<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8250" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8250?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-25T08:57:43+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18668">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/a8a1e7e38291ee0793cb16837f5728f3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e761ee2acb177b23e60fd608f623349b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="26704">
                  <text>..;;.

..

....

.

.

,,

~

'..

.-

'·.

. ....

c .

·,

"

,· . •

1 .·

·-

•
~

. ..

Frl~ay
.

Wea t er

i

; Today: Clear

.

· ·

""\

Local volleyball, Page 6
looks at life insurance, Page 7
Court news, Page ·3

~nn

High: 701; Low: 501

October 1, 1IKII

TomOJTow: Clear
l:llgh: 101; Low: 501

-Page4

•

a1

.

Meigs County's
Volum e ~&gt;0. Numb r! r 80

"'\/

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Oh1o

Single Copy- 35 Cent s

Late spending bills, fights over delayed aid for poor
By ALAN FRAM
Aleocl8lld Prela Wlft8r .

get a monthly income."
Predictably, DcmocraiS
WASIDNGTON (AP) - House Republicans say they jumped all over the proposare sticking with a plan to delay income-support checks for al.
poor workers, despite opposition from their own top presi"Let me be clear: I will
dential contender, as lawmakers greet the new fiscal year not sign a bill that turns its
today with a pile of unfinished spending bills.
.
· back _on these hardworking
The Senate was hoping to apprlivc an enormous, $324 families," President Ointon
billion measure today financing health,'education and labor said at the White H,ouse.
programs. II was among nine of the 13 annual spendin~bills
"For the pboresl workthat remained l!llfinished, and one of five facing 1\ veto ing people of this c:ounlry,
threat, due to cuiS Republicans would maltc in Ointon's you make their job a little
pl!IIIS to.hire thousands of new teachers.
·'
bit harder so it will make
But with both sides sensing an issue that could echo in your job a little bit easier," Rep. David Obey, 0-Wis., told
· next year's elections, a driving foroc in the budget battle has Republicans during the committee meeting.
bcoon1c the GOP pledge to ~t use Social Security surplusThe idea also has run into criticism from congressional
cs to pay for spending. Central to that is their plan, pushed Republicans, chiefly in the Senile. And Thursday, GOP
through tlte House Appropriations Committee on Thursday, presidcn~lll front-runner George W. Bush joined in opposto save money by paying earned-income tax crediiS month- ing the plan.
ly instead of the usual lump sum.
"I don't think they ought to balanoc their budget on the
"They don't lose a dime," the plan's sponsor, House backs of the poor," the two-term Thxas governor said
Majority Whip Tom DeLay, R-Texas, said of the nearly 20
Democrats say the tactic would be unfair, because it would
million working poor who receive the credit. ·
siphon money from working families.who earn less than
Hc added, "Rather than getting one check, and who $30,000 a year. Bilsh agreed.
.knows what they do with that one check once a year, they
"I'm concerned for someDI!e who is moving from near-

poverty to middle class," mcnt financed through Oct. 21. That gives all sides three
Bush, who is hying to more weeks to work through dozens. of disputes ranging
build an election coalition from public housing to mining on federal lands ..
by blending traditional
One legislative deadlock was broken when House and
conservative values with · Senate conferees finally agreed on a $8.7 billion farm relief
moderate rhetoric. After- package after dropping a provision that would have eased
ward, ~is SIJI'keswoman the embargo on trade with Cuba.
Karen HughEs confirmed
The House Appropriations Committee approved its
that Bush was criticizing $316 billion version of the labor-health bill by a near partythe proposal to change the line 33-26 vote. II did so after approving the delay in earned
earned income tax credit income. payments by a party-line 32-27 tally.
,
distribution.
That budgetary sleight-of-hand would produce $8.7 bilAsked later about lion in savings in fiscal 2000. That is because with monthBush's remarks; DeLay said, "It's obvious Mr. Bush needs ly paymeniS, much of next year's funds would be paid out
a little edilcation on how Congress works." He added, "I after Oct I, 2000 - the start of fiscal 2001,
don't think he knew what he was talking about," suggestThe 24-year-old tax credit program is designed to help
ing Bush may not have realized that benefits would not be 20 million low-income people avoid becoming welfare
cut.
.
recipieniS. The credit averages $1,890 annually for flimilies
Amid opposition from significant Republicans, one with children, and should cost nearly $32 billion next year,
GOP official speaking on condition of anonymity said they the Treasury D; pattment estimates.
might drop or dilute the plan 10 avoid political damage. But
ainton signed the fourth spending bill Thursday, a $21
others said they would stick with the delayed paymcniS.
billion measure fi_nancing energy and water projects. He
"This is the one members will support," DeLay said.
has also signed measures financing the Treasucy DepattFederal agencies remained open today because on ment, Congress' own operations and military construction
Thursday, Ointon signed legislation keeping the govern- projects.
sai~

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

State, local officials crack
down on deadbeat parents

COLUMBUS (AP)- The Ohio Department of Human Services said
at least 55 people in nine counties were arrested Thursday for ignoring
court orders to pay back child support payments.
The atTests are the result of a 26-county crackdown on deadbeat parents by a joint effort between the department, county sheriff's departments and local child support enforcement agencies.
"This roundup reinforces the message that not paying your courtordered child support is a crime," said department Director Jacqui RomerSensky.
'"Ohio will use every tool it can to help collect the support that's owed
to children."
Together, the 55 arrested owed more than $783,000.
The Toledo-based Association for Children for Enforcement of Supestimates that de~dbeat parents currently owe more than $2.5 billion

COLUMBUS (AP)- When
police
Bernard Anclcrson saw a'red dot appear on his chest as he worked special duty outside a
nightclub, he panicked. ·
.
·
He thc;lUght it was from a laser gun sight.
·
While taking cover, Anderson called for help. A police helicopter and
J,,.,ttnl cars that responded soon found the culprit: a man with a laser point~

.

.

Patrick O'Connor, 42, of London, Ohio, ~as charged. with inducing
panic .and aggravated men~~Cing for the incident in July. A Nov.lO trial date
was I!Ct following a-preliminary .hearing in _Franklin County Municipal
Court this week.
;9::c~~~~'~~ a patldng loi'
the-street from the ni~htclub. ~~d

·

aJro.

,,I J'i'~ &gt;

4o-

But
sai(l, "I can't lie. It scared the heck out of me.''
Sol)le guns have laSer siahts, pointers mounted on their underside that,
like laser pointers sold in stores, produce a red dot, Ron Cooper, a Columbus gun salesman. said.
In charging O'Connor with inducing panic, police said iraining a laser
light on an·officer's chest CQnstitutes a threat of violence.
Columbus Oty Prosecutor Steve Mcintosh said courts have held that an
aggravated menacing charge can be filed if a victim is ·in fear of bodily
harm or had reason to have such fear, regardless of iQtent.
lie said this is the first time in Franklin County that such charges had
been brought in COMection with a laser light.

Fumes s!clcen 14 Ohio factoty workers
WICKLIFFF.(AP) - Fourteen
. people had to be treated after inhaling fumes accidentally released
from a Lubrizol eorp. plant, a company ~pokesman said.
The accident happened about 5:40

r----------""'1
Toda·y's Se_
ntinel
2 Sections • 12 Paps ·,

~==~===j~a
W..
.

=

\

WISHING HIM WELL - Longtime Ohio Villley Publlahlng Co.
publlaher Robert L. Wingett marked hla final dey on the job
Thursday at 1 I'ICiptlon with t.llow employ... It OVP'a Gelllpolla offtcea. Wingett, who joined OVP In 1teo end wea named Pllbllaher In 1178, haaetepped down to puraue other lntereata. He
thanked all of the employ... for their loyelty and dedication to
tfie company over
yea,.,
·

"a

By JOHN SEJ;WER
Aaaocllted Preea Wrltw

~

-ji.:j=flii====f==~l

I

temper and .a jealous streak that carne out when his
daDghter spent time with friends.
Ms. Bcrenyi testified earlier that once when she
carne home late from an after-school event, her
father ·threw her against the front door, knocked
her down and jumped on top of her.
Paulding County Prosecutor Joseph Burkard,
though, said there was never any evidence of
abuse in the family ahd noted that neighbors and
Ms. Berenyi 's two' brothers testified that William
Bcrenyi was never abusive .
"It's very easy to point the finger at someone
who's not here," Burkard said during Thursday's
closing arguments.
Burkard said that Mindy Bcrenyi was not a battered child despite her claims that her father verbally, sex'ually and physically abused her.
The prosecutor showed the jury letters that Ms.
Bcrenyi wrote that talked of hurting others and
drawings that depicted a gun pointed at a face and

'

•

,,.1;,1

;~No..-

'f'

•

a heart with a knife through it.
"That's Mindy Bcrenyi," Bu(kard said.
DiLabbio said thaf the letters and drawings
Burkard pointed out illust
tragic life Ms.
Bcrenyi lived. One .of the ters, titfed "!'ear of
the Night," was abou r father.
.
"Fear was in this irl's face and in this girl's ·
·mind," DiLabbio said.
Ms. Berenyi, a cheerleader at Antwerp High
School when she shot her father, killed him
because she did not want to live by his rules and
she wanted to move in with her mother, Burkard
said.
.
It's the third time Ms. Be~nyi has been on ttial.
She was convicted in !996 of murder and was
sent to prison. The conviction was overturned
because she didn't receive a physical examination
after her arrest, as required by law for a juvenile.
At .a second trial in June, a mistrial was declared
because of alleged jury tampering.

Greenspan says benefits of free trade exclude _job creation

By MARnN CRUTSINGER
AP Economlca Writer

..... '
. : Iii.

I

Prosecutor says Berenyi was out to get her father

LIMA (AP)- The prosecutor says the case
p.m. town
in a Lubrizol
research
this
about 10
miles plant
cast in involving a young woman who shot and killed her
lledl
Cleveland,
said
company father is simple: she planned it.
spokesman Keith Krueger.
The lawyer for Mindy ~rncyi, though, says
Fumes created during the heating . the reasons behind the· shooting were much more
and processing of gear oil were sent complex. He says she suffered from years of abuse
--~---....,.-.&gt;1---l to an outside vent instead of to a that lc~ her confused and depressed, an emotional
..IJIIiJ:IL.____..JM_I carbon canister, Krueger said. state that led to the shooting.
Those fumes then went into a
OILThursday began considering whether
.....:~llb!L.:._,..__...JL~ Royale Appliance Mfg. plal)t, Ms.Jurors
Bcrenyi killed her father out of anger or fear.
which makes the Dirt Devil vacuum She is charged with aggravated murder and faces
Lotteries
cleaners.
a maxinium of life in prison if eonvicted.
"The· release was vcty short. It
-Ms. Bcrenyi has admitted slle shot her father
JliiiQ
was a pretty strong odor but there four years ago in their Paulding County home. She ·
Pkk3_; 3-7-7; Pkk4: 2-1-2-2
was no long-term toxic effect," he is using battered-child syndrome as a defense,
&amp;.dleye 5: ·2·3-9-12-35
sl!id.
claiming that the abuse led to the shooting.
l!.l'4. ' Lubrizol is a maker of.lubricants
Her lawyer, Larry DiLabbio, called William
Dally 3: 1-6-6; DIIIJ 4: 8-5-0-5
and fuel additives and has 22 plants
Bcrcnyi
a "classic battercr" with an explosive
o 19!19
worldwide.
. Oblo Valley N&gt;~illllaa eo.

.

!t

"It's ·.
they're finall getting the inessage· out that th1s
crime will · be tolerated," said Gerlildine Jensen, ,the group's director.
The parents targeted in Thursday's sweep were not making child support payments, and most had missed court hearings.
·
Those arrested could get up to 18 months in jail if convicted of felony
nonsupport.
Jensen said about 90 percent of those arrested will make at least a partial payment on the past-due amounts.
It was the third crackdown in as many years by the joint operation. The
first two resulted in more than 400 arrests.
Child support officials collected more than $1.6 billion last year, up
from $844 million in 1991.
Counties participating were: Ashland, Ashtabula, Butler, Clark,.Cuyahoga, Defiance, Erie, Fulton, Hardin, Henry, Huron, Licking, Lorain,
Lucas, Madison, Mshoning, . Marion, Miami, Muskingum, Pickaway,
Richla~d, Sandusky, Summit, Tuscarawas; Warren and Wayne.

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Trade liberalization
has greatly benefited the U.S. economy but the
gains h~vc come through creation of better· jobs,
not more jobs, Federal R.cservc Otalrman Alan
Greenspan says. ·
Speaking to business executives Thursday
night ill Minneapolis, Greenspan mounted a vigorous defense of free trade, which he has done
several times this year as the nation's trade deficit
has widened sharply.
Hc ~d increased global trade has "fostered
markedly hiP,erstandards of living" for the United Stites and other t~~untrics that have participatecl'in promoting it.
.
He also said freer trade has pushed businesseS
to more productive fields through increased global competition, •. meaning faller paychecks for
woiken and lower ·c:o~u for consumers.
But Greensjlan cautioned, "We too often try to
promote.free trade on the mistaken ground that it
will create jobs.·~
Trade can lil,fluenc:e ihe type of jobs that an
. CCOI)omy Cll\:creatc, but.lloldlc ovcra)l number,

"Indeed, we l!fe currently experiencing the widest
trade deficit in history with a level of uncmploymcnt close to record lows." ·
Greenspan's remarks, which were distributed
. in Washington, represented the latest in a "serlcs of
speeches he has given this year to counter what he
views as a growing clamor for new trade barriers
as the ·u.S. trade deficit has ballooned.
The deficit so far this year. is i'uMing at a
record annual rate of $247 billion, 50 percent"

as the central bank'sjleCisl : on whether tq spur
cir dampen consu111cr demand by lowering or raisina inteiest rates. .
· '
. ·
~:~=~==
~·tt · is difficult to find credible cviden~ th~t
..
, trade has affected.the level of employment m th1s
cOiintry over the IOJ!a run," Greenspan said.

Thc,.global financial cri~is his cut sharply into
exports of.farm products and manufactured goods
while increasing 11\c flow of low-cost imports into
the United States.
"The Campaign to expand free trade ·Is never
won," Greenspan said. Legislation to further

lower trade barriers "is becoming increasingly
difficult to pass in Congress."
The 134 members of the World Trade Organization will gather in ScatUc in December to
la~nch new . I~ _liber&amp;!ization talks. But the
Omton admm1strat1on w1ll not be able to complctc the negotiations because President Clinton
has been unable I? persuade Congress to pass the
necessary legislation.
Greenspan said he also was concerned that as
formal trade barriers were being reduced, more
countries were resorting to other forms of protcctionism such as i_ncrcasing tariffs and·find_ings that
goods were bemg "dumped" at unf111rly low
prices.
"While these forms of protection have often
been imposed under the label of promoting fair
trade, oftentimes they are just simple guises for
inhibiting competition," Greenspan said.
The Qinton · administration has supported a·
number of dumping cases filed in recent mon~
by the steel indliltry, which argued it was losing
millions of dollars in sales because of a·flood ·of
cheap imports.
. .•
Greenspan said the transition from obsolete
generates docs represent lost jobs for workers
through no fault ,(&gt;f their own. He urged suppo'rt
for the transition through job training.
"It would be,a great tragedy were we to stOp
the wheels of progress becaUIC of an i"capacity.to • .
""ist thc "victims of progress," Greenspan said.:.

J

;'
. '
.~.

..

..

·-

--------- ---~-

- - ------

-- --

\

---- ..

- - - " - ' - ---''

•

�t'

l

• ~

·''

I
.

.

'

.

I

':
.

Friday, O.ctober 1, 1999

.

COmmentary

.

Friday,~

lA_nn9unc:e~1

'

1, 11118 :

.

'Lsta6fi.slid tn 1948

,.

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.m·215CI • Fax: m-21!57

·Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
CHARLES W. GOVEY
. · Publ11har
DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genar11 M1n1gar

••Joe.,.. ,.,.,_orto-)
fiN ~ltot from ,...,. on • btoed,..,.
rep. loo. Sholt ,.._ ptlll ,_ rtoo r-r_.,.,.,. of belllfl publr-.
nt. Sentinel

tJf

'~)pod-_.,__ and o/1 ,..Y bo odlltd. &amp;ch ohould lmlluft alllgnaluro,.
.-.... Mtd cM)'IImt phoM n,.,.,~Sp.clty • ur• wttNn'• • ,.,., •JCI ro •,..

- . _,. or - - -y.

ro: t.rr- ro rho tdlfot,

011/o 4117ff; oo; FAX lo 7.1/e2-2117.

Tho Sentinel, 111 COurf sr..

.'Capitalize on available resources
·to boost child support fuf!dS
By REP. JOijN A. CAREY
Much of itfy time as a legislator is spent learning about a multitude of
issues. The debates while we are in House session are important and the
committee process is essentiaHo good legislating, but the responsibility to
be infonmed as a legislator is much broader and time consuming.
This summer I have participated in vario.us legislative forums which
included lawmakers and officials from other states. In one ~c ling, officials
• shared their respective state's strategy on protection of patient rights.·
The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEq was very helpful in
providing ·information about what is happening in Washington. Most recently, the Speaker asked me to represent the Ohio House on a National Sym,eosium on Child Support.
•
:· There are many issues surrounding child support. Some of the concerns
{egarding child support involve a federal mandated requirements to have
'state controlled disbursement of child suppOrt. There are opportunities that
Ohio needs to capitalize on more aggressively to help fathers get to work
:.Od to all,pw father$ to be involved in their children's Jives:· ..
·
: !think we have all seen what lack of a father in many families has done
~n many communities. Ohio can fund any county program which helps a
lather of a child from a needy family to be employed by offering transportation, training and other assistance. Welfare surplus funds are used to
help needy families function. One way this is being is mediation on visitation disputes. Whenever possible, parents need to work together for the good
of their child or children.
I recently have been appointed to a committee created in the last budget.
The Employee Disqualification Committee examines the permanent prohibition of ex-convicts from performing certain tasks oh jobs·in Ohio. This has
been a c~ of many legislators, especially in the urban area.
.. · Another·committee I have been.appointed to is tbe Medicaid Reimbursement Rates for Health Maintenance Organizations Committee. This is a
problem because as we have expanded health care to ·more children and parents, there has been less medical providers due to concerns about the reim·
bursement rates paid for by Ohio.
: The Legislate Service Committee (LSq and Legislative Budget Office
(LBO) are also available to me as a ·legislator to access information. One
resource that will be greatly diminished is the history, background and
expertise of fellow legislators as terin limits come into effect. State agencies
are also big provi~rs of information. ·
The most important avenue for me to learn is to listen to the individuals,
groups and public officials in the 94th District. The local media is also helpful.
· The _views and knowledge that you are as constituents express are paramount rn my efforts to represent the 94th District. Your say is important. I
~rge you to let me know when you have an opinion or iilfonmation that I
$ould know. You may contact me at 77 S. High St., Columbus, Ohio 43266
or (614) 466-1366 and toll free 1-80().282-0253.
: ..!i!hn A..Qwy , . , _ , . IM ~
. th Hou.. 0/llr/ct of G1///1, Aft/g1,
-!;:;_on filii
Uwrlnct count/11.)
, ·

.

The Eastern Athletic Boosters will hold a bonfire on Friday evening at 7
p.m., behirtd the high-school.
· ·

Immunization clinic set ·

. {)
W.VA.

0

KV.

C 1999Acc\1Wealhor, Inc.

0 ~-· ~-·~··

MiTY, SO 00 I •

The Meigs High School Band Flag Corps is selling personalized stadium
blankets. Cost is $30 due at the time the order is placed. Orders may be
placed at the high school or handled through a member of the flag corps.

Rain

FIUITIN

Snow

Ice

L4M"Us filed

Editor's note: A lawsuit outlines
the grievances of one parry againsr
another. ft does not establish guilt or
ilurocence.
' The foliowing lawsuits were filed
~cenlly in the Meigs County P,m- .
inon ~leas Court Of Judge Fred W.
CrowDI:
Home National Bank, Racine,
~ks $12,214.53 plus interest and
court costs from David Gene Wolfe,
Portland, alleging he defaulted on a
promissory note on a rnobile home.
· The Meigs Local Teachers Associaiion, Rutland, seeks a total of
$13,693117 plus costs from James
Sheets, Pomeroy. The association
alleges that Sheets, while treasurer of
the MLTA from spring, 1987, to
April, 1996, damaged MLTA by concealing financial documents and
l)laking unauthorized cash with·
drawals of $3,693.07. (The case 11/lls
djsmissed Thursday morning.)
Marvin R. Edwards Jr.,
Reedsville, seeks $50,000 plus costs
from Martha Jo Myers, Point Pleasant, W.Va., ·for damages stemming

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS ZIJ·MOJ
Contmunll)'

Holdlnp, Inc.

SUBSCRIPIION RATES
By C1rrier or M01or Roate .
One Wcck ................................ .S2.00
On&lt; MOttth................................ $8.70

One Year................................... $104.00
SINCLE COPY PRICE
Dlil~ ............................... ,......•35 Cenb
Subaaibcrs nOI dcsirinJto pay the carrier may
remit in advance direct to The Daily Sentinel on
1 three, si1 or 12 mo111h buis. Credit will be
aiven carrier each week.
No subscriplion by mail permitted in ateu
where home c:anier scrvioc is aYiilable.
Publisher reserves the right to adjust rates during the subscription period. Subscription rate
changca may be· implemented. by changing the
duration of the aubscription.

MAIL SUBSCRIP110N
lootde Mtlp County
IJ WtelcJ...........................S27.30
26 WtelcJ ..:........................$53.82
5Z Wtekt ......................... .SI05.56
1toteo o.iutde Mdp C01111y
13 Wtekt ..........................S29.25
26 Wtekt ............................S511.68
52 Wtcu ........................ SI09.7l

Reader Services
, Corractlr;m Polley .

·Oor Nlo .,....,. Ia aD otorios b to be
~1'8tc. If YOI, bew of ID error ID I
otoey, coli the ltWII'OOOI II (740) !I!J:I- .
lUS. We will ••t&lt;k your tolonnotloa

Ibg.ught fgr Tgday:

The trouble ·with
the rat _
race is ·that
even if yo11 win,
·you're still a rat."

'

.I
J

'

•

Flag CorpS"blanket sale
Athens-Meigs CAC meeting

·

The Athens to Darwin Citizens Advisory Committee will hold its third
public meeting/working session Monday, 4 p.m. at the Ohio University Inn
in Athens to hear presentations by four engineering consullants seeking the
contract to advise the CAC and Transportation Review Advisory Council on
the Athens-to-Darwin U.S. 33 project.

Masonic lodge to meet
The Middleport Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will meet TUesday at 7:30
p.m. Work will be in the master mason degree. Refreshments will be served.

AAtomeet

·

Alcoholics Anonymous open meeting will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday at
the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Mulberry Ave.

Immunization clinic set
·The Meigs County Health Department will offer an immunization clinic
on Tlll;sday, 1 to 7 p.m. at the Meigs Multipurpose Center, 112 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. Every child must be accompanied by a parent/legal
guardian and the child's immunization record is to be submitted. Additional
information may be obtained from the Health Department at 740-992-&lt;i626.

Meigs County Sheriff James M.· Soulsby cautions motorists to be
aware of slow-moving farm vehicles on the roadways through o~t the.
remainder of harvest season. Fanmers need to make sure their tractors, •
wagons and other farm equipment are equipped with the proP.r slow-:
moving vehicle reflective triangle.
:

Paving to begin

:

Paving will begin on Mulberry Avenue on Monday morning. The Vii-;
lage of Pomeroy will pave the street from the intersection of East Second•
Street to the end of Mulberry Avenue near Veterans ~morial Hospital. :
· John Anderson, Pomeroy Village Administrator, reminds residents that;
cars must be moved from the street. No ·parking on the street or adjacent• •·
to sidewalks will be permitted while paving is underwa)'.
:

Grants received ·

--&lt;.....

:

Two local organizationJ have received grant funding for FY 2000 from:
the Ohio Arts Council.
:
The Rive~end Arts . Council, located in Middleport, has receive&lt;:J:
$1,800 for mmonty arts programming, which,.according to the Ohio rutS' ,
Council, is designed to provide assistance from art advisors to strengthen:
Mrican American, Appalachian, Asian, Latino/Hispanic, a"nd Native:
American ans organizations and individual artists.
·
•
, •. The. United .P!ant Savers, a ~rivate organization dedicated to preserv-:
mg nat1ve med1cmal herbs, rece1ved $600 for signage for its sanctuary on •
Loop Road near Rutland.
·
The grant tfLUPS was ratified under the Ohio Arts Council's Region- ;
al Heritage Prdgram, which supports organizations participating in activ-:
ities that support Ohio's Hill Country Heritage Area program.
,
"The program helps communities and organizations educate, inform ande~gage resid~nts and visitors in understanding experiencing and appreciatmg the· reg1on's special sense of place," the Arts Council said.
'

Health care provider warns \.
teens to keep shots current
By The AaiOCIItad Prell
en pox, hepatitis B, tetanus/diphtheOne of Ohio's largest health care ria, and measles/mumps/rubella.
providers is urging parents to make
Advances in immunizatiOn and
sure their teen-age children have changing medical practices can mean
received all the necessary vaccina- · that adolescents miss important
tions.
shots, Campinha-Baco.te said.
·
Most children get at least 21 vaccinations before starting first grade,
more than twice as many as a decade
ago, according to United Healthcare
of Ohio. But immunization rates fall ·
behind this trend between ages 11 t~~~!r!~
and 21.
"Many parents are unaware that
their children should receive a series
of four vaccinations before they
reach age 17," said Dr. Dexter Camp- .
inha-Bacote, medical director for U;Gttiillll}~!~[~~~·Gil
United HealthCare.
Those vaccinations are for chick-

Health checks set

eigs EMS logs 6 calls

Stocks

THE TRINITY CHURCH

GanneH .................................70~
Kmart ....................................11 7!.

KrOger ...................................21 ~
Landa End .............................64',·Limlted ................·...-.................38
Oak Hill Flnl ..........................17li.
OVB .........................................33
One Valley.............................34'!.
Peoples ................................2~

.

Sears ....................................31''-

N - Departments
mota nomber b 99:1-2155. Deport·

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

~

Geaerol Mo11gtt.......................Ex~ 1101

N..., .................... ~ ......................bt..UDII

or Ex~ 1106

'

Other Sarvlcaa

MYenw.a,.................................Ext. U04
QI'CitiiiiH ..............:.............;.....Ex~ 1103
•

from a Nov. 25, 1998, motor-vehicle
accident.
Fanmers Bank &amp; Savings Company, Pomeroy, seeks $11,303.10 plus
Free blood pressure checks will take place in the lobby of O'Bieness
in_terest and court cost from Larry W.
Memorial
Hospital Wednesday, 10 a.m. to noon, and 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. At the
and Barbara McGrath, Guysville, on
same
time
volunteers ftom O'Bieness and the American Cancer Society will
·a promissory note for a·mobile home.
distribute
free
colon-rectal Cll!lcer screening test kits and information.
Seara Roebuck &amp; Company,
Salem, Mass., seeks $4,399.23 plus
interest plus costs from Michele D. Standoff suspect charged with felonies
XENIA (AP) -A man who police to Xenia police Cllief Eric Prindle. The
Day, Pomeroy.
say
barricaded himself in his bouse for charges carry a maximum penalty of
State Farm Mutual Automobile
e1ght
hours and threatened to blow it 9.5 years in prison.
lns~rance Company, Columbus,
up
before
officers stormed the home
Cox pleaded guilty in Xenia
seeks $55,000 plus interest plus costs
and
subdued
has
been
charged
with
Muncipal
Court to misdemeanor
from Clarence Owensby, Rutland,
~ counts of inducing panic, aggravated
stemming from an Oct. 25, 1998 felonies.
Ethelbert Cox IV, 23, was charg
menacing, arson and domestic viamotor-vehicle incident involving a
Thursday
with
felonious
assault
a
d
Jence
and was sentenced to 18 months
pedestrian.
attempted
felonious
assault,
according
in
jail.
·
Barbara L. Lola and Charles
SPECIAL
Whittington, Pomeroy, ·seeks damHEARTWALKages in excess of $25,000 from
Studenta and
Gwendolyn J. Bush, Parkersburg,
adult cllanta of
stemming from-oct. 4, 1997. motorCarillon School
vehicle accident.
and Melg1 lndu8A foreclo~ure. judgment of
trlls walked
$40,711.10 plus interest and court
through Syracuaa
costs was awarded to ContriMon·
this walk In thalr
gage lnc.from Larry Hendricks et al.
own Heart Walk,
Fanmers Bank &amp; Savings Compaheld to baneftt
ny received a judgment of
the Malga County
$52,392.67 plus interest and court
Unit of tha Amlrl·
costs from·James T. Them et al.
can
Heart AIIOCI·
Coup~slssued metrtage 1/censlll
atlon.
A walk for
The following couples were
tha
g
..
•ral publli:
issued marriage licenses recently in
was
hald
Tu11day
the Meigs County Probate Court of
evening.
Judge Robert Buck:
Denver Ray Cotterill, 40, and
Constance Len Karschnik, 51, both
Units of the Meigs County Emer- nie Miller, HMC.
of Pomeroy; Rdbert Glenn WorkRUTLAND
man, 45, Pomeroy, and .J)elva Faye gency Medical Service recorded six
calls for assistance Thursday.
1:38 a.m., Hampton Hollow Road,
Johnson, 43, Rutland. \
Units responding included:
Tina Jewell, trealed at 1he scene, CeoCENTRAL DISPATCH
tral Dispatch sq&amp;ad assisted;
3:28 a.m., East Second Street,
5:47 p.m., Meigs Mine 2, Carl
Pomeroy, Hel~ Teaford, Veterans Chevalier, HMC, Central Dispatch
Hospital;
squad assisted.
• 34 Memorial
It :34 a.m., Holzer Meigs Clinic,
SYRACUSE
Am Ele Power .........................
Pomeroy, Michael Gilmore, Holzer
5;59 p.m., Hiland Road. Pomeroy,
AkZo ••••.•.•.•.,.:••.•.•.....•.••••••••••• 4~~
Mattie Ball, HMC, Pomeroy squad
Amerltech ......;.F.,..................67'1• · Medit al Center;
1:26 p.m., White's Hill Road, Fan- assisted.
·
Ashland 011 ...'.......................33~.
AT&amp;T .............................. :......43~
Bank One ..............................34' ·
Bob Evans ............................ 20~
B(lrg·Warner ,........................42~.
Champion ...............................5'1.
Charm Shpa ........: .................4'~•
City Holding .........................18~.
Located at Set;ond &amp; ~nn St. in Pomeroy
Feder1l Mogul ...................... 28~.
Flratar ...... ;............................. 25~.

IJd Mike 1 cornclloa If w1rnattc1.

Tile

r

O'Bieness Memorial Hospital is offering a breastfeeding support program Wednesday, 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. in the hospital's conference room.
Michele Platt, board certified lactation consultant, will lead the group. No
charge, registration not required.

Prem Flnl ..............................n"'.
·Rockwell .....................:••..•. 52'1.

~n·r 'flec\~

RD/Shell ............................... 58"Shoney's ................................ ~1 ;t.

Witndy'a ............................... 26~
Worthlng!on .............:·· ····· · ··· -16~.

-

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided
by Adveat of Galllpolll.

Welcomes ·

Well Known Pastor
Rev. Gabe L. Ce~ntpbell Ph.D.

) '

·CERTIFICATE
OF DEPOSIT
SPECIAL
1 YEAR
6.18% *APY
.*CD requires a minimum deposit of $1,000.00 to :
open .and obtain the Annual Percen~ge Y~ild
whach 1s accurate as of 9/30/99. Apenalty wdl be
imposed for early withdrawal. ·

To It's P.ulpit Beginning

October _3rd 10:25 AM
rr'rinity Cfiurcfi would like to welcome
&lt;all it's members &amp; guests
to Welcome.1Jr. Campbell

....,.1.......................EI.L 1100

. •.
Cl

' J;

I

Ncwtp~~per

Published every lfttntOOII, Monday through
Friday, 111 Court St., P-omeroy, Ohio, by the
. Ohio Valley Publilbing Company. Second t:la.u
postage piid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member. The Aisocialed Preu aRd the Ohio
· NcwiiPIJ)Cr Associltlon.
. hltlllllkr: Send addres3 c:orrc~ions to The
Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
4S769.

..

'

[. -Local Briefs . I

I

Breastfeeding SCJpport offered

ThinK like a child sometimes

j_

'·

highs forecast Saturday

Showers T·S1otmll

By The Associated Preu
It will be a little warmer across· Ohio on the weekend with a chance of
showers in the north on Saturday.
Temperatures could reach 80 degrees in extreme southern Ohio on Saturday.
Another cooling trend will start on Monday, the National Weather Service said, with highs mostly in the 60s.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 89 degrees in 1952 while the record low was.30 in 1899. Sunset
tonight will be at 7:14p.m. and sunrise Saturd_ay at 7:28a.m ..
Weather forecast:
Tonight ...Ciear. Lows in the mid and upper 40s. Light and vanablc wind.
Saturday... Mostly sunny. Highs 75 to 80.
Saturday night. .. Mostly clear. Lows around 50.
Extended forecast:
Sunday...Partly cloudy. Highs in the lower 70s.
Monday.. .Partly cloudy with a chance of showers. Low~ in the mid
and highs in the lower 70s.
~
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows in the mid 50s
and highs in the upper 60s.

Gore acting more like challenger, than front-runner

- Lily Tomlin,

Letart trustees to meet

""-- warmer daytime
Slightly
CloiJdy

•

'

The Ohio University College of Osteopa~·c Medicine Childhood Immunization Program, a mobile health program, ill provide free immunizations
for all area children, from birth through 18 ars, on October 14. The mobile
unit will be at Reed's Store in Reedsville from 11 a.m. to I p.m., and at
McDonald's in Pomeroy from 2:30 to 4 p.m. ·
. In addition to providi)Jg required immunizations, the CHIP, along with
the Ohio Department of Health is now offering the Hepatitis B vaa;ine free
of charge to all children through age 18. The vaccine is a three-shot series
over a minimum six months. The child's previous shot records must be provided. The flu vaccine will also be; provided for adults ,.ith a Medicare card
or for $5 per dose.
Letan Township Trustees will meet in regular session on Monday at 6
p.m. at the office building.

&amp;.lny Pt Cloudy

Making conference a success

•

· A meeting· regarding extended hours for the Meigs County Courthouse
will be held OQ Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the courthouse. Members of the public,
busi.ness owners and elected officials are encouraged to attend the meeting.

•I Cotumbuo [47' ,71 ' J

letters tq the Fdltqr

•

Cout1houss extended hours meeting slated

•

Eastern Boosters bonfire planned

••lwm

p,..,

--

[Minaiiai.IT~rin-")

I

· Watch for farm vehicles

The Meigs Middle School will sponsor a yard sale Saturday, 7 a.nf. to 2
p.m. at the Meigs Middle School, Middleport. Proceeds will go to ~nefit the
yearboQk fund. Voter registration may also ~. done at the school the same
day, 10 a.m. to noon.
·•
The Olive Township Trustees will intet at 6:30p.m. on TUesday at the·
tnwnship garage on Joppa Road.

IF S:ICfWIAN
LEAVES TIF. REPl8.1Qfl

Today In History ··

j

Olive trustees to meet

By.Jack Andareon
·
·
dition, be •• if her husband is elected to be one of the most important and popuh1r·
and Douglaa Cohn
·
president -- cast into an active political political figures of our age.
WASHINGTON -· Who's the most
role. Already, in TeKas, she has been
A LAURA BUSH READING LIST
popular political figure in TeKas?
drawn into the legislative arena, meeting
Laura Bush provided the following lisl of the ·
·The answer is not Texas Gov. and
with lawmakers on issues near and dear last 10 books she read, a Jist that reflects her conGOP presidential candidate George W,
such as early childhood development.
centration on classical literature and modern .
Bush. Bush, himself, acknowledges
On the national level, would a woman Texas authors:
what the polls tell us when he says his
who has devoted so much of her life pro"Farewell: A Memoir of a Texas Childhood,"
wife, Laura, is.more .popular than he is.
moting literacy embrace the repeated by Horton Foote
And he might have added th'at. the
Republican attempts to abolish the
"Ordinary Paradise," by Laura Funman
demure, congenial eK-Iibrarian is also ·
Department of Education?
. "Ship. of Fools," by Katherine Anne Porter
lletter read than virtually anyone in' poliWould a woman as compassionate as
"The Poisonwood Bible," by Barbara Kin11- :
tics to_day.
Laura Bush tum a blind eye to the plight of 5olver
·
·
. :.
But what about her political views? She · homeless people sleeping on grates just. a block
"The Time it Never Rained," qy Elmer Kel•·
appears to be walking ah:mg the same ·political from the White House? Would a first lady Laura ton
·
path as her popular mother-in-law, former first Bush stand ·by while her husband appointed
"The Crystal Frontier," by Carlos Fuentes .
lady Barbara Qush, who was widely viewed as a Supreme Court justices who would overturn Roe
" Dreaming of the Bones," by·Deborah Qoni-·
supporter of a woman's right to choose abortion. v. Wade, the landmark decision that ensured a bie
·
When questioned, Laura Bush's press secretary, woman's right to choose?
.. ..._~·"=-~· ~·
"Be Sweet: A Conditional Love Story," by:
Anne Swanson, would neither confirm nor deny
Laura Bush, the most popular political figure · Roy Blount, Jr.
the assertion.
in Texas, could, through force of intellect and
"A John Graves Reader," by John Graves
However, it should be noted that despite her · compassion -· and absence of ambition -- prove
" Holes," by Louis Sachar
mother-in-law's views, her father-in-law,
ex-President George Bush (who was
understood to share the pro-choice position}. still appointed the arch-conservative,\ pro-life Clarence Thomas to the
Supreme Court.
The views of a potential first lady are
important because firslladies have historically brought varying degrees of
influence to bear on their presidential
husbands, especially so beginning with
Eleanor Roosevelt.
That period was followed by the near
noninvolvement o(. Bess Truman and
Mamie Eisenhower, the charismatic
charm of Jackie Kennedy, the businesssmart determination of Lady Bird Johnson, and the gentle advice of Pat Nixon.
Rosalyn Carter, however, harked back
to Elci!llor Roosevelt and more when she
was invited to sit in on Cabinet meetings,
ushering in the age of first lady as part·
ner, which her successors, Betty Ford,
Nancy Reagan and Barbara Bush, clearly
were.
This was virtually codified when President-elect Bill Clinton announced in
1992 that the nation was "getting two for
the price of one." And Hillary took him at
his word.
So whether or not the exceptionally
bright, camera-shy first lady of Texas
would have it so, she will, by modem tra-

An AP News Analysis
Democrats, not in matchups for the general
For Gore, as for any front-runner, every
By WALTER R. MEARS
election, which put Republican Gov. George · misstep is magnified. As in the talk of a list'
AP Spacial Corraaponda11t
W. Bush of Texas ahead.
·less beginning, tlie rumors of friction with the
WASHINGTON (AP)- Vice President AI
While Bradley served three terms in the president, denied on both· sides. There was
Gore is reinventing his campaign for t~e Senate from New Jersey, he's cast himself as said to be infighting, indecision, a hmpaigll'
Democratic presidential nomination - with the outsider, the candidate of change, and the spending too much money on a top- heav~
the tactics of a challenger, not those of a lofty one with the best chance of winning. He has staff.
·
front-runner.
been making headway using all three. And
Bradley hasn't faced such strains. He can
It is a role reversal for the vice president when Gore said he would take his campaign travel lighter than a vice president. His head•
who began as the presumed nominee-in-wait- "directly to the grassroots" with open meet- quarters is West Orange, N.J.
ing, with former Sen. Bill Bradley running ings in the early primary states, Bradley
He also took in campaign money at a rate'
but not threatening.
countered that he already was.
that surprised the Go~e camp. While Gore'
No more.
· Gore's debate challenge put him.in the role leads in raising money, he also leads in spendGore challenged Bradley to campaign usually played by the candidate trying to ing it.
··
debates. He is moving his headq_uarters from catch up with a leader, as when the RepubliFor all of it, while Gore's lead for the nom!
Washington to Nashville, "closer to the cans trailing Bush tried it, unsuccessfully.
ination may have eroded, it is not gone. The·
grassroots and out of the Beltway." .
The vice president said he wants to meet vice president ·has the backing of the DemoC:-·
The campaign payroll will be pruned in Bradley in a series of debates on specific ratic establishment, endorsements from more·
the process.
issues. Bradley countered that he was. not in than 100 members of Congress, the advan"
I
welcome
the
new
shape
of
this
camthe habit of responding to every change in tage~ of the office from which tto vice presi:
; I would like to take the opportunity to express my appreciation to all the
paign,"
Gore
said
Wednesday,
as
though
he
.
tactics
by the vice . president. He said he'd .dent who sought the presidential nomination
l~ies involved who were so instrumental in mak.ing the "Women's Outing
wouldn't
have
preferred
the
old
one
to
the
already
agreed io joint appearances, and the 'has been denied it since 1952.
··
on Well ness" Health Conference a success.
"
hard,
tough
fight"
he
foresees
now.
first
is
scheduled
for
Oct.
27
in
New
HampStill,
it
is
a
wgp:ied
establishment.
-sen:·
: The Health Conference was held Sept. 23 at the Family Life Center in
Later, he said he no longedelt likt a fr9nt- shire, the first primary state.
Daniel Patrick ~6ynihan of New York said
Middleport in conjunction with "Women's Health Month."
runner.
With
the
first
voting,
in
Iowa,
some
four
why
when he e orscd Bradley. "Nothing is ·
·· l_twas geared towards helping ~igh school juniors make good and healthy
"I
feel
like
tlie
underdog.
I'm
going
to
months
away,
the
preseason
has
not
gone
well
the
matter
with ore, but he can't be elect"
chorces for themselves. Tar:geted iSsu~s addressed were: Diseases Affecting
campaign·
like
the
underdog
and
I
think
that's
for
Gore.
ed,"
Moynihan
aid.
•
.
Teens, Stress Reduction, Eating Disorders, Assault Prevention, Skin Care,
the
way
to
get
elected,"
he
said
Wednesday
He
came
into
it
in
apparent
command
of
·
Add
the
Clinton
factor.
Elections
are
aboui
Osteoporosis, Low Income and Poverty Issues, Teen Pregnancy and Sexualthe Democratic campaign, with Bradley too change. Gore has to offer change while runly Transmitted Diseases. Other Empowerment topics such as: Self-Esteem night on CNN 's "Larry King Live."
Gore
said
a
"hard
fought"
contest
will
far
behind to req~ire his mention.
ning as Clinton's No. 2. "I think there's
and Journal Writing and Poetry were addressed as well as Prevention and
sharpen
both
campaigns,
both
candidates.
·
That's
standard.
procedure
for
a
front
..
runfatigue
with questions about' Clinton
~lln~ss Issues such as: HanJ.lful Dieiing, Nutrition, Depression and SuiBut campaigns are not workouts waged to ner; the theory is that talking about rivals, let fatigue ," he said.
~lde.
·
But it's still there.
: These young ladies from Meigs, Eastern and Southern High Schools make better candidates- the aim is winning. alone debating them, only gets them attention.
Gore
is
no
longer
sure
enough
,of
that
to
run
"For
the
last
10
months,
the
vice
president
One
of the old problems lingering for the
enjoyed a day long program and were given the opportunity to stop by
on
his
earlier
campaign
plan.
and
his
campaign
have
been
ignoring
me
and
"brand
new campaign" he said is ahead.
booths that were set up by local service agencies.
Not
with
Bradley
gaining,
on
him
in
polls
now
they
want
to
debate
me,"
said
Bradley,
Wolter
R. Mrors, vice prrsidrnt and
Lunch and snacks were also provided throughout the day by the ladies of
of
Democrats
in
the
early
primary
states,
and
campaigning
in
California
for
the
primary
columnist
for Tll1 Associotld P.rtss, lias
the Middleport Church of Christ. A big thank you goes out to AI Hartson,
raising
ample
funds,
despite
Gore's
still
comthat
could
J!c
pivotal.
"I
think
that
shows
rrported
011
Washington and national poll·
minister, and his staff for accommodating all of our needs throughout the day
fortable
lead.
in
national
polls.
That
is
among
we
'
re
making
some
progress."
tics
for
more
tha"ia 30 years._,
and for the use of the Family Life Center.
: I would like to especially thank two ladies in the County who were direct·
ly involved with the planning and sponsoring of this positive event for-yount'&gt;.
women. Norma Torres with the Meigs County Health Department and
~argic S~idmore with_ OU-CO~-AHEC were very instrumental in the planSlow Motion."
Knox knew how important it is to young peonmg and 1mplementatJon of th1s program. They both are so involved with By George R. Plaganz
A
current-events
paper
for
elementary
school
Here
is
an
excerpt
from
one
of
his
sermons
ple
to be, popular, and he shared with them the .
positive programs which in tum help Meigs County as a whole. We arc very
secret of popularity.
children is called The Small Street Journal. I'm on God's forgiveness.
•
.
fucky to have these ladies working for our community.
"We mustn 't," said Knox, "get iniO the habit
: Kathi Van Meter, Brpok Pauley and Gloria Michaels with the Abstinence going to subscribe. I don't understand much of
"Make it a practice," he said, "to identify ·
of thinking thai God is a good-humored sort some admirable quality in other people and :
Education Program, Nancy Aldridge and Brenda Curfman with the Family the news I hear on 'rV or read in the paper.
Maybe the young writers can clear things up whom it's quite easy to talk around if you usc a point it out to lhem. You will find that they will :
and Children First Council, Wellness BlockGrant worked endless hours to
for me. Children have a way of cutting through bit of soft soap so that you can spend your life seek out your company, for .¥/e alUike to hear :
pull this all-'ogether. The Planning Committee worked hard as well.
·, La.dies involved in the Planning Committee were: Kathleen Bowen, the underbrush. (I should mention ·that I fre- doing things he has told you not to and then nice things said about ourselves."
. Marg~e Blake, Janet Hollingsworth, Robin Harris, Connie Little, Connie quently get more out of the children's sermon going and making it up with him every Saturday
. We don't have I&lt;? wait for somebOdy to do
than
_
the
one
the
preacher
has
prepared
for
those
night
at
confession."
.
.
anything great before we compliment them, ·
Qodson, Gina Pellegrino-Pines, Christi Lynch, Rebecca Baer, Diane Dunfee
He went on to tell the story of Mary Jones, Knox would have said. I imagine that God was
~nd Joyce Sayre. if I have inadvertently omitted someone, please forgive me. my age.)
Five-year-old Jan is an example of how' who told her mother she had met a lion on her very pleased with the letter he received from
• As a co-sponsor myself, thank you ladies for making "Women's Outing
young
peopl_e get straight to the point. In a let- afternoon walk. Her mother said it was wicked Ruth (as quoted in "Children's Letters to Gnd"
for Wcllness" a huge success. Your hard work and countless hours of planter
·to
God
she wrote, " I wish you would not to tell lies like that, and ·she must go and ask by Stuart Hemple and Eric Marshall).
ning, preparation and attention to detail has not gone unnoticed.
·
make it so easy for people to come apart. I had Gnd to forgive her.
Ruth told God, "I think the stapler is one of ·
So when the girl carne down to tea, her moth· your best inventions.''
•
John R. Lentes three stitches and a shot.';
Four-year-old
Michael
was
also
in
no
mood
er said, "Did you tell God you were sorry?" and
Mligs Coufi/J Prosecutor
Pomsroy for beating around the bush when he ·penned this Mary replied, "Yes, I ~id, and God said, 'Don't
note to Gnd: " Instead of making people die and mention it, Miss Jones; I'm always mi~taking
having to make new ones, why don ' t you just that yellow dog for a lion myself."'
keep the ones you got?"
·
"If we get in the habit of thinking of our sins
By Thl AAocl.tld
Explaining the creation of the world would like .that," said Knox, "it makes us careless.
Today is Friday, Oct. I, the 274th day of 1999. There are 91 days left in the be simple compared with answering those ques- about them."
11
year.
tions perplexing Jan and Michael. ·
·
One of IC!Jox·~ sermons to the girls was
Today's Highlight in History:
One of the best preachers to children was based on something St ·Paul once said:
On Oct. 1, 1949, Communist Party Chairman Mao Tse-tu.ng raised the first Monsignor Ronald Knox, a Roman Catholic "Rejoice with those who rejoice." Knox ·.
priest in England.
flag of th.e People's Republic of China during a ceremony in Beijing. ·
acknowledged that was an admonition most of
On thra date:
·
During World War II a canvent school that us find hard.
.
had to be evacuated moved into the house in
In 180(), Spain !'eded Louisiana to France in a secret treaty.
"Being sorry for people w.ho are Jn trouble ·
Shropshire where Knox was Jiving and working comes naturally," Knox told the girls. "But
In 1885, special delivery mail service began in the United Slates.
other people's birthdays and prizes and their
In 1896, the U.S. Post Office established Rural Free Delivery, with the first on his popular translation of the Bible.
routes in West Virginia. •
As chaplain at the school, he preached every good news from home are rather boring, arcn 't
·
Sunday to a congregation of young girls. The they?
In 1908, Henry Ford introduced the Model T to the automobile market.
come~. lan.
"Don' t be content with yourself," said Knox,
In 1936, Gen. Franci;;so Franco was proclaimed the head of an in5urgent sermons eventually found their way inlo book
. form as "The Creed in Slow Motion," "The "until you find yourself really pleased to hear
Spanish state.
Mass in Slow Motion" and "The Gospel in about other people being happy."
In 1943, Allied forces captured Naples during World War 11.

t

Yard.sale set

The Daily Sentinel Speculating about afirst lady Laura_Bush
··:

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.·

.

'

'"

,,

.

�,.,.........-...... .

' '

'·.'

. "' .

.. " ... ,, . ... .... .. " .......... ··-··

,·~

........

....

~

.
.

-.. ___ "' . .. - ...............
~.

,

,.

·~

..

..

.

. I

The _Daily Sen~in,~!

Sports

· ..

·· · '

·

Friday, Octobef.1, ·1 M

·- -'---

•

-- .

...

,fr.lday, October 1, 1999

'·

.Yankees pound Orioles 1~·5, capture:AL East .fla·g'· ·again. ·~outhern to host Eastern in Saturday night football clasH·
By~ AIIOCIIIted Preal
It's become the most familiar
sight in baseball: champagne flowing
in the New York Yankees' clubhouse.
"The more you do it. the ·better it
gets," Joe Torre said Thursday night

after hipeam won the AL East for
the third time in his four seasons as
manager. "I feel fortunate to be here.
I still get emotional, for I know how
much work it takes to get here."
By beating the Baltimore Orioles

12-5 Thursday night for a split of
their doubleheader, the Yankees
eliminated second-place Boston
from division title contention. Up
next js a matchup with Clevelimd or
Texas in the playoffs starting
Tuesday.
" Winning never gets old. That's
what you play for," Derek Jeter said .
Baltimore won the opener 5-0, delaying the celebration for a few·hours .
The Yankees have finished first
37 times. the most in the majors. Last
year, when they set anAL record for
\vins by going 114-48, they clinched
on Sept. 9.
"A division title is a division title.
It doesn't matter how you do it," said
Scott Brosius, who hiltwo homers in
the second game.
In other AL games, it was Texas 7,
~cattle 0; Chicago 5, Boston 2;

Detroit (i, Minnesota 5; and Anaheim
Burkett iuiproved to 5-1 in his last · Varitek on a game•ending fly'out with
5, Oakland 4. ·
seven·starts, allowing three hits in•six the bases loaded. ·
1\t Camden ' Yards, · Orlando innings at Arlington. Tim Crabtree, '
Tigen 6, Twins S
Hernandez (17-9) allowed three runs Jeff Zimmerman and Mike ,Venafro
Gabe Kapler, . Dean Palmer and
and eight hits in seven innings in the combined on one-hit relief. •
Luis Polonia homered as visiting
night game after Roger Clemens ( 14- J Tom Goodwin had three hits and Detroit·stri:tched a winning streak to
10) lost tbe opener despite striking two RBis, Lee Stevens and Ivan six for the first.~ime in more) than
out .nine ln 'six innings. Clemens hit. Rodriguez each drove in two runs, three years.
.
···, .
..three batters and four of his five and Juan Gonzalez hit his 39th
Francisco Cordero (2-2) pitchell a
walks' turned into runs.
·
homer. Brett Hinchliffe (0-4) was the scoreless seventh and Todd Jones got
Mike Mussi na (I 8-7) pitched loser.
. three outs for his 29th save. Trailing
seven innings of five-hit ball in the
White Sox S, Red Sox 2
5-4 in the eighth,. Detroit rallied ftJJ:
opener. Chili Davis ' fifth-inning RBI
Rookie' Carlos Lee's seventh- two runs off Bob Wells (8-3).
single off Jim Corsi ( 1-3) gave the inning homer ~ff Brian Rose (6-6)
Angels S, Athletics 4
Yankees a 4-3 lead in tile fifth inning put Chicago ahead 3-2 at Comiskey
Jeff Huson hit a tiebreaking sing!~
of the second game.
Park, and Magglio Ordonez added a off Buddy Groom (3-3) with two
Rangers 7, Marinen 0
lWO'run homer, his 30th.
outs in the eighth at Anaheim, and
John Burkett (9-8) combined with
Sean Lowe '(4-1) pitched two- Garret Anderson homered.
three. relievers on a four-hitter as the thirds of an inning as Chicago won
Reliever Mark Petkovsek {I 0:4) .
Texas set a team record with its 95th for the fifth time in six games. Bob pitched a scoreless eighth, and Lou
victory, one more than 1977, when Howry pitched the ninth for his 27th Pole finished for his second save j n
the Rangers were 94-68.
save, retiring pinch-hitter Jason as many nights.

Cleveland Indians ground .Blue ~ays 9- ·::

B.REAKS RECORD - Tha Cleveland Indians' Manny Ramirez
: watchea hie dHp drive leave the yard tor a three-run homer In the
. fourth lnrilng of Thursday night's game against the visiting Toronto
~ Blue Jaya, who lost 9-2. Ramirez also broke the team RBI record
(138) Ht by Hal J'roaky In 1936. (AP)

CLEVELAND (AP) - With a record of 162 RBis, by Hal Trosky in
new Cleveland Indians record under 1936:
his belt, Manny Ramirez isn'tlook"I think we all understood finally
ing for a MVP award.
~ how special Manny has been this
He's only focused on bringing a year," said Indians manager Mike
World Series to Cleveland.
Hargrove. "You look at the score"Winning the MVP award is not board and see 164 RBis, that's a Jot.
that important to me. As long as my That's a lot for two seasons."
teammates know I am trying to help
At 97-62, Cleveland maintained
them . That matters," Ramirez said. the best record in the American
"None of this means anything if you League going into the final weekend'
don't win in the playoffs. Winning of the season, one game ahead of the
the World Series, that is my only New York Yankees (96-63) and two
goal. "
games ahead of Texas (95-64).
A three-run homer gave Ramirez
Ramirez received three standing
a team-record 164 RBis in a 9-2 win ovations from Cleveland's 370th
Thursday against the Toronto Blue conSecutive sellout crowd: one when'
Jays.
he reached the dugout, another to
Ramirez's 43rd homer, a441-foot summon him back out for a second
drive to left off John Bale in the sixth .curtain call, and a third when he tool&lt;;
inning, broke the previous team his position in 'right field in the sev-

enth.
"I never thought I would put
these numbers up," Ramirez said. "I
got great players in· front of me . Give
them the credit. If I think about setling recotds, th~n 'it isn't going to
happen. F,or me, if I hit 25 homers
and I 00 RBis, then I am happy."
The firs! major leaguer ' to reach
160 RBis si nce Boston's Jimmie
Foxx had 175 in 1938, Ramirez tied
Babe Ruth's 1927 total for the 12thmost in one season.
"I never heard .of some of those
guys ," Ramirez said. "I don' t know
them, but I am proud to be mentioned around those guys."
·
Richie Sexson hit a bases-loadeil
triple in the fifth inning off Paul
Spoljaric (2-2) after Ramirez was
intentionally
walked, .helping

Bartolo Colon; ( 18-5) beat Toro.1_ -,..__
for the second time in six days. -: ;
Wjth his second·triple of the ga~
and seventh this seasoR, Sexson gii\&lt;C
Cleveland a 5-0 lead, Wil Corde(!l
followed \lfilh an RBI single. . .
"When · Richie is on, he :is
absolutely golden. Hopefully he- ls
going to carry this right into the P~'
season," Hargrove said.
•: :
Colon won for the eighth timC::in
nine decisions, allowing six hits;ln
seve n shutout inni'Jls.
&lt;·:
" Bartolo is a fine pitcher.{:
Tororito manager Jim fregosi s~~:
"He is close to being a number tiD!! ·
guy. He's got the stuff. He just n~
the experience."
::-;
Roberto Alomar hit an a!ll
groundout in the first and Cordei'o
homered in the fourth for a 2-0 I~
.

.

' ' t/

Scoreboard
OUcago (Ucbtr 9· Ill at St. Louis (Thompson 1· 2). 8:10 p.m
·
San Dieso (W. Williams 11 -12) at Arizona
(Stonlemyre 6-2), 9:'35 p.m.

Ba seball
. AL standings

f1orida (Dempster 7-8) at Atlanta (Mulholland
9·8), I :15 p.m.
·
'CINCINNATI (Guzman 6-2) at Milwaukee
(Peterson l-7), I: IS p.m.
,
Oicago (Lorraine 1-S) at St. Louis (Stephenson
6-2), I:" p.m.
San Francisco (Rueter 14-10) at Colorado (Jamie
Wright 4-2), 3:0.5 p.m.
Los Angeles (Park 13- 10) ~t Houston (Eiarton 95),4:15 p.m.
•
Montreal (Powell 3-8) at Philadelphia (Byrd 15-·
10), 7:01p.m.
,.
Pittsburgh (Cordo~a 8-9) at New York (Reed 10.
5). 7:10p.m.
San Diego (Carlyle 1-3) at Arizona (Daall6·9),
10:05 p.m.

£.stern Dbisioo

lilt

.572
.491
.428

5
15
18
28

Centnl Dlvlsktn
· •-CLEVELAND .................. 97 62 .610
.459
~'f.·
~: ~ .428
Minnesota ......... ................. 63 95 .399
Kansu City ...... .............. 63 96 .396

24
291
33 h
34

~!::~~-::::::::::::::::::::::::·: :'::::::: ~

. Balti10011: ..............................78 81
T-Bty ...........................68 91

.5()9

.•••••••••••••••• • • •••• •

Wtmm Dltlsion
.....
.. ... 9.5 64 .597
Oakland ...
.. .... 85 74 535
Seaule ...
.. ... 78 81 .491
Anaheim ... .. ....... ............ 61 92 .421
It-clinched division tiile
y-clinched wild-card berth
x ~ Te1u

Sunday's n:gular-season finales

10
17
28

Florida at Atlanta, I :10 p.m.
Montreal at Philadelphia, I :35 p.m.
Pituburgh at New Yprk.. I:40 p.m.
Cllicago a1 St. Louis, 2:10 p,m.
Los Ang~let at Houst_on , 2:35p.m.
San francisco tn Colorado, 3:05p.m.
San Diego at Arizona, 4:05p.m.
CTNC INNATI at Milwauk~ . 4:05p.m.

Thursday's scores
DH: Baltimore 5, New York 0; New York 12·,
Balti~S

Cbita&amp;o .5, Boston 2
Detroit 6, Minncso111 5
Anaheim S, Oakland -4

4
'

Toronto at CLEVELAND. I :05 p.m. .
Boston at Baltimore, I :35 p.m.
New York at Tamp~ Bay, I :35 p.m.
Min~sota at Chica$0, 2:05 p.m.
De!mt at Kansas Caty. 2:05 p.m.
Se-MIIe at Oakland. 4:05 p.m.
Texas at Anaheim, 4:35p.m.

....

...
.-'

1! I. &amp;1.
l8
6&lt;i
83
93

.635 .
.585
.478
.415

96 .396

Centnl Ditlslon
......95 64
Houston ............ .................95 64
PituburJh ......... .. ............ 78 80
St Louit .... ...................... 74, 84
Milwaukee
...,... 72 86
O.icago . ................... , ......65 94

CINCINN~TI .......

.l97
.597
.494
.468
.416
.409

lilt
8

25

.Js

38

161h

20'1!
22'h
J()

.616
.528

S10 frlncitco ...................... 84 75
lot Anaeles
........ .76 83

.• 7J

il rs

.459
.447

·· ·

·.··· . -~

~j.l

123,15 122'45

Tai Chi
1 Classes begin Monday, Oc!Ober 4

'

• Automatic, Cruise, tilt
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Cassette

1 Mondays &amp;Wl$esdays

(7 p.m.)
1 Great way 10 increase Oexibilily, balance, slrengih &amp;relieves stress
1 30-minule classes (four week period -16 ~rs &amp;older) · ' ',
1 ~40/peiS()n or $30!PVH emplbyees &amp;gold cafd members

,950*

.
• Vortec V-8 Power
• Air Conditioning
• Nicely Equipped

• Automatic .
• Air Conditioning

• AMIFM Stereo

4

14

22
2l
27

· . · thursday's scom

~.Aaitlcl 9, ~an Francisco 4
' :,, " · Pllillrlol(lllla 2, CliiCaJO I
~·
Phtsbtirch 3, MilwAukee 2
•
A.lltiata 4, New Ycrk' 3 (II)
•
ArizOfUl S, San Dicao J

on the N · 1) W' ld
· h
•
first me~iin si~c~a~ IR l e team~
48-7 victory1ast seasonansas States
A greqt deal has changed since
then Texas is favored
d'
Appiewhite's confidence is high. an
"I don't think M · ~
thing except God ~J.or L~~r;h~~~
strong safety Lee Jackson said.
Appl' h't
h 1
~ ·
239
yards a:dwT~:~;-vo~/ :~~~hd~~n in

to 1

$9,850

Meigs County
~·--'
- sextets notch wins

mo.*

DON TATE

· i~ the first quarter of Thursday night's ACC con·

The Souther~ Tornadoes split two matches in their last two volleyball
outmgs, defeatmg Tnmble and dropping a disappointing .two-game
match to Waterford on Thursday, 15-9, 15-11 .
Against Waterford Fallon Roush had seven points, Stacy Lyons had
five, Heatherpailey five, Emily StiVers one, and Laraine Lawson two.
Tracy Forshey led Waterford with eight points.
· ·
Stacy Lyons was•7-8 with two kills spiking, .Laraine Lawson was lOll. with ~ kill, Kjm lhle was 5-8 with two kills, and Heather Dailey -'·5
with two kills. Roush was 8-10 w1th an ace and 10-10 setting, Dailey
was 7-8 w1th an ace; Lyons was 8-8 with an ace; And Lawson 5-5. Stacy
Lyons had three blocks and Kati Cummins two, while Cummins was 2528 passing.
Against Trimble, where Southern won 15-13 and 15-8, Roush was 56 serving with an ace, 2-3 spiking and a kill, and 9-9 setting· Dailey was
9-9 serving and 6-7 spiking with two kills; Stacy Lyons w~s 9-10 serving and had five blocks; Laraine Lawson was 5-6 serving, 7-8 spiking
~nd 13-13 s~tting with a kill; Kim Ihle was 5-6 se~ving and 11-13 spikmg With a kill; Kat1e Cummms was 4-4 servmg w1th,a kill and a block;
and Macyn Ervin was 6-7 serving and 3-4 setting.
· Roush led with I 0 points, Lyons had six, Dailey four, Lawson three
Stacey Mills two, and Kati Cummins two.
.
'
Southern dropped, the reserve game 15-12 and 15-5 led by Stacey
Mills with seven ·and Brandy. Lane with five.
.

Line Dancing·
• Thursdays (7:30p.m.)
al21members &amp;~3/non-members

Senior Low Impact Aerobics
1 Thesdays &amp;Thursdays (10 a.m.)

Cardio-Kick~oxing
• Mondays &amp;Wednesdays ,(Noon &amp;5p.m.)
1 Slirting Monday, Oc!Ober 4cUc8 will be Mondays, M~ ,;
&amp;Fridays (Noon) &amp;Thesdays :\Thursdays (5 p.m,)
·, " , .
1 $3/members &amp;Wnon.members
-.: ,
·

....

,· ~· I

Tonlgbt's gom..
Mottucal (Vuqucz 8-8) ol -Philadelphia (GrGht
l ·)), 7:05 p:m.
Pltubur&amp;h(Schmid! 1)· 11) at: New York (Rogen
S·ll. 7:10p.m •
•
Florida (Meadows 11 -14) at All ant a {Smoltz I08). 7:40p.m.
C,: INCINNATI (Neagle: 9-5 1;11 Milwauk~!c (Karl
11·1 h. 8:05 p.m.
Los An_Jeles (Gagne 0- 1) at Houston (Reynolds
16. 1)). 8:0)p.m.
Snn Francisco (Oniz 17-9) at Color:~d 6
~Thomson 1·9). 8:05p.m.
~

h f
·
.
t e ourth quarter that averted a II all. lfe's very versatile and they . Texas is 4-1.
387 yards and th~ee touchdowns, ran
~~~il~ou.\~a~~~~~~o~ffi~ie~~lh '~r~~~ ~~; ~~~~ze VJ~u~l1d ~~ery rece1ver h other Top 10 games, it's No. I lora 41-yard score and bolstered his
ing ·or 1,492 yards and
·ht.,.~h
e &lt;;{'}k e ••w: .
Flonda State at Duk~. No. 2 1 Hc1sman hopes to lead Georg 1a Tech.
10
1
d
h'.
.
uc
' 11 Jams gone, Alabama at No . 3 Flo~1da, No. II
Ham1lton, the nation 's top-rated·
. !c Y
in~:..cep:i~~ season, With only one Appl~w~ne ~~the L~nghorns' offen- Purdue at No . 4 Michigan, Auburn at passer, threw his first two interacp-.
..
· . .
.
sJve ea er. exas ( -I overall, 1-0 No. 7 Tennessee, No.8 Vugmta Tech lion s of the season but more than
any ~~~~~;;.~~e~s F~a;~ng as w~ll ~~ Big ~2 ) h~.s ;;on fo~ straight and at No. 24 Virginia, and LSU at No. compensated with t~uchdown passes:
Kansas State ci;.ch Bill~ c~un r~d ~~ n; Its tg est rah ng smce early 10 Georgia. .
. . of 80 and 29 yards to Dez White and
9 ·. .
"H .
.
ny ~r sm ·
.
Elsewhere m the Top 25, 11 s a 30-yardec to Kerry Watkins
an yet~~~~~~~~~~~; :;;:~de~~~~;~~~ LoIn 6ust h•sh secon~ se~so~ withh the Wisconsin at No: 12 Ohio State,
The senior quarterback comp leted
·
ng .oms, e IS a rea y ourt on 1owa at No. 14 M1ch1gan State, No . 19 of 31 passes and also rushed 13
Texas career pas,sm~ chan wnh 16 MISSJsstppl Stale at Vanderbilt, times for 87 yard s, fini shing with a
3,836 yards and th1rd m tou,hdown No. 17 Marshall at Miami. Ohio, No. school -record 474 yard s of total
pas~es w1th 28.
.
19 East Carolina at Army, No. 20 oflcnse.
They were teemg off on me Arkansas at Kentucky, Tqlane al No.
Georgia Tech (3- 1, J-1 Atlantic
because I was ~.freshman~ JUSt like 22 Syracuse, and No. 25 Oregon at Coast Conference) shredded the
every body .was, Applewhne sa1d of Washmgton.
nation 's top-ranked scoring defense .
last year.;; meetmg w1th the . On.Thursday night, No.9 Georgia The Yell ow Jackets scurcu tw o
Wildcats. They came after me . I Tech heal Maryland 4'1-31.
touchdowns in the first 6 1/2 minwalked away from that/lame knowNo.9 Georgia Tech 49
utcs. more than Mary land (3· 1, o. J)
mg what to •_mprove on.
Maryland 31 ,
.
surrendered in its ·first three games
Applcwhne and h1s teammates
In Atlanta, Joe Ham ilton threw lor combined.
ccrtmnly face a challenge Saturday.
Kansas State (3-0, 1-0) is coming
The expansion Jackso nville Jaguars made the ir National Football
off a 35-28 comeback vi ctory over
League
debut in 191J).by losing to the Houston Oilers 10-3,
Iowa State, in which it gave .up 379
yard s of total offense. But the
Bill Shoemaker rode John Henry to a nose victory at Arlinuwn Park in
Wi ldcats have held their opponents
1981
in -the inaugural Arlington Million , the first $1 mil lion r~cc .
lo jus! 39\ passing yards in three
gamp this season. Opponents have
completed 41 .2 p.ercent of their passes.
Kansas State have given up just
one passing touchdown this season,
ranks fourth in the nation in pass effi.
ciency defense. and has at least one
interception in all three of its games.
"Kansas State is still for real,"
Texas coach Mack Brown said.
"They're big, fast, and confident."
Kansas Staie and Texas are two of
five ranked Big 12 teams in action
YOUR CHOICE
, Saturday. Also, No. 5 Texas A&amp;M is
NO MONEY DOWN
at Texas Tech , No. 6 Nebraska plays
or
$202
Oklahoma State and No . 23
.• TRYING to get away fTom Maryland defensive test at Atlanta} Ga., where the ninth-ranked Yellow· Oklahoma is at Notre Dame. ·
.-back Shawn Forte (left) Is Georgia Tech tight and Jackets stung the previously-unbeaten Terrapins Nebraska, Texas A&amp;M , Kansas State
' Sean Gregory for a ·48-yard touchdOwn reception 49-31 . (AP)
and Oklahoma are undefeated, and .
308 E Matn St Pomeroy 1 800-387-1094
'

Texas players remember the
blowout at Kansas State last season,
and now all of the Longhorns are
looking for payback.
·
' ., Well, almost all of them.
"Revenge is kind of high school
stuff." Texas quarterback Major
'Applewhite said. "I want to win
tyery game,"
The 15th-ran~ed Longhorns take

'

'

I

•

I

I

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SALE

JER~Y

BIBBEE

It's the Dealer Behlnd The Deal
That Makes The :REAL Dll"l"ereneet

,,

IS

1998 LINCOlN CONTINENTAl
V-8, Auto, Air Cond., AM/FM Cass., Tilt, Cruise,
All Power
, Pwr. Seal

.'

· Tornadoes down Trimble, lose to Waterford

Thesdays &amp;Thursdays (6:30p.m.)
1 ~2/members &amp;$3/non-members

1 ~2/peiS()n

Wtlkm Di•ilien

x·Arizona.............................. 98 61

~~·
x-clinched divisiOI title

. Brand New 2000 Chevy
Silverado Extended Cab 4x4

l'i\.

1

A-Atlanta .... .i\ , ... . ......... ..101
New York.. ..
.. ...............93
Philodelplia ....... .,............. :.76
Mootreal . ............. ... ..........66
Florida ...........
...........63

BY The Associated Press

·Eastern claimed a 15-9, .15-7 win !Jver Miller, then dropped a 14-16
and 7-15 decJsJon to Alexander. Eastern is now 110-4 overall and 9-3 in
the league. Alexander is 14-2 ~rail and 11-0 l~ialt..
For Eastern against Alexander, Leah Sanders served 9-9 -w~3 aces
for 6points; Kristen Chevalier was 10-10 with two points, 19-27 setting
and had 3 ass1sts; Chevaher also was 3-4 spiking with 3 kills and 2
blocks. Ahson Rose was 9-9 serving ~with I ace and 5 points; Danielle
Spencer was6-6 ":'ith tw.o points;.Juli Bailey was 5-7 with two points,
was 6-8 sp1kmg With I k1ll; and Cmda Chfford was 4-4 with one point.
Eastern team serves were 43-47, Sets 33-44 with four assists.
Amber Church was 13,-13 serving with an ace, 21 , 16 setting with
two asststs and ten pomts; Kristen Chevalier was 9-9 with an ace 12-13
selling with three assists, 6-8 spiking with two kills, two bloc,ks and
seven pomts; and Alison Rose was 6-7 srving with five points and a
good defensive game.
·
·
Mendy Guess was 4-4 with three points. Sarah Clifford was 3•3 with
two points, Danielle Spencer was 3~3 and 8-10 spiking with two kills
and a pomt; Cmda Chfford had a pomt, Leah Sanders was 2-2 serving,
4-4 sp1kin~ 'Y'th a_pomt and a good def~nsi've game, whle Becky Davis
was 9-9 sp1kmg w1th four kills, and Whitney Karr was 3-5 'with a block.
Servingwise, Easter was 44-46 with two aces, 33-39 setting with five
assists, ~nd 34-3~ spiking with nine kills and three blocks.

1 Mondays, Wednesdays &amp;Fridays ( 9a.m.)

Ettlem Division

lull

Jexas seeks re·renge in bout wiih"''KSlfN~~."'9'rnG~lt~"
h"";i~s
~

Eagles beat Miller, fall to Alexander

Aerobics

NL standings

clubs. Southern finished 3-2 in the league last year in
place, whtle Eastern
. was 1-4 in fourth place.
ssecond
·
fi
atur.d ay .s wmner
1gures top play a key role in challeng•hg Federal Hocking' and Miller for the league
crown.
.
.. .
.
..
Game tune IS Saturday at 7:30 wnh a tailgate party

~-

.

Sunday's n:gular-season final ..

rently 3-2 after a disappointing home loss 't o Hannan 'wahama which Eastern defeated 20-0 and Wahama beat
W.Va. last week. Southern has had a miserable start,.bu; Southern 7_0.
h b
od
d h If
h
as een
a team
ath orne over the past
Although_ Eastern holds a command•'ng edge 1·n the .
1 a go
k 1secon
·
·
severa wee s, p ayJ.ng a very toug non-1eaguc sched- age-old senes, Southern has had much success ,·n recent·
ule.
Common opponents are South Gallia, which Eastern ~:~~\~~~~~ ~~~ ~~~se ones the past two years. Last
beat 40-6 and Southern 59_19 Both teams also played
S1 d
. h . 1 h 1
.

" Meigs defeated Wellston 15-12 and 15-9 in TVC volleyball action
.:n.ursday evening at Wellston. Meigs (12-2 overall and Il-l in the TVC)
·:S.V ill host Belpre on Tuesday, Oct. .
. : . Shann.on Price led th~ v.:inners wi~ II ~ints on 13 of 13 serving and
~·~ht ass1st, T1ffany Halfh11l added stx pomts on seven of nine serving
1th three k1lls. Amy Hysell , who scored four points, was perfect in six
erves with seven kills and two blocks.
Tawn~ Jones added four points with six of six serving, Tangy
Laude~lt added thre,e .Points on six of six serving with one kill and
nme asstst.. Brooke Wliha':"s added two points on five of five serving,
With five k1lls-and one asstst and one block. Margie Bratton added five
kills and one block.

liVER 200·,2000 MOOELIILVIRAOO PICKUPS T8 CH.IE FRill

,

Saturday's gam~s

'

Basketball
NaUonal BuketbaJI Auodalion
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS: Named Larry
Nance special ass istant.
MIAMI HEAT: SIJncd 0 Corey Brewer, F Jamie
Watson and F JennaJne Walker. Waived F Mark ,
Oa\'iS.
.
MILWAUKEE BUCKS: Signed C·F Chor~s
Shackleford.
PORTI.AND TRAIL BLAZERS: Nomcd Sue
C~ttt dira:tor olspona cwnmuniclllons .
, UTAH JA7Z: Siantd G John Stockton to a two-year contract and G Jeff Hornacek to a ont-year contract.
VANCOUV~R
GRIZZLIES:
Promoted
Lawrence Frank to assist~t c~ h .

Boston (Saberhagen 1()..6) at Baltimore (Linton 1J). 7:05p.m.
·
New •York (Penitte 14-1 1) Ill Tampa Bay (Arrojo
7-1 1), 7:0.5 p.m.
Toronto (Munro Q-2) at CLEVELAND (GoOOen
J-4). 1:0.5 p.m.
,
MinMsoto (Ryan 1-J) !U Chicago (Baldwin 11 ..
·
13), 8:os p.m.
Detroit (Borkowski 2-5) at Kans;u City (Stei n 1l). 8:05p.m.
Te1tas (l::oaiza 9-5) at Anaheim (Ort iz 2-JJ. IO:O.S
p.m.
Seattle (Rnmsay 0-1) at Oakland (Appier I5-14).
10:35 p.m.
Toronto (Hentgen 10- 12) . (lt CLEVELAND
(Wri8ht 8-9). I :OS p.m.
,
Sennle (F. Garcia 16-8) ~ Oakland ( J or ~ i s 0-1).
4:05p.m.
New York (Cone 11 -9) ttl Tampa B:fy (Alvarez 98). 6:35 p.m.
,
Boston (R. Maninez I· IJ m Baltimore (Johns 6·
)). 7:05p.m. ·
Minnesota (Radke 12-14) at O.icago (K . Wells Jl). 7,05 p.m.
Detroit (Weaver 8- 12) at KansaS City (S\Ippan lOll), 8:0l p.m.
·
Tellas (Helling IJ- 10) at Anaheim (Fyhrie 0-4).
10:05 p.m.
·
·

.•

- NL: Suspended New York DiP DenniS Cook for
one gamr. effective Friday, and fined him an-undisclosed amount, for overly auressive behavior and
making· comact with an 11mpire, durioa a same
agwnst lhe Atlanta Braves on Sept. 28.

Hoc:key

• CLEVELAND 9, Toron1o 2

Tonight's gam..,.

·

Popovic. SJ&amp;ne&lt;l Q J,ohn st ....y. Aulpeol C 'l)irr
Wright to Wiltts·Batre-Saantoo of the A.HL .. .. ~
. ST. LOUIS BLUES: Cl~med D 'todd ~
off waivers from Edmonton. Re-assigned D J~
Obsutto Won:ester of dte AHL.
- ... ·
TORONTO M~PLE LEAFS: ~iiijll«&lt; F
Nikolai Anb'opov. F Kevyn Adams and D Tmaa
Sudwilh to St. John's of the AHL. Relwed ,IM'
Danin Shulnon. Uated C Alyn McCauley u a oon'roster player.
:
VANCOUVER CANUCKS: Agnod 10 ......
with D Ed Jovanovski on a four~year COIIb'icl.
Signed F Greg Hawgood. Claimed 0 Manny I..egace
off waivm. Assijned C Mall Cooke to Syracuif:
Cl'llnch of tbe AHL;

$5,()(X), and Bill Wirtz, Qicaao 8\ackhawks owner, Added F Blair Atcheynum to the roster. ·
SlOOO. for comments lhey made during the investi·
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKF:I'S: Annaunced a
galion of the ~ncident conducted by the league.
player affiliation agreement with Syracuse of the
A11..ANTA 11-IRASHERS: Assigned F Jody AHL, bczinnins in the 2000 -2001 season.
·
Hull :md F Jeff Wil\iaim to·Orl•nOO of the IHL.
DALLAS STARS: Oaimed F Chris Murray off
Placed F Vladimir Vujtck on injured reserve .
waivers from Chicago. Assigned F 1\eilh Aldridge to
BOS1UN BRUlNS: Sianed D Nick Boynton.
Michisan of the IHL.
CALGARY FLAMES: Traded D Todd Simpson
EDM.QNTON OILERS: Re-5igned 0 'Roman
to Aorida for LW Bill Undsay.
HamrUk to 1 olle-year tontract.
C~ROUN~ HURRICANES: ~ssigne&lt;l F Silane
LOS ANGElES .KINGS: Signed D Mattiu
Willis to Cincinnati of lhe IHL.
Norstrom to a multi -year conb'act.
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS: Signe&lt;l D Soe.e .
NEW YORK ISLANDERS: Signed C Tom
McCarthy. Re-assigned G MlVC Lamothe, F Ty Connolly and D Mathieu Biron to three-year con·
JollCS, D Radim BiCHnek and D Todd Rohloff to tlacts.
Oeveland of the IJ-IL, G Michel Larocque to Aorida
PriTSBURGH PENGUINS: Traded D Ke~in
of the ECHland F Mark Bell to Ottawa of the OHL. Hatcher to the New York Rangers for D Peter
--·-

National Hockey Leaaue
NHL ~ Suspended Georae McPhee, Washington
Capitals general manager, for one month and fined
him $20,000, for his part in an altercation with Lome
Mollckcn, Olicago Blackhawks coach, on Sept. 25 .
Fined Ron Wlhon, V.:ashington Capilals coach,

• Teus 7, Seattle 0

.

Baseball
NaliuNd Leii.ue

Saturday's gam..

1aa
»:' I. 1'4.
' •-New Yorlt.. ........................96 63 .604

Transaction s

~ The Eastern Eagles will come 19 play the Southern
. Coorunnatd~~s Saturday night in the "Battle of Meigs
y.
·
, ·L'k
' e a1ways• th'IS years. bout. should be a good one
.
h
·'
. .
Th
. row t e records out the door and expect another hardhlllmg game.
.
.
.
' · Eastern has had liS best start m four years and 1s cur-

. Wellness Center

GmU.ine Chevrolet

-'

... .

~
....._,.......,...,.,

Wast VIrginia's t1 Cltavy, Pontiac,
And Custom Van Dealer.
·

(304) 675-7222

B~lck,

Olds,

Monday· Saturday 9 am • 9 pm

·

Jn ihe first defense of his heavyweight title , Joe Louis won a 15-round
unanimous decision over Tominy Farr in 1937 at Yankee Stadium.

. Sunday 1 pin • 8 pm

If The New York Yankees reached I00 wi~s ~n Sept. 4, 1998, the earliest
' major-league history, by beaung the While Sox 11 -6. . ·

.

I

•,

TOll FREF. 1·800-8 22 -0417

~

372· 2844

o

www.lompeden com

I

''

.'

. ''

"

.

~

.'.

•

V-6, Auto, Air Cond., AM/FM Cass., Till, Cruise, PS, PB, PW, POL. P Seat. More

HOURS
SALES 9- 6 Mon- Sat
P arts &amp; Service
8- 5 Mon- Fri
8-1 2 Saturd ay

JE~~y
Phone

·p ·

,During a 45-7 rout ih 1966, the Houston Oilers , of the American
Football Leagu~ held the Penver Broncos tO&gt; QO first downs.

., .

1999 FORD EXPEDITION

5.4L V-8, Auto, Dual A/C, 3rd Row Seating, AM/Ii..M Cass., All Power Equlpm~nt

..

. 7 40-992 ~2 196
www.jerrybibbee.com

'BIBBEE
J

6l.S. Third
Ave.
Middleport

�. I'

:
'

..

~-

\

•

.

. ,. •

' 1

. ,;, ; :!,

' · : -.- -:- .· - -··::: -J-

"..••
Friday, October 1, '1 99t

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

The Daily Sentinel'

Giants past and present·join I
fans in farewell to Candlesticlt..

f

·

.

Page7 :

Friday, October 1, 1999

By DENNIS GEORGATOS

FAREWELL TO CANDLESTICK - With San Dodgers Thursday night at 3Com Park, formerly
Francisco Giants past and present behind him, known as Candlestick Pa~\1-""The Giants will begin
Hall of Fa mer Willie Mays throws out the final pitch play.ing in Pacific Bell Pa(~neft\ason. (AP)
after the Giants' 9-4 ··_toss to the Los Angeles

New York closes in on falling out of wild card race

Braves drive past Mets 4-3
in ·11 innings; Dodge_
rs win
National League
roundup
By The Associated Press
For the second straight year, a
late-season collapse could mean no
posiScason play for the New York
Mcts.
•
The Mets, who held a four-game
lead in the NL wild-card race with 12
games left, have lost eight of nine
g~ 10 reach the brink of eliminatJOn from the playoff race .

los~~:~rs1~~y A~~~~~,t~s B~;~e: ~,in;~~~

Stadium left the Mets two games
behind Houston and Cincinnati for
the wild card with three remainine
for each team .
To make the postseason for the
trrst ltmc smce 1988, the Mets must
either sweep Pittsburgh while the
Astros o'r Reds lose at least twice, or
wi n tw ice and hope Houston or
Cincinnati gets swept.
"It's going to be tough," said
manager Bobby Valentine, whose
team lost the final five gam~s last
year to fa ll one game short of a wildcard playoff. "We are going 10 need
some help and we have to take care
ol our own business."
Brran Jordan tripled and scored
'"t Ozzic Gu ill en·, sacrifice Oy in the
11Ih as Ihe Braves won for the ninth
lime in tO games and clinched homeI reid throughout the NL playoffs.
''This is the next best thing to
winning the World Series," said
Atl anl a's Chipper_Jones. the subject
of constant ribhin g from Mets' fans .
I told them to go home and put their
Yankees
stuff on."
.
After New York tied the game at 3
in the eighth on Edgardo Alfonzo's
~6 th homer. the Braves took the lead
in the 1 1th .
Shawon Dunston overran a hrgh
llv to right by Jordan leadrng off the

inning. turni r)g a routin~ out into a trail s Mark McGwire by one homer
triple.
going into the Cubs' season-ending.
"I got a good jump and I was three-game series against the
gorng to get 11." sard Dunston. who Cardinals, starting tonight in St.
usually plays center field. "I had ,a Louis.
beat on it. I turned to look at the wall
Licbcnhal's 410-foot solo homer
and I saw the ball falling on the other gave the Phillies a 2-1 lead in the
side of me. I knew I was in trouble ." fifth . Lieberthal was 3-for-4, raising
Rookie Octavio Dote! (8-3), mak- his average to .301. Person (10-5)
ing his fifth career relief appearance, allowed one run and three hits in
h ·
· 11
tk d A d
t en mtentwna Y wa e
n ruw seven mmngs.
Jones. Guillen followed with a fly to
Diamondbacks~. Padres 3
shallow center, and Jordan narrowly
Randy Johnson tied Nolan Ryan's
beat Darryl Hamilton's throw to major league record for most doublebreak thctie.
digit strikeout games in a season,
Terry Mulholland ( 10-8) got the fanning II in seven innings as
final four 04ts for the victory.
Arizona beat San Diego.
J h
79
k
1
1n ot her NL games, It· was Los
o nson (I - ) struc out at east
Angeles 9, San Francisco 4; 10 batters 23 times this season to tie
Philadelphia 2, Chicago
I; the record Rvan set with the
' in 1973.
Pittsburgh 3, Milwaukee 2; and California Angels
Arizona 5, San Diego 3.
He allowed three runs on firstDodgers !1, Giants 4
inning home runs by Quilvio Veras
The last baseball game at and Eric Owens, then shut down the
Candlestick Park drew a host of for- visiting Padres on one hit the next six
mer Giants greats and 61 ,389 fans, innings. He allowed four hits and
the largest regular-season crowd in walked two.
the stadium 's history.
The 364 strikeouts by Johnson
After40yearsoftormenting.play· this season were the founh-most in
d f
·h
· I'
·d
ers an ans Wit sw1r mg wm s, major league history. The only pitchfrigid temperatures and blankets of ers to strike out more were' Ryan with
fog , the 'Stick closed its baseball 383 in 1973, Sandy Koufax"wjth 382
career on a balmy, sunny day.
in 1965 and Ryan with 367 in 1974.
Juan Marichal threw out the cerePirates 3, Brewers 2
monial first pitch and Willie Mays
Kevin Young's solo homer in the
tossed out. the ballpark's final pitch sixth inning spoiled Hideo Nomo's
performance
as
after the game. The Giants move to I O-strikeo11t
$319 million pacific Bell Park in Pittsburgh won in Milwaukee.
downtown Sa)l Francisco next seaNomo has 161 strikeouts this season, leaving Candlestick - which son. the most by a Milwaukee pitchopened on April 12, 1960- to the ·er since Cal Eldred had 180 in ~993 .
NFL's 49ers.
Nomo (12-8) allowed eight hils and
Phlllies 2, Cubs j
lhree walks in seven innings.
h.t
h.
3
l
· M'k
L'
b
th
• y
1
1
I e
1e er a
1
1s . s
oung •s two-ou t homer, h'IS 1h'1rd
homer and Robert Person held in four games, broke a 2-2 tie in the
~ahml mdyl Sosa homerless as sixth inning. Mike Garcia (1-0)
i a e phia beat Chicago at pitched one inning in relief of Pete
Veterans Stadium.
Schourek for his first major league
Sosa was 0-for-3 with a walk, win, and Scott Sauerbeck got the last
leaving him with 62 homers. He out for hrs second save. ·

goodbye,· " longtime Giants broad- World Series:
:;
The !til-Star game was played iii
· SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The caster Lon Simmons said during
San Francisco Giants didn't leave· postgame ceremonies that ended the 'Stick in 1961, when the win4~
their hean at Candlestick Park. They with the blowing out of a candle.
blew pitcher Stu Miller off til~
took it with them.
"Theie's a lot of good memories. moun d.
,.'
.•
On a bri lliant Thursday that belied a lot of bad memorie~ here," Mays
· 1·mg sat'd. "I'm happv.
1
don't
understand
Dedicated
the
yeai
before
by
ViC::~
th.~ ~ar k,s repu tat'ton •aor swu
,
p ·d
R' h d N'
"I""
txon as
··~
. I whv when vou leave a good thing rest ent tc ar
wm s, fog an d cold • lhe GIan s
J
'
h L:
th ' finest ballpark._ in America,-!l
played the Los Angeles Dodgers in and you go to anot er hung at s Candlestick also was the scene of the
the last baseball game at Candlestick going· to be good for the fans that
and then celebrated the end of their you've got to be sad."
16-inning scoreless duel betwecfl
Marichal and the · Braves' Waritm
40-year-stay at the park.
The last day for baseball was Spahn (Mays won it with a homerr,
They.didn 't leave without a relic, unhlike any other at Candlestick in McCovey's 500-foot upper-deCk
digging out home plate, putting the ot er ways.
homer in a 1966 loss to the Mets arid
old park's bean on a helicopter and
The park's famous winds were leftv Dave Draveckv's August I91i~
nying it UptOWn, Where it' WaS plant- quiet, the familiar ShrOUd Of COld and
.T
J
,f&lt;'
ed into the team's new stadium near fog nowhere to be seen or felt. Even muacle comeback from cancer, t!l
downtown that's opening next sea- so the elements loomed in every- whtch he beat the Reds.
;~
son.
.
on'e•s thoughts.
~ A 1964 game was delayed after A
"This is not a sad day for the
"The wind and the cold made it' visiting Dodgers outfielder lost a nlt
Giants," Peter Magowan: the club's miserable. Night games were terri- ball in the fog, though the finalgam_!;
in an aging general partner, said dur- ble," recalled Mike !vie, who was was played under a bnlhant sun. TliC.
ing postgame ceremonies. "Yes, we among some 60 former Giants play- temperature at gametime was IJ1:
are leaving our home, but we are ers on hand.to take a final bow before degrees.
~:
going to a new one, and I promise a crowd of 61,389, the most ever to
And with the sun out and ~you it will be the best ballpark in this. att~?d a regutru:-seas~n game here.
stands and dugout warmed by no.sta1
.
It took a httle b1t to put on the gia, even the bad, cold days d1dn, .
coumry."
In many ways, Candlestick Park msulated underwear and go play mne seem so windy or so cold.
::
might have been the worst, its pre- !nnmgs, but JUSt bemg here and see"I never really minded it, " sail!
dominantly chilly, windy environ- mg all the_old coaches ~!ayers and San Francisco manager Dusty Bakey;
ment producing the zany and the made II enjoyable f?r me.
a native of Sacramento who got hi)l
weird, and posing a survival test for
There were rousmg cheers for the first hit here in 1968 as a rookie witfl
fans and players alike.
oldumers and current players and the Atlanta Braves.
~
But Candlestick was also the plenty of boos for the Dodgers.
,
,
,
«
-scene of lsome of baseball 's great
Many in the crowd wore old jerWhenever I m here, I ve had a~!
moments O(!d the venue for some of seys and hats and some made their my friends and family h~re, so It -was
the game's best players, including feelings known in signs dotting the always hke a homecommg for me.-'
Hall of Famers Willie Mays, Willie stands.
had to have my best games here i!l
McCovey and Juan Marichal.
"Adios Candlestick," one sign front of my home boys."
~
" It was very special," Dodgers read. · " We'll miss the thrills and
Notes: In.his last game of the s~
manager Davey Johnson said. "Fans chills," read another.
son, · Bonds went 0-for-4. He f~CII
were really into it today, but they
"It was great to be out here today, season-ending anhroscopic surjto~
. weren'ttoo bad."
seeing all those players who gave me on his right knee today.... Raift
~hd it 'was in that spirit that the sleepless nights," said Tommy Mondesi hit the last homer _!IT;i .
curtain came down on baseball at the Lasorda, who managed the Dodgers Candlestick, a three-run shot in tnt '
'Stick.
for 20 years and now is a team vice sixth.... San Francisco's Marvin
Marichal tossed out the ceremoni- president. "I love this place, but the Benard homered .to lead off .tlic
•I
al first pitch, signaling the beginning new park is going to be great."
game .... The Giants went 49-32 i\1 of the end, and after the Dodgers beat
Maligned for its bitter weather home this season .... Eric Karras h~
the Giants 9-4, Mays came on to and isolation, Candlestick was also two singles for Los Angeles, extent
throw the symbolic final pitch to his remembered for withstanding the ing his hitting streak to 10 games . .1.
godson. Giants star Barry Bonds.
October 1989 eanhquake that rav- Shawn Estes (11-11) waS the losQ.
" I guess all you can say is, 'Tell it aged the Bay area and interrupted the and Jeff Williams (2-0) got the wiO::'
_ _.;;;._ _.;.._ _..;,...o___...:i;O:"""iili~--":"-o:--:.""""::-------=i;;;;;~ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. .
Football
LANSING, Mich. (AP)- Miami
Dolphins defensive end Dimitrius
Underwood left a hospital where he
was being treated for self-inflicted
knife wounds and· entered a mental ·
health facility.
unde rwoo d' s agent, cratg·

winner.

·

Domann, said the play'er is receiving
psychological treatment at a medical
facility. He didn't say where
Underwood was being treated.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - After
trying for five years to bring an NFL
team to Los Angeles, Michael Ovitz
bel'1eves he ·IS c1oser than ever.

Ovitz said he and his backer(
who hold an option on land- Ill
Hollywood Park, have met · all tbe
NFL's criteria. However, tile
Hollywood dealmaker noted that the
proposal still must be approved by 24
of the league's 31 owners if a deal is
to be completed.

The only life insurance Tom had was
through his work, and that wasn't
much. When he died, !'received benefits for one year. After paying the
funeral expenses and outstanding
debts, there was nothing left.
Tom and I had discussed life
insurance and decided it was something we could not afford ill the time,
so we waited. Now, it is tpo late.
And it isn 't only life insurance. If
only we had paid out an extra $15 a
monJh for insurance on our mengage, it would have paid off the
house. A few extra doll,ars on our

FRIDAY
RUTLAND- Rose of Sharon Holiness
Church, revival Oct. 1-10, 7 p.m. Jack
Dulin, evangelist. Dewe~ King, pastor
invites public.
SATURDAY
RACINE - The Shain, Sayre, Smith
family reunion, Saturday, American Legion
hall, Racine. Potluck dinner, I p.m. Table
service and drinks provided.

,
1

SALEM CENTER - Star Grange 778,
Saturday, potluck supper at 6:30 p.m.,
meeting, 8 p.m. Installation of officers, calender for 1999·2000-to be completed.
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville
Lodge 41 , Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Refreshments.

TUPPERS PLAINS -Gospel sing, Saturday. 7 p.m. at St. Paul Omted MCtliOdlst
Church. To be featured True Tone Trio,
Yvonne Walters and Procbum.
&lt;.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Poplar Ridge Free Will
'Baptist Church, gospel sing, State Route
554. The Joe Lester Family, the Brody
Family, Parkersburg, W.Va. Public invited

To

by Pastor John Elswick. ·
EAST MEIGS - South Bethel New
Testament Church, homecoming , Sunday.
Sunday sc hool at 9 a.m. ; worship service at
I 0: I0 a.m. Carry-in dinner at noon. Music
at I p.m with The Southern Gospelairs.
South Bethel is located two miles from
Route 7 on Silver Ridge Road, across ftom
Eastern Schpols ..

0 \ • ,-

.

. ..

POMEROY - Meeti~g. Meigs County
Counhouse, 7 p.m. to discus,t; extending
. open hours for the courthouse. Public offiCARPENTER - Columbia Township cial s, business owners and general public
Board of Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at invited .
the fire station.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Legal office of Clerk of
PAGEVILLE Scipio Township
Couns Larry Spence-r closed Monday for Trustees, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m Pageville
staff training. Title 9ffice will be open.
Town Hall.

JOSHUA DAUGHERTY'
TURNS THREE • Joshua
Daugherty, aon of Jim and Paula
Wlnebrenner-Oaugherty, cele·
brated his third birthday with a
!emily celebration en Aug. 26.
A construction theme party
was held at his home In Maaon
where he resides with his parents, a sister, Oanlelle, and a
brother, Joseph.
He Is the grandson of Gordon
and Susan Winebrenner, Syracuse, and Fred and Juanita
Daugherty, Poinf' Pleaaant, and
the grandson of Ernestine Zuspan, Mason, W. Ve.

.

RACINE - Racine Chapter, OES ,
Monday, 7:30p.m. Election of officers.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Literary
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, home of Phyllis
Hackett. Faye Wallace to review books
ATHENS - Athens to Darwin Citizens about man's first landing on the moon.
Advisory Committee public meeting/work- -Members to pay dues .
ing session Monday, 4 p.m. at the Ohio
University Inn to hear presentations by four

RUTLAND - Revival services, Rutland Church of the Nazarene, beginning
Sunday and continuing through Oct. 10, 7
p.m. nightly. except Sundays, 10:30 a.m.

-.

"·
" '

-~.

·,~~ ­
·~

.

19 CHEVY CELEBRITY
Brand New 200Q Pontiac
Flreblrd WlthT·Tops

All New 2000
Buick LeSabre Custom

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Grand Prix SE Sedan

821950*

~~ J450* ~7850*
. '

'
• Power Wlitdowa,
Locks
• Remote Keyl~u Entry
• Fully Loadedl

• 3800 V-6 Power
·• Power Wlndowallocka
• Fully Loadedl .

95 CADILLAC SEVILLE
Ride In Style
#GM1670 WAS $24,900

One Local Owner
#4534A WAS $10,900

'

'

~u"-~•18 980 '"-

• Cruise, nit, Air
• AMIFM CD System
• Aluminum Wheels

98 BUICK SKYLARK

=

•t

97 CHRYSLER
Family Sedan
#4638A WAS $14,900

o~----~..!!"'""!!L..:.•.!.1~8~7:.!!5~~

93 PONTIAC GUND AM 96 PONT. GUND AM GT
Sporty
#GM1817 WAS $10,999

Sharp
WAS$11,900

$10 250

Now

$8,990
!';; •• -

=

Luxury
#P393 WAS $31 ,900

--+--

~

$28,950

......;..
i:fl

. ,&gt;&lt;.;{. '&gt;k#~-

98 CHEVY K1500 PU

97 JEEP CHEROKEE
Brand New 2000 ChatiiV

Brand New 1999 Pontiac
Grand Am SE1 Coupe

~5,950* ~3,8
• Power Windows/Locka
• CruiiiiTIIt
• Aluminum Wheels

• AMIFM CD Syatem

• Power Sunroof

_S9

0
"

'-.

99 CHEVY PRIZM

~~Now~ $12,9,50---+-_:: $21,460
"'"

.&lt;

.

.,

('-~"

~'~~

~

-

- ;a£··

'

i

..
•

21~ ~

}'I)f

$1

600

-

L

, ~ .~~tl'

99 POIIT. GUilD PRIX SE

Ride With Pride
,..:414 WAS$13,999

. $1

West VIrginia's 11 Che!Y, PonU~c. BulcJ!, Olda,

'

NoW

~~ -

98 BUICI CENTURY
(!«:maine O'IC:Vnllee

,Perfect For Busy Moms
#GM1776 WAS $21 ,900

4 Door, 4X4
IIGM1 !l67 WAS $23,900

Loaded
114579A WAS

$

·

r

99 CHEVY M
_ ALIBU
Hot! Holt Hot!
#P413 WAS $14,999

-"-" •13 '30

99 PONTIAC GRAND 1M ·
12,000 Actual Miles
IIP405 WAS $16,000

Now

SJ

Ride With Peace of Mind!! Ask Us About Our Extend8d Service Contractsfl ·

1

EQUIPMEN-T LISTS AND OTHER DETAI

o---- 0 0 -0.~ - .. · - - .. •

•

•

.

.. ~ •• •

•

,., ,

••

•

7 CHEVY ll 1500 PU

'

· ~ '~·;;"" .;.~ ....

And .Custom Van _
Deller.

.,

..... ~ '
·'4'
' ' 44, ~ ·
': ,i
''"~'"""'~'"' ·' ,.
t'
~

•Automatic
• Air Conditioning
Exterior Appearance

• Air Conditioning

"'"~,:&gt;

97 FORD UNGER
Now

~2151f

*

~

5,500 Miles·, Uke New
#4654A WAS$11,800

·tt .
, . . . . . h O, L - - Oo 0

.

-94 CHEVY CAPRICE

\t • -

'

, ,

ALFRED - Orange Township Trustees,
Tuesday, 7.:30 home of Osie Follrod, clerk.

SYRACUSE Sutton Towpship
Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Syracuse
Municipal Building._

~

•
0

EAST MEIGS - Eastern Elementary
PTO, Monday, 6 p.m. in cafetorium.

•

- ~ --,

00

TUESDAY
Sali sbury Town ship
POMEROY
Trustees, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at the township hall , Rocksprings Ro~d . Pomeroy.

. .. .. -· ,.,..

•
O

MONDAY
EAST MEIGS- Friends of the Library,
7 p.m. Monday, at the Eastern Library.

LAUREL CLIFF - Family day at the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church; Sunday. Covered dish dinner at noon . Featured
will be the Boelk Family from Virginia
with the Rev. Bob Boelk preaching and the
family sin'glng. The Rev. Charles Young of
Akron, superintendent of the Free
Methodist Church of Ohio, will visit.
Charles Swigger invites the public.

.

Pursant to Section 121.22 of the Ohio
Revised Code, notice is hereby given that
the Meigs County Budget Commission
will be meeting::on October 4, 1999, at
9:00A.M. The meeting will be conducted
in the Meigs County Auditor's Office;
Meigs County Courthouse.
Meigs County.Budget Commission.
Nancy Parker Campbell, Secretary

_.o • &lt;t , ,-~ ~ -~·· · o- o J --o o•~ o

engineering consultants seeking the con tract 10 advise the CAC and Transportation
Review Advisory Council on the Athensto-Darwin U.S. 33 project.
'

OVER 251 PINDACS TO CHOOSE FRill

star.
Combine all that with Heisman
hype, .and Saturday is going to be a
special day at Miami, the place where
Paul Brown, Woody Hayes, -Bo·
Schembechler and Ara Parseghian
staned cdaching.
.
"Lets just put Travis and Chad out
there and just see who wins, I know
Chad can throw it a lot better than
Travis, but I think Travis can maybe
run it," Hoeppner said.
Marshall has edged out Miami (31, 2-0) for the MAC East title the last
two years. The RedHawks beat the
Herd 45-21 in 1997 - behind 203
yards rushing and four touchdowns
from Prentice - but lost a shot at the
bowl with two conference losses.

·,.

and 6:30: a.m. services. Rev. Murrell
Duffie, evangelist Rev. John Nunley, song
evangelist. Pa~tor Sam Basye invite s public.

HEMLOCK GROVE
Hemlock
Grove Christian Church, homecoming,
Sunday. AI Doster, speatcer. Dinner at noon,
afternoon services at 2 p.m. Special music
by the Williams Family, Vienna, W. Va.

"'

By ANDY RESNIK
"Travis is a great back and
AP Spol1s Writer
nobody's going to contain him."
In past seasons, fall Saturday Pruett said. "He can bust loose at any
afternoons in Oxford. Ohio, often time."
were spent studying for class, checkSaturday's winner, barring an
ing out autumn colors or watching upset, 1s almost assured of fmishing
Ohio S~e m an uptown bar.
atop the MAC East and playing for a
Thi s Saturday, the Marshall- benh in the Motor City Bowl - the
Miami of Ohio matchup at Yager MAC's only guaranteed bowl bidStadium is the only game in town- in the conferen~e title game.
a Mid-American Conference show·The loser, meanwhile, will be m
case featu ring one of the nation 's best trouble. Last year, Miami went 10-1
at quartcrhack (Chad Pennington) but failed to get a bowl bid while
and tarl back (Travi s Prentice).
North Carolina, a team that lost to the
"The eyes of the nation don 't RedHawks and finished 7-5 , went 10
often focus on Oxford. Ohio. But I the Las Vegas Bowj.
Ihink a lo1 of 1he eyes will be on us
Neither team cali afford a loss if it
this week." said Miami coach Terry wants a conference title and some
Hoeppner.
· national TV exposure for its super·
In 1997, Pennington was just the
.
guy who threw the ball to Randy
Muss. Now he has lhe Thundering
Herd (4-0. 1-0 MAC) ranked 17th in
At
6-foot-4.
220-pounds,
Pennington has NFL scouts drooling
over his strong arm, physical strength
and the way he surveys the field.
" He's ·gm all the intangibles that
certai nly makes him the top quarterback in the country,", Marshall coach
llob Prueu said. " I think the pro
scouts rate hi in as a No. ·t guy. He not
only has acc urate skills and throwing
abi lity, he's big and strong and such a
great leader and such a tough guy." ·
Prentice, the MAC's all-time leading rusher 'and scorer. is a 6-foot-2,
228-pouJ1d tailback who has a stat all
his own. Every time he run s over a
defender - and it happens a lot - he
gets a "truck.''
The Miami standout also holds the
NCAA record for most games (23)
with. two or more touchdowns . The
record ~sed to belong to Texas' Ricky
Williams, last year's Hcisman Trophy

the letter from "Carol in Maninez,
talif.,'' whose husband died suddenly of a bean attack, but had the fore~ight to carry ample life insurance. I
wish I had known l;:arol in Martinez.
Perhaps I would have learned something from her..
· I am a 43 year old widow with
lwo children, 10 and II years of age.
t&lt;ly husband passed away due to a
· sudden seizure. He was only 37.
Although "Tom" made a good
living, we were just getting by and
· never managed to save anything. ·

Spo rtS Jn
' bfie
' f

Marsh~II-Miami bout to feature
Pennington, Prentice as stars

the natiOn .

: .Dear Ann Landers: I just read

auto loan woul(j have ptiid off our don 't. My Tom was 37 years old. It ently being appealed, but here's the hit the intoxicated bicyclist. The
car.
can happen anytime, anywhere to Associated Press story. Thank you officer plans to appeal.
My children and I get by on anyone.·- FINDING MY WAY IN for passing it on.
Gem of the Day (Credit Chicago
Social Security benefits, which is a TAMPA, FLA ..
A drunken .bicyclist was seriously columnist Zay N. Smith): Guns
lot less·than what Tom was earning.
DEAR TAMPA : I am grateful to injured when he ran a stop sign and don 't kill people. They just make it a
I wish I could be a stay at home you for taking the time to write a let- pedaled into the path of a police lot easier.
"·,
mom, but that's not possible. I have , ter that could make a great deal of cruiser speeding to respond to a call.
Drugs are everywhere. They ' re
to work.
difference in the lives of many rea~­
The intoxicated bicyclist was easy to get, easy to usc and even cas'
Because of the Social Security ers. No one can make a point as well aY{ardcd $95,485. The judge ruled ier to get hooked on. If you ha~e
benefits, I am allowed to make only as someone who has been there. and that the police officer was partially questions about drugs, you need Ann
a specified amount of money per you certainly have. Thank you, to blame for the collision with the 58 Landers' booklet, "The Lowdown on
year. Our total income is less than thank you, thank you.
year old bicyclist, who suffered two Dope. " Send a self addressed, long ,
half of what it was. It is difficult to
Dear Ann Landers: Here' s broken legs and a fractured skull.
bu siness srze envelope and a check
explain to two young chfldren why another one for your stupid judge
l11e bicyclist's lawyer said the or money order for $3.75 (this
' we have to cut back on so many collection. I guess it pays to get ruling proves that "drunks have includes postage and handling) to :
ihings.
druqk m New Orleans. If this story rights, too.'' The man had a blood Lowdown, c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
I am doing everything I can to had not appeared , in a re.spectablc alcohol level of 0.13, which exceeds Box 11562. Chicago, Ill. 606 11 hold on to our home so that when the paper like the San Angckl Standard the legal limit of 0.10.
0562. (In Canada, send $4.55 )
children are ready for college, I can Times, I would no1 have believed it.
The lawyer argued that the police find out more about Ann Land ers
sell it and pay their tuition.
I hope you print it. -- J.H. , SAN officer could have avoided the acci - and read her past columns. visit the
My message to your readers is, ANGELO, TEXAS
dent had he not been driving so fast. Creators Syndicate wch page al
have life in surance. All the "if
DEAR J,H.: No comment from The officer said his siren was blaring www.creators.com.
onlys" in the world won't help if you me because this decision is appar- and his lights were nashing when he

• ·· ~

0

. .

.

... .. _

.. , , .

, , , , . .. ,.., . . . . . . . . o

-oo

_ _ _ _ _.c.;.._

�I

,.
Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Military .NewS'·'Notes _
Norris M. Roush
Navy P~tty Officer -3rd Class
Norris M . Roush, son of Norris L.
and Elizabeth R oush of Letart,
W .Va., recently returned to Gulfport, Miss., from a seven-month
dcploymept to Naval Stauon Roo~evelt Roads, Puerto R1co, while
assigned to the U.S. Naval M obile
Construction Battalion 74.
While deployed, Rous~ 's uml
acted as the area's alert battalion,
lending forward presence and providing construGti on support to the
region .
. Since their incepti on shortly
after the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
construction battalions h ave been
deployed around the world to pro-

VIde humanitarian assistance and
~u1ld r efuge shelters for th ou- .

sands of fighting forces. Seabees
are trained in bridge budding .

steel work, various .construction
and operating heavy equipment.
In addition, they possess knowl edge of combat. heavy weapon s

use and perimeter security tacucs.
wh1ch are nece ssary sk1ll s Ill order
to defend the1r positions
The 1995 gradua1e of Wahama
H1gh School jmned 1he Navy in
September, 1997 .'

Frld(\y, October 1, 1999
.
'

· Samantha
Navy

I. Conger

•
Constructionman

!ng forward presence and p.,rovld·mg constructio n support to the

Samantha I. Conger, daughter of
Sam and Cindy Conger of

region .
Since their mccption shortly

Coolville , re ce ntly returned to
Gulfport , Miss., from a sevenmonth deployment to Naval Stat ion Roosevelt R oads, Puerto
Rico, while ass1gned to U.S.
Naval M obile Constructi on Battalion 74.
Whil e deployed, Conger's unit
as the area's alert battalion , lend-

after the bombmg of Pearl Harbor,
· construction battalions have been
ocployed ar.ound the w orld to provide humani't arian assistance and
build refuge shelters for thousands of fl ghtmg forces. Seabees
are tramcd in brid ge building,
stee l work, various construction
and operatmg heavy equipment.

Friday, October 1, 1999 ::

In a4dition, they possess knowledge of combat. , heavy weapons
use and -perimeter security tactics,
which are necessary skills in order
to:'aeiend their positions.
The 1998 graduate of Federal
Hocking High School, she joined--:-~---the Navy in August, 1998.
In- Memory

I" :Memory Of

Buy, s,n or·Tr.ade
,

I

•

CldrtiiCt 'E. 'Fretmarr
Yf119 II , 1927-0d. I ,
1 997
.
.Sa&lt;lly """ "/ by famdy &amp;&gt;
fm•mfs tfiese past 2 years

,

.. lnthe

,CLASSIFIEOS! .

Access Gingerbread House
Pre·Schooi and Chllcl Care
584 N 2nd Ave.
Mlclclleport, Ohio
Is Now Accepting
Applications For Enroll111ent
Stop By or Contact
Allee Jacobs at 992·7328.

·140

Buslr&gt;P•

We UJDuld like' lo auy
Thank You lo 1he

/oUowitl(l bu•inflll '
for helplllfl rrwhe
Nalior•al FUhirYJ &amp;
Hunlb'IJ Day

a big •ucceul
· · 'PoMIIIo
· - LUIIIHI

-*'•• .....,•••

'Golden IIIII•
G•n Clu•
'UI John'• Deor
Procenlnl
'Chester fire ept.

'Holt..- fantlly
We apprelate your
help &amp; doraatiorul
Meis• Cou11ty
I .K.E.S .

Training

Found: Grey &amp; While Slrlptd Kit·
ten , near Greer Road Area .
(304)675· t 766.

BINGO

AMERICAN LEGJON,
POST 467
RUTLAND, OHIO
GUAUNTEED 60 I '
GAME, OVER 80
PEOPLE 80 A
GAME, OVER 99
PEOPLE 99.00 A
GJ¥E STIRBURST
$1,450.00 AND
COVERALL MOM &amp;
WED. DOORS OPEN
AT 4:30 GAMES
START AT 6:30

tt~""~~ 24 Hr. Taxi
al(l Delivery Service

Club Bingo On
ThuradiiY•
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 C11verall
$500.00 Starburst
: Progressive top line.

II 00-50

We deliver ALMOST anything

STONE

'L~!~~eD

St. Rt. 7

•

Culverts:

740-992-3954

·Complete
Remodeling

1st
' ' Birthday

happyJOth

We are having a cover dish dinner, so bring a

birthday!
plate and join in. We are featuring the Boelk

Love,
KaDEl Leanne

Family from Virginia. Rev. Bob Boelk will be
preaching and the Boelk Family will be

110

--

The~Cfiurch

wifftie tilesseo also

Racine American Legion

Love, Monuny &amp;

Membership dues for the year

Post

Help Wanted

Administrative

and

Clinical

115 E.

(740) 992-6667

American Legion Post

DILIVIRY AVAILAILI
tiCltJ&amp; 7am THRU 4pm

Hourly Rates

MONDAY-FRIDAY
7amTONOON

SATURDAY

·Room adllllons &amp; Remodeling
·New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing &amp; Gutters
·VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
•Patio &amp; Porch Decks

Will Be Made Available.
To Those In Attendance

Frte Eltlrfllf"

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992•6215

FIREWOOD
D1mp Tr11k.,
Pl•k·•r In nr y~rd

Recent y purchased:
Graham's Wood Products

Firewood Division

3.

or

0111

lllllng:

4. FNqUency of laouo:
Deily Mondey through

Frldey.
5. No. 011- publlohed

Annuelly: 2115.

e.

Annuol Subocrlpllon
Price.
$104.00
Home

Dellvtrtd.
7.

Locellon of Known
Office of Publlc.tlon: 111
Court Bl, P-.oy, Ohio,

lllllga co. Ohio 4579.

I.
Location
of
the
Heedquonoro .or Genarol

3611!1.

.

Average No. Coplea Each
laaue During Preceding 12
Montho:
15. Extent and neturo of
Circulation:
A. Total No. COpleo

4414.
2. Mall Subecrlptlono: 291.
C. Total Paid Circulation:
4705.
0. Fr,a Dlatrlbutlon by
Moll: o.V
E.
Frn
Dletrlbutlon
Outolda the Mall (ceo~tr-or
Othor Moone): 39.
G. Total Dlatrlbutlon: 4744.
H. Copltl Not Dletrlbutld:
1. OHice Uoe Left OVer,
Unaccounted, Spoiled Alter
Printing: 99.
2. Roturno -f rom Newo
.Agonto: 273.
1. Total: 5116.
Averogo No. Coploa of
Single IIIUI Publllhld
Naareal to Filling Deta:
15. Extant and notura of
Circulation.

and Firewood
' Be. Ball

35215 Ball Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

1-740.892-8142
uave a Message

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

6

pm leave

message. After

6 pm

Free £stinwtes
HOWARD

Hauling*Limestone*Gravel

Jim

ptMtD'oppp'J

HepQpp

(740) 99Z·3470

BuiUJoser &amp; Backhoe
Seroice•
House &amp; Trailer Sitea

New Store Hours
F~ Deer Season
Mon-Sat
8:30am ·8pm
Sun 1 pm -6 pm

Public Notice

A. Total No. Copleo
PJinted: 5100.
B. Paid Clrculetlon:
1. Saleo through Dlolero
and
Corrlera,
Strut
Vondoro ond Counter S.loe:

4489.

'
HARIWEIL .

SIDRAGE .

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Seplic Sy11errur &amp;

.
.

992-1717
L. Writesel

~

'· ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR .

2 taml ly, H&amp;R Block parking lol,
Oct. 1st &amp; 2nd, 9-2, exercise ma·
chtne."table &amp; lamps, books, dish·
es, clothing, tots ol mlliC
2 miles on Forest Run Rd , watch
for signs, furniture, mise Items.
9am-?, Oct

1-•.

1 family yard sale, Friday &amp; Satur·
day. OCtober 1·2. 9am-5pm Ron's
Gun Shop , Lasher Rd. just outSide Rutland. llke 124 towards
Langsville, first road to left, 1 2
miles, 740-742·8412.

918 South Third, Middleport. Friday- Salurday. Oclober 1·2, Sam·
Spm low prices.

2 Family Friday, Salurday, tO 00·
5.00, 13728 Slelo Roule 141, Bike,
Dishes, Clothes, Comforr Tops,
Misc.

81g garage sate- OctOber 1·2. 9·
4 Cleaned attic a,nd basement
Nice Christmas tree, lava toryf
vanity, 1• plastic gasllne, hard·
ware, linens. adult clothing &amp; etc.
112 miles off 124 on Minersville
H1ll frOm Ashland Plant.

3 Family Garage Sale. Antiques,
Toys, Furn111
.Jre, Ooth1ng For Everyone. Tools. Dishes, 1027 Davis
Road, Oil S.R. 218, Take Teens
Run Road. 1 Mile Turn Right. Top
or Hill, 1011&amp;1, 2nd

Larry Schey

··~

•&lt;
"750 East State Street

Phone (740).593-6671

Athens, Ohio 45701

Bidwell United Methodist Church,

Friday I Sl,' Salurday 2nd. lhe Sale
vou·ve been waiting tor. A little of
everythmg. Including Plus Size
clothes. 14 Birch Lane. Behind
Hutton's Car Wash ~

•ROofing
; FREE ESTIMATES

Friday/Saturday, 9:00·? 2 miles
Easl or Porler on 554 Baby Swing,
Bouncer, baby clothes. lots
Moret

HILL'S

MYEIS PAVINI
Henderson,

: SELF STORAGE

We Do•••

~9670 Bashan Road

•
•
•
•
•

Racine, Ohio

I·

45771
'740-949-221'1
Sizes

s·· x 1o•

10'x 30'

to

Hou11

WV

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Parking Lots
Basketball Courts
Driveways
Grading Work ·
Hauling Stone

005

START DATING TONIGHT!
Have Fun Meeting Eligible Sin·
gles In YOur Area. Call For More
lnformaHon. 1·800-AOMANCE ,
Exl 9735.,

FREE ESTIMATES
Cont. tWV003506

•
---------l
NowReatina
YOUR CONCRETE
-CONNECTION High·&amp;Dry
Self-Storage
•

r

Free Estimates

: 740-742-8015
: 877-353-7222 (loll free)
1111111 IMIIIDII
For New Local
Refem.l Sol'llice
:

Melga, Gallla &amp;
Surrounding areaa

740.742-3119

WORBYIIGU!

!UNIQUE
•

·No Embarr•Ament ...
You're Treated with R11pectl

; OLDIES

Rutland, Ohio

;

Truck seats, car seats, headllners,
truck .tarps, conyertlble &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. motoJ:cycle seats,
boat cov~rs, carpets, etc.

115 Salem St.

( Rutland, Ohio
.'_
OPEN
10.5:00 Tuea. Wed.

. :

..

Mon - Frl 8:30 - 5:00.
Over 40 'yrs experience

,

IThurt. .
.

: By Appolntment '

Pe11onals

A"'AtZING
PREDICTIONS!
COMPLIMENTARY READING'
Solves ALL Probtemst Love. Ca·
reer, Atid Money! Call Nowt 1·
954· n2-D796

(304) 675·2457 Ollla
(304) 674·3311 CoH Ph.

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

25 yrs experience

412TFN

WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS

-.;

Friday &amp; saturday OCtober 1 &amp; 2.
9am to 4pm .fiousehold Items,
cralts. Avon collecttbtes. women's
and men's clothes, anUque Iron
Bed. -1301 BulavHie Pike.

.COMMEROAL ... RESIDENltAL

: Complete Garages:
masonary/Wood

949-2168

(7401992-3131

AU. Yen! Solei Mull

Church Street, October 1&amp;t, 2nd,
9-5 PM Hoi Dogs. Baked Goods,
Drinks, Lots 0~ Items!

_ Sidewalks, Patios

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

No Credit • Slow 'Credit • Bankruptcy
Rapo • Dlvorded

33795 Hila"d Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

Start Dating Tonlghll Have fun
playing the Ohio Dallng Game, 1·
800-ROMANCE, eKtens10n 9681,

· 30

Announcements

Diabetic Pattenls: M8dicare Or
Prtvate Insurance, You May Be
Entitled To Receive Your Diabetic
Supplies At No Cost TO' You. For
More Information 1·888·677·
6561
New To You Thrin Shoppe
9 West Stimson. Altlens
740-592·1842
Quality clothing B.nd household
Items. $1.00 bag sale every
.Thursday Monday thru Saturday
9:00·5·30

9127199 1 mo. p&lt;l
Now Open: Poppy's Place, Gift &amp;
Craft SupPlies. 326 Matn Street,
Point Pleasant, wv. Across fr.om
PoSI Oli~e
-

DOZER WORK
Reasonnhit ~ Rt'"!h 1 ~'
:_!(J lt ' rfl · ~

Shoryla Dlnor Letart WV Open_8
AM·e PM Sheryl Mcdermoll
owner ~895-3721.

/-.\f Wiit ' l/1 ' 1'

40

(740) 388-9686

Big yard sale al n3 OUver Street,
~dleport . OCiober t, 2, 3.
Church basement sale, Tuppers
Plains United t.1ethodlst, Oct. 1,
(9·7), OCI. 2 (9·2). CIOihlng. dish·
as, furniture, food, misc.
Five family garage sa te· 1St &amp;
2nd, Bashan, 9:00-5:00. Crafts,
baby Items, fumnure, much more.
Five family yard sate, Oct. 4-5,
Skete·A-Way Rink, CheSler. 9·6,
furniture, carpet, microwaves, winter coats &amp; ctolhes, tools, toys,
RawlaJgh, lots of mise , 740-985-

9998.
Five !amity yard sale, October 45, Skate·A-Way Rink, Chester,
9am-8pm. Furniture, carpet, ml·
crowaves, winter coats &amp; clothes,
100~. 1oys, Rawtelgh. lot ol misc ..
740.985-9996.

Ba5s9t Hound Go.od With KICis,
To A Good Home, 740·446·0744 . .

CONSTRUCTION

Big Screen T.V.· Broken . Must
Haul. (740)245-5101).

• New Homes•
Remodeling '• Siding

Chairs, beds &amp;chester
304-875·1385.'

• Roofs

Ftea klnens 304·815·7453.

25 yra experience

dr~wers

Free to a,good home. 6 week ,old
Baagle/Austratlan Sh'epherd
Mixed! (740)·388-9485

(740) 992-2753
or 992-1'101

Garage Sale 88 Debbie Dr.
Oct -1st &amp; 2nd, 9·00-3 OOom Garago Door, picnic table, skio, car
seats. baby swing. boys. Infants
and maternity clothes, lot of misc.
Garage sate : 1149 Bulaville Pike,
Friday, October 1st, Saturday,

OCIOber 2M, 9 00 A.M. To 7
Garage Sale. 922 Jericho Road,
Cheshire. OhiO, OCIODer 1St, 2nd.
Rain Or Shin&amp;.

Pomeroy.
Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Oct.
lSI, ?nd, 3rd, 9am-5pm, 2nd
Street. Syracuse, 2 block's above
Hubbard'ii Greenhouse.
Garage sate- ttlree family, Octob·
er 1·2, Pine Grove Rd ., Five
Polnls area behind old L&amp;L Tire.
Jars, bicycles, dresser, chest.
table &amp; chairs, bow, goU clubs,
Ptav Statton games, woodbumer,
whee l horse and go carl, 740·
992-1093. AUCIIon Oclober 9.
Gigantic garage sale, two miles
on New Lima Ad , AuUand. Sept
30- Oct 2 9·00-5·30 Several
truck loads of stuff! Everything Is
reasonably pr~edl
Gigantic Yard Sale· ll's huge.
Furniture. chest freezer, washer/
dryer, antiques, clothing, antique
orchard sprayerf one cytinder gas
engine, knick knacks, and much
more 9am· 7 October 1 thru 4th.
Halfway between SR 124 &amp; 143
on County Ad. 1. Watch for signs.
Also 32' Filth Wheel camper
Come lf\,lrom 124 at Salem Center
or 143atcarpenter.
Large yard sale- Friday, Saturday,
9 00·? Behind Masonic Lodge In
Racine. Men's, women's plus size
clothing, household, Circle of
Friends figurine&amp; . books, lots of
misc. Rain or shine.
Loop Ad' Rulland. Friday-&amp; Salurday, Oclober 1·2, first trailer on
lalt above part&lt;.
Ocl. 2nd, 9·7, guns, baby llems,
clolhlng, loiS of misc., 2 miles oul
SR 143.
•
'

The Dally Sentinel • Page g·
70

Yard Sale
Oct. ~nd 9AM-1PM
Awnue,

Yard Sale. Sat Route 62, West
Columbia, 3 Houses from Poal
on~a.

Yard Sate: 403 Henderson Street.
VCR Tapes, TV Beanie Animals
Thuredly, Ftlday, Sal)lrday.

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Moodlspaugh Auctioneering
Complete Auctioneering Servic·
as Consignment auction- Milt
Street, Mlddleporl. Thurspays
Ohio License •7693 740-989 2823
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, complete
auct1on service.
Licensed
*66,0hlo &amp; Wosl VIrginia, 304·
773-!785 Or JOll.n :l-!11147
Wedemeyer's Auction Service,
Gallltldls. Ohio 740·379-2720.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absol~le Top Dollar: ~( I U.S. Sliver And Gold Coins, Proorsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
Coin Shop, 151 Second
' 74().446·2842

Clean Late Model Cara Or
Trucks. Low M11es. 1995 Models
Or Newer, Smith Buick Pontiac,
1900 Eastern Avenue. Gallipolis
Seeking motor bike with pedal
start up, call Mike anytime, 740·
992·1703.
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

$$$ Mlkl $35 -1&amp; /Hour, Set
Your Schedule, ·a, Your Own
Boll, And Work Out Of Your
Home, Anywhere. Great Payt
Paid Vacatlonat Caii1·8Q0.721·
8172

Wild klllans, under building; 740949·2087.

11 o

110

Help Wanted

Cooka, Fryera &amp; B11tenders
Needed Part·Time Day &amp; EvenIngs Experience Helpful. 740446-6647.
FaSt growing buatnesa looking for
cook. cashiers. and part lime
cashiers. S,nd raaume c/o: Tt\8
Dally Senllnel, P.O. Box 729·75,
Pomeroy, OH 45789.
Galtla ·Melgli Community Action
Agency Is Accepting Applica tions For A STAFF ACCOUNT·
Associate Degree In Business /Acco unting ·wuh Two
Years Nonprofit Accounllng Experience Required. Computer Experlenc~ A Must. Datal! Oriented
With Ab ility To Work Independently And As A Team Player.
Will Maintain General ledgers,
Journal Entries, Cash Receipts,
Budgets, Cash Flow. Inventory
Recards; Prepare Payroll Reports
And Financial Reports To Fuild·
tng Sources Resumes AnQ Applications Will Be Accepted At
The Cheshire Office. 8010 North
'State Route 7, Until 4:30 PM.-On
OCIOD&amp;r 8, t 999 GMCAA Is An
Equal Opportunll'( Employer.
Gallla -Meigs

Action

Is

I

peri anc;~e0~~~~::~:.''a~:~~~~:r

parlance A
W1th Ability
l o-do&lt;&gt;en·
dentty And As A Team Play. Witt
Process Accounts Payable And
Payroll, Prepare Cash Receipts,
And Maintain All Records Reaume And Applications Wilt Be
Accepted AI The Cheshire Office,
8010 North State Route 7, Until
4:30P.M On OCioDer 8, 1999.
GMCAA Is An Equal Opportunity
E~r
'
Help wanted· caring for elderly,
n1ghl shUt, 7pm·9am, 740·992·
5023
Houaekaeper- for disabled practicing attorney In Columbus. live
In, some care duties, room, board,
salary, 614·267·5354.

SINGEASI OOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTJff. Call Now Toll Free I ·
800·.,.69-816_,. For Appointment
To Come: To Nashvill e, TenQeS·
&amp;ee And Audition For Major
Record Producers. Internet
www.wctn.ap
State Tested Nurslng~ ssls tant S ··
needed for 100 bed Sftrred nurs· •
lng facility. Energetic, enthusiastic
and ded.cated staff to care for our ·
re sidents. Classes are betng set
up and Interested candidates
should ajtply to: Rocksprlngf Rehab•lltalloi'l Center, 36759 Aock~ '
springs Rd , Pomeroy, Ohio
•5769 , Sandy Bowen, LPN Instructor. Equal Opportunity Empk&gt;yer
Truck Ortvar Needed With Class ·
8, Or A Wllh Ha ~ mal And Tank
Endorsements For Home Heating
Ott Deh ~o~e ry. Weekend s 011 , In- ·
11urance. And Pa•d Time Off, Send
Resume To · CLA 481 ; clo Galti·:,O
polls Da11y Tribune, 825 Th1 rd,
Avenue Gallipolis. OH 45fi3t
TRUCK DRIVERS NEEDED
JCJ TRUCKING, INC.
IS HIRING IN YOUR AREA
WE OFFER: OTR and Regional
~ork available Compet1tve Pay
Pa•d weekly, d1rect depos11 avail
Health insurance &amp; Vacalion pay
Late model Convenlionals As·
signed TractOf"s
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
Wednesday Sept. 29th from 2pm- ,
4pm Comfort lnn,605 E Ma1n Sl ,
Jackson, Oh
For more information Experienced .
Drivers caiii ·(B00)-860-7384
EOE
WANTED
63 people 10 lose 30 lbs In 30
days &amp; earn SSSSS while surt1ng ·
the net. 1·868·229·8427 www.evl·
lell~. nellleelgtod

Wanted: Tractor Tra iler Drive ~
To Haul With A Coat Bucket, Experience A Must, If Interested
C,ll usa. 74().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 t421t . 8 A.M. -9 P.M.
7 DAYS l~s. Inc. Fee

IF YOU HAVE 5 ·395 lbs· To
Lose. Call To Earn Extra Income
Around Your Schedule . Call 1·
800-335-9771 .

$2,000 WEEKLYI Mailing 400
Brochures! Satisfaction Guaranteed! Postage &amp; Supplies Pro·
vlded t Rush Self-Addressed
Slemped Envelope! GICO, DEPT
5, Box 1438, ANTIOCH , TN .
3701 t ·1438 Slert l mmedlale~.

Full-Time Manageinent Position
With Local Aetall Jewelry Store.
Retail And Computer Background
Necessary Bene!lts Available,
Apply: Acquisitions FlnA Jewelry,
151 Second AV811Ue, Gallipolis.

WORK FROM HOMEI Explosive
Mall Order Business! Earn Big
SSSI Prr Ellorl, FIT Resullsl Call
24 Hours. Free lnfod 1·888·3685118 Op t
1 www work-

Immediate Openings lor house·
keeplngflau ndry aide. Part-time,
rolallng Shills. Apply Poinl
Pleasant Center/Genesis Eldercare, State Route 62, Route 1,
Bo K 326, Point Pleasant, WV.
Equal Opporrunlry Efl'4'loyer.

140

$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERNMENT REFUNDS. NO EXPERI&gt;
ENCE NECESSARY 1-800 -854 ·
6469 Ext. 5046.
$800

WEEKLY

POTENTIAL

Necessary CALL TOLL FREE .
t-800.968·3599 Exl 2601 $34.00
Refundabit Fee.
'DANCERS'
Top Dollar- (740)992-1i387.
ADVERTISING
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
ForWeiiEstabllshedLocaiCo
SERVING TRI.COUNTV AREA
"Must have gOOd communiCation
skills
.
'Muslhavogooddrivlngrecord
&amp;
Provide own Transportation
"roost have ability to be 8 TEAM
player
Send Resume 10. GALLIPOLIS
Dal~ Tribune, 82 ~ Third Ave,.,,
ADVERTISING SALES REP
d
A 11 11
b
PP ca ons are e1~g accep18
for Home Health Aides Appllcants should have a high school
diploma or G E 0 · reNabJe transportation, telephone In the home
aM wllllng to work week·ends &amp;
holidays. Must be motivated and
fla~~:lble. hpenence in providing
direct care or working wittl older
adults a plus. Will train. State
luted nursing assistants en couraged to apply. Applications
are available at 1fla Meigs Mull!·
purpose S,en~or Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, Oh. An EOE
Emp&lt;&gt;yer
ASSEMBLY AT HOMEtr Cralls,
Toy&amp;, Jewelry, Wood , Sewing ,
Typing .. Great Pay! CALL 1-800795·0380 Ext. 1201(24 Hrs).
ATTENTION:

IMMEDIATE OpENING

flee. Musl know or quick~ be
IO learn Corel {Word Pllrfecl) 7.0
Retirement plan available. A great
opporlunlry lor the maiUre. hardworking Individual willing to make
a long·term commitment Salary
commensurate with experience.
Respond lo P.O. Box 729-88, c/o
Ttle Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy, OH
45769

a

MOTHERS
OTHERS WORK
FROM HOMEI Mall-Order Part
Time &amp; Full Time. $650 -$3,6001

Full Training Provided!
Booklet can 1·888-234·

r~~~~~~~mlho~~~
.co

me

Need 7 l:.adles To Sell Avon, 74Q446-3358.
N~ad dependable person to work
wlfakands caring for tha elderly,
call 740-992·5039 Monday
::;:~ugh Friday beiWeon 8am·4pm

Needed: Carriers for Gellis Coun·
1y Areal1 -(800)·896-9706

October 1-2, Bash an , near fire·

blad&lt;smlth tools.
October 1st, 2nd &amp; 4 , Yellow·
bush Rd., Racln~

Part-Time Workers Needed, Apply tn Person: 220 Fourttl Avenue, AtA&amp;AAulo Detail.
Permanenl. part·ttme &amp; holiday

Put liTo Work!

S25 ·$75/Hr. PTIFT
1-888·890·3481
house Lots of stuff Including 1-_:.!!!!.~::!I~!!!!:~C....Attn. LPNs, ANs, EMTs And Paramadlcsl Become An RN Or BSN
Graduate And Increase Your Income Without Going Back To
Schootl To Schedule Your Inter·
view In Huntington, Call Angela
Copeland By Ocl 7 1-800-7372222
·
AVONI All Areasl To Buu or Sell.
'
Shirley Spears, 304-675-- 1429·

Garage Sale: October 2nd, 9·7 II One day sale· Saturday, October
sales person's needed In Acqul4 Mile Soulh, Rio Grande, On 325.
2,
Tuppers
Plains,
ned
to
Cltgo
sitlons
of Middleport, 740·992·
Nortl Track, Garden Tractor.
62 ~
Small Tra1ter, Coflee Table, 2 End ' Some furniture, raln cancels.
Tables, Much Morel
Sat OCI 2nd, Libby Fisher's,
PHAAMACYTECHPOSITION
Johns
St.
orr
Ye
llowbustl
Rd .,
G1g.intlc Yard Sale: Clothes, Baby
Racine.
Apply AI Frulh Pharmacy, 2991
things, Tools, Nlc-naks, Hoblco
State Route 160, Gallipolis.
Model Plane. Amish Oak Table/
Saturday, October 2, 8:00·5 :00.
Across From Holzer Hospital. No
Chairs, October 1·2, 9.00am to?
Was Gilkey, 999 Brownell Ave· Babysitter For 2 Boys Ages: 4 a Phone Calls Please. We Offer A
Grean Terrace li'ailer Park
nue. Middleport. Two Gravely g For Second Shill, 2 :30 . 11 :ao Career, Not Just A Job. Full·Time
tractor and anach.ment. guns, , P.M Preferably Green School Poslllon, Wllh~£~~i!~~
Moving /Yard Sale. October 1at,
cross bow, 85 Ford Ranger, boy's 0/strlct, 3 Days A Weak, Flef1r· bursment Of
2nd, 8:00A .M Tlll5·30 PM . 62
clothes, baby to 3T. lots of house- ancas Required, Call 740·446- Current Tech
Ann Dnve.
hold Items, men's and woman's 0«0, 740-446.0513
Required
clothes, tin cans, tool box, boat,
October 1st, &amp; 2nd, Clay Townlotsofthlngstobuy, comeseet
Bartender Wanted, 740-441· Positions Availab le. For FIN's &amp;
house, 8-5. Take Route 1 South
1428
LPN'S. ExperiBnce Pay &amp; ShiH OWTo 218, Turn LJeft On Lovers
Saturday, October 2nd only. Big
ferential Offered. Apply At: Scenic
Lane.
churctl varct sate, three mllas Church Treasurer, 24 Hn Par Hills Nursing Center. 311 Bucksoulh or Reedsville, 114 mile north Week, Oolng Bookkeeping &amp; ridge Road, Bidwell, Ohio. 740October 2nd. In Centenary Cloth·
ol Forked Run Stale Park on SA Mise oiiiCe ChOrea. Must be 446-71~0.
lng, Baby Iiams: Baskets, New (lift
124, Maslels residence.
Compuler Llle1111e. Send Resume POSTAL JOBS To 518 _35 /HR.
Items, Misc.
tCJ : Grace United MettlOdlsl
Slale
Roule
124,
Racine
&amp;cross
Church,
600 Second Slreel. Galli- INC. BENEFITS, NO EXPERI·
Porch Sate· 80 Locust Street, Iron) Hill's C11go. October 111, 2nd, polls,OH. 45631
ENCE FOR APF' AND EXAM
Saturday /Sunday, 9·•· Mens
41h. Old (child's) rocking chair,
INFO. CALL 1·900·813·3585,
Clothes. Jeans. Sweaters. Housagirl's and women's clothing, dolls, com'puter Users Needed. Work EXT 14210. 8 A.M. -9 P.M, 7
ho/d,.CO'a( Antiques.
IO'fS, klle of new mlsc. llems
Own Hrs. $25K ·$80KJ Yr. 1-100- DAYS Ids inc Fee
Sal Only 9:00·2:00. 175 Texas
536-0488 X 1n1. www.t cwp.com
RtlplfiiOryTheflplot
Rd. Lamps, Household items. Thursday, Ftlday, Salurday, Rl 33
ont mile past 4 lane to Athena. Driver rowner Operator • Chicago
/Tectlnlclan
Clolhes. '1\vln ~ed .
New and used Nlka ctoltles, new Area Truck Company Needs
·
Sahlrdlljl 9 To 5, 35 Garlltld Ave· shoes, toad of clothes &amp; misc. Owner Operators To Operate Full Time Position For CRTT I
nue, C101cetled II Rain.
Cheap. If rain will have next day.
East Of ROCkies. Gr'eat Pay, New RAT. Will Conslcter New Graduate
Trailers. Maximum Miles. Small Possessing Valid Ohio License
Saturday October 2nd, 9:00 A M
Yard &amp; bake· sale , Sonshlne Fe!t
w
C
Or Permit. Must Be KnowledgeTo 4.00 P.M. 209 LeGrande Boul· lowshlp of Dorcas United Method· Flee 0 wnar 81come 811 8
able in All Aspect or Aosptralory
782·5400
Ext
1!07.
1\/Brd
tat Church, SA 124 In Dorcas,
Ttlarapy Including ABGe And
0Ciober2nd,9-4.
Drivers: 2 weak Paid CDL'Traln· EKGs Compellllve Poy. Conlacl
Sepiember 30th, -October 2nd,
. nt
lng. No Exp. Needed. No Money, Doelon Hoopllel Nelaonvlllo, e
t 722 Fairview Road Bidwell, Gins
Pt. Plea . .
Nor Credl17 No PrOblem! Earn Up 740·753-1~1 Ext 11262.
..,
Sizes Infant -8, Mens , Womens
&amp;
VIcinity
To
$32,000
1101
Vi.
w
/Full
Bene·
CkllheS.
Ills. P.A M. Trensporl Call Toll River Fronl Honda Gallipolis,
Yard fGa.rage Sales: October 1at, Big Yard Sfle . Front Street In Free 1-877-230·6002 www.otr- Ohio, Service Manager And
Clean Up Pof1lon Noeded,Call 1·
2nd. 9·5 . Mynlo Avenue. Close Mason. October 1,2. Lots of New drlvers.com
800-982-9253, Or 740-4&lt;8-2240.
To The Kanauga Drive-Inn, Turn Halloween slull. WebTV, Ster·
eo's, Car &amp; Truck Bra's. Much EARN $50K A Year. Comp·U· SECRETARY for buay non-prollt
AI Five Sler Morlgago.
'
Med Seeko Fuii/ParHimo Modi·
mora. too numerous I&lt; menuon.
cal Processors. PC Required. No agency. A minimum of high school
Yard Sake: Women's &amp; Men's
and twa year eKPflrlence.
Clolhos, Houoehold Items. Ociob· Moving Sale: SaVSun. A'ntlquea, Experience Neceaaary. Will diploma
Must posaaas good communicaFurniture. Household IIams &amp; Ttaln. caM 1-800-458-4135
or 1&amp;2. 9 00.2:00
tion skills (wrllttn ana oral),
Misc. tOO 91h Strati against tho
Farm Work In South aide area, phone skills, and experience In
Yar~ Sale 128 Basllanl Dr. lot &amp; lloodwall ln Pl. Pl .
mo&amp;lly sauonal machinery op- Mlcrosolt Wor~ and EKcal.
2nd Plus Size Clolhts Md loll of
October t/2, Fri/Sal BAM-?, 991 I eration during planting and fall
Misc.
of databa11
a ptua.
Spruce Avenue . .Womena,/Jr. t1arv11t. Wagea Includes hone Knawledge
Sana reoumo
by October
18,
Var,d Sale Friday &amp; Saturday 2 MIIIOI Clolhlng. Baby Clothes, Call 8:00 to tO:OOPM . 304·757· 1999 to: FACTS, IS Olivo Slrotl,
etc.&amp; Mlac ..
miles out Unlo Kyger Rd.
85n.
Gallpollo, Ohio 45631 EOE,M.f'&lt;ti

Business
Training

Instruction
EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
OAEE QUICKLY, Bachelor s,
Masters. Doctorate. By~ Carre;
spondence Based Upon Prior Eaucation And Short Study Course.
For FREE Information Book let
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY I -800-964-8316

180

MEDICAL BILliNG Earn Excel·
lent Income. Full Training. Com·
puter ReQuired. Ca ll Toll -Free
800-54().6333Exl230t .
MEDICAL BILLING. Earn EJCC&amp;I·
lent $ S $ I Processing Claims
From Home. Full Training Provld·
ed. Computer Required . Call
Medlworks Toll-Free 1·800·S40·
6333 Ext 2312
Medical Doll ·Entry Aopa
Nettdtd For Entrv Level Posl·
tlon. FT /PT, Excellent Pty PC
Req. C.ll I00-2t8-1506.

Wanted To Do

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to tne milt Just call
304-1i75-1957
Handyman seeking work, available now, 740·949·1035.
Jlms Drywall &amp; Construction.
New Construction &amp; Remodel!
Drywall, Siding, Roors. Addl·
nons, Painting. etc (304)674·
4823 or (304)674-0155.
Klms Cleaning &amp; Interior PaintIng Commercial. Re sidentiaL
Reasonable Rates. Free estl·
mates call 304-874-4623.
Multi Family inslde·outslde Yard
Sale, A l1t!te of everything; "Tools'
To much to mention. Also Mums,
Gourds. Pumpkins.; Fell Hanging
Baskets, Ferns. Green Beans,
sweet and Hot Peppers. cumunb·
ers. Do not miss this one 1 m1te
w.est Rodney next to Jordo11s
Gas at Perry Green House. October 1st tO 1Oth
Wilt clean your home or office,
and do fall cleaning, have excel·
tent references. call 740·9926530 or leave a message.
Wtll do babysitting 1n my home. t
have references (304)675-4637.
Wll i Do Patnttng &amp; Odd Jobs ·
$4.00 1A Hour, 740·367·0140
Wilt mow grass., clean out old
butld1ngs , old houseli, etc. All
help 1s appreciated , 740-949·
0709.
Will paint Hgu111 (Interior &amp; Ex·
tenor) Will
Mob!lt Hgmt
Root&amp;. Barn• A Tin 8ooft EK·
per!enced, References &amp; Free
ESiimales (304)895·3981 .

e•'"'

FINANCIAL
Bualness
Opportunity
INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bust·
near with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have Investigated
lhl onenng.
2.8 Cento /Min. PHONE CARD
All. EASY $$ MONEYII FEW
Hours I Earn $500 -$5, 000 /Wk.
CASH I FREE Silas 1-800·9979888, 24 Hrs.
ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earo .
$1,000 A Day. No Selling . Not
MLM. For Free Information Pack- ~
age Call 1·800-786·8849, 24 Hrs.
XT 27.
AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 · 20 Loca tions $4K ·$10K .
$4,000 +IMo , Income • All
CASH! 100% Finance Ava ilable.
1·800-380-2615 • 24 Hrs.
CHRISTMAS IS COMING, Tur~ ,
Your Spare Time lnlo EXTR~ •
$$$. PTIFT. Men ·Womon Homemakers Average 5200 Ta _
$2,000 Per Molllh. Call Now! 1 ~~

80().==~~~32W==~·----------~"

DENTAL BILLER Up lo $15 ·S.5:
/Hr Dental Billing Soltware Com· '
pany Needs People To.Procau
Medical Claims From Home'.'
Training P"rovidad . Must Own
Computer. t ·800·223·1t 4~ Exll-·

II~;~~~:~;~~:;:ToB~e~;~
1
1~~~~
i

800·826·8523
www.glassmachanlx.com

II

.j,

,. , . ;••.,
' "' · ;;·:;,;·;;.:;;·.:.,i;;.;.:·;;.;:;,:.:,:,;.;;;:_;..:,:;;,;;.;;:;_;;:::::::=.:::::,::::;::::~~:l!l!:U!B~:::!&lt;~D!c-x&lt;::=::&gt;. ~~
iiiiiiiil..i'•.•..•.;·'i' ;~.-·~-······.....-··~-i-.--~~--~-~-~·~~·...-·-·············;.·~- ---~--··-~·;;.;.~·
;·;~;··~·;·~-,;.;,;. . -.~·~·; ; ; ,·
:;•;,;;r;---·'
;.:-::
-;-;:•-·
·~-~--::;;,;;~-;;;.;.,;,;
- ' 1. . . . . . . . .________....._______________________~~--------------~---- ... .. --~- ~--... ·~ - ·~
~·

~·""'""'··

.., ,,;~ ..-

• ~ • . • •:

.~ .· "'1 • »-\.&gt;/I. ~ ,.I. ,.Jo,.,_ ..,. :.... .• ~~ .. --.......,

~

,...,,

•

u·;&lt;t·~·· ·

....

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

I,

.

'

Gtlllpollo careor ColleGe
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayi74Q-446-4367,
1-800-214-0452,
•90-05·12746.

LEGAL SECRETAA~

OWN A COMPUTER, PUT IT TO
WORK . $850 -$3.500 MD PT IFL
FREE Delalls: Log Onlo: hllp II
www hbn.c:om Access COde 5298

Hlvo A computar7

athome.comlnlooleandkevm

•

..

.~

Help Wanted

Sl .OOO's PAID WEEKLY For
Stuffing &amp; Mailing Envelopes .
Your Own Hoursl COMPANIES
NEED MORE MAILERSII Exclllng
Info. RuSh S.A.S.E.: KeySione,
Box 95 t ·INO Joplin, MO 64802.

V·

Giveaway

2 Siamese Mhc. Kittens, 1 Male, 1
'Female. LoiS Of Wtllte, 6 1/2
Weeks Old, To G0&lt;1d Home Only!
7Mr44~2317.
'

SMITH'S

40 742·8888.

(10) 1, 19911

137 Peart Street. Middleport. Saturday, October 2nd. 9:00-? Rain
cancels

Big garage sate, October t-2.
former Betty Moore res1dence. SR
7 bypass between Pamlda. and
Dave's Small Engine.

Be Paid In Ad\llnee.
Q£APLflE: 2:00p.m.
tllo doy bolo"' the ad
Ia to run. SundBy
ediHon • 2:00p.m.
Friday. M,onday edition
·'0:00a.m. Saturday.

Quality Driveways ;

FREE ESTIMATES

U1Ui1ie•

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

u.. -

1202 College Rd .. Syr'acuse, 8·
4pm, Ftlday &amp; Salurday.
·

1st Time This Veer: All Sizes
Clolhing Boys Nlke, Levi, Home
Interior. Etc 781 Second Avenue,
1011&amp;1, 2nd

Stop In ~nd See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
I
WindOWS
•Room Additions

.'

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

CREDIT PROBLEMS???

Co. Rd'19

D. Free. Dlotrlbutlon by
Mall: o.
E.
Free
Dlotrlbutlon
Outalda the Mall (Coirler or
Other_Moeno): 3i.
G. Total Dlotrlbutlon: 4811.
H. Copln Not Dlllrlbutld:
1. Office
Left Over,
Unoccountld, Spoiled Altar
Printing: 127.
2. Returne from Newt
Aganto: 162.
I. Total: 5100.
ChoriH w. Govey
Publlohtr

..

Beginning Sept. 26th

2. Mall Subectlptlont: 283.
C. Total Peld Clrcullllon:

4n2.

Rutload, Ohio
American Legion
Post467
Beech Grove Road
Gun .noot
.
Slug and Shot
.••
Matches
Every Sunday
.
1:00 P.M.
.

Howard

EICAVAIING CO.

Bulldozer Services

.
.

'

740.985·4180

Sand*Topsoii*Fill Dirt*Mulch

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

198 River Street, Kanauga, Oc·
Iober 1st, 2nd, 9.00·5·00, Rain Or
Shine. No Early Birds!

CommuOity Yard Sale· 't0/1st, 10/
2nd. Ann Drive, State Route 7
South Before Raccoon Creek
Bndge.

..

Linda's Palntlnt

3/11/99TFN

22 yr.. weal

.
Printed: 5116.
B. Pold Circulation: .
1. Soln through Dtoltro
end
Carriers,
Strnt
Vandoro and Counter Solao:

Hauling
Limestone &amp;Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138

Pomoroy, Ohio

Everyone
Welcome

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Yard Sa le October 2nd at 11 !5
Harrisburg Rd. Bidwell , Oh.

All Yerd Sale• Muat Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:00J'm tht
day before the td le to run,
Sunday &amp; Monday edition.
1:OOpm Friday.

4 FamilY Sale: September 30th,
October 1st &amp; 2nd, 11 Mites Out
141 From Willis Funeral Home.
Left On Gage, 1 Mlle On Left,
740·379·2130

Business Services

LUMP AND STOIII COAl
I.I.A.P. VOUCHIIS

Aluminum

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
Buolnlll OHICII or lhl
Publlohera: 111 Court S£
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789. _
9. Publloher: Ch1~11 W.
Govey, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio. 4576!1.
Editor: Cho~..,. Hoeflich,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45780. ·
10. Owner: Rolph J.
Martin,
chnl,3800
Colonllllde Pkwy., Ste 450,
Blrmlnghom, AL 35243. Tom
Undlay, 221 Spring St., PO
Box 887, Jelleraonvllle, IN
47131. Jeck Quick, 136 E.
Moln ' St. PO Box 1317,
Lexington, SC 29071.
•
11. r.lortgogn: Retlramtnt
Syotamo of Alabame, 135 S.
Union St., Montgomery, AL

New Homes
,Garages
Replacement
Doors &amp; Windows
Wood &amp; Vinyl Siding
Custom Work
Kitch_ens ~ _Bat~s
Insured
24 Yrs. Experience

Dine in/Carry out

Anytime-Anywhere

YOUIIG'S
CARPEIIIER SERVICE

A Va~iety Of Screenings

.Public Notice

602

&amp; Noodle Dinner
Sunday, 11 am

ACCEPTED

1939 Chatham Avenue, Saturday
October 2nd, Air Conditioner,
Furn1ture. Sweepers. Ctllldrens
Clothes, Dishes, Household
Items. .

October 1st. 2nd, 3rd,
1826 Pleasant Valley
01 Rio Grande) New,

R.L.MASH
CARP.ENTRY

Commander

45769
74()-992-2104

Gaa-A&amp;C-Mig

1783 Shoeslrlng Ridge. October
tst, 2nd. 9·5.

74N87.all

Steak

124 Wellston, Ohio
740-384-6212

1103 Ohio Ave. Fr!day/Saturday.
8 00-4 00, Washer/Dryer, 55 gal
llsh tank. Lots of Yard $,ale Items!

3 •Famlly Friday and Saturday,
October ! st &amp; 2nd 9:00am ·
s ·oopm. 538 Skidmore Rd . a
Whee ler (parts), krafts, odds &amp;
ends Gravely, chal11 saw.

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville. OH 45723

Pomeroy, Ohio

Sr.

1 2 Miles out Route 218; Sep t.

3 Family. Friday, October tst,
Salurday Oelober 2nd 9:00·5:00
Fraley Drive Off State Route 35,
1st Time This Year! Girts, Boys
Clothing, Toys, What-Knots.

TREE SERVICE

Yard Sale ~ct 2,3 Nick Knacka,
Clothes, 9/fo milts out of Evtr·
green on Hemk&gt;ct&lt; Rd.

- George

Memorial Drive

Porta bitt
Welding Services

JONES'

&amp;

Toys

3 Fam11y: Clothes. Books. Guns,
Knives, Household items, Longa·
berger, Home Interior, New &amp;
Used. Central Ave, Fho Grande,
Around corner from Rio T~re . Frl·
day &amp; Salurday, 8·()().4·00

Dealers.

gifts for lamily members

experience

BRAMHI COAL
COMPANY

(7 40) 592-5025 Athens -·

Case-IH Parts'

Please consider buying

geriatrics preferred but not required.
Contact: Human Resources

information you need, please call

Public Notice

William Safranek, Attorney

Factory Authoriz ed

Must be an Ohio Licensed RN, prefer BSN.

Charles Young from Akron. Any other

Tuesday, October .5, 1999
10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Mason County Senior Center
Free To The Public

Bankruptcy contact:

Equipment Parts

Memorial Bricks as Christmas

for-24-hour:--administration- ofnursing services. on Skilled Nursing Facility.

of the Free .Methodist Church of Ohio, Rev.

Health Fair

602

MEMBERS WELCOME.

witb-tli~
e -t----J-Besponsible

Annual Vistors of the District Superitendant

All Makes Trac!or

2000 are due. Hel p Post meet
Nov. 11 District turn in. NEW

O.IILoglng

Stptam.,.r 30, 19911.

For information regarding

DEPOYSAG
PARtS

Info 304-675-5463

•· ,....----===::=::::::===..._.....,
HEAD NURSE

singing.

...

con relieve a deblor of linonc1ol obligolions an~ arrange o lair d~lribulion ol
osse~ among rred~ors Aper!On going lhrough bonltuplcy miiY reloln csrluin
property, known os · mmpl' properly, lor his or her personal use. lho may
indude a car, o house, dolhes, ond household goods. You should dired any
quoslions regarding bankrupll'f loon aHornty before proceeding.

7!22/TFN

Katly•n
Josephine Allman

992-9178

No. 145-980.

I

I

Oct. 1-2-3 8 am - S. pm

~appy

U you're ltOpped
1Jy thl• Trooper
today, wbh hila ia

H8N

~- PubllcMion

.A

9:00 to 4:30
Sat. 9:00 t'o 12:00

Mon.- Fri.

DANKRUPTt::Y

985-4473
Mason Co. Fairgrounds

BfiR-J

o.lly Stnllnel.

11111

ESTIMATES

and join. ~n. our fellowship and blessing.

Pastor Charles S:wigger at

STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP
MANAGEMENT AND
CIRCULATION
1. Tlllt of Publlc.tlon: The

&amp; Compare

Stop

4" - 48" in stock

ADVANCED OFWNAGE SYS ENS INC

iOBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

Church - Bring your love ones and enjoy a

hv WashinO'fnn

Public Notice

Ll .. l ...

Creek Rd Nama Brand Boys and
Girls Clothes, Toddler, Little T!kes

291h, IIYu Oct 2nd

8" Gravelless Leach •
100' -1000' Rolls I" &amp;3/4" 200# Wale1 Line
Full line of G'Os Pipe &amp;RegulalDIS Wale[ Siorage Tonks

I

• New Homes

roots in our church, you are invited to come

Yard Sale

Yare!' Sale

Va&lt;d Sale Ocl t &amp;2 Dollhouoos.
Lillie lYkes, Kldo clolhes. Home·
WOOd Or, off Route 160 Portar

Lost- brown/white lemale Pit Bull

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Tuppers PlainS, OH

70

on Taxa~ Ad. reward .,. call 740985-9822.

70

740-985-3813

MODERN
SANITAnON SERVICE

If you have

745J-742·2237.

0109

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

Top Soli
Mid-Ohio V!!lley Truck Driver Training
Weekday classes 8to SM·F. Also evenings &amp;weekends.
• daises lor boih class A and 8 Ucense
• Finaming and lunding avodable based on ellgibdily
"98% plocemenl on Class A~ainlng'
Ucensed by lhe Ohio Departmenl ol Hl~hwtJy Solely
Morieffa, Ohio 4S7SO
Conlod Ed Adorns 1-800-648-3695 or (7401373-6283 Ext

Family Day at the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist

great service in the House of God •

red &amp; vthila boxer/ pM bull,
New Lima Ad, Rutland vlclnlly,

1 rllfle oft Bulavllle on Georges

FREE

ALEXANDRIA, Va . (APlDenzel Washing ton will star 111 a
mov1e about a 1971 h1gh school
football team that overcame
rac1al SITife to win the stat1e
championship.
" Remember the Titans,"
based on Alexandria's T.C.
Williams High School, will be
filmed in Atlanta. but residents
here are getting a taste of Hollywood as Disney Films turns to
the city to help recreate details
like police uniforms and Virginia accents.
In 1971. the city 's three h1gh
&gt;ehools had just merged"intoT.C. Williams High Two of the
three schools were predominantly black.
.
The team was the ce nter of
racial tenswn after a white football coach was passed over for
the top JOb m favor of H ermao
Boone, who will be portrayed

Areo, 740·245-5965.

11noMn

Gravel

Sunday Oct. 3rd 10:30 AM

Found Puppy, Yellow Lab Mix,
Approx 4-6 Months Old, Rodney

Lost- small white female dog with
brown spots, child's pel, 740-742·

Cail for details
740-992-0038

• Garages

Denzel w::rlhington
to star in movie
about high school
'70s football team

Pomeroy • Ml~dleport, Ohio

•;

�,.

•

Page 10 • The Dally Sentll'!el

.'

..

Friday, October 1, 1999

~

October 1, 1999

•

Pomeroy•

•'

Ohio

OOP

The DAIIu Sentinel • Page_11

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
320
EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR
Sand Us A One Page Form We

Do The Rest No 0 rect Selling
Free Into Package 1 800 831
2385 24 Hrs Ext 63

HUGE OPPORTUNITY With A
Revolut ionary Telecommun•ca
tlons System Free Naflonwlde

Vo•camall Call Forwarding Call
Screening LD Calls 7 9c l Min
NOW SELLING GI~Je Away ~rae
Trials 1 800.310 6718 EKI 817

442 0442

1 95 Acres Seven Rooms Plu s
Bath Two Ga rage s Barn 10 5
Mtles To Gat tpolts 740 36 8
8942

...

2 Bedrooms In town Home tor

Sale (740) 446 2857

With This Proven

New OoubleWide Repo never
J ve d In still under warranty

(3041755 7191
Spec oat 28x80 3 or 4BR $1000
Down $349 per mo Fru Dehv
ery &amp; Setup 1 800-691-6n7

Bedroom House W/3 Acres
Few Fruit Trees 2 Bed
rooms Bath Upstairs 1 Bedroom
Front Room Dmmg Room Ut1hty
Room Kitchen Bath Downsta rs
S1ts On Storys Run Road OH Route 7 Information !740) 367

7576 Allo r Noon

MAKE MONEY FROM HOME

ALDER
Mobile Homes
lor Sale

$40 500 oo

080

Tested &amp;

hood WasheriOryer Hook Up No
Pets Second Tra1ter on left on
Roush Ferrall Orllfa ol Camp
Conley Road S320 month plus

deposit

For

Lease

Pomeroy At 124 600 sq II cus
tom parking ale carpet ceiling
fan $350/ month $150 deposit

3 000 Sq Ft Commercial Build
tng 10 Henderson lor rent tease
or sale Call Sonny Reyn_.o lds

3 Bedroom Trailer 1 M1le Ofl 160
VInton Electric New Carpet Prl

vote Lot $300/Mo $300 Deposot
No Pets 740 388 9326

Investment Call 800 811 2H 1
Cadet 100112 Vtstt http 1/tradex
1&lt;: oomopsecretsl

510

Household
Goode

$45 JHr Medical Billing Software
Company N~eds People To Pro

7795

cess Medical Claims From Home

Dfyer lor Sale &amp; Dinette Set

$75 (304)675-6693

Training Provided Must Own
Computers 1 800 434 55i8 Ext
667

For Sale Reconditioned wash
ers dryers and refrigerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jackson Avenue (304)675-7388

MEDICAL BILLING Unhmoted In
come Potenttal No E)(penence
Necessary Free Information &amp;

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

CD ROM Investment S4 995

Washers dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs AP,pliances 76
Vine Street Cal( 740 446 7398

$8 995 Financing Avatlable Is
land Automated Medical Servlc
e&amp;

1 888-818.0128

Inc 80Q-322 1139 Ext 050

Void In KY IN

~T

START YOUR OWN VENDING

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nlshed and unfurnished security
deposit requ~red no pets 740

Business For As little As $1 0001

All CASH BUSINESSII t 800
220-2985 2• Hrs

992 2218

WE ARE ENGERGIZING E
COMMERCE ON THE INTER
NElli! H;we Your Own Turn Key

1 bedroom apartment In Middle
port all ulllllles peld $270 par

Online Business Through •HAND

7806

month $100 depos11 740 992

TECHNOLOGY" low Start )Jp
Cost Gives You A Complete
Package With Mentonng And
Training To Help 'lou Succeed
Calltvan Turner 877 324 8135

Molgo Co
Rd

Acres $17 000 Water On Briar
R1dge Ad 7 Acres $13 000

Money to Loan

liS NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remaining Payments
On Property Sold! Mortgages!

AnnuiiiOSI Sotllomentsl lmmo
dlato Quotoslll "Nobody Boats
Our Prtcea • National Contract
Buyers 800 490 0731 Ext 1Ot
www nationalcon1ractbuyers rom
$SS OVERDUE BILLSIII SS$ Con
IOiidate Debtsl Same Day Appro
val NO APPLICATION FEESII t
800-1163-9008 Ext 936 W'HW help-

11 Acres $14 000 Or 9 Acr

es $12 000 Danville SR 325 9

TCI28586

220

Ruuano Whiles Hill

a

Hous.e
5 acres heat pump
remodeled
asking
needs
$30
two miles east on Long
Run lrom Bashan Fire Dept 74().

ooo

Call NOW For Free Maps +
Owner F1nanclng Into Take 10%
Off List Price On Cash Buysl

992 7945
Must Sell! 4 Bedrooms 3 Batns
Brick Ranch On 2 12 Acres
Cathedra! Ceiling Full Basement

""HOMES FROM $10 0001'" 1
5 Bedroom local Repos &amp; Fore
closur11 Fee Financing Posai
lllo For Listings 1 BOO 719 3001
xl185

320

FREE MONEYI Its True Never

Free 1 800-724-6047(~ Hrs)
CASH Or LOAN! Farm Capital
Will Purchase Or Loan Against
Your Government Farm Pay

menta (CRPIPFC) Call Farm
Capital t 888 FARM ACT (327
6228)
CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monthly Payments 20 50% Save
Thousanda Of Dollars In Interest

Ncn-Prolit TCC 8(\0-758-38«
CREDIT PROBLEMS Stop Hero
WI Can Http Loans AvallaDto
$3 000 And Up No Fao 1 877
ee:H269Ext221
CREDIT PROBLEMS
STOP
HEREII WE CAN HELPII LOANS
AVAILABLE $3 000 AND UP
CALL TOLL FREE t 877 663

92011 Exl231
GET YOUR CASH NOW I Oldest
BUjlrS Of Slructured SaHiomonts
Annultlel And Government Farm

Paymonla Alao Purchasing lot
terl11 And Private Mortgages

Mobile Homes
for Slle

91 MansiOn moble home 14x60
two bedroom one bath total elec
triC stove refrigerator central air
Ready to move $12 500 740

" ""lOOKI"""'
5 Bedrooms 2 112 Baths ov1r
2 000 sq II lor tess than $400
mo FREE delivery &amp; set 1 80o948-5678
12x85 mobile nome remodeled
Including f11nace new paint extra
clean call after 5pm or leave

RECEIVING PAYMENTS? In

Annully Hlghut Prices Free
Ouo1o1 Why Wall? Call Rich 1
800-118H&lt;450
WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS
MORTGAGES
DEEDS OF
TRUST NATIONWIDE CALL
BEN OWENS (TOLL FREE) 1
888-399-1 &amp;e5

230

Protetelonal

Services
Mounts Tree Service "The Tree
Profenlonata• Bucket Truck
Service Top Tr im Removal

9turr'4). Grinding Free Estimates
Fully lneured Works Comp Bod
well OH Call And Save t 800
838·11'118 74o-388 11648 Owner

Ride "'Iuul
TURNED DOWN ON
80CIAL SEC:URITY ISSI?
No Ftt Unless We Wlnl
1-888-582-3345

•1[/\ L hTAf E

310 HOIIIII for Sale
1111 A.S A~ LIOUIDATIONIIII Re
ponotlldl Mutt Sell 4 Brand
- · Super lntullltod Affordable
PrelaD Home Packagea Highest
Quollty. Fast Easy Construction
'tbur Rtundatlon ~415 Bedrooms
1-eoo-t7oH032 Sacrlf&lt;!ll
SO DOWNI HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED!
GOV T
FORE
CLOSURES! CALL NOW FOR
REGIST""TIONI J •oo 43•
2434EXT 3205 (NO FEE)

2 br apt in New Haven call alter
noon 304 882 2937

New dresser w/ mirror &amp; a chest
super single water bed asking

$300 lor ell 304 675 4525 esk
lllr Lise

of 1968 which makes II
to advertise ~any preference
I mltat1on or d1scrlm1nat on
based on race color religion
sex famWial status or natiOnal
ongin or any lntentioh to
make any such preference
limitation or diSCrimination "
This newspaper will not
known1gly accept
advertisements for real estate
wh ch Is 1n v1olat10n or the
law Our readers are hereby
mformed that alii

2bdrm apts total electric ap
pllances turnlsned laundry room
facilities close to school In town
Applications available at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or cal 740 992

37tt EOH
2BR Apt In Mason StovetRefr~g
erator/Utllllles furnished A C
Laundry Room Ceiling Fans
Garbage Disposal Very Nice No

Pets (304)773 53521(304)882
2827
Apartment for rent In Pomeroy no

pets 740 992 5858

Refrigerator

adlron- 1n thiS n

are avaliab~ on an equal

opportuMy basis

360

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 500 Acres

We Pay Cash 1 800 213 8365
Anlhony I.Jind Co

RENTALS

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Wotk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740 446 2588
Equal Housing Opportunity

remodeling must soli asking
$11 000 740-992 5688
1972 Redman 12x70 I n Good
Condition New Furnace $4 BOO

Call Between 4 &amp; 8 PM 740 245
5788 Or 7-4o-245 9029
1982 14 x60 cray1on 2 Bod
rooms 2 Baths Condition Good
Ask1ng $4 000 Contact After 6

PM 741).446-1749
1989 LIDorty MoblloHomo 2BR
$8 000 (740)388 9971
Super Clean

1999 400 EX Excellent Shapel
$4 500 74(}446-1627
1999 Ooublewlde Repo Never
L1ved In New Home Warranty 0

Down II Qualified 740 446-3093
Oa~ Gallipolis Onlyll
48R 2BA $499 Down $259 mo
(304)756-!1566
Want A Home Don't Have Lend?
Wt Do Hurry Only 10 Lolo Loll
800 383-6882
Doublewidea

ture

Free Decor &amp; Furni-

HURRY, HURRY, HURRYI
OA1&lt;WOOD HOMES
BARBOURSVILLE WV
800 383-6882
OoubleW1de 01splay Sate AU
untts must go Save thousands
Oakwood Homes Nitro WV

(304)755 5885
Free Money/Cash Rebates that
can be used towards your down
payment only at Oakwood

Homos NI!FO WV (304)755
5885

Bedside Tables

Premium Ftrewood Oak &amp; Ash

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques
1124 E Man Street on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M TW 10 00
am to600pm Sunday100to

cpndl!lon $100 OBO 740 992
2063
RCA Color Trac 2000 console

TV 25" 740 992 67n
Sears wasner&amp; dryer set ex tg
capaCity $500 1 yr old 3 pc
queen water bed set $250
98 Kaw J&amp;t sk1 $5500 &amp; other

Items 304 675 1135
Sectional Couch Reclining Chairs

With Fold Away Bod 108" By
t1 0" Very Good Condlllon $375
740 388 8355
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Claim Denied? We Sp8:clallze In

Appeals And Hearings FREE
CONSULTATION Benollt Team
Services Inc Toll Free 1 888

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY Wo Finance ·o· oownl Past
YoueCredo1111 800 659 0359

For lease One Beelroom AC
Apt Corner Of Second And Pine

You Don t Call us We Both Lose/
740-446-6308 1 600-291 009ll
3/4 200 PSI
S21 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI
S37 oo Per 100 AH Brass Com
Waterline Special

pression F1ttings In Stod:

Aequlred No POlS' 1740) 245
5053 after 4 OOpm

S2SO/Mo Plus Ulllltlos Socurrty
And Key Dtposw References Re
qulred No Pets 740 448 4425

2 Houses On Lovers Lane Over

looklpg River Each With 2 Bed
roms Small House $350/Mo Big
House $450/Mo 740 446 1243
740 448 1615
3 Bedroom Brdo Homo 6682 S R
588 ,Rodney Contact 0 K Phil
lips 740 383 4778 For lnlormo
110n

3 Bedroom House Sandtrs Drive
Ga llpols $400/Mo. Plus DtposR
7A0-44t 1519
3 Bedroom House Central HeaU
A1r 2 Car Garage 2 11:2 Bath
Fam1ty Room S550 per month
ptus Deposit One Year Lease

(304)675 7873
94 Pinecrest Drive Adjacent To
Arbors Nursing Home 2 Bed

rooms CA Gas Heat Dlshwaoher Range Refrigerator Washer &amp;
Dryer Furnished Available 10/11

Gracious living t lind 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments In M1ddle

port From $249 $373 Call 140
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tunlltes
Large modern upstairs two bed
room apartment appliances air

wood splitter 5 hp 1

S400 call304-675-1206

550

Allred on 68! 740-985-3504
Nice one bedroom furnished

apartment In Mlddlaporl no pols
references and deposit required

740-992 5833
N1ce Unfurnished 3 Bedroom
Apartment Point Pleasant 740

560

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse

http://Www arden ne!Jearcand~/ 1

lnctudll

Water

Sewage Truh, $315/Mo 740
446.(1()()8

99 $425 Leas, Depoolt Re·
qulred 74Q-448-l!957

One Bedroom Apt Fufnlshed or

For Lease 2 000 Sq Ft Execu
tlve Home Near Golf Course

Not Utllltlu Included 5 min
from 1tore, IChool, hoapltal
Cttll (304)f75-2117

$750/Mo 740 448-2957
Pomeroy three bedroom house
two bedroom apartment referenc
es security parUy furnished 74o-

992 6886 anor 5pm

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
cond1tlon8d $260 $300 sewer
water and trash included 740

992 2187

HUD Ho~es Approval By Phone

a

Tara Townhouse Apartments

Very Specious 2 Bodrooma 2
FlOOrs CA 1 to2 Both Fully Car
poled Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pallo Start $350/Mo No Pets
Lease Plus Security Deposit Re
qulred After 5 ~ 7ol0 446 0101

Before 5 740-448 3481
UpStairs Furnished 3 Raoma

Botll Clean No Pelll Rolerorces
&amp; Deposit Requlrtd 740 448
1519

916 203 2441 PO Box 41312
Sacramento CallfOrrja 9564 t
Electric hospital bed $100 ra
cllntng lift ohalr $75 1993 Chevy
S 10 61 000 miles atondard PS
air tool Dox $4500 HO 992
2019
Firewood ror sale $25 a truck
toad, 740-94!1-0605

Flrawood Fol Sale 74(].256-1922
Flfawood for sale All Hardwoods
Full Size 3/4 Ton Truckload De

lovoreo &amp; Slacked $45 (304)882
2555
For sale July 1938 edition ol
Gone With The Wind ta1r cond1
lion $50 740-992 5196

For S•t•

Big Wheel Stroller

HighChair CarSoal BabyBed
PlayPen (304)675-2901

1983 Chevy Cavalier runs good

$500 080 740 992 9190
1984 Pontiac Bonneville 4 Doors
Body Great Shape Runs &amp; Or1v
able Need s Valve Pan Gasket

$850 OBO 741)-441 9864
1985 Dodge Lance Runs Great

Body Rough
$450
(304)895 3940 Aher 5PM

Call

1985 Mercedes 190E Grey With

$7 700 74Q-446-8657

Asking $100 00 (740' 245-56!6
Squlrreb dogs

new large dog

RoO
4893

"!!Jl. nrce $5200
.)

AMIFM Cassette
4-1.~

ARENT ouore
THt:;. NOt5V

Bundy Trombone

used

with

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

E~ecellent

Trailer

Wa lnuts

$3 800 (740) 448 4766 alter ,
:5::00p::::::m::.______________ ,

Troyers

Woodcraft Open Monday And

590

For Sale
or Trade

Registered Arabian Stud Horse

(304)675-5621 Saloorltldo

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610

Farm Equipment

1999 Cub Cadet compact tractor

30 hp 4 wheel drive wllh agncul
tural !Ires &amp; 4 woods bushhog
call740 992-6098 after 4 pm
50 Jo~n Deere new pant 3 pont
hllch llold ready live power 7~0
992 8803
Round Bale Feeder $65 Manure

Spreader $175 Limo Sproeoor
S100 Hay Wagon $400 Hey
Condluonor $75 74(}245 9551

630

Livestock

J Appaloosa Gelding 3 Years
Old One 4 Year Old Paint Mare

One 3 Year 010 Appaloosa Gold
lng One t /2 Quarter 1/2 Morgan
11 Year Old Mare 2 Arabian

Geldings One 3 Years Old One 7
Years Old Installment Plan To
Good Homes With :25% Down

740-388--8350

1 Baby Jack Donkey 1 F1ve Year
Old Donkey 740-448 1158

2 Purebred Llmousln Bulls For
Salt One Rod
(:D4)458- t 727

One Black

call avo 1(740)5339186 or
(7.0) 843-1027
Registered Hamp Boar Ritz
BtoodRne Call 740 245 5872 Or

740-367.0583

So

Pass

6•

Pass

6•
Pass

Pass

Opemng lead •

glance

38 Uncle
41 Extremist
42 Words ol
under
standing
43' Shopping
canter
44 Type of
cotton Iabrie
45 Voges

Q

machine

47 Tennis player
Nastase
48 Tableland
49 Fruity drinks
50 Greater In

number
52 Mined maHer
54 Type ol bran

lti:LEBRITV CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnly Ctpher cryplograms are crea ed !rom quola 10ns by famous poople pa I and proscnl
Each letter In lhe c phar stal'lds lor anolhe Todsysclue Zequals K

Wtth II top lncks declarer had to
score a second heart tnck - or
puttmg II another way had to avotd
lwo heart losers Thts appeared 10
requtre East s holdmg the heart ktng
However South was an ex pert And
experts hate to take finesses whtch
nonnally work only 50 percent of the
It me

c

VJTH

GVCKCEM

VM

T PH H Y

E J

E PH

A J Y N J Y G~

J-o

WCKCEGYM

V G0 Z

EPJYOEJO

RJ'l'KL

RGt

J

u

RCKLHY

GYWM

C

\

THYBCAH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'Ltle ts somethtng loke lh1s trumpet II you don 1 put
- w C Handy

~nythmg •n rt you don t get anythtng out
(cl1999 by NEA Inc

'::!:t~~, S@\\JU}A-~£trs&amp;
_..;,.;;.~~.::._; ldllod ~r CLAY I POlLAN
O Rearrange Jertert of the

WOlD
GAM I

four scrombltd words be
low to form fcur simple words

ME I N G- I

declarer would have re -entered the
dummy wuh ad1amond and fmessed
lhe hean queen Here though the
heart nme forced out the kmg , so
South clatmed

0 N WU 0

III

1998 Pontiac Grand Am SE 4
door ale am/fm cassette great

car $5995

t

Tf.H: DENTIST SAID I WA5 A
GOOD PATIENT AND 6AVE ME
A FR.EE TOOTfl6RUSH

Condition

I WAS HOPIN6 FOR A

PRINT NUMBEREO LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

D06 OR A SICVCLE

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
'

1995 Pontiac Grand Am SE two
door coupe ale am/lm cassette

nice car $4995
1994 Buick Skylark Custom one
owner ale amlfm cassette 72
000 miles very clean $4995
1993 Ford Escort Wagon ale
amlfm cassette nice car $2395
1992 Olds Cutlass Supreme two
door sport red ate amlfm cas
sette loaded nice ride $3995

.
-,
----------'
Auto Parte &amp;
Accessories

TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

-· "'

Wreath- Shrug· Baron- Mutmy ·MARRIAGES

• ,
Don t gtt

stung by hrgh prrcts'
Shop lht clrmr(itd soctron

eudget Priced Transmissions

and Engines All TYPU ACCOII •

To Over 10 000 Transr,isslool:_..
eve Joints 741).245-5877
~

•

Truck Tires M&amp;S 4 EA mounted •
on 15• Ford Alms w/4 Hub Capt. :

o11 ol4x4 Ford $120 (304)675 ,
1731
'

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

'
'•
'

1997 350 XL 7 3 Diesel Automat
lc Cab &amp; Chassis 38 000 miles
At Condltkm (740) 256-6056

BASEMENT
., 1
WATERPROOFING
•,
Uncondlllonal lllellmo guarante&amp; "
Local references furnished Ei' ~
1997 Pontiac Bonneville 55 000 uat~iSnO&lt; 1975 COli 24 Hrs (740) "'
Miles loaded Take Over Pay 446 0870 t 800 287 0578 Rog
monts of $381 740-367 7755
ors Waterproofing

Asking pay off (:D4)882 3825
76 Silver Anniversary Corvette

Cell (740)-448-91 51
84 Cimarron good cond clean
30"4
xtra tires&amp; rims S1 795

675 4575

oo

84 Cutlaaa auprome 400 tilg
lliOCI. $800 OBO 304 675 1626
87 Olda 9 pssaongor SW new
motor and transmlaslon ale PW
PL PS cruise till eJCcellant con

98 Ford Escort excellent condl

lass supreme air auto transmls

ston 2 8 engine 304-675-2884

All types of masonry work brtclr. block stone concrete 20 yeara
experience free estimates 304
773-9550
Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 2&amp; Years Ex
porlenco All Work Guaranloa~
French City Maytag 740 448·
n95
C&amp;C General Home Main·
tonanca Pa[nllng vinyl aiding
~arpontry doors wln~wa bat!lt,
mobile homo repak ana moro For
lroe oatlmeto call Chot 740 992
6323
Livingston s Basement Watt~
Proofing all basement repalrs
done tree estimate&amp; llfetlrtia
guarantee
on job experl·

840

g2 Otds Cutlass Clerra loaded

V 8 4 dr tt4r000 miiN $2 000
84 Pontiac Grand Am v 6 auto
•/c 80 000 mites $4 000 740
742-2351

•

RIAGES

&amp; R Auto Ripley WV (304)372 ~
3933 or 1 SOQ-273-9329
•

car 1995

1998 Chevrolet Monte Carlo LS
2:2 000 miles New Tires Tmted
Window&amp; Nascar Style Spoiler

' ComprQITliSe the mother told her newly wed daughter 1s what makes nations great and happy MAR

New Replacement Gas Tanks

1989 Pontiac Lemans good work

Rutland car Salas
740142,-3311 or740-74214oo

~-~: ,'

I ·I I ._

200ee Or Smaller 74(}367-7117 , "'

760

r

C0 l AV

Wanllng To Trade Complete Sat
ellile System For 4 Wheeler, ,k

Thursday And Saturday Starting

9125 Till t 0130199 9 Motes West
Of Gallipolis On t4t

Pass

•

Two t 992 Yamaha Jot Skis a)ld

lngs 740'245-9047
At

4NT
SNT

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

chances, of course I

PEANUTS

Red Raspberries Now Available
Taylors Berry Patch Cal In Eve
Bought

4.

True East w1ll have both the 10
and Jack' of hearts only some 24 per·
cent of the time, but when added to
the 50 pe t;Se nt shot for the hearl kmg,
that makes a JUICY 74 percent
My other tttle' Elevatmg ones

M1:1slcal
Instruments

good cond I 89 Oldsmobile Cut

(304)8112 2214

FIT IT 1111 1

Tflf: Stf&gt;.fF z '

1993 Chevy Lumina V 6 AfT
New Tires &amp; Wheels PW Excel
lent Condition $4 500 740 446
8022

Country Fair Grounds Steers &amp;
Heifers Born &amp; Ra1sed In La
wrence County For tnrormallon

2 Trailer Iota lor rent $75 each
per ,month In a trailer park near.
New Haven Grade Sctlool

I.~~~«.

304 675

88 Monte Car lo Super Sport air
auto transmisalon 305 eriglne

New 4Bfl. 18 wide $5QO Down
$2•5 per mo Free All 1 800
891 em

I f\"-IJEt-IT
BErn l&gt;el£ It)

~""'"'"'rl ti#W:£~rnT~~~

1993 Chevy Lumina Euro 2 dr

Manchester Terrier 2 years old
House Trained Very Smart Male
Loves Kids! Needs Good Home!

Pass

C~-:-li'nC;;T5Hi:W3W;;-\~ '\ If 11 had lost to the I 0 or Jack

Club Call Sale Saturday October
9 1999 12 DO PM lawrence

Down $210 per mo Free Air 1

-,=;::_...;;;.....;;;;;,;'7'

A.KC lab Pupp1es Call 740 388

$175 740-388-9325

3•

East

Alter wmmng Wtth hiS d1amond
ace declarer drew trumps endmg m
the dummy Then he playe d a heart
lo hiS nmc

Uon $1200 080 740-992 7370

~91-em

s:;t&gt; YOU .50\WUU:: TI-ll\HIII-E.-;-

Kept One Owner Front Roar All 'f
68 ooo Miles $10 500 1•0
2151

North
2NT

M Y6ft.F7!

•

Gara~~

West
Pass

North's response of two no-trump,
showmg a balanced e1ght plu s,
wouldn t be everyone s chOice
because tf the contract belongs m no
trump, It ts probably better to have
the strong hand as the declarer
tO·t
(Alternatively respond two dta
monds, the so called waumg btd
Th1s 1s made wuh euher fewer than
----~---oerghrp-cffii l s or a better ~and" tthout
~
a good suit to show)

~

sunroof ale new
paln1 asking $4300
740 949 2644 even
740 992 1506 deya

Front WD

8 Rlcttng Horses For Sats, Prices
S14rt S550 740-446-4110

New 3BR 2 Bath 14 Wide $500

950

2.

How would you declare th1s stxspade contract? West leads 1he dia·
mond queen

¥10Mfftl wANT,
1&gt;0 rou Vltllll~
:t'1&gt; If up tte~e

IY

I

Honda EX 1000 generator 2
ysara old 3 tanka uuo $325

JET

wtMT

1984 CJ7 Wllh Hardtop 32 Inch

1

diUon J2000 74Q-992 9098

AERIITION MOrORS
Repalr&amp;ll Now &amp; Rtbull1 In Sleek
CaH Ron Evans 1-800-537 9528

~ ~ftlfy/

1

1990 Grand Am 4 Doors Auto

Ride 74Q-256-9202

MOVING OUT 0~ AREA Must
Sell At Saerallee 1998 SW like
304 733-9102

IF

&amp; 4·WD•

1986 Chevy Silverado .(WO 350 '
4 Speed Body And Suspension ..

4 Year Oftt Tennease Walker 3 4
Year Old Palamlno Broke To Trail

740-1115-4' 83

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

~~~~------------~

1993 Grand Am 88 000
$4 395 cook Motors 740 446
0103

22 Off ones(nuts)
23 Marathon unit
24 Some poems
25 T1dy
26 Roof
overhang
28 Actress
Redgrave
29 Angers
30 South Alncan
tribe
31 Ancten1
llallan family
37 Cast a
sidelong

By Phillip Alder
Whal would be the log1cal tnle
or headline 1f you !?refer - for
today 's story, If tt weren t Ehsha
Otts, the bndge player ' ? (Most
papers don't pnnt the title hence my
repeatmg It for you )

loaded StJ·~

Laramro 22 ooo miles Dooks lor
$2506 will sal a $22 005 firm '
304 675 7642

OBO 74Q-441 0688

Hawaiian terlyakl Reclptt $3
s A s E Kama aIna Fooda
PM8&amp;22 4224 Wo lol ae Avonuo
15 Honohflu Hl96618

Like New

.
call.!!:

condlllon $3250 call 740 992
2429

Limited OfflJr 1999 Double Wide
3 Bedroom 2 Bath $1799 Down
$275 00 par month Delivered
and sot up COli 1 800-948-5678
sacrifice 96 S W

j

1997 Chevy Tahoe K 1500 47~ ,
Miles Loaded $25 900 1998"'
Dodge w 250 Diesel s Speed '
Loaded S32 500 74Q-245-0379
•

Mickeys With Ultra Alms $5

11 Rampant
12 Old dagger
19 Roman 1 051
21 Hlatory
repeats-

Elisha Otis:
bridge player

Ch~~ot 74Q.25~34

Actllava

!

'MARY
BETH--

t995 Dodge Ram Truck 1500
SLT 4x4 360 Engine Automatic
53 000 Mlloa Long Bod $9 995
740 256 1142

Auto AC Till Cruise 76 000 1983 Chelfy Blazer New Paint
original miles Call (304)458 Tires 4x4 Automatic AIC $2 300
May Trade On Later 4x4 Truck
1997 After 6PM
1989 Mercury Grand Marqu1s lS
full power Garnet Red very gOOd

!I

IF YOU'LL GIVE MY REPORT
CARD TO AUNT LOWEEZY

HOME,

1986 Buick Gra nd National Ex

Slhgloa Or Doubles 740 446
3883

(304)736-9102

t'LL TAKE
YORE BOOKS

collent Condition $7 500 OBO 1972 Ford Van Runs Good New
Tires Asking $2 250 OBO Call
74().446 4819
Anytime 740 446 7769

Grul!b s Plano tuning &amp; repairs
Problome? Need Tuned? Call tho
P~Arro Dr 740-446-4!525

Moving Out 01 • - Must soli at

BARNEY

Melntelned Runs Strong Drive
Anywhere S5 400 740 4411595 BotwooniHIPM

Vans

Anawer to Prevloue Puzzle

•A

South

1993 Chevrolet V 6 Auto Well

730

ACROSS

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

1992 Chevy 5 10 PICk Up For
Pay 011 66 000 Original Milas:
740 379 2388

full size pick up

• A 3

•

Sale

1998 Dodge 4x4 extendad

Leather Interior New Mercedes
Engine With Remaining 48 000
Mile Warranty Good ConditiOn

• K Q J 10 9 8 4

1979 Chevy Pick Up 4X4
ton (304)882 3825

995 Ford Wlndslar GL

Call FIROCOM Advanced Tech
nologles 1 600-617 3476

446-0041 After 5 PM

772 7470 EXT 7832

• 9 6 5 2
• K Q 9 3

10 8 7 4

•AQ9

Pets for Sale

580

$0 Down Low

IMPOUND Honda s Toyota s
Cnevys Jeeps And Sport Utili
ties Fee Required Call Now! 800.

Trucks for

• 7 5

South

5121

1019

COMPUTERS

720

Block bnck sewer p1pes wind
ows lintels etc Claude Winters
Rlo Grande OH Call 740 245

Case $150 (304)675 3534

EAR CANDLES BULK HERBS
NATURAL PET SH~MPOOS

Apartments

o 112 ton

Antique dining room set hutch
corner cabinet claw lagged tabla
&amp; 6 choirs S2000 llrm 740 742

Monthly Payments Y2K Compll
ant Almost Everyone Approved

80 Super Sport Camero drag

Building
Supplies

570

Lloyd E Eaquo PhOne 304 7735479 Mason WV

Terms 01 Salo CASH OR C~R· '
TIFIED CHECK.

CARS $100 $500 &amp; UP POLICE

• J 10 6

Items From Sate Prior To Salt ~

CALL NOW For LIS!Ingsl I 800
319 3323 x2156

74().992 2478 or leave mossoge

East

• 6
•KB32 ·
• Q J 10 8

DOPI At 740 441 1038 OYB Rt
serves The Rlgtlt To Accept IR•
)eel Any &amp; All Bids &amp; WithdraW' ~

4x4~,. ,

6 x1 t Utility Trailer With Lights
And Brakes 740 245-9551

Collector&amp; Item German 35 MM
Plate Camera World War II

$500 CARS FROM $500111 Buy

West

•

I
I Maytag Dryer S80 00 Call
After 5 30 (740) 448 9066

boJCOS304-6756132

BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up TQ 30 IDs 30 DAY MONEY
BACK GUARANTEE! Natural Dr
Recommended 740·441 1982
Free Samplls

• K 7 4

• J 6 52

Seen By Calling The Collectfon

Autos for Sale

10·01 99

• A 32
• 7 54

Air Clean Car $1 850 Or BeS1
Lil t 38 Tires $4 000 740 448 _.
Offer 740-441 1083
8022

mount 304 882 3970

style) quill stand lloor lamp loc
torn stand 74Q-965-4193.

North

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Ject&lt;son Ohro 1 8Q0-537 9528

AKC Registered Boston Te mer
Puppy Female Show Quality!
Shots Wormed Ready To Go t

Blue W1ngbach chair (velvet) 2
side cane chairs 1 tg fruit wood
occas1onat table 2 lg area rugs
w1ttl runners (green 4 w&amp;stern

Vall~ Bank Will Offer For
By PuDIIc Auellon A 1993
S 10 1144282 &amp; A 1990
t 50 IB 15970 A 1998
Hondo
TRX300FI'/
ATV
1925440 &amp; A 1986 lnternallon
Semi Truck lA 13973 AI to ob
AM On 101!6199 At The OVB
Annex 143 Third Ave GallipOlis,
OH Sold To Highest Bidder "As
Is Where ts• Without Expresseit
Or Implie d Warranty &amp; May B.e

1986 Chevy Cavalier RS 2 0

WARMUP

Antique writing desk &amp; dishes
2 Bedrooms Large LA K1tchen
D1n1ng Area $400 OOimo Deposit

TRANSPORTATION

83 Jaguar 87 ODO miles good
co ndition $4000 OSO call Rod

540

30 000 BTU vent less gas heater
already on stand or can wall

Round ba les of hay for sate 740

698 8211

Queen SIZ&amp;d hide a be~ co uch
dark greenloe1ge wood trlm- g6od

9398

2 All STEEL BUILDINGS 40x36
Was $10 818 Soli $3 900 50x90
Was $22 800 Sell $10 800 Doug
600 388 5314

of Corn AI Centerpoml

You Pdo Or Chop 304 372 9661

car $15 ooo OBO call Anthony
74().992 2478 or leave message

Moore owner

Miscellaneous
Merchandlu

13 Acres

Gr111n

$50 load Full Size Pick Up De
livered 710 992-4568

SKS sem1 automatic assau t nfle

lully loaded 5450 740 992 7370

Hay

Pollee Impounds &amp; Repos Fee

luro (740) 446 1004 (740) 446
4039 any tune Out Bulav111e Pike

92% Gas Furnaces Heat Pumps
Duct Systems Free Esllniates If

Set ol 11tOIIS1 DCI Irons 3 pi1Chlng
wedge 2 mon old $450 304
675 1275

&amp;

640

N1ce used furmture and Ap
pllances Johnson s Used Furnl

Washer S95 Dryer $95 Electric

Sporting
Goods

Six white young pigs $30 each

74(}992 3564

710

Credit Problems OKII Even If
Turned Down Belorell Reestablish

aango $95 Relrlgarator $95
Washers Like Now $205 Wllh 1
Year warranty Skaggs Appllanc
es 76 Vlno Stroo\ Gelllpollo 74(}
448 7398 1-688 818-0128

Six miniature Mrses tor sale

lstered 740 742 2050

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

Manual Typewriter Adding Me
chine 19000/BTU A C Dehu
mldlfler Exercise Bike (304)675
76981or tunller lnlormotlon

6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ

~~I~~J

Bank Fmancrng Huge Inventory
01 lntertnerm Muter &amp; Coleman
Furnaces Heat Pumps And
Parts Vmyl Sk1rt1ng K1ts $299 95
Doors &amp; Windows Water Heat
ers Anchors Plumbing &amp; Electrl
cal Parts ' Bennetts Mob1le Home
HTG &amp; CLG 740 446 9416 Or 1

836 4052

Ntco Quiet 2 br kit appliances&amp;
AJC &amp;
Roloroncos/Dopos

14x70 trailer 1 \(2 baths 2 3

1993 Clayton 16x80 Very Nice
3 Bedrooms 2
Baths Wllh Big Round Bathlub
Heat Pump Electric $21 000
740-256 6382

vastor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Financed Mortgage
Real Eatate ,c&lt;Jntract Insurance

PelS Qulat Locations $279/Mo
+Utilities 74Q-448-2957

bedrooms some new carpet and

Need A loan? Try Debt Consoli
dation $5 000 $200 000 Bad
Credit 0 K Fee t 800 770 0092
Exl 215

1(877)EARLYPAV
1st AD
VANCE FREEIL ~efcc70036

Stop And See us 7•Q-446-4782

520

mosaeoo 740-992 5419

1BA Central Air Gas Heat lo
cated on Rental Lot near Pt PI

Office Vlstt Necessary Up To
$500 Instantly Call lo ti Free

New And used Furnl1ure Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga

949-9018

Call Settlement Capital 1 800
959 0008 www aottlementcapl
Ill com

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No

Near Arbors Nursing Home No

loovo messalla

Askong $1H 900 7-4().388-8074

City

Repay Guaranteed S500
$50 000 For Debt Consolidation
Personal Neeels Med1ca1 81111
Education &amp; Bus•ness Call Toll

1 Bedroom A/C WID Hook Up

tached 2 Car Garage Pool Lo
cated Between Bidwell &amp; Vinton

Parhaf
Basement Owner Will Finance
With 10"-'o Down 74Q-441 11 08

(304)675 2617

Required No Pets 740~46 4043

mon Includes wster trash refrig
eratora stove 304 773 5577

3120 Sq Ft 01 llvlny Space AI

Light
$150

Mars ~M

2 br apt In New Haven S275 a

$400

"GUARANTEED APPROVAL"
Bonk Card No Credit Chock No
Up Front Cash Security Deposit
Requlrad Mus1 Be t 8+ AnQ
Have Valid Checking Account•
Pre Approval By Phone 1 800
68!1-15S6

1 Bedroom Apartment In Galllpo
lis Water Paid S2651Mo Deposit

Lane Rocker Recliner
Mauve
Like
New

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Furnaces I nstall ed As Low As
$28 00 A Monlh Wllh Approved
Cred11 Easy Over The Phone

800 872 5967 Galllpol s OH

MERCHANDISE

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers Drye rs Ranges Aelrl
grators 90 Day Guarantu!
French City Maytag 740 446

MEDICAL BILLER Up to $IS

l

490

7•o-949-2093

(304)675 4123

Guaranteed Program
Earn
$5 000+ Per Month W1th Minimal

2BR Trt~~Jter Central Air New
Heating SyS1om Quiet No ghDor

Wanted To Rent HUD Approved
3 Bedroom HolJse Or Trailer Pre
ferably In Bidwell Porter &amp; R1ver
Valley School District Needed
tmmadoaiA!Iy 74Q-388-0473

42 Demono
46 Long lloh
1 Ocean foams
47 Mohammedan
7 Sharp wellPOna
prayer leader
13 Like a olupld
51 Popeye, e g
peroon
53 Spenlih city
14 Rowboat pert 55 Thriller writer
15 Diving duck
Leonard
16 Huardoua
56 One who IIIIo
17 Drying
57 Very happy
apparetua
58 Army order
(2 wda )
18 Print measures
20 Mople, o gJ
21 Lazybones
DOWN "
23 French pelnter
Claude1 Average
27 Adore
2 Large rodent
32 Thoughts
3 Flylnl! saucers
(abbr.)
33 Former
4 &lt;:atchar a
Secretary ol
Slata Vance
glove
34 Depart
5 Compaespt
35 Prepared to
6 Rip ln1o pieces
prey
7 Blotto
36 Actreas
8 Shallow veaeel
Pareons
9 Formerly, once
39 Follow
100n--wllh
40 Thighbone
(equal to)

.)

1786

Electrical and
Refrigeration

__

-

__

ASTRO-ORAPH
_.;,;;;......;....

Saturday Oct 2, 1999
Because you will be wdhng to do
all that IS necessary to fulfill your
arilbtuous goals when v1ctones don't
cpme easy, lhe year ahead could
prove to be qutte rewardtng
LffiRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) When
gelling mvolved 1n an arrangement
llll!h another today that could be
fJifsncially meanmgful mak&amp;certam
yo~ II be able lo call the shots
YOu're qutte adron In thiS area now
T!Ytng to patch • up a broken
rDJP.ance? The Astro-Oraph MatchtiJ~er can help you understand what
tG do to make the relauonsh1p work
~I $2 75 to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper PO Box 1758, Murray
Hill Stauon, New York NY 10156
.SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) You
could be called upon today to make
a dectSion that may benefit someone

els~ more '""' tl does you To your
credtt, you'll do so wtth a mtmmum
amount of fanfare
SAGmARIUS (Nov .23-J?tc
21) ThiS could be payoff day for a

past perfonnance If you were tndus·
tnous the returns coula be 1mpres
stve If you weren t expect payment
proportionate lo the effort expended
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan l9)
Don t hesitate to talk to someone you
know soerally who IS 1n the poSitiOn
to help yoo m another area tf you get
the chance today She or he w&amp;ll glad
ly lend a helptng hand
AQUARIUS (Jan 20·Feb !9)
Make an effort today to fintsh what
you prev1ously have m the m1ll 'tou
could get a chance to mvolve your
self tn a new endeavor, but you II
need to be free to do so
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) A
new SOCial relauonsh1p mtght establish Itself today that could prove to be
quite advanlageous for you m many
ways It wtll be endunng and stand
the test of ume
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19
Marked tmprovements In your finan
c1al alfatrs are posS1ble loday throug~
d1hgen1effort but 1f you tncorporal&lt;
a ltttle menu! ag1hty alons w1th ~~ the
gams could be even llqer
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) The
posstbdttles for making a change f01

the better could come through some
sohd deep concentrauon of your
problems at hand You II find a grat
tfymg an~ rewardmg way to deal
wtlh thangs ~
,
GEMINI (May 2 l June ~0) You
lntght see the first stgns of financ~a o
gatns today from some ktnd ol
mvolvcment

to wh1ch you've

g1ver

a lot of attenuon but thus far ha
proven to be of httle signtficance
CANCER (June 21 July 22) There
ts a sohd chance today for fulfilltn!

,••

a reahsuc hope or cxpectauon you \(
been nurtunng It m1ght come abou o
through an tdle conversauon wuh ,
fnend
LEO (July 23~Aug 22) Thmk wm
today because

amb1Uous

mtenuon~:

can be graufied at thts ume prov1d
ed you have both lhe patience ant

endurance

Just

remember Rome

wasn t budttn a day
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22
Should you get tnvolved tn a ne\1
endeavor today 1um to the past fot
gu1dance and d11ect10n The kno" I
edge you need to be successful e&gt;1st
m your past expenences

..
'

i

\

�.·

,

~· ··-'

•. '

••
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Apostolic

Friday, October 1-, 199j

James Miller
Sunday School · 111:30 a.m.
Evening - 7:JO p.m.

or

Church Jesus Christ
Apostolit• hilh
New Luna Road
Pa~hJL

.\hrl y Hulton

SunJ.l _l. [{I a. Ill . anJ 7:.10 p.m.
W..:Jncsdil)', 7:.\0 p.rn .

Assembly of God
Libert~

.-\ss'embl}' or God

I'\ l llo1\ -111 7. Out!J wg Lath'
Mas.1n. W.Va . ~
1':1,;tm ~til Tennant
SLJnd~} S.-r\·in.'s- W:OO a.m. anJ 7 p. m.

Baptist
Marunalha Baptist Chu fc h
Uurlingh~ m · 7~2-7606
l'aMLH : J oh nS~~·on
SunJa~· Schoo l - I · a. lll .

MornmfScrvice 1:00 a. m.
Evening SerV ICe- 6:00p.m
W cdn~· -,J'*&gt; Serv ice. '7::\0 p.m.
Hul}t'

Uuptist t· hurch {Sou thern)

Pa:-.tur Jlln D11t1
;'i70 ti r.tnt St . Mtdllieporl
Sw1J.J1 'l-ho~o•l - IJ· '(1 ;1m
\\'ut:-hLJ) - l l .1. m. ouLJ b p.m
\\cdm·., Jay Service- 7 p.rn .
Fn~c

Willll11plist Chun·h
Strc.·ct. Mi Ullleport
P:t.,!lH " Lc.;. HITy rnan
Sum.Juy Service - 7:(}(} p.m.
- Sundav Se houl - IU a.m.
Wt·dncsJa~ Se rvice -7:00 p.m
A~h

Rutland •'irst Buptlst Church
Sundav School - 9:10 a.m.
Wui-shrp - 10:45 :1.m.

f'11 meroy First Baptist
Ea~ l

Main St.
Sumk1v Sdlllul · 4.J:~U a.m
Wui-~ lllp- IO:J() il.r\1 .
Fi Nt Southern Bupi bt
4 I ".,2 l'omcrm l1 tkc
P.1s1ur · E Lamar b" Br)Jilt
· Su nd&lt;~ y Sehoul - 9 : ~0 .1.m.
\Vur~hip - 1!1:45 a. m., 7:UU p.m.
,\\ l'dnc'ida} SCI\' I~l"S- 7:0U p.m.
~' irsl

IJuptist Chu rch

P;:rstor : Mark Morrow

6th ;lnr.l Palmer St.. Midd leport
Sund:t y School. 9:15a.m.
Worship- 10:15 il. m ., 7:00 p.m.
WcJnesJuy Se rvice - 7:00p. m.
Racine First Baptist
P;~s t o r : Rick Hulc
·
Sund ay S&lt;.:hi)OI • 9:)0 a.m.
Worship · I U:.lOa.m., 7:00p.m
W cd n c.~Ja y SCJ.\'U:C..'\.,· 7:00.p.tn.Silver Kim Haplist
Pnstm : Bill Little
Sund&lt;~y School- I Oa.m.
Wor.,hip - !\ a. m., 6:)() p.m.
W t."d ucsJ~y

Se rvices-6:30p. m.

i\11. I '1 ifln D11ptist
P :~s tor Joe N Sayre
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Eveni ng --fl:JO p.m.
WcJncsliay Scrvit"l'S · (i:JOp.m.

Uethlrh t m'llaptisl Church
l.ir~·:u B,:nd. /{ uru ~· 11-l.

Raci ne. OH

p,l,!or Gcnl· Murti.,

Sdll.lul - Y:30a.m.
Sunu~~ ~ \\'urShip . JU:JU a. rn . &amp; 7 p.m.
\\ '.: Un~!'&gt;J a y Bible Sttidy- O:UO p.m.
~LJnd:n

Old Uelhrl Free WIIIDapllsl Church
213601 St. Rt. 7, Middlr:port

SumJa)' School - 10 a. m.
Evening -7: 30 p.m.
Thur~J ay Se rvices - 7:30
Hillside Bap:Ust Church
St. Rt . 143 just off Rt. 7
P:1 ~tm: Rev. James R. Acree. Sr.
SunJay Schoo l - 10 :1. m.
Worship - l l&gt;~.m ., 0 p.m.
W r linl'S!Ja~ Serv r ~.:c~- i p.m. •
Victory Daptistlndependanl
5~5 N !m..l St. Mtddlepon
P:.tsror: James E. Keesee
Wur'ihiP,. - IOJ.m.• 7 p.m.
WcrJnc~d'-1)' Se rvices- 7 p.m.

Fu ith Baptist Church
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School · 10 a. m.

Wor:;hip - I I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices . 7 p. m.

·

f'orest Run Baptist
Pastor: Arius Hurt
Sunday School - 10 a. m.
Worshtp- II a.m.

MI. Moriah 8aptbil
Fourth &amp; Matn St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gi lbert Craig, Jr
Su nday School - 9:JO a.m.
Worship - JU:45 a. m.
Antiquity Daplisl
Sunday School · 4.) :]0 a.m.
Worship- W:45 a.m.
Su nday Evening-6:00p.m.
Rulland Free Will Baptist
Sa lcnl St.
!'astor· 1-tcv. Paul Tay lor
Sunda) Schuo l - 10 a.m
Evcnwg · 7 p.rn .
WnJnc:sUa! Service'&gt; · 7 p.m.

Catholic
Sacred Heart t:atholic Church
161 Mu lberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Paslor: Rev. Walter E. Hei nz
Sat. Con. 4:45-5: 15p.m.: Mass- 5:JO p.m.
Sun. Con. -8: 45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun . Mass- 9:30 ~.m.
Dailey Mass- 8:3U a.m .

Christ

''
•

IT'S ASMALL WO ...~., Blue Devil$
overtake.
VOL. VI
Athens

Middleport Chur&lt;h orChrl51

Worship - 9:30 a. m.
SunJa)' School- 10:30u.m.
P;~s t ur - J cffre y Wullacc:
I st and 3rd Sur1day

Dearwallow Ridge Church of Christ
P ~stur :Tcrry Stewart
Sund ay Schl)oi -9:30a. m.
Worship - 10:30 _&lt;~. m ., 6:30p.m.
Wedr1csday Scrvrccs · 6:30 p.m.
Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy, Harriso nville Rd . (RI.I43)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:,30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices - 7 p.m .

llysell Run H

Reed!willr Church of Christ
Pastor: Ph il ip Stum1
Sunday School: 9;30 a.m.
Worship Service:-10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:JO p.m.

Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School - 9:1.5 a.m.Worship - 10:15 a.m.

Laurel Cllll Free Molhodist Chun:h

SnowvUie
SumJay School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m .

Christian Union
Hortronl Churcb or Cbriolln

Mt. Moriah Churc:h or God
Mi le Hill Rd ., Racine
Pastor: Brice Uu
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices - 7 p.m.
Rutland Church or God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Wot5hip- 10 a. m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Apple and Serond Sis.
Pastor: Rev . David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a. m.
Evening Services- 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

Church or God or Prophecy

O. J. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: I'.J. Chapman

Episcopal
Groce EpiO&lt;Opal ChurcH
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Katharin Foster
Rev. Deborah Rankir1, Clergy
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday Schoolll :00 a.m.
w_ww.lrognet.netJ-deancry

Follb Goopel Cburdl
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
ML Olin C'IDlmuully Cbun:b
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
~unday School -9:30a.m.

'2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on Stale Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley

.'
1

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m. .
Wednesday Kids for Christ- 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Church of the Nuareat
Pastor: Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm ,Jr.

Rt.- 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Rev. Robert~- Smith, Sr.

~astor:

.•

Sunday School- 9:30 aom.
WoJShip · 10:30 a.m.. 7p.m ..
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.

Silver Rid&amp;e

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Chesler Church or the Naza~ne

Freedom Gotpel Minion

Pastor: Rev . Herben Grate
Su nday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servites · 7 p.m.
RuU1nd Church of the Nuanne
Pastor: Rev . Samuel W. Basye
Sunday Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 7 p.m.
Wkite's Ch1pel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev . Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

;~~:~~:p~!art~~icipated
both of
·
toursin that

'Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken'

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

Jlj'i11~er

Jlf umrnl ~mm ,..:~mt.tl

261 Sooth Second Aw.•MIOdleport, OH
740;992-5141
Bruce R. Flatter - Cirec:lor

590 East M•n Street • Pomeroy, OH 45789
740-992-5444
Director

992·5432

·fllt-P

Mei&amp;• Cou111y i Oldetl Florid

fAt

I

Good Morning

u. S•nd You,.1'Mu6ht• Wili.

Check the.Sentinel
every Friday/
~I

•••~ •

••••··•

• ·~ ·

·-

...

·~• "" · •

•

""'"&lt; • r,_.. .,_,.,,

......... -

··~-

carver
who lu:;~~~~!~~~~~
Hank
Peters'
world log champion
of Nova Sco·
tia. Canada, who will perform wearing roller
ISKitiCS, then stand qn his head on the log,
other lumberj~ks will hold a jousting
.,,,.,.~,. in canoes and .participate in a .contest
tests the . power of motor powered cliain
against hand saws.
Reluming 10 lhe fct~tival will be popular
saw carver Denn~s Beach, who fashions
:~~~~~s~talues
from logs. Beach will'join 150
crafts people demonstrating and
their skills in a variety of mediums ·
as bMkel making; wroughl iron, brooms
pollery.
The festival will again fealure rontcst such
apple peeling, corn shelling. cow-chip loss·
hog calling, egg toss, feed ·sack race and

l

Work unde

y..,.·.t..

on new Meigs Co. ODOT garage
processes will be installed to comply with
slate and federal EPA guidelines, thus .increasing efficiency as well ·as safety for employees.
The office area of the garage will indude
-.many built-in fealurcs and all new fumityre. ,
A new sail dome is also to be ronstriictcd,.·
although not as part of .the buildini ccintrld:
District I 0 will sell a separate ~~.!t'~for QOn; .
struction of the salt dome. ·:
'
After an extensive search for proptrty for a
new garage, ODOT finally purchasc4.2().plus
acres at $7,500 per a=· from Donald Mora.
That's quite a difference from the $963 paid in
1944 for 4.4 acres at the present site.
The $3.2 million in construction ·.FCJidl is
also .quite a difference from the $1~37
spe~t 10 ronstruct the existing J&amp;rlp In 1~3.
The existing garage was dedicated in Dccit'm·
ber, 1953. At that time, Carl J. Offutt wu
superintendenl and·52 workers ~reemploy~
in the highway maintenance, constructio!fo
special projects and route marldng depart.
meniS.
·
·
Prior to moving, 10 thal.buildi~g, the.Qh!P
Department of H1ghways, ... tL wu then
called, wu housed in the buildina that is•IIO)¥
home to Associated Fabricators on Spring VIII·
ley Lane in Pomeroy.
'
Since the Department of Higbways becM!e

-

... ... -

Continued on pege A2.

Corffmissi.oners to sign contract for renovation. work

Sear9hing for
local church? •

.

skates and a

POMEROY - This year's snow and ice
this year.
season will be the last for trucks and snow
"Familiarization lours are a
plows pulling out of the 'phio Department of
for the VisiiOrs eeDter 10 show-1 Transportation garage ori slate Route 7, four
our beautiful community
miles north of Pomeroy. ' ·.
r~etnerale free publicity," Cox said.
By the end of Augujt, 2000, ODOT's
The OVVC is located at 45
trucks will be leaving from a new $3.2 million
'Gallipolis. Office hours
facility, about lwo miles sd'uth of their current
1Monclay through Friday, 9
state Route ?location, according 10 George M,
and Saturday, 10 a.m.-3
Collins, deputy director of.9DOT District 10,
local event informalion,
of which Meigs County is I! part.
A Wednesday .pre-construction conference
for the project was held at-the exisling garage.
Man wanted In
Headed by Tom Ko~acs of the State Archi·
tect's Office, the meeting included reprcsenla·
MARl~A (AP)- A Wesl Vir· lives of the general and sub-coniractors, as
man accused of shooting his well as local and District 10 ODOT personnel.
Bi-Con Services of Derwent is the ge~~eral
10 death here last month is
held on $500,000 bond on contractor on the project, with Slateline Pipe
of aggravated murder Corporation of Belpre installing the plumbing,
' and violating an anti-stalk· Sochnlcn Piping Company of Dover installing
the heating and air conditiOI)ing, and Welsh
ordinanQe.
Electric
Company of Gallipolis installing the
Finloy Namelh, 64,
electrical
equipment.
W.Va., was arraigned Friday
Site
preparation
at the new location begsn
CourL
on
Thursday
and
is
expected 10 be completed l
hearing is set
within the nextli.vo:weeks. Soon after tha~·the
Namclh was arrested Monda:r 1buildina should start taking shape.
in Virginia Beach, Va.
The new aarage will be a vut impn)vcment
'lpolice received a tip from his son.
over ODOT's existing Meigs County facility.
Police say Nameth shot
·
Up-to:date mechanical repair equipment and
60
i;everal times at

I If,
740-992-2644
740-992·6298

"

will capture the

children's pedal tractor pull.
According 10 festiv~ organizers, children
will deliglit 10 th.e horse-drawn wagon rides .
and led horseback rides, the hay bale maze
and lhe chance 10 interact with barnyard ani,mals and lhe Bob Evans mascots, Biscuits 'n'
Gravy.
Visitors will be entertained! i\v:i~~th~~·rti'~t-­
of. musical · pet:formances ir
national Bluegrass Band of lhe Year award
winner Rarely Herd. The band has finished in
tho· lop three in lhe Society for lhe Preservation of Bluegrass Music in America.
The Original Briarhoppers, one of the oldest performing groups of bluegrass and hillbilly music, will also perform. The group
began performing in 1935, and is noled for the
guitar, mandolin, fiddle, bass and banjo stage
show,
•
The cOUnlr}: ·music group '(he Bi~M will
.tt, , f!WIII*fli~i'ee perfonnalices dijly. Tile
Breeze ·hu gpened for stars such as Randy
TraVis; . QJnw"
· y :1\ililty, .The· Judds ;lind the
Oak Ridge Bci s. Not all music will be lradiSEASONAL ENJOYMENT'- Children vllltll! l18t;yHI''• Bob EWf!• .
tionil ~ the crry Weayer Good Time Jazz
v111n
Rio G111nde clellaht.llt 1 dlaplly or jiCk.o -11111~ e11t up In one ot the
Band is noted for iiS lively Dixieland music,
on
the
firm grounda. fhle
tl~l, fHturlng eq111111 dlnclng tl'lctol'8, .
in addition to swing and dance music. The held Oct.
8-10.
.
.
band will involve audience members in skits,
jokes and other entertainments.
anliques and counlry items; William Lloyd, God, GallipOlis, women 's minis.l,riei
Forty-five dance teams from Ohio, Penn- Gallipolis,_pianist for worship ~rvice; Fred- offering homemade crafts and canlly;
sylvania. West Virginia and Michigan will erick . Burdell, Bidwell, living bee display; lis Rotary Club, selling ice cream 10
demonstrate and teach dance steps to audi· Karen"Dempsey and Elizabelh ~elly, Vinlon, scholarship programs for Gallia Co11ntt
ence members. Featured will be the All-Ohio "Spinners. of Yarns, Weavers of Tale1," spin· school graduales; Rio Grande P05t vntce,
Ooggeril and Senior Clog 4U team, ')Vhich- ning; Dan Davies, Patriot, demonstraling playing stamps and special~
will present a special show.
.
.antique saw mill; and Randy Callihan, Bid- Toddlers 10 Tassels League,
Local residents who will demonstrate lra- well, emcee for musical entertainmenL
bread; Gallia Academy High
ditional arts, provide enlertainmenl, make
Joseph Tirpak, Gallipolis, whiltling and Boosters, apple dumplings and the
homemade ' foods and provide services woodcarving; Simpson Chapel UMC, Rio Colony, Gallipolis, tald~g "old tyme"
include Tom Grulle of Gallipolis demonstral· Grande, "heavenly" cornbread; Salem Mis·
For more inf~Jrmation, call.·.l ' 'OU\J~l
ing antique farm tools and cooking with cast sionary Sociely, Salem Baptist Church, Patri· FARM, or visit lhe web site at W\!'W.IXilii•
iron; Janice Sheets, Rio Grande, displaying o~ group quilling; Rodney Pike Church of vans.rom

death faces charges

Crow's Family Restaurant
;.

OVVC worksrlilosely with
Imagaziines and ncwspalfcrs thrtJugih·
region and oul of state 10
lprtJmctte the area.
"SIOries like the one in Ohio
1~~~~~r~ are worth thousands
It
in free publicity," said Cox.
Each year, the OVVC participates
travel writer familiarization tours
the tourism cooperative Ohio
Frontier (OFF), made up of the
~E;JaUia, Athens, Fairfield and Hockrounly IOurism offices. Writers
phoiOgraphers from all over the
arc given a first-class lOur
lvario•~ attrtldion5. in the area
llieronle familiar with is offered
four-county cooperative.

l

Suo. Worship -tO:lO a.m.,6 p.m. .
Wednesday Service -7p.m.
C.rleloo lnlenleoomlaotloaal Chun:h
Kinpbuty Road

· Putor: Oyde Henderson
. Sunday School · 9:JOup.
Worship Servi,cc 10:30 a.m.
·
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services

Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m
Wednesday Se rvices - 7 p-.m.

Ilattenn~':of
chill
log

"

Sunday Worsh1p • 10:00 a.m.&amp;. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
We~nesday Youth Service · 7:30p.m.

Uulled Fail• Cbun:b

Worship -lO:.lli a.m., 6p.m.

Enterprise

'

Edtn Uniled Bmh.. n In Christ
Sunday School - II o.m.

Reedsville

Pastor, Robert J. Coen
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.

Paslor: Keith Rader
Sunday School· 10 a. m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

.

Te xas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Serv ices · 7:30p.m.

Longbottom
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

· Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Chtr d Em ric k
Su nd &lt;~y Schoo l - 9:45a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:3U p.m.

Scventh-D1y Adventist
Mu lberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy lawinsky
Sat~o~rday Services:
Sabba1h School - 2 p.m.
~orship- 3 p.IJl. .·

Mt. Hermou Unlled Brethreo
In Chrisl Chun:h

Syncuse Chun:h orlhe Nuarene

Central Clusrer

Adv c n 1 1 ~1

Un1ted Brethren

Long Botiom
Sunda y School - 9:JU a. m.
Worship - J O:JOa.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hau sman
S!inday"School - 9 a.m.
. Worship- 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services . 7:30p.m.

Seventh -Day

Mono Chapel Cburdl.

Sunday School -10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tucoday &amp; ThuiSday -7:30p.m.
Soulh 11etb11 New T-..eal

Tuppen Plains Sl. Paul

Trinity Church

Worship- 10 a.m.

Off Rt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.

Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School -9:30 a. m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Congregational

Mldditport Pmbytorioa
Sunday School · 9 a.m.

·Full Gotpel UablhoUR
3304S Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter

Reeds, me Fellowship
Chun:h of the Nazarene

UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

. Worship · 9 a.m.
.
Sunday School · 9:45 am.

Evening • 7 p.m.
Wedneday Servite • 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
,.. .....

Wor ship - 9:30 a. m.

HOJTIJOD&gt;III&lt; Prosbylerian Chun:h

Sunday school - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.

Middleport Chon:h or tho NIZiftO&lt;
. Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

,

Huel Community Chun:b

Nazarene

f trst Sunday of ~fonth -7:30 p.m. ~rv ice

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Sunday school and worship 10:25

..

Syracuse M!::!c:
1411 Bridaeman St, Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sund ay School - 10 a.m.
Evening- (1 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
WorShip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonbip · 10:30 a.m . .

•.

Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a. m.

SUnday Evening 7 p.m.

Grund Street

porter lo offer opinions 10 a voter aboul candid~les and whallhey do when the ballots come back to lhe voter."
issues on lhe ballol, Lenles said.
Frymyersaid lhat lhe board has received a number Df
"However, nobody can tell someone else how to telephone calls from volef!l · in Lebanon and Letart
vote, and certainly lhey cannot cast a ballot for someone precincts saying that they had received absentee ballots,
else," he added.
but had not requested them, and did not wish 10 vote in
According to Frymyer, her office has seen evfdence that manner.
that a large number of absenlee ballots are being
Lenles said that while there is no evidence lo date
requested and processed. by lhe same small group of that criminal wrongdoing has laken place, lhe matter Is
people.
being treated as a criminal invesligalion.
·
She said lhat many of the applications and ballot
"Actually, anytime you see a huge increase in voter
envelopes that are relurn~d lo the board office have lhe participation, it's a good thing," Lentes said.
same handwriting on them, bu~ like Lentes, she admit"Bul if there's a problem with lhe·way that the ballotl
led lhal no wrongdoing is involved in processing appli- are received, or the way thatlhe ballots ar.c cast; it causcations for other voters.
es the ballot lo become invalid, and it becomes a crime."
''There is nothing wrong with helping someone,"
· Lentes said lhat voter fraud was recenlly made a
Frymyer said, "but those who are helping volers with felony, and carries with il a possible one-year prison
·
their absentee applicalions need to be very car,eful aboul sentence.

I
I

•

Syncuse First United Presbylrrtan

Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:)0 p.m.
Dyeavllle Community Cbun:h

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 6)

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · I I il. m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

.

Bailey Run Road

Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson

SuOOay School - lO a.m.

Pastor: Bob Randolph •
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

.....

Presbyterian

Follh Volley Tabel'llade Chun:h

Hockingport Chun;h

Joppo

Syracuse First Church of God

Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday SchooiiO a.m.
Evening - 7:30 P·'Tl·
Wednc:sday Service· 7:30p.m.

Worship - 11 a. m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m,

Chesler
l'llluor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

·•.

Th ird Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
W ~d n esday Services - 7:00p.m.

575 Pearl St., Middleport

______T_
hu~ ay ~ rvi~-- 7 p.m.

Vol. 34, No. 34

Middleport Penlecostal

Middleport Community Church

Tow nsh ip Rd., 468C
Su11day School- 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Serv ices- to a.m.

Mtia:s Coopentlvc Parish
Northeasl Cluster
Alrred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9:30a .m.
Worship- I I a.m., 6:3p p.m.

Church of God

Sunday- 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

Jlelhel Chun:h

MI. Olive Unllfll Methodist
Off 124 be hir1d Wi lkesville
Paslor: Rev. Ralph Spire s
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services. 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:jim Hughes
Sunday School - II a. m.
Worship ·9:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Pastor: William Hoback
SLJnday School · 10 a.m.
EveninJ • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

R acine,O~

Main &amp; Fifth S!.
. Sunday School· tO a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Se rvices - 1 p.m.

Graham United Meth~ist
Worship -9:30a. m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (Jrd &amp; 4t h Su n)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Harrisondle Commualty Cb.in:h
Pastor: Theron Durham

Cool&gt;lllt Uniltd Melhodlsl Parish
Pastor: Helen Klin C
Coolville Church

United Methodist

Penteoostal Assembl,)'
St. Rr. 124, Racine

Carmti-Suttoo
Ca rmel &amp; Bashan Rds.

Raclnt

Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School - 9:45 .a.m.
Wo~hip ~ J La.m.

.;

Pentecostal

FelloWiblp Mloltlry

New Lime Rd., Rutland

Putor: Rev. MargaretJ. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

East Letart .
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
-··· --wednestttrr·~'"P"'
- 1111:'1.- -

St. Paul Lulhcraq Church

Dexter Church of Christ
Pastor: Justin Campbell
Su nc:lay school 9:30 a.m.
Norman Wil l, superintendent
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.

The Jlelltven'

,,.

. ...

Wcdncsdar -7p.m.

Pastor: Dewilync Stutler
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Worship - to a.m.

Corri~ r Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy

RL 338, Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Asst. Pastors: Jim Morris
Serv ices: Satu rday 7: 30p.m.

Friday • fellowshtp service 1 p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: Dewayne Stuller
Sunday S~hool . 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

•
..
:.:
. ..

Full Gospel Church otlhe Uvlna: Savior :

LongBottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m. ·

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a.m .
Worship - 11 a.m.

Our Sniour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravc nswood ..W.Va.
Pastor: Da\'id Russell
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Now Lire Viclory Cooler

Fallh Full Gospel Chun:h

Morning Star

St. John Lutheran Church
Pir:~ Grv·.-c
Re v. Donald C. f ritz
Wor ship -9:00a.m.
Sunday School · 10:00 a. m.

"

3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pas1or: Bill Staten
• Sunday Services- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m .
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p,m.

Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.

239 of those applicalions have come from Lebanon and
By BRIAN J. REED
Letart precincts - 117 from Lebanon and 120 from
:flmea-Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY -; Law enforcement and elections offi- Letart. Frymyer said thai Letart voters casl 22 absentee
cials hav·e begun an investigation into posl!iblc voter ballots in lhe 1998 general eleclion, and Lebanon volers .
.fraud in lwo Meigs Counly voting precincts.
: cast 41. This year's general eleclion includes candidateS..
· · According 10 Prosecuting Altomey John Lentes, the for lownship trustee and township clerk.
Meigs County Board of Elections has asked law
Specifically, the investigation will focus on individuals who may be' coercing volers into casling votes for
~nforcement and his office 10 look into the misuse of the
)lbsenlee voting system,
particular candidates, or processing applications wilhout
The investigalion focuses on Lebanon and Lelart the consent of the voter, according to Lenlcs.
Both Lenles and Frymyer stressed thai there is no
townships, where a staggering number of absenlce ballot applications have been processed for lhe November wrongdoing in assisting a voter in voting by absentee
ballot. 'For instance, Le~tes said, lhere is no wrongdoing
election.
Jane Frymyer, deputy.direciOr of the Meigs County involved in assisling an eligible voter in applying for an
,Board of Elections, said Friday afternoon that a IOtal of absentee ballot, and even in assisting that voter in pro254 ab5cntee ballot applications have been received by cessing the ballot itself.
II is even legal for a c_andidate or a candidate's sup~he board office from throughout the county, and lhat

'·

Cl ift on, W.Va.
Sur1day School - 10 il.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • October 3, 1999

Possible voter fraud investigation -underway in Meigs County

. ·:-·

Clifton Tabernocle Chun:h

HGb!on Chrbtlan Fellowsblp C~ur~h
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m ., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m. "'

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunc:lay School - 9:JOa.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:1)9 p.m.

Lutheran

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ·

Pastor : Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School- 9;30 a.m.
Worship- lO:JOam
Wedr1esday Services - 7 p.m.

Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Roben E. Musser
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11:15 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7·p.m.

'

The Church or Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Salntl;
So. Rt. 160,446-6247 or 446·7486

Sunday Schoo! . O·JO a. m.
Wors hip - 10:30 a. m., 7:30p.m.
Wedncsd&lt;ly Service 7:30p.m.
Hemlock Grove Chun:h
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sur1day school - 10:30 a.m.
Worship -' 9:JO a.m .. 7 p. m.

' Sunday Sc I · 9:30a.m.
Worship - :45 a.m., 7 p.m.
ThursdayS icc · 7:30p. m.

tmts· ~

Kojoltlna ure Chun:b
lOON. 2nd Ave .. Middleport

Cbrislllo Fellowablp Cenlor

Salem Crnter

SunOay Schooll 0:20-11 a. m.
Relief Socie ty/Priest hood 11 :05 -12:00 noon
Sacramenl Service 9-10:15 a. m.
Homemaking meeting. lst Thurs.• 7 p.m.

77)-5017

Follb Cblpel

Rulland
Su nd!r )• School - 9:30 a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursduy Servfi:es- 7 p.m.

•

Bible Chun:h

SUversvllle Word or Faith
Paslor: Dav id Dai l ~y
Sunday SchooiY:30 a.m.
Evenl11g - 7 p.m.

923 S. Third St., Middlcpon
Pastor £rnie Wengerd
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
'Wednesday servite, 7 p.m.

Rock Springs
Pnstor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9: IS a.m.
Worship . 10 a. m.
Youth Fe llows hip, Sunday . 6 p.m.

Ponlar1d-Racine Rd .
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sund~y School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - lO:JO a.m .
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

Langsvlllr-Chrirthit&gt;Chun:h

...

Sports B·l

Local Spo~ B-2

Pomcroy"fike , Co. Rd .
P11stor: Rev. Bl:~ckwood
S und~ y School -9:30a.m.
WorshiP 10:]0 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Se rvice-7:30p.m.

"Full-Gospel Church"
Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason

Pomeroy

eq_ Chun:h

Calvor~

· 'Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
•~:·
Wednesday 7 pm
"

Pastor: Connie Fiares
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Woiship - 10:30 a. m.
Bible Study Tuesday - 10 a. m.

Reorganized &lt;;burch of Jr"sus Christ
of Latter Day Saiots

Bradrord Church o Christ
Corner of St. R1 . 124 &amp; ad bury Rd.
Mir1i stcr: Doug Sha blin
Youth Minister: Bi ll A berger
.
Sunday School - 9:JO
m-. - Worship - 8:00a. m., 10:30 a. m::"..""",ir.:'p."'
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wor~ hip - lOa.m.• 6:30 p:m.
W6Unesday Se rvices- 7 p.m.

Ptarl Chapel

Feature on·C-1

Pastor; Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 1 p.m.

Appe Ure Ctaler
,
1

-•

Big day in the Big 10
Cullege football

Fallb Fellowship Crwade ror C.t'rlsl

47439 Reibel Rd., Chester
Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesd~~ Services - 7 p.m,

Sunday Sctlool - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Rulland Ch"urCh of·Chrisr
Su nday Schoo l - 9:.30 a.m.
Worship - 10:)0 a.m., 7 p.m.

Harvest Outreach Mlalltrles

Mlnenvllle

Pastor: Charles Swigger
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a. m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Bradbury Church of Christ
Paswr: Tom Rur1yon
Sund:~y School - Y:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Healh (Middleport)

Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pear l St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Su nday Worship· 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service ·7:30p. m.

Tuppers Plain ChurCh or Christ
Jn strumental
Pastor: Terry Stewarl
Worship Servict- 9 a.m.
Comm union · 10 a.m.
Sunday School - 10: 15 a. m.
Youth· 5:30 pni Sunday
Bi ble Study Wednesday 7 pm

Other Churches

Vcrnagayc SLJIIiv ;m
Su mllly 5dwol - Y:JOa.m.
Worsh ip · I(UO a.m.· ·•

Pine Grove Bible Holintss Church
1/2 mi le off Rt . 325
Pastor: Rev. O'De ll Manl ey
Su nday Sc hool - 9:30 ~. m .
Worsh_ip- 10:30 u·.m., 7:30p. m.
Wednesday Service - 7: 30p.m.

Services - 7 p.m.

Pa:itor: Bob Robinson
Su nday School ·. 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

l';~ s l(n :

Rose or Shll'on Jlollaess Church
Leading Creek Rd ., Rutland·
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Su nday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m

Keno Church or Christ

Wtdne~ay

Forest Run

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School 9:30 a. m.
Worship . 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Lciart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday Sc~ool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 7:00p.m.
Wedneliday Bible Study · 7:00p.m.

Sunday Se.rvice- 6 p.m.

;;.

Colvory Pllarlm Chopel

5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youth Mini ster: Bill Frazier
Stmday School . 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a. m., 7 p. m.
- ~~ Wednesda y Services - 1 p.m.

Fainiew Bible Church

Morning Wor.~hip -ll:l.S a.m.

Worship - 11 a.m.

,. Danville Hollnw Church
-~
310.:!7 Stale Rou1e 32j, Langsv lle
~
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sunda)· sc_hool - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship- 10:30 a. m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer servict - 7 p.m.

Polneruy Weslslde Church or Christ
• 3J226 Chii&lt;J ren's Home Rd .
Sunday Sc hool - II a.' m.
Worship- IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesda y Services- 7 p.m.

Hickory Hills Chun:h or Chrisl

PastOr: Keith Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Community ChuKh
Pastor: Rev . Amos Tillis
Main Sueet1 Rutland
Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m .
S~J nd ay Service-7 p.m.

.
i St
Minister: Danny Bias
Sunday School - 9:.10 a.m.
Wur~h ip- I 0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
W..:dnl'Sllay Serv ices . 7 p. m.

l'ortlood Ftnl Cbun:h ofthe NIUIU'rue
Pastor: Mark Matson
Sunday Sdlool -10:30 a.m.

Flalwoods

Holiness

Church or Jesus Christ Aposlolif
Jla ~ t u r :

:I

.

•...

.
VanZandt and Ward Rd.

.
•

••

.

.-+-..... -

•'

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

"

:~-..-..

' I

...

~- '

,. ...... . ... .. , , , - ""'l'"""l ' '" t

§§i;~~~~~~

j

.'/7 I

3

. GAlLIPOLIS- Gallia County Commissi~ners will sign a
conlract with Tri-Mat Construction Inc., Bidwell, on the ·renovation of the former Ohio DePartment of Tranaportation
garage into new offices for the c:ounty healtli department. ..
· Following ·a minor revision · iit the contr~ the commil!sioners are expected to sign the document at this Thursday's
meeting, a spokesperson for the rommiasioners office said.
Tri-Ma~ which bid an entire jJickage for the t:enQVation,
was the recipient of the bid on the job, and Klion finalizing the
contrKt occurred after a review from the proaeaating attor:
·ne)('s
· 10 take 150 days. to C!)m~lete;
. •
.Theoffice.
project is estimated
and·
rel)ovation is c)!~ to occur soon after the contrKt slgnlna.
The cornmlssiO!Iers ~ 10 allow f~ the con~~'act revision

defer,ed mortgage on work doric under the Community H~
ing lmprovemenl Program during CHIP•s Bidwell ph~. ·
Cooper had reached the end of her five -year obligation on the
deferred mortgage, a procedure used when a CHIP program Is
underway in a community.
.'
Bob Gordon of Gallia-Jaclcson Treallllent Altemativa ·
· St=t Crime briefed the comtniuione111 "" a clinical au~
sor thll hu been employed at liS hours per week by the ~­
gram, and commissioncn viewed Thorrip11011 Hollow ac.1. In:
Oleshire Township before adjouniing. . .
· , · ' 1"
The raid's residents are. reqlielting that the road .,_ d ·
the
buyout
so that plans.
eligible employees have ample the spokesperson said.
·
.
,r' ·;,timeprO~
10 make their
retirement
• No ·immediate action was liken.
. . ~e commiasioners took no lmm~le acti~ followl. .
· . •·
",'{he ·rommissioncrs also releued Edna M. Cooper from her v1ewmg.

II last Thursday's meeting. The rounty came iniO PosSession of
the old ODOT garage on Jackson Pike a year ago, and started
planning 10 lum the site iniO lhc health deparll!lent's new base.
The het!lth de~ent is now in the·courthouse b&amp;Semenl.
In other matters, the commlssion.ers mel wilh County AudilOr Larry Betz 10 discuss an .impending employee retirement
buyout ,program.
Commissioner Shirley Angel said that resean;h in the mat·
ter they requested earlier this year ,has been completed. BeiZ
requested q.at the 'rommissioners draft a resolution addressing

-....'"1' ..

'

c,

•
,;.,

f

I

i

I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="431">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9867">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="26706">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="26705">
              <text>October 1, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
