Start Immediately.
sume And App t1c at•ons W1ll Be
Bisqueware. Misc.
,$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN Accepted At The Ch!shrre Olhce.
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN· 8010 North Stale Route 7, Unht
September 30th . -October 2nd.
MENT REFUNDS NO EXPERI · 4 30 PM On Or.rober 8 t99 9
1722 Fairview Road 81dwell, G1rts
ENCE NECESSARY 1-800-8!54GMCAA Is An Equ al Opportunity
Stzes Infant ·8. Mens. Womens
6469 E111 , 5046
EfllJIOW,r
Clothes.
·

Yard /Garage Sates October t st.
2nd, 9·5. Myrtle A venue , Close
' To The Kanauga Drive-Inn, Turn
At Ftve Star Mortgage

Cont.' IWI/003506

CARPENTRY

(No Sunday Calls)

Used Crarts.

(740) 992-27,53
or 992·1101

R.L.MASH

740·992·7643

4 Families: OGtober 1st. 2nd, 3rd.
9 A.M.- ? 1826 Pleasant Valley
Road . (Out Of A10 GraJ~de) New

WICKS

8:30am -8 pm
Sun 1 pm·6 pm

New Homes
Garages .
Replacement
Doors &amp; Windows
Wood &amp; Vinyl Siding
Custom Work
Kitchens &amp; Baths
Insured
24 Yrs. Experience

3 Family Friday October 1st.
Saturday October 2nd g·oo-s·oa
Fraley Drive Off State Route 35.
1St Ttme Th1s Year! Girls , B oys
Cloltling, Toys, What-Knots.

By Appointment

ttel"~~~ 24 Hr. Taxi
Mrl Delivery ' Service

New Homes • Vinyl
Sid1ng • New Garages
•Replacement Wlnqows
•Room Additions
•Roofing
&lt;OMMIROAIIIIIIISIDINTIAL
FREE .ESTIMATES

3 Fam1!y Garage Sate· Antiques.
Toys, Furniture, CJothing For Everyone , Tools, D1shes. t027 oa .... ls
Road , Off SA 218 , Take Teens
Run Roac. 1 Mile Turn Right , Top
Of Hill, 1011&amp;1 , 2nd

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

ADVANCED OOAINAGE SYSTEMS INC

New Store Hours
For Deer Season
Mon-Sat

Co. Ad 19

MI&amp;C.

9 West StlmSOfl, Art\ens

' 1 o{ten sit

Still missed, LotJed ,
stdl nunc
You will live wlffi me
in memory
Until tfie end of time .
Sadly .Afl55ed by
Your Wife
'Dons :Jfaynes

OLDIES

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

(9) ·29· HC

''come "

)'Ou 're ever

SMITH'S

A &amp; DAuto Up o stery • Plus, Inc

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

the final action. ERAC

UNIQUE

FIREWOOD
Ou111p Traa~ ar
Pia~·•P iit nr r~r4
Recently purchased:

2 Famtty· friday. Saturday, tO:Q05 00, 13728 State AoU1e 141 , Bll(e,
Dishes. Clothes . Comfort Tops ,

4(2 TFN

Araytinw-Anywhere

BRAMHI COAL
COMPANY

2 Famlhes 6 M1les South On Route 7 Large Vanety! September
30th, Tl"'rough OctotMiH 2nd.

949-2168

V.C. YOUNG Ill
Pomoray, Ohio
22 yn. Local

1 51 T ime Tn1s Year All S1zes
Clothmg· ~oys Nlke, Levi , Home
lntenor. Elc 761 Second A.!Jenue.
ttVtst. 2nd.

FREE ESTIMATES

SeptU, Syolenu &amp;
UtWtU.o

Yard Sale

110

PoiMf'OY,

60 La.! end Found

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

TREE SERVICE

Yard Sale

par, 7"C).3611-16l'll,

ROOFING
NEW· REPAIR

lOIII'

~:~==C§a;u:t~h;o:rn::~J=oa;n~Klerr:r·=========~·

pnze went

Wastewater

·empire Wall
Heaters

ST. RT. 7
10 X 10$40
10 X20 $60

EICIVITitiG CO.

Rutland, Ohio

COUNTY: Melga
PUBUC NOTICE
The
I o II owIng
application• and/or
verified complalnlo wore
ncotvod and tho
1a II awIng
droIt,
propoaed, or final
actlano wore llluld liy
the Ohio Environmental
Protection
Agency
(OEPA) lut week.
"Actlono: Include the

cortlllcatoo·, and tho
approval or disapproval
of
plano
and
opaclllcttlono. "Drall
Actlona'': are written
atotemtnll of the
oI
D Ire c tor
Env ironmental Protec·

SAYRE
TRUCKING

70

Floor MOdel TV N. .ds T.nl Re -

To pla(C an ad Call992·2156

HOWARD
u

Glvuway

40

Howard L. Wr~esel

Public Notice

or

Phone (740) 593-6671
6129Jmo.

Public N~tlce

v a r I an c e a,

Larry Schey

i

Riverview Garden Club look toward winter protection for plants
A program , "Preparing Our
Flower Beds for Winter'', was pre·
sented by Ruth Anrie BaldersoQ·.at a
recent mceung of the Riverv1ew
Garden Club held at the home of
Mary Ailee Bise with Betty Boggs
and Balderson. co-hostesses
The leader noted that after the
first ktlling frost in the fall , dead
stalks should be cut and removed.
tnmmmg the stems to w1thm an mch
or two of th.e ground. and then
applymg a winter mulch of leaves or
straw. She sa1d II IS also an 1deal time

HARfWElL
SIORAGE

Steve Riffle
.-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

wheel horse and go cart, 740 992-1093. Auction October 9

:.s:.::P:.::u:.::p:.p,:.e:.:s·;_s_w_e_ek_s_OId_T_o_A-1 Gigantic ~;~arage sale. two miles
Good Home. 4 Females, 2 Mates
on New Lima Ad · Rutland . Sept
Pan Cocker Span1el , 740 · 245- 30- Oct 2 9 00·5 .30. Several
truck loads ol stuHI Everything 15
5291

------~---) reasonably pnc&amp;dl
Basset Hound Good With K1ds ,
To A Good H_ome. 740-446-0744
Large yard sale- Friday, Saturday,
9 00 -? Behmd Masomc lodge m
Chairs beds &amp;chester drawers Rac1ne. Men's, women's plus s1ze
304-675-1365
clothmQ. househ ol d . C1rcte ol
Fne nds hgurmes. books tots of
Commode 304-675-5324
m1sc Rain or shine

$800

WEEKLY

POTENTIAL

He lp wanted· canng lo r elde rlY
ntght sh1lt, 7pm-9am. 740-9!4•
5023
~

Complete Simple Government
For ms AI Home, No Expenence
Ne cessary CAL.l TOLL. FREE 1-800-966·3599 Ext 1 2601 $34 00

Houtekee-per- lor O•sab1ed prac·
tie ing attorn ey lr'l Columbus . live
m some care dU11es room, boar~.
salary 614 -267-5354

Rerundable Foe
'CANCERS'
Top Dollar· (740)992-6387

IF YOU HAVE 5 · 395 lbs To
Lose can To Earn Extra (nco me
Around Your Sc t1edule . Call 1·
800-335-977 1

ASSEMBLY AT HOME!! Crafts,
Toys , Jewelry, W09d Sewing
Typmg Great Pay 1 CALL 1-800795-0380 E111 1t20 I (24 Hrs)
Bartender

tmmed1ate Op enmgs lor house~
keepmglleundry a•de Part-lifT!&amp;
r otaung shifts
Apply Pcm1
Pleasant Center/ Genesis l:tde~
care . State Route 62 . Route t·
B ox 326 Pomt PleaSa nt. WV
Equal Opportuf'11ty Employgr
'

Wanted . 740 -4 41·

1428
Churcn Treasurer 24 Hrs Per
week, Do1ng Boo"-"'eep•ng &amp;
Mise office Chores Must be
Computer literate Send Resume
to Grace United MethOd ist
Church. 600 Second Street Gallipolls.OH 45631

LEGAL SECRETARY
Needed for busy A!l'1ens La w Ot~
hce Must know or QUICkly be a~leto learn Corel IWorO Perfect) 7.0
Computer Users Needed Wor"' · Retirement plan ava1lable A grea~
Own Hrs. S25t&lt; -$80K/ Yr 1·800· opport unity for the malure hard ..
536-0486 X m7, www 1cwp.com
wOrl&lt;\1ng mdlvtdual w1llmg to mak&amp;
e tong-ter m cornm •tment Sata,ry
Cooks, Fryers &amp; Bartenders
commensurate w1th expem~nc&amp;.
Needed Part- Ttme Day &amp; Even Respond to · PO Box 729-86 c /~·
Ings EKpenence Helplut , 740The Dally Sentmet Pomeroy 011
446-6647
45769
Dnver /O wner Operator - Ch1cago
Area Tru ck Compa ny Needs
Owner Operators To Operate
East 01 Roc"-•es Great Pay, New
Trai lers . Mutmum M1les . Small
Fleet Owner Welcome Call 888782·5400 Ext 207

Local ta M office needs pan t1me
laM ,preparers for up com1ng tal
season. we wtll tram. send resumi
to Oa1ly Senbnel, PO Boll 729-891
Pomeroy, Oh·45769
MEDIC Al BILLING Earn EK cer.
tent Income Full Trammg Corn:
puter Requ1rec1 Call Toll -Fret
800-540 •6333 Ex1 2301

Onvers - Hornady Tr uck Line
STarts Yo u Up To 3~eiMI Plus
Bonu ses . Aa1ses. Tarp &amp; Up To
S1.200 Or ient Pay Top Flatbed
M1tes · ~11 Pa1d l Ass1gned Conv. You Take Home BC!BS Ins., Rid·
er, Family Support Prgm&amp; , Vaca IIOn &amp; More 24 Hr Turn • Arountl
on PhOne Apps 1-800·441-4271
Ext ET2 92 Or www ho rnat;ly nuck com
Or 1vers 2 Week Pa1d COL Tra inIng No Exp Needed No Money.
Nor Cr edit? No Problem! Earn Up
To $32 ,000 /1st Yr. W / Full Bene·
flts P A M Transport Call Tott
Free 1-877-230-6002 www o tr drtvers com
EARN $50K A Year Comp·UMed Seeks Full /Part -Ttme Medical Pro&lt;;:essors. PC Required . No
E11per1ence Necessary. Will
Tra1n Call 1·800-458-4135 ,
Farm Work In South side area .
mosrty seasonal machinery op·
erat1on du nng plant ing and fall
harvest Wages mcludes hOuse
Call 9 0010 tO·OOPM 304-7576577 '

Needed · earners for Gatlla CouQty Area• 1-(800}-896-9706

NOW HIRING
$170.00 PER'WEEK
PART·TIME
!GUARANTEED SALARY!
Men And Women Needed To ,
Do Telephone Operator Wor"- Fort

LOCAL RAOIO STATION
PROMOTIONS
1

~

' Day And Evening
. Shift Available
• FuttAI'Id j;!ari-T•me Openings
• No Expenenoe NeededWETRAtN •
• Opportunity For Actvancement
• College Students Welcome

Apply In Pers on At.
t7 P.1ne Street
Gallipolis. OH
Tuesday, Septembe r 28th
W~nosday, September 29th
Thur~y. September 30th
3 00 PM TlUS ·OO PM ONLY
Ask For.'Ms Hammond

'

:

I
~

r
'
:

�Plge 10. The Dally Sentinel

Wednesdlly, September 29, 1991

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

September 29', 1999

Sentinel•

The

OOP

&gt;

..,_ _ ..,,

PHIU.IP
ALDER

MEDICAL BILLING Earn beet·

lent I S I I PJocesslng Clarms
From Home. FuN Tralntng Provtd·
ed. Compullf Requtred Call
MedtWOfkS Toll-Free 1·800-540•

6333Exl 2312

INOllCEI
OHIO VALLEV PUBliSHING CO

recommend$ that you do bust
ness wtlh peop._ you know and
NOT to send money through the

Medical Oata · Entry Repe

Needed For Entry Level Poal•
Hon. FT IPT, Exc.llenl Pay PC

"-4. c.IIIDD-211 • • .

MOTHERS

a

OTHERS WORK

FROIII HOllE! Mati -Order Part

r,.. &amp; Full Time

$&amp;50 ·S3.8001

Month . Full Tratning Provtded'
R&gt;r FREE Bool&lt;lol Call 1-1!88·230·

9897 www.easMn 1 c:orrthiOme
Need 7 Ladies To 5etl Avon, 740-416-3358
OWN A COMPUTER. PUT iT TO
WORK $850 ·$3.500 MO PT IF!
FREE Delatls log Onto hUp·J/
www ltl!1 com Acals$ Code 5298

PHARMACY TECH POSITION
Apply AI Fruth Pharmacy. 2991
State Route 160 Gal1tpolls
Across From Holzer Hospital No
Phone Calls Please We Ofler A
Career, Not Just A Job FuH-Time
Position, Wllh Possible Ae•mbursment 01 licensure Fees
Current Tach Regtsuat lon NOT
~IIIJ*a&lt;j.

POSTAL JOBS To SIB 35 IHR
INC BENEFITS , NO EXPEAI·
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1· 800· 813 3585 .
EXT , .. 210 8 AM 9 PM 7
DAYS Ids inc Fee

Full Time POSition For CRTT I
ART Wilt Conside{ New Graduate
Pouessing Vahd Oh1o License
Or Permtt Must Be Knowledgeable In All ~spect Of Resp1ratory
Therapy Including ABGs And
EKGs Competitive Pay Contact
Doctors Hospital Nelsonville. 0
740-753-1931 Ext 6262
River Front Honda Gallipolis.
OhtO, Sendee Manager And
Clean Up Person Needed CaH 11100-962·9253. Or 740-4&lt;6-2240
SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY'. Call Now Toll Free I ·
800-469-8164 For Appqmtment
To Come To Nashville. Tennes see And Audttlon Fo' MaJOr
Record Producers Internet
wwwwdnac
State Tested Nursing Asststants
onteded lor 100 bed skilled nursIng racHity Energetic. enthusiastic
and dedk:ated staH to care lor our
residents ' Classes are be~ng set
up and ~nterested candidates
should appty to Flodl;spnngs Re·
habilltalton Center, 36759 Aockspnngs Ad , Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 . Sandy Bowen LPN Instructor Equal Oppor!Untty Empta;er

TRUCK DRIVERS NEEDED
JCJ TRUCKING, INC.
IS - I I YOUR AREA

WE OFFER: OTR and RegiOnal
work IMI- Compelftvo P1111
Paid WEM!tkly. direct deposit avad
Health Insurance 1/acatlon pay
Late model COnvenllonals AS·
slgned Trae1ors
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY

a

- - 5ep1 29lh from 2pm·
4pm Comfort Inn 605 E Ma1n St .
Jackson , Oh
For more inklmlatiOO E!jiOriel"ced
caM 1·(800)·880-7364
EOE

Or-•

WANTED
,
63 people 10 lose 30 lbs 1n 30
days &amp; earn $$$$$ while surfing
the net 1-888-229-8427 www evlta~lynelllee9&gt;00

Wanted Tractor Tratter Dnver
To Haul With A Coal Bucket, EK·
perle nce A Must , If Interested
Calt Usa, 74Q-286--4951'
WilDliFE JOBS To $21 60 /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 P.M.
1 DAYS Ids. inc Fee
WORK FROM HOME! Explosive
Mall Order Business! Earn Big
$$$1 PfT ,fflort FIT Results' Call
24 Hours Free Info I 1-888 -36851 t8 Opt
1
www workathome.comlniooleandltevm

140

Business
Training

Glllttpotio Colftf College
(Careers Cklse To Home)
Call Today! 74Q-446·4367,
1·800--214-0452,
Reg 190-05-1274B

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
OREE QUiCKLY, Bachelors.
Masters , Doctorate By Corre Spondence Based Upon Prior Education And Short Sludy Course
For FREE Information Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1-800-964-8316

180 Wanted To Do
Georges Portable Sawmill don't
haul yoU!' logs to ,,. mill lust eat!
304-675--1957
Jtms Drywall &amp; Construction
New Construction &amp; Flemodell
Drywall , Siding. Fl oo ls , Additions , Painting, etc {304)6744623 or (304)674.(1155
, Klms Cleaning &amp; Interior PaintIng Commercial Res iden tial
fieasonable Rates Free esti mate&amp; call304·674-4623
We do tra iler demolttton&amp;some
homes&amp; trash pick -up 304-7738167
Will Do Palnllng &amp; Odd Jobs
$-4 00 A Hour. 740-367·0140

FINANCIAL

:110

Business
Opportunity

START YOUR OWN VENDING
Business For As LHtle As $1 OOOt
ALL CASH BUSiNESSI11 · BOO·
220-2985, 2.. Hrs

mall unhl you have mvesugated
... olforlng

2.1 Cenll /Min. PHONE CARD
Ate. EASY $$ MONEYII FEW
Hot,.~rst Earn $500 · $5 ,000 fWk
CASH! FREE Sites 1-800-9979888 24 Hrs.

ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
St ,000 A. Day No Sellmg Not
MLM,. fOf Free lntormaUon Package ·can 1-800-786·8849, 24 Hrs
)(T 27.
AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 -20 Locattons S.. K -SIOK
$ ... 000 +f Mo . Income - All
CASH! 100'"4 Finance Available
1·80().380-2615 • 2• HB
CHRISTMAS IS COMING , Turn
Your Spare Time Into EXTA A
SS$ PT/FT Men -Women Homemakers Average $200 To
$2,000 Per Month . Call Now! 1-

1100-:&gt;40-3202.
DENTAL BilLER Up to $I 5 -~5
JHr Oen1at Btlhng SQitware Company Needs People To Process
Medtcal Cla tms From Home
Tram tn~;~ Provtded Must .Own
Computer 1-800-223-11 .. 9 E11t
oi60
EARN $90 000 YEAAlY Aepalrmg NOT Rep lactng long Cracks
In Wlnclshlelc1s Free VIdeo 1800 -826-8523 US /Canada
'lf'NW glassmechantx com
EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR
Send Us A One Page Form We
Do The Rest No Otr&amp;et Selling
Free Info Packag~ 1-800 -831 2385 24 Hrs . Ext 63

GET PAID Whtle You Surf The
WEI!b Go To h11p /lww w gala world COO'igelpa-nworks asp?rtd=l 031141662 Stgn
Up lor FREE, AM (,let A FREE
Browser!
HUClE OPPOATUNiTV With A
Flevoiuttoriary Telecommun fca•
hons System Firee Nat1onw1de
Votcamall , Call Forwarding , Call
Screentng. lD Calls 7 9c /Min
NOW SElLING Give Away F.ree
Tnals 1-800-310-6718 Ell! 811 442·0442

NEED AN EARLV PAVDAY?? No
Offtce VIsit Necena,y Up To
$500 Instantly Call Toll Free
I {877)EARLYPAV
tst
AO VANCE FREE' Ucetcc10036.

Upl

Oak'Miod, Golipolio. ()rjyl1
Want A Home, Don, Ha\le Land?
We 00. Hurry Only 1(j Lots Left.
800-383-6862
·
~

230

Doublewldes Ffee Decor &amp; Furnt·

Mount's Tree Serv1ce "The Tree
Professionals" Buckel Truclt
Servtee, Top, Tnm . Aemo ... al
Stump. Grtnding Free Estimates
Fulty Insured. Worlts Comp. Bid·
well OH Call A.nd Save , 1-800·
838·9568, 740-388-9648. Owner
RICk Mount
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W10'
1.s88·582-3345

MEDiCAL BILLER Up 10 Sl~ •
$45 fHr Mldttal 8111tng Soltwafl
Company Needs People To Process Medical Claims Ffom Home
Training Provided Must Own
Computers 1-800-434-5518 E11t

167.
MEDICAl BILLING Unlimited lneomt Potel'!tial No Expenence
Necessary Free Information &amp;
CO-ROM Investment $4 995
$8 ,995 Financing Avatlable Island Automated Medical Services, Inc 800-322·11 39 , Ext 050
Voklln KY. IN, CT

WE ARE ENGERGiZING E·
COMMERCE ON THE 1NTER·
NET!! I Have Your Own iurn ·Key
Online Business Through "HAND
TECHNOlOGY" low Start Up
Cost Gives You A Complete
Package With Mentoring And
Training To Help You Succeed
Call Ivan Turner, 677-32 .. ·8t35
TCt28588

220 Money to Loan
ISS NEED CASH?? WE Pa&gt;
Cash For Flemamlng Payments
On Property Sold! Mortgages t
Annultlesl Settlements! lmmadlala Quotes!!! "Nobody Beats
Our Prices." National Contract
au,ers 800·490· 0731 E•1 101
www.naliol'lllcontracttMJyers com
SIS OVERDUE BiLLSIII ISS Con·
sotldate Debts! Sarna Day Approval NO APPLiCATiON FEES1i 1·
800·883·9008 E•1 ' 936 www.heip·
pay-btlls com
SFFIEE CASH NOW$ From
Wealthy Families Unloading Millions Of Dolars, To Hatp Minimize
Their Taxes Write Immediately
Wlnd1a1is. 847-A SECOND AVE .
SUiTE 1350. NEW VORK . NEW
YORK 10017
"GUARANTEED APPROVAL'
Bank Card, No Credit Check, No
Up-Front Cash Security Deposit
Requ ired •Must Be 18+ And
Have Valid Checking Account•
Pre-Appr.ova! By Phone 1-800689-1556
FFIEE MONEY ! It's True Never
Repay. Guaranteltd. 1500 $50,000. • For Deb1 Consolidation.
Personal Needs. Medical But s,
Education &amp; Business Call Toltr=ree 1-Soo-724-6047 (24 Hrs)
CASH Or lOAN! Farm Capital
Will Purchase Or Loan Against
Your Government Farm Paymenls (CRP/ PFC ) Call Farm
Capllal 1-888-FARM-ACT (327622~)

""" ,_.RRY,
HURRY, HURRY!
OAKWOOO HOMES,
BARBOIJRSVILLE. WY
801).~

HUO Homes, AtJprovtl By PhOne.
Singles Or Doubles . 740-4 .. 6-

3583
MOVING OUT OF AREA: Mus1
Sell At Secralice. 1998 SW, like
New, 304-733-9102
New JBR 2 Bath 14 Wkta 1500
Down S2t0 per mo. Free Atr 1-

New -4BR 16 wide. $500 Oown.
$245 per n1o Free Air, 1· 800 ·
69t-6m
Special 28Jt80, 3 or 41BR. $1000
Down $349 per mo Free Deliv ery &amp; Selup 1·800-691-6777
All real estate adVertiUIQ 10
!his n e - ~ SllbjaC1 to
the Federal Fair Hous'"U Act
of 1968 whiCh makes It lltegal
to advertise "any preference,
limitatton or dlscnmmation
based on race. color, reiiQIOO
se:ot tarmlial S1atus or natiOnal
-orvn IX any Intention t?
make any such preterence1
JimitatiOfl or discnmlnatoo •

Thfs newspaper will not
knowmgty accepl
adverttsements for real estate
which is 1n vlolaUon or the
law OUI' readers aru hereby
tnformed thai all dWellings
advertised In th1s ,newspaper
are available on an eQual
o,...,,m basis

340 Business and
Buildings
3,000 Sq Ft Commerctal Build Ing In Henderson for rant. lease,
or sale Call Sonny Reynolds.
(304)675-'123

Apai t11 MWitl
lor Rent

t and 2 bedroom ~s. furnished and unfumtshed. security
deposit req\.llred. no pets, 7-w992·2218.

porl, all uttlllttts patd, $270 per
month. SIOO deposit. 740-992 -

71106

t Bedroom Apartment In Gallipolis Water Paid. $265/Mo , Deposit
Reqi.Hred. No Pels, 740 U6 4043
Aller&amp;~~~

1 Bedroom. AIC. WID Hook-Up,
Near Arbors Nuntn!J Home, No
Pets, OuiaiLocaHons, $279/MO ,
+ Utliltes. 74().446-2957.
2 br apt tn New Haven
noon 304-&amp;82 :l!m.

can after

2 br apt m New Haven 1275. a
mon mcludes water ,trash,relrlgerator&amp; stove
litave message

3041·773·5577

lilt A SA P UOUIOATIONI!II Ae·
possessed! Must Sell 4 Brand
New !:iupar lnsulaled, Alfordable
Prefab Home Packages H1ghest
Quality Fut, Easy ConstructiOn Your FoundatiOn, 314f5 Bedrooms
H!00-874-6032 Sacrlficall
SO DOWN1 HOMES NO CREDiT
NEEDED !
GOV'T
FORE·
CLOSURES( CALL NOW FOA
REGISTAATIONI
1·800·413A·
2434 EXT 3205 (NO FEE)
1 95 Acres . Seven Rooms Pius
Bath , Two Garages, Barn 10 5
M1tes To Gallipolis, 740· 388 8942
3 Houses Financing Ava ilable
$18 000 Each. Otscounl For Cash
All Pomeroy Area 740· 3888591 304-633-8937
ARIZONA RAFIE BUY! Pnsline 40
Acre Ranches In Northwest A.ri·
zona From Only $495/Acret Lush
VegetatiOn, Mounlatn VIews! No
Ouahfying Low Down. Ask AbOut
6 Mo Inspection Program• 1-800711 2340
Brtck
Ranch
3Bedrooms
2Baths. 2 Car Garage. 1 2Acre t
Year Old Pt Pleasant, $125,000
(304)675-8959.
Buy Homes From $10,000
1 -3 Bedroom local Government
&amp; Bank Fo racloaures Ftnanclng
Possible. For listings Call 800319-3323. Eld 1709
FORECLOSED HOMES Low 01 0
Down! Gov't And Bank Flepo's
Being Sold NOW! Flna[\ttng
A'v'allable Call Now! 1·800-'7307n2 E•t 8040
HOME FORECLOSURES - NO
MONEY DOWNI NO CREDiT
NEEDED' TAKE OVER VERV
LOW PAYMENTS' 1·800·916·
9191 11H5023
"
House &amp; 5 acres, neat pump,
needs
remodeled,
asking
$30,000. two miles east on Long
Run from Bashan Fire Cep'l, 740992·7945
Older home 'for sale. Oexter. prl
vale. llreplace, fruit trees, great
ptace for hunters, asking $32,500,
74().992·3325
Must Sell! 4 Bedrooms, 3 Baths,
Brick Aan&lt;;h On 2 t 2 Acres
Calhedrat Ceiling Full Basement.
3120 Sq Ft Of Uving Space. AI
tached 2 Car Garage. Pool, l o·
cated Between Btdwell &amp; Vmton'.
Asking $114 900, 74G-388·8074
Racine - three bedroom , $400
month plus utilities $200 deposit.
no pels , references requireel ,
74().949·2821
••HOMES FROM S10.000t•• 1
5 Bedroom Local Repos &amp; Foreclosures Fee Financmg Possible For listings, 1·800-719·3001
X1185
'

Nk:a, Oute t 2 br kit appliances&amp;
A1C &amp; carpet Aererencei/OeposM 304-675-'302
2bdrm apls , total electric, appliances furnished. laundry room
facti!Hes close to school 111 town
Applications ava1labte at Vtllage
Green Apts . 149 or call 740-9923711 EOH
2BA Ap1 ln. Mason StoveiFielngerfttoriUIIIItles furnished A C ,
Laundry Room. Calling Fans,
Garbage Disposal. Very Ni~e . No
Pals (304)773·53521(304)882·
2827

2 Acres of land out E~ard Chapel RO $14 ,500 firm 30 .. ·882-

3346

Applications Now Accepted For

2 .... Acre £, Homesite , Green
Township. Gallta County, Scenic.
Quiet, Close To Gallipolis. SOme
RestriCtiOns, 740-245-5776.
for J)uilellng. Rtdgewood Estales
304-675-2564

31 o Homes for Sale

23 ACRES
2 Miles 0!1 SA 1 &amp; SA 218. Soulh
01 Gaiiipoil6 Singlewides Allowed.
Rough. Mostty Wooded. Aoad AI·
ready Cut ln . Land Contract
Available Only $27 000, 1·800·
213-8365

360

8Joct. brick, sewer PtPel, windows knlels. etc Cllude Wtnws.
R10 Grande, OH Call U0· 2.. 5512t

AKC Lab Puppies. CtH 7..0. 188-

9398
Regtstared English Coon Hound
,..,. 7.0.256-1517

boxes 304-67:&gt;-6132

Spoftlng
Goods

~OlF

CLUBS - Factory Direct
Pro-Lh'1e Equivalent • Titanium
Ori\lert $89, Iron Sets $199
Save $$1 FrH Catalog 1-100213-3584 www.lgigolf com
Set of ttlehst DC! Irons 3 pitching
wedge ,2 mon old 1lt50 304675-1275

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Rlvenne Anttques.
112-4 E Uam Street on Fit 124.
Pomeroy Houri M T W 10 00
am. toEiOO pm . Sunday 100 to
6 OD p m 1&lt;40·992-2526, Russ

Apples- Red &amp; Yellow DelteiOus,
GrirMos ~ $4.00 ""' Bushel
For Drops. $10 Bushel Ptcked.
7..0.367-7401
•
Red Raspberries. Now Alfattabla.
Taylors Berry Patch, Call In EvetngS. 740-245-9047
Walnuts Bought AI Troyers
WoodCraft Open Monday And
Thursday And Saturday. Start.ng
9/25 Till 10130199, 9 Miles Wesl

OlGa-On ••1

Real EBiate
Wanted

3 Surveyed And Oeeded Acres
Secluded. Wooded With More
land ~vallable Must Have Build·
tng Site And Be Accessible . Prefer North Or West Gallla County
740...6-2311
We Buy land• 30 -500 Acres,
We Pay Cash 1·800·21~· 8365.
Anlhony Land Co

RENTALS

410 Hou8el for.Rent
1- Bedroom House, No Petst 28
Lmcoln Avenue. Gallipolis,
S27~ 00 monlh. 740-446-9302
2 Bedrooms. S3251Mo . + Uhlttles.
and Oepos1t. No Pets! 740-446·
4313

3 Bedroom House Sanders Drive,
G~11ipoHs, $-400/Mo Plus Depo~l.

74().441 ·15 19
3 br country home available midOctober on Boald RD. Letart 304·
675·2484 klave message

9.. Plnecrtst Orlve. AdJacent To
Arbors Nurstng Home. 2 Beetrooms. CA, Gas Heat, Otahwasher. Range, Aalrigeralor. Washer &amp;
Cryer Furnished, Available 10/t/
99, S425 Lease; Oeposlt Required, 740-446--2957
For lease 2,000 SCI Ft EII&amp;CU·
live Home , Near Golf Course
$750/Mo ' 7o40-446-2957
PomerOy- three bedroom house,
two bedroom aparlment. reterenc·
es, security, partly lurnlshed, 740.
992·6888 a11er 5pm

420 Mobile Home•
for Rent
Between Athens and Pomeroy, 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes. air
conditioned, $260-$300, sewer.
waler and trash included, 7.. 0.
992-2167,
2 Bedrooms $3001Mo , $100 Deposit Heated With Propane, You
Pay Etectrtc. Hannan Trace Road
011218. 740-258-6202
2 Bedroom Mobile Home In Ka·
nauga $3151Mo . $300 Deposit,
No Pets. 7-40.446--4107

SUPPLIES
&amp; LiVESTOCK

Me1 chandlse

oeo

2 Beanie Bab1es, First One Gol
From McDonald's. Ftrst Avon
Bonte . 7~7571

no

Antique dintng room set hutch,
corner cabmet claw legged table
&amp; 6 chairs 12000 firm 740-7421019.

Ex~• ~~

One Bed·

Vi!V~ia

BEAUTiFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRiCES AT JACKSON
ESTATES . 52 Westwooel Drlve
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740 -446 -2568
EQual Housing~

Antique writmg 'desk I dishes,
Blue Wtngb'ach chair (velvet), 2
side cane ctlatrs, 1 lg fruit wood
occasional table, 2 ig area rugs
with runners {green &amp; western
style), quUt stand lloof lamp. lectern stand, 740-985-4193
Baby equ1pment &amp; clottles, mlant
to 12 months. 740-985-4351 ·
BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 lbs. 30 DAY MONE-t
BACK GUARANTEE! Natural, Or
Recommended 740· .. 41 -1982
Free Sart1)1es

For lease One Bedroom , AC
Apt Corner Of Second And Ptne,
1250/Mo., Plus Utllitlaa, Security
And Key O.,.oil, Reterenca~ Required, No """· 740 ~ 48 4425

Colleclors Item German 35
Plate Camera, World War 11,
Lloyd E Esque. Phdno; 304-77~·
5&lt;79. Mason. wv

Gractoua tMng 1 and -2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middleport. From $249·$373 Call 7 .. 0·
992-506.. Equal Housing Opportltfllties

COMPUTERS • $0-n Low
Monthly Payments Y2fC Compliant. Almost Everyone "pproved.
Call FIFIOCOM Advanced Tech nologies 1·800-617.3476

Large modern upstairs two bed room apartment. appliances. air.
Allred on 881 . 740-985-3504
Ntce one bedroom furmshed
apartment In Middl(!iport, oo pets.
rele,ences and depoSit reQuired,
.
740-992·5833
Nice Unfurnished 3 Bedroom
Aparlment, Point Pleasant. 7 ..0.
+46-0041. After 5 P M •
-.
Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartmenls, Includes Water
Sewage, Trash, $3151Mo , 740·
446-0008
Tara Townhouse Apartments ,
.Very Spac1ous. 2 Bedrooms, 2
Floats. CA 1 112 Bath, Fully Carpeted, ~dull Ppol &amp; Baby Pool ,
Pallo, Start $350/Mo No Pets .
Lease Plus Security Oepos11 Requlfed. Alter 5, 740-446-0101 ,
Before 5, 74D-446-3481
Upstairs Furnished, 3 Rooms ,
Balh, Clean. No Pwitst References
&amp; Deposit Flequlred, 740-4 .. 6-

._,M

EAR CANDLES BULK HERBS.
NATURAL PET SHAMPOOS
hnp /!www arden neVearcantla/ 1916·203-2441, PO Boll 41372.
Sacramento. Califorlla 95841 .
Electric ho&amp;pttal bed, $100, re chnlng lift cha1r, $75, 1993 Chevy
S-1 o. e1.000 miles. standard, PS,
air, tool box, $.. 500 , 7410-9922019
Firewood lor sale. S25
toad. 740-949·0605

a

truck -

For Sate· Big Wheal, Stroller,
HlghChatr. carSea1 BabyBed,
PlayPen (304)675·2801

460 Space lor Rent
Large prlvale mobile home lot at
Santa's Forest on AT 87, water/
sewer, $90,00 a mon ,references
30'·875·4138
Uoblle Home Space Centenary
Area, $ti»'Mo, 740-446-4053

JET
AERATiON ~TORS
Flepalrdd New &amp; Aeb!Jilt In Stoclt
Call Ron Evans, 1-800 -537-9528
MAKE BIG MONEY! Top Money
-Maker's Se.ccats! Simple, Easy &amp;
"FREEt SeM E-Mall To more-tu20awebercom
MOBiLE HOME OWNERS
Furnaces installed As low As
$28 00 A Month With Approved
Credit Easy Over The Phone
Banh Financing Huge Inventory
Of lnteflherm. Miller &amp; Coleman
Furnaces. Heat Pumps And
Parts VInyl SklrHnQ Ktts $299 95,
Doors Windows. Water Hsat·
ers, Anchors, Plumbing &amp; Eiectrl
cal Parts Bennetts Mobile Home
HTG &amp; CLG 740·••8·9418 Or I ·
800-872·5967 Gaiii&gt;Oiis, OH

a

New Irregular jeans &amp; shorts See
Peggy, 132 Butternut Pomeroy

Ohio. basement
Premium Firewood, Oak &amp; Ash
$50 load. Full Size Pick-Up, Delivered 740-992-4568

470 Wanted tp Rent

2 Bedroom Natural Gas Furnaca.

Wanted To Rent HUD Approved.
3 Bedroom House Or Trailer, Pre·
ferably In Bidwell Porter &amp; River
Valley School District. Needed
hnn-1eiy 741)-38&amp;-0473.

Sears washer&amp; dryer set ex. lg
capacity $500 1 yr old ,3 pc
queen water bed set $250
98 Kaw jet ski $5500 &amp; other
lleoms 304-675-1135

490

SOCiAL SECURiTY OISAB1LITY
Claim Denied? We Specialize In
Appeals And keartngs FREE
CONSULTATION B&amp;netn Team
Services. Inc Toll-Free· 1-888836-4052.

CREDIT PFIOBLEMS Stop Hare
We Can Help Loans Available
$3,000 AM Up. No fee HJ177663·9269 Ext 221
CREDiT PROBLEMS. STOP
HEREii WE CAN HELPii LOANS
AVAILABLE S3.000 AND UP
CALL TOLL FREE 1·877·883·
9289 Eld. 231

14x70 trailer 1-1/2 baths. 2-3
bedrooms. some new carpet and
remodeling must sell. asking
$11.000, r•o-992·5888.

3 Bedroom Mob'lle Hofne, Large
Yard, Barn , $300/Mo , Plus Deposit &amp; Ulili118s. 740-256-1464

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

3 Bedroom Tra1ler 1 Mile OH 160
Vinton Electric, New Carpet, Privata Lol. $300/1.1o • $300 Deposn,
No PelS. 740·388·9326

1982 H 'x60' Clayton. 2 Bed rooms, 2 Baths, Condition Good,
Ashlng $4,000 Contact Attar 6
PM 740·446-1749

3 Bedroom TraYer For Rent In Flio
Grande, References. No Pets Inside 740·379-2720, No Calla
Unlit After 7 P.M.

1986 2 Bedrooms . 1 Bath Carport . Stoarge BUilding . Ere On
Rented lot, Must Seat 740 4468617 For Appotntmenl

Furnished two bedroom, ate, no
pels, Fllver Parh Pomeroy, $300
per mon1h, $150 deposit, 740·
949·2093

2 be trailer on private lot Hartlord ,$200 a ll10n .,. utll .,. dep.
304·675·165 J
2 Trailer lois tor rent, $75 each
per month , 1n a trailer parlt near
New Haven Grade School
(304)882·2214

Pomeroy, At 12... 600 sq ft , custom parking. a/c carpet, ceiling
fan, $3501 monlh. S150 deposit,
740·949·2093.

MERCHANDISE
- - -----

510

Household
Good a

Appliances ·
Reconditioned
Washers, Cryer&amp;, Ranges. Retrlgrators , 90 Oay Guarantee!
French City Maytag. 740-4467795
For Sale Reconditioned wash ers . dryer&amp; and refrigerators
Thomp&amp;ons ~ppllanca 3407
Jad&lt;son AY8fiUO (304)&amp;75-7388
GOOD USED APPLI~NCES
Washers, dryers , refrigerators.
ranges Skaggs Appliances . 7V
Vtne Street Call 740-448·7398,
1-888-818-0 128

Queen sized hide-a-bed couch.
dark grnnlbelge, wOOd trim, good
condition, $100 OBO, 740·992·

2063

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Finance, ·o· Oownl Past
Credit Problems OKtl Even H
Turned Down BeiOrelt Reestablish
'Vbur Credit!! 1-80Q.659-0359
WARMUP
92% Gas Furnaces, Heat Pumps,
Duct Systems , Free Estimates. If
Yo&amp;J Don't Cai, Us Ws 9oth LOSBI
74().446·6308. 1-1100·291 0098
Waterline Special 314 200 PSI
$2 1 95 Par 100, 1• 200 PSi
$37 00 Per 100. All Brass Corn·
pression Fittings In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRiSES
Jackson. Ohkl. H!00-537·9528
Wood splitter 5 hp 10 t /2 ton,
S400 caii 304-875· 1208

-

• 7 5 •

1993 Chevy Lumma Euro 2 dt
Fled, extra ntee $5200 304-67~
4893
1993 Chevy lumina V-6 , Alf
New Tires &amp; Wheels. PW. Exceflent Condttton, $41.500. 7..a.....,.
8022
1998 Chevroftt Monte Carlo

ls~

22 000 miles, Naw Tires, Tlnte~

AskOV P1111 oil (304)882 J82S • ; •
84 Cu11ass supreme 400 b1g
87 Olds 9 passenger SW. oew
molar and transtmssiOn ale PW,
PJ-. PS, crutsa, lilt, excellent condition, S2000. 740-992-9098 ~

4•

Pass

Pass

MAW t t YOU FERGOT TO
'SLOP TH' H06S !t

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale
$500 CARS FROM $500111 Bu&gt;
Police Impounds &amp; Repos Fee
CALL NOW For listings! 1-800·
319·3323112156
'68 Super Sport Camaro. ~rag
car. 115.000 OBO. call Anthony,
740-992-2478 or leave massage

'83 Jaguar. 87,000 m11es, good

1983 Chevy Cavalier, runs gOOd,
$500 080! 7o40-992-9190
198.. Pontiac Bonneville 4 Doors,
1Body Great Shape ~uns &amp; Drivable Needs 1/alve Pan Gasket ,
$850,080 740-441·9864
1985 Mercedes 190E Grey With
Leatner Interior New Mercedes
Engine Wtlh Remaining 48,000
Mtle Warranty Good Cond1t1on,
$1.100 740·•46·8857
1986 Bu1ck Grand National, Ellcellent Condition. 17.500 OBO
740·448·4619
_!"\, _ __

:..:.:......:.:...=:_

1966 Chevy Cavalier, RS 2 0
Auto, AC , Till , Cruise, 76,000
ortglnel miles Call (304)458·
1997, After 6PM
1989 Classic Caprice, 350, Good
Tires, 740·24~·9393
1990 Grand Am 4 Doors. Auto ,
Air, Clean' Car $1 ,8 50 Or Best
Olter, 74D-4..1-1063
t994 Ponliac Grand Am GT 4
Doors. 64,000 Aclual Mlles, Full Power, $8.99~. 740·448-2957
1994 Plymouth Acclaim 66,000
Miles, Auto, Air. Cruise, Tilt, Alumtnum Wheels, $3,600, OBO 7410256-6169.
.._

'f fiANK&amp;

TON1Gt4T'S
TOPIG:

1995 Monte Carlo Z34 70 000
miles, axe cond red w! tinted
windows 30 .. -675-271.. or 304·
578·2092 •
1996 Pontiac Grand Am SE ..
door, ale , amllm casseHe. great
car, $5995
1995 Pontiac Grand Am SE two
door coupe. a/c. amflm cassene ,
ntee car, $4995
1994 Bl!_lck Skylark Custom, one
owner, ale, amllm cassena, 72,
000 mHes, very clean, $4995

•

I 993 Ford Escort Wagort, al e,
anw'frri cassette, mce car. S2395
1992 Olc1s Cutlass Suprema two
door sport, red , ale, am!frTY cassane, iollded. nlc81ide. $399~
1989 Pontiac lemans, good
car, $995

wor~

Flutlanct Car Sales
740·742·3311 or740·742·1400
1997 Ponllac Bonneville. 55,000
Miles, loaded. Takt O-..er Payments of $381 . 740-367-nss ~

'

•

-

411 Not -""!!
8JIYIIIing

.....,..,..

1ted savmgs, bemg able to provode for

out some insurance is often a good

50SoMII .

54 Frully
drink

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty CtpOef Cf)'PtOQf&amp;IT$ are cnsated !rom quotat&gt;ons by tahoou$ people pas1 ana prese!'ll
Each letter 1'\ the Cl()hef Stands lot l!l~r Todsys dw 5 equal$ U

1dea, perhaps even gammg you some
In th1s deal , how would you plan
the play m four spades after West

•

MA~H

r

HE..U.OOOOOO!

TI\E \MIT

,

a matchpoontcd pa1rs eveht (dupli-

YOU~

t~ E.1T11.a.

cate), when ovenricks are vital?
&lt;;heck your losers Ou1sode lhe

U..Wt\16

rume.o OfF oc

~rump

OOT OFU\(.~U..!

sun, there arc enly two one m

HMWZHYHO

two trump lose r s He had to fimsh
one down The wmmng play IS a l o10
spade to the ace When the kmg
drops. you arc h o me Yet even tl the

BIG NATE

r

Motorcycles

PAEIWWA

ace collects only low spades. you
enter dumlny w1th a d1amond and
lead a spade toward the queen-pc k

East woll have kmg-double10n or
kmg- third of spades almost 34 per·
cent of the ume-. So, it 1s correct to

1994 Yamaha 250 WR Rac&lt;&gt;g. dirt
bike runs a fooks good , asktf\Q
$1200 01 Wll trade; lor 4 wheeler of
equalvalue 740-9926414

take the spade fmesse Y o u have
much better odds of generatong an
ovennck than an undertnck.

For Sale 98 .. wheeler Yama,a
Breeze 125CC $2400 like naw
30'·675-'132/30H75·59t4.

CAMERA ..

IT TAKES PICfliRES

UNDER WATER ..

AD H

CM

P Z H R

A N

'::~:t:~' S@ltu\llA-l£t.ffS•

WGID
UMf

1410.4 ~y CLAY I. POUAN

0

Aeorronge letters of the
four Krombiod
b.
low to farm four sJrnple words

-d•

II I

EL · CKUB

I I

R 0 WY R

.~~,w--,:o,4~c....,IRr-:D...---11~

r

G a0 d

dip I am a ts alway s

L.=~-;::;~·:;:~·;:::;~-;:·"':.,know what to talk about but
r
don ' t always talk about what

~

_TA.;_;Q;-:I~U:.....;.N;r.T..,.-11

-

AN

WZHYHO;

M-

6

I.___.I_..LI_..JIL.-.L.......I.

L___

"PEANUTS
UNDERWATER

EHPPHB

FHABFH
0.
KBHDPCWH
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ~ It 15 our expenence that poltttca t leaders do not
always mean the opposite of what they say
Abba Eban

In a duplicate event. n's differem.
West w11l have a smgleton spade kong
under 3 percent of the time , whereas

1981 Honda CX500 Custom Motorcycle tiD Tires, Battery,
Plugs &amp; Brakes MiltiD8 21 ,700,
$800 inch,tdes 2 Full Face Helmets Call 304 773 5723 Ask For
Rusty

'

P Z I D

RSWZ

hearts and one m c lubs .. So. you can
afford one spade loser, but no1 two
South ducked the first tnck , won
the club continuation. then fine ssed
the spade queen Unlucky·- 11 lost to
the smgleton kmg, g ovmg declarer

1996 Yamaha Wolverine .. wheeler with 1998 tilt trailer, new mud-tiers, $2800, 740-992·4t63

I B H

PZCDFM

any dofference if you were playmg in

BORN LOSER

;Y~o~~~~~~

-lhe chuckle

~uoled

by flll1ng 1n the "uss.ng words
you de ... elop from step No 3 below

DON'T 1l11NK
IT'S WORKING ..

Two 1992 Yamaha Jel Ski's and
Trailer E11ce1tent Condltian,
$3.800 (7 .. 0)-446 -47 66 al18r
500pm

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Sprawl· Ftnal ·Dough · Kmght- SIT DOWN

Wanting To Trade Complete Sill·
elltte System For "' Wheeler.
200cc Or Smaler, 74D-367-7117 .

Mother of three young ch11(!ren to ne1ghbor

Don' I gel soung by lwg~ pr"" 1 •
Shop r,. rkn!l(ied ••won

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

I WEDNESDAY

1989 20' Skipper Crafi~P-o-n-1o_o_n
60 HP Mariner, Low Hrs Bimini
Top $3.800. 740·258· 1906

Auto Part1 &amp;
Accessorle.•

Budget Pnced Transmisston's
and Engtnas, All Type&amp;, Acce§
To Oyer 1 o.ooo Transmlsstonf.
eve JOints. 7~245-5677
'

b

&amp; R Auto. Ripley. WV (30.)372 ·
3933 or 1-80()-273-9329,
~

SERVICES

Home
Improvements

ASTRO·ORAPH

'

.' '

Thursday, Sept 30, 1999
Your success rate tn accomplish. mg your endeavors in !he year ahead
looks qutte encouraging, but nolhmg
, _ w1ll he handed to you on a silver plat·
_ tcr Be enterprising and progresstve
LIBRA(Sept 2J.Oct 23)Aggres·
·~ uveness ts certam to draw fire today,
_ so 1r you need 10 make some sug• gestlons on how somethmg should be
done, do so wuh plenly or cool logic Know where to look for romance
and you'll find it, The Asoro·Graph
Matchmaker tnslantly reveals which
s1g ns are romanucally perfect for
you , Ma1i S2 75 to Ma!chmaker, c/o
• thos newspaper, P.O . Box 1758, Mur·
ray Holl Station, New York, NY
10156
•
SCORPIO (Oct 24 -Nov 22)
Inequality mv1tes failure m all
endeavors, but espeCially. where mon• cy IS m-..olved If ncgottnting in thiS
• rcatm today, make certam all part1es
. are trcaled fa1rly.
SAGI1TARIUS (Nov 23-Dcc
2 1) Independence 1s an admtmhlc
quality. bu t there 's a chan ce you
I

\

45 GriM pert
47 Leg pert
48 They're often

52 - til France

leads the club queen? Would it make

1995 Ford Wtndstar Gl Gaiave
Kept One Owner, Front. Rear Afr
Front WO, AM I FM Cassette,
88,000 Miles, s~o.soo, 7..0-A462151

Residential or commercial wlnng,
new service or repa1rs Master Ll·
censed etectnc1an Ridenour
Electrtcal, WV000306. 304·67S17B6

-

.... -Inger
~

whodoesn ' l work. children, and hm·

At the bndge table , though, taking

-:&lt;

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

R-ru1er

43 Dluocloo

h ve a nonnal hfe span. the return for

1992 Chit'wy van, 31.. ton, 350'•
glne. 52.000 miles. extra cleitft,
runt! good+7410-992-3:M8

livingston's Basement Water
Proofing . all basement repairs
done, free estimates. lifetime
guarantee. 12yrs on job experl·
anca.(304)895-3687

41 Diwb42 Fc:wn•

so slupid. Yet the odds agains1 your
dying young are very long, and of you

8022.

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence - Painting vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows baths
mobile home repalf and more Fo;
lr" estimate call Chat 740-992 6323

31--·

37wtld.._

dollars

~

c...,_ 740-258-&amp;1!!4

Appliance Parts And Servtce 1 AU
Name Brands Over 25 Years Experience All Work Guaranteed.
French Ctty Maytag , 740·4467795

Hl-

31 Tinla

your money is so bad.

P~OGESS

Tiaen

30 All doco

them tf the unthmkable occurs •sn"t

t

BASEMENT
WATEAPIIOOFING
Uncondttlonal Ufelime guarante"e
local references lurnlshed Es labllshed 1975 Cal . . Hrs j740)
••6·0870 , 1·800·287-0576 Rog·
ers Walerproollng

211Se

insurance True, tf you have a w1fe

1983 Chev~ Blazer, New Paiht.
Tires. 4a4 Automatic. AJC $2.300
'-1ay Trade 00 Later •h4 Trucll

810

24·- -

How much insurance do yo u
' have? I've never been a fan of life

1997 Chevy Tahoe K-1500 47~
Mtles Loaded , 125,900, 1991
Dodge W-250 Diesel 5 Spee~
loaded, $32,500 7~245-0379 •

New Replacement Gas Tanks

23P00-

By Phillip Alder

1993 Chevrolet V-6. AUIO , Well
Maintained Runs Strong. Ortve
Anywhere. 15.400. 740-411 t;
1595. Be"""'" 6-9 PM
.

760

.'sdeg.

Taking out
insurance

t992 Chevy S-10 Ptclt. -Up Ftw
Pay 011. 66.000 01101nal Mtlet'
740-379-2386

1999 Honda 4 -wheeler 450 Fore·
man ES 4x4 S 5 400 00 :104-862·
293e

19 -

... ttr

22 StociUngs

Opening lead: • Q

1979 Chevy Pick -Up. 4X4 . 11~
100.(304)882·3825
'

740

•• . , .... !ICeS

21Aitaclt

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

Pass
Pass

atif

11-~

12 Paving

• 4 3

East

1988 Chevy Siiverado, 4WD 3~b
4 Speed. Body And Suspension
Lill 38 Tires $4,000. 740 · •4~·

·-tom
7-.g

25-in

North

Registered Hamp Boar Ritz
Bloodline Call 740·245·5672, Or
740-367-0583

13 Acres Of Corn At Centerpotnt,
lbu Pick Or Chop, 30'·372·9681 .

i

• A K 10 2

z•

1984 CJ7 Wiln Hardlop 32 toefl
Mlckeys With Ultra Alms , $5.950
080 r•0-44Hl688

Hay &amp; Grain

• A 9

Pass

Club Call Sale Saturday October
9 .1 999 12·00 PM Lawrence
Country, Fair Grounds Steer1 I
Heifers Born &amp; Raised m La·
wrence County For Information
call eve 1{7.. 0)-533-9186 or
(740)-643-1027

640

§

West

67~75

5--

. . . . . ftWI~lll

I Plarwaight

1•

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs . ;

Slx white you.ng pigs, 130 each.
740-992·3564

• K Q 6

Soulll

4 Year Old Tanneue Watker, 3...
Year Old Palamino Broke To TraH
Ride 7-4().258-9202

Six mlmature horses for sate. reg~lalad. 740-742·2050

• t 0986 ·

•t08:i42
• 7 6 3
• Q J io 6

-$800 080304-675·182!1

•

bab~

Easl

•K

I

Wmdows , Nascar Sty"! SpoU~

84 Ctmarron, good cond. cteaf\
•tra ttres&amp; nms 11 .795 00 :W.

2

304 -

West

•AQJ32

Pygmy goals 6 weeks
old:,1 Blly 5 yr1 okl . 1 pr Emu 5
.... oil 304-875-6236

675-4029

a 2 calls

eound
2 w. Co4tet coli.
3 Signify
4 Gur

Sou.lll

Tt4~ AGING

2 3yr old cows

I

1 S.penfs

• J 7 3
• Q J 9
• A9 8 7

1992 Chelfy Lumtna V-6 Automalic, Pwr windOWS. Pwt cto.·
IQctl;s. Cotd AJC. Ctean ln51de 6
Oul. Euro Package Astuno
S3.25000080 7-4().256· 1288

1998 Dodge 4x.. extended cab.
full size pick up loaded SLT
Laramie 22,000 mtles books f~
12506 will sale 122,005 fir"'
304-875·7&amp;42.
•

CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUND Honda's Tovota's .
Chevys. Jeeps, And Sport Uttltties. Fee Required Call Nowl 800772-7470, EXT. 7832

Pay Uttlllles, &amp; Deposit, In Porter
Area , 740-~·9162

For Lease

Appaloosa Gelding 3 Years
Old, One 41 Year Old Patnt Mare.
One 3 Year Old Appaloosa Geld·
mg. One t/2 Quarter 112 Mofgan
11 Year Old Mare , 2 Arabtan
Geldings One 3 Years Old. One 7
'fears Old Installment Plan To
Gooel Homes Wllh 25,._ Down
7.().3811-8358
1

Hawaiian Tertyak1 Recipes $3
SA S E
Kama 'alna
Foods
PMB522 4224 Walalae Avenue
15. Honolulu. Hi 96816

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, You

2 br alec heat wilh central air .
12x64 on nice lot Mason PhOne
30&lt;4-882 3287. leaw message

T~lvestock

conditiOn, $4000 OBO, call Rod,
740-992-2478 or kta'V9 message

A1ver Park , Pomeroy (formarty
Brown's). $100 par month, 7.. 0·
949·2093

A1r. Very Nice In Gallipolis. 740446-2003. 740-446·1409

staltc Onve, Will'l 60 " Mower
Dedi 2 600 Hrs Excellenl CondtliOn. 740-....6-3277

Grubb's P1ano· tumng &amp; repatrs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
piano Or 74Q-446-4525

1519
Valley VIew Apartments. Rio
Grande,-Oh Now Accepting applications lor Immediate occupancy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apts Air
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Fenced In Playground laundry
On Sight Managemtnt. Water,
Sewage and Trash Paid. Ful lime
Students must meet Ohio HousIng Finance Agency Qualifica·
Jtons Senior Citizens Welcome,
EHO For more Information can·
(740) -24!5 -9170 Monday -thruThursda)' 9 00 ·12.00 noon

One Owner 1980 400 John Deere
Lawn And Garden Tractor Hydro·

630

2· ALL $TEEL B\JII.DINGS 40•36
Was S10 818, Se~ S3 900 50•90
Was S22,8oo. s.n S10.800 Doug
1100-388-5314

1991 Cav•"'" 5 Sp,.d. ss.OOO
Milaa. 12. t95, 1992 Oldsmobi"
Ach leva 58.000 t.ltlas $4 ,295;
1993 Grand Am 11.000 MtJeti.
$4 ,395. Coolt Motors , 740-U&amp;oun .._

720 Trucks for Sale
610 Farm Equipment

*\ rrfi'illllll

fol' Sale .

auto transmlsston .305 engine
good cond I 89 Oklsmob•le Cu~
lass supreme atr, auto tran smts~
2 B engine 304-675-2684

FAR~1

112 Carat Diamond Sofila1re Ring,
VS·2 Clarity, 14K. Yellow Gold 6
Prong. Ttffany Bancl. Appraised AI
12.000. Less Than Ooe Year Otd.
s1.1oo
740-446-•548

Aut~

88 Mente Carkt Super Spoil

540 Miscellaneous

30,000 BTU vent less gas heater
already on stand or can wan
rnotn )}4-882--3970

sman Bul

Fruita &amp;
Vegetables

580

Apt . Newly Decorated
Month Ptus DapoStl And
lease . No Pets Ap·
Furnished Call 74o-4-46·

room, Very Clean, Stove, Frlg.,
Wasl'\er1 Dryer Total Electric lAC
Non Smokers Only No Pets,
$300 Deposit, 135M.4o 740~82205, 740·448·9585. Aok For

Pets for Sale

560

Squmel dogs , new large dog

520

'

Aparlmartt fOr rent In Ptlrnarov,
pe~ . r•o-992-5858

eat

3 A Homes1te. water tap, ready

REAL ESTATE

Wuher ' "· Dryer $95; Elecluc
Range 595 Relr lgerator $95,
wasf'l'ers like New $205, W1th 1
Year Warranty, Skaggs Appliances 76 Vine Slnlol. Gallpl1li&amp;. 7-4().
446-7398. t.eo&amp;-818-0128

1 bedroom apartment tn Mtadle-

2 ,.;1 0 acres &amp; 3 4/1 o acres with
large garage on
land coniract. r•o-384·3845

'91 Mans ion mobile home 141160
two bedroom. one bath, total electric stove relrigerator centtal a1r
Ready to move $12 500 , 740 949·9016

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320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

tatcom

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Professional
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710

Mobile~

420

,

NEA Crossword~ Puzzle

Could carry it to extremes and come
off in a sclf-servmg manner 1oday
Display cooperatton tnstead
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) If
co-workers don ' t seem to be workins
up 10 par today, do 1 '' •Imply assume
tl)cy arc lazy Chau .ell ore the mcth- •·
ods or procedures thllt have been set
'" place need to he revamped
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fcb 19)
Gel your ~octal obhgouons out of the
way early today. so you can carry out
plans to be with persons you truly
enjoy, ..rather than bemg only wtlh

those to whom you feel bcholtJcn
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Unless you firslthmk about and then
assign what tasks can be happily done
by whom on the family today, an all·
out dcsenton cou Jd occur Be cunstderate of everyone's destres
ARIES (March 21-April 19) You
might have to dc~l with someone
today whn has a bit of a chtp on h1s
or her shoulder. Fortunately, mslead
of ustng your brawn. you'~use your
w11 to calm the ternperamenl
TAURUS (Apri120-May 20) Pay
special allention 10 ,detatls today

relaling to any bustness or money
transacunn Whol you fail to rccogntze now could come back to haunt
you laler
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Speak
up on your own behalftfyou 1 re deal Ing with someone today who shows
little regard for the ~nteres1s of you or
o1hcrs Let this person know you
won't go uncounled.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be
eKtra careful today not to go about
your workman absent· minded fashIon, because you could mtss some·
thing quote large that has potential
money maktng possibilttic s.
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You're !he
person who can usurp an tndiVIdual
who has laken It upon htm or herself
to dictate the actions of a group
mvnlvcmcnt today Lei h1m or her
know tt'~ the majonly who rules.
VIRGO (Aug . 23- Sept. 22) Qu•·
ct ly go about working toward s your
ann~ today, espectnlly when m the
m1st uf other s whn arc openly damoring for the pn7.c The m Ore subtle
you arc the greater your chances of
Wtnnlnj.!

QUICkest way to get your Child ' S attenhon IS to

"'The

SIT

DOWN "

SEPTEMBER 29

I

�Pllge12. The o.Jiy Sentinel

Wednesday, September 29, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·Thursday

Meigs County Girl Scouts post meeting times, activities for October
Meigs County Girl Scout leaders The activicy will be open 10 any girl
mel a1 Meip High School rec~tly
in Meigs County lhat would like to
lo review upcoming activities and participate. To regisrer or for more
JO over proaramming for the com- information call Glena Smith 81696ias month.
1153 or Brenda Neutzling at 992·
The Scouts' Fall Nut Sale will be 6679.
Slllrting soon with funds from the
Troops with leaders and their
sale 1o help finance troop activities
meeting time and place are as folA Girl Scout 11131Ch and bon- .lows:
ftmsing along has been set for Oct.
SOUTHERN
LOCAL
29 in Pomeroy. The event is free and Racine Brownie Troop 1100. Joyce
10 any girl in Meigs County
Romines. Mon!lays after school at
grades K- 12 that would like to the leader's home; Syracuse Junior
attend. To register, call Melissa or ' Troop 1204. Mary Freeman. Tues·
Denise Holman at 992-3895 or days at 6 p.m. at Forest Run United
Brenda Neutzling at 992-6679.
Methodist Church:
A countywide food drive and
EASTERN LOCAL - Eastern
after activity is being planned for Brownie Troop 1316. Crystal Ridge·
Nov. 13 with items collected to be way. Mondays after school at Eastgiven to a local organization for dis- em Elementary School; Reedsville
tribution.
Brownie Troop 1067. Jodi Bissell.

opca

Mondays at 6 p.m. at Reeds• ill~ Elementary; Salem Center · Junior
Chwch of Christ; Reeds•-illc Junior Troop 1254, Becky Smith. Tuesdays
Troop 1042. Tami Putman, Mondays at 4 p.m. at Salem Center Elemena1 6 p.m. at Reedsville Church of tary ..
Christ;
It "as noted that traditional Girl
MEIGS LOCAL .- Salisbul') Scout troop leaders have been mothBrownie Troop 1220. Michele Dick- ers of a girl in the troop but thai it
erson, Mondays_ at 6:30 p.m. at does not ha•·e to be - grandmothMttgs High School (Room 213}. ers. aunt's, older sisters. or other
Salisbury Junior Troop 1290. Glena concerned and caring adults interestSmith, day and time to· be · ed in working with girls and providannounced , Laurel Cliff Free ing posnive opportunities for them
Method.ist Church; Pomeroy Bro"' n- should tontact the service unit
ie Troop 1271 , Brenda Neutzling. administrator, Brenda l'jeutzling,
day and time to be announced. lead- 992-6679 to find out about voluners hpme: Middleport Brownie teenng .
Trqop 1276, Lisa Mitchell. day and
In recent troop acuvmes,
time to be announced. Hope Baptist Pomeroy Senior Troop 1180 camped
Church: Salem Cen(er Brownie at the Mcig~ County Town &amp; Counl'roop 1308, Andrea Smallwood. try Expo a nd provided outdoor
TlJesdays at 4 ·p.m. at Salem Center cdoking demonstraJions. Girls hand-

oed out samples of their campfire
chili at lunchtime and later in the
afternoon gave samples of their
pineapple upside-down cake that
was made in a bo~ oven.
The troop is now planning to participate in the chili cookoff during
the sternwbeel festival .
Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271
.met at the Indian watering spring at
Rock Springs for its Court of
Awards and Bridging ceremonies.
The troop invited girls from the Salisbury/Pomeroy Daisy Troop 1292
to join them. Refreshments !Nere
served follo':"ing the ceremonies.
Registration is underw~y for the
new year.
.
Middleport Brownie Troop 1015
held ils first meeting of the school
year and registered five new girls

and one adult. Girls d!ew names for
a buddy IUid learned about each
other then formed the Brownie Ring
and introduced themselves. The
'troop provided a bootb at Expo and
provided bingo for those wishing to
participate.
Girls began work on the Pro~t~i.se
and law and learmng abouttbe'hts. tory of Girl Scouting as they
planned for the~!_ Rededication I
Investiture I Bridglng ceremony for
October.
Salisbury Brownie Troop 1220
and Junior Troop 1290 provided a
· bootb at the Elcpo for participates to .
try tlieir . tiand at string painting
white Middleport Junior Troop 1276
provided a booth for visitors to
mak.e friendship bracelets.

Sons of the American Revolution hears about Chester courthouse restoration

. I(J:LSEY MARK SAUTERS
. TURNS NINE - Kelsey Mark
S.utera celebrated his ninth
bir1hday Ill hie home on Aug. 22
with 1 picnic for family and
friends. He is the son of Charles
and Dillnn1 S.uters of Pomeroy
111d the grandson of Leroy and
Joyce · Sauters of Po'm eroy,
Manda Eastman of Pomeroy,
Delbert and Lorelha Vandevander of Whitiner, W. Va. and
LeSter Dice of Orego, W. Va.

The cash all
gone, millionaire
ends. his column
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Percy
Ross .is tapped out.
The millionaire-turned-philanthropist who doled out cash to readers of his syndicated column for
nearl y 17 years has closed his wallet
aft~r handing out as much as $30
million.
1. ' T vc achieved my goal. 1' ve
given it all away." Ross tells readers
in hi s last " Thanks A Million"
columns. ".Yo u've given tne so
much over the years . In many
respects. I'm far richer today than
when l started ."
Ross' farewell co lumn was dis~
tributed this inonth , e nding .a run
that saw him "raise inoncy for organ
·transplants, help pay for recreational
centers and hand out sil ver do llars
along with hi s homespun wisdom.
"He who gives while he lives,"
he often liked to quote, "also knows
where it goes."
Ross" col umn s featured letters
· ·from reade rs - he'd get I0,000
each week, said his editor. Nancy
Webber - seeking help, offering
sugges tions or simply sayi ng thank
you.
\ ;'Thanks a Mill~on " ran in about
800 newspapers, from maj or dailies
like the St. Louis Post -Dispatch to
tiny weeklies li ke the Swift County
Monitor' in western MinnesOta.
The 82-year-old son of poor
immigrants from Latvia and Ru ss ia,
Ross launched the column in March
1983 after making a fortune producing plastic film and trash bags.
Ross came up with the column
idea after giving away more than
1.000 bicycles at a holiday party for
c hildren at the Minneapolis Convention Center in the late 1970s.
One rece nt letter was from a 26year-old woman whose bulimiainduced purging had left her teeth
gray. She asked Ross for $1.400 to
·pay for dental work. .
\
".You' re willing to make changes
because your past li fes tyle wasn't
healthy. And, you're wi lling to meet
me halfway," he wrote . " Why on
God's green earth wouldn't, I be
willing to help you?"
He sent the woman a check for
$700.
But Ross also had no qualms
about r&lt;jecting other requests, even
with a tone of disdain . One woman
~c.!oi:;) in prison asked him for money so
,.If she could buy her son a computer.
• · Ross sa id ·no .. ·
AnothCr wrote to criticize Ross
for sending him $300 for a new
computer. The man had meant to ask
for $3,000 - he made a typo - and
thought Ross would figure that out
s ince computers cost su much.
" Ma ny people have purchased a
computer- a lbeit used ~ for $300.
I know because I have received
lovely .tha nk you notes from these
very people," Ross responded . .' 'So
put that in your ungrateful pipe and
smoke it!"

, A program on the restoration of project is yet unfinished . and more noon. All members are urged to president i~ 1891 and who is
lhe Chesler Courthouse was t?iven funds are needed . Member.'io attend .
.
·
buried in Gallipoli s. Due 10 an
for Ewings Chapter. Sons of the admired.the completed period plasA new gra\'e mark er for Revolu- oversig ht early ln the society's
Am'erican Re\'olution . recently by ·tering. flooring , and lighting.
· twnary so.l dicr. John Bing, will be, existence, his ance·stry was ·. no t
Pat Holter and Mary Powell. .
Pres. James Lochary announced held at I p.m .. Saturday. October 9, recorded.
Meeting 3.t the courthouse. the the 2251h ·anniversary of the first at the fami ly cemetery off the road
The chapter voted to sponsor the
two presented a detailed explana- battle of the American Revolution leading from the Kyger Creek S.A.R . llistorical essay contest for
tion of the fund raising needed for will be held at Pt . Pleasant. W.Va .. power plant to River Valley High local high ~c hoo) students. The
the project as well as what is still this weekend. The Kanawha Valley Sc hoo l. Any relatives are urged to paper must be original research on
needed to p~t the building back to Pipes and Drum s along wi th a fife attend. There will be a full military an person, events; or philosophy on
and drum corps will be presenting t:e~c mony ' to dedicate the marker the American Revolution or ConIts appearam:e in 1823.
Two theatric presentations con- music : ·The wreath-laying ceremo- with a Revolutionary War color stitutional Convention. There is a
cerning real Chester people were ny wi ll be on Sunday at 2 p.m. ·
750-word limit. First place will
guard from Pt . Pl easant attending .
The Ohio Societv S.A .R. will
made . Howard Pa.r ker portrayed
The chapter approved a request receive $100 with the supervising
Lish WaterS , an o ld eccentric host its quarterly bo,;,d Of manage- of the Ohio Society and the Nation- teacher receiving $50.
school teacher of Chester. and ment at the Holiday Inn on Friday al Society to correct the memberGuesrs introduced for the
Dixie Sayre portrayed Aunt Rhoda e\'ening from 7 to 9 p.m. and Sat- ' ship record ·or Col. John l,uther · evening were James Oiler of Rio
Knight . Ho lter emphasized that the urday mornin g,' from 9 a.m. to Vance. who was the Ohio Society . Grande and Michael Canan of ·

----~--~--------~------Soc~~

~

Reedsville News Noles
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead
recently attended Summer com·
menceme nt exerc ises of The Art
Institute of Pittsburgh. Their grand·
daughrer. Sarah Ann Frydman,
received an associate degree in ·
graphic design/visual communica·
lions during the ceremony. The
Whiteheads were accompanied by
Sarah 's mother, Jean , of Chicago,
. Ill.
Visiting with Frances Reed were
Ann Lee and Otis Cole and famil y
o f Cinci nnati . They also visite&lt;l Mr.
and Mrs. Milton Tuttle of Texas
Road , Pomeroy.
.
Myra June Argabrite of Norfolk, Va . and Kathryn Dietz of Belpre visited with Lillian Pickens.
Mrs . Argabrite' and Mrs. Virginia
Lee Desmond of Parkersburg , W.
Va. also visited with Ruth Anne
Balderson ..
Del ores Foster of Belpre visited
with her mother, Mary Alice B ise.
A baby showe r honoring Teresa
B lair was held · at her parent'"s
- home, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bise. The
showe r was given by the ladie s of
the Nazarene Church.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cowdery o f
Cebrook , Texas we~e recent vis •-

tors of Delore.s ·Frank.
Mr. and Mrs. Jilek We stfa ll
vacationed recently . in Nashville ,
Tenn.

l&gt;UIJIIC IO
join the congregation in
observance. The Rev. Bob Boclk will be
preaching and the Boelk family
will be singing. A covered dish din-

ner
, be served.
v.
Charles Young of Akron, superintendent . of the Free ·Methodist
Church of Ohio will be making his
annual visit.

Tod.y: Pertly Cloudy
High: 70.; Low: 40a
Tomorrow: Cleer
High: 70.; Low: ~·

Meigs - Wellston gridiron preview, Page 5
Unattended kids in casinos, Page 12
Making a case for·NIH, Page 2

·Meigs County's,
Volume

Sports

SepCell.,., 30,18011

so. Number so

Regional Briefs
Board acts on personnel matters
· The Meigs Locai .Board of Edu~ation· I&lt;J?k the following action during
its regular meeting Tuesday night in Pomeroy:
- Hired Ramona Lewis, Kimberly Roush and Marva S.tumbo as substilule reachers for the 1999-2000 school year to be used on an as-needed
·
basis effective immediately.
. - Hired Carla Milhone as a bus driver oh a one-year contract.
- Hired Rusty Bookman as boys ' assistant varsity basketball coach for
t~e 1999-2000 school year.
- Approved permanent appropriations for the 1999-2000 fiscal year in
the amouny&gt;f $18,417,184.80.
-ApProved the payment of an invoice to t~e Gatlipoli~ Cil)l Sch~l
District in the amounl of $1,721\.18 for the luttton of a vtsually handicapped sludent.
.
.
-Approved the following grants: Title I, $817,076; Title II, S19,365;
Title IV, $10,032; Title VI, $16,288; Title VIR, $116,922; Title VIB,
$187,495; Carl D. Perkins Grant, $111,616.07; Professional Development
Block Grant, $12,631.53 .
-Met in executive session to consider the hiring and compensation of
personnel.
·
·
.·
Presenl were Superintendent Bill Buckley, Treasurer.Cindy Rhonemus,
board members John Hood, Wayne Davis and Roger Abbott. Absent were
board members Randy Humphreys and Scoll Walton.

Houston downs
Cincinnati 4-1, reclaim
ot first p1ace

share

-Page4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Single Copy - 35 Cents

·Meigs Marauders Band·receives supe:rior .ratings
The Meigs Marauder Marching Band directed
by Toney Dingess took superior rati'ngs .in recent
competitions at Logan Elm and Zanesville.
At Logan Elm in Class A the band .took first
place overall, along with being named grand
champion band of the contest. It al5o' received
first place in percussion, second place in flags,
and best overall in marching and general effect .
At the Zanesville Bonanza of Bands, Class A,
the Marauders placed second overall, and first in

percw;~ion . Next competition will be Oct. 16 at

Wilt, and Heather Ferrell, flag corps, and S~ra
Riverview High School near Coshocton, and Oct. I hie, field c?mmander.; second row, Dame I
27 at Green .Local1n Lawrence County.
Young, Sara Ftfe, J~ke· Btrchfield, Stacey Brewe_r.
By laking superior ratings at the first two com- Charla Bur~e, M1 chelle_ Kennedy, a_nd ~ns ,
petitions, the band now qualifies for the state con- · Snouffer; thtrd ro~, Scan Fahner, C~ns Gtl~ey,
lest.
Renee Stewart, Ashley Vaughan, Jenntfer Shnm·
_Senior band members pictured with the _tro- plin, Jackie Buck, .and Ryan Pratt; an~ back, Seth
phtes the band won tn 1ts first two compet1ltons. Rawson, P. J. E:rwtn, M"?' Bratton, Ntck Mtehael,
are from the left, front, Marjorie Halar, Laura Jeff Brown, John Kopq msky, and Shawn Whtte.
Payne, Morgan Mathews, Crystal Stewart, lillian

..----------~-----------------------.;_-.,..-------.....- - - - - - - - - - ,

FIELD COMMANDER - Sara lhle, center, Ia the n - field . commander for the
Melge Mar1uder Band. Sare Fife, le1t, Ia
a1tem1te, 1nd Jllll1n Wilt l81he band's flag
corpe cepta In. . .

check it out.

.'
.

M 1 M
d · b d
lor membera
e ge arau era an aen

.

School bus crashes injure 45 people
improper tum, said Jerry Coughlin, supervisor of
transportation for the· West Oei-mont School District
For1y· five people were injured in two central
. Brown said the bus in the Pickaway County
Ohio crashes involving_,school buses, but apparenl·
1
crash apparently slipped off the shoulder of a narly no one suffeied setfo"Us injuries.
row two-lane road and Hoover overcorrected,
· The crashes Wednesday were the second and
causing
the bus to skid across the pavement and
third school bus accidents in two days across the
on the other side.
overturn
state. They lefl 66 people injured.
.
·
No
charges
were filed, and Brown said it would
·
Most of the injuries occurred when a school bus
take
a
few
days
to determine what had happened .
carrying seventh-graders from Teays Valley MidHoover said the school district advised her not to
dle School on a field trip flipped over on the si.de
discuss the accident until the investigation is comof a rural highway in Pickaway !=&lt;Junty, injuring 38
plete. "There is really nothing I can say except that
students.
I'm
glad that all of my kids are all righ~" she said.
Most of the injuries were cuts, bumps and bruis·
•
The
accident occurred in the village of South ·
es, said Pickaway County Sheriff's Lt. J. Phillip
Bloomfield on State Route
Brown. Nine girls and ' four · ~-~----------------------'---;_--'--­
316, one mile wesl of U.S.
lxiys, some with broken
.
23,_about 20 miles south of
bones, were taken lo ChilColumbus.
dren's Hospital in Columbus,
A student in a bus behind
said hospital spokeswoman
the one lhat crashed said he
Katie Pakel .. One child was
saw the bus go onto its side
admitted in fair condition with
and turn over as tlt'e back
ashoulder injury.
wheels came off the ground.
Kelly Ross,. a spokes"Students started jumping
woman at Berger Hospital in
out of the windows to get out
Circleville, said 25 children
of
that bus," Juran Smith, 13,
were treated there for minor
said.
injuries. One boy remained in
• Another student, Ryan
the hospital overnight and was
Pucket~
13, said the driver of
listed in stable condition late
his
bus
rushed to help the
Wednesday, said a nursing
injured. The assisting driver
supervisor who refused to
and
some passengers were
identify herself. The driver,
covered
~ith molar oil that
Beverly Hoover, 4 I, of South ·
had
leaked
from the damaged
Bloomfield, was treated and
"
I
was
terrified," Ryan
bus.
relei!Sed, Roos said.
said.
Six students on a bus and a ·
The crash at about 9:15a.m.
driver in another vehicle were
ignited
a small fire and the
treated at Children's J-lospilal
smoke led rescuers to the
fo! . n,o?~~floe-threate_ndingt
C&lt;~ASH INVESTIGATION_ Letter cards mark the path of motion at the scene scene, said village employee
lnJUnes re a....
an acct en
........
fl ld
ad
I
PI ka
involvin a school bus c
_ of a school bus crash outside South Bloom e
""ne ay morn ng. c way Ray Lowe. They encountered .
in stud~nls from Fairw~ County Sheriff Lt. J. Phillip Brown aeid ltlppeare;d that the tlrea of the bua went crying students sitting in a
A~enue Elementary School in ·off the aide of the pavement and tha driver overcorrectad, caualng the bus to cornfield consoling each
other, Lowe said.·
·
Columbus, Pakel said.
t~nn over. 38 children were InJured In the accident.
.

By DAVID JACOBS
Aaeocllhld Pretia Writer

Entertainment
industry criticized
for lack of diversity
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A new
statewide commission charged with
promoting tolerance and understanding of diversity has se lected
te levision as its first target.
T~ ie vision' s new prime-time fall
lineup - which has been critici zed
for its lack of elhnic faces- shows
HollywOod" mogul s are out of touch
with the multicultural reality, panelists told the Commission for One
Qalifornia.
" It 's pure rac ism to me," said
Anne-Marie Johnso n. a black actress
whose credits include the 1997
miniseries " Asteroid."
The commission. composed of
religious ' and civic leaders , civil
rights .tawycrs, u,ni versity official s
and others, held its first meeting
Tuesday.·
Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante said
the entertainmenl industry was the
first subject chosen because it is a
"hot topic,'" but diversity in 5chools,
housing and other.issues also will be
addressed.
·
During the meeting at the Simon
Wiesenthal Center's Museum of
Toletancc, a pane l of activists and .
industry insiders said none of the
more than two dozen new fall sho ws
has a minority in a leading role.
Paneli sts cited 1998 studies that
found minorities. especiall y Hispanics, were underrepresented on
prime~t ime TV and in movies.
Children want multiethnic shows
and the lack of ethn ic actors and role
models "affects the aspi ration of the
kid s who arc mvisib l"· ·• said Lois
Salisbury. pres ident of the advocacy
gro up Ch ild ren Now.
Partelists s ~ggested severa l reasons for the minorit y underreprese n·
tation: Holl ywood jobs depend on
"who you know. '.' and minorities
don 't know the right people ; e]&lt;ecutives arc afraid of using minorities
for fear of bei ng cri ti cized for ih ac curate ly portraying their ~ ul t u res;
and executives don' t reali ze there is
a vast English-speaking Hi spani c
market .

Family day to be obsened
Family day will be held Sunday
at the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
C hurch and the Rev. Charles Swig-

Chest pain and other symptoms associated
with a heart attack-sweating, nausea, trouble
breathing--&lt;:an
be scary and unsettling.
And
.
.
when it happe11s, you need treatment immediately because seconds count.
And with O'Bleness Memorial Hospital,
you'll receive the right care- when you need it
most. Our Emergency Department physicians,
who are specially trained in emergency medicine for adult and pediatric patients, can
respond with the most effective treatment for
you or your fatnily.
Our commitment to delivering complete
care in an emergency extends to our Intensive
Care-Coronary Care Unit. Our goal is to provide patients with a comfortable liJld efficient
environment for receiving the special kind of
care we provide. for·patients with the most critical medical needs.

-

A large part of our approach to emergenc,ies
is the comprehensive medical care provided by
O'Bleness' qualified physicians along with the
,expertise and compassion of our nuri;ing and
clinical staff. The balance of our approach is
accomplished by sophisticated monitoring, diagnostic Wid ~espiratory equipment, as well as ·
. individualized patient care.
If you e~perience chest pain or. any .of the
other symptoms of a heart attack, let us check it
out. Remember, seconds count!·.

Y2K status of foreign air .systems. in 34 countries unknown

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

2 .Sections • lZ Pages .

'

SoortS
Weal her

Seconds count.

Lotteries

·O'BLENESS

OHIO
Pick 3: 8·1-6; Pick 4: 5-4-2-6
Super Lotto: 8·13- 14-30-31-46
Kicker: 6-0·9-5-4:0

Memorial Hospital

55

Hospil ~ 1

Drive, Athe~s. OH 4570 I
740-593-5551

www.oblcness .org

W.yA.
· Dally 3: 8-2-1; Daily 4: 3-5-2-4

C 1999 Ohio Vallty Publi~hing Co.

..

Nursing supervisor Pam Hulls said the, driver
and one student still were being evaluated late
Wednesday.
Weather may have been a.factor in the. accident.
A car lurning in front of an oncoming truck was
slammed into the siOJlP"d bus, a wilJiesS said.
A storm had caused a power outage in the area
at the time, said Steve le'l'ell, signals management
engineer for the cily. It was not koown whether the
traffic signal was out when the accidenl happened .
One day earlier, 2 I students were examined for
injuries after a West Oermont School Distri~t bus
hit a car while taking students to Amelia Middle
School. None of the injuries was serious.
The driver of that bus was cited for making an

w-..

I

i

Pomeroy.
· It was also noted that the recent
issue of'Colo ni al Williamsburg " .
had an item written by this. chapter
correcting the politically correct
statement that Thomas Jefferson
was the prove n father of one of his
slave's children . The research said
that the child in que stion had the
Jefferso n gene but could not po int
conclusively to which member of
the Jefferson family.
· The next meeting wiil be held
Oct. 28 at Our House in Gallipolis . .
The meal will be' entirely by candlelight and will feature. period
foods. Local D.A.R. c hapters will
be i.~vited guests of the meeting.

Weather

'·

..

.

•

'

By JIM ABRAMS
"We are somewhat less confident" about &amp;stAaiOCiated Preaa Writer
~rn Europe and other areas of the .world, he satd.
WASHINGTON (AP) _ Air travelers heading
Smart said there was a .poss tbJitty of a1rspace
for distant paris of the world this New Year's hoi- . and airports along main Asta-Europe rout~s bemg
iday could be flying into. a void of in'forrnatio_n ~ cl?sed bec~use of. a~r-gr?und commumcatJOns
and maybe trouble - al/out Y2K preparattons, fat lures. Hts assoctat1on ts recommendtng that
\beT
rllit'10n Department's inspector gener- pilots carry an extra 30 mmutes of fuel and rhat ·
the ICAO make military airports available to cope
1 ranspo
a s-ri;!~e is major uncertainty about Y2K readi- with possible Y2 K-induced delays and diverness in sonic foreign counlries where Y2K pre- sions.
.
. . ' ·r
paredness has been "sketchy or known to be inadThe FAA plans to i11_1pose tltght restnctton&gt; t
equate,'" Kenneth Mead, the transporlation offi- there is a known, venf~able safety problem. But
cia! , said ln testimony prepared for a hearing Mead said ·:we are not persuaded thts approach
toda of the Senate's special Y2K panel.
wtll be sufftctent because FAA ts not hkely to
Jead said the International Civil Aviation have verified evidence of problems lUittl after
a u N -based group that sets inter- Dec. 31 1999 ." .
· t'
0
rgantza ton,.
· ·
national
flight standards,
has not received
Dave' Smallen, spokesman o f t he T ransportaresponses from 34 of its 185 members '"about tion Department's Y2K office_. said a lack of Y2K
readiness for the potential computer glilch.atlhe readiness does not . necessanly means a safety
end of the millennium.
problem.
·
The concerns are focused primarily ory African
'"We are telling people that they sh ould be very
and Asian countries where there is a tow amount prudent and very careful when maktng. the•~ travof air travel. Still, officials said, about 1 million el plans, be_cause they could face serviCe dtsruppasSengers last year traveled between the United .ti ons and dtverstons, but at th1s potnt we are not
I
States and the 34 countries yet to respond on
Y2K.
'
.
Ed Smart of the International Federation of Air
Line Pilot Associations told the Se nate panel th at ~ 'Y' •
· ·
~
pilots were · confident of flight safety .in North ,......-...........
America· and in rhe eastern Pacific and northern
Atlantic regions .
·v

c

.

E

A

R

going beyond that, '" he said.
.
,
. Smallen. satd the department today ts launch t~g a_ webstte: www. Oy2k.dot.~ov, that ~·II pr?vtde mformatton on what foretgn countnes, atrports and atrhnes have reported the1r Y2K preparallons . .
. .
.
.
Domesttcally, Mead saod atr earners ~andhng
. 95 percent of passenger and cargo serv1ces say
they will be Y2~-r.eady at 1~•- end of September.
The FederalhAvtattoln Admtntstrattton has gtvcn
assurances t at vtta avJatJon sys ems are pre,
pared to handle the year 2000 d~te rollov.er and
people . can be confident that atr travel tn .thts
cou ntry wtll be safe.
.
But Mead also. noted that 1,900 smalle r earn ·
ers of the 3,300 a1r earners surveyed by the FAA
abo ut. Y2K re ad 'mess d'd
t no t res~n d., and. onlv,
107 of 579 non-hub and general avtalto n atrports
had completed Y2K work as of M ~rc h 15 . .
. Y2~-related fat lures or dtsrupttons ar9 hkely
to be ts~lated ~?cal events tn the Untied States,
~ead sat.d, but we ~e d1sappomt~&lt;l at the lack of
tnformatton .co nc~~mng the readmess of _ma~y
smaller provtd~rs . H~ satd the. _4,6~4 publtc at~- ·
ports not assoctated Wtth the major atrporl ~SOCI ations had ~o~ been surveyed by the FAA or the
trade assocJattons.
The Y2K problem i nvolv~s. older computers
that read o nly tho last twodtgtts.. of ~.year and
could mtstake the year 2000, or 00, as 1900,
causing systems to malfunction or break down.

I • I • ,.

R ·U N

c

H

\

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