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,

~· ··-'

•. '

••
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.

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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

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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.

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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.

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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

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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

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VanZandt and Ward Rd.

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Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

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.'/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

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Pon:~eroy

A2 ......... •m,-Jh:dbuJ

Chance of showers
forecast on Monday
By The Aaaoclated Press
Rain is likely in the North on Sunday. In central Oh10, 11 wtll be mostly ctoudy wtth a chance of showers Southern Ohto wtll be partly cloudy
Htgh temperatures wtll range from the upper 50s m the Northwest to the
lower 70s in the Southeast
Sunnse Sunday wtll be 7 29 p m
Weather forecast:
Sunday Partly cloudy Htghs 70 to 75 . Ltght and vanable wmd.
Sunday ntght lncreasmg clouds wnh a chance of showers Lows m
the lower and mtd 50s Chance of ram 40 percent.
Monday Cloudy wnh a chance of showers Htghs tn the upper 60s
Chance of ram 50 percent.
Monday night . Becommg mostly clear. Lows ncar 40
Extended forecast:
)
Tuesday ... Mostly clear. Htghs 60 to 65
Wednesday .. Mostly clear. Lows from the upper 30s to the lower 40s
and highs m the upper 60s
Thursday, .Mostly clear Lows near 40 and htghs m the upper 60s

Congress slates test
ban vote for Oct. 12
By TOM RAUM
Aaeoclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON
Senate
' Democrattc and Republican leaders
agreed Fnday to vote Ocr. 12 on a
' long-stalled treaty to ban nuclear tests
worldwide. Both stdes suggested
rejection was likely.
Agreement on the date came after
Democrats reluctantly went along
with a GOP move to force a vote on
the Comprehenstve Test Ban Treaty
with little advance debate.
"We feel we have' no chotec," srud
, Senate Minority Leader Tom
Daschle, ·D·S.D. "Thts may be the
best that we can get. .. We 'llllike 11."
Conservatives have blocked a vote
on the treaty for two years
But Republican leaders now want
the vote to occur - both to silence
increasing complamts from the Clinton admtmstratton and Senate
, Democrats and because they 're sure
they can defcattl. The treaty needs 67
' votes - two-thirds of the Senate All
' 45 Democratic senators are e~peeted
to-support rt, but only two-Rl!pubh• cans- Arlen Specter of Pennsylva• nta and James Jeffords of Vermom •: have
endorsed it, and even opttmtsllc
, supporters count only seven potenttal
~ GOP votes .
{
"We! don't thmk thts ts a good
! treaty. We think tl would put us m a

weakened posttton mternattonally."
Senate Majonty Leader Trent Lott, RMtss , satd Fnday " But smcc there
have been all these calls and demands
,for a vote, we have olfered to vote "
" If they (Democrats) want to
vote, let's vote, " Loll added " If
there 's not two-thtrds to vote for tt,
tt 's over ''
The treaty. whtch calls fdr an outnght ban on all nuclear testmg, has
been stgned by 152 nattons, mcludIOg the Unned States Butll hru; been,
rattfied by only 18 of the 44 countnes
with nuclear capabtlltles that must
rattfy tt for tt to take effect.
Conservattves contend the pactwhtch also has not yet been raufied
by Russta or Chma - could threaten the U.S ability to moderntze tls
arsenal tf necessary.
Supporters say the Umted Siales
already has a vast supenonty m
nuclear weapons, thanks to more than
1,000 nuclear lests durmg the Cold
War, and the treaty would lock m that
advantage
Loll proposed Thursday that the
Senate take up the treaty next
Wednesday, debate tt for 10 hours,
and then vote Daschle objected at
firs!, clatmmg the tlmmg was too
short and that no hearmgs had been
held on 11.

•
• Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

'

By RICHARD CARELLI
Associated Press Writer ,
WASHINGTON - the Suweme
Court, havmg reshaped the balance of
federal-state government power m
recent years , beg ms 1ts 1999-2000
tenm Monday wnh several chances 10
fire lresh volleys m what some call a
states' nghts re,olutlon
The JUSttees also con fra nt an old
quandary - pubhc a1d to rellgtous
schools - and " new one close to
home - grandparents' n ght to see
thetr grandchildren
Headmg mto the new century, the
court also 1s tack lmg dtsputes over
robacco regulation , autumobtle safety anlt-abortton demonsbtratlons and
1tmtts on po1tt1ca 1conlrl utlons
The mne-member court has been
rnlact srnce 1994 and . dcsplle Jusuce
Ruth Bader Ginsburg's recent colon
cancer surgery, ~s - not expected to
undergo any change before the next
prestdenltal electiOn
Three cases wtll test the court's
commitment lo gtvmg states more
power at the federal government's
expense- a phenomenon Washmgton law)•er Charles Coope r call s "the
most nuttceablc development of the
Rchnqutst court"
•
Chtel Justice Wtlliam H Rehnqutsl has led the court s10ce 1986
"These cases address m dtffenng
ways a smgle polittcaltmpulse - to
~ . thestates," satd
g1ve more power'l.o
Steven Shaptro, legal dtrector ol the
Amen can Ctvtl Ltberttes Unton
"Thts year, the court's constderatton

•

Soc tal Secumy numbers - ~cuscs
on Congress' power to requtre states
to close motor vehtcle records 10 the
pubh c
The fate of a 1994 federal law, the
Dnver's Pnvacy Protecuon Act,
hangs 10 the balance.
In a parochtal-atd case from
Loutstana, the JUSttces must decide
whether computers and other mstruclwnal matenals patd lor wllh laxpayer money can be lent to all pnvate
schools, mclud10g those wtth rellgtous mt sstons
What the court says ~ould become
"the most tmportant church-state
dectswn 10 over rwo decades,"
~r:m:.~tpc:da ~rw s~~o~ ~st:o,::n ~~:~ accordmg to the Rev Ba;..y Lynn of
Amencans Umtcd for Separation of
attackers
Church and S.tate The rul10g also
A ledera I appea Is court! hrew oul may delermme the scope of federal
•
the Iaw after ru Img Ihat Congress efforts 10 connect every Amencan
power lo reguIate mterstale comclassroom to the Internet
r
I
d
merce an assure equa protecuon oor
Two 1970s deciSions Itrotted such
all Clll l cns dtd not authoriZe 11 to gtve dtrect atd to the lendmg of textbooks,
vJcttms sueh a Iega I ngII1
but today's court has, m other conA Fl d
11 d 1
' on a case WI
e ermmc texiS, proved more tolerant of ltes
"helher state employees who say between ~•overnment and rellgton
lhey are vtcums oI age dtscnmmatwn
A case from Washmgton state
can make a federal case oI ll
focuses on a state's powerto provtde
The JUSltces must dectae whet her grandparents wtth VIStlatiOn nghts
Congress, m passmg lhe Age Dts- even when the chtldren's parenfs
cnmmatlon m Employment Act ol obJect All 50 states provtde such
1967 w1ped oul the II th Amendment nghts
unmunlly states enJOY agamsl beiOg
The JUStices- SIK of whom are
sued 10 federal courts
grandparents - must dec tde whether
A sout h c aro 1tna dISpute over sueh laws wrongly 10terfere with parstales' pracllcc of selling personal ents' nght 10 rear thetr fam thes wtthmformatiOn from dn,cr's license out government mterference
records - such as addresses and
'the Clinton admmtstratton and

of !hose qu estions comes even closer to core concerns ol the CIVIl nghts
commumty"
!'he relauonshtp between lhe federa! government and the states whatconsututtonal scholarscalllederallsm - ts not wtdcly constdered
as pollttcally volattle as abortton. rehgton and other loptcs that reach the
nallon 's htghest court Bur the JUSuces' vtew of that relattonship defines
m fundamental ways the ebb and
fl ow of pollttcal power whtle affectmg everyday Amen can life
The JUSt tces wtll use a Vtrgmta
case to dectde whether Congress
exceeded lis authonty '" 1994 when

House approves relief
action for producers·

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
House agreed Fnday to the second
btg farm bat lout m RS mRny years,
$S 7 bilhon in relref for produce~
battered by bad wealher and the
worldwtde gram glut
If the Senate gtves tls approval,
probably on Monday, the measure
would go to Prestdent Clinton for hts
stgnature The ftrsl checks coulq go
out later thts month
" Farmers can't watt They need
as'sistance now," satd Rep. Joe Skeen,
R-N M. The House approved the
l•
(Continued from A1)
measure 240-17 5
I
Most of the money wtll go to gram
the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation
10 19'12, the agency has pared down
I
qutte a bit when it comes to the number of employees Currently there are and cotton farmers to compensate for
31 workers assigned to the highway mamtenance, survey, construclton and a second year of depressed market
.. traffic departments m Metgs County. The posiuon formerly called superin- pnces, and there ts $1 2 btlhon for
I.
ts now called the county manager. Metgs County Manager Brett Jones producers who lost crops to drought
'' 15tendent
and flood s
asststed
m his dulles by Wesley Arbaugh. Lots Allen ts ttmekeeper.
'·
But.the flleasure also offers spectal
Although the new garage wtll be home to ODOT, ODOT ts not m charge
rehef
for other producers - tnclud( of constructmg the new buildmg. That responstbility falls to the State Archimg
a
tax
break for sugar farmers and
tects Office.
$328
mtlllon
m spectal substdtes for
ODOT is mvolved 10 the daily duttes of maintainmg Meigs County's state
•
tobacco
growers
- as well as deals
hishway system, and m readymg equtpment for the upcoming snow and tce
for
some
people
who don't even
season.
11 }
fanm
·
•
There will be one more wmter equtprnent inspection, or dry run, at the
• Low-mcome fishermen around
; existing garage. The dry run ts scheduled for Oct. 18, starting at npon.
Alaska's
Narron Sound wtll get $15
::.
"Local residents are always welcome at dry runs," says Dtstrict 10 Deputy
mtlhon
~ : Director Collins "But thts year espectally, if anyone wants to take a last look
• The ctty of Stroud, Okla , whtch
~· at the old ODOT garage, they should try to stop by."
.
was
hn by a tornado thts spnn g,
,.:
At this ttme, no decisiOn has been made regard10g the future of the old
won'
t
have to pay back some gov~: garage, although Colhns has recetved mqumes from several mdtviduals who
ern
ment
loans
·~· are mterested m acqumng the factllty
/
•
Sled
dog ow ners tn Alaska The
~;
The completion date for the new garage ts Aug 23~ 2000
btll
would
req Uire the Agnculturc
;:·
In additiorato Metgs, ODOT Dtstnct 10 10cludes Athens. Gallla, HockDepartment
to reconSider rules
~. ing, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Vinton and Washmgton counttes. The last Dtsrequmng
lhat
the dogs be kept m
~ trict I0 county to get a new garage was Gallla County, m May 1998 Morpens,
rather
than
lied up
~. gan County wtll get the next one.
But the focus was on larmers, and
~
some House members complamed
the btl! dtdn 'l provtde enough monGALLIPOLIS - The Galha County EMS responded to I0 runs Fnday ey for those they satd needed help
h
the first day of October.
' most farmers and hvestock produc~
Runs mcluded:
ers hurt by the drought and lloodtng.
• Responded to Vanco Road; treaunenl refused
Much of the cash would go to
~
• Transport from Bulavtlle Pike to Pleasant Valley Hospital
well-off farmers and landowners who
.lo....
• Responded to State Route 160, l[eatment refused
•
don't need asSistance, satd Rep. Mar• Transport from the Galha County Semor Resource Center to Holzer Med- cy Kaptur; D-Ohto. "Some of these
;j ical Center.
people aren'tthe ones who are truly
S
• Emergency transport from the HMC Cnttcal Care U~ll to Oh10 State hurtmg 10 thts economy.':
University Hospitals.
Others were unhappy the GOP
t
• Responded to Bast! Road; treatment refused.
leaders refused to constder allowing
...
• Responded to Chatham Avenue; treatment refused.
sales of food and medtcme to Cuba
~
• Responded to SR 218; treaunent refused.
or to block the government's new
.,...
• Transport from Buck Rtdge Road to HMC
mtlk-pncing rules
e&gt;...,. • Transport from Gallipolis Developmental Center to HMC .
Many saw the btll as evidence that
the market-onented 1996 farm law
~ r-----------------------------~----~
has fatled The law was supposed to
wean fanmers from dependence on
government substd1es Last year 's
(USPS $:1$400)
bat lout cost nearly $6 btl lion
Community Nnrspaper Hoktlnp, INc
Reader Services
"I wonder how much longer we
can go on hke thts." satd Rep.
Published every Sunday, 825 Thud Ave GalhpoCorriCtiOn Polley
h~ Ohoo b~ ohe Ohoo Volley Pobhsbong Company
Charles Stenholm , D-Texas.
~
O.r ..a. Ollletn II aU ateries is to be • S«:ond clus pomge pa1d at Ollhpohs, Ob10
Most maJ or farm groups, howev__
45631 Entered as semnd class ma1hng maner at
8Cal•Pomeroy, Oh1o Post Offta
er, JUS! want Congress to fimsh work
If JH bew of II error i1 a stD.,, e~ll Member. The: Assoc:1atcd Press and the Ob1o
on the atd package D1sputes over the
1M - - • at: Gallpolls: (740) 446- Newspape• Asoac1111on
l34l; er ,_...,,, (740) 99%-115!. We P.....,.er: Send address comctooiiJ Ia The

: Work underway on new

Cuba and datry tssues stalled tls
progress for more than a week
"Thts bill ts ~~~fro m perfect, but
11 represents the bcsr chance for ge ttiOg asststance to pt oducers m an
ex peditious manner," satd Dean
Kleckner, prestden t of the Amencan
Fann Bureau.)'ederauon
-~eney ts tncluded '" a $69
btlllon appropnat10ns btlllor operatiOn s of USDA, w1th 1ts mynad agncullure and nutntton programs, and
the Food and Drug Admmtstratton

·Tri-C.ounty.Br1efs;

Sunday, October 3, 1999:

States' rights, aid to religious
schools to occupy high court

_,..

tobacco mdustry square off before tho
court m a fight over smokmg . ThO:
JUSltces must dectde whether tho!,
Food and Drug Admmt stratt on catt
regulate tobacco by crackmg dowr\
on ctgan·•re sal~to mrnors.
·
In another regulatory dt spute, the:
court wtll dectde whether people who ;
own cars butlt before air bags became ·.
mandatory can sue automakers on .
grounds the safety devices could:
have saved them from tnJunes.
:
The JUStices wtll dectde whether&lt;
Colorado went too far rn limiting ;
"sidewalk counseling'' by antt-abor- :
lton demonstrators when it enacled a '
1993 1aw that bars people from get. ;
tmg wtthm etght feet of someone :
wtlhout consent when near a health ,
'
cllntc entrance. '
·
A dectston likely wdl contam ,
tmportant new gutd~lmes for other:
states and for ~ommumttes nation-·
wtde.
• '
·
And the court wdl JUdge the con·:
sttlutwnallty of Mtssoun's money:
llmtls on contrtbuuons 10 political.
candtdates The JUStices are bemg.•
asked to use the case to reconsider the'
••
court's landmark 1976 rul10g thai·
tmposed a $1,000 llmtl on contnbu~
lt onls tolclanhdtdates forhfederal offtttc~
n a . t e co urt as commt e ,
Itself to dectdmg. 44 cases by lat~
June Dozens more wtll be added Ill;
dthe dcommg
d 75 months
d ThethJUSttces
1 i
ect e
cases unng etr as ,
mne-month term. and rejected som~:o
7h·000 other appeals that reached
tern

WINDOWS &amp;SIDING.
"WHATEVER

IT TAKES SALE"

CREDIT ACCEPIEDrl

PAYt.INTS 1l
MCHYDOWNII

*1~FREfTCXlA-,r!!!!U1.

Free vision clinic slated Oct. 14
GALLIPOLIS - llle Gallla County Health Department wtll ofler a
free Y!Ston clrmc on Thursday, Oct 14, begmmng at 8·30 am
The cllmc ts avatlable to serve county restdents aged 0-2 1 years For
more tnformatwn, pt to schedule an ppomtme~t. call 446-4612, extension
293. The health departmentts located m the basement of the ~ourthou se
An appomtment is required
'
1

Free immunizations set this week

GALLIPOLIS - Free immumzaltons wtll be provtded by the Gallla
'County Health Departmenl at the follow10 g locations thts week
• Monday, Oct 4 - CVS on Second Avenue, 4 30-5 30 p m
• Thursday, Oct 7 - Gallla County Courthouse lobby, 4-6 p m
Chtldren m need of tmmumzattons must be accompamed by a parent
or legal guardtan and bnng a currenl tmmumzaiwn record wtth lhem

Fall evening walk on tap for Oct. 7
GALLIPOLIS - A fall evemng walk ts scheduled for Thursday, Oct
from 5 30-7:30 p m on the Gallipoli s Hub (McConmtck Road to Odd '
Lots) of fhe Gallta County Htke and Btke Tratl
Regtstrati!Jn wtll be the day of the event RegtstrattOn Will he held at
the McCormtck Road entrance to the htke and btkc tratl For more mformauon, contact the Galli a County Health Deparlment at446-46 I2, cx tcnston 294, or the Gallipolis Parks and Recreatton Department at 44 1 6022

Green Elementary plans fall carnival
CENTENARY - The Green Elementary School Fall Carmval wtll he
. Oct 7 fro.m 5 30-8 30 p m at I I 3 Centenary Church Road. Gallipolis
The cacntv.tl wtll fealure food, games, hayndc. general store and a hvc
auclwn There wtll be a drawmg lor two Ohm Sl ate homecoming game
ttckets, one ntght hotel, lunch coupons and a team aulographcd football

"'

p

...
f

.

I w•
•

dtcG y"r 11fo11111tiH 11d

811ke a

CIIIIKIIHIIf warnated.

Sunday Times-Sentmel, 825 Thud A'lle Galllpohs. Ohao 45631 .

SUNDAY ONLY
Newa Departnlent
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Curler or Motor Route
Galllpolla
Ono Wc:ek ............................ ,•. $1 2!1
'l1lt -~~~ ......, II 446-l34l. DcporlOne: Year................ .............$65 00
- t n t II lllrt:
SINGLE COPY PRICE
H .... ldltor....................... Ext. US
S"ndaJ................................... .$1 00
C11J Dilts:............................... Ext. Ill No subecriphon by mad penn1nc:d 1n areas where
U..,lo........--·····- .. .......... Ext. llO home e~ m er serv1ce 11 available:
Spona..........- .... - ............... ... Ext. Ill ne Sundly Times.&amp;ntu~l Will 001 be responsl•

News..... ,_................................... .Ext. 119

To Send E·MIII

'
Pomeroy

Pubhsher reterves the: nght lo adJUst r&amp;les dunng
the subsaipl!on ptnod Subscr1pt1on rate changes
may be 1mplemented by chaniJng the durat1on of
the subscnpt1on

~aeli!n':"baelc:om

Newa Department

blc for adVInce v-ymcnts made 10 ClrfiCD

011111 oad Sunda1

-

'l1lt -~~~ a .....r II "'2-%1!5. Depart·
lllat ultallaas an:
GeMnl Ha. .r...................... .ExlllOI
!hwi............................................EiliiOZ
or Exll106

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
lnlldt C1llla Cou111
I J Weeks........................ ,.$27 30
26 Wee~ ................ .,, ... ,.$53.8:2

Meigs EMS runs

POMEROY - Units of Metgs
Emergency Servtces answered four
calls for asststance on Fnday Untts
respondmg were

· AARP plans forum for consumers
SOUTH POINT- Southeastern Ohw restdents can getlhetr questions
.answered and learn how to make the nght chmce for thetr households at
the AARP Consumer Chotec and Uttllty Deregulatton Forum be10g spon·sored by Lawrence County AARP Chapter 5029
The meeting wJII be held at the Grandvtew Inn, 154 Lawrence Co. Road
'450, off US. 52 m South Pomt, on Tuesday from 1-1 30 p m Refresh' ments wtll be served
• Representatives from the Oh10 Consumer Counsel and the Public Uultltes Commtsston
teach attendees·how to fmd
gas
to
companng
avmd scams, to protect themselves agamst slammmg, and who to contact when problems ansc
.
Consumers who have questiOnSabout natural gas suppliers should bnng
a copy of thetr currenl btll and any 10fonnation !hey have recetved 10 the
mat! from competmg suppliers.

Theft report filed with city officers
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Ctty Pollee are mvesugatmg the theft of
severalllems from the vehtcle of Waneta M. Denme, 339 Netghborhood
Road, Gallipolis.
Denme mfonncd officers that between the hours of 8 a.m and 3 p m
Thursday, an umdenttfied subject broke out the rear wmdow of her truck
'and removed a CD player, valued at approxtmately $3()0, speakers, valued at approxtmately $150, and an amplifier, valued at $100 The subject
also damaged the dnver's stde and passenger stde do0r and wmdow
GALLIPOLIS - Galha County shenff's deputt es placed Raymond M
Litchfield, 48, Pomt Pleasant, W Va., m the Galha County ptl on charges
of reSISting arrest, vtolatmg a protection order, menacmg by stalkmg and
cnm\nal trespass
Also placed m Jatl were Btlly Joe Harrmgton, 47, 14255 State Route
7, Galhpohs. fordomcsnc vwlence, and Bryan DeWttt Dtllard, 23 ,97 Berry
Road. Scottown. dnvmR under the mlluence

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• Crulsemlt
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Exterior Appearance

SALEMTWP.

4:33 a1m., State Route 124, motor
vehicle acctdent, Gladys Cross, Mary
Ptckens, treated,..

;:
DAYTON (AP) - One of two
;: men accused m the attempted robbery
~ of a Jiffy Lube in Harrison Townshtp
,• has been charged wtth murder and
;: • aggravared robbery afrer hrs alleged
- ~ . accomplice was fatally .shot 10 the
••• headf
,
~
The vtcltm was shot whtle strug~ ghng wtth the store man ager Thurs~ day mghl , Montgomery County sher~ tff's department officials swd. The
: manager was not ,charged.
:
" The manager did manage to get
• the gun away frotn one of the sus;. peels," satd shenff's Lt Pat Mathe: ny
.
:Sherman Lightfoot, 22, of Dayton,
,.
,.. dted Good Sam an tan Hospital and
,.. Health Center about II p.m. The rob~ bery attempt occurred about 6 p m.
,.
Ltghtfoot was shot whtle strug·
;o
gllng with the manager for control 9f
~ the gun, Matheny said. As many as
=· stx sh9ts may have been ftred, wtth
·~ one stnkmg the hand of the manag',
r, er, she satd. He was treated at Good
:• Samaritan and released .

at

Chnstopher l&gt;txon. who Matheny
said helped Ltghtfoot dunng,the robbery attempt, lled, bul was arrested at
1h1s home around mtdntght.
Dtxon, 25 of Daylon, dtd not fire
the shot rhat killed Ltghtfoot, but
Ohio law spectfies that anyone who
commns a felony m whtch someone
dtes can be charged wtth murder,
aurhonues satd

co upon ~

lnstc.1d

:: Hospital news
Wesl VIrginia's #1 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer.

Monday- Saturday 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm - 8 pm

TOLL FREE 1-800 -822-0417 • 372·2844 • www.tompeden.com

~:
·. :

Veterans Memorial
Friday admisstons - none
fnday discharges- Myrtle Han·
;: ing and John Wtlli.am~.
'

.·
.
.·.
•
.....
.·-

l
'

c li e nt ~ c ~n

"load' th c tr cards alter

'

By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Press Writer
COLU MBUS .- Alter lour pcopie were ktlled m ~mu semcnt park
acctdents m New Jersey. Cahl orma
and Vtrg101a last month . one st.ttc
law maker says maybe 1t's ttme to
take another look al whether Oh10's
safely regulaltons ensure that ndes
are dealh-delymg, not deadly
" Ohto's gol a very good safety
record, " Sen Mark Mallory, DCmcmnatt , satd last week " I JUSt
want to make sure 1t st.tys that way "
Paramount's Ktngs Island near
C10cmnat1shut down two ndes - the
Drop Zone and Kmg Cobra _ fol low 10 g the deadly acctdents on sundar ndes at two other Paramount
amusement parks. The Kmg Cobra, a
standup roller coaster has reopened
The Drop Zone, a lree-fall nde,
remaiOed closed pendiOg an mvcsltgatwn mto the Callforma acctdcnt
Mallory satd he wants to meetthts
state Agnculture Department. whtch
momtors amusement park rtdes, a nd
wtth operators of the parks

' It seems slrangc that ,til ul" sudden , we l~&lt;tvc all ol thcsc acc tdcnls "
he explamcd ' I'm look tng at th1 s
wt tll ,m eye loward posSthle changes
11 neccssmy
,
It tsn ' t necessary. sdtd Re p
Gc~t gc Tenvtllcger. R M.unevtlle
ferwtllcgcr. whose dtstnct
mcl udcs Kmgs Island sa1d he lhtnks
the st.ttc 's current rcgu lalot Y system
and rhc park's mtcrnal salety mom
tormg program ts work mg we ll
" I thmk lhmgs are workmg the
way they should wnhoulthe state getun g mote mvolved ." he smd
Oh10 and Flonda are,the only two
slates wtth lull -ttme mspectors to
mon1tor ndes Twelve states and the
Dtstnct ol Columbta have no salety
regula! tons lor ndes at all
In Olno, ctght 10 spec tors and one
supe1v1sor check every nde at least
twtCc a year, satd Deborah Abbott , a
spokeman for the state agncuhure
department They have JUnsdtctton
on ly at theme parks such as Kings
Island , but also go-kart tracks, water
parks and travelin g nde compames
thattemporanly set up shop at fatrs,

.
Municipal
GALLIPOLIS - fhe loi!Ow) ng
cases were recently resolved 10 GalIt polls Mumctpal Court
Darrell Fellure, 51, 7924 State
Route 588. charged wtth dtsorderly
conduct, was It ned $100
Common Pleas
GALLIPOLIS - The followmg
act1ons were filed 10 Gallia County
Common Pleas Court
Steve "Games, Columbus, has
changed hts prevwusly enlered plea
of not gutlty to gutlty on a charge of
commumty control v10lattons Garne s was senlcnced to 30 days m the
Gallla County ptl
Marshall Seymour, 27, Laurelvtlle, wnhdrew hts prevw usly
entered plea of not guilty and pled
guthy to a January 1999 charge of
gross sexual tmpos lliOn A pre-sentence mvesttgatwn ts to be compl eted by the Adult Probat ton Department.

#

A plea change has been set lor
C10dy Wade, 42, 38 1 Buck Rtdge
Road, Btdwell, on Tuesd,ty, October
5 at 9 am lor alleged communny
control Violations
The tnal of John E Johnson, 62,
Hanover Street, Crow n C ll y, has
been cont10ucd lor Fnday, Oct 22, al

carntvals and shoppmg centers
around the state.
In BO percent of the amusement
park acctdents - deft ned as a nderelated tnjury requmng a tnp to the
hospttal - over the past four years,
human error was to blame, Ms
Abbott satd ·
And though she dtdn 't have the
spec1fic figures, most of the error was
on the part of the nder, she added
"We don ' t usually see a lor of operator error or mechamcal error"
OhiO also has a "~tder responstbtllly" law that allows prosecutors to
charge unruly amusement park
patron s wtth a miSdemeanor tf thetr
horseplay rest Its 10 an mJury
Nauqnwtde, amusement park and
canuval ndes ktll slightly more than
ftve Ameneans a ye.ar, based on 25
years of stallsttcs from the Consumer
Product Safety CommtsstOJl There
have been more than 130 nde- related deaths smc e 1973
But the federal agency on ly mves-.
ligates acc oJeuts ouvolvmg portable
carmval ndes thai are moved across
state lines to vanous operat10g sties

9 am The tnal slems I rom a July

1998 charge ol voluntary manslaughH!I

An Mr,ugnmcnt has been set tor
Don me L Drennan Jr . 19. 63- 1/2
Garltcld Ave • Galllpoh s, lor Thursday. Oct 7. at I 15 p m The anatgnmcnt stems frollJ a Jul y 1999 charge
ol vandaliSm '
Chnslopher Smtth, 31 6 I2 Ftllh
St , Galhpohs, wtlhdrcw ht s previously entered plea of not guilty and
pled guilty to two counts of theft A
pre-sentence tn ves u ga tt ~ tll be
done by the adult probatiOh department
Beth Roccht , 25, Chtlllcothe, has
entered a gutlty plea to one count
each of tampenng wtth records and
trafftck10g tn food stamps Roccht
· was sentenced to the Ohw Refonmatory for women for SIX months on
each count, whtch was later suspended, and she was lhen sentenced
to rhree years ol probation and forced
to pay restltutwn , 111 the amount of
$4.544 to the GalIta County Department of Human Servtces
Dtssolut10n fil ed - Kenneth M
Boyd, 4649 Cherry Rtdge Road, Oak
Htll, and Margaret A Boyd, 1904
Georges Creek Road , Gallipolis

Police start writing more tickets
CLEVELAND (AP) - Pohce
officers have begun tssu10g more
ttckets and making more arrests followiOg a stx-week drop of at least 30
percent cnywtdc and 75 percent m
some neighborhoods
It stgnals an apparent end to a·
loosely orgamlCd slowdown to
protest the ctty admmtstratlon, The
Plam Dealer reponed on Saturday
Safety Dtrector Henry Guzman
sa1d Fnday that lhc ft gures started
10creasmg the week of Sept. 20, a
week afler ttckct-wntmg bottomed
out The slowdown became pubhc
when The Plarn Dealer reported .11
Sept 19
"We th10k patrol offtcers are
do10g what they're s.upposed to be
domg now," Guzman satd " They
ftgured out that they should really do
the nght thmg "
Officers have complamed of low

'IVIM,
RY
UQUIDATION

·W~LLPfiPER BOUTIQUE
Mon-Fri 9-5 Sat 9-3
4279 St. Rt. 160 446-0490

•

Gallipolis

Federal Jaw exempts llxed-Iocauon
nd es - such as those m theme parks
- I rom the comnnss10n's Junsdtc,
uon
}
US Rep Edward M.trke). DMass, smd Fnday he wtll mtroduce
legtslatlon gtvmg the commtsston
power to set standards for ndes, perloflll mspecuons and lnvesttgat10ns.

recall unsafe equtpment and tmpose
CIVIl penahtes
Rtchard McClary, a federal workplace safety mspector turned Memphts , Tenn -based consultant to
amusement park operators, satd he's
troubled by the lack of umform reg· ,
ulatlons across the country and the
absence of a nattonal acctdenl reportmg system.
"Oh10 has a good state mspectton
program," satd McClary, executive
dtrector of the Memphts Area Safety
Counctl
"My compla10t ts that we don't
have any records...You can't correct
thm gs if you don't know about
them "

--------~-.----------------~--~

Gallia County court news

S

Stephame Jones, treated at scene.
Central Dispatch asststed

j,

'

Brand New 1999 Pontiac
Grand Am SE1 Coupe

MIDDLEPORT

SYRACUSE

REEDSVILLE ....!. Due to a scheduhng conlltct, the regular meetm g
of the Olive Townshtp Trustees wtll hold thetr regular meeting on Monday at 6·30 p.m. rnstead of Tuesday, as was previOusly announced

:: Suspect faces murder c

Z 49 p m . Famtly Dollar,

Rlln Outside Gallla Counly
13 Weeki. ........................ .S29 25
26 Weeki......, ................... •.$56 68
52 Weeki. ........................ .$109 7:2

Olive Township Trustees ·to meet

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

CENTRAL DISPATCH

52 Wccb ........... ............... $105 56

GALLIPOLIS- The Famtly Addictton Commumty Treatment
Servtces (FACTS) has added two new members to 1ts staff Penny Edwards
has been htred 10 serve as a prevenuon educator. whtle Jenme Adkrns JOIOS
the staff of FACTS counselors
Edwards, a Galha County reSident, wtll work wtth the Gal It aJackson mentonog project and other FACTS prevention programs. She
graduated from Southern Ilhnms Umvemty at Carbondale wtlh a master's degree m English Edwards has taught English compostllon at Wnght
State Umversuy, Shawnee State University and the Umverstty of Rto
Grande!Rto Grande Community College over the past 12 years.
Adk10s, a Jackson County restdenl, wtll work out of the FACTS
office m Jackson County known as New Alternauves She ts a recent graduate from the Umverstty of Rto Grande , earmng a bachelor's degree m
soctal work Adkins ts also a licensed soctal worker
In other news from FACTS, the orgamzatwn's Gallla County
offtce has been moved to 45 Olive St m Gallipolis The move took place
Sepl 27
The fanner Galha County location was at J 770 Jackson Ptke,
Gallipolis

OVER 250 PONTIACS TO CHOOSE FROMI

a spec tfted day ol the month al a POS tenmmal at any of three ~rocery outlets that the chen! chooses Once loaded wtth the month's beneftts, clients
can shop for grocenes at any outlet acceptmg the card
One food stamp chent, who rece tved her Dtrectton card Fnday, sa td that
she thmks the new card wt ll be lar more conveme nt than the old coupon system
' ThiS wtll be a lot laster and easter to use," she satd , "and now I won't
have to fumble around with coupons whtle someone ts wallmg behtn'd m~
m the chec kout ltne "
However, she sa1d, ltke any change , the new system wtlltakc gcttmg used
lo In I act P J Harm, who worked tn tratnmg food stamp cltents m the COl\- •
vem on, satd that a small number of cl Jenls actually lclt tfle program beca us~
they were unwtJIIn g 10 Jearn how (0 USC the card - WhiCh IS reJatt ve Jy easr
to use , anyway
Well arc admmtstrators hope that the new card. convent entlor customet;s
and retatlers . wtll also help ehrnmate the lraud rhat has been a problet~ wtl~
load coupons
·
•
Food coupons m the past have been sold for cash, traded and ttnsused th
other ways Others puPChased a small ·nem wllh a lood coupon and used tJ-Oo
com change that was recetved back to purchase JlOn-e hgtble ttems, mclu~IOg beer and ctgarettcs
·
Whtle DHS adm tmstrators have worked to ellmmate fraud wtth couporJ!&gt;
as much as posstble, the new EBT program does not provtde cash (orca~
relunds on returned merchandtse). so Il ls hoped rhat fraud can be vtrtualry
ellmmaled

.
Lawmaker seeks review of r1de-safety laws
mo nth to p tck up th ctr

Three lodged in Gallia County Jail

·6 33 p.m., John Street, Btlly
Brewer, Veterans Memonal Hospttal

2:25 a.m., wtth Rutland umts, Carp~nter Htll Road, garage fire , no
IRJUfleS

By BRIAN J. REED
• •
Times-Sentinel Staff
MIDDLEPORT - It's easter and safer to use.. and llts hoped thattt wtll
ellmmate fraud The Ohto DirectiOn Card, whtch wtll replace food stamp
coupons across the state, ts now m place 10 Metgs County, and ts 10 the process
of be10g put 10 place tn Gallia County
The card ts used 10 conJunctton wtlh Ohw's new Electrontc Benelits Transfer system
Effie Johnson, manager of the lood stamp off1 ce at the Metgs County
Department of Human Servtces, satd Fnday Ihat she and two staff members,
wtth asstslance from other offices m the department. recently compleled convemon of 1,600 food stamp clients from coupons to tbe card
The converston process mvolved extenstve srafftrmmng, as we ll as trammg of clients on the usc ol the card Teamwork played heavtly mto the process
as well
The D1rectton card works on the pnnctple of a debtl card Stmtlar to a
credtl or bank card, the Dtrectton card ts dehtted monthly wtth the spcctfic
benefit amoum for each household and ts accepted at supermarkets and other grocery outlets where lood coupons were previOusly accepted
At the checkou t hne, chents mserl lhetr card mto a pomt of sa le termi nal. stmtlar to a cred tt card machme, and enter a perso na!Jden ttficauon number, whtle the cashter completes the transaclton Once rhe lran sactton ts complete, the chentt s gtven a detatled recetpt, whtch repon s the amount of the
sale a"d the balance of benelits remammg m the chent's account
Food stamp cl)ents wtll no longer be requtred to vtsllthe DHS offtcc each

GALLIPOLIS - The Naltonal Hunger Clcannghuusc, a twtlonal organiZatiOn committed to endmg hunger m Amcnc,l, has 1n~ulc a phone number available to re staurants, groce ry stores and mtcrcstcd vo lunt eer~ that
. wtll connect them wtlh one ol5,000 local hunger gtnups where they liM Y
volunteer or have thctr lcltover food collecred and dtstnburcd
By callmg I-BOO-GLEAN-IT, restaurants and others can- help feed tbousa~ds of hungry famtltcs by stmply "rescu mg" lood they would have ntherw tse dt scarded. and mdt vtduals can be con nected wllh thctr loca l lood
banks and other hunger programs where they may volunteer thc11 tllnc
More detatled mformauon about local gleanmg and food rescue program s ts avai lable from the USDA National Hunger Clcannghouse, a program of World Hunger Year -

1·.8 88·670·3035
ERSEAL U.S.A

t

I..:

Card replaces f·ood coupons in Meigs

Number available to clearinghouse

I

s Gallia EMS responds to 10 calls

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, October 3, 1999

'

pay, poor equtpment and unfatr dtsctpllne Thetr anger grew after Mayor Mtchael R Whtte relayed allegations ol ractsm m the department
all owed Ku Klux Klan membets to
dress 111 pol1ce headquarters before an
Aug 21 rally, and proposed a plan to
cut overttme
Alter the slowdown became pubhe. Pohce Chtel Martm Flask ordered
supervtsors to )Jut the number of each
ofliccr's cttatwns and arrests 10 annu,\1 evaluatiOns
OlliccJS had planned to end the
slowdown at tl1e end ol last week

Logan looks to absorb
loss of Goodyear jobs

LOGAN (AP)- Goodyear Ttre &amp; Rubber Co.'s plant, whtch op~~ed
10 1963 and once employed (iOO workers, has closed
"It's been a very emotional week, " satd plant manager Larry Sptlker
The clos10g on Fnday was a blow to the ctty of 8,300, 40 mtles southcas! of Columbus. and to the regton, whose unemployment rate usually
runs above the state average
_
"We're 1ry10g to do everyth10g we can for them, buttt's obvtously a
btg tmpact, " Sptlker satd of the workers
The Akron-based company closed the plant because Its btggest customer, Ford Motor Co , dectded to makes tls own dashboards Ford once
bought 85 percent of the plant's output for tls Taurus and Sable sedans
A small staff wtll remam through the end of the year to help latd-off
workers file for beneftts and find new JObs
The plant held a JOb fatr 10 September and has opened a center to help
workers enroll 10 college for JOb retrammg At least 80 workers have
enrolled 10 Hockmg Techmcal College and other schools.
Hugh Monon, chief executtve of the Logan-Hocking (:harnber of Commerce, has predtcted a buyer or tenant wtll be found for the property

There Is Still Time To Register
For Fall Quarter
Call Today!!
446 ~4367 or 1-800-214-0452

GIUUPOUSQUIERCOUIGE
"Careers Close To Home"
Spring Valley Plaza • Gallipolis

WTHOfllEOTti11NC ClNlEA

Accredited Member ACICS

#90-05-12748

Holzer Health Hotline
"Did you misplace my cell phone again Miss Kitty?
I need to call the Holzer Health Hotline!"
Whether you are close to home,
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6 a.m. until 2 a.m.
Ask your physic1an about
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: Commentary
.iunh~· ~imts• ~tntin.el

PegeA4
Sundey, October 3, 1DW

·What iS Bill Bradley?

WASHINGTON ·• If the pres1denllal
electton were held today, ex -Sen B1ll
Bradley, D· N J , would aurae! more than
tw1ce as man) crossover votes from
825 Third Avenue, Galllpolla, Ohio
Republicans as V1ce Pres1denl AI Gore (9
740-446-2342 • Fex: 448-3008
percent compared to 4 percent), and sub111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
stanti al support from Independents (29
740-llw.!-2158 • Fex: llw.!-2157
percent to 24 percent) Ltberals d1sap·
pomted tn Gore's centnsl pollctes also
fmd refuge 10 Bradley 's cand1dacy, eleCommunity Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
valtng htm as the lone ltberalm the race
Cheri. . W. Govay
What g1ves 1 How can nght and left ahke
Publlaher
embrace the tall man from New Jersey? Truth IS,
nobody knows qutle how to label Bradley,
\Larry Boyer
Dlene Hill
wh1ch ts part of the secret of h1 s success Unit I
Generel Maneger
Controller
now, Bradley has enJoyed the relattve anonymity of a campa1gn operatmg under the radar
The honeymoon Is over Gore's announceTl&gt;o . . . .
•olcamH , . _ ID lite otllfor ll'vm- on
ment
that he wtll seek a senes of debates w1th
range &lt;&gt;I t&lt;&gt;plol. Shott lollora (3011 - . ., INo) 1/lo .,.,.. ol N/ng
h1s elus1ve oppo nent means that Bradley's
P"b''ohotl. !)'pod- , . , _ _ MHI all.,.y N · E - ohou/d IIHIIudo
o oignolutfl,--- .,.,..,. ~ n . . - llpHify o dolo H flroro 'o o ,.,.,.
vtews w1ll soon be subJect to ex hausttve scrull ·
.,_ ID o - - Mil$ Dt · llollro. Ltflwolo 1110
Tilt.,_, Cll
ny A sampli ng ol the contradtcltons 10 the
T7tlnl A,., Go/1/pollo, Ololo 46&amp;31, .,, Th• Dolly Senlln•l, 111 CGutf St, PomMoy,
Ohio, U7tf. n.. Nltor MH weloomN lnt.m.t trNIII'rom ou',...,., MldrwHfl
Bradley record
to~ .....
.. Drug poltcy Bradley would call an end to
the War on Drugs By staltng that he would concentrate on the demand s1de rather than "pump
so much money tnlo the supply stde,"
he 1s essen II ally say mg ihat we should
copy the U S policy toward ctgarettes, whtch IS to reduce usage
By GARY C. SUHADOLNIK
through
educatiOn, warnmg labels and
We have all h~ard a great deal about the Y2K issue, which descnbes the
adverttsmg
As to Bradley's own
•
potenllal year-end computer problems that mrght be expehenced on or around
admitted
use
of
mariJuana,
he
wtll
not
January I, 2000 But many Ohroans may not have heard how well prepared
elaborate except Ia say tl occurred 1n
the finanCial servrces mdustry really rs
As Director of the Ohio Department of Commerce, I ovem:e the Divtston the '70s
•• &gt;Health care Bradley \\ould
of Financrallnstrtubons and the regulatron of Ohio's state-chartered financtal
requtre
parents to purchase coverage
mstrtuttons And I can report to you that the financtal msltluttons are very well
for
a
ch1ld
at btrlh, wtth federal subs1
prepared for Y2K
d1es
and
tax
credtls to ease the burden
The financial servtccs mdustry, state and federal regulators, mdustry trade
Hav1ng
parents
exefCise personal
associations and data servtcc providers and software vendors have exerted stg·
respons1b1llty
IS
a
conser\311ve 1dea,
mficant effort to ensure that the finlutcial instttut:ons will make an uneventful
but
1mposmg
a
federal
mandate to
transtlton mto the Year 2000
force
responstb1hty
echoes
ihe soc1al
After two years of scruuny. regulators report that more than 99 percent of
engmeenng
that
got
H1llary
Rodham
all federally-insured financtal mstituttons arc currently prepared for Y2K. In
Chnton
10
trouble
w1th
her
h~alth
addition, regulators are supervising the remaintng few to monitor their Y2K
plan
remediatton efforts.
•· Welfare reform Bradley's mam
• Based on the on-sne reviews of nnanctal mstitutions by state and federal
cla1m
to hberahsm IS hts 1996 vote
regulators, we arc confident that financial institution customers wtll be able to
agamsl
welfare reform Bradley mamconduct busmess as usual before and after January 1. While I cannot guarantatns
that
the Jury 1s out on 11s success
tee that there won't be an occasional glitch, we can find sohd reassurance m
because
the
11me hnuts 1mposed on
that many of our instituttons are already successfully using thetr Y2K-ready
welfare
reCiplents
have not yet ktcked
systems.
tn
He
may
be
proven
nght, but wtll
In fact, severe! Ohio fin:ne1a! institUtions are so confident in the1r Y2K
readmess that they plan to be open for busmess on Saturday, Jan. I, 2000
In addtlton to the preparedness of the financial tnshtubons, most payment
systems for purchasing items or paymg btlls - such liS" checks, credit cards,
debtt cards, and ATMs - have been tested extensively.
By WALTER R. MEARS
The Oh1o Department of Commerce's D1vtsion of Financ1al Institutions 1s AP Special Correspondent
• suggesMg a common sense approach to the"Y2K 1ssue
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ronald Reagan
Financial mstttution deposit insurance (such as FDJq has been tn place for once called 11 a M1ckey Mouse system, and
decades. It wtll not be affected by any Y2K related event. As F. Scon O'Don· sa1d hts chimpanzee co-star m "Bedtime for
nell, Ohio's Superintendent of Fmanciallnstitutions, says, "There ts stmply no Bonzo" made more sense than the way a
reason to overreact and dram depostl accounts m fear that funds wtll be lost dtvtded government was settmg !Is budge I.
forever.
As the Republtcan Congress and the
Your money rs safer in an insured deposit account rather than hidden away
Democraltc
Whrte House argue rnto over·
in your home "
~
It
me,
as
usual
, on fmancmg the government,
As January I, 2000 approaches, each of us will n~ to decide whether to
the
maneuvenng
would ftt a comedy scnpt.
wtthdraw some money from our accounts Before making th1s deCJston, I
-The 1dea of a 13-month year, for examwould encourage Ohioans to consider the security and safety issues associated w1th having large amounts of cash on your person or in your home. It is sad, ple, and the destgnat!On of so pred1ctable an
but true, that crimmals will prey on indiv1duals who they thmk have wtth· expense as the 2000 census as a $4 I btl lion
emergency to avord countrng 11 agamst
drawn large amounts of money
As for myself, I will only be withdrawing enough money so I can enjoy a spendmg ltmtls.
long holiday weekend.-! recognize that the safest place for my money is in an
-The repeltttve debate rn which each
insured account
poliltcal stde accuses the other of doing
If you would like more mformatton on the Y2K tssue, please vtstt the Ohto what it denies.
Department of Commerce's web site at www.com.state.oh.us and click on the
-The Democrats' pl11~sure at watchrng
Divis1on of Financial Institutions.
the Republican maJonty struggle.
(Gary C. Sulladolnilc Is dindor of th11 Ohio [)llparttrNIIt of Commerce.
-Or the Republtcan resolution the
Thll dt~pattrMIII's Division of FillllnciallnflitutiOns cluu111rs and ngufJJUs House approved declaring that 11 should not
Ohio's staU-cllattttrd jiluutci4l imtitutions. This I'IIIIUrial is 11 "YNr Z000
spendrng any of the Social SecuriRNdilltss Discloam • statltrNIIt colltllinillg Information lwlkved to be constder
ty
surplus
for anythmg else, and should
accui"'IU.)
keep trymg to reduce the naltonal debt. It
dtd not - could not- bmd Congress to do
what the resolution sa1d 11 should do.
Republicans accused the Democrats of
By The AIIOCIIted PraM
to ratd Soctal Securtly funds to cover
trytng
Today is Sunday, Oct. 3, the 276th day of 1999 There are 89 days left tn
spendtng Pres1dent Cltnton wants. They
the year.
countered, wrth a report from the Congres·
Today's Highhght in History:
sional
Budget Offtce to back them, that
On Oct. 3, 1863, President Lincoln declared the last Thursday in Novemspendtng
the Repubhcans favor would cost
ber as Thanksg1vtng Day.
about
$18
btlllon m Soc1al Security surplusOn this date:
es
next
year.
In 1226, St. Francis of Assisi, founder ofthe FranCiscan order, dted; he was
Whtle House Chtef of Staff John Podesta
canomzed m 1228.
In 1929, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes formally changed Its
name to the Kingdom of Yug05lavia.
In 1941, Adolf Hitler declared in a speech in Berlin that Russia had been
"broken" and would "never nse again."
In 1942, President Roosevelt estabhshed the Office of Economtc Stabiliza· By Chris Matthews
Washmgton ·• A bold Btll Bradley showed
lion.
last
Tuesday that he learned the nght lessons
In 1944, durtng World War II, U.S. troops cracked the Siegfried Lme north
from
Htllary Chnton's health-care debacle of
of Aachen, Germany
whtle nval AI Gore remams capt1ve to
1994,
In 1962, astronaut Wally Schtrra blasted off from Cape Canaveral aboard
the
wrong
ones.
the Stgma 7 on a mne-hour flight
Bradley's proposal to bnng medtcal msurIn 1974, Frank Robinson was named the first black manager m maJor
ance to 95 percent of Amencan famtltes car• league baseball, with the Oeveland Indians.
nes the grandeur of Franklm Roosevelt, the
In 1981, Irish nationalists at the Maze Prison near Belfas~ Northern Ire- pep of Jack Kennedy and the street smarts of
•. land, ended seven months of hunger strikes in which 10 died.
both these great Democratic prestdents. He's
'.
In 1990, West Germany and East Germany ended 45 years of postwar divi· offenng voters a nat1onal program many need,
, sion, declaring the creation of a umfied country.
most believe ts nght and none have reason to
,
In 1995, the jury in the 0.1. Simpson murder trial found the former football fear.
•• star innocent of the 1994 slayin&amp;'l of h1s former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson,
That last potnt ts the most vttal. B1ll
' and Ronald Goldman (Simpson was later found liable in a civil proceedmg). Bradley follows the phystcmn 's ftrst precept,
-· · Ten years ago: Panamanian officers launched an unsuccessful coup against to "do no harm " EXtSttng medtcal plans wrll
- • Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega. In a move to stem the flow of refugees to the not be touched. No beneftts wtll be cut. No
' . West, East Germany suspended unrestricted travel to Czechoslovakia.
options wtll be dented. No one w1ll be forced
:.
Five years ago: U.S. soldiers in H81ti raided the headquarters of a hated rnto managed care. No one will be shuttled to
, : pro-army mtlitia. Agriculture Secretary Mtke &amp;py announced his resignation a strange medtcal facthly to fact! the cold stare
• •because of questtons about gifts he had received. South African President Nel- of an unknown doctor.
• son Mandela addressed the United Nations, urging the world to support hts , Secondly, there. w1ll be no dreaded mar• country's ~nomy.
riage of health care with welfare Unltke the
One year ago: Australian Prime Mimster John Howard's conservative gov· hornd plan put forth five years ago, ,.he
' ernment was narrowly re--elected. Pope John Paul II beatified Cardinal AIOjZ· Bradley plan will not treat working families as
iJe Stepinac, the World War II archbishop of Zagreb and a controversial figure wards of the state. What Bradley offers
instead is a chance to afford the kind of pri·
· • because many Serbs and Jews accused him of sympathizing w1th the Naz1s
Today's Birthdays: Author Gore Vidalts 74. Actress Madlyn Rhue is 65 vale medical tnsurance now available to so
"· Singer Alan O'Day is 59. Rock 'n' roll star Olubby O!ecker is 58. Actor Alan many mtddle· and upper·rntddle-mcome fam•
•.• Raehins is 57. Sen. Jeff Bingaman, O.N.M., is 56. Singer Linckey Bucking- tlies.
"We
are
not
talktng about the mdolent or
ham is 52. Jazz musician Ronme Laws is 49. Blues singer Keb' Mo'ts 48. All·
star outfielder Dave Winfield IS 48. Actor Peter Frechette ("Profiler") ts 43. the neghgent," he said in offering his plan.
Actor Jack Wagner IS 40. Rocker Tommy Lee is 37 Pop smger Kevm Richard· "We're talktng about people you and I know...
son (Backstreet Boys) is 28. Actress Neve Campbell ts 26. Actor Ertk Von the warters and waitresses ... the home-care
Detten is l7,

. '£stiiD(i.sfld 1111966

·-W

-or,

o-

A common sense approach
to the Year 2000 issue

\

ayJackAndersonandDbuglascohn

•• Foreign policy. Bradley is an internat1on·
those Repubhcan-leamng voters slick
alist
and a free trader, whose v1ews echo the
With him once they realtze how he
Clinton admmistratron 's tn most areas One
voted?
·· Tax loopholes. Bradley worked hard point of conf11ct is the expanston of NATO,
to advance tax reform when he was tn whtch Bradley opposes. But liberals and con·
the Senate, but he was a zealous protec· servatives alike critic1zc expansion, mcluding
tor of spectal tax pnv1leges enJoyed by former Sov1et bloc countnes, as an unnecesbig, pharmaceutical companies head· sary provocalton ·of Russta Bradley ducked
quartered tn New Jersey As a senator, takmg an opm1on on the Kosovo mterve nt10n,
he opposed federal subs1d1es for wh1ch may provide him another -'bpemng to
ethanol As a candtdate tn the Iowa caucus, take on Gore tf the Kosovo Albanians continwhere ethanol subs1dtes are manna from heav- ue to exact revenge upon the Serbtans, and the
en, he supports them Heanng firsthand the conflict appears never-endmg
.. Polls Bradley says that he makes dect·
phght of the Iowa farmers changed his mtnd,
srons based on pnnctple, not polling. Yet when
he says Is that pnnc1ple or exped1ency?
·· School vouchers. Bradley was one of a he ran for reelection in 1990, he spent more
handful of Democrats who voted to support money on polling than any other DemocratiC
voucher programs, whtch are anathema to hb- senator
And he hasn't gone cold turkey. Pollster
erals and strongly opposed by teachers' untons
Dtane
Feldman IS' currently on h1s payroll In
who are the backbone of the Democraltc Party.
fanness,
Bradley's near defealtn his '90 SenHe now says vouchers are " not a nattonal
ate
race
coupled
w1th h1s wtfe's breast ca"fer
so lut10n" to the tlls of mner ·c11y publtc
made
htm
re-thmk
h1s approach to poltucs,
schools In a sly slap at Bradley, the Gore
forces dtstnbuted bullons at a Democraltc and to life But Bradley better tone down the
NatiOnal Party meeting that sa1d, " AI Gore ·· sanct1momousness He's running an outsider's
campaign, but he was an insider for 18 years
Always a Dcmo~rat "

Rose Ann Curry
RACINE - Rose Ann Curry, 78, of State Route 338. Rautne, d1~d Fnday, October I. 1999 tn St Joseph's Hospital. Parkersburg, West V1rgm1a
Born Apnl 4, 1921 tn Rtpley, West Vtrgtma, she was the daughter of the
late Holly McCoy and Ella Skeens McCoy She was a homemaker
In additiOn lo her parents, she was preceded m death by her husb.md.
Charles Curry, and hve brothers, Clarence Skeens, Cltfford McCoy, Foster
McCoy. Darrell McCoy and Btlly McCoy
Survmng arc two daughters and sons-m-law, Ruby and Btll Dav1s ol
Pomeroy, and Nola and Danny Stump of Portsmouth, two sons and daughters-tn-law, Bobby and Martha McCoy of Fremont, and Donald and Barbara
McCoy ofFremoni. mnc grandch1ldren,two s1sters, Stella Sarson of Racme,
and LoUtse Whitcomb of Waverly , a brother, John (Betty) McCoy of Fre
mont , two Slslers-m-law, Margaret McCoy ot Fremont, and TresS! McCoy
of Nycut. West Vtrgrma. and several meces and nephews •
Serv~ces w1ll be I p m Tuesday, October 5. 1999 m the Ewmg Funeral
Home, Pomeroy Bunal w1ll be 1n the Letart Falls Cemetery Fnends may
call althe funeral home from 7-9 p m Monday, October 4. 1999

Report targets Gore
campaign manager
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Tony Coelho,
V1ce President AI Gore's campa1gn
manager, approved questiOnable con·
tractor payments, hued hts mece for
a JOb and may have stuck the government wtth repayment of a
$300,000 personal loan whtle dlrectmg the US pavllwn at the 1998
world's fa~r m Portugal, State Department mvesttgators found
Then report sa1d Coelho and h1s
staff also m1 sused donated a1rhne
tickets, h~red 1wo stepsons of ihe U S
ambassador to Portugal and had the
~overnment re1mburse $26,000 m
expenses to a consultant who worked
m Coelho's New York Cny off1ce
Coelho's rental of a chauffeur-dnvcn
Mercedes "w~ espec1ally trouble·
some" because he cost exceeded a
$500 ce1hng 1le a neet of s1x vans
for.ihe pav1h were under u,;ed.
The In spector general's report was
released by the Center for Public
lntegmy. a nonprofit organtzatton
that tracks government fraud waste
and abuse and cth1cal confi1cts
mvolvmg pubhc ofhcmls
The center sa1d Coelho's actwns
may have vtolated federal laws governmg use of lederal fund s tor mter-

N,Y

NEiEORGtOG!ST

•

SAYS...

satd lhe whole budget process was headed keep federal agenctes from runmng out of
funds unltl Oct. 21, Chnton said he drdn't
toward chaos.
Chnton sa1d he didn 'I want a ftght with want to but "it was the only way to prevent
the Republicans, but he does not sound con· another government shutdown," a remmder
cthatory. Stgnrng a resolution to keep the of the 1995 budget mess that resulted tn pargovernment from runnmg out of money Ita! shutdowns.
That year, the Republicans, newly m conbecause of deadlines that passed Fnday
without appropnaltons to keep thrngs going, trol of Congress, let it happen tnstead of
he accused the Repubhcans of ~orting to compromising to avoid Chnton vetoes, f1g·
"gtmmicks and gamesmanship" li'i'stead of uring he would get the blame. Instead, they
passing a responstble budget.
did .
They want no replay, but neither do they
By responstble, of course, he means one
want a budget deal hke the one they made
that ftls hts priorittes.
That ts no more hkely tn thts dtvtded last year, whtch sltll rankles conservatives
government than t1 was for Reagan, tn 1982, for the spending Clinton won
The president has vetoed one 2000 appro·
when h1s Republican administration had to
priation
bill, and there are veto threats
deal wtth a Democratic Congress, and he
made his remarks about Mickey Mouse and against ftve more because of GOP cuts he
Bonzo.
won 'I accept.
Actually, the system looks logical and
The latest is against a plan by House
orderly. But that's on paper, wtlhout factor· Repubhcan leaders to delay payments to
ing tn competmg spendmg pnorities.
about 20 million low· income worktng fami The process tlself is the product of bud- lies, which would push $8.7 btllion in
get reform 25 years ago, when Congress set spendtng into the next budget year. It
up a series of deadlines for actton - and wouldn't save any money, but it would
almost tmmediately began missing them. It make the 2000 numbers look better.
begms wtlh a prestdent's budget in the wmClinton satd tf they do it he won't stgn it.
Eventually, they 'II come to terms. And
ter, a congressiOnal budget tn the spring, to
be followed by aclton on the 13 approprta- the cycle w1ll begm agam, next ltme to be
ltons btlls to ftlltn the blanks, whtch ts sup· settled in the mtdst of the 2000 electron
posed to be done by mtd· September but campaign.
never is.
Then, tn time for the Oct. I budget new
EDIT01l'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears,
year, there ts supposed to be a final measure rice presillent and columnist for The Asso·
covenng both spending and the tax revenues elated Press, has reported on Washington
and national politics for more than 30
to pay for 11.
Stgmng the extension Congress passed to years.

natlonal cx.postttons

•

Bradley's got the right prescrtption

:(I

.·

~

Gliml•·"as:timl • Page AS

October c~n' bfi rough on investors

Budget shen~nigans: Call it comedy or call it chaos

Today In History

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

workers who s11 wrth our agmg parents ... the ton team: "It turned health-care reform over to
taxt dnvers, gas statton attendants and depart· a SOO·person task force of self·anotnted
ment store clerks
experts, meeting for months in secret, chalfed
"We're talktng about Americans who get by a sinister liberal activtst and a dnven f1rst
up every day, do a full day's work, but who lady. They came up with a I ,300-page docu·
know if they get sick or hurt, they have no ment that could not have been better designed
back-up " Nobody, not even the arch· to·scare the wits out of Amencans. It was the
Buchanamte, mocks the hopes and fears of the hvtng embodiment of Btg Government."
duttful workmg sttffwho drags himself or herWhere AI Gore contmues to rectte tho son·
self out of bed each dawn, makes breakfast for nets prepared by Hillary and Bill's patd apolo·
the kids, and catches the early bus.
gists for the death of their much-ballyhooed
Bill Bradley, an 18-year student of congres· plan, Bill Bradley proved last week that he had
sronal pohttcs, knows that fear •• not boldness the brains and the guts to read the autopsy. For
•· ts the greatest obstacle to any new idea. AI that, he, the Democrats, the country, and espe·
Gore, still prisoner to the Clinton catastrophe cially those deserving, working families out
of '94, does not. Ltke Htllary tn her New York there may soon garner the benefit.
Senate quest, he repeats the pious, self·
(Chris Mlllthtws, chief of the San Fran·
aggrandizmg mantra that the sole moral or cisco E1Cilmlner's Washington Bureau, is host
political flaw of that earlier Clinton catastro· of "Hardbtlll" on CNBC cable channels.)
phe, which cost the Democrats their 50-year
control of Congress, lay in "trying to do too
much too soon." Like Hillary, he speaks of
,.
.
cltmbmg the Everest·hke challenge of nattonal health care wtlh baby steps.
Bradley_showed us thts week that he knows
better. Bill Clinton failed to dehver on health
care m 1994 for a number of good reasons . A
Gallup poll taken in August of 1994 asked
people which group would be helped most by
the Cltnton health plan and hurt most by it.
The answer to the first questton was "the
poor." To the second 11 was "the middle
class."
Pubhc·opimon analyst Wtlliam Schneider
offered this dammng post-mortem of the Clin-

Thought for Today:

uoon't be humble; ·'
you're not that
:
great."
.·

- Golda Meir, lsra~li
prime lttinister (1898·
1978).

A Gore spokesman. Chns Lehane,
declined tmmedtalc comment on Saturday
The allegattons surfaced at a dtf·
ficult lime for the Gore campa1gn
Reeling from Democrattc presidential
challenger Bill Bradley's surge tn the
polls and fundratsmg. Gore several
days ago shook up h1s campmgn and
moved 11 to Tennessee
Coelho. then House Democratic
whtp, left Congress m 1989 amtd
questions about hts personal financ1al
dealings A legendary fund ratser.
Coelho once headed h1s party 's con·
gress10nal money-ratsmg operauon
Coelho was appomted U.S. commiSSIOner general for the world's fa1r
tn Ltsbon tn June 1996. wnh responstbtltty for fund ratsmg, as well as ihe
destgn, fabncauon and operauon of
the U S pav1lton The expo was esll·
mated to cost $8 m1lhon, but the ftgure JUmped to $9 8 mrlllon and "wtll
likely cost more " because of pendmg
lawsutts, the mspcctor general sa1d
Federal law says government•
funds should not be spent unless
"expressly authonzed and appropnated" for pavd10ns at the mternallonal
fa1r The report sa1d no authonzatwn
was granted for Expo 98. "yet US
government funds accounted for over
80 percent of the total U S pavthon
fundmg "The report concluded that
· the Untied States lnfonnaiiOn Agency
"may have vtolated the sp1nt , tf not

•

The report and further mformatwn
developed by ihe center sa1d ihal
Coelho and h1s staff
• Dtrected the USIA to retmbursc
a New York-eontmctor $26,000evcn
though offictals "could not find a
legal bas1s"" for expenses such as
travel, offtce space and reloc'at1on
The contractor was proJect manager
for the pav1llon Other "questiOnable
payments" m1ttated by Coelho
mcluded dmner for Portuguese
gu1des, laundry serv1ces, the luxury
apartmenl, and a dry run reccplton
that cost $294 for food and flowers
• Htred h1s mece, Debra Coelho,
m v10latwn of USIA regulations. at
$2,500 a month as an assistant to hts
deputy He also htred two stepsons of
Gerald McGowan, the U S ambassador to Portugal, at mnated salanes
One stepson recerved $2,700 a month
and the other $3,200 a month The
contract "d1d nottdenttfy any dut1es"
for McGowan's stepsons, the IG
satd
• D1d not "adequately manage and
control" use of atrhne 11ckets, hotel
accommodattons and other lodgmg.
free Expo ttckets, motor veh1cles,
computers and VIP gtfts
Elaboratmg on the IG's report, the
center reported that Coelho also was
mvolved tn busmess ventures tn Par
tugal wtth at least three corporate
undemnler&gt; of the US Pavtlton
Eth1cs rules proh1b1t spectal government employees from worktng on
matters that would affect the1r fmanctal mterests

Where.Biackbeard died
OCRACOKE. N C (AP) Ocracoke Island, part of the Cape
Hatteras National Seashore, IS known
for 11s vtolent stonns pnd long history of shtpwrecks It ts also noted for
wtldfowl huntmg and fishtng In the
18th century, the tsland was frequently used by English ptrate Blackbeard (Edward Teach), who was
ktlled here m 1718

Probe continues into fumes leak
WICKLIFFE (AP) - Federal mspectors are mvesugaung the Lubnzol
Corp 10 determme whether the company v10lated safety regulations when
fumes escaped from 1ts plant
1
The leak on Thursday bnefly stckened 14 Royal Appltance workers almost
a quarter-mtle away
Rob Medlock, the Cleveland·area dtrector of the U S OccupatiOnal Safety and Health Admtntstratton, satd 111s too early to know whether then; were
vtolattons
"Certamly, 1f there ts release ipto the atmosphere where 14 people are
overcome, then thatts an unsafe cond1t1on, and we need to make sure tl does
not happen agatn," he satd
1
Lubnzol spokesman Ken lwashna satd on Fnday that the company has
at least temporanly stopped producmg the matenal that was the source of
the noxtous odor
Employees were blendmg chemtcals to make a gear lubricant called
Anglamol 99 when a nearby venttlattOn system sucked a noxrous odor from
the mixture and released 11 outstde, !washita satd.
Lubnzol employs 1,200 at tis Wtckhffe plant and 350 m Pamesvtlle. The
Fortune 500 company rs Lake County's largest pnvate employer and sells
tis fuel addnives, Jubncants and spectalty chemtcals around the world.

•'

mon

or s oc s

rom t c

erash 1hat heIpe d Iaunch the Great
DepressiOn to the 554 26-poml
biggest smgle-day plunge tn 1997
October has provtdcd Ihe backdro
for some of the worsl days m stockp
market htstor
•
y
Th 1s year, memones of 0 ct'u bers
ast
P are already hauntmg Wall Street
"Th ere -are some 1rou bl mg s•m•
lantles to October 1987, 'smd Hugh
Johnson, ch tel mvcstme nt officer at
First Albany Corp 'The dollar was
weak. some carl warnm " ns of
mfiatwh were c:Ceptn g u~ a~d the
Fcd was ratsmg tnlerest r&lt;~tes ..

In 1987, those economic factors
culm mated m Black Monday. when
the DaY&lt; Jones mdustnal avcro~gc
1
d 508
1
22 6
p ungcl
PI otnts. ostqg
per
cent o ns va ue
No one expects a smgle day loss
of that magnnude any lime soo n Bu1
the Dow• already 9 7 percent below
It s Aug 25 cl os mg record ul
II 326 04 cou ld dtp as low tls
·
I0.000
satd Ned Rtley. clucf 1nvcst·
mcnt officer at BankBoston Thai
would lea\ e tl II 7 percent he low Its
record, a sohd correct ton or retrench
ment
Allihe economtc factors, and the
fact that II s a very narrow market,
make tl hkcly that we could reach a
bottom thts month," Rtley sa td, relernng to the fact that a small number
of stocks drove the market to us
August highs, while the maJonty of
share pnces faltered
Th1s year, analysts expect Octo
her's course to be detennmed fatrly
early On Tuesday, the Fe\leral
Reserve:s Open Market Committee
wtll announce whether 11 will rai se
mterest rates for the thud ttme 1hos
year The Fed raised rates twlce' thts
h
k
n
summer, oplpg to eep m a1IOn

By LORI HINN~NT
happmess "Killing a defective mfant
Associated Press Writer
ts not morally eqUivalent to ktlhng a
PRINCETON, N J _Two weeks person Somettmes IllS not wrong at
mto Ihe sc hooI year, Prmceton pro- all," he has wnllen
fe ssor Peter s10ger works 10 an
In "Ammal LtberatiOn," wh1ch
unmarked office posts no office Smger cons1ders hts most1mportant
hours and teaches biOethtcs tn 3 work, he argues that the hfe of a perguarded classroom
son IS not necessanly more valuable
The 53-year-old scholar has come than that of an antmal The 1975 book
under fierce cntiCism because of hts led to the foundtpg of Peopl~ for the
vtew that parents should be able 10 Eth1cal Treatment of Ammals and
eulhamze severely disabled mfants turned Stnger mto the phrlosoph1cal
HIS appomtment as a tenured profes- father of ihe ammal nghts movement
sor at the umverstty 's Center for
Some opponents hken hts voews to
Human Values has led to threats, a tho~'eHof the Ndazts
h
barrage of e-matls and demonstra- .
e provt es a convement et lea 1
ttons
framework for btgotry and cost-savmg measures that cut hves," sa1d
Lasl Week , Sorne 250 pro Iesters- S
h D k f h F
p
many tn wheelchatrs - ba
d d tep en ra e o I e orest ark, Ill '
_mea . e d1sabtltty_.group Not Dead Yet 'I
entrances to the admmtstratton bu1la- really don 1 thmk there's rMm for
mg and demanded the umvemty lh ki 0 d 0 f d
..
rcsc md 1ts offer to the Australian
ISS
hlscusswn d d h
sc holar
mger, w o IS mame an as a
" ! th k 1t' 5
d th
daughter, says he has actually
m
a goo . mg to slim· rece1ved support from some parents
ulate people to thtnk, Smger sa1d m of disabled chtldren
an mtervtew at hts offtce Thursday
"There 's no unantmtty among
"You can'l separate debate and leam- those who lwe w1th dtsabled chilmg •
dren,' he satd "II people attack me
Even pres1dentml candtdntes are because of that bel1ef. \\hy aren ' t
betng drawn mto the controversy
they gmng to chntcs that offer preRepublican Steve Forbes, a mem- nataltestmg and protestmg there? •
ber of Pnncelon's board of truslees,
Bob Gnss , a Pnnceton graduate
has sa1d he w1ll no longer donale to who IS dtrector of the Center on Dts
h1 s alma mater for as long as Smger
abtluy and Health m Washmgton
tuaches there The wealthy publisher
satd
when he first heard of Smger's
and h1 s late father, Malcolm, have appomtment,
he pe11110ned the um been among the untversuy 's most
vers~ty to reconstder But after
generous donors, an undergraduate
exchangmg e-mails With Smger over
res1dence hall at Pnnceton ts named
several weeks. Gms changed hts
alter the younger Forbes
mrnd
Advocacy groups for the dtsabled
"I personally vtew hun more as an
are calhng on Democrattc pres1den
ally
of the dtsabthty commumty than
Ita! candtdate B1ll Bradley, also a
our
archenemy,"
Gnss satd "lthmk
Pnnceton alumnus and trustee, to
that
he's
m
a
pos11ton
to recogmze the
condemn S1nger's hmng So far,
dangers
of
the
rmplementauon
of hts
Bradley has not commented on the
theorettcal
questwns
"
ISSUe
II
Smger eats no meat, wears no
Smger's v1ews on euthanasta were
leather and donates one-fifth of hts
first detatled m h1s 1979 book "Pracucal Ethtcs ' He has wntten that chil- mcome to mtemat10nal atd orgamzauons In a New York limes Magazme
dren less than a month old have no
arttcle,
Smger wrote that members of
human consctousness and that parWestern soctettes should
affluent
ents should be allowed to kill a
donate
at
least 10 percent of thetr
severely dtsabled mfant to end us sufmcome
to
help
ease starvation m poor
and to mcrease the fam1ly 's

1480 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

1·800·445·2206

countnes The art1cle resulted m
$75.000 tn une![pected donatiOns to
Oxfam over thr'ei eeks, spokeswoman Peggy Conno ly s d
The attention has put Pn ceton m
the d1 fftcult poslllon of ensunng
Smger's place wtthout d endmgor condemmng
IS v s The um·
verstty has prov1ded h1m wtth a
guarded classroo"'. and prom1sed to
mamtam h1s safety and that of the 23
students taking h1s course, "QuestiOns of L1fe and Dealh "
"Some of the coMroversy can be
attnbuted to mtsrepresentauon or
m1smterpretat10n of hts \ICWS," URI·
vers~ty Pres1dent Harold T Shaptro
wrote m an edttonal for the Datly
Prmcetoman last November. shorlly
after Smger was appomted "But
some of the cOfltroversy ans&lt;:.!i from
the Iact that he works on dtfficuh and
provocative top1cs and m many cas-

ber troubles may stem from mvestors
rmslng cash lor year-end buymg
spreeNs
b De
dJ
" ovem er
cember an anu·
ary are typtcaily very strong " he
..
•
said By October, you can get a fmr1 1
f
• f
dy c ear 1ctured 0 fa hcompany s hunamenia s. an I d t fere s anyt mg
you ,want to get n o to ra1se some
cash, It's a good lime to do It "
woe fu1 rcmembranees of past
Ociobers may play a mmor part, BelSki satd . In terms 'or downsides and
k
k
h
mar ct wea ness ~nvestors ave
very long memones, he sa~d
But over lim e, analysts say, sea•
sonal supers1111ons stmpl y don 1hold
u
P
'There have been many Oc10bers
when the market dtd not crash "satd
JohnsoQ 'Uiumately, lundamenlals
mnaIt.~r Th c It me of the year does
01
Th
k
k
d
IS past wee , mar el tn exes
sur vtved several volat tle sesstons to
d I ttl h
d Th D
dd
en ' c c ange
e ow en e
the week 6 33 pomts lower A loss ol
63 95 p01nts on Fnday left lhc Dow
at 10,273 00
•
The Nfasdhaq shpkpedl h3 S6 dover,thc
course o 1 e wee
e 10 ex ost
9 31 on Fnday to close al 2 7~6 85
P

1

RACINE- Rose Ann Curry, 78, Slate- Route 338, Racme, dted Fnday,
Oct I, 1999 tn St Joseph's Hospttal, Parkersburg, WVa
Born Apnl4, 1921 m Rtpley, W Va, daughter of the late Holly and Ella
Skeens McCoy, she was a homemaker
She was also preceded tn death by her husband, Charles Curry, and five
brothers, Clarence Skeens, Cltfford McCoy, Foster McCoy, Darrell McCoy
and B1lly McCoy
SurviVIng are tWO daughters, Ruby (Btll) Davts of Pomeroy, and Nola
(Danny) Stump of Portsmouth, two sons, Bobby (Martha) McCoy and Donaid (Barbara) McCoy, both of Fremont, nme grandchtldren, two SISters, StelIa Sarson of Racme, and Loutse Wh1tcomb of Waverly, a brother, John (Bet·
ty) McCoy of Fremont, two Ststers-m-law, Margaret McCoy of Fremont, and
Tresst McCoy of Nycut, W Va . and several meces and nephews
Serv1ces w1ll be I p m Tuesday m the Ewmg Funeral Home, Pomeroy
Bunal wtll be tn the Letart Falls Cemetery Fnends may call at the funeral
home from 7-9 p m Monday

Grandpa died of a heart attack;
Mom ditd of a heart attack.
Chantts art you will tool
Dr. Robert Holley has received special
Training to identify and treat the many risk factors
Tliat lead to a heart attack or stroke

es challenges lon g-establt shcd ways
of thmkmg - or not thmktng about them "
Stnger, who has taught at un&gt;verSII!Cs m Bntam and Australia, has
been assaulied m Germany for hts
v1ews and made an unsuccessful run
for the Australian Senate as a Green
Party candtdate He satd the Amencan controversy has not changed h1s
larger v1ews on h fo and death
"If people read thts as part of a
broader context," he sa1d, 'they
understand that I'm trymg 10 alleviate the amount of unnecessary suffenng m the world "

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THE MEDICAL SHOPPE

from escalatmg and · worrtes about
another tncrease have kept markets
off balance for several weeks
R
h
k b aki
I tsmg rates urtfstoc_ s y m n,g
1 more expens1ve or compames o
borrow to fmance growth That eventually culs mto corporate proftts
Moreover•fixed rate mvestments hke
bonds become more allunn g 10
mv estors when tnterest rates arc
lugh
Whtlc most analysts behcvc a ralc
mcrease Tuesday could spark a short
term sell off, many also believe 11
would be the Fed s last move 1n 1999
That could clear the way lor another
rall y, Rtley satd
0 nee t hc Fed ts out o 1 11c
1 v.ay,
we should gel some la1rly good news
m the tonn of thtrd qu,mer corporme
proftts," Roley sa1d
0 cto be r se IIoffs 11ave often set thc
stage for ralites later tn the year In
October 1997, for example the Dow
lunlbled 502 46 POint s But the Do w
d
h
h
game more I an 400 pmnts m I e
next two months, clos1ng out the year
at 7 908 25 and conttnu10g 1he run of
1 longest bull market on record
lle
Bnan G Bclskt, chief tn vestment
strategist at George K Baum &amp; Co
10 Kansas Cuy, Mo ' believes Octo-

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the letler" of that law
That agency, ihe report sa1d
turned over control of the opetatwn
to Coelho who, the Center for Public
lntegnt y repotted lived tn an
$18,000-a month luxury apartment
b1lled to the USIA and used tree
donaicd mrllne tickets
, The tnspec tor general &gt;md Coelho
obtatned a personal loan of $300,000
from a Portuguese•bank so that a pn
vatc foundatiOn could construct a
memonal wall m the shape of a wave
The Joan was listed on pavthon
records as a hab1ltty and the foundatiOn hadn 1made any payments as of
December 1998 The U S govern·
ment could be obit gated to pay for the
sculpture, the report sa1d

By EILEEN GLANTON
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK _ Investors had a
lot to worry about thts past week The
government offered confltcung slg·
_._
" hh
na Is on whet h"' econom1c growl as
slowed The dollar mustered httle
streng1 h agamst 1he Japanese yen
G111 11
d
ld f 1
Ae de sal us earfnlllnghs woOu bate~
here n on top o a 1 at, cto er s
Wh 1
k
1
1
I e mar et hana ydsts are re uc
lan I Io g1ve muc ere ence to sea
sonal swmgs,thcre's no denym that
0 1b h
ft
b
g h
c otherf ast okenF een ha rolu9g29

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Sunday, October 3, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Merger of !'e~f~r~,
,Q~.~~'"I!.
a
!~.!.,~!.!~~.;!t9rkers
wor~ied
;
c tc

-.; .:IOHN McCARTHY
an~es ' ~-' w~
sys em AaiOCiated Prell Writer
\umunl •t~ ti s"\ '"~~ ng ' ';f~~·COLUMBUS - At two state cnts 10 00 or wor - ,1\ e,ll crmmcd the. lngoc nt
aacnctes th at wt'II merge to rnake 11·
. ha v m "~ bseparate
.
1lat C"''Inl1JU p1U&lt;C•
.
f
If
.
.
r·
d
agen&lt;:
tes
tor
we:
easter or we are rectptents to m
.
· bs an d be come se If-s uffitctent, m~ nl.
JP
h dBut
. . &lt;ombtnm •e two
d mstttuttoll&gt;
h.
1
1
· d . w it b II crcnl w.1ys o m nl:!" t m gs
·
workers are watltngand wome
The 4,000 employees of the OhiO can e a c1"' 11 ~nge
I
.
·
"Oiten there s ., rc uctan&lt;:e to
h . b .. T
, '
.. .
Bureau of Employment Servtces and
,.._ De partment of Hurn an Servoces s harcII Jll s. . wccu 1c '"
" 1. 1I sa rc,t1
"
""'
d
, a cn\'C 1llt t 11\.' lll lll11 11l ~ ,,uc nl'v 1u
..
h L
are watttng on I e egos 1ature to
d
~
1 1 .. e ·
~ the merger, and some are worc~c 1"I' a '"" 1" ", ' 11 llii:C
tied thetr JObs may be left out. Gov h en,"te Prestdc nt Rtchard Fman
Bob Taft promised dunng hts electiOn
as seen prev oo_u: •!!tempts 10 merge
campatgn last year to streamhne va~tbus ~late .tgenctes meet wtth
government.
reststan~e fro~l both p~bhc ct~lpluyMuch of the agenctes' work will ees.~nd age ncy .tdmm tstrators. .
be shifted to the state's 88 counties.
Some ol the problems 111 try mg
Layoffs at the state agenctes may be 10 do _lhts mthc past. why we never
avoided, but staff reductions through , got offth~.dunc. was the prospec t ot
early retorements and buyouts are turl wars, satd Fman, R-Ctnctnnau
likely.
How the work for the merged
· That hurts, satd Bruce Wyngaard agency - 10 be called the Depart'\... of the Ohio Ctv il Service Employees ment of Job and Fanuly Servoces Association.
wtll be performed ts not yet kn own
.- "We're try mg to tmprove our Teams of agency planners and law'
system and basocall y. we' re told by a makers arc studymg 115 structure. and
new administration that u's be mg giv- the Legtslature woll have to create the
en to somebody else."
new agency tn state law.
~kers at state, agencoes around
The work gmng to the countocs 15
r
the nation· are fec lm g a so molar e.&lt;pectcd -10 he spill up between
crunch, sa1&lt;1Jack Tweedle. do rector of county employees and state workers
child and famol y servoces for the at the ~unty level
.
National Conference of State Legislhc eg tslature ts wo.rk.mg agamst
latures.
'
a Jul y I deadline. That s when nev.

effect, and Taft and leg islattvc lead- have a "career center" that.&lt;:ombiqes
ers be lieve it '~ lhe perfect time for the training, employment services,
merge r
~
une'mployment msurance and adult
. and retrammg
. . programs.
Seventeen states have submotted educatton
.
.
. as much
pl ans to the U.S. Dcpurtm cnt ol The state ts trymg to provtdc
·
·
·.·
·
·
·
Labor lor complytng wtth the new flex1bthty to the counttes as posst ble.
· of ur ban, subur ban
rules. and a1I of· 1he states must 11avc go·ve n 0 h'to,s mtx
plans comnleted h)' Apn I Nme of the and rural counties
,.
.
.
.
17 states have been goven penm sston
"That s really at the heart of our
Ad mm
· ostrator
to beg m t11c transot .oon ca r1y.
strategy, .. OBES
.
'd it
Eve n wtthout a merge r. some James Mermts sat . ·
changes wo uld be necessary ConAlthough the sta~c: has held up
grcss on 1998 passed the Workf orce Montgomery County s one-stop proIn vestment Act, winch co nsolidates gram as an e• ample of how to make
ahout ~~ fede ral Jnhs programs tMo the. transform atoon successful , the
block grants In the states. It transfers ·do ft oeult part of the merger has hcen
both money and decoston -makmg convmcmg counties that the state woll
authority from Washin gton to state not doctate all the rules, smd Jacqueand Ineal co mmumties
line Romer-Scn sky, d~t ccto o of
The chan ges resulted from a drn- Human Se rvices
matte drop on we lfare recipients
" I don't th ink any une model tits
natton wtde In Oluo. the we lfare a lithe countocs or fots all the JOb marro lls have bee n redueed from an all - kets th at are out there... she said .
ttme htgh of 748,717 in March 1992 '·We're not trying to force people onto
to 25 1,735 in Au gust
the (Montgomery County) mode! "
In 1997, at then Gov. George
Reps. Btl I Harns, R-Ashland . and
Vomovtch's urgmg and bu oyed by a John Barnes. D-Cieveland: have hcen
strengthemn g economy. the Legisla- charged hy Speaker JoAnn Dav idson
ture hmited the amount of time rectp- wtth provodmg legislauvc mput to the
ients could get benefit s to three years merger.
"The speaker has not gtve n me a
111 a fiv e-year period. The fi rst group
of recipients will be dropped !rom the spec ific deadltnc . though a sense of
rolls!n,October 2000 - three months urgency in my mind c.ists," Hams
after tile merger is to be completed. sat d. "There arc lots of thmes that
Under the new rule s, each of have to take place to meet that (July

·'The OCSEA, which represe nts
abqllt 1,800 .Employment Services
workers and about I 100 at Human
.
·ts womed that
' the LegoslaServoces
'
. than
ture may be more agg resstve
.
.
'
Taft about downsmng.
. both the admm
. .tstrallon and
Wh1le
Davidson satd they believe any staff
.
reducllon's can be accomplished
. early retirement
.
through
and employee buyouts layoffs have not bee n
·ruled out . '
" It concerns me that we might
have a governor who bas a very speco fi c plan in mtnd with respect to his
vtsion of this merger and what's really driwmg it and the l,cgislature,
which might have a di fferent one,"
Wyngaard smd
Davidson~
R-Reynoldsburg,
ac knowledged that one of the goals
of the Republican-dominated Legis
lature 1s smaller government, but she
added that we lfare reform is more
about·helping the rect pients become
scl f-s uftieoent.
" If you' re tnterested in downstzmg government. m streamlmmg govcrnme~t ,then you try to look at what,
\uncti ons ca n be legi timately
merged." Davtdson sa od " I sec tim
much more im portantl y as bcuco
se rving the cl ocnt v uf both 9,1' the
departments . I' vc certainly bee1'1 very
scn ous-about doing a good JOh on

I

.sunday, October 3, 1999

AttiiOCiated Press Writer
.
I DAYTON - They am ve to col_eel welfare benefits and leave wtth
the same day
Job ""Ospects
r·
·
It
happens
all
the
ume
at
The Job
C

L

dtldmg tthf47 government . pnvatc
an f non-pro II agenctes under one
roo ·
b The center is co nsidere? a model
y state offi ctals who are preparmg to
.
merge
the
OhiO
Department
Human Serv c
th th Ohof

entcor,atonte;tsOry, 8.1.5n
·aCrfe Olftiut
Ce e n

~e

Bureau of Employment Servoces
·
" We are the larges t employment
and traming center 111 the United
States" saod do rec tor Gary
'
. .
Wtlltamson "There's nothmg hke ot
·tn sea• 1e. ..
'
I eo;,&gt; nWI s u e rei
O s
hO
' m. e

~

•

•

·S t a t e g e t s s h a r e O f m i l i t a r y f u n d s
:
,
·By LARRY MARGASAK
to build the best. 21st century equipMaj. Gen. Arthur J. Lichte, direc·a~aoclated Press Writer
...
ment for the .armed force s," tor of g1oba1 reac h programs oror the
WASHINGTON - In an era of Czwartack.i said. " He doe'sn't make Air Force, said the service was not
tb k T t L tt' M'
'l'tary
m11
cu ac s, ren o s ts- apologies forh ts advocacy on behalf ready to retire older C-130s because
sisstppi os on a roiL A storm-chasmg of hts own state."
they sttll have a use ful hfe an·d "we
cnuadr . B'l .. ..,...
.
b d
Rese Ve ""
qp&gt;n 1 oxtts ...-..mg
:;&lt;J!Hvas-a~gered when the ship- try to love wnhin our u gets. ..
, 10 new CI30-J aircraft. A $1.5 billion yard where hi s father once work.ed as
Cz wartacki said the maj ority
ship
that
would
be
built
in
Pascagoula
a
ptpefiuer,
Ingalls
Shipbuildmg
m
leader
"believes the unit is so criti'
is cruising through Congress.
Pascagoula, lost a contract to butld an cal and fii es ex tremely dangerous
The Air Force and Navy say they assault shop to a partnership between missions, 11 should have the safest ,
will not need these proJects for years. the Avondale. La.. shipyard and the newest, front-line planes."
But Lou, the Senate ma;:.~ ority leader, Bath Iron Works in Maine.
Lon al so persuaded Senate
wanted them now.
To compensate, Lon tried to take defen se appropnators to add $500
_-_ The Republican is a dnving force other vital busi ness away from the mtllt on for the LHD-8 nu ni aircraft
;·behind Mississippi 's truhtary success. Maine shipyard Stunmng the state's camer for Marines. The Navy did not
·He has used his powerful office to - two Republican senators, Olympia wa nt fundon g to start building the
-:i&gt;crsuade the Pentagon to change pri- Snowe and Susan Collins, Lou pro- $1 5 bilhon ship. to be co nstru cted in
:·~rities, even buning heads with fel- posed backing out of a deal he had Pasc agoula, until fiscal 2005. Co n; low Republicans to boost his state's brokered for the Mame and Mtssos- gress10naI ofhcoa Is expect the mon:'ilefense industry.
stppi shtpyards to each butld si• new ey to be approved.
When House appropn ators as ked
·.: His announocment of new projects destroyers.
. hhd
h
h
for Mississippi in 2000 is so big he
Lon demanded the Ingall s shop- t e Navy - whtc a not soug t
· separates them by regions of the state. yard get to build seven o• eight of the any money- how much it could use
Among them: new destroyers, ship 12 destroyers
toward advance work on lhe ship. the
. benhing facilities. classrooms, barSnowe and Colhn s protested. The Navy returned an estimate of $295
' racks, night simulators, hangars. dt spute was sculed when Defense millo on.
· computer software, crash seatsBnd a Secretary Will tam Cohen, a former
T. Eric Womble, Lon's seni or
: tank-firing range.
senator from Maine. agreed to sup- mtlitary atde, sent the servo ce a hand. Mtssissippi is the 31st most pop- port construction of up to two addt - written note that $295 million was the
• ulous state but ranked 15th m per !tonal destroyers. to be built at "wrong answer."
: capita defense spending last year, said Ingalls.
"We have worked too hard to give
: the National Priorities Project, a nonSnowe and Collins will not dis- up on the $500 M now," he wrote.
: profit research group .
cuss the mcodent But another memCzwartack.i said Lou would save
With Lou's help. the state "'pects ber of the Maine delegation. Demo- taxpayers between $700 million and
· to get about $8 billion in the fiscal cratic Rep. Tom Allen, said Lou was $1 bilhon by allowing Ingall s Ship. 2000 defense appropriations bill.
unfair .
buildin g, now a dtviston of Litton
" He's a fierce competitor," said
" It seemed overreachin g to me, Industries, to retain workers and
: former Rep. Bob Livingston, R-La. and after 2 112 years tl stoll does," contractors now constructing the car: livmgston stded with Lou on most Allen said . "We ought to be argumg rier in Pascagoula.
·· issues, but he recalled a tough battle from the evidence and not making the , Lotr has fought off cutbacks, and
with lott in 1997 over whose ship- case based on raw PQhtical power." then helped add money, to speed up
yard would get the contract to build
Lou's mnuence placed the 53rd the Pentagon 's Space-Based laser
' an amphibious ship.
Weather Reconnaissance Squadron in project, the last vestige of President
, ' "All's fair m love and war, " Ltv- Btloxi - the "hurricane hunters" Reagan's "Star Wars" missile
ingston said, "and in that instan~e tl who VY through storm s - immedt- defen!(e system. Lou touted the mothately in line for d\e new C-130Js. balled Mtssisstppi Army Ammunition
was war."
Lott spokesman John Czwartacki Without the insistence of Lott and Plant complex to become its headsaid the majority leader is "a very other lawmakers, the plane, partially quarters.
, proud senator from the state of Mis- built m Mtsstsstppt , would not roll off
The Air Force planned for a tow- sissippi, a state that has certain eco- the ass~ mbl y line at all this year. The level test in 201 2, about si• years too
:nomic disadvantages."
Air Force does not want the aircraft slow for Lott and others.
; ' "Senator loti fights for his state for regular units until 2006.
The majority leader also promot' O'J...l
II.
1
ed the form er ammunition complex
as thesite foraregionaiNavyHuman
Re sources Service Center to serve
, CLEVELAND (AP) - Three
seven
states. When Mt ~s i ss ippi was
The numbers in Frtday's West Ytr·Buckeye S game tickets had the
chose
n
in 1997. Republican Rep Joe
ginia lottery were:
:right combination for the drawing
Scarborough
qf Florida - whose disDaoly 3 2-2-2
:Friday night, and each is worth the
trict
lost
the
project
- contended the
Daoly 4· 6-3-7-8
;Ohio Lottery game's top prize of
Navy
"
tgnored
the
critena they set
Cash 25: 4-6--13- 15-24-25
' S I00,000.
forth. "
· The winning tickets were sold at
:Vinnie'sDrive Thru in Youngstown,
•Richfield Tire &amp; Auto in Richfield
' Spee-D-Foods 7 .m Canton
0
,IJid
:.C:-o
'
Night drawings
05j
Buckeye 5: 2-12- 13-29-3 1.
- c:
Ill Q)
Pick 3 Numbers: 3-5-3.
::I (,)
: Pick 4 Numbers: 2-1 -8- 7.
~:::J
··
nay drawings
::I 0
Pick 3 Numbers: 3-8-9.
o:.C:
(.)Q
·I Pick 4 Numbers; 5-1-9-3.
In the Buckeye S drawing, wininers will split up $402,007 Buckeye
•
~ sales amounted to $328, 196. ,
· The lottery will pay out
$~. 195.50 to winners in Friday
)'light's Pick 3 Numbers daily game
For initial evaluations or follow-up visits,
on sales of $1 ,161 ,049. The Pick 3
we offer monthly office hours.
Numbers day game winners' payout
;was $132,726, and sales totaled
$367,698.50.
' : In the Pick 4 Numbers night
'same, players will share $143,900.
~e
game 's
sales
totaled
.$390,2 15.50. The day game winners'
prizes total $50,300, and its sales
;were $120,227.50.
Member, Ohio Orthopaedic Institute
• The jackpot for tonight's Super
~lotto drawing is worth $4 million.

:. 1110,

W.• v8. tOtfery SeleCtiOnS

The center opened 111 June 1997 to
. asststance
, ·
offer one-stop
to we Ifare
recipoents and JOb see kers so they
don' t have to troop all over town.
agenc y to agency.
Betwee n 1,500 and 2,000 people

their luck
'
" We created class-A office space,.
created a nice envoronment," he satd .
" We treat people respectfully no
'
.
' ,.
matter where they are m thetr lt ves.
w 1·tt tams
·
. ·d th e agenctes
· have
sat
there
"It's like.a nea market. We' re all
under one roof together. We make

~t: :,~; ~~I~C;e,~~e;p~~~r~ldl~t f~:~~ ~~~~~~~d~~~i:~r~·:~r~ther and

doors each l10ur.
There arc no long lines. People arc

~'~::c~/'~~~~.~~;:s f~:~s~:gskag'~:~~y" decisions
togethehr. andt~eytovei!·"
he said. " We're s armg space, we re

By DAVID RO~E
Aaaoclated Prell Wr~er
· TALLAHASSEE, Fl~ . (AP) - A w~ite man who
reportedly admitted making a phone c,alllinged with
racial slurs and profanity after two bombings at a
black college has denied making either of tlte explo·
sives.
Lawrence M. Lombardi, 41, an unemployed, mar- .
ricd father of two, who is originally 'from Ohio, but
now lives in Tallahassee, was arrested Friday and held
without bail on lwo counts of making bombs. He could
'face up to 20 years in prison if convicted.
The first bomb exploded Aug. 31 in the restroom of
an administration building at Florida A&amp;M University. "fhe second went off Sept. 22, damagmg a restroom
surrounded by classrooms and offices .
. FBI officials said Lombardi admitted making a
telephone call to a Tallahassee TV station after the
second bomb, and warned, " this is just the beginning,
brother,"
.
' Tm telling you, these ... n
... I've had
enough of this," the caller said. "They got no business
having a colleg~ when there ain' t nobody there smart
enough to ... get a degree."

Furney, D-Tol ~d o, says there sim:•
ply is not enough lltne to proper ty;;,
merge Employment Serv1ces and'
Human Services. She said the e• Jst-'
ing development prog rams ~ould fit
what Empl oyment Services ts try ing•
to do.
·'
Taft says the merger wo ll procee&lt;l·
as planned However, he empha- .
sized the merger ts only the beginnitlg·'
of a changing work force development phil osophy.

. ,.

..

" Beyond thts merger, we' ll bC'
working on a strategy to coordmat!t
all of the departments and agencot:_s.
that are invol ved in work fm ce dcvcl-,
opmcnt and training and educati o n ,' ~·
he smd.

By LUKAS I. ALPERT
Associated Preaa Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Al last, the day of reck·
oning.
"Sensation," the controversial art exhibit that
set New York on its ear even before it arrived, was
scheduled to open today at the Brooklyn Museum
of Art amid cheers of First Amendment advocates
and jeers of disguSted detractors.
"I thought it was a 1/ery provocative, enduring
show," said Mimi Zahkll, who viewed the exhibit
in advance, and was among about 600 pro-museum demonstrators that formed a sometimes raucous crowd at a rally in Brooklyn on Friday night.
· Katie Browning said the exhibit is "a little bit
shocking," adding: " Some of the pieces made me
feel kind of queasy- (but) not in a moral way."
· The exhibit includes a painting of the Virgin
Mary decorated with elephant dung; another of a
serial child·killer whose face is formed with hundreds of children's handprints; and a bisected pig
floating in formaldehyde .
· Mayor Rudolph Giuliani has called the show
" sick" and has vowed to cut the city's $7 million

.

~~;S~~;:S~~ ~:C~U~~~~~ ~~~Cr;~e~~r~~·~

the state of Ol11 o they are 111 doltcrent
parts of town. They do bu siness di f&gt;

-reoeHntty."
,., _
d
_..owe vcr. nt 11 t ~m&gt;So n sat mer~~
after agency.
sharing problem-solvin g. we're shar- tng the two agenctes can .t-ork anfi.
Onl y one of every
four
people mg goals."
wtl_l po od•u
h
d
"'_ce more creato vc w_ ays ol
who wal ks through 1 e our comes
However, Wtlltamson satd there do t~gl bus okncss wtt h hthe publtcd.. .,
for welfare benefit s. The rest arc there . were some bum ps in the road .
t1un tl wt11 c a won er1~1
b
· " h ·d
10 look for JObs. 10 get JOb-trmnmg.
"We had so many partners that • ..oon 10 customer scm cc, e sat ~
or to seck unemployment -related ser- one of the miti al problems wasJ·ust
Consumers wt ll get a beuer scrvoc•sd
d. ..~L h
·l
each partner"" erstan mg wrrut I e VIC~.
~
"A lot of people who com~ m
· satd w tlt
· 1.atnson. " They
have JObs."
JUS! heard we have a lot of JObs avati able...
More than 9 ,000 joh openings
. arc curwtth o ver 1,000 compamcs
d
Tl
b
C
rently poste at 1c 1o enter. F·ree
access to telephones, comput ers and
•Seiko
fax machmes is provided 10 j ob
seekers. Interview rooms e nable
•Bulova
employers to talk with prospective
employees on-s ite.
•Put.ar
Wilhamson said the modern furnishings and cooperati ve spirit give
a lift to people who may.be down on

Judge
against Aetna; appeals are

1

I

.

GREAT REWARDS

na

•

OHIO VALLEY
.'

......,..1.,.., ,..., ,

Candidates
show credentials to Christian Coalition
:By

l

'I

Salutes MeinDers, J1Ltl'1Jisors,
o/o{unturs, anti our 4-!J{
Scliofarsliip 9{ecipients
luring 9{p,tiona£ 4-!Jl Wee{
Octo6er 3-9

SANDRA SOBIERAJ

"Every child born and unborn must
be protected by law and welcomed to
.... WASHINGTON- As Republi- life," he declared . _
~an presidential candidates showeU
He advocated parental- no~~fication
oti:&gt;ff their conservative credentials Fri- laws on abonton, saymg Parents

Robertson said some of what he 's

~uoclated Press Writer

he~d from Bush's "centrist" cam-

patgn "so far would cause me to
believe he would be ,;'orthy of support of the coa\1tton.
.

~obenson deemed Gary Bauer a to know."
. .
1•'1ost cause," Elizabeth Dole "a
Robertson, the rehgtous broad~~outhern belle" and George w. Bush caster who com~ands the_ grass~· worth of support., .
roots army of Chnst1~n actt~tsts that
•· For ~at Buchanan, Robertson gave helped sweep Republicans mto con~i. stem warning that Christian con- trol of Congress in the 1994 electtons,
.:t;ervatives will desert him tf he d1tch- said he will nbt endorse any presi:Cs the GOP for a thtrd·party presi- dential candidate during the primary
•A
• 1
- h th R f
Part
cason
,...entta run wtt e e orm . ,. Y·
s
·
~ Reform supporters are
180
But his preferences were clear.
•!degrees out in terms of social iss:ues.
In an interview, Ro be rtson a11 but.
m
, ey don 't share any of the views dismissed Bauer, whose teen-aged
h'
tthat Pat Buchanan claimed to espouse supporters in campaign T-s Iris
~0 vociferously," Robertson told a worked Friday's convention in
: news conference al the coalition's droves.
· " Robert•·nnual "Road to Victory" confer"He's not going to wm,
•e
sontoldTheNewYorkTimes.,"You
• .-nee.
._: "I can't see him taking many don't win with 1 or 2 percent) Most
~hristi~n conservatives ~ith him- people are not terribly keen on riding
~otto the Reform Party, Robenson a lost cause."
l &lt;aid. ·
Bauer, who once ran lhc Family
Y.
The two-day conference drew Research Council and prides himself
..,
·11·
~,500 of the coalitoon's 2.1 mt ton on his Christian conservative ap_peal,
:!litembers and six of the eight Repub- appeared taken aback when informed
:1icans running for president.
of Robertson's remark. He said he
::· ll was Bush, the Texas governor was disappointed Robertson was _not
""
· taking a straw poll of members a\~
.. nd front-runner for the GOP nom1....,
1
h
:Jiation, who filled a\ t e seats - an d ' yeat's convention. "Then we wo,.'utdu..
·
,..med
the perimeter's stand'mg room
n't have to sit around and specuIate
·" " d.
II
't-- in a cavernous hote I ba room ;· onwberetheleadersare,"Bauer~

'

•&lt;

.
I,

Specialized Care for Total Joint Replacement

seeking his will in my life," Dole
said. "I learned from the best President Reagan - that you have to
lead with the convictions of your
heart, not with the latest polling
. data."
Robertson said later that she gave
a "wonderful speech" and enjoys
"real support" from his members.
Asked to explain the music organiz-

·.~
~t".

' I

GALL/A t:OUN'I'Y JUNIOR I'A/RGROUNDS

•

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

OCTOBER 8-9,. 10

·ovB 4-H Scholars &amp; Alumni .

.

OPIN II A.M. TO II P.M.

Member FDIC

L.ARGBS'I'

I'RII PARKING AND ADMISSION

8t. OLDBS'I' FLEA MARKE'I' IN SOUTHERN OHIO
t.

r•
•I":

FI!R INFDRMATIDN AND RE.ERVATIDN: 7411-246-6347

.,,
'·

'•

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

Johnson's Y•rlety Store
210 EJ11t Mlltn St.

Pomeroy, OH 45789

740-H2·1112

:J04.n:J-530s

--- - -'"'

Health Fair

AVariety Of Screenings

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

To Those In Attendance

Will Be Made Available

Everyone
Welcome

I

.. WE HAVE ITEMS FOR EVERYON£, YOUNG AND OLD I ..

Oo/t.B ...!Jf.efping to :Ma~ tlie 't.Best '13etter!

ers chose for her entrance, Robertson
boyishly shrugged. "She's the Southern belle, right?"
Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch promised
to-be a " conservative president with
guts."
Barbara Penberth of Bethlehem,
Penn., remained undecided. "These
20-minute speeches don 't get you
anywhere. It's just rah-rah," she said.

'kllc:Pielsl

gious upbringing. She called her
grandmother' s tattered Bible her
dearest treasure.
"M
. t t·e
y commt 1men1 ts o s nv 10
lean on the lord with my whole heart,
reading his word daily and earnestly

\i·'

WELCOME TD

~

to ~~e a sen_es of debates for~.• Bush
to cry~ta\ltze hts pos1t1ons,
.
In hts speech, Bauer promtsed
that, ~nhke Bush, he would make a
JUdge s opposmon to abort Jon nghts
a prerequtstte for appomtment to any
federal bench.
,.
Also, Bau~rdshoutedd, h My JUdges
are gotng to ~n erstan t at mamage
is between a man and a woman '"n' ot two men ." ,
Dole took the stage to the rolling
crescendos ofthe music from "Gone
With the Wmd " and talked of her reli-

THE FRENCH 500 FLEA MARKET

•

t.orif!

Professor hopes to excavate, clone woolly mammoth

i;.lliillliiiiiiliiiiliiliiii.iiliiiilili.•••••••••••••••••••••••••

October 22,-1999

was about 7 until age 20. He has not seen him sin¥'
Lombardi graduated from mortuary school.
:~
" From everything I know about the guy, he *,
good.... I hope it 's not him," Policaro said.
•
" It 's a hell of a nice family," Policaro said.
Offi cials wouldn 't say whether they believe
bardi was part of a larger group, but they indicated th~/
the campus is now safe.
. IJ
One former co-worker told investigators Lombard!
had talked arout findi n" '""''h "laking in structions·oj
the Internet, the Fl:ll saou.
,
·
Lombardi worked for a vending c'ompany and h!~
route had included machines at the two buildingi
where t~e bo~bs exploded, the FB_I said. An 7mploy.l
ee told mvesttgators that Lombardi had been 1ssued· 4
university ID card and that he dod not surrender th~
card when he left the company in July.
·•
" The vending company employee described Loll'lbardi as having no perso nality and as an individual
who did not like blacks and has used the 'N' word, "
the FBI wrote in its affidavit.
-~
Jansen said that was not true. " They did not fin II
any identification card at his house. He did not have
one at the time ·of this event, " he said.
·-

annual contribution to the museum because of it.
In the latest addendum to the legal battle, attorBut hundreds voiced support of the museum, neys for the muS~;,um filed papers Friday accusing
would be with the doctor, not
MICHAEL RUBINKAM
both in public opinion polls and al the rally. Giuliani of violating the liiuseum's equal protec•
HMO, the judge said.
I
Aitsoc:lat•ICI
Press
Writer
Homemade signs there featured pointed state- tion privileges under the Fourteenth Amendment.
The Foundation for Ta:KPitVer I
PHILADELPHIA
(AP)
A
conments about the mayor's purported lack of respect
The papers also said the mayor isn't entitled to
•.
,-.
.
plans
to
appeal
a
judge's
t
for the First Amendment.
withhold funds already authorized by the city
Consumer
one of the first lawsuits and
based
consumerRights,
group ~~~Fs~~
Actress and activist Susan Sarandon saluted the Council, named the mayor as an individual defenin the nation to accuse a health main- the plaintiffs, called the
large crowd, urging them: "don't roll over on this dant and sought punitive damages.
"It's an outrageous, frivolous act, " said 1teon~~:: · ·o ~!~:~tii~~ of racketeering. "temporary setback."
one, this is really a big deal."
" The fact that the
said Aetna Inc.
Michael Hess, the city's top lawyer. " It's a mean- I The
Giuliani was unmoved.
promised
quality
medical
care,
but
largest
health care company ad'nili(-'1
" I don't want any money coming out of my spirited, outrageous maneuver."
encouraged
widespread
cost-cutting
ted
in
this
litigation that its cotrnilltit; l
poekct to pay for this kind of sick demonstration
Several demonstrations were expected today
and
penalized
doctors
who
didn't
ment
to
quality
health care
of clear psychological problems," he said' at City and police were to be in the vicinity of the muse'mere
puffery
'
is
a de•vaslta~rfgj
increase
their
patient
load.
The
lawHall. "This should happen in a psychiatric hospi- um.
suit,
filed
in
April
on
behalf
of
nearly
admission
that
we
intend
to
But travel to and from the museum might not
tal, not in a (city-funded) museum."
6
million
Aetna
customers,
claimed
·
explore,"
foundation
president
Both BMA and the city have filed lawsuits be as easy as usual. Due lo work on three subway
lines, the three stops closest to the museum will the abuses were so widesRread they vey Rosenfield said Friday.
over the conflict.
"It's going to have a trememloid
The museum filed suit in federal court, not have service on the Manhattan-bound tracks. constituted a pattern of fraud.
U.S.
District
Court
Judge
John
P.
impact
on this company's reputation
responding to Giuliani's threat to withhold the Shuttle buses from the museum are scheduled&gt;to
I
F11lla.m
this
week
agreed
with
and
ability
to service the mafliefo
museum 's funding, which is about one-third of run to the nearest station with regular service.
place."
.._,
the
nation
's
largest
health
"These things are planned months in advance.
the museum's annual budget.
An
Aetna
spokeswoman
did
The city later filed a lawsuit in state court in an It in no way has anything to do with the muse- Ii~~u;~:r~i~w~hich admitted that its
claims of being commit- return a call for.cornm&lt;:nt IFriclay.,~i
effort to evict the ,museum from its building for um," said Melissa Farley, Transit Authority I&lt;
to
"
maintaining
and improving company's U.S. Healthcare
spokesperson.
violating its lease.
lquralilty health care" were "mere based in Blue Bell, Pa., pro•videi4 l
puffery," but didn 'I amount to health insurance lo 21,million Amer, I
icans.
fraud.
Fullam on-Wednesday rejected
Tite Aet11a case was one of
By·JOL:Y-N· DKJMOTO -- ----~-- -- -· . -.encased animal from the Taimyr Peninsula in Park' to the contrary,__it won't succeed," Greg
~aoclated Prell Writer
Siberia and airlifting it more than 200 miles to Pence said, referring to the movie in which the plaintiffs' a(gument that " in first to accuse an HMO of racketeer,
every case, individual physicians ... ing, a charge originally aimed aJ
·. _FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) - It sounds like a the city of Khatanga.
cloning was used to resurrect dinosaurs.
' be moved to put their own ceo- organized crime. A similar lawsuit
lho vi~ plot come to life: A Northern Arizona
The mammoth will be kept frpzen there in an
But scientists at Te xas A&amp;M University
interests ahead of their filed under federal raelc.cteering
University geologist aims lo excavate and clone underground tunnel, where scientists will study prov,ed last month that live cells are not needed
patients' welfare."
against U.S. Healthcare in 1988
i woolly ·mammoth from DNA.
the 11-foot-tall animaL
for cloning. The team successfully cloned a steer
Even if that happe_ned, the fault was dismissed.
: larry Agenbroad concedes that cloning the
Besides analyzing dirt, pollen, and even its from the hide of another that died a year ago.
4nimal is unlikely. Still, he says biologists stomach contents, a primary task is to extract
Still, t~e odds are slim for mammoth cloning,
(cmain optimistic and he is excited about the DNA for cloning.
said Hessel Bouma III, a cell biology expert at
DIAR PRIMISTAR CUSTOMIR,
project.
The cloning process involves putting DNA Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Mich.
.
1AICI ADVANTAOI Of
' Agenbroad is part of an international team of from the mammoth into an Asian elephant's egg
"ll would stan with DNA not from a fresh
~cientistll .whose first task is to cut the cloning that hils been stripped of elephant genes. So even ceil, but from one haphazardly frozen by
NOWI
candidate -the likes of which roamed the earth though an elephant would give birth, the baby nature," Bouma said. "The chances of DNA
iboul 23,000 years ago- from a Siberian ice would be a mammoth, not a hybrid, Agenbroad being completely intact is very, very small."
Give Ul your PIIMEST.IIta
field.
said.
But why bring back the mammoth in the first
bill and
alva you a
- The adult male mammoth, estimated to be
"I don'tthink (the elephant) would know the place?
DISH
NETWORIJ.
•
100ul 40 years old when it became frozen, was difference, though she ~ight wonder why her
"Why not?" asked Agenbroad .
DIGITAL
SATElliTE
TV
SYSTIN.I..
f(lund by a 9-year-old nomadic reindeer herder baby is so hairy."
" I'd rather have a cloned mammoth than
.
INSTAWD•
.. ;
; n 1997. It's been named Jarkov, after the boy's
Agcnbroad said he is not countiqg on success. another sheep," he added, referring to Dolly,
t amily.
• "I guess it would be a rarity, but the biolo- cloned in 1997 from the udder of a 6-year-old
·,
~ "To feel the skin and touch the flesh of the gists are quite optimistic," he said.
ewe.
Snammolh will be quite spectacular. It's the closA medical ethicist at the medical school and
Agenbroad isn't the only one excited about
6IPIUIMONTHS
) stl've gotten to an animal I've been chasing for the department -of philosophy at the University the cloning prospects.
OF
AMERICA'S TOP 40"
3Dore than 30 years," said Agenbroad, sitting in of Alabama at Birmingham is among the naysay·
" I think it would be a. really wonderful
PIIOOIIAMMINO PACKAGI . ' 'J
oan office crammed full of mammoth bones, ers.
thing," said Paul Martin, a retired professor of
YAWED AT $19.99 PD MONIHI
jAitorU ,..,.._.,,_ ... ...,.
~eth, figurines and paintings.
"You need live nuclei and live eggs, plus a geosci~nces_ and a l~rge mammals expert from
; ·. Agenbroad and scientists from the Nether· · host mammoth mother to gestate the fetus. the Umvers1ty of Arozona.
a c tJt rill.
11
~ inds, France and Russia, arc removing the iceBecause none of these are available, 'Jurassic
"ll would be a moon shot."
t
.
a - fnJm huntlleds of Pf'011111mmllll opllons, incledlo;; $tlol1l, . .,
Movies, Music •ncllnlenutlieMI tH...,_i.,_

,Joint
Implant
Surgeo'ns, Inc.

(614) 221-633.1for Appointment Times

Lombardi's attorney, R. Tim Jansen ,
with an uncommon type of heavy-duty
said, " He is absolutely innocent."
PVC pipe that Lombardi bought at a
Authorities were confident they had
lowe's home improvement store the
their man .
'
day before the first explosion .
" FAMU today does not face the
Investigators said three former &lt;;O ·
threat that it did yesterday," said U.S.
workers identified Lombardi from a
Attorney Michael Patterson, when Lom store surveillance tape and recognized
bardi's arrest was announced .
his voice on a recording of th e threat·
. No one was injured in either blast,
ening phone calls.
I the explosions spread fear across the
Lombardi grew up in Columbus,
,_ ,000-student campus. Dozens of
Ohio, and graduated from Ready High
police officers searched every campus
School in 1976. He attended Ohio State
building each morning, and everyone
from 1977-79 and graduated from the
had to show ID to enter. Surveillance
Cinci~nati College of Mortuary Scicameras were mstalled at stale expense.
ence tn 1980.
Some of that security will remain
Th e state Board of Embalmers and
intact, campus authorities said. The
BOMBING SUSPECT
Funeral Directors said Friday that Lomschool has a big football game tonight Lawrence M. Lombardi bardi was licensed as an embalmer and
- and hundreds of parents(are on campus for parents' funeral director from Ma_y 1981 until July 1990, when
weekentl.
he let his license lapse.
"It looks like our nightmare may be over," FAMU
His mother, Sylvia Lombardi, would not comment
President Frederick S. Humphries told students at a on her son 's arrest.
rally Friday.
At a barber shop near her ~orne, owner Franco Poli Investigators said they matched bomb fragments caro, 59, said he cut Lombardi's hair from the time he

Eve of destruction? ContrCNersial exhibit opens today

others provtded ,.. he satd
tv. .
An d w 1II oamson satd Ihe rc may"'"'
challenges m meshing the operati ons,
of OBES wtth the human-servoce.).
d
epartment.
.
"You've
"'"
two
lar~c
organin.
b
"
.
·'

qy BANK

Po-m eroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

White man charged in.bombings at black-university

weUare reform .
.
,.
One.lawm aker wou:d l,tke 10 sl
somcthtng take pl ace 1101 s cnttre Y
do\Ierent ·
. . . -'
Sen· Lmda Fumey
says
lalt 1·9,
·
·
mergong the wrong departments
'
· She
s·ud
make
' it would
.
. more sense tu.,
merge the JOb-creattng Department q"
D 1
1E I
t Se ·
eve opment wot 1 mp oymcn
~'-•
voces.
•

Officials b~o~k to Dayton One-Stop Center as model .
~JAMES HANNAH

.-Jiltbav tltm..-~t.w • Pag•

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Pleasant .
Valley
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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point

as.ant, WV

'

Sunday, October 3, 199~~

Radiation ·tear continues, but town egins returning to normai~
By KATSUMI KASAHARA
Associated Preas Writer
TOKAIMURA, Japan - The Japanese government today lifted an evacuation order for more than
160 residents living near a uranium-processing plant
that caused the nation's worst nuclear accident.
, Smce the Thursday morning acctdent, which set
off an atomtc react ton and sent three workers to the
hospital, peopl e living in a 385-yard radius had been
evacuated to a nearby community center.
" Safety )las been confirmed," top government
spokes man Hiromu Nonaka smd tn a nalionally televised news conference. " We pray from the bottom of
our hearts that their lives can return to normal as
soon as possible."
The night before, an advisory to stay indoors was
lifted for hundreds of thousands of residents living
wi thin a 6-milc radius of the plant.
Desptte government assurances of safety, serious
doubts remained over how such a potentially devastating ac cident could have occurred.
For the first time since radioactivity was detected
po uring out of the uranium processing plant, cars
we re on the streets, shops were open and many stuJ cnts were headtng back to school for morning class'" today.
But official declarations of safety were of little

comfort to many in this town of 33,000. I
lion.
·
More than 1,000 people showed up for radiation
JCO spokesman Makoto Morita said workers were
checks .at one community center here today. Other believed to have put 35 pounds of uranium into the
centers were still filled with people nervous about tank- well over the 4 8-pound safety limit.
going home.
Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi told reporters that
"I'm scared to go in,". said high school student · employees of the plant were unbelievably careless,
Yoshitaka Nambara, 17, who was staymg at the Kyodo News agency reported .
Funaishikawa Community Center.
"According to media reports, the workers had
Nambara, who lives about 330 yards from the used their hands and a stainless steel bucket or some·
plant, said he and his neighbors were shock~d by !hing. One can't help but think they were being carenews of the accident, since they did not Jllhow that less," Obuchi was quoted as saying.
work involving radioactive materials was going on
"They had no double-checking system for unex·
behind the facility's walls.
peeled accidents. This is~nconceivable . "
Workers at the plant mistakenly set off the reacExperts quoted by Japanese media sharply critilion Thursday morning, spewing radioactive gas into cized the design of the facility, and said the problem
the atr. The problem continued until hours later when should not be seen merely ~a matter of human error,
the reaction stopped, letting radial ton levels return to as the government and JCO officials have stressed.
normal.
The three workers remained in intensive care
Officials at JCO Co., which operates the plant, today.
have admitted that workers caused the accident by
After the accident, Hisashi Ouchi, 35, and Masato
violating a legally mandated work procedure.
Shinohara, 39, were in shock and had diarrhea, fever,
Skipping several steps of a process for disposing a high white-blood-cell count and reddened skin of contamtnants, workers mtxed a solutwn contain- all symptoms of radtation sickness.
·
ing uranium in a slam less steel bucket and poured it
The third worker, Yutaka Yokokawa, 54, was alert
by hand into a tank.
and able to walk.
In trying to process an excessive amount of uramAt least 50 other people also were exposed to the
urn, the workers set off an uncontrolled atomic reac- radiation, the National Police Agency said. Among

them were workers at the plant, firefighters arid
seven people who were working at a golf range near
the plant. None required hospitalization, officials
said. The nationwide Yomiuri newspaper said its o~n
survey found that at least 69 people had becq
exposed.
w
··
Checks on more than 3,000 residents at Mito Red
Cross Hospital on Friday showed that no one oth~r
than the already identified victims needed treatment,
said Dr. Fujiko !ric.
Meanwhile, a breakdown str114=k another nuclear
facility Friday, just nine miles from Tokaimura. The
malfunction caused no injuries, and radiation did not
leak into the atmosph~re. ·
Reported levels of radiation at the scene of Thursday's accident were nothing like that at Chernobyl,
the world 's worst nuclear disaster.
Radiation outside the Japanese site was said to be
about five times natural background levels, while the
three workers received radiation of'Up to 4,000 till!Cs
the level considered safe.
.
Spokesman Nonaka said the accident at Tokaimura would not affect Japan's overall nuclear pow,or
policies or development. Japan relies on atomic en~rgy for about a third of its electricity.
Still, Thursday's accident is likely to shake many
people's faith in the nation's nuclear industry.

Police, witnesses say hostages freed from Myanmar Embassy
By MATTHEW PENNINGTON

known.
Associated Preas Writer
Earlier, two vans drove the rebels to the football field
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP)- Some 40 diplomats of the Bangkok Christian School, where the rebels
and foreigners who were taken hostage by rebels at the demanded helicopters pick them up. But Thai authoriMyanmar Embassy in Bangkok appear to have been ties said they had picked another site, the grounds of the
released Saturday, police satd. Witnesses said they saw That Air Force Academy. ·
as many as 30 people leave. the embassy !!rounds.
At the academy, three men and three women got out
However, a full accounting of the hostages was not of one of the vans, shouting "Democracy" and "Free
avatl able from authorities. Bomb squads combed the Burma" and waving revolutionary red headbands.
embassy and found no explosives or injured persons.
Speaking on a local radio station, the dissident
Meanwhile, a helicopter carrying rebels who seized "-group~ leader, named Johnny, said he doubted helithe embassy on Friday flew out of Bangl(ok with two copters could land within the walled embassy comsenior Thai officials. The rebels had earlier had pound, so he asked Thai authorities to dnve them to the
demanded to be flown to the Thai-Myanmar border, football field.
officials said.
The 14 rebels, he said, wanted to be flown to the borInterior Minister Sanan Kachornprasart said Deputy der area to join an unidentified "revolutionary group."
Foreign Minister Sukhumbhand Paribatra and a senior
Earlier, police said there were 12 young, mostly exrefugee official, Chaiyapruek Sawaengcharoen, had university students in the group who seized the
volunteered to take the place of the hostages and fly embassy. They called for a restoration of democracy in
with the rebels
their military-ruled homeland, Myanmar, also known as
The exact destinatton of the' helicopter was not Burma.

Before the latest demand, a police helicopter hov- one Japanese and at least five Thais, in addition •to
ered over the embassy grounds to determme whether Myanmar diplomats. The foreigners were probably at
helicopters cou ld land.
the embassy to obtain visas.
Earlier the rebels released four hostages, including a
Other tallies of the hostages and their nationalities
pregnant Thai woman and three males either ill or suf- varied somewhat, wtth earlier reports including a G8r.
fering from severe fatigue.
man and an American among the hostages. Uncoh·
Police said about 40 hostages, including 13 Myan- firmed reports suggested some other people may be h{d•
mar diplomats, Thais and other Asian and Western for- ing but trapped within the compound.
,·:·
eigners, had been taken.
In a statement sent to news media the dissidents .::....
Earlier, one of the rebels told The Associated Press calling themselves the Vigorous Bur~ese Student
that he and his colleagues distrusted the Thai govern- riors- demanded the release of all political prison~iS
ment, and if a helicopter was not provided, they would in their homeland, a meaningful dialogue betweep
" have to do something," which .could include killing Myanmar's pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu &amp;yi
hostages.
and the military, and the convening of an elected parliaThe man, who described himself as a 29-year-old ment.
student named Preeda, did not say there was an explicThe government of Myanmar has refused to negotiit threat to kill Myanmar hostages every half-hour if the ate with Noliel Peace Prize laureate Suu Kyi or to conaircraft didn't come, as some of his comrades had been vene the parliament legally elected in 1990.
quoted saying.
Armed with rifles and grenades hidden in guitar
Officials said the hostages included three French- · cases, the dissidents stormed through the embassy gate
men, two Malaysians, one Canadian, one Singaporean, Fridav. witnesses said.

war-

Forced to leave,·refugees want to return to East Timor
had worked for the U.N. mission that organized the independence referendu!il
and wondered how much danger he was in.
·
Despite Indonesian government claims that most of the refugees want .to
· stay in Indonesia, everyone who spoke Friday said they had one goal - 'II&gt;
return home.
They said they had been forced to flee to West Timor.
"The Indonesian military told us to get on the plane or we would all be
killed," Lea Silva, 18, said as she tugged at her ponytail of soft brown hair,
Meanwhile, the Australian troops in towns just across the border said t'!_ey
aimed to block militias from returning to East Timor to wreak more havoc.
U.S. and Australian defense officials estimate 2,000 to 4,000 pro-Indonesian
militias have congregated near Atambua, in West Timor, and may be plotting
cross-border guerrilla raids.
·
,
,•
.
•
The international force, known as lnterfet, met no resistance Friday a5 it
flew into devastated Balibo and other towns, said Australian Maj. Gen. Pe)er
Cosgrove, the commander of the peacekeeping troops.
'

By DAFNA UNZER
Associated Press Writer
KUPANG, Indonesia (AP) - They envisioned freedom after their vote for
independence from Indonesia. Instead, life has become a prison for tens of
thousands of East 1imorese, forced into exile at gunpoint and living in squalid
camps in netghboring West Timor.
A rare visit to two camps on Friday showed appalling conditions - and
rep,&lt;Jrts that other refugees face far worse.
As the refugees struggled to survive, Australian troo/is in East Timor took
control of several strategic border towns in the U.N.-mandated peace mission's most ambitious operation yet. The 700 troops were determmed to deliver aid to the refugees and to stop the militias who wreaked havoc on East
Timor last month from returning from their exile in West Timor.
The refugees - 230,000 of them, by Indonesia's estimate - wm driven
out of East Timor and into exile begmning Sept. 4, when the results of East·
·nmor 's mdependence referendum were announced.
The territory overwhelmingly voted in favor of breaking away from
Indonesia. That sparked a backlash from pro-Indonesia militias and Jndonesian troops, who killed hundreds of people, forced thousands from their homes
and looted and burned villages.
Gurhka peacekeeping troops escorting a relief convoy on Thursday arrested several suspected militia members and freed 3,00o East 1imorese rounded
up for.deportation at the East 1imorese port in Com, a coastal town on the
eastern tip of Timor, U.N. spokesman Fred Eckhard said Friday in New York.
The refugees who took shelter in Indonesian-controlled West Timor have:.
found little shelter or sanitation and certainly no hospitality _:just fear of
death, disease and permanent displacement.
In Gor camp, home to 8,000 refugees in the center of Kupang, West
Timor 's capilal, conditions are abominable. Indonesian authorities control the
camp and the anti-independence militias, many of whom also fled west when
peacekeepers arrived in East Timor, are a visible presence.
Toilets are filthy and backed up, so people tum the open spaces into
makeshift latrines. One very small East Timorese girl in a ragged blue dre5,'i
squatted near her tent Friday as Kupang children in neat white-and-grey
school uniforms walked by.
rhe United Nations Children's Fund said there are at least 37 encampments

and Geoff Jenkins. Rookie Ron in the eighth.
Belliard, who hit the game-wmmng
The Reds got a scare in the third
single in Milwaukee's win on Fnday, inning when Peterson hit Reese on
then had a ground-rule double to the wrist. Reese dropped to the
right-center.
ground, but he eventually went to
It was the normally reliable first base and stole second.
Gmman's shortest start since May
Reese then scored the game's first
13, 1997, when he was pitching for run on Mike Cameron's smgle.
Toronto. · He threw just 40 pitches Cameron left the game in the fourth
against the Brewers.
inning with a stramed left hamstring.
Jenkins and Belliard also had RBI
Blue Jays 7, Indians 3
doubles in the f\)Urth against Belinda.
At Cleveland, Pat Hentgen took a
Peterson (4- 7) got the win but shutout into the ninth mnmg. and
wasn't
sharp.
Toronto hll four
Dmitri Young hit
homers Saturday
Major
league
a
three-run
as the Blue Jays
homer in the
baseball
beat Cleveland 7fourth innmg that
3, leaving the
cut Milwaukee's
Indians' playoff
lead to 7-4, but Peterson retired the situation up in the air.
next six hitters before tiring in the
Hentgen (11-12) won for the f1rst
sixth.
ttme m five starts with perhaps hts
Eddie Taubensee drove in runs for best outmg this season. Entering the
the Reds with a single in the sixth ninth, he had allowed five smgles but
and a double in the eighth. Cincinnati lost a chance at his first shutout in
hit three doubles in the eighth and more than two years when Carlos
had runners on second and third with Baerga singled and Alex Ramirez
one out, but Pokey Reese popped up homered.
and Mark Sweeney grounded out.
Before that, Hentgen had struck
Burnitz drew a bases-loaded walk out stx and dominated a club whtch

Mexico still recovering from earthquake
By MICHELLE RAY ORTIZ
Associated Press Writer
OAXACA. Mexico (AP)- Candles on the bare concrete floor of a simple home flickered next to a white
casket holdmg the crushed body of an 18-year-old
woman, one of at least 20 people killed in the latest
earthquake to strike Mexico.
The magnitude-7.5 quake shook the southern state of
Oaxaca on Thursday and terrified people hundreds of
miles from the epicenter. It was felt as far south as
Guatemala and sent high-rises swaying strongly in Mexico City.
The teen-ager, Teresa de Jesus Garcia, died while trying to flee from the stationery store where she worked in
Oaxaca city She was the main breadwinner for her family, and coworkers related what had happened.
" They said that when the earthquake happened, the
room she was in started shaking and because she was
really frightened, she went outside," the girl's mother,
Bernarda Garcia, said outside the one-room home where
dozens of friends and nei·ghbors gathered to mourn
. Thursday night.
· Twenty people were confirmed killed in Oaxaca, the
state government ¥id today. Most were killed by collapsing buildings in Oaxaca city or in rural communities
in the state. A 12-year-Qid girl also suffered a heart
attack because of the quake, authorities said.
The Oaxaca governor's office said about 20 people
were hospitalized. Authorities evacuated buildings in the
colonial-era city's center, including a hospital that
received minor damage. Sixty-two patients spent a
chilly night in tents, but hospital authorities anticipated
that they would be able to return to their rooms today.
Schools were closed in Oaxaca state until Monday so
that authorities could determine if the structures were
safe. Streets in the city center were closed to traffic, and
fallen plaster and bricks littered the sidewalks.
" The U.S. Geological Survey in Golden, Colo., said
the quake was centered between the Pacific resorts of
Huatulco and Puerto Escondido in Oaxaca state, 280
miles south of Mexico City.
President Zedillo left Mexico City this morning to
visit towns along the coast near the epicenter. He will go
on to Oaxaca city later this afternoon.
The quake struck at ~1:31 a.m. local time (12:31 p.m.
ED1) Thursday and lasted about a minute. Thousands of
~·.

people rushed out of offices in Mexico City, where a
1985 earthquake killed at least 9,500 people.
The quake also was felt strongly on Oaxaca's Pacific
coast, where wide cracks appeared in roadways, slowing
and even blocking some traffic.
"It was very intense. There was panic because we
haven't ever felt anything of this magnitude," said
Norma Alquitra, a sp&lt;ikeswoman for Puerto Escondido.
The Oaxaca state governor's office reported 300
houses seriously damaged in the state and said about 100
businesses were damaged in Oaxaca city. There were
scattered reports of cracked buildings in Puebla and Veracruz states, as well as in Mexico City.
Otherwise, life in Oaxaca began to return to normal
this morning, as people headed to work without much
apparent fear of aftershocks. Some aftershocks have
been felt, but none were serious.
Though the quake was almost as strong as the Sept.
21 temblor that killed more than 2,}00 people in Taiwan,
or the Aug. 17 quake in Turkey that killed nearly 16,000
people, reports of damage here were relatively lim1ted.
The earthquakes in Taiwan and Turkey occurred in
heavily populated areas, while Thursday's quake was
centered in an area of villages and small towns. Experts
also said the Mexican quake was probably centered
deeper in the earth than \!lose in Taiwan or Turkey, making it less damaging.
Local news media' reported two other deaths they
blamed on earthquake panic: A Mexico City man died of
a heart attack, and an elderly woman in the eastern state
of Veracruz raced from her 'house, slipped m the street
and cracked her head.
Mourners gathered for Miss Garcia's wake Thursday
evening stood outside in the mud, fearful that an aftershock could cause the family'S' home to collapse. The
initial quake' had knocked plasier off one comer of the
brick building.
"Look how it is now, in danger of falling," said
neighbor Araceli Juarez, pointing to the home.
.- ,
· Inside, chiidr~n lit candles in front of the casket and
stood on tiptoes to peer at the lifeless body of the young
woman who supported her mother and grandmother on
a weekly salary equivalent lo $32.
~
"She was working to help them live a little belter,"
neighbor Trinidad Lopez satd. "Now what? Won 't
someone offer them a little bit of help?"
jl

'

Fall

Speeial
•.

' How the top 25 teams in The Associated Press' col, lege football poll fared this week:
.' Ne&gt;. I Florida State (5-0) beat Duke 51-23. Next: vs.
~o. 18 Miami, Saturday.
· No. 2 Penn State (5-0) did not play. Next: at Iowa,
· Saturday.
..
_ No. 3 Florida(4, 1) lostto No. 21 Alabama40-39..0T.
· Next: at LSU, Saturday.
: No: 4 Michigan (5-0) beat No. II Purdue 38-12.
!Next: at No. 14 Michigan Staie, Saturday.
·
- No. 5 Texas A&amp;M (3-0) at Texas Tech. Next: vs.
Baylor, Saturday.
. No. 6 Nebraska (5-0.) beat Oklahoma State 38" 14.

OAK HILL
BANKS

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(See BASEBALL on B-6)

i

No. 13 Kansas State (3-0) at No. 15 Texas. Next: vs.
Kansas, Saturday.
'
No. 14 Michigan State (5-0) beat Iowa 49-3. Next:
vs. No. 4 Michtgan, Saturday.
No. 15 Texas (4-1) vs. No. 13 Kansas State. Next: vs.
No. 23 Oklahoma, Saturday.
No. 16 Mississippi State (5-0) beat Vanderbilt 42-14.
Next: at Auburn, Saturday.
,
No. 17 Marshall (5·0) beat Miami, Oh1o 32-14. Next:
vs. Toledo, Oct. 16.
No, 18 Mtami (2-2) did not play. Next: at No. 1
Florjda State, Saturday.
•
No. 19 East Carolina (5-0) beat Army 33-14. Next:

vs. Southern M1ssisstppt, Saturday.
No. 20 Arkansas (2-2) lost to Kentucky 31-20. Next:
vs. Mtddle Tennessee, Saturday.
,
No. 21 Alabama (4-1) beat No.3 Florida 40-39-0T.
Next: at Mississippi, Oct. 16.
No. 22 Syracuse (4-1) beat Thlane 47-17. Next: at
Pittsburgh, Thursday.
N~. 23 Oklahoma (3-1) lost to Notre Dame 34-30.
Next: vs. No. 15 Texas, Saturday.
..
No. 24 Virginia (3-1) vs. No. 8 V~rginia Tech. Next:
vs. Duke, Saturday.
No. 25 Oregon (3-1) at Washington. Next: at UCLA,
Saturday.
'
·

-White Falcons roll over Hamlin 45-16. Story on B-5
-Warren Local beats Big Blacks 17-10 in overtime. Story on B·5

.

$2,500 minimum deposit. I'J'V (1nnuat percentage yield) Is accurate as of the date o! this
Issue but Is subject to change. Not ovaUabte for public funds. l!enolty for ea~ wtthdr~wat. .

0

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, High sChool footbaU adion:
·
·, _Blue Devils whip Atftens 39-7. Story on B-2
..--Wellston downs Marauders 41-7. Story on B-3
-::..-Jackson def"'ts Raiders 63-19. Story on B-4

500 3rd Ave., Gallipolis, 446-0315
201 S. Front St., Oak Hill, 682-7733

·innings, allowing six runs and seven
hits. '
The Blue Jays teed ·off on Wright
in the third inning, hitting three
homers to score six runs. Wright hadn't given up an earned run in his previous 12 mnings in two stans.
Green made it 2-0 with his 42nd
homer, a two-run shot, that snapped
his 1-for-18 streak against the
Indians this season. Following a
walk and single, Indtans pitchmg
coach Phil Regan came out to try and
settle down Wright.
But Wright's next pitch was htt
over the wall in left by Batista,
putting Toronto up 5-0. Otaner. then
hn his seventh homer to end Wright's
afternoon.
The nght-hander was booed as he
walked slowly toward the dugout.
But unhke his last home start on
Sept. 17, when he mocked the crowd
by tipping his cap after he being
pounded by the Yankees, Wright kept
his head bowed.
Thronto went ahead 7-0 in the
fifth when Blake homered Jim
Brower.

AP Top 25 college football scores

Next: vs. lowjl State, Saturday.
No.7 Tennessee (2-I) vs. Auburn. Next: vs. No. 10
Georgia, Satitfday.
.
,
No. 8 Vir~i¥ Tech (3-0) at No. 24 Virginia. Next: at
Rutgers, Sat~l'$1ay. I 1 No. 9 Gii.Qrgia Jech (3-1) beat Maryland 49-31.
Thursday. Next: vs. No~h Carolina, Saturday.
No. 10 Georgia (4·U) beat LSU 23-22. Next: at No.7
Tennessee, Saturday.
No. II l'u!lf'ue (4-1) lost to No.4 Michigan 38-12.
Next: at No. 12 Ohio State, Saturday.
No. 12 Ohio State (3:2) lost to Wisconsin 42-17.
Next: vs. No. II Purdue, SatUrday.

- .ln~ide_ today's sports:

Banking In Your Best Interest

scored its I,OOOth run of the season
Friday and could have wrapped up
home-field advantage in the first
round with a win.
Richie Sexson had a pinch-hit
RBI single in the ninth as the Indians
tried to rally, but rookie reliever Billy
Koch came on with two on and got
his 31st save.
A Cleveland win would have
assured the Indians of playing
Boston and having home-field
advantage in the first round of the
playoffs. The Indians can sttll get
home-field advantage if Texas loses
etther of its final two games. The
Rangers played at Anaheim Saturday
mght.
Shawn Green, Tony Batista,
Willis Otanez and rookie Casey
Blake all homered for the Blue Jays.
Three of those shots came off Indians
starter Jaret Wnght, whose performance couldn't have come at a worse
time for Cleveland.
The Indians were hoping Wright
(8-1 0) had finally put a frustrating
year, behind him and could be counted on as the team's No. 4 starter in
\he postseason. But he lasted just 2~.

,.

Elsewhere in sports:
.
• Sam' Wilson comments on golf in weekly oolumn. B-6
• Reds, Astros lose in bid to decide NL Central title. S ry on B-7
,
• ~ankees win, battle for home-field advantage in play . ~ SJory ~ B~Z ~
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·Blue Dev· whip
·Athen 9-7, stay
:unbeaten in league

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: By ANDREW CARTER
Tlmei-Sentlnel SIIIH
THE PLAINS ' - Following a
slow start, Gallia Academy awoke in
the second half and rolled to its third
consecutive win, handing Athens a
39-7 defeat and spoiling the
Bulldogs' homecoming at Rutter
Field Friday night.
\he victory allowed the BI ue
Devils to keep pace with Jackson and
Logan in the hunt for the SEGAL
title. Both the Ironmen and
Chieftains posted wins Friday to
remain undefeated in SEGAL play.
Neother team· could produce any
offense m the openong quarter.
Athens managed just five total yards
on offense on the opening frame
while Gallia Academy accounted for
27 yards
"We knew they would try to play
us hard," said Gallia Academy head
coach Brent Saunders. "Everybody
that they've gone out agaonst says
they come out playing real aggressive football. We didn 't execute very
well on offense and fell asleep on
defense a few plays and before we
know it, we're not scoring very many
points. The first quarter went
extremely quick and the second
quarter seemed like it took forever."
The Blue Devils drew first blood
in the second quarter on a spectacular 74-yard punt return by Heath
Rothgeb. Rothgeb skated through a
band of Bulldogs at midfocld then
legged out the final 50 yards to give
Gallia Academy a 7-0 lead with 6:25
remaining in the half.
"I thought we needed something
to start this and that did it," Saunders
said of Rothgeb's return.
Three minutes later, the Blue
Devils increased the1r lead to 14-0
thanks to an aerial attack that Athens
had stifled until Jeremy Payton and
Ike Simmons hooked up for a 26yard scoring play. The three-play, 40yard ~ve tOOk JUSt l:OSto complete.
. &gt;'~.meiiS'"gorti!Coal! back w£tt13: !7showong on the game clock and put
together a_ sohd seven-play,_ 78-yard
march m JUSt over three mmutes to
cut the gap m half. Tailback Shawn
Hewitt and wideout Steve Llewellyn
each made key plays to keep the
drive on track
On third down and five from the
A~hens 23 yard line, Hewitt rolled
around left end for 30 yards and a
first down. Followmg a 15-yard
penalty against the Bulldogs, it was
still Athens' ball at the Bulldog 41
yardli~

Two plays later, quarterback
David Fulks hit Llewellyn in stride
with a 40-yard miss1le down the right
sideline to give Athens first down at

the Blue Devil 14-yard ltne. Fulks
oiled left to pass on the next play,
b t was forced to pull the ball down
an scamp~r seven yards to the
GA S seven-yard marker. From
there the w1ry southpaw found
Llew llyn in the right corner of the
end z ne to cut the deficit to 14-7 at'
the half.
"We really liked their quarter·
back," Saunders said of Fulks. "We
thmk he 's a nice athlete."
Galha Academy established its
dominance on the first drive of the
second half. The Blue Devols
marched 90 yards on 12 plays, eating
up 4:54 to build a 20-7 lead. Athens
had a chance to snuff the drive, but
roughed up Payton while attcmptmg
to block a punt on a fourth and six at
the Blue Devil 30 yard line. The 15yard penalty gave the ball back to
Gallia Academy at ots own 45.
Payton hot trght end Jeff Mullons
for an 18-yard gam on tlrst down
!rom the Athens 43 to move the ball
to the Bulldog 25 yard hne. Alex
Saunders then rumbled over left
tackle for 18 yards to move the ball
to the se ven yard line Saunders carned the load himself from four yards
out for h1s second rushmg touchdown of thl season.
The extr,'l.Pomt attempt by Payton
was bloc~, ending a GAHS record
string of ~consecutove extra points
this season for the senior. Dating
back to 1998, Payton had been per·
feet on 25-of-25 extra point tries
from placement.
Cody Lane broke loose for a 20yard touchdown run with 3:09
remaining in the third to boost the
Blue Devil advantage to 26· 7. Lane's
run capped off a six-play, 56 yard
drive that consumed just I:05. The
key to the drive was Payton's 30yard run down the right sideline on
the option.
It took just another 31 seconds for
Gallia Jjcademy to extend the lead to
33-7. Jared Boya11 recoverod a fumble by Hewitt following a ferocious
hit at the Athens 26 yard line.
Following an mcomplete pass
from Payton to Lane, Payton hred a
pass to S•mmons who rumbled 26
yards for hts second touchdown of
the mght.
Blue Devil reserves closed out the
sconng in the fourth quarter. Allen
Skonner tallied his secqnd rushing
touchdown of the season on a 10yard run. Sk:mper accounted for 19
yards during the 49 yard scoring
~~
•
"The big thmg was how we came
out in the second half and took the
game to them," sail) Saunders. "We
wanted to come out and establish our

Area gridiron standings
!11m '

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Jackson ............... 3

SEOAL

L ff

~~~~-AC8df.riiy:~

Warren Local ...... 2
Athens ................. 1
Marietta ...............o
Point Pleasant ...0
River Valley .......0

0 108
0 111
0 117
1 40
2 34
3 28
3 . 24
3 38

fA

46
14
23
52
108
62
73
126

Overall

:w

l.

0
1
1
2
5
3

6
5
5
4
1
3

3

.3

0

6

ff

fA

214
60
163
59
186
81
117
92
96 200
129 . 100
125 105
88 235

:w

Eastern ...................................................... 3
Meigs ................... ......................... .............3
Hannan ......................... :... :........................ 2
Wahama .................................. :................. 2
Southern .......................... .......................... 1
South Gallia .. ... ........................................... 0

Friday's scores
SEOAL
Gallia Academy 39, Athens 7
Jackson 63, River Valley 19
Warren · Local 17, Point
Pleasant 10-0T
Logan 24, Marietta 0
Othtrt
Wellston 41, Meigs 7
Wahama 45, Hamlin 16

DIU Dlaved Saturday
Eastern at Southern
Hannan at Burch
South Gallia at Parkersburg
Catholic

Gallia Academy-Athens statistics
Qulll1er lmiiJ.
Gallla Academy (5· 1) .......0
Athens (1 ·5) ..................... 0
•

19
0

14
7

39
7

6=
0=

J.

2
3
3
4
4
5

ff

112
123
83
75
107
43

fA

69
144
121
105
128
261

GO, MAN, GO! - Gaflla Academy quarterback Jeremy Payton
(left) watches as fullback Ike Simmons (right) rumbles · around the
left end en route to a 26-yar,d touchdown run against Athens Friday.
Simmons rushed for 99 yards and one score and also caught a
touchdown pass in the 39·7 win., (Photo by Bryan Long)
running game."
Sommons caught one ball for 2o
Galha Academy gamed 196 of ots yar~s Mulhns grabbed one pass for ·
265 total rushmg yards m the second 18 yards Josh Perry had one catch
half. Sommons picked up 56 yards iq for 13 yards and Lane caught one
the fmaltwo quarters on his way to a pass for seven yards.
game- high 99 yards on the ground in
Hew ott led Athens ( 1-5, SEGAL
12 carries
1-2rwoth 65 yards rushing on IS carPayton netted 38 yards on JUSt two ries . M1ke Hodgson came off the
attempts. Lane had sox carries for 32 bench to chip in 20 yards on four
yards. Bobby Jones carried the ball attempts.
six times for 27 yards. Saunders
Fulks was 4-of-1 0 for 57 yards
picked up 22 yards on three carries. passing with the lone scoring play.
Skinner finished with 19 yards and
Gallia Academy (5-1, SEGAL 3·
Joel Elliot\ gained 16 yards. T.R. 0) outgam~d the Bulldogs 329-141 in
Rogers, seeing his first action in total offense. The Blue Devil defense
three games, gained 12 yards on held Athens to just 34 yards of total
three carries before leaving the game offense m the second half.
after re-aggravatmg the ankle injury
Gallia Academy now prepares, for
that had sidelined him.
a rugged Logan (5·1, SEGAL 3-0)
Payton completed 3-of-13 passes squad that blanked Marietta 24-0
for 51 yar and a touchdown. David Froday. Game time at Logan Friday IS
Brodeur as
f-2 for 13 yards.
7:30p.m.

Snccer__Oef.enders blank
Elk Valley Christian 2-0
in the closing minutes o'f the
match. The goal gives Bowman
ELKVIEW. W.Va. · Ohio 17 p01nts (7 goals, '3 assists) on
Valley Christian rebounded from the season.
·Taylor 'l!otched his ninth
a tough loss Thursday to defeat
Elk Valley Christian 2-0 Friday assist of the year on Bowman's
i'n Elkview, W.Va. Foll~wing a ·goal. Taylor continues to lead
scoreless first half. OVCS ral- the Defenders in scoring with 37
lied for two scores on the final points ( 14 goals. 9 assists) .
forty minutes to pick up the win.
Cluis Burnett , made three
The Defenders (9-3), still saves to earn the victory and hos
sluggish after an emotional sixth shutout of the season.
match against arch-rival ·cross
Wesley Palla of Elk: Valley
Lanes Christian the day before , Christian (5·6) faced 36 shots
were a bit flat in the first half and made II saves to keep his
against Elk Valley Christian. side in the match.
However, the second half was a
Ohio Valley Christian contin·
different story as OVCS tallied ues its short road trip Tuesday
two goals 17 minutes apart in ':"tth a trip to Wood County
the middle of the second frame . Christian in West Virginia.
Striker Josh Sanders, who has
Following that encountet, the
benefited recently from the Defenders close out the regular
Defenders' new 4-4-2 formation, season with three consecutive
netted his ninth goal of the sea - home matches against Federal
son in the 54th m•nute to give Hocking, Ironton St. Joe and
the Defenders a 1-0 lead. Brad Teays Valley Christian.
Bowman assisted on Sanders'
goal, which ·boosted hi s season Match summary
point total to 23 points (9 goals, Ohio Valley Christian . 0·2=2
5 assists).
Elk Valley Christian .. 0·0=0
Wilhin the 4-4-2 system, Scoring:
OVCS-Sanders
Sanders and fellow senoor Jon Bowman) 54 :00 , Bowman
Taylor hav e been paored up Taylor) 71 :00 . EVCS-none.
front. The duo has produced
hots: OVCS-36. EVCS-15.
nin e goals in the past fou r Saves: OVCS-14 (Burnett).
mat ches sonr;e the introdu ction EVC~ · 19 (Pal la) .
of the new se t.
OVCS-2 .
Corner
klcks:
]3owman scored hi s seve nth EVCS-1 .
goal of the year in the 71 st Records: aves (9·3). Eves
monute to prov ide bhio Valley (5·6).
Christian with so me in surance
By ANDREW CARTER

~

Jr.

Athens
7
35·84
4-11-0
57
141
. 1·1
7-75
9·30.2
6-87

Individual statistics

~

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y-Bos1on .

97
92
M2
78
68

Toronto .

Oallnnure
Tampn Day

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6)
6M
78
81
92

606
575
513
488
425

62
75

613
HI

- 77 83

48 1

1t

................ ... 74 86
5
Coloralio
71 89
15
x·clmched divu10n tnle
19 •
29

46.1
444

14
27

du.

97 6.1
74 86
68 92
64 %

.,

606
46.1
425
400
.196

90

Gallla Academy Blue Devils
Defense
Fumble recoveries: Bryan (1)
Interceptions: none
Sacks: Lane (1), Simmons (2), A. Saunders (1)
Offense
Passing: Payton 3·13-1-51-1, Brodeur 1·2·0· 13·0
Receiving: Simmons 1·26·1, Mullins 1-18, Perry 1·13, Lane 1·

7
Rushing: Simmons 12·99· 1, Payton 2·38, Lane 6·32·1 , Jones
6·27, A. Saunders 3·22·1, Skinner 3·19·1 , Elliott 2·16, Rogers 3·12
Athens Bulldogs
Defense
Fumble recoveries: Maccombs (1)
Interceptions: Fulks {1)
Sacks: Skinner (1)
Offense
Passing: F.ulks 4·1 0·0·57-1 , Hewitt 0·1 ·0·0·0
Receiving: Champlin 1·2, Llewellyn 3·55·1
Rushing: Hewitt 15·65, Hodyson 4·20, Llewellyn 1·7, Spires 1·
5, Evans 5·3, Mascombs H. Fulks 8~( -17)

2)
19
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l ' '1,

594
5\H
488
425

9
17
27

Receive Ohio
Lotto 'ickets With Each
1992 Car or Newer Sold
Good Oct. llh·Oct. I

They played Saturday
Ronda {Dempster 7- Rl at Atlallla {Chen 2-2)
I I~ pm
CINCINNA"ll (Guwmn 6-2) .u Mdw.lUkct:

M atur e ~ (\'mw\1 1-1-11 .u l'h t i.J,Icl i~ua IDyrd I ~

Today's regular-season finales
· Tomnto (D.Welb 16· 10) at CLEVELAND
I 'i-K). I 05 ll m

Boston (Merckcr 2 0) nt Baltunore (Pomon 12121. 1]3pm
New York (lrabu 11 -7) :11 lampa Bn y (Eilatul 48), I lS p rn
MtnncsOia {Mt lton ·/- 11) at Chtcago (StunzcO OJ ,
2 0Spm
.
Detron (Moehler I 0- 16) at Kansas City (Wnamk
9-12), 2 05 p m
Seanle (Halama 11 ·8) at Oakland (Hudson 11-2),
4 05 pm
TeKa~ 1Fasscro 5- 14) at A~1he1m (Washburn 3-5 ).
4 \5 p m

Eustem Division

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(iii

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66
84
9J
97

6l!!
588
47l
419
394

8
26
l5
l9

• CI NCINNATI
: Hous1on .

Ctntral Division
95 65
95 65

594
594

Be~t l cy

22. HebrOfl Lakew ood 20
Blanchester I:1. East Clinton 0
Bloom -CmToll 10 Loga n Elm Jl
Bluffton 14 Luna Cent C&lt;tth 10
Bow ling Green 1 Sy\va.nt .J North\ 1cw 0
Brooklyn 26. Rt chmond Hts 19
Brunswtck \5. Notlh Ruy.tltou 7
Bu ckeye rnu l 28 CadiZ H.lrrt SOn Central 12
Buckeye Valley 28. North Unwn 7
Caldwell 21 Bcallsv11le 11
Canal Fulton NW } I Mmcrv.120
Cant on Cent Cath IB Ci\111\l n limken 12
Canton GlenOnk 55. Wuo s1cr 6
Canton McK mlev 28. Cll! Ht s I
,
Cardtngton-LmcUln 2 1, Guhou Nurthmor 14
1sle n. Preble Shawnee II!
,tl tn Margar\!Ua ~7 M1lan Ed1son 14
crYille 64, Beavercreek 7
Chagrm Falls J4 Perry 9
Chesapeake 40, Rock Uti I I I!
Chesterl .md West Geaug~ 21 Aurora 0
Olilhcothe 21. Dublm Scwto 20
Chllltcothe Huntmgton Ross 21 Umolo 0
Cm A11dmon l5 Cm Glen Este I-I
Cm Coun1ry Day 42. Cm Summ11 Country Day

Tnday's regular-season finales
l lonk1 tSrnnger 6 1'it .u Atl,un .t iGI.i\' llll' I I
I ll I 10 pm
~hmtrc.JI 1H erman ~n n 9 I 4 J It l'luladt..'l)tlH.I
i\Vo ll 6-9) I \'\I'm
l'ttlsburgh \lkmon II · \J .11 New York
(H('rslmer I ~ - l!J . 1 .JU J1 m
Clncago (T1nchsl!1 R- 17) :Jt !.it \.&lt;lms_( Luehhe •s
2· 'J2 10pm
Los Angeles (C I ~el'n 2- 11 at Houston IEiarton 9
'i)

2 35 pIll

'

San Frnm' ISCO !Nathan 7 4! ,u Color.1do
!Bohanon 12- 12).l 05 pm
San Otego (Cle ment 10-11) at Amon.1
(Anderson 7-2) -' 05 p m
CINCINN1\ TI (Harmsch 15-10) :11 Mtlwaukcc
(Eldred 2-71. 4 0~ p m

14

7

'
Cm Deer l'ark 35, Cm M:tnCtnLJI1t 14
Cin Elder 28, Cm L" s,,l lc: 10
Clll H.ln!SOII 18 Ctn rurpm 12
Ctn H1lls Chr Aead 42. Cm• N Nonh Coll ege
Ht\127
Ctn Hughes 41 , Cm Taft 14
Ctn Indian Htll 34, Cm Fumcytown 14
Ctn Mt Healthy 54 Ctn Woodward 2J
Cm Norwood 28, W1lmmgton 20
Cin P\Jrceli-Marmn 14. Alter 6
Cm.St Xavtet 2L. Moeller 17
Ctn Sycamore 14, Cut Pnnceton 10
C1n Taylor 7. Cm Reading 3
( tn Walnut Htlls J7, Cm Withrow U
Ctn Wcst('rn Htlls 56, Aiken 19
Cm Wyomrng 29, C1n Made1ra 28
C\e South 42. Cle Co lli nwood 6
Clermont NE 14', Mount Orab Western Brown 8
Col Wauerson 56, Day Dunbar 6
Coldwater 35. Mmstcr 0
Col Academ y 15, Johnstown-Monroe 7
Col Dcechcroft 20, Col Northland 12
Cui Brookhaven 50 Col Mtf!lm 14

NFL's Week 4 slate
Today 's games
1\nzona at Dallas, I p m
Balt&amp;more at Atlanta. I p m
Jacksonville at l'tttsbu rgh. I p m
New Englilnd at CLEVELAND I p m
New Orleans .tt 0Hcotgo, I p m
Pb.iladetpbrnat-hl.eY~ Yurk Giant5, ) p m
St Louts at CINCINNATI . I p m
1'.-,mp;:, llil)' .-., M,m,ewtlo. i I' 111
Carolina at Washmg tun, 4 0~ p Ill
Kansas C1t y at San Otego. 4 1S p rn
New York Jets at Denver, -' 15 p m
Tennessee at San FranCISco 4 15 p m
Oakland at Seattle, 8 20 p m
OPEN De trmt. Green Bay lndumupolts

Monday's game
Buffalo at Mianu , 9 p m

IIJIA7E

-

- - -- -

• •r

'-"'

Mon.·Fri. 9 am•l pm; Sat. 9 am·4 pm; Sun. 1 pm·5 pm

\!!V

··~
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&gt;•

_ ..,-

!
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Ill~--

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...;,.

'

94 CHEVY CAPRICE

89 CHEVY CELEBRITY
Only 36,000 Miles
1#4623A WAS $4,995

Ride In Style .
#GM1670 WAS $24,900

Now $3 975

96 DODGE INTREPID 4Dr., 3.5 V6, All Power ~quipJ~·.....J

Now $18 980

On.e Local Owner
#4534A WAS $10,900
Now

$9

97 CHRYSLER CONCORDE
Family Sedan
N0:6$ WAS$14,

1 75

I

FORD CONTOUR 4Dr., AT, AC, Lots of Extras. •e.¥uu•
CHEVY CORSICA 4Dr. AT, AC. Lo&lt;OI Trade ..... 15;895:
HYUNDIA ACCENT 4Dr., AT, AC Sun .Roof, Ni(e .. 1 4~99S:.
BUICK CENTURY 4Dr.,Auto-Trans, Air Cond., 3.3 V6, Lots :

Extras .....•...................................................... 14,995:
CHEVY CAVALIER 2Dr., AT, 4Cyl. Rear Spoiler .. 14,ctct!li:-t
MERC TUCER 4Dr:, AT, Cold Air, Extra, Oean .... '3,99s:
FORD tAURUS WAG 7Passanger, V6, Auto, All
0. 0 • • • • • 0. 0 0 . 0 • • 0 •• 0 • • • • • • • 0 I . 0 • • • • • 0 . 0 I • • 0 . . . . . . . . .

• ••

JI,OS:I:

I

'l
l

95 PONTIA~ GRAND PRIX

"I

97 HONDA ACCORD

98 BUICK SKYLARK

'

Gas Saver
#P380 WAS $17,800

'
I.

~~~~-$15,250~~~~~~~~
'' .
II'
.
;_,
·. .
.

~

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.·

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•

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01
&gt;

96 GlO TRACKER CONY.

97 JEEP CHEROKEE

98 CHEVY K1500 PU

97 FORD RANGER

.

5,500 M1tes, Uke New
#4654A WAS $11 ,800

FORD UNGER XLT AT, Cold'Air, 3.0 V6, Topper,
60K miles .......................... :....................... .
UN~ER XLT Short bed, 5sp. Nice truck,

.

.

.

&gt;l~

new tires •.••.........•...•............•.••..•.....................
Loaded
1#4579A WAS $16,900

~.!!Now~ s1

~

Now $9 600
,!:. ,..
~

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"""'"""""""-'"'...,

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1:!

98 GMC JIMY

98 PONT. TUNSPORT

4 Door, 4X4
I#GM1667 WAS $23,900

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

&lt;l

I'

99 CHEVY PRIZM

I

'I
/

95o~~= s21 ,46~oTNow~i
s1~:'~o~oT~si~

'

·'

4Dr., 4x4, 3.2 V6, 5sp., Air

~~·n· ·~~ 1o······5 ·sp.;d:·~:;; Mii~; r~p~;·:::::::. '!1.2os:

FORD UNGER V6, 5Sll8ed.......................... .,
FORD F·ISO VB, Auto-Trans, Runs Good ....... .

verview Moto'
• • - .. .

~ -:;;...~:.;.!..:...."::."~· .... ···- -

-

-

'

I

Like Hew ................•.....................•.... Sale Price ·•-..•utll

Ph: 740:-992,3490
Your Last Stop Car"'"'"
Dean
Whited
•
, .., . -

. ·l

'.

308EA$T MAIN (704)992·6614 •1800) 837·1094 POMEROY
OLDIIMOIII.E

I

I

070RS .

. Truck Sale

•1995 FORD F·350 12FT. FLAT DUMP TRUCK 5Spd,
Air, 351 V-8, Soulhern Tru[k, Uke New Was S19, 900 ...... NOW $17,888
•1994 OLDS CUTLASS CIERRA 4·DOOR Denl&amp; Strotth
Spedol Loaded Runs Greal......... ........ . .. ....
.: ·... NOW $4,999.
•19B5 CHEVY CAP,RICE STATION WAGON Great
Work or Family Car ..................................... NOW $999
•1987 CHEVY BLAZER 2 Door, 4X4, Runs Great, Looks GrBIIt
..................................... ~ .. :..................................... NOW $2,999
•TWO TOYOTA 414 TRUCKS '94 Regular Cab--'95 Ext Cab,
Sharp! Sharp! ............................................................... :········ ...SHARP!

Ptckerlllgton .\I , Newark 17
P1ke ton 59, Ridm1Qnd Dale SE 34
Ptql.ln 54, Clayton mnhmolll 6
Lea ~ Htsb urg LaBrae 21, Con land lakev1ew 14
Pobnd 28. Salem 0
Lebamm 15, Loveland 7
Portsmouth West 28. McOermoll S"ol,o
Letpstc 42, Artndm 6
Nonhwest 18
Lemon Monroe 27, Frankhn 12
Proctomlle l"a1rland 28 , Tolna . W Va 7
Ltben y Center 34. Swamon 0
Ravenna 211. Stow 0
L1herty Umon 24. Crrc1evt lle 6
Rayland Buckeye Local 19. Well sburg W Va
Ltcking Hetghls 21, Mtllerspon 20
Brooke 14
Luna Bath 17 Wapakone1a 9
Reynoldsburg '6 Lewis Center Olentangy 12
Luna Semor 28 Milford 0
Rtdgcwood 25 Sugarcreek Garav.ay 22
L1sbon Beaver Local 41, Wctr. W Va 0
Rootstown 27 , Woodndge 13
Ltsbon Dnv1d Anderso n 50. Spnngficld 0
Ross 39, Goshen 0
Logtm 24, Manetta 0
Sundusky Perkins 28, Clyde 2 1
London ·" · Ltck.ing Valley 14
Sandusky St Mar} 's 27, Pon Clanton 7
Loram Clearvtcw 22 l.ilGrange Keywme '
Sarahsv&amp;lli! Shenandoah 21, Bndgeport 20
LorAin South vtew 34. \~rnu l ton 1
Sherwood Fairv&amp;ew 54, Defiance Tino'\.0
Lout sv 11le ll:t Carrollton 8
Smuhvllk 66, West Salem Northwestern 0
Lowelh1\le I.$ , McDo nald \ 3
Solon 42, Nordonm 36
Madt son ~4 Wlilougltby So uth 13
South Potnt 36, Coal Gro\e Oaw5on·Bryan 6
Magnolm WVa 15 St Clansvtlle 14 '
Sp11na Ht ghland 42, Mount G1 l ~ 0
Maple Hts I \, Parnta 3
Spe ncervtlle 36, Ltm.t Perry 0
'
Mana Stem Manon Local 1 I. Fort Recovery 7
Spn ng Catll Celli 21. Stdney Lehman 14-0T
Manon IJgm l9 . Marton Pleasa nt 14 ,,
SpnngOOro 9 M1am sburg 0
Man on H.trdmg \5. LcKmgton 3
S1 Henry 17, New Bremen 7
Manon Ki ver Valley JO. Morral Rtdgedale 20
St Marys Memonal 34. Ehda 1
Mamm Franklm l l, Col Brtggs O
St Pans Grnhom JJ. T1pp C•ty-lippeconoe IJ
Manms Ferr} 58 Hanrubal Rm::r 6
Steubenvtlle 27, R&amp; chnlond Ed&amp;
son 1
Mary;vrllc I I Htlh ard Darby 7
Strongs\ille JR. Rredl svtlle 28
Mason 42, o\llleha 7
Struthers 35 Libcnv 14
.
Ma&gt;Sillon Perry 69, Alh&lt;.~n cc 7
Sul ltvan Bl ack Rt ver 12. Bellevtlle Clear Fork 7
Masst llon Tudav. 20 M:~ g n o h a Sandy Valley 6
Sunbur y B1g Walnut 28 Wh tte hall-Yearhng 0 '
M.tsst lllln Washmg!on 2l , You Chane} 14
Syr.;am~e Mohawk 56, Rascom Hopewe ll·
Matthews t l Ber lin Center Western Rc ~!Ve 12
Loudon t&gt;
Mayfield 11 Twmsburg 10
Syhama SouthvieW 30, Ron fcYd 0
McArthur Vmtun County 25. Ndson\ llle-Ynrk
lil\ ,&amp;w~nt.la 20. Fenwtck 19
n ornv•lle Shcndan '~ Croo k ~v tll e 0
McComb 47 . VanBuren 7
1"1flm Ctl9e•t 21 Care) 14
McCo nndH tlk Morg.m 21 Ph1lo J
Tiffin Co\umbran 21 Upper Sandusky I l
·.t
Medma I He&amp; ea 0
To\ Bow~ he r U Tol Woodward 6
"'Mentor Lake Cathohc \-l. Garfield Hts rnllll} 0
l"ul Chnsuan 24 Ecorse: Mt ch 8
Mt.ulll Trale -'~ Col H.trtley 0
Iol St John s l8 lol Libbey 6
Mtddletcwn Maduon 4l Dtxte 0
fol Start 20, Tol Cent Cat\. 19
Mtdpark 1\ North R1dge,·tllc 2 I
Tol Vf;.utc 25 To\ Rogers 14
Mtd\ tCW .t8 Ftrclands 0
Tol Whumr r 4Z. Ucdlord. Mich 8
Mt11crsbnrg W Holmes ''i Mcdma Bttckeye 0
l"oro nto 'i 2 Jlmsburgh, Pa Alleghe ny Academy
Mog1tdore 19 W,llc rloo 7
Mogadore Fteld I I. SouthJ:;tst 10
l.t
Tn ad I \ W:iynesfield -Cioshen K
Mornslown Umon Local 27 Gnadenhullcn
Troy '5. Cui West 18
lndtan Valley 7
Twm Va lleyS 38, Natmnal Tmtl 0
•
Mt Vernon 46 Delaware 7
Umontow n Lake 16. N Canton Hoover \ l-OT
N L1ma S Range 25, Mmeral Rtdge 21
Upper Arhngton 4], Thomas Worthmglon 0 1
New Carhsle Te~· umse h 4 1. Spnng Shawnee 17
Valley Vu:~w 45. Day Northndge 7
New Lexmgton 26. John Glenn 7
Vtlndtlha Butler 35 Greenvtlle 14
New Mtdd lcwwn Spungfteld 20. Jackson·
Versailles ~ 4 Mtlton-Umon 0
M1lton 17
Vrncem Warren 17, Pomt Pleasant. WVa 10
New Phtlndelplua 50, 8 yesv11le Meadowbrook
W Carrollton 28. Day Carroll 0
l2
Wndsworth 28, Nonon 14
New Rtchmond 14. Chnton-Masste 7
Walsh Jesuit ::\8, Lakew ood S1 Edward I 0
Newcomerstown 21, Sti:lsburg-Frankltn 13
Wiirsaw Rtver View 28 , Maysvtlle 6
Newton Falls 2R. Brookfield 21
Wauseon 28, Bryan 21
Northndgc l.l Uuc t~ 1
Waverly 28. Mtnford 20
Norwalk St: Paul ~7. PlymoU!h 6
Wayne 42. Xema 7
Norwood 28, W1lmmgton 20
Waynesv ille 27, Cedarvtlle 0
Oak Glen, W Va 43. Wcllsvtlle 27
Wellmgton 39. Brooluitde 6
Oak Harbor 35. Huron 20
Wel\uon 41 , Pomeroy Me1gs 7
Olmsted Falls 45, Rocky Rtver 8
Wes1 Jefferson 28, Washmgton CH 21, 20T
Oregon Clay 27, Napoleon 19
West Ltberty Salem 37, Rtdgemont 14
Oregon Stntch 29, E\·ergree n 0
WM: k-liftiJ ~\8, Or;mge l2
~
Orrnl\c 48-, MaruftektMadrson 14
Wtllow Wood Sy mmes Valley 61. Franklan
Orv.e!l Grand Valley 29, Midt:Uefield Cardmal
Furnace Gree n 6
·
!I
Wmdham 65. Gll.ITettsv&amp;lle Garfield 7
Otsego 40. Woodmore 34
Wmter~ v1lle Indian Creek 31. Day Belmont ~
Ottawa Htlls 42. Lora&amp;n Cath 7
Wmton Woods 21. Cm Northwest 0
,
Oua .... a-Glandorf 35 . Ltma Shawnee 28
Wood~field Monroe Central 42, Tyler, W Va .,
Patnesvt lle Haney 32, Andover P~matumng
Consolidated 0
V(\1\cy 14
Wooster Tnway 34, loudonville 6
I Pames\ille RIVers&amp;de 22 , You Rayen 6
Wonhmgton l(j\bourne 27, Hllhard Davtdson ()
' Pandora-Gtlboa 35. Arlington 8
You Boardman 40. Mass11lon Jackson 23
..
Parma Padua .ll, Elyna Cadtohc 12
You Cardtnal Moot'ey 43, Ausuntown-Fnch 0_.
PembeTVIHe Eas1wood fO, Kansas Ulkota 19
You Ursulme 23. Warren Harding 14
Perrysburg 33, Holland Springfield 14
Lancaster 14, Galutnna 1

landmark O m 47 , New Mtamt 20

r:remonl R os~ ~" J·osturm 8
G&lt;Jih polt S 19 . Atht.• n~&gt; 7
G.Lrfit:fd Ht ~ 1~- Parma Nonn.111dy 7
GcncYa 'i, , C01meaut 21
Gcno:1 21. N on~wou d 0
GtbsotJburg 49, Lakes tde Danbury 0
G1rard 22 Canfi eld 10
Glc nv&amp;llc 52, John Hay
Glouster Tnmble 2lS. Watcrfurd 11
Gree n 41) , H1 ghland 14
Gree ncvtew 2]. Sol.llheaMcnr 22
Gree nfie ld McC lain 1·8 Grandvtew 7
Grove Cuy 21. Westervtlle Sout\1 7
Hntrulton 14. Middletown 10
Hturu lton Badin 14 Cm Roger Bacon 7
Hamtlton l"ownslup -16, C.um1 WmcheSic:r 21
Hamler Patnck He nry 44, Delta 20
H~noven o n Umted 34, Southern 6
Hardm Northern 60 , Vanlue 7
Ha\ tland Wayne Trace 45 Edgerton 7
Heath 26 Granv&amp;lle 19
Hemlock Mtller H Stewan Federa l Hocki ng 14
litlltop 48 , Lltchticld, Mid\ 7
Hablmrd- :\!-, €1wfrlp10n 7lronton 21, Portsmouth 12
;,Jr.;~MJII 63, Ci te~l 1111; R.ive1 V&lt;Jllcy iS:
Jcffersnn Area 46 Ashtabu la Hnrbor 0
Jonathan Alder ~4. Mnd1 son-Piruns 18
kenston 20. Brush 6
Ketll Roose\'eh 14. Barberton 6
Kt:IIIOII 40, V.m Wert 20
Kenton Rtdgc 27. Urbana 7
K1n gs Mtlls 'i6, Lmlc fl..ha nu 24
Ktrt l ~nd 12. l)unon Berkshtre 0
I
Lakewood 21 El yn .J 7
:
Lakota W I.$ , C111 Cokra111 J

..

•
- ' . • ··- r ., .,. _ _ __.. ..

7 0~pm

l' tllsburgh (C"on.hn .t 8 1)) .11 Nc1' Yu1k (Reed 10)) 71 0pm
Sau D1egll iC.Jrlylc l -1t .n i\rt7llll.l !D.t.tll £.-9)
t O05 p m

· NL standings
102
94
76
67
.. 6J

Amhuu y Waym: 70, Mmnr~&lt;.:c 0

Apple C 1t~e k Waynedale 11, Htllsdale 0
Archbold 1\ Monlpeher 14
Ashmbula 20 As hmbula Et.l ~n..ood 6
AUica Senec.1 E:isl 31) N Ba1tunore H
Avon 35, Obcrh n I 8
Avon Lnke 21 Westlake 14
Bambndge Paml V.illey J6 7. . ane Trace 0
B.In ~t: ~v i ll c 4J, S IMdys~&lt;k U
Bmavta 20 Hillsboro I ll
~edford Ownel l~ . 01ardon NDCL 1.\
Bellbrook 44, Broo kYlllc 14
Bellefnntm ne 19 Spnng Northe.!Stcrn 0
Bellevue 42 Norwalk 6
BeJou Weu Branch 21. Canton South 7
Belpre .'2. AlbatJ} Alex:111der 26
BenJ,umn LoBan 26. Mmnu Em1 6
Bethe\7. Mtsstssmnw a Va ll 0
Bethel-Tate 22 . Wtillllmsburg 20
BeYcrly Fort Frye 21 New Mat.imom ~ l"rtllltiCI

Los Angeles ~- Houston 1
San Francasco 9. Co lorado 4
New York 3. Pmsburgh 2 (I I)

10 )

l oronill Otcntg1!n 10-121 n1 C' LFVF I AN D
, iWnght 8-9) I O'ip m
Scaule ir G.trl"ta 16-81 .n Oakland !La"tun 0-0J
. -1 OS p m
Ni!w Yor~ !Cm1c: 11 -9) .u T.unp.t IJ,t) iAh onez t.J.
Kl 6 l S p m
Ros10n (R Mal !Inez I I) .it B.1111rnorc tJuhns 6, \), 7 05 p m
Mmnesota iRon'k'rO 0-0) at Cluca!!n IK Wdl s ' ·
11 1 os r m
l&gt;etrot t (Weaver 8· 121 nt K.msas Cit y ISupp:m I0·
II J. g 05 p m
Texas (\ielhng. 1' · 10) .I t Armhetm (Fyln•e 0 -41.
IOmpm

.

Amherst I 6, Bay 0

Amoma 'io7. Convoy Cres1v1ew 22

!Peterson ' -71 I I~ p rn
Clm.1go \Lorr.lmc· 1-'i) at St I O lli S \Stephenson
6-ZJ I l'ipm
Sa n r r.iii CIS&lt;'O (Rut!l('l I.J- 101 .t l Collllradol
( J ,mn~ Wtlght4·2 ), 1()'i pm
Los Angeles (!'ark 1 1-10) at Houston !Luna 20~
\ 0).4 0Spm _ -

Friday':!i scores

• lt.· l\tlanta
' New York .
' Phtlade\phta
' Montreal
.. Plortda '

Akron St. Vinl"CUI-St Mary 14, llcncd•cllne I J
Allen 1-".ast ll l'auldmg 6
Amanda-Cicarcreek 26. Teays V3lley 7

Friday's scores

llo ston 6, O.ilt1more 2
Toromo 8 CLEVLLAND 6
KaMas Ctty 9 DetrOit S
Nev. York II Tpmpn Ba) 7
Chllagu 9, Mtntlesota 8
o\naheun 7. Texas 6
Oak\,md 5 Seattle 1

.' rum

Akron Mo.nchester 43 . Navarre Fauless B
Akron Spnngfidd ~5 . Marh ngton 14

M•lwaukec 4 CINCINNATI 1 ( 10)
San D1cgo 6. Amona I

Wrsltrn DiYislon
95 6)
ll·I"Cit.rui
Oakland
M6 74
78 B2
Seanle
Anahetm
68 92
K·dmched dtVISIOII tit\C
y-c hnchcd wtld-curd benh

(~ tuba

11

Atl anta 4, Flonda I
Montreal 7. Philndclphm 4
Clulago J, St . Louis 2

Ctnlritl Division

They played Saturday

·Across From Super America In Pomeroy

...... . ..

' Iwn

98
85

play, 65-yard drive for the score. Young earned eoght tim es in the
Jawn Fortner hooked up with Aaron drove .
Jenkins on a 33-yard pass play for
After both teams traded punts,
the score The kick was no good, but Justin Roush put the Marauders in
the Golden Rockets held the 6-0 lead
woth 8:22 left in the first period.

Col OcSuh!s 24, Co l S1 Charb 14
Cui Eastmunr 20, Cui Whetstone 7
Co l Independe nce 26, Co l East 20
Co l Ready 55. Co l World Harvest 0
Col South 19, Co l Walnut R1dge J8 1 ,
Culurnb1 ana 11, E Palesune 21
Cnlumbtana Crestvtew 21. Leetoma 7
Coh.1mbu s Grove 6B, Upper Sctoto Valley 0
Copley 2J . Revere 7
Cury-Raw son 'N Fmdla y I theny-Bemon I :1
Coshocton 56 Unchsv1llc Clayrnonl 12
Co\l ngton 49. Arcanum 6
Cres twood 29, Streetsboro 6
Cuyahoga Falls 27. Hudmn 13
Cuyahoga Hts 15 Gtlmour Acudemy 0
Cuy.thoga nllcy Chmtmn 11 Lurhtr:m E 2R
Uallon 12, 1ttman 7
Danvtl le 27, Ce merburg 14
D&lt;~ y Co1one Whne 26, Day Me.Jd owdalc 18
Day Pattcrso 41' U.ty Jclferson 0
Ddinncc I 9 ( It na 0
Uclphos St Joh s 24. Rm kfouJ Parkway 0
Dover 6l C.unlilrulgc I 2
Doy le stown Ch1ppcwu 62, Cre ston Norwnync 7
Dresden Tu -Valley 16. W Muskmgum 0
Dubhn Coffrn:m 24 Grovepon l ~
E Canton V. lust.lf &lt;lWaS V,rlley ~ I
East KrJ(J X \4 I rcdem:kwwn 1
East LJ vcJ p uol .~u Wtlsun 0
Ltsrlake N 17 Ch,rrt.lou 9
F.atnn '~ IJay O.tkwoolf 6
l.dgc\\OU\1 '6 D.1y Stcbbms 0
F.don fl.\ "ldomh.J M1d1 6
rtmwoo,J ~ J\ltllbury \ :lkt•O
l: nt)n Gn:enun -t9 Spnng NW U
l. udtd 2K Mentor n-U l
Farrb:mks I I. IJet.:r.ilt ~J \' t.'fs t,lc 6
•
rmrborn -t9 Spmlg Nt II th ''
I .u dlcld 2H I ,\k ut,l l· 7
Lmfidd Unwn 2S C'tn kvtlk 14
\ ,ulnlltm l-t Spt tn ~ SuUi h R
l·.urvlt\\ 11 Nmth Dl msteJ fl
l~n JI,Jy 45 S.mdusky 6
l·r.tnklort Adena 11:1 Wtlhamspurl Westfall 0
Fr:mklm Hts 27 P.ilaskab W.itkms Memoml

Akron Cove'ltrY20, Athnual Kw g 14
Akron Fast ll Fm~ stone 6
Akron Garfield 48 Ellet 7

Western DivisiOn

Eastern Dhlslon

Mmnesma

CHEVY CORSICA . 4Dr., Auto, Air, Low Miles .... '3.4951
OLDS DELTA 88 4Dr., Loaded w/options, Nice .. .

•1996 GMC SO..OMA 414 JRUCK UkeNew, WasS13,500
.................:............... ................................... NOW $12,888

----· - · ~ - - ·

Young. Hutchinson, a senior speedstcr carried 19 tomes for 195 yards.
Young, only a sophom~re rushed for
I
on 24 carroes.
took the opening kickoff
bchmd Young put toge ther a 10-

Friday's actinn

AL standings

K:msas C1ty

Category
~
First downs ......................................................, ........ 17
·Rushing attempts &amp; yards ................................. 37-265
ComplattempVI NT ....... .... .. ...... ......... .... ... ... ...... ..4·15·1
Passing yards ......................... .... .............................. 64
Total yards ................ .. ....................... ,.................... 329
Fumbles/lost ............................................................ 3·1
Penalties ............................................................... .4-30
Punls/avg ..................... ......... .............................. 1·31.0
Kickoff .reVyards ,........... ,........................................ 2·20

IECIUiJ~PIId •..•••••

South Gallia at Gauley Bridge

Marte

...

strong runnong game, outscored Meigs team 41 -7 in TVC football
•t:S Correspondent
Meigs 27-0 in the second half and action Friday evening at Wellston. It
::· WELLSTON- Wellston, woth a went on to defeat an injured riddled was the TVC oj\cner for both teams.
The Golden Rockets rolled off
429 yards rushong led by the tandem
of Chros Hutchinson and Brad

Dc uon

Team statistics

Saturday

Dale Earnhardt
Jeff GordOn

-~

;i:y DAVE HARRIS

X-CLEVELAND
Ch• cago

This week's agenda
Fridav SEOAL
Gallia Academy at Logan
Marietta at River Valley
Po1nt Pleasant at Athens
Jackson at Warren
'
Friday-others
Federal Hocking at Eastern
Guyan Valley at Hannan
Meigs at Nelsonville-York
Southern at Trimble
Gilmer County at Wahama

T..SHIRTS • CAPS • JAC,KETS •, COLLE,CTABLES

..... .. -

~Well$ton · gets 41-7 win over hurting _
Marauders .in OD opener

Scoring summary
GAHS: Rothgeb 74-yard punt return (Payton kick) , 6:25-2nd
GAHS: Payton 26-yard pass to Simmons (Payton kick), 3:17·2nd
AHS: Fulks 7-yard pass to Llewellyn (Coble kick)~16·2nd
GAHS: A. Saunders 4-yard run (kick blocked), 7:06·3rd
GAHS: Lane 20-yard run (run failed) , 3:09-3rd
GAHS: Simmons 26-yard run (Payton kick), 2:38-3rd
~AHS: Skinner )0-yard run (run failed), 2:38·4th

$unbav ~ime•·$mtbul • Page 83

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

c

Selected non-league teams

THin

Sunday, October 3, 1999

Sunday, October 3, 19~

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· ·Page 84 • JJIUitii!Q tlimn-JJadiml

PQmeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

~· Garctner gets game-high 1M yards. scores three TDs in losing cause

Sunday, October 3, 1·999 '

Sunday, October 3, 1999

Wahama flogs Hamlin 45~16, captures second win of se~a~on

0

·Jackson ·c ruises past Riv~r Valley _
63-19, stays undefeated
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tlmee..S.ntlnel Staff
JACKSON - In hiday mght's
Southeastern Oh10 Athlettc League
football game at Jackson Htgh
School, the host Ironmen scored the
first 14 points and never looked back
en route to a 63' 19 wm over the
River Valley Ratd~rs
~
In the first mmute of the game,
hnebacker Matt Prater's recovery of
quarterback Clark Walker's fumble
on the Ratders' 32-yard line From
there, Jackson needed one play senior quarterback Chad Spradhn's
32-yard pass to split end Ryan Ttpton
- to score the first pomts.

After Rwer Valley's second possesston ended m a punt, Jackson, a
club known more for pumshufg runmng attacks than aerial firework, ,
returned to the auborne pan of tts
offense and got satisfactiOn agam
Spradhn and ttght end Morgan
Wtlharns connected for a 54-yard
touchdown pass play that, with
Jerrod Parker's second extra-pomt
boot of the mght, put the lronmen
ahead 14-0.
The Ratders answered wtth a
three-play, 65~ard sconng dm e
htghhghted by tatlbacklquarterback
Jeff Gardner's 45-yard run on the
opemng play After Juntor runnmg
back Jared Taylor's 14-yard run put
thetr club deep m the red zone,
Gardner's stx-yard touchdown run
and Ntck George's extra-pomt ktck
slashed Jackson's lead to a 14-7 margm.
Jackson, -~tartmg tts th11d dnve of
the game at the 5 53 mark m the first
quarter, moved the ball four yards
before puntmg. The Ratders settmg
up shop at thetr own 26, showed
plenty of enthustasm and appeared to
be on thetr 'fay to ue the game But
Walker's pttchoul tell short of th e
mark (Gardner) and was recovered·
by Ttpton at the Ratders' 17
The Ironmen, hampered tcmporanly by a holdmg penalty that
negated what would have been a 13JEFF GARDNER
yard touchdown catch for tailback
Senior QBJS - River Valley H.S. T J. Mustard, began the If breakaway

l I

l

Marauders....

busmess wtth a 31-yard Jaunt to the
Wellston four. But the Golden
Rocket defense sttffened and stopped
the Marauders Roush's 22-yard field
goal attempt mtssed wtde right.
Wellston scored wnh 6:04 left m
the first half when Young went over
:-, 'from ftve yards out, capp10g off a
· ; .nine play 44-yard dnve. Erron
. · Brennan added the extra po10ts to
g1ve Wellston a 14-0 lead
Me1gs took the ktckoff and put
together a five play 60-yard dnve
1
I
capped off when Roush broke free
1
on a 35-yard sconng run. Justin was
perfect wtth the extra points and
141- - -Melgs had- pulled..to ..wttbto 14-7
wrth 4 23 left m the ha:f.
",,
The Marauders recetved a break
,I
when Roush as he was slidmg out of
bounds recovered a lateral at the
·:. :Metgs 32 wtth 2 05 left. One play
·-:later, Roush broke free with a 44: ·vard run down the side hne to the
•'Rocket 14. On the next play Jeremy
• ·Roush went for I0 yards, but the
; Marauders were stopped cold by the
&lt; :Wellston defense as the half ended.
; . Metgs drove the Rocket 34-yard
; ~me, but a fourth-down pass from
~ ;Aaron Vanlnwagen to Matt Stewart
: fell 10complete Stx plays later
; Hutchinson scored from 23 yards
• )Jut, Fortner's kick made it a 21-7
~ lead With 6:04 left 10 the th1rd period.
Shawn Brennan had a btg 37-yard
, )UR 10 the dnve.
~ • After Metgs went four and out the
• kockets butlt onto the lead with
: Jlutchmson scoring another touch: down from seven yards out Once
• again Fortner added the extra points
;: for a 28-7 Wellston lead with 1:37

I'

I

5

:

...•.
.

River Valley-Jackson statistics

Team statistics

By RICK SIMPKINS
T·S Correspondent
VINCENT - The Warren Local
Rushtng attempts &amp; yards . .
. 33-200
blocked a potenual gameWamors
Total fumbles &amp; number lost.. ............................ .4-3
wmnmg
fteld
goal m the fmal sec'
onds of regulatton .and then scored
Total first downs
.
..
.8
the only touchdown of the extra peri Total yards ...................................................... 215
od
to hand the Pomt Pleasant Btg
Penalties: number &amp; yards ................................. 4-23
Blacks
a 17 -I 0 defeat.
Punting: number &amp; yards . ... . .
3-114
The loss, the thtrd consecuttve
one for the locals after a three-game
Individual statistics
wmnmg streak to open the season,
was parltcularly hard to accept
because of the mtssed opportunittes.
River Valley Raiders
Offense
"ThiS ts a btttcr ptll to swallow,"
Passtn11: Gardner 1-5, 15 yds. &amp; 1 1nt.
satd PPHS head coach Steve Safford
Receivtng: Northup 1-15
"Stausucally, we beat them. But, you
Rushing: Gardner 14-~5 j 3 TDs; Taylor 12-28; Walker 5-9;
wm .football games by sconng more
George 2-8
~
pomts. not by gettmg an edge m the
states. Th1s loss pretty much makes
Jackson lronmen
every game from here on out a 'mustDefense
win' sttualion for us if we are to
Fumble recoveries: Prater 1-0; M. Williams 1-0; Wood 1-0
reach our goal of geumg back to the
playoffs."
Interceptions: Pentx 1-6 ·
Offense
The Btg Blacks, behmd junior
Passing: Spradlin 4-11, 116 yds &amp; 2 TDs
tailback John Bonecutter, out rushed
Receiving: Tipion 2-63 &amp; 1 TD; M. Wllltams 1-54 &amp; t TD; Adkins.- -+-- -~ the hosts by-over a hundred yards m
-1)
·
the Southeastern Ohto Athletic
Rushing: Swtsher 9-59 &amp; 1 TO; Mustard 11-53 &amp; 1 TD; Parker
· League contest. and had an edge m
6-37 &amp; 1 TD; Rouse 7-36 &amp; 1 TD; Pentx 2-17; Spradlin 3-5 &amp; 2 TDs;
total offense - but m the most
Wolford 2-5

·n
BREAKING AWAY from Wellston defenders is Meigs running back
Justin Roush (24) during Friday night's Ohio Division opener at
Wellston. Though Roush gained 164 yards and scored a touchdown,
theo Golden Rockets won 41-7. (Times·S~ntinel photo by Dave
Hams)

•' .•
: : Scoring summary

7

8

0
14

0=
13 =

~~~ fo_r

7
41

.

:Individual statistics

•.

·~

OT.

From my perspective, though, It one for a loss, two ftrst hils and:an
would have been much more enJoy- assJst, whtle Joe Marcum had .It&lt;
able 1f we would have won thts solos, two lor losses, two ftrst htts
thtng"
and two assiSts Jeremy Jeffers
Defenstvely, the Blacks had many ptcked off a Warren Local pass and
outstandmg performances but none added a solo tackle and an asstst,
were better than the two mstde hoe- whtle Enc Myeros recovered a
backers - Culley Thomas and Enc Warrtor fumble, had two solos and a
Frye. Thomas, a semor, had ftve solo patr of asststs
time.
'
tackles, mcludmg one for a loss, four
The Btg Blacks are now 3-3 on
"We felt ~reuy good in the final ftrst htts , and SIX asststs Frye also the season, 0-3 m league play. They
seconds of regulation," satd Safford had five solos With on resulting m a wtll be at Athens next Fnday. Warren
"We have a very good kicker m Bnan loss, wtth four ftrst htts and 11 imptoves to 4-2, 2-1 m league play
Sang and n wasn't a long attempt asststs RD. Knopp had live solos,
But, g1ve Warren credit, they made a
)
b1g play when they had to."
The Wamors regained the lead
when quarterback Travts Ollom hll
Brad Venham with a 23-yard sconng
strike on their first possesswn of the
extra penod ..Westerman's kick made
tl 17-10. The Big Blacks had one
more opportumty, but a Jason Gtlley
pass attempt was ptcked off by a
Warren Local defender tn the end
zone, and that - as they say, was
that.
f-----...::
"Th1s was a pretty good football
game - one I would have enjoyed
or
$202
watchtng," satd Safford. "there were
two pretty food football teams out
there ant the stood toe to toe for 48
minutes and they fought to a draw.
'JOB E M,11n St Pomeroy 1 ROO 187-10Q4

turned back the "hosts on the
Warnors' next possessiOn Pomt
drove deep mto Warren Local terntory and wllh JUSt eleven ucks left on
the clock, the B1g Blacks attempted a
fteld goal that would have "on the
game. But, the Warnors crashed
through the Pmnt hne and blocked
the attempt and ll was on to over-

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COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP) -The to the tee skatmg arena and the
· &gt; Oh10 Sratc Un1verstty Board of Woody Hayes Athlettc Centet
:·: Trustees approved an addttional $37
The stadtum IS to be ftmshed by
: : mtllton for the renovation of Ohto the start of the 2001 football season,
• • • Stadtum, but Imposed a moratorium
:. : on any more sports prOJects
.
• , The addtuonal money approved
· .: ' on Fnday bnngs the proJect's total to
.: ~ -~ $187 million, not mcludtng $10 mtl•. ·'. hon borrowed for a htgh-tech score"'. ~ board
.: : Several trustees met With faculty
·'~~ '"·.and admmtstrators who were con~ · .; cerncd that sports buildmgs were get,. : -:tmg too much money, whtle academ~ : ic buildmgs weren't getting enough,
:·. • Chairman Mtchael Colley said.
;·.: OSU officials sa1d numerous aca;.~ : ·dcmic projects are under constructton
:··; or being planned, includmg the $92
• - millton F1sher College of Busmess
: : complex and a proposed $65 mtlhon
· . - rehabtlitation of the hbrary.
:: : They also noted that the three-year
' ~ : expansion and tmprovement of the
•: • stadium renovation will be patd for
:: : wtth ttcket sales and private dona;.• : tJOns The university is borrowmg
mon~y to cover expenses unttl those
• .• rece1pts. come m.
~-:
"Basically, we're gomg to pause
· :- and catch our breath," prestdent
; · : Wilham Kirwan said. "We have a lot
~ : : on our plate."
.
• : ' In the last three years, Oh10 State
:· ·: has oither completed or started' the
' : ' Bill Davis baseball stadium, the
•' : ,• Schottenstem Center basketball and
{ · ;, hockey arena, the Jesse Owens soccer
· -·-' and track stadium and improvements

dtstnct hetghts as a semor on the
gndtron He was Defensive Player of
the year and Spec tal Mentton AllOh10 as a ltnebacker/detenstve back

(Ju s t South of Hiqh Price s )
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SIGNS WITH REDMEN - Jeremiah Bentley has signed to play
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CAMARO 11819&amp;-Biue, AT, AC, Ult,

57-429
1-1

Wellston Golden Rockets
Offense
Pa. .lng: Jawn Fortner 1-4, 33 yards
·
R,celvlng: Aaron Jenkins 1-33
Ruahlng: Chris Hutchinson 1_9-195, Brad Young 28-146, Shawn
Brennan 5-67, Erron Brennan 2-19, Austin Arthur 1-9, Jawrr Fortner
1~
'

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MAUBU 118236-AT, AC, tilt, cruiSe, PW, PL,

Melge M.-audera
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,
Offenae
~aalng: Aaron Vanlnwagen 3-12, 18 yards &amp; 1 int
: ~ec:eMng: Jonathan Haggerty 1-12, ~all Stewart 1-9, Justtn
Roush 1-{-1)
·
.
·
Rushing: Justtn Roush 24· 167, Jeremy Roush 8-32 Chris
'Jeffers 6·24, B.J. Kennedy 2-11, Tyson Lee 4-1, Aaron Vanh1wagen
1-(·2)

yard run prov1ded the hosts wtth the
early
advantage
and
Scotl
Wes terman added the extra poml
ktck to make tl 7-0 and there was sttll
II 50 showmg on the fust quarter
clock The rest of the quarter was
scoreless, although there was plenty
of acuon from both teams
The Btg Blacks tted the game
when Bonecutter galloped mto the
end zone from 62 yards out wtth mne
and a half mmutes left tn the second
quarter Bnan Sang added the e&lt;tra
potnt to make n 7-7. The score
remamed ued for e1ght mmutcs, but
the Warnors regamed the lead -one
they took mto the halftime locker
room, when Westerman connected
on a 36 yard fteld goal wtth just over
a mtnute and a half left m the first
half.
. It looked like tl mtght end that
way when ne1ther tam managed to
score m the thud quarter. But, the
Btg Blacks !Jed the game wtth just
three mmutes lefl m the conte&amp;l when
Sang spht the uprights with a 37yard field goal. The proud red and
black defenders then gave the1r
offen~e another chance when they

~:~ impose curb on additional sports projects·

Calt$!orv
MJjp Wellston
, · Passtng yards ........................................ .. ................. 18
33
·.Completions &amp; attempted passes ................ ........ .3-12
1-4
"Interceptions thrown ................ .... ................ ...... .... 1
o

.

tmportant category, the Btg Blacks
tound themselves on the wrong s: de
of the ledger Bonecutter contmued
hts assault on the I ,000 }ard plateau
wtth a game-htgh 182 yards - a
total that "as 68 yards more than the
enure Wamor team managed But,
penalues - the Btg Blacks were
flagged stx ttmes, and turnovers
(three for the locals) proved to be
very costly for the Btg Blacks as they
tried m vam for thetr first league wm
of the season.
"We have a tendency to be our
own worst enemy at ttmes," satd a
very dejected Safford after the game
"Somettmes tt seems hke we can't
stand prospenty. But, there is one
thmg I can't fault and that is the effort
that these guys made tomght We
were factng a pretty good football
team and playtng m a dtfftcult place,
but these guys gave everythtng they
had. We didn't leave anythmg on the
field from that standpomt," added the
long ume B1g Black mentor
Warren Local vaulted out of the
blocks, sconng the game's first
touchdown JUSt ten seconds after the
opt:mrtg kickoff. Dernck Wetz' 12-

:;: osu trustees OK $37M for renovations, but

:ream statistics

"

As it was the Wh1te Falcons came up with
the btg play and went on to add tw~ more
touchdowns on a 55 yard pass frorli Eran
Branch to Adam R1ckard .and a three yard
sconng run by Brtnker Rtckard booted the
extra-pomt ktck on the Falcons final tou~h­
down wtth the Bend Area defenstve untt limJIJng !;lamhn to a 27 yard Krack field goal
durmg second half actiOn to come away wtth
the 45-16 tnumph
Wahama dommated the games fmal stattS·
ttcs by. ptckmg up 2 1 finil down whtle rushmg for 361 yards and passmg for 79 more.
McGrady was the oftens1ve star for the
Bobcats wllh 172 yards through the atr for
two touchdowns wtth only one of hts 29 aenals bemg mtercepted
Defenstvely the Whtte Falcons were led
by none other th~n Beau Gerlach wtth nme
tackles wtth Joey Dtvtncenzo addmg seven
stpps, Tyler Rone)StX. and Bnnker wtth ft~e.
Wahama, at 2-4 on the season follow!ng
the wm, wtll close out tts four game home
stand next week when tire Whtte Falc9ns
welcome Gtlmer County to the Bend Area
for the first ume ever Hamltn falls for lhe
fourth stratght week and dtps to 1-5 wtth the
Bobcats enJoymg an open date ne&lt;t w~ek
before meeung Lmcoln County nval Duv)ll

URG

. •.
RIO GRANDE Jeremiah
'.': Bentley, a former pttcher/shortstop at
:.: : Mctgs Htgh School, comes to Rto
· " Grande after a sohd sen tor season for
the Marauders. He htl 374 and stole
16 bases on hts way to earning first
. . team All Tn-Valley Conference as a
· · senwr The productive senior cam' ' · pa1gn also earned Bentley first team
.,·· all-dtstnct honors He was honorable
·. mentton TVC as a junwr.
,
The 5-10, ISS-pound righthander
' · • uses four pttches tn hiS repenotre ~ ; fastball, curveball, fork and change: ·: up Bentley reports that his fastball is
· • • hts best pitch
: : Bentley was speechless over htS
• ·: opportumty to play college baseball.
• - 'I'm exctted, at a loss for words,
• : overwhelmed,' he satd. Bentley feels
• • • he IS a good all-around, hard-nosed
; · : player that a)ways hustles and pos: ·: scsscs ~ood leadershtp sktlls
.: : Bentley wlll get the chance to play

AC, tilt, cruiSe, PW, PL,

.Total ftrst downs ...................................... ................... 9
:Total yards .. .................................................. ......... 251
·Penalties: number &amp; yards ...................................... 0-0 ·
:Punting: number &amp; yards .................................... A-108

lowmg a Wahama fumble. Behind the pass·
mg arm of .Walt McGrady the Bobcats covered the dtstance wtth McGrady tossmg a 14
yard scormg stnke to Brandon Enochs wtth
Sebasttan Krack booting the potnl af!er
Wahama answered the Hamlin score wtth
5 44 left m the half wtth a 77 yard dnve as ·
Bnnker look over where MacKmght left off
Eran Branch sneaked m from a yard out for
the touchdown to gtve the White Falcons a
26-7 edge
.
McGrady once agam brought the Bobcats
back on a 66 yard, si&lt; play dnve that culm•·
nated tn a 42 yard pass play from McGrady
to Rodney Salmons to conclude the ftrst half
sconng wtth Wahama holdmg a 26-13 lead
Hamlin fumbled the second half kickoff
and Hankmson carne up wtth the loose football at the Bobcat 30 yard hne Four plays
later Hankmson went the fmal , 12 yards to
f&gt;aydtrt to gtve WHS a 32-13 edge "That was
probably the biggest play of the game when
we recovered the fumble on the secona half
ktckoff," Cromley satd. "If they would have
put the ball tn the end zone 'tt could have
been devastating to us. They posstbly could
have pulled to wtthtn five or stx pomts and
the momentum swmg could have really dtscouraged us."

.5~i.baseball
.
'

·: : Welleto.n: Aaron Jenkins 33-yard pass from Jawn Fortner (kick
: · failed)·B·22·1st
· Wellston: Brad Young 5-yard run (Erron Brennan run)-6:04-2nd
Meigs: Justin Roush 35-yard run (Justin Roush ktck)-4:23-2nd
:
, • Wellston: Chns Hutchinson 23-yard run (Jawn Fortner ktck)• : 6:04-3rd
: : Wellston: Chns Hutchinson seven-yard run (Jawn Fortner ktck), 1:37-3rd
- : Wellston: Chns Hutchinson ltve-yard run (Jawn Fortner ktck): •9'57-4th
0
' . Wellaton: Chris Hutchinson 31-yard run (Jawn Fortner ktck)8:47-4th

:Rushing attempts &amp; yards ................................ 45-233
;Total fumbles &amp; number lost.. ................................ 2-1

was havmg a heck of a game "
MacKnight scored one touchdown and
picked up 131 yard§ m seven carnes m the
first quarter alone before exmng the contest
wth 4·36 remammg m the opemng stanza
with Bnnker ptcking up the slack for the
departed senor wtth hts second consecuttve
100 yard effort Bnnker gamed 101 yards 10
14 tries in additton to making hts presence
known defenstvely wtth five tackles. t
WHS spnnted to an earl~ 20-0 leao by
sconng the first three ttmes 11 had the football. MacKmght got thmgs started wtth a 45
yard touchdown gallop at the I 0·05 mark 6~·
the opemng penod. Brandon Hankinson
tossed a succusssful two pomt conversion
pass to Beau Gerlach to stake Wahama to an
8-0 advantage.
Moments later the Whtte Falcons
embarked on. an 35 yard e1ght play nve
behtnd the runntng of MacKntght wtth
Brinker capptng the senes wtth Sl five yard
burst for the touchdown to make n a 14-0
contest. The final Falcon score came wtth 08
remamu\g in the quarter when Hankinson
spnnted around the left stde on a 14 yard
sconng run.
Hamlin closed the gap to 20-7 early id the
second canto after marclung 70 yards fol-

Bentley
;_:=to play

Meigs-Wellston statistics

: : Quarter mt11.1
·: Meigs (3-3) ..................... 0
~ • Wellston (2-4) ................6

ttme this season the White Falcon running
backs rece1ved ~orne outstandmg blockmg
up front and MacKnight and Bnnker made
the most of 1t by leadmg Wahama to 361
yards on the ground '
The maJollly of the damage to the Bobcat
defense was outstde the left stde where
Donme Scaggs, Tyler Roney and Beau
Gerlach contmually sealed off the Hamlm
defenders to allow the WHS offense to ptck
up huge chunks ot yardage "We felt that
wtth Mtke Nonhup out of actiOn our left stde
of the hne would be a little stronger and
Roney ~ Gerlach and Scaggs proved thai to be
true," sa1d Cromley.
.
Northup was held out of the homecommg.
act 1cm due to a shoulder InJury but should be
back nex t week. However the Whtte Falcons
lost semor runntng back Johnn} MacKntght
1n the fmal seconds of the opemng pcnod
w1th a knee m1ury and hts status for the
remamder of the season IS questtonable.
'We JUmped out to an early 20-0 ftrst penod lead when MacKmght \\cnt down and we
sort of lost our locus for a whtle," Cromley
saJd. ·I thmk the ktds were warned about
htm and that's a crcdtt to the closeness thts
te am possesses It "'as sad that he got hun
and was forced to the stdeltne because he

Warren Local cracks 10-10 tie, beats Big Blacks 17-10 in

Category
. 8'l Jackson
Passing yarc:ls ................. ......... ......................15 _
116
4-11
Complettons &amp; attemptec:l passes ..................... 1-5
Interceptions thrown . .. ...... .......... ..... •............... 1
0

'

left m the thtrd penod. •
Wellston was on the dnve headmg
mto the fourth period and tool a 35-7
lead when Hutchinson scored from
five yards out with 9 57 remammg
Fortner's ktck made tt a 35 -7 contest
wtth 9:57 left.
The Golden Rockets closed out
the sconng on a 31-yard run by
Hutch10son wtth 8:47 left. The pass
for the extra pomts was no good, that
score was set up by a Marauder fum ble.
Metgs . has been htt hard by
mjunes all season, and Fnday
even10g was no exception. eigs
lost Matt Stewart for much f the
g&amp;nte when he aggravated a hand
tnjury. Btlly Soulsby and
m
Bullmgton went down wtth inJunes
Also, Just10 Gtlmore suffered a posstble concusston late m the game.
G1lmore was transponed to the hospital by S E.O.A.M S. Hts condJtton
was unknown at press ltme .
Bes1des Hutchmson and Young,
Shawn Brennan added 67 yards m
five cames. Fortner was one of four
m the au.
Despite the loss, Justm Roush
continues to put tmpressive numbers
in the books. He carried 24 times for
164 yards. Jeremy Roush added
etght carr1es for 32 yards, while
Chns Jeffers added six carries for 24
yards
Vaninwagen was three of 12 tn
the atr wtth an interception for 18
yards Jonathan Haggerty caught one
for 12, and Stewart had one for nme.
This week's agenda: Wellston
will host Belpre Fnday, whtle Metgs
will face Nelsonville-York

, B!f GARY CLARK
c.
T-S Correapondent
MASON, WV~ A determmed
, : Wahama Whtte Falcon football team found
: · tis mtssmg offense Fnday mght by takmg out
·. five games of lrustratwn on vtsJIJng Hamlm
::;.- tn a 45-16 homecommg win over the
Bobcats
,
The Whtte Falcons recetved a patr of 100yard rushmg efforts from Johnny MacKnight
and Robert B~mkcr to clatm tis second
stratght gnd tnumph before a large homecommg turnout m the Bend Area. In additton
ltJ the WHS vtctory Wahama sent or Crystal
Johnson was crowned the 1999 homecomtng
queen durmg hal f-ume festJVtttes at the
Mason County campus. ·
'We were ready to play tomght," a cheerful Falcon coach Ed Cromley stated follow mg the one-stded wm . "We had a pretty btg
crowd and I'm plejij,ed that they finally got to
~ee some offense ITI!~he home team. I wtsh
11 could be homecom ng every week I thmk
we've won every ho ee9mmg contest smce
I've been the head coaclf"at Wahama"
Wh1le MacKmght and Bnnker's 100 yard
rushmg totals paced a devastating WHS
ground attack the real story hes mainly m the
B~nd Area teams offenstve hne. For the ftrst

with Spradhn's one-yard touchdown lronmcn led 35-7 at halfttme and undefeated status as the guest of the Warren Local Warr10rs. ,
run tn the openmg act's l,tst mmutc scored the ftrst 20 pomts of the thud
Parker's boot put J&lt;1ckson ahead 21- quarter - dtdn't deter the Ratders
7.
from seekmg the end zone. Wtth 39
Alter the Ratdcrs scored thetr ftrst seconds left tn act three, Gardner
touchdown, they hurt themselves used hts speed and qUickness to
when Gardner threw a second-quar- break away for a 26-yard touchdown
Quarter mt111
,
ter mtercepttpn and by not gcling run After the two-pomt converston
River Valley (0-6) ............ 7
0
6=
6
past the mtdltcld stripe lor the rest of run fell shon, the Ra1ders settled for Jackson (6-0) ............... 21
14
20
.a=
the ftrst half
tnmmtn g Jackson's lead to 55-13
Though the h on men weren't
Swtsher's 24-yard touchdown run
Scoring summary
allowed to double thetr rushmg and JGsb Caner's two-pomt conver!
yardage m relauon to R1ver Valley's, stan run concluded Jackson's scormg
Jackson: T1pton 32-yd. pass from Spradlin (Parker ktck)-11·02 •
they
wtth 9 29 left m the game. Then
1sl
·
• Had f11e runncts who ltntshed Gardner scored h1s thtrd touchdown
Jackson: M. Wtlltams 54-yd pass from Spradlin (Parker kick)wtth at least 30 yards
of the mght from 33 yards 0 ut to cre- 6:521st
'
• Had two ol the1r lop three rush- ate the fmal score
River Valley: Gardner 6-yd. run (George ktck)-5:58 1st
er&gt; sophomore lullback Davtd
This week's agenda: The
Jackson: Spradlin 1-yd. run (Parker ktck)-0:50 1st
Sw1sher and Parkc1 ~ come off the Ra1dcrs, who wtll take on teams
Jackson: Rouse 5-yd. run (Parker ktck)-6:09 2nd
hench tm dcl lvc duty 1n the second startmg thts week wtth records nor
Jackson: Mustard 4-yd run (Parker kick)-3:58 2nd
half
lower than 500, wtll host the 3-3
Jackson: Adkins 86-yd. kickoff return (Parker ktck)-11 :46 3rd
• Gamed 103 ruslung }ards 1n the Manetta T1gcrs for homccommg m
Jackson: Sprcaafln 1-yd run (Parker ktck)-1 0·10 3rd
first halt "htlc holdmg Rtvcr Valley the stan of thetr two-game home
Jackson: Parker 4-yc:l run (run short)-4.0f 3rd
to 75
stand Fnday.
River Valley: Gard~r 26-yd. run (run short)-0:39 3rd
The llood of Jackson po1nls - the
Jackso n w1ll seek to retam tts
Jackson: Swtshem-yd. run (Carter run)-9: ~9""4th
River Valley: Garc:lner 33-yd. run (run short)-6:39 4th

ccontmued from B-3J

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galli 91is, OH • Point Pleasant1 WV

•

l' '
''

'

'

�n

..

l

'

INot so sedate:
golf is· now ~ different game_

r

~Instead of L.A. Lakers,

jPippen goes td Trail
:Blazers in 6-for-1 deal
B111kelball Writer
: Scottie Pippen was traded
:Saturday, and the Trail Blazers said
-'tie's happy to be headed to Portland.
~ . In a six-for-one deal, Pippen was
,;sent from the Houston Rockets to the
::J'ortland Trail Blazets for Kelvin
:Cato, Stacey Augmon, Walt
:JWilliams, Ed Gray, Brian Shaw and
iearlos Rogers.
~ Pippen wanted out of Houston, as
~videnced by his highly critical
::.remarks Wednesday about Rockets
:ieammate Charles Barkley, but
;would have preferred to go to the
•Lakers so he could be reunited with
~il Jackson, his coach in Chicago
~hen Pippen and the Bulls won six

I
I
I

Times-Sentinel Staff

Local man fires ace;
area college athletes
continue to excel

:~hampionships .

.; Trail Blazers president and gener111 manager Bob Whitsitt said that in
- ~ phone conversation with Pippen,
)he player downplayed reports that
-he wanted to go to the Lakcrs.
: "He's looking 'forward to being· a
:rrail Blazer," Whitsitt said.
• "He said 'That Los Angeles stuff
-~~ blown out or porportion. I like
:Portland. I like what's going on.' "
~ The Lakers and Rockets disj:ussed a deal early in tJIF summer
'that would have sent Glen Rice and
:.toben Horry to the Rilckets for
~ippen, but Houston ultimately

Major league baseball...

.

,:points lllllt season.
• · The Blazers had to ~ive up six
1Jayers in order to make the trade
.work under NBA salary cap guidcJines. Pippen will make more than
414 million this season, and Portland
luKJ to put that amount of salaries

Redskins
Kyle Kemper, Logan Gary, Wally
Luckeydo 0 , Kory Cox, H.L. Pugh.
Chad Helm s. Jeremy Law horn'.
Josiah Harrison. Seth Haner: Jaymie
(See MFLon U-7)

·

Elks
Philip
Remy,
Greg Russell ,
St. Louis Cardinals.
Andrew
Rose,
Corey
Icard, Jesse
McGwire homered off Andrew
Lorraine.
In his next at-bat, McGwire drew
an intentional walk with two outs and
a runner on third in the third.
Roosevelt Brown's two-run shot
in the seventh off Garrett Stephenson
Ap~Jreeiati.on
(6-3), put the Cubs ahead 4-3. Jeff
Reed added another two-run homer
W~nesclay, October 6, I999 ·'
in the eighth.
'
Doori O~en 11 S:JO O•m•• Besln •t 7:00 ··
Reed homered with a l]lan on in
the eighth to make it 6-3.
S~soo.oo Guaranteed Payout · .
.
Bobby Ayala (2-7) worked two
s~
It Glnaa Away As p.pwJWbw, .
innings of hitless relief and Rick
the
save.
Aguilera
worked
Alexander Jli8h School
'
Stephenson allowed four runs on
seven hits in seven innings .•
. Alban OH ·

Spartan Bingo
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) •Pi!'Jer.
. . Steve Smr'th an d
ppen wt'II JOIO
~f Schrcmpf as additions to an
~mproved Trail Blazers team that
_ . . it to the Western Conference
liuls last season.
:• . 1be Rockets were eager to part
•
Pippen and his $67 million five)Car contract, which still has four
- n s remaining, following a poor
:1999 season.
: -; Pippen w.S somewhat of a disap:P.!iDtmerll, averaging 14.5 points and
~as just 43 percent from the
:fteld while complaining throughout
'the -Steason 'that the Rockets' slow~wn style of offense hindered his

r~pairs

•· 'Pippen

blasted Barkley on ·
~y in an ESPN interview,
~yina -he "doesn't shol"' the desire
:10 want to win.': .'f!te atta7k came
tfter Barkley cnllCJzed Prppen rn
~IJSUSI for publicly lobbying for a

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Chester

Grissom made a diving catch of Eddie
Taubensee's sinking liner to center, ending
the inning.
Neagle, who allowed four hits and struck
out four, left before the seventh with a
chance to become the Reds' fourth 10-game
winner.
But Williamson, who had · a strong start
before developing tendinitis in hi s shoulder
in September, walked Valentin leading off
the eighth. Loretta hit a one-out double, an!l
Cirillo then lined a pitch back up the middle
that scored Valentin and Loretta, who slid
under Mike Cameron's throw.
Greg Vaughn, who led the majors with 14
homer" and 33 RB!s in September, drove in
hi s !15th run with a fqurth-inning solo
homer off Scott Karl that put the Reds up 30. Pokey Reese stole a career-high three
bases for the Reds.
· Cameron hit a homer in the third. It was a
low shot that landed just behind the short
left-field porch at County Stadium.
One inning later, Vaughn hit a slightly
higher blast that landed about 10 yards to the
left of Cameron's homer. Karl , who was
drilled in his right hip on a comebacker by

~arlier,

Seart Casey two pitches
hun&amp;
curveball that became Vaughn's 44th home~.
·
• Neagle, who worked through the :si~L .inning of each of his last six wins, a119w
just two singles in the first_five inning~ b~t
tired in the sixth, when Clnllo doubled
I
" .
Valentin. It was the Brewers' on y ru,, !l,
Neagle.
"· I
A light rain fell in Milwaukee most of ~~
day but stopped shortly'irefore game tittl~.
when the temperature was a chilly ~
degrees. The drizzle began again in tife
eighth.
,
,.
' ·1
Notes: Loretta has reached base in t6e
Brewers' last 18 games .... The Reds; lo~s
clinched home-field advantage for the
Arizona Diamondbacks in the first rounll-;61'
the playoffs . ... Cirillo's first RBI, his 84th 'df
the season, was a career hrgh and a record filr
a Brewers third baseman .... Plate umpll'e
Dana DeMuth called Vaughn out on strikr.
, in the lOth, and Vaughn becarfte incense .
He yelled at DeMuth from the dugout
threw his helmet on the field, but DeMulb
didn 't eject him.
. ·•''

4

ff

•iii'

a .three-run lead at Milwaukee and the minus side as far ar;:;ks are iage in the first round of the playoffs off Brian Meadows (11-15). Ry'~
lost 4-3 in II inning~. The Astros conce rned .''
·
against the Reds, Astros or Mets.
Klesk() added hts 21s! ~omer.
,1
were pounded 5-1 by Los Angeles at
At New York, Mike Piazza also . Todd Stott Iemyre . (6-3) allowed
. Expos 7, Ph1lhes 4
the Astrodome. .
.
.
homered for the Mets.. Pat Mahomes frve runs and 10 hils rn srx-plus . Vladrmrr Guerrero set Mon~~~~
"What hurts rs knowmg we let a got the wm and Scott Sauerbeck (4- mnrngs.
,
smgle-season records for home ~s
golden opponunity slip away, " Reds I) lost.
.
. Cubs 3, Cardmals 2
. (39) and RB!s ( 124), hrttrng a t
reliever Scott Sullivan said.
In other games, San Drego beat
Nerther Mark McGwue (63 home run homer and dnvmg m three ru,'J.s
While the NL Central wqn 't be Arizona 6-l , Chicago beat StLouis runs) nor Samm~ Sosa (62) came at Vet~rans Stadrum.
.
decided until Sunday _ Monday if a, 3-2, Atlanta beat Florida 4- 1. close to a homer tn the opener of the
Javter Vaz~uez_ (9-8) allowed f\yo
one-game playoff is needed - the Montreal beat· Phrladelphra 7-4 and three-game~ season-endrng senes at earned !'Jn.s, srx hrts and _thfee w~l~
wild-card race would end today if the . San Francisco beat Co!orado 9-4.
Busch Stadrum.
.
'"five rnnrngs. The Phtlltes stran~~.,
Mets· lose and both the Astros and
Dodgers 5, Astros I
Jon beber (10-11) prtched a 14 as Joe Grahe (1 -4) was pounoea
Reds win.
Gary Sheffield ·hit his 34th homer seven-hrtter for hrs second strat~ht for five run_s and _got JUSt o~e oili. ,
But if New York wins and and drove in three runs, sendmg c_omp1et~ game and Jose Nreves htl a Ugueth Urbma fimshed for hts 41~1
' Cincinnati and Houston both lose Houston to its ninth loss in 13 games. uebreakmg RBI double tn the stxth save.
G@nts 9, Rocldes 4
'~'
N.Y. leads home-field advantage race again, the three teams would have . Eric Gagne (1 -1) got his first off Mark Thompson (I-3). Rick Jay Canizaro.
had a career-high
identical records going into the final maJor .league vrctory, allowmg five Agutlera fmrshed for hrs_ erghth save.
four RBis and J.T. Snow homer.~
day. .
·
hits in six innings. Shane Reynolds
Braves 4, Marl1.,ns I
That' s not exactly what the Mets (16-14) allowed live runs and eight
John Smaltz (ll-8) allowed one and had three RB!s as visiting Sa~
were hoping for when the_y held a hits in five innin~s.
run and five hrts .'~ seven rnntngs at Francisco won for just the third' time
' ,
four,game wild-~a!rl lead with 12
Pad~ 6_
, Diamondbacks I . Turner Freid, stnktn~ out a season- .m 13 games.
Rich
Aurilia
added
a·
two:ril
)
games left. Then they lost eight of
Woody Wtlhai!IS ( 12- 12) won hts h1gh, II. Atlanta, wh1ch has won 10
-homer-and
Russ
Ortiz
(
18-9)
pil~h~
nine before Friday.
fifth straight deci sion . ~~d _Tony of II, opens the playof~t--h~me
"It's happening. It's all happen- Gwynn homered as vrsrttng San Tuesday mght agamst Cmcmnatt or a seven-hitter for his third complejf
game.
•
. ing," Mets manager Bobby Valentine Diego stopped a four-game losing Houston .
.
.
John Thomson (1-10) gave ~p
said. "We finally got some breaks. streak. '
. John Rocker p1tched the ntnth for
l 'll take as many going our way as
Cincinnati's loss guaranteed the hrs 38th save. Chtpper Jon~s -:vent !- seven runs and six hits in 2'1, inni~itl\Toronto later in the inning.
possible.
I
think
we
're
probably
on
Diamondbacks
home-field' advan - for-2 and drove tn a first-tnmng run
American League Manny Ramirez and Travis
Fryman homered for the Indians, who
roundup
~arne the seventh major league
team to score 1,000 runs in a s~ason. ·
IJy The Aaaocleted' Prelll
Ramirez hit his 44th homer, a 445• With the four AL playoff teams foot shot to center, to give Cleveland
ilready set, the only suspense head- a 5-2 lead in the fourth. He has 165
Ing into the final weekend of the sea- RBis this seasen, tying Hall of
son is which team will finish with the ~amers AI Simmons _(1930). an4 Lou
league's1lesrrecord.
... --- ..
Gehrig (1934) for 12th on the all: With two games left, the New time list.
·· York Yankees .and Cleveland Indians
Yank~ 11, Devil ~ys 7
ire tied at 97, 63 in the race for home·Joe Girardi, Tina Martinez and
(ield advantage throughout the leasue Datryl Strawberry homered in a five~laypffs.
.
run fourth inning for New York. ,
•. "We'll see where it goes from · Fred McGriff hit a three-run
liere," Indians manager Mike homer . for Tampa - B·ay. It was
, Hargrove said aftes his team lost to McGriff's 390th career homer, which
~ Toronto 8-6 Friday night at Jacobs tied him with Graig Nettles for 34th
~t,s
Behind The·
'•Field. "I would much rather open the on-the career list.
:'playoffs at home, obviously."
·
Royals 9, Tigers 5
The BEAL DIITerencel
· The Yankees beat Tampa Bay 11-7.
At Kansas City, Jermaine D_ye
·:at Tropicana Field to match the drove in three runs and the Royals
.:Indians' record. If they finish in a ti~. overcame Tony Chirk 's two homeis
•the Yankees would gain the home to snap Detroit's six-giune winning
': field because th~y won the season streak.
.
:series with Clevelatld, seven games · 'Dye boosted his RBI total io. 119,
·to three.
tying former Royal and current'11ger
After losing to Anaheim 7-6 Dean Palmer for second-best in team
'Friday night, the Texas Rangers (95- history. Hal McRae set the team . 65) can no longer gain home field record of 133 in 1982:
throughout the playoffs. The _best
Reel Sox 6, Orioles 2
!hey can do is finish with the same
At Baltimore, Jason Varitelc and
iecord as the Yankees, who hol&lt;j the Jose · Offerman homered .as the
tiebreaker edge because they won tl\e Boston Red Sox assured the Orioles
V-8, Auto, Air Cond., AM/FM Cass., Titt, Cruise,
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of their second strajghi losing season.
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· No matter what ha ens, the
Offerman was 2-for:3 with two
hnkees are ·assured of me-field walk,,'two runs and two RBis for the
advantage - . in the first . round. Red Sox, who have already clinched
Cleveland als&lt;;&gt; will have the home the AL wild card. The Orioles, who
ti.eld in the opening round unless _it had baseball's third-highest payroll
. rpses its last -two games and Texas on opening day, fell to 78-82 with
wins its final two. In that case, the two games left.
- ~angers would hrrve the extra game
White Sox 9, Twins 8
$t home in the first round.
·
At Chicago, rookie Carlos Lee hit
In other AL_games, rt was Boston . his second gr,and slam of the season
· 6; Baltimore 2: Kansas Ctty 9, as the White Sox handed -Minnesota
\_~
Detroit 5; Chicago 9, Minnesota 8; its season-high, seventh straight loss.
Anaheim 7, Texas 6; and Oakland 5,
Lee connected in the first inning,
Seattle I.
his 16th hpme run of the season and
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_ Blue Jays 8, India!JS 6
. secoad in as many games. Brook
, Wrlh_s ~tanez. sn~pped a 6-6 · tte fordyce hit a three-run homer and an
~it~ an erghth-mmng homer 'Off RBI single for the White SoK, who
Steve Karsay ( 10-2), and Vernon won for the sixth time in seven
Wells added an RBI double for games.
·
.

h~ve

.

fin~l

-team'
a chance at the
two
play ff berths with two games left.
Ne're hanging by the skin of our
tf 1," said the Mets' Robin Ventura.
''-·U hit a fourth-inning home run
B~ The Associated Press
and a game-winning single with the
. Just when it seemed like the post: bases loaded in the lith. "But we' ll
season matchups were falling into just keep showing up and see what
place, the National League's postsea- happ,ens.''
son picture got more confused.
Cincinnati and Houston (both 95Following the New York _Mets' 65) remained tied for the NL Central
dramatic 3-2, 11 -inning win over lead but their lead over the Mets
Pittsburgh on Friday night, and loss- (94-66) in ihe wifd-card race was
es by Cincinnati and Houston, three . sliced to one game. The Reds waste_d

National Lrague
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work by starter Denny Neagle , who was
looking for his seventh straight win.
Sullivan (5-4) hit Loretta with a pitch
opening the lOth. Two outs later, rookie
pinch-hitter Kevin Barker singled to right,
advancing Loretta to third .
,
Belliard then singled to right and Loretta
scored easily, bringing the Brewers out of
their dugout for a small celebration.
Neither reliever was looking for excuses
after the game.
"I fell behind in the count to (Ciri llo), and
he got me," Williamson said . "I just didn't
do my job."
"We let one slip away, and I was the
biggest part of it, " Sullivan said. "But you
can't harp on a lo~'1'ight now. We've got to
come back here in 12 h·ours." ,
Rocky Coppinger (5-3) pitched tw.o
innings for Milwaukee, which used seven
pitchers.
"That was the most exciting game I've
ever been involved in," Coppinger said.
"We're not going out easy. We're building
for spring training."
Cincinnati had two on in the lOth, but
four-time Gold Glove winner Mar.qui s

\

Rio BP Steelen
: Joey Toppings, Brett . Unroe,
~n~ Patrick, Derrick Shadwick,
-Ronnie Burns, Jessie McComas,
Chaz Saunders, J.T. Cremeans, Eric
lfooth, Tyler Potter, Andrew Cook,
Nicholi ~ webb, -Josiah Spn,·egel,
, i"Jitrick Fillinger, Aaron Pauley,
}~W-on Mollohan, Joey Woodyard,
J~~Stin Lambert, Steven Merry, David
Denny &amp; Zach English. ·
; Head ~b: Marvin Pullins
Assistant coaches: Scott Howell

.

1/

L.....-....liilloiiiittillillilllllr........__ _ _....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____ ________ _

...

,

Mets beat Pirates 3-2 in 11 frames, st(\y in hunt for .playoff$.

Haggerty, Chris Canady, Seth Bickle,
Spencer Russell, Tyler Handley,
Matthew Beaver, Cameron Muncy,
'Iyter Houck &amp; Anthony Fowler.
: Ha~d c:oach: Bobby Marchi
• Assistant coaches: Todd Fowler,
tom Beaver, Scott Russell &amp; Bob
Marchi.
. ,
• Cheerleaders: Danielle Fowler,
€hris Brandenberry,. Courtney
Swain, Heather Withee, Kristen
· Oostic &amp; Jenny Slayton.
·
• Muc:ots: Abbie Wiseman &amp; Sara
·Beth. Synder.

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asamebetinningat
. Rookie Ron Belliard's two-out single
scored Mark Loretta with the winning run in
the lOth. The Brewers (73-86), who took two
of three from the Astros last week, are pllying some of their best baseball of the season,
with' l2 wins.in their last 18 g_ames.
"We want to make ihis our own playoff,"
Belliard said. "We want to play well against
Cincinnati, just like we did against
Houston."
The loss kept the Reds (95-65) in a tie for
the NL Central lead.with the Astros (95-65),
who lost 5-1 to the Dodgers. Cincinnati and
Houston's lead over the New York Mets in
the wild-card race was slic~d to one game
with two games left to1 play.
"What hurts is knowing Houston lost and
we didn't close this one out tonight," said
reliever Scott Sullivan, who lost the game by
allowing consecutive two-out singles in the
lOth. ''What hurts is knowing we let a golden opporlllnity slip away."
Reliever Scott Williamson squandered a
3-1 lead in the eighth inning when Jeff
Cirillo's single scored Jose Valentin and
Loretta. The tie erased srx strong inntngs of

Cheerleaders: Tricia Lucas,
Whitney Caldwell, Adriane Eastman,
Kaylee Edmonds, Rebecca Sit~s &amp;
Stormy Sites.
Mucots: Aubrie Ward &amp; Katie
Taylor
·

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Elks vs Browns, 6 p.m. _- .
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Redskins vs Cowlioys, 8 p.m.

,JER~Y

Sat., October 24
bo
B
1
ow ys vs rowns, p.m.
Elks vs Steelers, 2 p.m.
Packers vs Reclskins,-- 3 p.m: .•

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Sat.; October 31
Steelers vs Browns, I p.m.
Cowboys vs Packers, 2 p.m.
Elks vs Redsltins, 3 p.m.

..

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Browns vs Redskins, 6 p.m.
Steelers vs Cowboys, 7 P·IR·.
1Packers vs ·Elks, 8 p.m.

·

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ByOREOBEACHAM
.
.
·' MILWAUKEE (AP) -Their bats were
mostly silent, and. their pitching staff could·
n't protect a three-run lead. The streaking
Cincinnati Reds must be feeling the pressure
of the playoff race .
·: Cincinnati's three-way' fight with the
Astros and the Mets for two playoff spots got
a whole lot tighter on Friday night when the
Reds lost to the Milwaukee Brewers 4-3 in
10 innings.
The Reds had won ;even of their previous
nine games and taken the NL Central
:Division reins away" from Houston with a
great late-season run, but theY. had just iwo
singles after the fourth inning and five hits in
the game.
Their normally reliable bullpen turned a
3-1 eighth-inning lead into a disheartening
loss - one the team won't have much time
io reflect upon, however.
· "When you don't get any hits, that puts a
whole lot of pressure on your pitching staff,"
Reds manager Jack McKeon said. "We just
didn't come through, but we've got to come
back fighting tomorrow,"
Cincinnati and Milwaukee meet today in

Yankees beat Devil
Rays 11.;.7; Texas,
Cleveland lose

(Continued from B- f&gt;

·

~

~

Gallipolis Jaycees Packers ,
Daniel Hill , Bart Garnes. Nathan
Biars , Joe Esmaeli. John Mullen·.
Zane Schoonover, Allan Holmes,
Nathan Moll ohan, Todd Woodall ,
Randy Saun~crs , Thomas . Phillips'.
Jordan Zerkle, Tvler Bullion, BradAberts, Kyle Hively, Jared Zerk le.
Brett Pierce. Rynn Walter, Jo sh .
Moss, Matt Casto, Casey Corbin, &amp;
Peyton Hylton.
,
·
Head· coach: Dwayne Evans.
Assistant
coaches:
-Aaron
Beaver. Roger Warren . &amp; leO·
Phillips.
~
Cheerleaders: Kayla Johnso~;
Ashley Chupman , Megan Fergansoit;
Chri sty Watt s, Randy Tawney If.
Brittncy Carr.
Mascot.: Olivia Trout &amp; Jessica
Koh ls.

·· Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Milwaukee Brewers.·top Cincinnati Reds 4-3·in 10-inning affair

Russell,
Adam
Blake; ·, Relt
McKinniss, Chase Davis, Trenton
Pethtel, Adain Jones, Joe Davis.
Evan Wilber, Jared Burnett, Chris
Edwards, Ryan Shiflet, Chad Ward,
Joshua Hollis, Ross Brubaker, Billy
Hamilton, Aaron Phillips, &amp; Larry
Angel.
·
Coaches: Mike Canaday, Terry
Porter. Keith Grafe , Victdr Van s ickl~ .
Sam Hamilton. Sammy Hamilton,
Jeff Golden, &amp; Dave Burnett.
Cheer-leaders: Kelly Bonicc,
Leslre Niday, Stephanie Kenney ,
Brittney Manard, Kayla Siders &amp;
Alex Ball .- ·
Mascots: Laci Comer. &amp; S h ~ i
· Coiner.

$54 95.~Ius $21.8

Now, the R'ockets are willing to

~e back six reserves - none of
~om averaged double figures in

'

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Midget Football League began its
1999 season Saturday. The six-team
league has 123 fifth and sixth graders
signed up to play this season.
Each team features a 20-man roster along with six cheerleaders and
1wo mascots per team:
All games will be played at
Memocial Field. The entry fee for
games is $1.00 per person . Programs
will be.available also for $1 .
The MFL commissioner for 1999
is Philip Skidmore. The MFL board
of directors features Dwayne Evans,
~ike Canady, Bobby Marchi .
Marvin Pullins, Winston Saunders &amp;
David Wandling. The fJ!eerleading
advisor for the league is Dianne
Eutsler.
The following is a list of thi s
year 's teams with players. coac hes,
cheerleaders and mascots along with
the 1999 schedule .

Most GM cars
any repairs extra

~lined.

•

·~unday, October .~. 1999

Ace, ace, baby!
Marshall Stadium. The junill'r lined
Bidwell re sident Dale Whitt up for kick off duty late '" the conrecorded a hole -in -one recently at test, drilling the ball to about the
the Runnmg Fox golf course in five yard line.
Chill icothe. Whitt used an eight
Beaver just missed out on pickiron on the par three, 145-yard in g up tackle points on the play,
14th hole to notch hi s ace.
arriyi ng just second s too late to
Fe llow Bidwell resident s Roger ll'·ake the lui. However, MU coachGreer and Ralph Spence were on el did credit the yo un gs ter for
Saunders Insurance Browns
good hustle to he around the fool Chns Miller, Todd Saunders,
hand to witne ss the event.
Woodward third in tackles
ball when the hit was made .
Matthew Elliott , Geoff Cunningham.
at OWU
Beaver is currently·· working in Scott Hunt , Justin Saunders,
(Gallia the office of NIU athleti c drrector Jonathan ,. Elliott, Daniel · Ours,
Rob
Woodw ard
Acad emy, '97) continu es to put up Lance West when he's not in cl;ss Matthew Hemphill , Luke H:ii slop,
outstandm g numbers for the Ohio or on the gridiron.
Jeremy Gibson, Craid Barker, Dustin
Wesleyan football s quad ~- The Gallia Soccer Club squads win McCombs, Stephen Neff, Matthew
juni or reco rded 15 tac ~les during a
Luke Hollman and Se th Eas ton Caldwell , Bryan Morrow, Caleb
17-3 loss to Alleghen y last week - each tallied a hat trick to lead the Fooce, Philip-· Bokovi tz: Michael
end. It ·was the first loss of the sea - Galli a Soccer Club undcr- 17 tea m Cordell , &amp; Jacob Clagg.
so n for OWU .
past the Chillicothe Cavaliers 7-0
Coaches: Winston Saunders &amp;
Woodward is third in tackles for Sept. 23. Zac Pohlman added the Doug (lrown.
the Battlin g Bi shops with 37 on the _othe( goal for the GSC.
Assistant
coaches:
Kent
se ason. Woodward has 18 so lo
Brian Gordon had two .~ ssists . Shawver, John Rum ley, Tony
stops and 19 assi sts . He also has Pohlman and Kimberly Anderson Thompson, &amp; Matt Bokovitz.
one tack le for loss and one fumble each had one as. ist.
Cheerleaders: Ivy Hurt, Jill
recovery. The Bishops are ranked
Goalkeeper Micah Kolcun made Graham ., ·Carrie .Stager, Brynn
third in total defe nse in the NCAC. five saves to earn the shutout.
Saunders. Amy Haffelt. &amp; Megan
The Galli a Soccer Club's junior Saunders .
Nehus kids keep the pace
Erin Nehus (Gallia Academy, hi gh squad cap tured its first victo- . Mascots: Heather Caldwell &amp;
'99) and Eddie Nehu s (Gallia ry of the season by defeating So uth Lexi Moles.
Academy, '97) continue to exce-l Point' 2-1 Tuesday evening . The
for the Cedarville cross country win was the first in four matches
Bob Evans Farms Cowboys
teams. Erin Nehu s placed fifth at for th e team·.
,
Carter Snijth. Matthew Mooney,
the rece nt Friendship Invitational
Ryan Anderson and Chris Brett Jones, ,Jtyan Richards, Nathan
hosted by Cedarville. Her time was McCarty each scored for· GSC in Jones, Br&lt;idley Caudill, Travus Stout,
19:19.
the first 10 minutes of the second David White, Shaphen Robinson,
The Lady Jackets , ranked 17th half. The South Point side also net- Kelsey Reuter, Alex Kyger, Joey
in the NAIA last week, pl aced third ted its lone goal in the second half. Hager, Kyle Shockey, Brenton
in the meet.
~----:----;;:;:-;---:;-~~~~C _g.oalk eepers Andy Litfle Fisher,o Tri ston Coburn, _ Jeremy
Eddie Nehus came in 36th place and Matt Brinker combined to Roush, Trent Coburn, Dustin Mink,
with a time of 27:25 at the help their club notch the win .
Jeff Howell , Billy Writesel, Luke
'
The team had dropped its first Edwards.·
Friendship meet. The Yellow
Jacket men placed fourth in the three matches of the seaso n, losCoaches: Head Coach: -David
meet.
ing 7-0 to Russe ll , Ky., 3-0 to Wandling. Greg Smith
The Nehus kids will co niinue Chillicothe and 3-1 to Waverly,
Assistant ~l'aches: Jeff Ward,
their quest Sa turday at the · Ohio before winning earlier this week. Jerry Eustler, .1ason Casey, Deryl
Intercollegiate Championships.
The next home match for the Jones, Pee Wee Robinson.
Beaver sees first collegiate action junior-high team is slated for Oct.
Cheerleaders: Ashley Curry,
T.C. Beave r (Gallia Academy, 9 against Wave rly. The club hosts Shannon Smitl)_, Ashley Swartz,
'97) saw his first collegiate action South Poi nt Oct. 14 at 6 p.m. and Katie Hubble, Chelsey McC! be &amp;
during Marshall's 63-3 victory then hosts Unioto Oct. 18 at 5 Cassey Smith., &lt;~ · . . , •.
over Liberty on Sept. II at p.m.
Mascots: Tessre Richards &amp;
Hay1ee Myers

Marlins I, Braves 0 (10)
At Atlanta, Cliff Floyd got both
trade to the Lakers.
florida hits, incl~ding a home run in
Barkley complained he had sacri- the lOth inning Saturday that gave
!iced greatly in February to· make the Marlins a 1-0 victory over the
salary-cap room in order for the Atlanta Braves.
Rockets to acquire Pippen from the
Four Braves pitchers had retired
Bulls in asign-and-trade deal.
26 consecutive batters before Floyd
"He's creating all this controver- , homered off Derrin Eben (0-1) with
sy just to get traded," Barkley said one out in the lOth.
Thursday. "He wants to get traded so
Floyd was the only Marlins player
bad that he'll just say anything to to reach base against the Braves.
make it happen. "
Braves pitchers struck out 13.
Pippen, 34, is a seven-time AllBraden Looper (3-3) earned the
Star and two-time Olympian,. who win with a scoreless ninth and
won his six titles with the Bulls as Antonio Alfonseca got the save.
the second option behind ·Michael
Floyd had a two-out single in the
Jordan.
first off Bruce Chen, who pitched the
Willi ams, a seven-year veteran , first six innings. Chen retired the
will be joining his fifth NBA team . next 16. striking out six, before
The 6f'foot-8 forward averaged Kevin McGiinchy relieved in the
betweer\10.3 and 17 .0 points in his seventh.
first six seasons before dropping to
Flbrida starter Ry an Dempster
9.3 last season as a reserve.
allowed five hits, walked one and
Augmon, a defensive specialist, struck out seven.
will be entering his eighth NBA seaCubs 6, Cardinals 3
son with his fourth team. Cato, a 6At St. Louis, Mark McGwire
foot-11 center, is entering his third appears. to be closing in on a home
season.
run title he insists he couldn 't care
Gray, acquired by Portland in the less about.
Steve Smith-Isaiah Rider trade over
McGwire hit No . 64 Saturday,
the summer, averaged 4.9 points for tyirig him for I Oth on the career list
the Hawks last season. Shaw and · and putting him two ahead of Sammy
-Rogers barel¥ played last season and Sosa, who had to be content with the
might not eve n make the Rockets' Chicago Cubs' 6-3 ·victory. over the
roster for the regular season .

:ey CHRIS SHERIDAN

Sund!IY· October 3, 1999

GaiUpolis Midget Footbal_
,,
League action begins· . ·

By Andrew Caryer

·'

~

WV

AC's-Plug-ins

IY .SAM WILSON
::'ff'IIMII Sentinel Correspondent
Before some Europeans visit America, they are often told they will see the
llest and worst of democracy. They get a chance to see unlimited freedom at
~,price that sacrifices traditiqn. This wasevidcnt in last Sunday's Ryder Cup
final when Justin Leonard sank his iniprubablc 45-footcr for a birdie on the
17th green.
,
•
Golf entered mainstream America with the remarkable U.S. comeback at
)rookline. It's difficult to believe, but we could add golf to the in-your-face_i,ash-talking sports of the '90s. l can just hear Tiger "j uici ng" Serg io in two
:years with such calls as "you can't pull with me ."
I watched part of the tournament in Boston last weekend . I was surprised
that the sports bar was loaded with fans watching _and cheering golf ,when
.!X)IIese football was featured on every other channel. I was more amazed at
,_ihe passion shown over golfers hitting long drives and clutch putts.
'
, I used to quietly watch golf with my father years ago. I can never recall
.Jack or Arnie show a hint of emotion. Even the crowds were sedate. Fans
. ~red in a reserved fashion . Applause came only after a great shot or putt,
!lad been made. Now Tiger pumps his fist and J'ustin Leonard spr·ints and
Jumps to the thrill of the gallery.
: Naturally, I can understand why Jose Maria Olazabal. Sergio Garcia.
~ark James and the other Europeans were offe.ndcd and upset; 1\'s a differ,ent game now, and they are going to have to adjust to the changes. After all .
these changes translate into extreme financial and personal benefits in the
·immediate future.
Let's face it, today 's fans love the show of emotion in sports. What \ life
ljlithout an end zone celebration or home run trot?
· Ever since tennis and golf began to accept the real it y nf the modern fan .
they have taken off like fore st fire s. Golfers and tennis stars earn millions in
.l1rize money and endorsements because of corporate sponsorship and large
fan ~upport. These factors arc part of the reasons NASCAR is so popular
today. Now they ' re at work in the PG A. the-senior circuit and the WPGA.
Tiger W.&gt;ods is on the cover of cere ell boxes and h ~s a separate Nike contract. Millions were paid for the Duvai -Woods spec ial competition la•t
1\ugust. The Europeans are also enjoying thi s new popularity and wealth; so
.why complain because some of the playe rs and fan s celebrate in an cx uber,
ant manner?
,..
.
~
" It wasn 't publicized outside of Boston, ~ut th~sc s amc~p~ V.:ho
cried about the indignity on the greens lied to Boston authorities at Logan
'Airport. Like all spoiled and pampered athletes. the Europeans expected and
:got special privileges. After all, they arc professional golfers. They are recoanized stars!
. They can't be bothered laking~lraditi onal commercial flight s across the
Atlantic like us normal human beings. Unfortunately for them . Boston's
'Logan Airport is not equipped to handle traffic from the supersonic
&lt;;:oncorde. But that didn 't stop our European heroes .
, They just informed the authorities thai Prince Andrew· was aboard their
flight. This made it an official state visit and required Boston to accord the
'Concorde access to their airport.
' . Other flights were re-routed; some were delayed and changed to other airports to accommodate the Concorde's landmg. Imagine the surprise when it
was learned Andrew had missed the fl ight! But these were the victorious
·European Ryder Cup golfers on their way to defertd their title. Does It realty matter that a few less deserving people were put out because of their lie?
Their special treatment ended on the course. They, oked under the pressure and felt embarrassed. Afterward, they expresse their outrage at the"
areaunent they received. Some even considered not r rning in four years.
I want to apol,0gize to them and express my hope
t they will reconsider and continue this fine Ryder Cup tradition . I al ' at next time they will
:-Ill least rev&gt;emb&lt;ir to bring Prince Andrew.

·r

--

..

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

.I

I

•

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\.

~.,.

.,

·BJBBE
461 -S. Third
Ave .'
Middleport

l

!

'I•
[

•

!

'·

�•
.

.

•l

·.

•

I .
Pomeroy • Middleport~ Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

•••

•••
'

October 3, 1999 :
~

-.

A/on the River

Ohio DOW
posts rainbow
tro,ut stocking dat~s

•

.

~

Section

Ci

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A list of rainbow trout s,tocking dates
(with number of fi sh released). provid•d by the Ohio Division of
~Wii~

.

No.

WHOI'PER - Casey Taylor, the son of John and Jackie Taylor of
Gallipolis, caught this 23.5-inch striped bass at the Gallipolis Locks
g~::!d~ :~~~mber, 1999. The fish measured 7.5 pounds and had

:

Location
County
A~trim Park ...................... ................ Frankliri'
BlUe Limes tone Park .. .. ......... ...... ...Delaware
Cenli Lake ....................................... Fairfield
Mt. Gilead St. Park ...........................Morrow
Wa&gt;hington C. H.Park. ..
......... Fayette
Crossroads Pond, Bucyrus ..............Crawford
Lima Lake ..................................... ........AII~.n
Norwalk Res. No. I ............................. Huron
Oakwoods Lake ................. .............. Hancock
Olander Lake .... .......... ... ............ ........... Lucas
Granger Pond ........................................ .Lake
Ohio/Erie Can.al Reservation .......Cuyahoga
Painesville Rec, Park ......... .................... Lake '
Petros· Lake ....................... .. ................... Stark
Alma St. Park ................................... Vinton
Blue Rock St. Park ..................... Muskingum
RIO GRANDE ..............................GALLIA
Rose Hocking Hills St. Pk ............... Hocking
Scioto Trail St. Park..
.... Ross
Waterloo Lake ................................ Jackson
Yoctangec Park ..................... ...... ............ Ross
Rush Run Lake .................................... Preble
Stonclick Lake .. . .. ::............... ........ Clermont
Sycamore St. Park.. ................... Montgomery
Tawawa Lake, .Sidney ................. ........ Shelby

!!.t'fWI

2,000
750
1,000
1,200
1,000
700
1,300
1,000
1,000
1,000

1,900
2, I00
250
750
750

750
500
1,000

750
500

750
1,250
2,500
500
750

l!m

Oct. 14
Oct. 22
Oct.20
Oct. 22
Oct. 20
Oct. 21
Oct. 19
Oct. 18
Oct. 18
Oct. 18
Oct. 15
Oct 15
Oct. 15
Oct. 22 ·
Oct. 29
Oct. 22
OCT.l9
Oct. 29
Oct. 21
Oct.l9
Oct. 27
Oct. 9
Oct. 25
Oct. 14
Oct. 14

,_.At the French Art ColoR
an
Sentinel Staff
Internet group called
GALLIPOLIS - It is a world where
"Tiny - Talk." Deb: nothing is at it seems. A paper petite
bie Laue, Director of
:four cup. becomes a lamp shade. The
the MIAA Ronald
: perfume bottle is really a bead and what
McDonald
House
project, posted a
:appears to be a bone china dinner plate ·
:is a button.
Welcome to the
request for building
·world of miniatures at the French Art
the doll houses on
·colony.'
,
"Tiny Talk," Moore
· During the month of October, the
approached
the
galleries will be filled with the charm~
Riverby
Mini
ing • and always intriguing - exhibit,
Crafters about join· ·
-ing the nation- wide
.'lt's A Small World: Vol VI.'
. T~e exhibit is the work of the Rivereffort to supply
by Mini - Crafters and area miniatures
every
Ronald
enthusiasts. According to Mary Bea
THE
WITH EVERYTHING • What McDonald House in
McCalla, FAC program director, "This family wouldn't mind living In thlt beautiful home the United Stales
• Mama 11 bu1y In 1111 khellin gltttlng ready for the
ts among our best attended exhibits. compltte with landacaplng that would dtllght any with a dollhouse.
family dinner, while the family kltttn takta a nooze In front of the c81t Iron atovt. The
People always look forward to seeing gardtner.
The group agreed dry1lnk and Ice box add to Httlng.
~hat the crafters create."
and began work in early January. Club mem: This year's exhibit will fe~tute a dinner buckel call!ld ber Hope Benson built the hoqse from the sup·! Retired,' a Wizard tower, The·Addams Family home, a kitchen plied kit . Various manufacturers of dollhous- l~i[~{~;~J~'~;~jt~f:1YiJ;
icene in a bread bo1( and·several dollhouses.
es and dQIIhouse supplies across the nation I"
.: One doll house that is receiving special attention will be a gift donated items such as house kits, wallp;~per,
lo the Ronald McDonald House in Huntington, West Virginia. carpeling and furniture to local groups. HandThe house, was liuilt and furnished by the Riverby Mini - ley House Miniatures of Wheeling, West VirCrafters as part of a nation wide project spearheaded by the .ginia, has or will be donating five complete
Miniatures Industry of America (MIAA) and the Cottage Indus- rooms of playable furniture to every Ronald
.
'McDonald House Dollhouse built and donated
try Miniaturist Trade Association, Inc. (CIMTA). ·~,
: One member of the crafter group Mendy Moor~~ discoyered across the United States and Canada. To date,
•
approximately 52 of the 191 Ronald McDonald Houses nationwide have received or are in
the process of receiving a dollhouse.
On Friday, Jack Rose, din~clc'f~Of-Ule..tllunJI=....
ington Ronald McDonaTii lfouse • formally
accepted the house on from Moore, and
expressed his appreciation for the many hours
of labor. He commented that the house would
be a welcome addition to the facility and will
be the showcase of a toy room 1hat will be
built at a later date. The doll house will remain
on exhibit at the FAC through the month of
Oc,tober.
The Riverby Mini - Crafters .is a group of

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Willow lslarltt Pool bass prefer plastic wo·rms
sinal! crank baits and live night ners. tube worms, crank baits and are fa irly abundant and sustained
crawler rigs around South Beach and live bait. Crappies, saugeyes, nat- through natural reproduction . Pike
Kelleys Cove is the best tip for tak- head catfish and hybrid striped bass fishing likely is to improve in late
ing walleyes. Largemouth bass, also can be found .
fall and early winter.
smallmouth bass and crappies also
MAUMEE. RIVER ~ Good
Lake Erie
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)__:Here offer fiir to good fishing.
numbers of smallmouth bass are
Many limit catches of yellow
'is the final weekly fishing report for
STONELICK LAKE - This found in the deeper holes below rif- perch continue to be made in the
1999 provided by the Division of 171-acre Clermont County.lake has a nes around Otsego, Weirs Rapids, western basin when boating condiWildlife of the Ohio Department of fair bluegill population. Shoreline Waterville and Buttonwood. Use tions are good. Among the top perch
Natural Resources:
areas with .submerged cover and hellgrammites and soft craws for fishing locations are the area northPIEDMO~~u~~;~ _ This is a aquatic vegetation are good places to best results. Channel catfish may be east of Kelley s Island, the area
fish-for bluegills when using larval taken at night on traditional baits belween Rattlesnake. and Green
good lake for fall bass fishing . baits and small worms suspended fished along the bottom. ~rvlest-of~ lslands:-ffte Toledo water intake, the
Smallrnouth bass can be found in beneath a bobber. Some of these these fish measure 14 to 20 'inches. · reef complex and near Cedar Point.
areas with a rocky bottom or shore- areas may be good locations to take Northern pike fishing likely will Anglers are fishing near the bottom
line riprap. Channel catfish provide · largemouth bass. Anglers should use improve as November arrives.
at depths of 20 to 25 feet with
excellent fishing opportunities at soft plastic bafts, small spinners and
Northeast
· spreaders, shiners and minnows.
night. Some muskies measure up to live bait during the afternoon and
GRAND RIVER - Good num- Smallmouth bass fishing is good
45 inches. The artificial reef areas early evening.
bers of steelhead trout should over West Reef and around the Bass
and those with discarded trees are
Central
become available to anglers later this Islands. Bass anglers are·eJ!sting tube
good · spots to take game fish .
KNOX LAKE - The vegetated fall here, in the Rocky and Chagrin jigs and drifting live bait such as
Bluegi lls and sunfish measure six 10 areas and those with woody shore- rivers and in Conneaut, Euclid and leeches and soft craws. Most bass are
eight inches and can be taken on line cover are good places to fish for Cowles ~ reeks. Anglers generally measuring 14 to 17 inches.
·
small worms and larval baits from largemouth bass. For best results, cast small spawn sacs, worms and
In the central .basin, yellow perch
many shoreline areas.
anglers should use small spinners, spoons into the deeper pools near the fishing remains excellent, with many
SALT FORK LAKE - Drift fish- jigs, soft plastic baits and live bait. lake. Some of these tributaries al~o limit catches reported. Among the
ing deep water with a worm harness Around shoreline cover, bluegills offer fair to good fishing opportuni- top locations are the area three to six
or weight-forward spinner can entice generally can be caught on larval· . ties for channel catfish.
miles northwest of Fairport Harbor at
a strike from a walleye. Most of baits and small ·worms fished
MOSQUITO CREEK RESER- depths of 52 to 60 feet, three to four
these fish measure eight to 28 inches. beneath a bobber. Channel catfish VOIR - Ohio's second largest miles north of Eastlake at depths of
Muskies can be caught by trolling weighing up to 10 pounds may be inland lake is in Trumbull County 48 to 53 feet, and near the intake crib
large imitation .!l~s and lures at taken at night when fishing !!long the and has no horsepower limit. off .of Cleveland. Most perch are
depths of six to !!lt!ht feet or casting bottom with traditij&gt;nal baits such as Blucgills can be taken from many measuring seven to 12 inches. White
spo.ons into shallow . areas with chicken livers, night crawlers and shoreline areas that have some type bass fishing is fair. The top locatio.n
aquatic vegetation. The fishing for -prepared baits.
'
·
of vegetation or underwater structure is the CEI Eastlake Plant in 15 to 25
bass. sunfish. bluegills and channel
INDfAN LAKE - The shoreline when using mealwdrms, red worms feet of water. Anglers are using"agicatfi sh also is good.
riprap areas arc good places to fish and larval baits. Crappies can be tators with jigs, al\d small spinners in
Ohio River
for largemouth bass when using plas- found in deeper water that contains addition to jigs and minnows.
The Willow Island Pool incll!des tic worms, smallJ;pinners and topwa- submerged structures. Nonhern pike
36 ri ver miles through Washington ter baits. Most bass measure 12 to 18
and Monroe counties. Angler.; may inchefr Night fishing in areas with 1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
catch largemouth bass and spotted moving current can produce good
bass when fishing with six-inch plas- catches of channel catfish when
tic worms, spinner baits and small using chicken livers and nightcrank baits in areas with weedbeds or crawlers. Night fishing with minwoody cover along the main river nows near the bridges is the best
channel. Bass also can be found in method for taking white bass.
areas around the islands and in the Saugeye fi shing should begin to
embayments. Smallmouth bass can improve
throughout
October
be taken on small jigs, minnows and between the 0111 Indian Lake area
crayfi sh in areas with gravel bars and and the Moundwood Canal feeder.
other rocky substrates. Other game
Northwest
fish that are taken in this stretch of
CHARLES MILL LAKE _ Most
river include channel and flathead channel catfish in this Richland
catfish, sunfish and hybrid striped County lake measure 12 to 24 inches.
hass.
They may be taken from shoreline
Southwest
fi
ROCKY FORK LAKE
areas at night when tshing with cut
baits, prepared baits and .night
Fishing along the shoreline at night crawlers. Largemouth bass average
with worms, chicken livers and other about 18 10 20 inches and can be
cut baits is the best way to catch found in areas with woody cover,
• Classes beginMonday, !klober 4
channel catfish. Most of these fish submerged structures and aquatic
• Mondays &amp;Wednesdays (7 p.m.)
measure II to 15 inches. Trolling vegetation, Cast small jigs. and spin-

ODNR's weekly
fishing report

Come &amp; Check The Malibu's! We Have A Great Selection
With Great Rebates &amp; Factory Supported Lease Specials

2000 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO

Deer archery season begins;
to stay open through January
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An added together. Only one antlered
estimated 200,000 bowhuntcrs were buck may be taken during the fall and
expected to participate jn the winter hunting season, regardless of
statewide archery deer hunting season method.
which opened Saturday, the Division
In addition to the statewide
of Wildlife said.
archery season and the firearms deer
The season is open daily. through season that begins Nov. 29, Ohio
Jan. 31 Last year, archery hunter.&gt; offers a special bucks-only primitive
killed 25,548 deer, which accounted deer season on the Salt Fork,
for·22 percent of the total harvest of Shawnee and Wildcat Hollow public
118,270 deer.
· hunting areas Oct. · 25·30. The
The division estimates Ohio's deer statewide primitive deer season is
herd to number about 420,000 this open Dec. 30 through Jan. 3.
fall.
Longbows and crossbows may be
A deer permit is required in addi· . used to take deer during any of these
' tion to a valid hunting l.icense to hunt seasons.
deer in Ohio. The special deer permit
"I expect to see no major changes
and special management antlerless in the archery or primitive deer seadeer permits each sell for $20. son harvest totals this year," said
Hunters also may buy up to four Mike Tonkovic~. deer management
urban-deer permits at a cost of $10 biologist with the Ohio Division of
each to take an antlerless deer only in Wildlife. "Overall, we have good to
the urban zones or during a special or excellent opportunities for hunters to .
controlled hunt.
take •a deer this year."
The urban deer zones are in and · Legal hunting hours during the
around Columbus, Cleveland, Akron, archery season are one-half hour
Youngstown, Toledo, Dayton and ,before sunrise to o_ne-half hour after
Ci ncinnati.
sunset. Dunng the firearms season,
Ohio is also ·divided into three legal hours are one-half hour before
larger zones. A limit of one deer may sunrise to sunset. Deer taken durong
be ·taken in Zone A or Zone B. An the archery season must be brought to
addi ti onal deer may he taken in the an official check station for permanine-county Zone C in southeast ncnt tagging by 8 p.m. of the day after
Ohio. ·
·
the deer is killed.
Deer zone bag limits may not he

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V-8 ~nglne, Auto Trans., Alr-Cond., Low, Low Mllea

1990 INDY BERETTA

Auto Trans., V-6 Engine, Air Cond., Pwr. Windows,
Pwr. Locka, Locally Owned and Low Miles

1996 MERCURY SABLE LS

V-6

Auto Trans.,-TIIt; Cruise, Pwr. Windows,
Pwr. Locka, Alum Wheels, Local Car

• Mondays, Wednesdays &amp;Fridays ( 9a.m.)
tl\Jesdays &amp;Thursdays (6:30 p:m.)
• $2/members &amp;$Ynon-members

Line Dancing
• ThursdaY! (7:30p.m.)
• $2/members &amp;$Ynon-members
Super Clean Vehicle With Pwr. Windows,
Pwr. Locka, Tilt, cruise, Alum Wheels

tl\Jesdays &amp;ThursdaY! (10 a.m.)
• $2/person

Cardio-Kickboxing
• Mond2ys &amp;WednesdaY! (Noon &amp;5p.m.)
• Starting Monda~ October 4classes will be Mond2ys, Wednesdays
!Fridays (Noon) &amp;1\Jesdays &amp;Thursdays (5 p.m.)
• $3/members &amp; $4/non-meinbers .
·
·

Wellness Center
(304) 675-7222

•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

1616 Ea11emAtJe. (740) 446-3672

•

~

. Gal{ipoU.

Call Toll Free 1-800-521-0084

' •

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~~~~~5!§~i5~~~~~i~~~~~;~

.1996 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE

Senior Low Impact Aerobics

I

.dollhouse . and .•miniature.•cQIIe!ltor,s ..and .ereator4. They,
·•tlle
third
sunday ·They
nf l&lt;ea,,h
monlli
in ihe meet
FAC's
lower
classroom.
t,y ~~e:~~~~~§:i~i
to complete a -group project each year. This
year the members ex.changed 'grab bags' filled
with odds and ends, and were told to create
• • • - -....~~~~=::5;:::::':""":-'~~lll!!ii!Ri!l!ll! --~
something from 80 percent of the contents.
Among the items they had to work with were
one clear contact lens, sequin, several toothpicks and fabric pieces. Among those who finished the project, the results included a gypsy
tea room, a dress shop, space station and several others.
Another feature will the final results of a
two day workshops on making roomboxes for
.
FAMILY
- Trick or kids ages 10·- 15. The workshop was conducttreattra won't mind making a litop lit tht Addam1 FamilY HouH with ed by Barb Simpkins and Jayne Burger and
'·" ' black wrought Iron fenct and tht' acary ti'H In the front yard.
challenged the kids to create a bedroom scene.
Simpkins was very pleased with the results,
"It's great to see their imaginalion and creativity in interpreting the roomboxes. They all
seemed to love animals and books. Each room
is different, but we showed them how to make
curtains and other ilems."
The roomboxes look like the bedrooms of
typical teens, complete with Chinese checker
games with tiny beads for marbles, trash cans
. filled .with papers. One young crafter who,
according to Simpkins, freely admitted she . A GYPSY TEA ROOM - Mtmbera of the Rlvtrby Mini Craftera took grab bags of
.
was not the neatest person, decorated lu:r placta which wtra to be uHd to makt 1 roombox. Thll creation 11 a gyp1y tea room In '
rleh jtwtl ton... So Inviting for julit a._ bit of Ita."
roombox with a popcorn spill on the floor.
"I think this is so much better (or them
rather than spending so 111uch time watching
TV or being in front of a computer. This
-· teaches them to think about how to niake an
object out of something else, and to see lhings
in a totally different way.
The exhibit includes 'No Room At The
Inn,' l! nativity scene with lavish greenery and
rock formation; 'Devin's Teddy Bear Cottage,' a charming two ·story house where a
family ofteddy bears Jive among lace curtains
and rose covere!l picket fences.
For the nature lovers who think rustic liv·
ing is for them, the house 'Solitary Pleasure'
is reminiscent of a lodge, complele with stone
fireplaces, woo.l blankets and a canoe ready
for a day of fishing on a lake.
Visitors step back into the past with the
'Bread Box Kitclien Scene' and 'Annie's Bakery.' The one room schi!OI houses of another
era ·are faithfully captured, as well.
What promises to be a roombox that will
have visitors talking is a fabric shop made
completely of sewing notions.
Another exciting dollhouse is a 62 year old
_ Thll
appointed homt could be the dMIIlng or
'Keystone House' made by the Keystone Toy proper VIctorian family. It fetlturet
tht ltemt for a family to enJoy dlll'lllg a
Company.
.
,
e'o(tnlng lit hom~. Not• thtwarrn glow ~ the nrap~ace, the obJect c:i''~rta pt111apa
The house was purchased at the Dtamond ehaHd on tht grand tour and of COUI'H the plano ready for the chlldl'lll tO begln
Department Store in Charleston, West Vir- daHy lellone.
· '
ginia, and furnished with high quality solid
··
wood furniture.
raffled off at the .close of the ex'hibit.
.
.
For those interested in buying miniature iteins, a sale will take
Tickets are $1.00/ each or 6 for $5.00. Please sto'p by and pu.r.'
Simpkin•'
· place in the F:AC's .,lower classroom and dining room on October chase a ticket to help support the interests of this fascin•tiri&amp; ,
5:3~':Aluminium afltr many yeara, he vowed~ his 16 and 17 fl'Onl .t ..-.s p.m. ·
.
. .
group.
·
., ,
tht brldgt. Thankfully, 00 hltllllit day of work
_ ·~
· · Among the-items for sale will be miniature wall paper lamps
Ga)lery hours are Tuesday through Friday 10 a.m. , 3 p.m. ancl';
and home cam• tht lunoh box. Barb, pictured;
.
·
.
'
'
d
J
In tht ln•rt,'....',, •~'' 81 ulittlng for thla charming tribute to tilt life ~and plants.
· Satur ay and Sunday 1 • 5 p.m. Admission is free. ·All PAC pro• ,':
;ef buey,· Will n" too bu.Y. hubby,
·. ..
S As a club and FAC fund raiser, a "Santa House Kit" will be gramm lng _is offered through support of the Ohio Arts &lt;?ouncih . j. ,

Tai Chi

. • Great way to increase Oexibili~, balance, slrength &amp;: relieves slress
• 30-minulf classes (rour week period - 16 years &amp;-older)
• $40/person or 130/PVH employees &amp;gold card members

~
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1£

'1 '

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Pomeroy • ~iddleport ~Gallipolis, OH·· Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, October 3, 1999

-. Travel~th Max
·' '·

..

'·
'-

Theologian .sees new pathways in quest
foi spirituality
.

By VERENA DOBNIK
prayer, which she says helped her
; ·:By MAX TAWNEY
Associated Press Wl'jter
.
survive deprcsston.
;·; . ". GALLIPOLIS - I met a real nice, polite young man named Jose . N6~0RK (AP)- Theologian
Redmont, a 47-year-old Roman
·· Valdez at a restaurant in Acapulco on one of my many trips to Mexico.
Jane Re ont is striding~d{)wn Fifth · Catholic theologian, writes of being
··
He had just graduated from college. I :!Sked Avenue a quick clip as the words at a church service "praying and
him if he would be my travel guide. He said he come out: "To get a spiritual life, we crying ." Friends sitting on either
would be glad to and would borrow one of his need to slow down' and take some side noticed, "reached out and held
da'd 's cars.
· ·
deep breaths."
my hand , wrapped an ann around
We went to his beautiful home overlooking
She knows both the hectic pace my shoulder, did not ask, simply
Acapulco , where he introduced me to hi s dad of modern life and what she sees as held me anp continued to pr~y. and
and mom . He asked his dad, who was a doctor, a broadly felt yearning to (ind spiri- sing.
if he could use one of his cars to take me on tuality .
"There was room in the pew for
"A lot of us in the contempor~ry suffering and friendship, for prai se
tours of Mexico. I was surprised when hi s dad
said it was okay.
world feel assaulted by the speed, and lament - no need to check any
Jose's mother insisted I stay the night wtth the economic pressures, the compe- part of our ltve s at the door. In this
.
them , which I was happy to do. I spent seven tttton - and the feeling that ' I have communal acknowledgment, before
; happy days with this nice young lad. I must 'say no travel agent could to pull myself up by my own boot· God, there was hope , inside the
~:fi;lve taught and showed me more than thi s boy did. I will mention just a straps, make it on my own,' " she tears."
:1-tew of the places we vtsited.
said in an interview. " We' re feeling
Red mont v1cw s America 's new
• •: Jose knew the history of everywhere we went Here are just a few of . very fq~mented, and there's a desire spiritual landscape from an eclectic
tl!e many places we went that I can remember: Guadalajara. Jarla, Leon, to pray with our whole selves, with past. She's a convert to Catholicism,
:_. $1extco City, Tax co, Veracruz, Puebla, Toluca , Oaxaca, Pachuca and oth- our heads and our heartS, as well as . born In Ft:ance of American Jewi sh
~-{rs.
.
our bodies, our senses ." ,
parents, agnostics who-raised her as
~· When we returned fiom our ';\(Onderful tour of Mex ico, Jose ' s dad
And how, pray tell , docs one do a Umtarian Uni versahst. Her brother
~:Wok me with him to a Lions Club meeting one eve ning after I showed that'
·
Dennis is The Associated Pre ss
:"-lJim my membership card to our Lions club here in Gallipolis. What a
Planting a garden, makin g love , bureau chtef in Rome.
·~reat thrill that was; they gave me a standing ovatt on.
_
kneading bread , dancin g, singing, or
A lay mintster with a master's
- ~:. I was asked to sit ne xt to the prestdent of the club, which they say has even just sitting, breathin g anc) med· from Harvard Divmity School, she
; o~!Je largest membership of any Lions club in the world . I believe it, as ltating - all of these can he spiritu- is fini shmg a doctorate at the Gradu' lhere were 600 in attendance that nigh!. I have made many trips to old al acts. says Redmont , whose new ate Theological Unwn in Berkeley,
; ~exico, but I must say thi s one ranked No I. It was a rea l education of book.. " When in Doubt. Sing," Calif. She WIJrShtps at a mostly
: -&lt;ifd Mexi co.
explores myriad ways of "praying" Afncan-Amer.ftan- Ca!holic church
' : • The reason for writing thi s article is I recently recetved a Very sad let- in the angst-tilled modern world .
m nearby Oakland.
bcr from Jose's mother, telling me Jose had been kil.led in a had auto acc tHer book describes the inner
" Prayer in daily life" - the
; ~nt. I found out he was a coach and teacher at a high school. He was a adventures of hundre&lt;\s of ordmary book's subtttle - can be found, she
wonderful person. I will never forget Jose and his mom and dad.
people she spoke with, a spiritual says. in countless ways : in the Chri'smosatc including mellow Californi- tian , Jewish or Muslim faiths,
ans, Benedictine monks, Zen practi- among others, or through practices
:- (Max Tawney, longtime Gallipolis businessman, writes an occa· ti oners, urban profess ionals and like yoga, med itati on and ritual
slonal column about his world travels for the Sunday Times-Sen- small-town Midwesterners .
touch .
.. tlnel .)
·
She writ~s. one shouldn ' t reword
The title celebrates mu sic as

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'

DURST-CODNER..-- ANDERSON-NICHOLS-

·: POMEROY - Sarah Elizabeth
&lt;Anderson and Andrew Paul Nichols

were married on July 24 at the
. • Sacred Heart Church in Pomeroy.
,~ ·• The double-ring ceremony for
:;,. . the daughter of Don and Bernadette
!· • Anderson, Pomeroy, and the son of
· Paul and Jennifer Nichols of Point
~ Pleasant, W. Va . .;JO'as performed by
the Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz.
•
It followed a program of mustc
: by organist John Anderson, soloist,
Laura Guthrie whose selections
( included "The Lord 's Prayer", trumpet player BettWright, and-the Fam; . ily Singers presenting "Love One
' Another, "Ava Maria", and "The
: Irish Blessing."
=
Wreaths of hydrangeas and tulle
~. decorated the church doors, and
:0: vases of hydrangeas were use!!· in
the church.
, · Escorted to the altar by her
• : father, the bride wbre a gown fash~ : ioned in silk with a fitted bodice
~ : adorned with pearls, with a full
· • • length satin-trimmed tulle skirt. She
:: wore a satin trimmed elbow length
: : veil made by her aunt, Maureen
: • Hennessy; and earned a hand-tied
• : bouquet of pink roses and
·: : hydrangeas. She wore pearl ear: ' rings, a gift from her parents.
~ : Crystal Vaughan was maid of
•; honor and the bridesmatds were
: • Noel Nichols, sister of the groom.
·: : Lauren Anderson, cousin of the
bride, Rachel Mosher, Vane ssa
I; Compston, and Tara Whaley, and
I' junior bridesmaids, Angela Wilson
• : and Hilary Hecker, cousins of the
! : bride. Jordan Anderson , also a
; ' cousin, was the flower girl.
; : The attendants wore identical
•: black satin-ba~ked crepe floor!; length gowns and carried hand-tied
I • bouquets of hydrangeas. The flo:wer
' : girl's gown was satin and tulle with

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a pink sas h.
Cory Hill was bes_t man and the
groomsmen were David Anderson,
brother of the bride, Jay Rcymond,
Jason Roush, Butch Oltver, J. D.
Holstem , Jon Tatterson. Chns
Wheeler, B. J. Buchanan. and Matt
Young. Derek Mount was the rmg
bearer.
For her wedding the bride 's
mother wore a lavender, fioor-length
gown with matching jacket and had
a purple hydrangea corsage. Mrs.
Nichol s was in a sage green gown
with a matching lace jacket and.had
a blue hydrangea corsage.
A dinner-dance reception was
held immediately after the wedding
mass at the Sacred Heart Church
hall.
Tables were decorated with
cream tablecloths and candle garden
centerpieces. Hydrangea topiaries
made, by the groom's mother were
used on the bridal table which featured a four-ttered wedding cake and
the groom's cake decorated with
live hydrangea. .
Guests received boxes of cookies
fl!ade by the bride, her fam ily and
friends.
Gretchen Anderson and Vickie
Wedge presided at the guest register
and the cakes were served by
Brandy Anderson and Bridget
Vaughan.
The couple honeymooned in
Maui, Hawaii with stops in St.
Louis, Mo . and Los Angeles, Calif.
They reSide m Morgantown , W. Va.
The bnde is a graduate of Meigs
High School and Ohio Umversity
with a degree in elementary educatton . The groom, a graduate of Point
Pleasant High School, is a senior at
West Virginia University where is·
majoring in civil engmeering .

••
·· -----~--~----~~------~--~~--~

::Jesse Jackson: Concentration of media
:~ ownership homogenizes society
:' CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) : : Concerned about the portrayal of
~: minorities, the Rev. Jesse Jackson IS
i: turning his attention to the people
~ • who own media outlets more than
• : those who run them.
~: Jackson, who has called for Fed~ : eral Communications Commission
~ • hearings on the effect of media
~: mergers on minorities, warned
~ : broadcasters from across the coun
: : try on Thursday ·that consolidation
-- :~ of ,media ownership homogenizes
• , the culture.
::
"Too many people's real needs
are not met in the scenario of a con,; centrated ownership arrangement,"
~: he said at the annual convention of
t the Radio and Television News
~ : Directors Association.
~.
Jackson was challenged by other
members of a panel addressing the
•: broadcasters. Enca Farber, publisher
~ • of the -trade magazine Radio &amp;
~ : Records, said consolidation in radio
•: has had the opposite effect. .
:,
" I think the industry is so much
:: more willing to take oh new ideas,"
• : she said. "There's so much more
: • diversity in formats than there was
: : IOyearsago."
!:
Robert Pittman. president of
i: America Online, and Mtchael
:· Bloomberg, founder of the multime.; dia news service that bears hi s
! : name, both said the Internet allows
' for many more voices in media.
" Six months, two years from
~ : now,. everyone is going tO have their
~; own radio and television station,"
'· ·Bloomberg said, "and I'm not so
:: sure that's a good thing."
::
Jackson countered that the pow• erful media owners are much more
able to drive the pub! ic agenda than
would-be moguls.
Meanwhile, the RTNDA teamed
up with a few minority journali sm

groups to encourage radio and television stations to hire more minorities. The percentage of minorittes in
electromc newsrooms has slipped
from a high of 21 percent three years
ago to 19 percent now, the associ ation said .
·
The organization steered clear of
the question about minority O)llnership of the media. John Sears,
RlNDA chairman , said his group
will concentrate on what its members can control.
-

POMEROY - Amy Renee Durst
and Joshua Tate Codner were mar·
ried Aug. 14 at 5) 0 pm at 'the
Pomeroy United Methodtst Church.
The bnde ts the daughter of
Willis H. and Sharon S. Durst 'of
. Pomeroy and the groom is the son of
Robert J. and Sandra E. Codner of
Portland.
Rev. Connie Faires performed the
ceremony. The music was provided
by Debbie Rose. The church was
decorated with pink and cream roses
m baskets, the pews were marked
with pink, cream, and white ribbon
bows, and the wmdows tnmmed
with pink netti.ng.
Given in marriage by her father,
the bride wore a white formal gown
with a chapel train adorned "witR ·
beads. Her pearl -accented headpiece
held. her veil, and she carried a bouquet of pink and cream roses .
Amy Miller was matron of honor
and bridesmaids were Jenm Durst,
Melissa Canan, Andrea M_oore,and

Sheffler - Long wedding vows made
COVINGTON, KENTUCKY The wedding of Debbie Shefner and
Greggory Long has been announce
by the couple The ceremony took
place Se-ptember 18. 1999. in Covington, Ky.
The bride ts the dAughter of
Howard and Su~an Shefner of New
Castle, Pa. She is a graduate of Slippery Rock University where she
earned a BSBA in marketing. She is
employed at Homeplacc of America
as lead rece iver.
·
The groom is the son of Roy and
Thelma Sayer of Galhpolis. He
served in )he Anny, wtth duty s_ta-

tions in Korea and Ft. Benning Ga.
He is a 1985 graduate of Buckeye
Hill s and is employed as a grocery
merchandise manager at Meijer's.
The bride wore an tvory suit with
pearl and di&amp;mond accents at the
bottom of the jacket.
The reception was attended by
the famil y and fnends and included
an Italian style dinner and three Iter
wedding cake, at Hitoe's restaurant
in New Castle, Pa., hosted by the
bride's parents.
Honeymoon plan s included a
seven day cr · e in the Bahamas.
The couple rcsi
Fairborn.

SCOTTOWN · Ernest and Connie Montgomery announce the marriage of their daughter, Elisha Sue
Montgomery to Haskell 'Hack'
Layne Orsbon on August 27, 1999,
at .the Wedding Chapel of Catletts·
burg, Kentucky. '
The ceremony was performed by
Reverend F. Martin Oute.
The bride is the daughter of
McKinley Clark of St. Albans, West
Virginia, and Eldora Clark of Huntington, West Virginia.
_
The $room ts the son Qf Haskell
Orsbon of Nelsonville and Pamela
Congrove of Crown City, ~nd the

ROME (AP) - All roads may
lead to Rome, but judgi ng by the
names chosen for so'me of the Eternal City's new streets, visitors may
think they wound up in Hollywood.
The City Council paid homage to
Marilyn Monroe, Greta Garbo, Ital ian actress Silvana Mmigano, comedian Buster Keaton and John
Lennon when it announced the

Traveling novelist
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Writer Jack London , born here in
1876, attended the University of California. He then tramped the country,
went to sea, took part m the Klondtke
gold rush and was a war correspondent in the Rdsso-Japanese · War ~

(1904-I 905).

names of new stree ts Friday.
" We have wanted to honor these
ce lebn ttes for some ttme, u's just
that we had to wait for new streets to
be built," said Filippo Sensi, a City
Council spokesman.

NEW YORK (AP)- And now fer the $64,000 Question: Which net.Wrk
plans to revive 1V's first big-money quiz show?
~
The answer: CBS. The network. 's production aim has acquired righ~ to
"The $64,000 Question" and soon will develop a pilot. It will be a candidate
for prime-time later this season or next summer, CBS spokesman Chris
Ender said.
•
"We may adjust the amount of prize money for inflation," Ender added.
That's what an earlier revival did when it aired in syndication from 197678: It was called "The $128,000 Question."
No host has been named for this latest remake, which will be produced in
Los Angeles.
1V's big-money quiz craze began on CBS in June 1956 with the premiere
of the original "$64,000 Question. " Other quiz shows quitkly followed.
· Then the nation was shocked by the revelation that some co ntestants had
been given answers beforehand. Within a few years, all the shows had disappeared.
:· ,
CBS's rcne.wcd interest could come from the success in August of ABC's ·
""Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?" , which became the summer's most popular series. ABC has announced it will bring "Millionaire" back in No\oember.
Ul copy

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Arcossy Casino Oct. ZO·ZI
ZOth C.entury Christ111as Nov. z4
JoAnne Williams

i:

grandson of Dallie Orsbon, also · of
Nelsonville.
Given in marriage by he~ parents,
the bride was escorted to the alter l&gt;y
her father. She wore a white laced
fioor length dress that featureU: a
high neckline. Her headpie'.ce
attached to a veil was accented wjth
white flowers' wi'th pearl centers.
She carried a bouquet made by Jier
mother.
.
The couple enjoy a weekend ~n­
eymoon at Sea World of Clevela~d.
They reside · in a newly bgild
home in Scottown.

CBS. plans to bring back 'The
$64,000 Question' to TV lineUp

Rome pays homage to Hollywood with street names

i•

Farmers·Bank
211 W. 2nd St.
Pomeroy
740-992-2136 .

•

Brenda Roush
Leo's Cruise &amp; Travel ·
Ill W. 2nd St.
_Pomeroy
740-992-4233
800-795-1110

.'

VourBank/n~.·..
Leo's Cruise.
Fo Farme~
&amp; Travel
...._._._., Me~ber F.o.1.c. Bank
!

211 West Second
Street

,,
;.

'

Kathy Bernard . They wore floor
length pink satin dresses and "-arried
pink and cream bouquets of roses.
The fiower girl was Brittany Durst,
niece of the bride . She wore a white
dress with pmk bows and a headpiece with white flowers and pink
veil.
The groom wore a black tuxedo
with a pink and black vest and had a
single ptnk and cream rose boutonniere. Jayson Codner served as best
man for his brother and groomsmen
were Chad Wise, Jamie Rizer,
Daniel Vance, and Richard Lyons.
All wore black tuxedos with pink.
and black vests with a single pink
and cream boutonniere.
Je ssika Codner registered the
guests and Kittie Braden and Jeannie Nease decorated and served at
the reception.
The tiered cake was white with
pink roses and was accented with
ferns and baby's breathe and topped
with white bells

MONTGOMER~ORSBON

164 Upper River Rd.
o.
Galllpolla, OH
P.O. Box 626
TUppers Plains, OH
45831
Pomeroy, OH 45769
45783
740-446-2665
740-992·2138
740-667-3161
BANK
42120 St. Rt. 7
P.. Box 339

111 W. Second St~. ·
Pomero_y .
740/992·4'233
1·800·795·1110

Jtsmbllv albise•-Jimtblel • Page C3

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

Traditional blackboards now
gathering chalk dust in new age
of computer communications

'

the 23rd Psalm as, "The Lord is my healing · service. "An enormous
shrtnk, I shall not want."
grace of this tragedy is that it has ,
Simple traditional rituals remain taught us how to love in new ways,"
powerful. We're attached to "the she says.
.
·
prayers of grandmothers," as one
While some seeking a spiritual .
woman in the book calls them.
life have returned to religious instiAfter the school massacre in Lit- tutions, others shun them, instead
tleton, Colo., the first large public finding sacred space in activities as
gathering. was an outdoor Sunday simple as listening to music . •
pra~er service. It offered emotional
"There are things Mozart has
balm for the victims' families and done for me that no amount of serfriends before they askedothe tough monizing could 1!4&gt;,'' Redmon! says.
questions about how guns get into
· And the spiritual value of simply
walking at a comfortable pace while
children's hands.
" We need each other, whether it's quietly listening to one 's thoughts
a group or a large cathedral or a evokes a Japane se theologian 's
small parish or an ashram or a phrase: "There 's an iinmense
mosque. Find yourself a ' we,"' Red- . hunger for 'the three-mile-an-hour
mont says. At the precarious edge of God."'
the 21st century, "there's an inqedi There's also a more tangible kind
ble loneliness out there."
of spiritual hunger, according to
Her theme finds support in oth- Harvard theologian Harvey Cox .
"People are looking for a kind of
ers' research and practices.
Princeton University sociologiSt usabl e tradi tion . And sometimes
Robert Wuthnow, an authority on they just kmd of give up because it
trends in American sptrituahty, says seems too confusing .... "
Redmont's contributiOn, he says,
"more people in the United States
pray than actually believe firml y that is that "she is able to combine a very
God exists. Prayer is a search, an serious rootedness in a particular Iraexpression of faith , but also an dition, Roman Catholic, with a genadmtssion of doubt. "
uine openness and appreciation fqr a
Redmont says prayer has other very wide range of styles of spiritupurposes, too. She cites a challenge ality- without blending them all.
many feel today to "pray with the
" I thmk of her as being very
actions of our lives." The late Swiss much on the frontier as to how
theologian Karl Barth believed one !hings are developing in the reltshould, so to speak, hold th~ Bible in gious sphere of the world . She's
one hand and' the newspaper in the really Catholic and really ecumeniother, she says.
cal, and it enriches both of those
In Boston, she participated in this sides of her. " •
"laying on of hands" at an AIDS

Read The i&gt;unbap-t!rtme~ i&gt;enttnel

Deeds Family Vision Care

NEW HAVEN, Conn . (AP) scraping a blackboard.
Chalk' it up to changing times: The
' "The feel of the chalk in your
-In the Wal*Mart Vision Center:
venerable blackboard, the center of hand, it's a whole different feeling,"
'
:--:;,
classroom attention through genera· said Gerald Baldino, the principal of
Vision plays an important role in helping
tions of fraction s an11 vocabulary lists, Edgewood Magnet School in, New ·
children adapt to the world around them and
'
is being erased from the modern Haven and an educator for 30 years.
excel in everyday activities.
American classroom .
"It's tradition ."
' )!
Teachers say they can't quite pinAssistant Principal Bonnie Pachcomprehensive eye exam_s for school
-veiHt-th&amp;date when chalk - atld-tlms, csa -said she doesn' t like markers:
chalkboards - first began disappear- they can dry up, youngsters sometreatment of problems that may interfere with a
ing, but they invariably link it to the times walk off with them, and some
Drs.
Michelle
&amp;
Duane
Deeds
lifetime of learning
introduction of computers in clas s- ·markers give off an odor.·
roams.
" They
give
me
a
Independent Optometrists
Pleu•e 1chedule
child .. exam
Chalk. dust mucks up circuit boards headache," she said.
and wiring and can aggravate allergies and breathing problems for children wtth asthma, teachers-say.
"Chalk really isn't good for anyWe, tile undenlped, caD upon our eleeted olllclal• to enact laws to
thing. It gets all over your hands and
protect and delencl human llle aplnst abordon, lnlantlclde, and
•'
your clothe's," said fifth-grade teacher
euthanasia. . . reeacmu and upbold tbe unalienable rllbt to
Stephanie Tate! of the Amistad Academy, a newly renovated chaner school
IJI"CM"la'med In our Natloa'a Declaration·of~ .
in New Haven.
Architect Jay Brotman, whose firm
Fanh Pennington
Lori Patterson
Sheila Hill
Becki Boll
Pot Moore.
renovated an office building to create
' . · SUNDAY
will be open.
Judy Rockhold
Martella Short
Teri Hockman
Christy Ramsburg Holly Worsder
the academy, satd teachers recomPOMEROY - Poplar Ridge Free
mended replacing the blackboards
Wendy Shuler
TommyAdoms
Gino Phillips
Jill Dorst
Ben Skinner
Will Baptist Church, gospel sing,
POMEROY
Meigs County with " white boards." The smooth,
Don Tillis
· State Route 554. The Joe Lester Fam- Commissioners meeting rescheduled almost tile..tike surface can be written
Elizabeth Meadows Kimberly Hupp
Curtis King '
Edward Boss
-r ily, the Brody Family, Parkersburg,
for Tuesday at 6 p.m.
on with markers and wiped clean wuh
Robin Harris
Ton~ Kennedy
Chostidy Murphy
Cheryl A.Bailey
Frances Thomas
.·: W.Va. Public invited by Pastor John
a special eraser made of a soft fabric .
Sherry L Brody
Brenda Cotteril
Elswick.
John E.Moore · Deborah Mohler
William L Smith
RACINE - Racme Chapter,
Among the advantages, teachers
OES, 7:30p.m. Election of officers . say, is that bright marker colors better
Paul J. Jones
Jesse Wingrove
Shari Blackwell
William Craven
William H.
1· EAST MEIGS - South Bethel
attract [he eyes of children with short
Kay Rowe
Judy Jones
Mary Voss
Paul R.Milner
Middlesworth
:-'"New Testament Church, homecom AlliENS - Athens to D~rwin attention spans. Different assignments
;_:··ing, Sunday. Sunday school at 9 a.m.; Citizens Advisory Committee public can be given in contrasting colors, and
Brittany J. carpenter Barbara Gatrell
Dorothea Mash
Betty Edwards
Melanie Quolls
: •-worship servtce at 10:10 a.m. Carry- rneeting/worktng session Monday, 4 overhead projectors can display trans· Rhea Lank
Geni Brannon
Deborah Spurlock Diona Frederick
Norman McCoin
l ~ -in dinner at noon. Music at I p.m " p.m. at the Ohio University Inn to parcncie~n lhc white boards.
Mary Klein
: .• with The Southern Gospel airs. South ~ear presentations b~ four engmeer·
Crystol Facemire . Sharon Shoemaker James Brannon
June Epple
"The markers are· easier to see than
; · Bethel is .located two miles from mg consultants seektn@&gt;the contract yellow chalk on black, especially
Tommy Chapman
Mike laWson
Mary King
Brenda Neutzling Kelly Weddle
: ·:Route 7 on Stiver Ridge Road, across to advise the CAC and Transport•· from the back. rows, " Tate! said.
Erma M. Smith
Bill Cornell
Dennis Bryon
tion Review Advisory Council on the
,from· Eastern Schools.
Jessica Priddy
Mike Wright
An added bonus ·is that magnets
Athens-to-Darwin U.S. 33 project.
Patty Monzey
Dolores Donohue
stick to the·marker boards, so teachers
Rebecca Snowden Rhea Faith Haymon lottie lawson
HEMLOCK GROVE - Hemcan post other visual aids onto them .
Steven E. Beho
Bonnie ~mith
Joan Barringer
Roger Epple
Des Jeffers
lock Grove Christian Church, homeLETART - Letart Township
The AssociatiOn of School Bust·
- coming. AI Doster, speaker. Dinner at Trustees, 6 p.m at the office building.
Angelo McClure
Phyllis Rees
Danelle Jones
Karin Johnson
Mary J. Perdos
ness Officials International, an
: noon, afternoon services at 2 p.m.
alliance of about 6,000 school pllrFr. Wolter Heinz
Wando Shuler
Audelle McCain
Connie Collins
Holly D. Stump
'- Special music by the Williams Farrii- TUESDAY
chasing managers, budget directors
Amy Perrin
; 1y, Vienna, W. Va.
POMEROY - Salisbury Town· and financial officers, confirms that
Edna Maxine Rose Brion K. Conde
Frank Martin
Tammi Barber
ship Trustees, 6:30p.m. at the town- teachers are overwhelmingly demandMidlred lee
Katherine Beaumier Catherine Rule
Joni Jeffers
Bobby Fosler
~ :: LAUREL CLifF - Family day ship hall, Rocksprings Road, ing the white marker boards.
William Bailey .
Rella Day
Barbaro Bogard
~ 411 the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Pomeroy.
Cynthia K. Pallerson Corio Kimes
. "I really can't remember the-last
~ Church. Covered dish dinner at noon.
David l. Harris
Michelle Holsinger
Susan Vanmatre
Randall Stump
time we bought a chalk board," said
Nodio N. Bush
~ Featured will be the Boelk Family . ALFRED - Orange Township Deborah Grant, purchasing supervisor
Betty J. Louden
Tamara Hayman
Paige K. Garfield
Mary Pellogrino
Glondo K. Hunt
r from_ )(i~ with the Rev. Bob Trustees, 7:30 horne ofOsie Follrod,' for St. Cloud Area School District No.
Jackie Jeffers
:: Boell&lt; preaq'ling and the family clerk.
Bil~ Fitchpatrick
Lindo ~orrison
Melissa A.Johnson James Vitale
742 in Minnesota. She also heads the
;· singing. The Rev. Charles Young of
Rocky Allender
association's purchasing and supply
Lindo Keesee
Leslie Kidder
Joann Robinson
Peggy Crane
c Akron, superintendent of the Free
POMEROY - Meeting, Meigs management committee.
Rebecca Smith
Lisa Lewis
Lynn Runyon
~ Methodist Church of Ohio, will visit. County Courthouse, 7 p.m. to discuss
JoY'(6 E. Manuel
Helen Holter
Ken Clark, director of supply ser·
~ Charles Swigger jnvites \he.public. __extending- open hours for )lie courtLinda Foster- ---·Robert Barber--~· Betty Willis
vices for the Jefferson County Public
Polly Taylor
Groce Griffin
,.
house. Public officials, business own- School District in Louisville, Ky., said
Daniel A. Haymon
Teresa CCarr
Trudy Mitchell
Ann Col~ns
~ RU1LAND - Revival services, ers and gener~l public invited.
Leslie Quails
his district has b~ilt 15 new schools in
: Rutland Church of the Nazarene,
James E. Keesee
Paulo Hart
Melissa Brown
Karen Werry
the last ,10 years. Nary a chalkboard
Lily Kennedy
~ beginning Sunday and continuing
POMEROY - Meigs County can be found in any institution.
Tommy Boble
Betty LJackson
Kay Hysell
Charles G.Lee
Alisho Gilkey
~ t~ough Oct. I0, 7 p.m. nightly Commissioners, regular meeting, 6
"We're trying to have at least one
• eXcept Sundays, ·10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.
Polly Curtis
Terrry Shan
Shirley McKnight
Sherry Kinnon
Mischelle Beeler
computer 111 every classroom and the
: a.m. services. Rev. Murrell Duffie,
chalk dust is a problem with the new
Mony R. Hart
Robert Fetty
Patricio L Rough Ann Layne
Kathryn Mora
: evangelist Rev. John Nunley, song
JOPPA Oli ve Township technology, not to mention the generSheena Morris
Susan Allender
• evangelist. Pastor Sam Basye invttes Trustees, (i:30 p.m., township garage al cleaning in the classroom," Clark
Judy L Lee
Kathryn Lewis
Kristin M. Torres
on Joppa Rd .
: public.
Richard Monzey
Joseph Stobart
. said.
·
Becky Foley
Chelsa Dilcher
Herbert Short
The buyers say marker boards cost
Josephine Smith
Mary C. Beho
Randy Lee
·• MONDAY
Sue Kibble
Noro Nitz
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport , about the same as blackboards :
EAST MEIGS - Friends of the Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM. Tues- generally between $150 and $200 Sharon Stewart '
Judy Roberts
Jane Wise
Douglas Shomb5n Vera Meadows
: Library, 7 p.m., at the Eastern day, 7:30p.m. Work in Master Mason so it's more aquestion of teacher prefPatti Blakenship
Tommy Cowdery
Amy VanVranken Ashley Freemon
Kolhy Ottman
Degree.
: 'Library.
erence than price.
•
Cheryl King
Barbara L. Tottersan Joe McCloud
Mike Smith
Eloise Watkins
• Brite Inc., a company in Quincy,
:
EAST MEIGS - Eastern ElePOMEROY Immunization Mass., distn~ute s bpth kind s. of
Josefina Myers
Andrew VanVranken Cathy Erwin
Vivian L. Jones
Margie Ellis
: mentary PTO, 6 p.m. in cafctorium. clinic, Tuesday, I to 7 p.m. at the boards.
Mary F. Bush
Kristen D. ~Bond
Mollie Johnson
Mcig's Multipurpose Center.
Darrick St. Clair
Shelly Word
"Marker boards are the prominent
'•
:
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township
product being ordered," said compaElsie King
Janice M. Curry
Scott T. VanVranken (indy Smith
Melanie Holman
:Trustees, 7:30 p.m. at · Syracuse WEDNESDAY
'ny President Scott Newman. "With
Margie Lawson
Sidney McOoud
Brenda Barnhart Claro Moe Hysell
. PAGeVILLE - Scipio Township all the classrooms being wired for the
Norma Torres
: Municipal Building.
•
Trustees, 6:30 p.m Pageville Town Internet, the goal is to put a computer
Kristin Powell
Jeff Thornton
Alice C. Chapman Lodona Boyd
! CARPENTER - Columbia Hall.
on every student 's desk, and the
Marco Jeffers
Troy Word
Judy Lil~
Koren Milner
: _l;ownship Boaf\1 of Trustees, 7:30
chalkboard was a dustier product."
MIDDLEPORT - MiddlepOJt '
! p:in. at the fire statioh .
Marjorie Collins
Nancy D. Woehler Rhonda Foster
The older boards are not being left
Emily Henry
Literary Club, 2 p.m. ,home of Phyl· to gather chalk dust in every school.
:
I'OMpROY - Legal office of lis Hackett. Faye Wallace to review For some veteran teac hers , the
SPONSORED BY, THE
: Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer closed boo'ks about man 's first landing on thought of educating young minds
• Monday for staff training. Title office the moon. Members to pay dues.
without them is like the sound of nail s
MEIGS COUNTY.CHAPTER OF 0100 RIGHT
UFE
•

•

740·441· 2151

ore ..

.

•

•
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"

Po111eroy • Middleport • Gallipolrs, _OH • ·Point Pleasant, WV

. ~unday, October 3,, 1999

Sunday., October 3, 1999

•

Hobby turns-into business of selling
·thousands of varieties o·f trees ·

"

''I

TEMPERANCE. Mich . (AP) It looks like a pine tree having a bad
hair day.
" I give it a perm every Saturday," says · Hans Thumm . as he
caresses the curly needles. of pinus
. strobus torulosa. a strange breed of
white pine that looks like it was
assaulled with an eggbeater.
'Thumm owns Temperance Garden Specialties, perhaps an apt
name for a business that deals in
rare and unusual plants. ·
On 17 acres off Telegraph Road
ncar the Mi chigan -Ohio line ,
Thumm has cullcctcd about 4,000
odd ball varieties - mainly conifers
1
~ that arc the products of grafts of
mixed and matched spec ies. It 's
possibly one of the largest collec tions of such unusual plants in the

!

courltry.

· Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hysell

Couple notes-anniversary
POMEROY - Guy and Ruby
Hysell of. Pomeroy were re~ently
.surprised with a 45th wedding
anniversary party.
The party was hosted by their
children, Linda Blake, Donna
Hysell, and Donald G. Hysell and
held at the Mason Fire Department. Fing~r foods were served
with the anniversary · cake and
punch.
Atte.nding were Linda, Chuck
and Kim Blake, Donna Hysell , Pat
1+-- - - -Eilts.-Gonald -B. llysell, .C-rystal

Richmond, Katie Warth , --A nn
Kauff, Roger, Jane and Cody
Hysell , Russell Bowers, Ralph and
Madeline Painter, Nathan and
Bette Biggs, Robert and · Mary
Bowles, Wilma Blake, Charles and
Donna Stover, Tammy McGuire,
Ivan and Evelyn Wood , Laura.
Amanda, Lindsey and Jonathan
Wolfe, Rodney Wood, Andrea
Warner, Margaret Eskew, George
Gum, Eric, Karen Bowers, Becky.
Bethany and Ryan Amberger.

· "They' re freaks of nature is what
they arc." sa id Thumm. who sti ll
re tain ~ a plcas'ant accent from his
nati ve Gcmmny. "Some are onc,,afa-kind 111 the world.' '
Rooted in one mound of mulch is
an all igator jut\ipcr, it s bark the pal·
tern of it s ~caly nam esake. In another nearby row is a Japanese red
pine. its gray bark falls off to reveal
a bright orange undersk in.'
Thutiun shows off another tree,
its branches snaking every which
way as if it isafnictcd by a genetic
prob lem.
"The contorted look is a typical
look for an Oriental setting, " he
said, struggling to recall the tree 's
name.. Finally, he checks a tag on
the tree . It's a pinus contorta murrayanna.
"If you ~ave 4,000 children, you
know them all by name, but you

I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

~Mafor James McCreary 'of 11th .Kentucky· Cavalry taken prisoner at Buffington

have to think about it," Thumm said plants, he'll coordinate total land- gardening and plants, but his inter-·
apologetically.
scaping.
. est blossomed after a trip to Hidden '
The "children" 1ft Thumm 's
"I come to your place. I take a Lake Gardens, Michigan State Uninursery come in all shapes and look at it and I make a recommen- versity's botanical preserve near
.·
sizes. Some-are short an~ squat, like dation," he said. "Then you come Tipton.
a fireplug made of brush. Another here and I show you the plant so
He was stru~k by its conifer cplmaple called "Monumentale" tow- 'you're not buying a .. name. You lection . "I was'·so fascinated ~th
ers 30 feet high, but is only about a know what the plant looks like."
the form ..textures and colors of the
fool wide from top to bottom.
He commonly uses huge boul- pl•nts."
Thumm's&lt;j&gt;lants aren't for every- ders , lighting and even metal sculpHe checked with a variety :of
one.
tures to create an appropriate effect. Toledo-area nurseries for simi)ar
He sells these rarities mainly to "Believe it or not, I guarantee the plants and found none .
He began to collect them 'to
upscale homeowners who may be rocks indefinitely," he joked. The
moved to spend from $800 to trees are guaranteed for a year if he adorn his Temperance rcsiden~e.
$17,000 for a tree that will set their plants them ..
then' he branched out to sales. Scion,
lawns aparl from the nursery stock
"I create every garden like it's lour buses were slopping by his
in neighbors' yards.
.
my own," he said.
house to see the variely of plants:
"I have plant material that has
He annually hand-se lects all of
Meanwhile, ·he continued work·
interest year-round," he . said. his plants at specialty nurseries in ing full-time as maintenance man"These are actually living art."
the high mountains of Califorma ager for Bro.wnin~ Fields lndustr.ies,
~ Japanese red pine, for examand Oregon , and his choices period- the big waste di sposal firm. . .
ple, changes its coloring from gold ically are shipped .to the TemperN~. he retired five years
to green, depending on the season. ance yard.
ago, and three years ago bought \he
A dwarf Korean pine lends a twoA couple of loyal customers are former cornfield that is his present
tone perspective. The . needles are asked to be alerted when the ship- business address.
silver underneath and green on top. ments arrive, so they can have fir~t
He usually works day light to
Unlike typical trees and shrubs crack at adding to their collections. dark during the warmer months ~nd
that arc planted young and then torn
His customers range from north· that's still not enough time." '[ didout after IS or 20 years, most of west Ohio through most of south- n't gel all my jobs done from last
Thumm 's selections are I 5 to 30 east Michigan. Rece ntly he broad- year," he said.
,
years old when they are sold.
ened his reputation by winning the
He said he -thoroughly enjoys his
Some of the trees are both male best collection of plants award at work. though admits not everyone is
and female. "They pollinate them- this year's Home &amp; Garden Show in a prospective customer-.
selves," Thumm said. "They don 't Detroit.
"It's for people that just want
need another tree . They just need
"I Installed seven tons of rock. something different," he sa id .
the wind.''
40 tons of sand, I,000 plants, a "Some people drive Cadillacs and
Another variety is patented to . waterfall and a river," he said. It some people drive Chevrolets. It's a
keep others from propagating it and was judged best among 38 other little more prestige. It 's a stat~s
selling it for profit.
plant exhibitors.
thing."
Plant value is based on supply
Thumm said he's always loved
and demand, rate of growth - the
slower they grow, the more valuable
- and how haFd it is to propagate
Evcrythmg mu st g o to nw kc ro o m for new fnll m c r c h.111 d1 SC'
them.
Ev cr ythmg on s ;~l e r No reCt sonahl e offP.r r efuserl 1
Thumm not only sell s single

quence of a heavy rain away up the
river. Shells and minnie balls were
ricocheting and exploding in every
direction, cavalry were charging and
the infantry with its, slow measured
tread moved upon us, while broadside after broadside was poured
upon our · doomed command from
the gunboats. It seemed as if our
comparatively small command
On~ of the Confederate units that would be swallowed up by the innufought at the Battle of Buffington's merable horde."
Island in Meigs ~ounty in July, 1863
"About half of it was captured or
wa.s the II th Kentucky Cavalry. killed. I made my wuy out by chargMajor James B. McCreary of that ing through the enemy's lines with
unit later became Governor of Ken- about one-half the Regiment, and
tucky (elected in 1875) as well as finally forme!l a juncture with the
. Congressman for some six terms remnant of our co mmand under
and U.S . Senator for one tern1.
Gen. Morgan, now numbering 1200.
~· · McCreary's account of the battle With these we moved towards
.states: "Early in the morning of the I Cheshire, traveling rapidly at night,
9th the Yankees guard!Pg the ford (at passing around the cmemy's pickets,
Bufllngion Island) were attacked by over cliffs and ravines, which, under
our force. driven away, and their ordinary circumstances would have
artillery captured.
been considered insurmountable .~
"Immedi ately after thi s, and
Just below Cheshire. the II th
whilst we were trying the river to Ky. Cavalry was fired upon by gun. ascertain if it was fordable, the gun - boats and forced up a high hill. Havboats steamed up river. The trans- ing exhausted all ammunition, some
ports landed their infantry, thou- 700 of Morgan's men surrendered.
.sands of cavalry moved down upon. including many from the lith Ky .
tis, and the artillery commenced its McCreary negotiated the surrender
deadly work. We formed and fought for the 700 while Morgan took 500
. here to no purpose.
out the back of the hill . Later that '
"The river was very full in conse - day Morgan's men passed through
By:
James
Sands

I

SAVE UP TO 50% Off:

RODNEY - The family of Allen. and Ann Romaine are planning a
ce lebration to mark the couple's 50th wedding anniversary. Family and
frie nds are jnvited to Faith Baptist Church on Sunday, October 17,
l999,..3L2.p.m. Tllc..t:amil)' ·reque.ts.gifts be omitted.

Fifth Annual Health Information Fair planned for Meigs County
f

POMEROY - "Healthy Aging Health Education Center; Meigs di splay by the Herbal Sage Tea
' Refreshments will be served and
and the Millennium" will be the County Council on Aging , Inc.
Company. Refreshments will be ~umerous door prizes will be awardtheme of the Fifth Annual Health
Veterans Memorial · Hospital. served and numerous door prizes ed.
:: rnfonnation Fair to be staged Oct. Health Recovery Services, Meigs will be awarded throu.ghoul the
~ 14 from noon to 3 p.m. at the Meigs County Health Department, Meigs afternoon.
'· Multipurpose Senior Center.
County Board of Mental RetardaThe fair is funded through the
·: The day's event will feature tion/Developmental Disabilities; Ohio Department of Aging through
:screenings for cholesterol, blood Kroger Pharmacy, Serenity House, Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valley
;sugar,
blood
pressure, Inc.; O'Bicncss Memorial Hospital; Regional Developmcnt.District Area .
glaucoma/cataract, health risk VMH Behavioral Health Unit; GJM Agency on Aging and the Meigs
:appraisals, and spinal screenings.
Board of Alcohol and Drug Addic- . County Council on Aging, with
~
In addition there will be displays tion and Mental Health; Meigs additional support from a number of
· ·· by health agencies and organizations County TB Clinic, Continuity of local (sponsors. The list i~c ludes
•sign up for a Chippewa Gift
; in the county along with the distrib- Care; Appalachian Community Vis- Farmers Bank and Savings Co.,.
Certificate. Value at $140.00
: ution of informational materials.
iting Nurses; Holzer Hospice; Rock- Racine Home National Bank, PeoAmong those participating will spfings Rehab; Breath of Life Tech; ples Bank, The Daily Sentinel,
: be Dr. David Faro,' podiatrist; Dr. Holzer Home Care of VMH Ameri- McCullough &amp; Riffle Drug , llrogan: Kelly Roush, chiropractor; Anwar dn Red Cross and Holzer Wellness Warner Insurance. Middleport TroLafayette Mall Gallipolis
:Eye Center; Dr. Margie Lawson; Center.
phies and Tees, _Don Tate Motors,
•InHearing; Ohio University College
New features this year will be a Inc., Delivery Concepts, SunMead:or Medicine, arthritis program, com- demonstration by Ramona Compton ow/GA Food Service, Superior
;munity service program, and Area on Tai Chi and a new informational Office Service, and King Hardware.

@!!'!!~
·---250/o Off

:: . CHARLIE
AT 50· Stephen Charla, c;oUectlons. coordl·
: ·ilator of the International Museum of Cartoon Art In Boca Raton,
: Fla, puts the final touches on a display celebrating tl:le 50th
:.~nnlversary of the Peanuts cartoon strip.
·

&gt;By· KAREN TESTA

ThtaS~;~· C~fe

:Region,al artists sought for_Dairy Barn ·event
. ATHENS - Regional artists are
·bei ng invited to participate in the
:Dairy Barn Southeastern Ohio Cui) ural Arts Center in Athens "Art on
•View 2000" a display of artworks in
mediums.
·
, Jurors for the event will be Dr.
·Mitchell D. l&lt;ahan, director of the
~Akron Art Museum, and Christopher

:.11

.

.

Hixson, owner of Among Friends
Gallery, Modo Gallery, and Booties
of Peninsula. Kahan and Hixson will
select works that display a unique
and fresh approach to their medium .
Work will be judged on originality, concept, design, technique and
craftsmanship. Participating artists
must be from within a 200 mile' radi-

::women··s·: history
:essay.
contest
;:planned for students
COLUMBUS · The Women's
:'Division at the Ohio Bureau of·
: ~ ___ ~ ·Employment Services (OBES} is
·
·:Seeking entries for the Women Makjng History Essay Contest 2000. The
:contest, open to all Ohio eighth·
:l!rade girls and boys, encourages
.students to submit a 400-500 word
::essay about a woman who is mal&lt;ino
·or has made history in one
'nontraditional career fields: athtet .. ']cs, business, communications, gov~rnment, or·math and science.
· The goals of the contest are to
l ncrcase students' and educators'
')lwarcness of• women's contribu1ions, to recognize March ~
:Women's Ht!&lt;tory Month, and to
.highlight nontraditional career
}lppurtunitics litr women.
• Essay entry forms will be sent
lhis month to all Ohio middle school
principals, guidance counselors, and
past participating teachers. Essays
may be submitted to the Women's
Division, OBES, 145 S. Front St..
Columbus, Oh 43215 and must be
postmarked by Decemhcr I , 1999.
Essays will be judged on ~ontent
jtnd writing style. Four winners will
be selected in each of the five catci!orics. First-place winners will
tcceive $150; second-place winners.
$·IOO;·tltird·placc winners, $50; and
honoraltlc mention winners will
receive a prize,

..

um of Athens.
Entry forms , with slides of completed works, arc due Jan. 7 with the
show to open on March 26. Artists
should call 740-592-4981 for an
entcY form . Forms may also be
obtained hy writing to the Dairy
Barn Art Center, P. 0. Box 747,
Athens, Ohio 45701 .

PVH HEALTH FOUNDATION
Pic-nic -an·d G-olf Scramble
October 14, 1999
•

.-T'· .. S~.~t_gu.n

hstartNa1 !..PM _
L'unc at oon
. Pine Hills Golf Cource
(forraerly

M~igs

County GCI

(

4-Man Scramble:
Team handicap must total at Ieist 40 with no
more than 1 player ~nder 1 10 hdcp.

Entry: $200/Team
(includes golf, cart, hnch ud priml

For more information or to sign up call:
992-6312 or 675-6042
"EDUCATING TODAY FOR A HEALTHY TOMMOROW'l.'
II

"L..,,., •••u•••u••• • un•• •••ou uu••u• • ••u•u ou•u••u~•nuotuntuot~

...M ammo graph y

Rt

Holzer Clinic
1n recognition of National
Breast Cancer Month, Holzer
Clin-ic i.s-of-fering .special ra_tes on
mammograms during October.
Routine Screening - $55
Diagnostic Unilateral - $85
Diagnostic Bilateral - $100
(all include physical readings)
Special rates &amp; Extended Hours
will be available at all Holzer
Clinic MammQgraphy
Locations: Gallipolis, Jackson,
. Meigs and Proctorvil_le

· Call

748-446-5289
Or Your Ph sicians Office

I

This old hotel building In Cheshire, torn down a couple of years
ago, housed, in 1863, Major McCreary who, within a decade would
be the governor of Kentucky. ,McCreary was captured and paroled
at Cheshire when 700 of Morgan's Raiders surrendered there.
bars" formed an American town in from Americana in a commuDity the
Brazil known as Americana.
Russians n:imed New Odessa .
In one of history' s ironic twi sts, a
few years after the Confererate
immigration, a group of Ru ssian
immigrants settled some five miles

Good grief! Peanuts gang enters 50th year in funny.pages

SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE

Anniversary celebration planned for Romaines

Ewington.
About S.(i of them were put in
For July 21, 1863, McCreary .prison, mostly in Illinqis and 24 of
wrote: "We are now prisoners. I those died in prison. One man, Capt.
have. just found Rube, my negro. .Gonlon .Mullins of Co. A, died in the
who was captured at Buffington. Ohio Penitentiary as he froze to
Also find that my blanket was perfo- death on Jan. I, 1864, the coldest
rated b9 a minnie ball and suppose day of the Civil War.
my horse shot, as I had to mount a
Sgt. Turner Trevis of the II th Ky.
fresh one in the excitement. We field was taken to Camp Douglas in Illiofficers were paroled and are now nois. He was one of the few who
stopping at the Cheshire Hotel. Dr. escaped from the camp. He went
William Mullins, USA and Col. into Canada and then to Vermont
Crittenden are here. Both arc kind. where he was arrested for helping to
The ladies stare at us, or rather the rob the Bank of St. Albans.
women, in our room s and while we
A few of the II Ky. Cav. crossed
are bathing, like we were wild the Ohio River at Buffington,
beasts."
including brothers Ezekiel and
There are many interesting sto- William Pyles. The brothers later
ries concerning the I llh Ky. Cav. became part of Gen. Basil Duke's
For instance, one of the reasons per- Brigade. They were captured at
sons are fighting' to preserve Buffin- Kingsport, Tenn. on Dec. 31 , 1864 .
gton battle field is because there are They served time at Ca mp ChasGT
believed to ·be 57 Confederate sol- Ohio, and after their release in 1865;
diers buried somewhere on the bat- the hrbthers .bccamc ·part of the final
tlefield.
escort of &lt;;o nfederate President JefSome 48 of that number came ferson Davis.
from the lith Ky. Cavalry. Also .
Both were personally released
·members of the I Ith Ky. Cavalry, from .service .by Davis-just a few
taken prisoner, received very poor days hcforc Davis himse lf surren treatment while in prison. In perus- dered.
ing the record s for just Companies
After the Civil War, the Pyles
A, B, and C. of the II th Ky. Cav., brothers joined with some 8000
one find s that there were about 220 other former Confederate soldiers
men of these. units present at Buffin- who immigrated to Brazil. Many of
gton.
these former soldiers of the "stars &amp;

The younger Walker is the
-: Associated Press Writer
guest curator of an e•hibit openBOCA RATON , Fla. (AP) ing today at the International
·
·· .aou
v •re an o ld man, Ch ar I'tc Museum of Cartoon Art 'which
&lt;Brown'
chronicles the first five decades
.;- : · Peanuts, the comic strip fea· of Peanuts and .the work of
: !~ring the lovable lo ser in the Schulz, who at agl: 76 continues
zigzag shirt. hi s wacky beagle to draw single -handedly the 365
Snoopy and their unique group of Peanuts strips a year at his st udio
ne'ighborhood pals . ·marks the in Santa Rosa, Calif.
.start of its 50th year on the funny
The exhibit, which runs
·:pages today.
through Jan . 30, contains hun·
Good grief' That's middle - dreds of collectibles and original
·
sketches that take visitors
:aged!
Through more than 18,000 thrgugh the evolution of what has
·strips over the past half-century, become the most successful
·creator Charles M. Schulz has comic ever.
:shared the gang's trials and tribu There are larger-than -life charlations with the Red Baron and acter props of Charlie Brown on
:the kite -eating tree and. in .the the pitcher's mound, Linus in the
:pumpkin patch and on the pitch· pumpkin patch with his security
:er's mound .
blanket, Lucy dispensing advice
The strip appears in more than for 5 cents and Snoopy, as a
:2,600 newspapers in 75 countries. World War I ace, flying overhead
:~nd the Peanuts franchise gener- on his red dog house proclaiming
ates $1 billion in sales each year. " Curse you, Red Baron'"
Schulz, who donated some of
. But it wasn't always that way.
Peanuts made an inauspicious the inost recent originals of his
deb.ut in just seve n newspapers on strip for the show, is not expected
Oc~; 2, 1950 . '
to attend because he ,prefers not
Elvts hadn t even co me on to travel,_ Wal,ker s~td. The .mod.
___ :th_e_ scene __ye t, . ne.ve.~ _..'_ll,tnd ~!~~ -~e-~t_cartomust decll~ed an _,hter· -~
Beatles or rap muStc, sa!d Bnan vtew to talk ~bout hts work.
Walker, son of Beetle Batley ere- . The exh1b1t offers a chronolog. ator Mort Walker.
teal Vtew of t~e development of

Peanuts, and shows the remark·
able yet subtle development the
characters have made over the
years - from !heir first $1 book
to NASA using Snoopy and Charlie Brown's names and images for
the space program.
"I'm on the moon! I did it. I'm
the first beagle on the moon!"
Snoopy proclaimed in a strip than
ran at the same time as NASA's
mission. ~' I beat the Russians ... I
beat everybody. I even beat that
stupid cat who lives next door."
The vast majority of the i\i&lt;mS '
on-display-came-fro~ t'he c ol~c- ­
tion of Freddi Margolin, known
as "the Snoopy lady." She has at
least 20,000 Peanuts items in her
Long Island, N.Y., home, Walker
said.
The reach of the Peanuts gang
stretches far beyond the daily
newspapers.
In the I 960s, Hallmark began
using Peanuts on greeting cards;
now one in eveiy five Hallmark
cards has a Peanuts theme . There
have been thousands of new products bearitfs., Peanuts characters,
television shows, .feature films,
even a Tony Award -w innl,Pg
Broadway play.
.
Of all the characters, the persona lity of Charlie Brown has
proibly remained the most con·
sta t through the years. From as
far ack-as 1952 and possibly earlier, he has worn his trademark
zigzag shin_ though sometimes
it 's orange and sometimes it 's
yellow.
And he's a born loser who
never · gives up. And that's his
appeal , said Steve Charla, collection¥ coordinator at the museum.
"'We all kind of see ourselves
in Charlie," he said,
Other Peanuts characters have
undergone dramatic changes over
the years.
Lucy, for example, started off
as a sweet little girl. She soon
evolved into a "fuss·budget,"
Walker said. And Snoopy,
strangely enough, used to act like
a dog . That was before his flights
of fantasy.
The years have taken a slight
toll on Schulz, who admits sometimes having to use one hand to
steady the other. His lines are . a
little less firm, but he:s given no
thought to looking for an assistant. In fact: Schulz says when he
dies, Peanuts will-die with hi~.
Until then, though, he's gomg
to enjoy a career that he's never

:Keep Galfia Beautiful plans benefit yard sale; coincides
:with Gallia Ministerial -Association's Texas barbecue
According to Rev. John Jackson,
Bush, Ken and Barbara Morgan,
·:sy CATHERINE HAMM
membt!rs of Keep Gallia- Beautiful . the pit barbecue ~til feature sandTimes Sentinel Staff.
wiches of pork, chtcken, bnsket, hog
:: GALLIPOLIS · Keep Gallia and other community families.
For those wishing to bring items roast and,Texas beans. Members of
:Beautiful has announced plans for a
benefit yard sale to support the orga- to sale, KGB members will accept the ministerial association will be
.
:nization's efforts to beautify and items beginning on Thursday, up cooking and serving.
: clean up Gallia County. The sale . until Friday morning . To help the . R_ev. Jackson note.s the fund rats·
"will be held October 8 and 9 at the members. items should be marked er wtlrhelp the assoctatton ~e~lent.sh
·
its l~w . treasury. "The mtnt~tenal
:Jewel Evans Grist Mill, fr~m II a.m. with a sale price.
The
yard
sale
wtll
coincide
wtth
assoctatmn
helps so many needy
··w 6 p.m.
a
Texas'
style
barbecue
held
by
the
causes
such
as,; the , outreach center
: · The sale will feature items and
1 and food bank.
Gallia
County
Ministerial
Associa: ~rtwork from the homes of Bob and
: :Jewel Evans, Herb and Pauline tion.
i

a

:Galli County Health Department to offer free flu st:lots

. GALLIPOI.IS · Free flu shots a.m.-11 a.m. Following a lunch
: :will be given by the Gallia County break they will return to provide
: ·Health Department; begmnmg to additonal shots from I p.m. until 6
· :october.
p.m.
,. . On Friday, · October 22 s taff ·
The next round of the free vac:·:nurses from the health department cine is scheduled for Monday,
&gt; will provide the free ,vaccine at the October 25 at the Gallia County
•.,First Church of the Nazarene on Senior Resource Center on State
Eastern Ave. in Gallipolis from 'J · Route 160 from 9 a.m. until II a.m .

.

.

In the afternoon the the flu clinic
will be held from I p.m. until 2:30
p.m.
. Pre-registration or an appoint·
ment is not required.
A spokesman for the health
department stated that additional
clinics for the shots will be
announced for Novembef.

seen as work.
"It's just something I always
wanted to do," he said in a recent
interv·iew with The Palm Beach
Post. "I'm not obsessed by traveling. I'm not obsessed by getting
everything done in this lifc!ime. I
draw comic strips for the same
reason people do water colors or
go bowling. I love it."

Massagers
soothe

gourmet cuisine to satisfy
meatlo~ers and vegerarians
at affordable prices
Fri. &amp; Sat . 5-10 II' Sunday 10-3
F~r reservations call·

*Sign up for a Red Wing Gift
Certificate. Value at $100.00

your body.

elegant dining experience in a
relaxing country atmosphere

Deliciou• and Creative Caterbtg
At Your Place oro,,,

Th:asn&amp;;~· C~fe

5

200 Coupon good
toward the purchase on

FLAIR

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
MBRfiNO NAME FURNITURE AT DISCOUNT PRICES..

Rl. 2, Gaftipolis

WV

67 S-1371

Mall

rr'fie Lily Of rr'fie Valley

.'

Sore feelings boiled
..,-at tfie 'Deptfis of constraints;
Wfien tfie migfit of eartfi's surface
'Failed to fiold,
:Mount St. Jfelens exploded,
Witfi tfie fiery clouds
'10 tfie fieigfits of sky's eyes.
Witfi all tfiat lieat,
'1fie flowers witliered to asfies,
Ill-winds blew tfie caustic asfies
across tfie Lands, across tfie fiearts,
'1fiere was ail emptiness
Under tne 'suffocated grey skies.
'.5fs tne despair in tfie air cleared,
'1fie awakened mending winds
'Filled tfie
skies-

~~~~:----'11~ilfi1fie-dm~ds~t!tsinrenTegrets;

·

'1fie rains poured M.e my tears ,
'Forcing tne asfies back into tfie eartli,
Witfi tfie vows of a renaissance .
'1fie lily of tfie valley bloomedOver tfie b1irnt Lands, learnt minds,
Surely as tfie evolution of liliaceous love,
Sweetly as tfie river angel's gracious smile.

riJJ{alesh rpatel
Witli tfie best compliments of

LIL£YrpJIY[CJtMYfal'11C!ALS
'1fie makers of acros,
a new drug "~~mise
. ' of better par control.

�7

•

•../
.

I

Gallia .Coiinty, OH I
Point :Pleasant, WV
1999 Area Calendar of Events

OCTOBER
BatUe Days
T.B.A
Point Pleasant, West Virginia
Ohio Valley Symphony Concert
8 p.m. - $
Ariel Theatre, Gallipolis

2

URG Cross Country Jnvltntional
lind Open Race
9:00a·.m.
· Bob Evans Farm &amp; URG, Rio Grande

2

Redmen Soccer vs Malone
3:00p.m. -Stanley L. Evans Field
University .of Rio Grande, Rio Grande

Fes~Steam

2-3

Fall Country
&amp; Gas
Engine Show
8 am- 5 pm W. Y. State Farm Museum
Point Pleasant, West Virginia

2-31

"It's a Small World: Volume V-1"
10:30 a.m.-3:00p.m. Tuesday-Friday 1-5 pm
Saturday-Sunday
French Art Colony, Gallipolis

li-10

29th Annual Bob Evans Farm Festival
9am-5pm
Bob Evans Farm, Rio Grande

8-10

'French 500 Flea Market
8am-5pm
Gallia Co. Junior Fairgrounds. Gallipolis

I
9

First Families or Gallia Co. Banquet
6 pm
Grace United methodist, Gallipolis

14

Don Rose Comedy Show
7pm- $
Ariel Theatre, Gallipolis
Founders Day Fun Festival
!lam

16

16

Redmen Soccer vs Union
2 pm- Stanley L. Evans Field
University of· Rio Grande, Rio Grande

16-17

Longhunter's Camp
9 am- 5 pm Saturday and 1-5 pm Sunday
·Our House Muse.um, Gallipolis
"Treasured Moments or Civil War
Americana"
2:30pm
Gallia Co. Historical Society, Gallipolis

17

20

Valley Artist Series presents:
The Texas Boys Choir
8 pm ·. Berry Fine Arts Center • $
· University of Rio Grande, Rio Grand.e

.,

23

Redwomen Volleyball vs Seton Hill
I pm - Lyne Center
University of Rio Grande, Rio Grande

I
23

Redmen Soccer vs Point Park
2 pm • Stanley L. Evans Field
University of Rio Grande,.Riq Grande

24

Ariel band Competition and Show-Best
ofthe Basement Bands
Competition 10:30 am, Show at 8 pm
Ariel Theatre, Gallipolis

26

Redwomen Volleyball vs Cedarville
7 pm - Lyne Center ·
University of Rio Grande, Rio Grande

2rT

Redmen Soccer vs. Alderson Broaddus
3 p.m. - Stanley L. Evans Field
~niversity of Rio Grande, Rio Grande

Sunday, October 3, 19~

-·', ~unday • October ~. 1999 ·
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpollls, OH • Pol'n t Pleasant, WV
·11·-'t.- Gltmnt-Jinttiml • Page f;7
~ ----------------------------------------------~~·~~~~~~~~~~.:~~~~~~~.:~~~::~~~~--~------~--------~::~::--:!v~::::!::::::_~~~~~

Keillor, Spielberg, FranRJin, others receive arts awards
By JOSEPH SCHUMAN
Hall near the. White House. Clinton Lear. who created some of the cen- ern Oral History Project at the UniAssociat~ Press Writer
said this year's winners of the tury's most popular television social versity of North Carolina-Chapel
WASHINGTON (AP) - As National Medal of Arts and the comedies, including "All in the Hill. ,
-Keillor, best-selling author and
Medal Family," uGood Times" and "The
Aretha Franklin, Steven Spielberg National • Humanities
radio host Of "A Prairie Home Comand August Wilson passed through a "deftned·in their own unique ways a Jeffersons."
White Hoijse receiving line, Presi- part of who we are as a people and
- Actress and producer Rosetta pamon."
.
- Television anchor and edlklr
dent &lt;;:linton was overheard telling what we're about'as a nation as we LeNoire, who boasts a more than
one guest, "If I could make Keillor enter a new century and a new mil- 60-year career that includes numer- Jim Lehrer, ·host of a public teleV,i laugh, I knew that I had achieved."
lennium."
ous movies. Broadway productiens sion news program name&lt;,t·for hi~.
-Political philosopher ~nd
Humorist Garrison Keillor, direcAmerican Indian ballet dancer and TV shows, including "Family
author
John Rawls, renowned for his
tor Spielberg . soul diva Franklin, Maria Tallchief and fo lk singer Matters" and "Amen."
views
on justicc, basic rights a~d
-Arts administrator Harvey
playwright Wilson, and 14 others, as Odella were among the musicians,
equal
opportunity.
:
well as the Julliard School for the writers and arts patrons so honored Lichtenstein •. who was president of
~Academy
.
~ard-wi
nning
the Brooklyn Academy of Music for
performin g arts, were awardc.i this year.
national arts and humanities medal'"
Odella's 50 years of performing 32 years and established it as a lead- f ilmmaker Spielberg.
-Pulitzer Prize-winning play - '
WGdnesday. chosen by the White American folk and gospel reminds ing arts center.
wright
August Wilson whose plays,
House as American cultural trea- "us all that songs have the power to
-Singer Lydia Mendoza, who
"The Piano Lesson"• and
including
sures.
change the heart and change the brought Mexican-American music
The medal s go to individuals or world," Clinton said.
"Fences,"
explore the black experito the public's attertion and became
institutions supporting the gro wth
Tallchief helped put an American famous iq Latin America with her ence in America.
and availability of the arts and stamp on classical ballet, until recent signature song, "Mal Hombre."
humapities to the general public. · decades a ·primarily European disci- Sculptor George Segal, who
" lt gives America a chance F
pline, Clinton said.
.
.
made' a career of sculpting environrccogmze our sons and daughters · The 1999 wmners of the Natwnal ments, including a life-sized bread
who have enriched our lives, made Medal of the Arts are:
line at the Franklin Delano Roous laugh, made us think. made us
- Arts patron Irene Diamond . sevelt Memorial in Washington .
cry. lifted · us up when we were who gave more than $73 million to
- Tallchief, who was the New
down. " Clinton said at a White the arts through foundation s and York City Ballet's longtiine prima
House dinner honoring tl1e medal personal gifts.
'
ballerina.
. ·
wmncrs.
- Aretha Franklin. the "Queen
The 1999 winners of the National
Earlier .i n the day, Clinton of Soul" who has won 17 Grammys. Humanities Medals are:
referred to Keillor - a writer and
- Designer
and
architect
-librarian Patricia M. Battin,
radio impresario best known for his Michael Graves , who created some who organ ized a national campaign
puhlic radio show. "A Prairie Home of century's m0st apmired struc - to save millions of decaying books
Companion" - as "our modern - tures. including· the Riverbend
by
their content on microd:ty Mark Twain."
Music Center in Cincinnati.
film .
- Odella, the "Queen of Ameri"With imagi nation. wit and also
-Pulitzer Pri ze-winning writer
with a steel trap mind and deep con- can Folk Music," who created a and journalist Taylor Branch, whose
viction . Garrison Keillor has groundbrcaking sound with her books. including " Parting the
brought us together. " said the presi- voice and guitar.
Waters: America in the King Years, "
dent.
-The Juilliard School of per- made him an authority on the civil
He said Keillor 's humor and vari- forming arts in New York , which rights (llovemel).l.
ety show about life in a fictitious includes among its alumni colliedi- ·
-New South scholar Jacquelyn
small town in Minnesota "constant- an-actor Robin Williams, cellist Yo- Dowd Hall, who founded ·the Southly reminds us how we're all {;On- Yo Ma and jazz and classical trumncctcd and how it ought to keep us a petist and composer Wynton
little humble." ..
Marsalis.
At a ceremony at Constitution
- Writer and director Norman

putti~g

' ll!!!!!~!!~~i

~~o9•~o~1Xl

GARDENER'S GUIDE: Fall is a
time to plant trees and shrubs
Fall is more than a time for harDeciduous plants need only one
vest and garden cleanup. It's also a thorllllgh soaking immediately after
time to plant trees and shrubs. They planting unless they are in pots and
. are available either potted or as bare- . still have their leaves. Jn this case,
root , lea ness plants. Potted plants keep the soil moist until it freezes or
· can be set in the ground any time. the plants lose their leaves, whichev Nurseries cannot dig bare-root er comes first.
plants until they Jose their leaves.
A thick mulch of leaves, hay, or
An advantage of fall planting is straw is a must for fall -planted trees
that soil is usually soft and moist, and shrubs. Since roots grow whennot sodden as it often is in spring. ever the soil is at a temperature
Plants might even grow some new above freezing , the longer soil freezroots in the fall before the soil ing can be delayed the better estabfreezes. Fall-planted trees and lished a plant can become in the fall. ~
shrubs are in place and ready to
Heaving of plants. caused by
grow with the first breath of spring. nuctuating soi l temperatures, is the
Yet another good reason for planting second potential problem associated
in fall is that there are so many other with fall planting. That thick mulch
things, such as pruning peaches and just recommended to delay soil ·
forsythias, sow ing tomato and pep- freezing also prevents wide temperper seeds, and transplanting broccoli ature swings, takes care Of this sec plants that must be done in spring.
ond problem and keeps new plants
Two problems, both avoidable, firmly anchored through the winter.
are associated with fall planting . The
There is no need to delay digging
first, with evergreens , is that their holes for planting until trees and
leaves dry out. Antt-desiccant shrubs are available. Now is the time
sprays. such as 'Wilt-Pruf,' reduce to dig the holes and amend the soi I
water loss when sprayed on plant with limestone or sulfur. as needed .
leaves. The coating eventually This is another plus to fall planting.
sloughs off, so renew it periodically · In the spring, plants usually are
through winter. Keeping the soil avai lable before the soil is ready to
moist around all new plants until the dig. In · the fall , the holes can be
soil freezes also keeps the leaves ready to receive plants as soon as
plump with water.
they arrive.

''Our Easiest
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Carter celebrates 75th birthday with
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Tuescfoy 6:00 pm • w..t...ctoy 9:30 am '
JAC~N

Coofort Inn • 60S Em Main
Mondoy 6:30pm

,,

.

"' ·. .

If you're connected to any three of the.following

~:. ADDISON - Preaching service
~ at Addison FWB Church, 6 p.m.,
:0- ~ith Rick Barcus preaching.

HENDERSON, W.VA. - Western
square dancing , 7:30 - 10 p.m..
Henderson Recreation Building.

***

POMEROY - Narcotics Anonymous Living In The Solution
Group, Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, 7]J.m.

Monday, October 4

***

GALLIPOLIS - Narcotics
Anonymous Miracles in Recovery
Group, St. Peter 's Episcopal
Church, 7:30p.m.

•••

CHESHIRE · TOPS (Take Off
:2"....
***
Pounds Sensibly) meeting. Cheshire
~ ' KANAUGA ' Worship service at ' United Methodist Church, 10 - ·II
~ Silver Memorial FWB Church, 6
a.ni. Call Ann Mitchell at 388 ; .•p.m., with Rev. Charles Neece
8004 for information.
~ (I•Preaching.
·
***
';, ·..
***
GALLIPOLIS - Gallip,lllis chapj :: GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Ralph . ter TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) meeting, First Church of the
~ .Workman to speak at French City
Nazarene, 5:30- 6:30p.m. Call
~ ~eaptist Church at II a.m. and 6
Shirley Boster 446- 1260.
~ p.m. serv-ice.

...

~

:: ··;, GALLIPOLIS - Fellowship Day
~ •tiervice at Triedstone Baptist
., ·ehurch. 2 p.m. , speaker Rev. Dale
~ · --~amette, pastor of Big Bninch
~' United Methodist Church of Chesa~ peake. .
.
.
~ ~! · .

,,·.;.

•••

GALLIPOLIS -John Gee Black
Historical Center open for public
tours, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.

...

Thesday, OctQber S

CROWN CITY - Homecoming
·· ~ .: at GoOd Hope United Baptist
: Church, beginning at I0:30 a.m.
t ~pecial singing by Emma Lee
"' Waugh and Sharon Eblin. Preaching
~ by Brother Ronnie Nicholas and
~ Brother Larry Haley.
¢

•••

• IRAs
• Consumer Loans
• Real Fstate Loans

., • . CROWN CITY • Headed Home
Singing at Kings Chapel Church, 7
p.m.
'•
'·
***
'·
EUREKA - Homecoming at
Eureka Church of God, beginning
at I 0 ~.m. ~pecial singing by Dillon
Trio. S~clill preaching for IJlOming ·
and afternoon services. Covered
,,'· dish dinner at noon·. No evening
service.

..
.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - National Life

PATRIOT · Bethel Ladies Aid
will meet at the home of Marianna
Jeffet's. Potluck SCI'VCd at 110un.

•••
•••

Thursday, October 7

•••
•••

...

MIDDLEPORT - 'Sisters Exercise Class' at Ash Street Baptist. 6
p.m. Low impact aerobics. For
more information,.call Diana Bing
at 367-0126.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy
PTSO second anllUlll open house, 7
p.m:, GAHS audltorium. All parents
of-grades 7 - 12 asked' to attend to
meet teachers.

***

GALLIPOLIS - Cancer support

•••

•••

· GALLIPOLIS- John Gee Black
Histori£al· Center open for public
tours, IOa.m. - 2 p.m .

•••

Friday, October 8

•••

GALLIPOLIS -Alcoholics
Anonyf!!ous meeting, 8 p.m. St.
Peters Episcopal Church.

•••

PORTER - Bible study at Clark
Chapel Church •. 7 p.m .

•••

EVERGREEN .• Springfield
Townhouse church service, 7 p.m.

Saturday, October 9

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Miracles in
Recovery Group Narcotics Anonymous meeting. 9 p.m:, St. Peters
Episcopal Church .

•••

KANAUGA - Hoc Down at
AMVETS, 7:30- 10:30 p.m., with
the Sounds of Bluegrass.

***
CHESHIRE- Ladies for the
Lord. interdemoninational women 's
ministry, picnic at Cheshire park, 2
p.m. Bring cove red dish and
dessert. Singers include Sid and
Carol Hayman , Deanna Stewart and
Earthen Vessel. For more information call Betty Johnson 441 - 1415
or 992 - 6443 or Jan Swigger at 992
- 6667.

•••
)
REUNIONS
•••

GALLIPOLIS - Descendants of ·
Pete and Margie Parsons to meet
Oct. 3, at Raccoon Creek Park, ·
shelter·house #I, IQ a.m. to dark.

Home, noon homecoming ; Sullday
a.m. Teddy Glassburn and Delivered.

•••

Denver McCarty and Pastor Dan
Bennett preaching. Special singipg
by Note of Prai11e. Ray of Hope
singing on Saturday.

CENTENARY - Centenary United Christian Church old, fashioned
revival , September 27 ' October 5.
Singers include Thursday - Jimm y
and Kathy Sisson; Friday - Gloryland Believers; Saturday - Founda·
tion; Monday - .Dale Williamson;
Tuesday - Dillon Trio. Preachers are
Pastor Donnie ·Johnson, Evangelist
.Matthew Henry and_ Evangelist
Joseph Woodall.

•••

Exhibits

GALLIPOLIS - French Art
Colony cx hibi\ 'It's a Sm: dl World:
Vol. Vl , ~,,_ ... ueril,. 31. Sl! owing Df
doll houses, roOJI.L,boxcs and other
miniature crcatiooS" ·Gallco'y hours
Tuesday - Friday 10 a.m. - 3 J?.m. ,
Saturday and Sunday I . 5 p.m. Free
admissio n. For more int ormati on
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipoli s caU 446 - 3R34.
Church of Christ in Christian Union
fall revival , October 5 - lOth EvanFestival~/
gelist Denver McCarty. Special ·
singers include Note of Praise, Ray
***
(l.IO GRANDE - 13oh Evans
of Hope· and others. October 10 will
be chur,c h homecoming with dinner. Fann Festi vaL October X· 10.9 a .)ll .
- 5 p.m. Festi va l features craft s peoGALLIPOLIS - Revival at Gal· ple, musj~. line dmKing, l1vcslock
li polis Church of Chri st in Christian demonstrati ons and fo od. SqurirL'
Union, October 5 - 10. Services ~ancing tractor pcrform anct: Sau;ubegin at 7 p.m. on Tuesday - Satur- day and Sunday at I 0 a.uo.. I_and '
day. Sunday homecoming services p.m.
at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Evange li st

•••

•••

•••

•••
•••

Card Shower
Esther Luman wi II celebrate her 90th birthday on October
2. Cards may be sent to her at 1253
Cadmus Road. Patriot, 45657.

•••

Viola Mooney will turn 97 on
October 2. Cards may be sent to her
at 7724, State Route 7 South, Gallipolis, 45631.

"***

Revivals

•••

ENO- Tent revival sponsored.by
the Morgan Center Church Youth
Group, beginning September 20, 7
p.m. nightly. Featuring James
' Speedy' Arthur, special singing
each night and speciaf singing oy
The Trinity Trio, Bring lawn chair.
Ted Russell , pastor; Margaret
George and Harve Ferrell youth
leaders.

•••

BI'oWELL - Revival at Garden
Of My Heart Holy Tabernacle, September 25- October 3, 6 p.m. nightly. Thursday - Butch Jewell and
church singers; Friday - Dorset Messick and Don and Sherry Swick) Saturday - Dorset Messick and Headed

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ADDISON - Prayer meeting at
Addison Freewill Baptist Church,
7:30p.m .• with Matt Smith preachmg.

GALLIPOLIS - New Life
' Lutheran Church '12 Step Spiritual
Growth Pr&lt;!gram', 6:45 p.m.

• PLGIEquiLine
• Trust Account

We appreciate our customers' business. That's why we'll
when you take
advantage o£ at least three other Peoples services. It's our way of ·
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and 'add a little interest to lbe rates below.

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the office nearest you.
. . .nk·BrPhon• 1.aoo.374-6t23 TDOOntr 371-7123 .

..

•

•••

PORTER - United Methodist
Women regular meeting, I p.m.,
Trinity United Methodist Church.

•••

GALLIPOLIS -.1\1 -Anon meet·
ing at St. Peter's Episcopal ChulJOh.
Sp.m.

***

•••

VIN.TON - Vinton' Baptist
Church's Pastor Marvin Sal lee
teachin·g series on 'Discovering
God's .Best,' Five Foundational
Skills for Supernatural Living each
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Nursery provtdcd.

*** "

GALLIPOLIS - Choose To Lose
Diet Group, 9 a.m. at Grace United
Methodist Church. For information
call 256- 1156.

'**

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Services at Faith
Valley Cliurch canceled. The ·
church will be supporting revival
serv ices at Centenary Church.

GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting, St. Peter's
Episcopal Church, 8 p.m~
•

•••
Wednesday, October 6
•••

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.Narcotics Anonymous meeting Tri ·County meeting, 611 Viand Street
(use side entrance), 7:30 p.m.

•••

***

.

Peoples Bank services, you qualify for our bonus CD rate.

~),000

***

BIDW£LL- So 0gfcst at Poplar
• Ridge Freewill Baptist Church, 2
·-- p.m.• fealllring the Bradys and the
'
Joe Lester Family.

YaWd at partidpau,. locations for a limired time wt.ll• ~Uppllet lrost. 0 1999 WttpWatchen

'

f ~·:30p.m.

•

PORTER - Trinity United
Methodist Church homecoming.
Morning worship at 9 a.m ., carry in dinner at noon, afterneon service
at I :30 p.m. Rev. Connie (Comer)
Saires guest speaker, music by Son
- Shine.

*** '

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.
Narcotics Anonymous Tri - County
group meeting, 611 Viand Street,

..._

Use your connections
to get the best rat~
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• Checking
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group at New Life Lutheran
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Sunday, October 3

.•.

Lafayelle Mall Gallipolis ·

...

Chain Sunday, 2:30p.m., Gallipolis
City Park.

•••

Th;rn$~;~· C~fe

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··The Community Calendar Ia published 111 a free service to non·
. profit
groups
wishing
to
.. announce meetings and special
events. The calendar Is not
. designed to promote sales or
· l~nd-ralaera ol any type. Items are
· 'printed aa space ]lermlta and can, not be guaranteed to ·run a specifIc number of days.
·

CADMUS - Cadmus High
: School homecoming, starting at I0
:: a.m., Cadmus Community Center.

Mirilrum deposit to open an aoooUnt is $5,000.lha amual peroentaae yield
sl'oow1 is accuate as of August 26, 1999. The bonus wil be creditedlo yoor
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AMERICUS, Ga. (AP)- Former President Jimmy Carter celebrated his
75th bi.rthday Friday night with friends, family and hundreds of admirers at
a historic theater, calling it "one of the finest days of my lit~."
Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, were joined by 600 people who packed the
recently restored Rylander Theater in Americus, about .12 miles from
:Carter's native Plains. More than 200 'others gathered in the parking lot of
Habitat for Humanity headquarters to watch the gala on a large TV.
· Singer Pat Boone and country music stars Lynn Anderson and the
McGuire Sisters were among the perfomters.
"I'm glad I made it, " Carter quipped when asked about turn ing 75. "As
far as my mental capac ity and my physical capac ity. I've never had a better
titne in my life." ·
.
'
Carter was _in a renective mood Friday as he spoke with reporters . Asked
about his legacy as the 39th president, Cartct replied, "We obeyed the law,
we teld (he truth and we kept the peace."
He also .called hi s loss to Ronald Reagan in the 1980 election his "higgest
failure. "
~
Since then, Carter 's esteem with the public has improved greatly. While
about a third' of the public approved of hi s JOb -performance as presjdent in
, pecember 1980, two-thirds now approve of hi s perfonnance .as president,
: -according to an ABC News poll released Friday.
; :. Three-fourths of t.he people surveyed approve of the humanitarian work
; Carter has done since leavi ng office. which may contrib ute to the improved
. ~mage of, his presidency.

,,

.,
'7

'

Pomeroy • Middleport·· Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

2

":I'~-;;. .

(

•

1-J

......

weDstte: ""'Nol.peoplesbaniXIrp.com

Gospel · concert planne.o with Released and
McKameys, October 16.at Rio's Lyne Center

RIO GRANDE - The gospel
music groups R&lt;fleased and The
McKamey will be in concert at
the Univ'ersity of Rio Grande's
Lyne Center on October 16, 1999,
beginning at 7 p.m.
Released began in January
1998, at the home of bass singer
•.
Rich Dillon. What started out as
a way to defeat a boring · winter
soon turned into several church
appointments in both Lawrence
and Gallia Counties. In May of
1998, Tim Moses joined the quartet giving Released its current
•
blend.
While most gospel groups
'
' endure years of travel and prac'· tice with little or no recognition,
Released entered the national
music scene in the summer of
1998, as The Eddie .Crook Company released thefr Morning Star
"Closer to you".
..• single
The Eddie Crook Co111pany has
been the starting block for many
'· of the top Southern Gospel artist.
'
In the early · 1980s The Eddie
Crpok Company saw the same
raw talent in another young group
Clinton, Tennessee, recog,,•' from
nized
across America as The
..
McKameys.
'·'·
The McKameys have enjoyed
'·•.
tremendous success from the
beginning but ~~.st of ihe national attention has occurred within
the last decade. Having been hon'·..,, ored with many nominations and
'• awards. almost every single
.... released this decade has charted
'·'· in the Singing News Top 40
'· Chart.
The McKameys have won the
hearts of Southern Gospel music
lovers acToss the country, ani!
now Gallia Counties Released
,, ciimbs the same la~der of suc'·'· ce~. Neither g.roup boast of for '·'· mal education ' !n music or entertainment, but both have a rich
family heritage· that has instilled
•.. the true meaning of .wot'6hip and
'·,, praiSe.
.
. Besides their obvious talent, .
:·.
'' Released is also known for their
''-· testimonies. "We've been 'through '
~- so much , the audience can feel

the sincerity in each voice," says ·
Willie Church, the quartets tenor.
Having 7,200 volts run
through him three times, Rich
Dillon by himself is a walking
example of God' s mercy and
grace. However. when you add
the brain aneurysm suffered as a
child by Tim Moses, and the
prison term served by Willie"
(convicted in 1988, of attempted
murder) , is it any wonder people
want to know more ab6ut
Released?
Baritone Mark Sanders
remains the only "normal" member of Released . In his words " ..
. God has nj)t given me a huge
testimony. nor do I want him too.
What He has given is the knowledge that His love, grace and
mercy covers all through His son
Jesus Christ."
For more information on ticket sales, please call toll free at 1877,755-1117. Tickets may be
purchased at the followin'g locations : Sanders Sunoco Service
Center 740~446 -0935. Church's
Grocery Store of Mercerville,
740-Zsti-6207, Shear Dimension

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Entertainment

Sunday, Octo~r 3, 1999
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.lhaNv alta.- Jk:db11l • P~ge

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Section

0

Sunday, October 3, 1999

Your personal rasset allocation
By JAY CALDWELL
' GALLIPOLIS - Too many mdividual investorS blur the diStinction.
between !'saving" and "investing." "Sav mg" IS settmg money aside in a si'cure
lotion for a certam need or deSire. "lnvesung" entails putting money to work
IO)Vards achieving a financial go~! with the possibility of generating return.
. As an investor, it is of utmost importance to be able to answer certaiq fundamental questions: Will your current investment portfolio be ab.le to, l)leet
both short and long-term investment objectiVes? Is your current portfolio correctly geared to your individual level of tolerance for risk?
·
One sound way to answer these questions is by utilizing asset allocatiOn
-a disciplined, objective investment game plan that will help you mee,(your
financial goals. Many financial professionals believe the asset allocatio~ decision is the most important step i~ the mvestment process. "ro be most effective, a personal asset allocation fuodel should be tailored to your particular
goals' and needs.
: A Simple asset allocation model for an individual investor generally
reqmres a portfoliO of assets divided mto three categories - stocks, bonds
and cash. Each IS ass1gned a fixed percentage. Based on thJS strategy, a conservative portfolio would generally contain more bonds and cash than stocks
~ more· aggressJve portfolio might contain a higher percentage of stocks.
Since diversification of assets is generally recognized as a reliable way to
reduce and manage risk in a portfolio, the mix of assets m your allocatiOn
model should reflect your preferred level of nsk Considerations such as cur-

Olivia Newton John is back

Another tour, a new movie
By TOM GARDNER ·
Associated Press Writer
RENO . NeY (AP) - M1dway
through .1 l:OIKCit hc1c, ,1s Ohv1a
Newton-John IS chatt mg w1th the
crowd between &gt;ongs. a male fan
shouts. " You' re my ch1ldhood
1dol 1..
W1thout mJSsmg a beat, NewtonJohn g•gglcs and replies, "You must
be very old "
Cons1der 1t more a tnbute to her
endurmg populanty than a comment
on her age .
Newton -John JUSt celebrated her
5 1st b1rthday.
She 1s well along m her first tour
of the Un lled States smce 1983 and
headed toward her firsl movte ruie
smce "Two 'of a Kind," wh1ch was
released that same year
"[ thmk what's kmd of mterest·
mg ahout thiS bmmess IS that thmgs

keep opemng up I reall y had no
mtent10n of ret urnmg. hut mentally
and cmouonally. I'm more ready
than ever," she saJ d
She s1ps tea, chatting softly
agamst the background hum of a
vapon1.er that she uses to counteract
the Nevada desert dryness. She puts
down her cup when her breast cancer IS mentioned.
"I draw attentiOn to it. I talk
about 11 even on stage because the
feedback I get 1s that by talkmg
abou111, by having survived it, I help
other women who are going through
that," she srud.
Newton-John recalled a chance
meetmg as she was recovering in
1992.
"It was Australia. Everybody
know~ what[ do. So this lady comes
up to me m the bathroom telling me
not to worry because she had cancer

20 years ago and she's tine [I was ,
IJkc, WOW' It was such a_grcat feelIng to have somebody say that to
me I'll always remember those few
words ."

Except for one bnef costume
change. Newton-John sang nearly
two hours to a capacity aud1ence
wllhout a break. " It sounded really
dau~t,'lfg when we started, but now 11
nics by. You're getllng aud1ence
feedback. It's not like you' re smgmg
to a vmd," she sa1d.
The three-song set from
" Grease," her 1978 film, was as
much a sing-along as a performance.
"The people come to hear yo ur
songs. And they don' t want to hear
them different~ ' she sa1d. "! remember when I was really young, I went
to see an entertainer that !loved and
she d1dn 't do her hils and I was really disappOinted , so I've always

remembered that."
Aiong w1th the medley · from
"Grease" and the title song from the
1980 film "Xanadu ," she m1xcd the
twangy " If You Love Me, Let Me
Know," "Let Me Be There" and "If
Not for You" with the soft "Have
You Never B'een Mellow " and " I
Honestly Love You."
"It's a journey through all of my
muSJc I have n't done everythmg
because I couldn't fit 11 all in," she
sa1d.
The crowd - whose average age ·
fell somewhere between Gen-X and
baby boomers - wore "Grease"
and "Xanadu" T-'shlfls Some carned record albums. COs and scrapbooks for her to autograph.
She hopes to do a new album and
concert tape from the tour. "The
whole thmg, not JUst tndiv1dual
v1deos."

Her next proJect IS an mdependent film , "Sordid L1ves."
" It's a qulfky kmd of mov1e, a
funny movie, " slie sa1d. " I'm gomg
to play a singer in it. I play kind of a
toughie. It'll be very d1fferent for
me."
D1dn't Sandy get a little gritty in
"Grease" when she got her perm,
put on her leather jacket and
sneaked that drag off a c1garette?
"This is taking II a bll further.
This is hke an ex-con this time," she
said.
·

The players enter their pond rink
along a snaking ice trail to the reverential cheers of the fan s. The town
fathers painstakingly assess caoh
player's performance. Schoolchildren gossip over who might get
dumped from the team and what
fresh young skater m1ght be "going
up
The town catches the NHL's eye
when an expatriate Mystery nat1ve
(Azana) lands an article m Sports
Illustrated, hyperbolically stating
that Mystery's players can skate
w1th the best of the pros.
The league dec1des to dispatch
the Rangers to. Mystery for an exhlbmon game, bnngmg dreams of
glory and terror of fa1lure to the
town.
"What 1f we lose th1s game 25llp?" Crowe. the town shenff. asks
ma, the mov 1e co mes ah vc onl y Azaria "You brought back the one
when the Rangers arnve for a thmg that cpuld te~
he heart out of
b1zarre open-au game agamst the this place."
· Am1d the tum'illt the Rangers'
home team
• How strange that the mov1e lum- VISit comes a spate o small-town
bers along so woodenl y before then, problems. The mayor 's wife is
considermg it's the latest b1g-screen cheating on him With one of ·the
entry from sm all -s~reen scnbe and hockey players. Crowe grapples
producer David E. Kelley, this with age as he's cut from the team m
year's double Emmy wmner for • favor of a younger skater. A grocery
" Ally McBeal" and "The Practice." clerk, one of the team's key players,
Kelley co-wrote and co-produced is put on tnal for shootmg a corpothe character-dnven "Mystery." but rate spy from reta1l behemoth Price
there 's little ev1dence of the sharp World m the foot
d1alogue from hiS character-dnven
None of th1s IS terribly mterestTV shows.
,
mg, though. The SJtuatJOns are
.There 's a fine ensemble cast fea- milked excessively for what is little
t~ring Russell Crowe, Hank Azaria, more than pifnmg drama, chokmg
Lolita Davodov1ch, Mary McCorma- off the few humorous forays m the
ck, Colm Meaney and Burt first pan of the film. such . as the
Reynolds as the patriarchal town team 's method ofpumshment. Forcjudge and hockey coach. But there 's mg a player to slide feet first into a
just not much for them to smk thelf snow ban.k wearing only a jockstrap.
skates mto ·
The grocery shootmg amounts to
The 1dea was a sound one for the nothing more than a cheap device to
sort of cccentnc charactenzations show how far the town will go to
Kelley excels at Mystery, Alaska, a rally ' round 1ts teltm. Once the trial
town of 633 somewhere m 1he 1s over, the Pnce World scenario,
Wastelands north of Falfbanks, l1 ves wh1ch at first seemed mtegral to the
for us Saturday
hockey games.
small-town-vs.-outsJde-world plot,
.

.

. Natalie Cole to sing
at LA Staples C~nter
LOS ANG ELES (AP)
· Grammy-w1nnmg smgc r rilata!Je
Cole will perform at the opc nmg
gala of the Los Angeles Staples
Cc ntc1
The Oct. 16 event \v iii be held
on the new baske tball court
where the Lus Angeles Lakcrs
,md Chppers teams will pl ay.
Proceed s lr om

t~t:

d1sappears through the ice.
J.ay Roach, who d1rected the
"Austm Powers" movies, seems lost
in weak materi al early on w1th
" Mystery." He finally gets some
action going about the tulle Crowe
pulls Azana over for dnvmg a Zambom under the influence.
In a w1tty scene, My stery's
mayor consp1res with L1ttlc R1chard
to smg an interminable version of
the nauonal anthem to keep the
Rangers, unused to arcuc weather,
immobile L1tde R1chard then
launches into "0 Canada "
"Austm Powers" star M1ke
Myers makes a funny appearance as
a hockey commentator spouting
such colorful sports babble as, " If
you don' t play th1s game with a big
heart and b1g bag of knuckles m
front of the net, you don' t got dmky-

Feeling blue can be
contagious condition

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By then, the mov1c IS down 12-0
Without much chance of catchmg up
" Mystery, Alaska ," needed a .
heavier dose of the wu and oddity
that characterized the small -screen
"Northern Exposure," set m fictional CJcely, Alaska, or Kelley's own
"Picket Fences." It's a mystery why
a talent like Kelley couldn't deliver
a big-league scnpt
" Mystery, Alaska," dJStnbuted
by Buena Vista Pictures, is rated R.
· Monon P1cture Association of
America rating defimt1ons:
G -General audiences. All ages
admitted.
PG - Parental gu1dance suggested. Some matenal may not be suitable for ch1ldren.
PG-13 - Spec~al parental guidance strongly susgested for &gt;children
under 13. Some material may be
inappropriate for young children.
R - Restncted . Under 17
requ~res accompanying parent or
adult guardian.
NC-17 - No one under 17
admllted

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Pnces Good October 1S1 thJU October 3111 Not JeiiX)11Sible lor typOg18phical911'aS

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SUPPLEMENTS AVAILABLE - The Meigs County Chlroprac·
tic Clinic in Middleport has announced the addition of Standard
Process VItamin Supplements to the cllhlc. Standard Process Ia
a company !hat produce• all-natural supplement•, which are
grown on Its farms and are not synthesized. The adventage of
this Ia that they are more readily absorbed by the body. Supplements can help with flbromyallsla, prostate problems, women's
health problema, nerve problems, thyroid disorders, allerglea,
stomach problems, painful jolnta, as well as many other organ
and muscle disorders. Both doctors at the clinic, T.E. Roell and
D.R. Williams, are trelned In nutrition and are ready to help anyone with health problems.

GALLIPOLIS -State Rep. John
A. Carey, R-Wellston, was the featured speaker for Gallipolis Career
College's annual commencement cereirlomes held Sept. 25 at the Faith
Baptist Church in Rodney".
In his address, Carey urged the
graduates to find their spec1al talent
By BECKY COLLINS
tend to respond negatively to purple,
and pursue it with determination."
GALLIPOLIS- Everyone has a gray and black, and that these colors
• He commented that the graduates
bout of m1ld depression from time to are assoc1ated with feelings of
had to make the most of the educa11me. I'm not talking about clinical despondency and a general lowering
tion they received at GCC as they
depression, which requires med1cal
of spirits.
entered the work force. Carey and
attentlon. I'm refemng to th~ e days
Are the blues associated with any.
guests m attendance were welcomed.
when you just feel down m the
particular
time of year or weather?
by J. Brent Patterson, GCC director.
dumps.
Yes.
Down
in the dumps periods were
Ronal Lynch, an mstructor at the colRecent research has found some
found
to
occur most frequently
lege, gave the mvocation and William
interesting answers to some of our
runong
subjects
in the fall. Next highE. Plants, GCC political sc1ence
questiOns about what causes and
est
mcidence
was
m the winter and
instructor, lead the audience in the
what can help m1ld depressiOn.
Pledge of Alleg•ance.
spring.
The
most
depression-free
FEATUREIJiSPEAKER- State Rep. John A. ment exercises on Sept. 25 at Faith Baptist
Are the blues catching? Yes.
time
of
year:
summer,
of course.
Following Carey's address, assoCarey of WeQ~ton was the featured speaker at Chu~ch In Rodney. Associate degrees and
Researchers at the University of CalHowever,
humidity
- most
ci~te degrees and diplomas were
Gallipolis C'lf.r'r Coll1!9e's annual commence- diplomas were awarded to 11 graduates.
ifornia demonstrated that being nea1
awarded by Patterson
noticeable
in
the
summer
- has a
a person who is feeling down can
Those receiving assoc1ate degrees sell, Carol Stewart aJ\il Tami Thomas. before the benediction by Lynch. Fol- College begins Oct. 4. For more cause you to feel vaguely disturbed depressing effect on many people.
1 u~11n~ the ceremony, the graduates mformation , 446-4367 or l-800-2 14included Beth AndreW's, Becky HenIn fact, justhstenmg to tape record- Studies at Kansas State University
0542.
dm~Jf,I~TY'•'HUglies:-·J.qlia &gt; ~~~~~~-~i~~
ings of voices of depressed or anxi- show that humidity has a much more
hall.
I&lt;ing, Chri6ti Reynolds, Gloria Rus- . ..
ety-ridden people can quickly pro- negative effect on men than on
Fall quarter at Gallipolis Career
duce a negahve mood in the listeners. women.
v
What QJ1 you do to send the
Can one's job affect the frepacking? A UmvefSity ofWisblues
quency of the 'blues? Yes. Studies at
consi
n
study shows that common
the Institute for Social Research m
depression
responds favorably to a
ByHALKNEEN
reflects off the house.
6696, and we will send you Oh10 behind Holzer Clm1c- Meigs County New York found that comfort, mon- Simple technique. Force yourself to
POMEROY- Are you prepared
The.Multicolored·As1an lady bee- State University's fact sheetii2158- Branch). It is bemg sponsored by the ey and convemence do not m them- participate 10 some form of positive
for the annual pilgnmage of ladybugs tle is a beneficial m~c t (it eats oth- "Multicolored As1an Lady Beetle."
Oh10 State University Extension selves Insure against the blues. The activity. This can be anythmg that
into their winter homes?
Me1gs County Master Gardeners and crucial factors have to do with work w1ll stimulate the body and mind.
er insects), so Ohio _ijate University
performance and accomplishment.,
Multicolored Asian lady beetles, suggests exclusiOn as the first 'Th"ans
Vegetable fanners, handmade adm1ssmn JS free
Stud1es show that those who
The
researchers found that people
better known as ladybugs, will soon of control Secondly, &lt;Hower up your crafters and home gardeners w1th
report
high levels of happiness and
be leaving their summer homes vacuum cleaner that h•s a disposable excess produce! You are invited to
The Athens Chapter of Ohm Eco- who had a chance to use their sktlls, sausfaction recogmze that down days
among the forest branches to seek bag and JUSt suck up the beetles . participate on Oct. 7 from 4:30-7 p.m. logical Food and Fann AssocJatJon is • had help at work, had a chance to be are just part of hfe. Some of the sucoverwintering quarters m our homes, He aviest congregatio,n of beetles at the Nelsonville Community Farm- holdmg their fall meetmg on Oct. 17 creative and learn new thmgs, and cessful ways to help combat the blues
had a supervisor who respected her
-garages andJ!arns.
appears to be near dust:'time, so time ers Market Harvest Celebration being at the farm of Roger Graves m Vmco-workers
' abll111es and mmntamed mclude having a sense of humor,
. If you hail problems in your home your vacuummg neart&amp;us hour Be held on the Nelsonville v1llage green. ton County. A potluck dinner starts
spendmg 11me With other people,
last fall , you need to fix up the house careful in smashing thebeetles with I
the day at I p.m ., followed by a busi- a h1gh performance m her own work exerCISe, and recognmng that you
ti'y chalking cracks around the win- a fly swatter, ~S they ma)' Slam yo ur I In addition to produce, dried flow- ness meeting and a,. fann tour All were less likel y to e&lt;penence JOb- have con trol of your thoughts and
related depression.
dows, doors, porch hghts, electric curtains or wall s.
.-.
ers, crafts and baked goods will be attendees are asked to bring table serIs it true that drab surroundings fee lmgs.
:outlets and attic vents. Install handThe ~etles w1ll n~' reproduce available. In addition, both pumpkin vice and a dJSh to share
(Becky Collins Is Gallla Coun:ware clotli (screening) over roof while inside your home~hey prefer pamtmg and live entertamment (Back
Roger produces free range poultry, can affect youtmood? Yes Stud1es ty's extension agent for-family and
·vents and attic to prevent beetle a cool, dry ana dark area.in wh1ch to Porch Swing Band) w1ll be on hand. rabblls and meat goats plus chemical have shown that men and women consumer sciences, Ohio state
University.)
entry. If monies are tight, the beetles hibernate. By late Febr"ilfy or early More information may be obtained free vegetables wh1ch he sells at the
)lave a greater tendency to enter the March, they will reappear m numbers from Nicole at Rural Action l-800- Athens Farmers' Market. Graves
home on the south or west side, so on any warm sunny day! looking to 531-7180.
Farm IS located two miles south of
start your impro,vembnts there. The start up their hfe cycle ofll!ltmg oththe intersection of state routes 160
beetles seem to(be more attracted to er insects and reproducin~r anothGardeners! You are cordially invit- and 124 (Wilkesville) on SR !60.
large white of light colored areas er generation. For more 1n rmation, ed to a 7 p.m. presentation on Oct. 12 Watch for signs. For more informaBy BRUCE WILLIAMS
where the late afternoon sunlight call the extensio11 off1c at 993- on "Gettmg Your Garden Beds Ready tion call Ed Perkins, chapter prcs1dent
DEAR BRUCE. I work for a company that noufied us, rather abruptly,
For Wmter" g1ven by Frank Porter, at 740-664-33 70.
that they didn ' t have enough money to pay the1r employees. The rumor is
Meigs County Master Gardener and
(Hal Kneen Ia Meigs County's that the owners don't even have enough money to file for baiikruptcy. Will
owner of Riverview Herbs. Th1s extension agent for agriculture
we ever be able to get our money?- S.G., Tucson, Ariz.
class will be held in the basement of and natural resources, Ohio State
DEAR S.G. If the company 1s broke and there are no assets, then I think
the Meigs County Annex located off University.)
that's the end of the game. Whether or not they have enough money to file
Mulberry He1ghts, Pomeroy (just
for bankruptcy is almost moot 1f there is nothmg to protect. It may be thai
they would have some personal liability, dependmg on the circumstances and
the constructiOn of the company. It might be well for all of you who are on
· PIKETON - Fred L. Stokes,
the short end of th1s one to h1re one attorney to make appropriate mvestiga·
ch1ef of production and environmen11ons,
and of course you should query the wage and hour diVISion of youi
tal engineering at Ohio Valley Elecgovernment.
.
state
tJ:Ic Corp. an Piketon, rellred on Oct.
DEAR
BRUCE:
My
wife
IS
currently
m
a
403-B
plan
with
a
fanner
non•
J., announced David E. Jones, v1ce
CARBONDALE, Ill. (AP) - A
The system involves a closed p1t , profit employer. The plan is doing well, and I would like to leave the man;
president of operation~.
Southern· Illinois
University
ey there. Do we have th1s optiOn, or must we take some act10n to roll1t over?.
_ OVEC supplies electnc energy for
researcher says he has developed a an air blower and an air scrubber to
M.M .. Anchorage, Alaska
.
,
use at the U.S. Enrichment Corp.'s
system to quickly strip the odor from recover offens1ve ammoma odors. A
DEAR
M.M
..
It
depends
upon
how
the
40~-B
plan
Itself
has
been
for•
uranium ennchment facility m Pikehog waste and produce high-grade farmer who produces 5,000 hogs a
mulate&amp;. In some plans 11 would be set up so that if someone leaves, the mon ~
ton.
fertilizer and surplus·energy to boot. year would have an Jmtml investment ey must be taken out withm a pre scnbed period of time. "Taken out" doe~
of about $50,000. The process would
Stokes began his career in 1960 as
The system makes use of the bacbegin turnmg a profit fol small fann - not mean pullmg II m your pocket; 11 co uld be rolled over into a traditional
a performance engineer with t~e
teria naturally present m manure and
ers
m four years or less Large farms IRA without any tax Impact. l would inqmre with the human resources depart;
comp1111y's Kyger Creek Plant at
is among the ideas bemg pursued by
could see profits after only one year. ment of the fanner employer as t6 whether she ISallowed to leave the mon-:
Cheshire. In 1966, he was promoted
researchers as Illinois hog farms · Blac kburn estimates.
ey there or 1f 11 must be rolled over. If she must roll it over, any decent broto senior performance engineer. In
continue tp grow in size and become
ker can handle the ent1re transactiOn for you, should you wish to consider
"It's
1mportant
that
research
like
1974, he transfem:d to the company's
less remote .
putting
the money mto some fonn of eqmty or mutual fund.
thiS
JS
getting
done.
It
may
not
be
the
l)j:adquarters office i,n Piketon as a Jackson. He is also a member
But engmeering professor J1m
DEAR
.JlRUCE. Do we need a w1ll if we plan to personally di spose o(
woduction and environmental engi- Script Ohio Club-OSU Ma1rchi,,g Blackburn said what sets his 1dea answer, but it 11)ay be a step in the
we have and g1ve 11 to our two children while we are alive?-·
everythmg
. neer, and was later named semor pro- Band. Stokes and his wife Mic:key apart is its economic potential - a
nght direction," smd Mark Gebben, R.M , Henderson, Nev.
:
duction and environmental engineer. reside m Jackson, and they are tbe plus for pork producers struggling
a
Clark
County
hog
producer.
DEAR
R
M
·
Why
m
the
world
would
you
do
that?
Unless
you
antici-:
' with a severe slump 111 P.rices for their
: In 1984, he was promoted to parents of one son and one daught~r.
Although the total number of pate goin g mto some health facility, where you won 'I be able to pay and you'
1
operations supenntendent at the
meat.
hogs produced in the state has actu- want to g 1~e everythm g away while you are st1ll healthy, mayl)e. IIJUSI seem;
Kyger Cteek .Plant. In 1986, he Prize winner named!~
Farmers would potentially have to ally declined in the last 10 years, that 1mpovenshm g oneself IS a very dangerous thmg to do. You m1ght countef.
l'f:lurned to the Piketon office as ch1ef
GALLIPOLIS _ Sus1e Wooten ••, buy less fertilizer and energy if the according to the llllnms Agncultural 11 wllh your trust for your children . Unforeseen things can happen. Divorces'
of production and environmental Point Pleasant, W.Va., was the grand · system works as well as lab tests mdJStatistics Serv1ce, pork producuon. happen , as do liablluy situauons. One of your k1ds could believe that they
en gineering.
prize winner of a recent NASCAR cate II Will. Hot water heat produced has beco·me more concentrated.
have ample msurance an d then go out and cause several m1Ihon dollars tn:
: Stokes graduated from the Uni- ticket giveaway sponsored by Loan dunn~ the treatment prcx_:ess co~ld be
Also,
with
urban
sprawl
and
the
damage
and wipe out your assets. Unless there IS some compelling reason:
v.ersity,of Kentucky with a bachelor
.
, used mstead of electnclly or gas to mcreasmg population of rural areas, for you to do what you say, II s,eems to me 'ihat you would be better advised'
Cena.
tr [.
h
· 1
·
d
·
of science degree in mechamcal engiShe received four free tickets to eat amma nursenes ·an contam- farms have many more nearby noses to keep these assets m your name and pass them to the next generation die:
Ji:enng In 1960 and i~ a member of
'
Charlotte &lt;Motor Speedway for ther ment bUJidmgs
traditional way - upon your death. •
•
to offend.
tbe UK Alumni Association College NASCAR race be held on Oct. O. ! Farm tnals are scheduled to begm
10
A
steady
stream
of
complaints
has
1
Interested
in
buying
or
selling
a
house?
Let
Bruce
Williams'
"Hou~
Of Mechanical Engineers. He is a
.
early next.year.
" We're putting waste treatment m plagued pork producers over the last S ~af!l ' be your gUJde. Pnce: $14.95,'plus shipping and handling. Call : (800):
!Jlember.of the Amencan Soc1ety of Tickets were,gJven awa~ at ~ach of
994-6733 •
•
Mechanical Engineers ana is a Ken- Loan Central s four locatiOnS1n Gal- {ii category where 11 's profitable," few years, promptmg legislation to
more
tightly
control
hog
farms
and
a
(Send
JOUr
questions
to.
Smarr
Money,
P.O.
Box
503,
Elfers,
Fla.
34680,;
ha, J.ackson , Lawrence and Pike ,:'§lackburn sa1d. "Farmers could actuiucky Colonel.
· · He is a member of the Christ Unit- counues. Loan_Central ts ~ wholly- · ililly make money from treating theif pledge by pork producers to )ie more E-mail to. brucebrucewi/!Jqms.com. QuestiOns of general inte~st w.i/1 ~~e:
answered in furure colw1111S. Owi11g to· the volume of mail, personal ~p,lits'
environmentally friendly.
ild Methodist Church and the Elks in owned subs1d1ary of Ohto Valley waste."
, CGIIIIOI be provided.)
•
' ,:
Bane Corp.

DISCOUNTS PIOCES ON:

'Mystery, Alaska' leaves audiences out in the. cold
By DAVID GERMAIN
Associated Press Writer
The lanallcal hockey players of
Mystery, Alaska, a mythical
Mudv1ll e where the path of glory is
paved w1th 1ce, are watchmg a
v1deotape of thelf next unllk!!lY
opponent. the New York Rangers
As a brawl among the NHL stars
drags on, one of the Mystery players
offers a suggestion to help prepare
tor the game· "Maybe we should
fast-forward to the hockey part."
If only the makers of "Mystery,
Alaska" had followed that cue.
"Mystery" enters sudden death
from the outset. The first two-thirds
'of thiS Cmderella-on-1ce story drags
Its tall IJke a defcnseman who's been
on the nnk for a full penod Without
a breather.
AfteP an hour of ted1ous melodra-

Legislatar
addresses
graduates
ofGCC

'

rent spending requirements, tax implications and mflatJon-adjusted;return may '
also be addressed thrbugh the asset allocation process. .
·
Asset allocation is flexible and revolves around personal needs. However, professional financ1al adviSors have generally found thatmvestors at various age levels tend to be best served by 'adoptmg all ocatiOn models tbat
address the needs of the1r "life-cycle phase" In most cases, the longer your
mvestment time honzon, the more aggresSive your mvestment strategy might
be
For example, investors m the If 30s and 40s tend to have' several needs
and concerns m common (e.g., children, new home, college educat1on, retirement planning). To address these co ncerns, an asset allocatwn plan that
emphasizes stocks 1s often recommended because they hiStorically have pro·
VJded supenor returns over lime. At the other end of the spectrum are mvestors
who are close to or who have entered mto retlfement Thelf goal m1ght mcl ude
prov1dmg enpugh mcome to mamtam a lifestyle, or growth of their cap ital
to ensure that they do not outlive their assets. For these m vest~rs. an aboveaverage holdmg m bdl\ds may be recommended
Obviously, these are gUJdelmes. When implemenllng as asset allocatiOn
strategy, the various percentages allocated to stocks, bonds and cash should
be"lissessed on a personal basis and reassessed p nnually. Be sure to check
With your financJa[ advi sor regularly on your asset allocatiOn strategy.
(Jay Caldwell, CFP, Is a financial advisor for Raymond James Financial Services, 441 Second Ave., Gallipolis, 446-2125, member NASD and
SIPC.)

.
•
I

I, ~

I

Researcher says his system
could deodorize hog odor

t

..

',I

•

.' '

"

�•

.

•

Strong economic report'
send stocks lower again
By EILEEN GLANTON

f*.P Buelneaa Writer

II

NEW YORK - Stoc ks resumed
theu slide Fnday af er new repor s
showed that the economy s surg ng
growth has not slo\\ ed n recent
months The data renewed concerns
that the Federal Reserve w II ratse
mterest •ales next week
The Dow Jones mdustnal average
(ell63 95 to close at I0 273 00 alter
: falhng nearly !53 po111ts earher m the
sessiOn The blue chtp mdex ended a
: frurly volattle week JUSt 6 33 po111ts
below last Fnday s close
Broader stock tnd1cators were
1
mostly lower The Standard &amp; Poor s
, 500 edged up 0 10 to I 282 8 1 and
the Nasdaq compoStte mdex fe ll 9 31
to 2 736 85
,
StO&lt;,:ks fell af er the Commerce
• Department reported that personal
1
111come - whtch mcludes wages
\ mterest and governmenf benefi s rose 0 5 percent m August thee gh h
stratght monthly ncrease
At the same llmll consumer
spendmg rose 0 9 percent n August
and the personal savmgs rate matched
a record low of negauve I 5 percent
Whtle robust consumer spe ndm ~ has
powered It growth of the U S
economy many economt sts fea that
tf spendmg conllnues un hec kcd
mflauotl wtll begtn escalat ng
The market s dechne accele ated
after the Nat iOnal Assoctat on of
Pure has ng Management reported the
natton s manufactunng sector grew at
a stronger than expected rate 111 Sep
!ember The NAPM also satd tho

mcrcascs take se veral n on hs to pro

Hew lett P ckard lcll 1 3/8 o 87
1/8 Fr d ty The computer maker
' an cd th ll s f seal lourth quarter
re\cnue could lall I rt ol Wal
Street expectauons because ol com
ponent shortage s caused by last
week s earthquake tn Tatwan
IBM le 13 1/4 1&lt; 11 7 3/4
Revlon shares slum ped 6 l/4 to 12
after the osmeucs maker atd 11
e•pec ed a lo 111 the th rd quarter
Revlon has not bee n abl e to find a
huyc r s 11 now ts look ng to se ll off
liS salon based bus ness an d some
Latm Amc tcan brands
Elt Ltlly rose 4 3/8 to 68 911 6 The
U S Food and Drug Adm mstrat10n
granted thc ~ ompa n y app oval to sell
an estrogen substtute used to preven
bn ttle bones tn won en \\ho are past
menopause as a treatment fo r osteo

ducc a mea urable cflcc t on the

p orOS IS

ecnno n y

And Mer k rose 3 5/ 16 to 68 1/8
after the co npan y pr scntcd s rong
results from tess of ts Fosamax
drug used to treat male osteoporost s
On he New Yo rk Stocl&lt;
Exchange dccl mng tssues outnum
bercd advanccts by a 7 to 5 marg111
Volume ol all hsted shares totaled
I 0 1 bt lhon shares compared wtth
I 02 htll on n the prev ous sesswn
The Russe ll 2000 mdex of small
er compan es fe ll 3 77 to 423 53
Overseas Japan s Ntkket stock
average rose 0 6 perce nt Germany s
DAX ndcx fell 0 5 percent Bnt a n s
FT SE 100 fell 0 5 petce nt and
France s CAC 40 closed 0 9 percent
lower

pr ccs ol raw nate ttl&lt; purled to th
h ghestle,cl tnce M ty 1995
I' rst the person I t~ come and
consumer spend ng report knocked
the 1 a ket dow 1
atd Alfred E
Goldman dtrcc or o market analysts
at A G Edwards &amp; S n Inc 111 St
Louts Then the NAPM reall y was
tl c bul let The n arkct rc lly dtdn 1
ltke tl e r sc n pncc patd
ave olf
The Fed h s tr ed I
mll atton b) rat ng li e C&gt;l r ll s
twtc o lar hts year Fear ol 1th rd
mere tse have kept st k ofl b t ance
lot the past n on h and whtle many
analysts expect tbc Fed to leave
rates unchanged when I mee s next
T dav Fr day s repo IS nJcCted a
last mmute note ol unccrtatnly
E~.:o n o m sis say
ntercs rate

The nlla 101 sc ns vc hand mar
kct cspon dcd mmed a ely to tl c
stgn ol conllnued c onom c growth
P
s slun ped pus) ng they c d on
tl c 10 year Trc su y h nd to 6 11
pcrcentl ro n 6 04 per cr\tl a c Thurs
da)
Bonds h d a cry bad day and
we c ce ta 1 y a ggc r lor he eak
ness 111 stt ck sa d R ky Har mg
on tcc hn ll'al 1 tlyst at Wa h v a
Sccur I cs n Cl 1 lotte N C Over
all there s st II a ot ol k n th s
narket
Ha nn gto n also c ted we tkness n
tl e doll ar wl td sl pp d u 104 96
Japanese yen Iron I06 27 late Thurs
da)

Alloclated Prell Wnter
CHICAGO - Soybean futures
pnces fell sharply m tradmg Fnday
on the Chtcago Board of Trade as
forecasters called for relattvely dry
weekend weather that wtll allow
~ontmued harvestmg
In other commodtttes markets
gold fim shed htgher and natural gas
futures rose
Soybean futures pnces slumped
desptle an esltmate from a closely
watclted pnvate analyst that produc
!ton was lower than the govern
ment s September esttmate Many
traders already expected the govern
lnentto lower soybean producuon tn
Its Oct 8 repon
Corn futures fell to a 10-week low
after an analyst esttmated productton
}lias 100 m1lhon bushels htgher than
the U S Agnculture Department s
esumate Wheat futures pnces also
fell
In tradmg Fnday wheat for
becember dehvery fell 8 3/4 cents to
$2 67 a bushel December corn fell 3
t/4 cents to $2 05 a bushel Decem

HelpWanted
SU Make $36 85 /Hour Sot

Announcement
NewTo YouTh ft Shoppe
9 Wes S mson A hens

740 592 1842

&lt;Q ua t ~ c oth ng a n ~ house ho d
tam s S 00 bag sa le eve y
Thu sday Monday h u Satu day

900 530

owner 304 895-3728
40

STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP
MANAGEMENT AND
CIRCULATION
1 Title of Publlc.ttlon The
Sundlty Tl-Sentlnel
2 Publlclltlon No ~ 500
3
Date of filling
September 30 1te9
4 Frequency of leeue
WHkly

5 No Of IMUH publlehed
Annu•lly 52

e

Annuli Subecrlpllon
M5 00
Home
Price
Del '-eel

7 locltlon of Known
Ofllce of Publlciilllon 11 I
Court It P~y OhiO
...... Co 457811 525 Third
M GIHfpolle Ohio 011111
Co 41131
I
Loclllon or the
He1dqu1rllrl or Oener1l
1ualn111 on1c11 or the
Publllhlre 8211 Third Ave
01lllpolll OhiO 41131
;

9 Publlaher

Charita W
Govey 825 Third Ave
Galllpole Ohio 45631
EdHor Charles w Govey
825 Third Avo Galllpolla
Ohlo45831
10 Owner Ralph J
Manln
chnl 3800
Colonnade Pk&gt;W Ste 450
Birmingham AL 35243 Tom
Undlay 221 Spring St PO
Box 887 Jofteroonvllla IN
47131 Jack Quick 136 E
Main St PO Box 1317
Lexington SC 29071
11 Mongagoo Retirement
Syetema of Alabema 135 S
Union St Montgomery AL
38119
Average No Coploa Each
IHue During Preceding 12
Month a
15 Extant and nature of
Circulation
A Total No Coploa
Printed 13264
B Paid Circulation
1 Sales through Doalora
and
Carriers
Straot
Vendors and Counter Salee
10879
2 Mall Subecrlptlona 735
C Total Paid Circulation
11614

ADENA HEALTH SYSTEM

Ade na Heath System A Rap d y
Expand ng n eg ated Hea thea e
De very Sys em In Sough Cen a
Ohio Is Seek ng P o ess on als
Fo The Fo low ng Oppo tun es

Masters Doctorate By Co re
spondance Based Upon P o Ed
ucat on And Sho Study Course
For FREE Inform al on ~o o kle t

Compute Use s N&amp;eded Wo k

Own H &amp;$25K $60K Y 1 600

536 0486 &gt;&lt; 7771 www 1cwp com

Cooks Fr~e s &amp; Bartendels
Needed Pa 1 T me Day &amp; Even
ngs Exp e en ce Helpful 740

•

Compul' 600 223 1149 E\1
460
OWN ACOMPUTER PUT IT TO
WORK $650 $3 500 MO PT Ft

Bonuses 01 $35 200 $71 900
Earned By 5a OS &amp; Mgm S aff
• Mgmt Opportun les In An
Unl m ed Make
• No Re oca on Even ngs
0 Weekends

2 9 Cento PHO~E CARD Ro
ute $750 $3 000 Wk CASH

FREE Local ons Free Card &amp;
Vdeo B86 200 7551 24 Hro

A2 lit PHONE CARD Routt
EASY$$ MONEY! •oca Aea
Ea n $500 $5 OQO /Wk CASH
FREE Info 1 800-997 9689
ARE U LAZY? I Am And Ea n
$1 000 A Oay No So tng Not

210

Buslnasa
Opportunity

WE ARE ENGERGIZING E
COMM ERCE ON THE NTER

31 o Homes for SBII

310 Homes for Sale

FREE TERM UFE OUOTE •ock

95 Ac es 5tve n Rooms P us
Ba h Two Ga ages Barn tO 5

2 Bedrooms In tow n Home lo

In LOW Ra es Now Exce ant Lo
ca Serv ce 1 877 TermOn ly
www TermOn y com

Mtes To Go po s 740 368
8942

Cos t G vas Y t..: A Camp e e
Package W th Men o ng And
T a nln g To He p You Succe ed
Ca ll Ivan Tu ne 877 324 8 35

have rete ences 13041675-4637

lmm ed oJe

F eo lnlo Pa ckage 1 BOO 631

2385 24 H&amp; Ext 63

open ng lor exper anced ph ebot
om st ful o pa t t me Respons
b t es wou d nc ude collec ng
spe c mens I om nu s ng h o n;~ e
pa ents n South East Oh o Sead
Gs ume to Ahens Mad ca lab

01 ce V s t Necessa y Up To
$500 lnstan y Ca To F ee

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard Selea Must
Be Pa d In Advance
DEAQLINE 2 00 p m
the day before the ad

Ia to run Sunday
edition 2 OOpm

vas to Pays CASH NOW Fo
Yo u Se e F nanced Mo tgage
Rea Es ale Cant act lnsu ance
Annu ty H gl'l es P ces F ee
Quotes Why Wa t? Ca ll R ch

GUAR ANTEED APPROVAL
Bank Ca d No C ed t Check No
Up Front Cash Secu ty Depos t
Requ ad Mus Be 18 And
Have Va d Check ng Acco un
P a App ova l By Phone 800

Professional
Services

Be ng Sod Now F nanc ng Ava I
ab e Ca Now t 800 730 7772
Eld 8040

II th s sounds g eat and yolJ
meet the equl amen s ca Ran

10 00 1 m Slttl'lloy

Fo Add t anal Oppo tun I es
Please Contact The Adena
Heath System Job l ne At 740

dy or Chrlotlno at 800.826-3580
o v s t our web page a
www hwtruck com

H&amp; WTrucking Co. Inc

779-794

H ng No Expe ance Pad
Ti a n ng G eat Benet s 5ta ~ 7
Days 6Q0-429-3660 EKI J 365

DAYS Ids nc Fee

ems

REGISTERED NURSES
Moterutty a Family Unll

Exper ence Necessa y Earn Up
To $40k Wo k ng At Home
Must Have IBM Compat b a PC

Call I BOO 697 7670 www mod

All Yard Sale a Muat Be Paid In
Advance Dead! na 1 OOpm tht
day btfore the 1d 1 to run
Sunday 1: MondiY edition
1 OOpm Friday

Bus ness Fe As L 11 e As S ooo

INOTICEI
All CASH BUSINESS I 1 600
OHIO VAL.EY PUBLSHING CO 220-2985 24-Hr&amp;
ecommend s that yo u do bus
rtess wnh people you know and
HOT to se nd mon ey lh ough the
ma until you have nvest gated
the oflonng

The

Excellent Wage And Benefit

Poclulge

Pnona 741).446-5105
Fax/TOO 741J.446.5106
RHpltOioryThotOplol
/Technician

&amp;
P ov de own Transportal on

must have abllly to be aTEAM

Cnlten)

Needed lo busy A hens

3082

•l!:atertalnlllet kolll the Bll
lead a......, tz.l the FI'CIIt

law Of

to loa n Co o (Wo d Perltct) 7 o SECRETARY for busy non prol l

Ae lrement plan ava lab e A g ea
opportun ty tor the mature ha d
work ng lnd v dua wI ng to make
a long a m c9.mm tment Sa a y
commensu a if w th expe ence
Respond to P 0 Box 729 fiB c/o
The Da ly Sent ne t Pome oy OH

45769
UNE /CABLE INSTA •• ER

ASSEMBLY AT HOME II Crals
Toys Jewe l y Wood Sew ng

Typng Great Pay CAU I 600
795 0380 Ext 120 (24 HtSI
ATTENTION
Havo Aco..,.ttr?

agency A m n mum of high school
ploma and two year e1epe lance
Must pos5ess good commun ca
ton ski Is (w tten and o at)
phoAe sk I s and expe ence n
M c osoft Wo d and Excel
Knowledge o da abase a plus
Send resume by Octobe t8
1999 to FACTS 45 01 ve 51 001

eo--·~
For Morelnlo1'1118tloa,
Pleue Contact

(I

Critel

F om Home Ful T a n ng Com
pule Requ ed Ca I Mad works

po s OH 45631
C•ASS A CD• DRIVERS Ded

cat ed Reg onal &amp; OTR So los

80

Auction
and Flea Market

I 30 M Teams S 34 /ml Spit
t OOo/. Company Pa d Heath Ben

ell&amp; Med col Denta Vs on

PLUS 40 k After 90 Days (W h

Public Notice

Match ng) Company Pad Vaca
on And Pad Ho day s 95"fo No

Touch F etgh Sattl to Corm&gt;un

G Total Dlatrlbutlon
11750
H Coploe Not Distributed
1 Ofllce Use Loll Over
Unaccounted Spoiled Alter
Printing 769
2 Returns from News
Agenta 581
I Total 13080
Charloa W Govey
Publleher 90
October 3 11199

cat on C ed t Un on Direct De
pos t Ass gned Conven onafs
Company Pad un orms Stock
Purchase Call 800 555 CWTS
cwt obsO con way com ConWay
T uck load Se v ces CWT IS An

EOE

DRIVERS Cannon Exp eS$ 99%
Dr ver No Touch F e gh Start At
32e M 5 Vr + Ellp 3t e M 3

Yr 300 M 1 Y 290 M 6
Mos 26¢ Ml 2 6 Mos Stud
onts Or I Mo Exp. $350 Wk Pry
Ra sa Every 50 000 M les Bonus
R de P og am Pa d Vaca
ons Ins Ava I www cannonex
pred com Call Fo Dt a Is
600 845 9390

ANNOUNCEMENTS

e~

P11rsonals
DATING TONIGHT

DRIVERS IMMEDIATE OPEN
INGS REGIONAl OTR Star AI
29 CPM AIM Unoa~ng Pay

Have Fun Meat ng El g be S n

gles In Your A ea Ca I Fo Mo e
800 RO MANCE

Pe sana zed 0 spatch

Home

Often Hot day tvacat on Pay

401 K Med cal P as /Dental As

• gned 99 T2000 s R de Pro
g am 98'll No Toucn Fr,lght
Ca I Butch At Summ 1 Transporta

tion BOO 876-G660 EOE

D ve s 2 Week Paid COL Train

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE S

tng No E&gt;p Needed No Monev
No C td t? No Prob oml Eolh Up
To $32 000 1o1 Y W Full Bene
Its PA M T ansport Cat Toll
Free I 877 230 6002 www ol

drives com

i

(

do you ra1e tn cus1omer servtce?

Sate Tested Nu s ng Ass slants
needed for 100 bed sk lied nusng lac ly Energet c erllhuslasflc
and dad caled staff to ca e to our
es dents Classes a e be ng set
up and nteres ed cand dates
should app y to Rocksp ngs Re

Now Accepting
Applications
on the Followmg Dates
For Cash1ers &amp;Sales Clerks
For Softhnes, HBA, Housewares,
Grocery, Overn1ght Grocery Stockers
&amp; Unloaders
All Sh1fts Will Be 4PM 11112 PM
S PM til lAM
Apphcat10ns may be p1cked up m
advance at Layaway Dept.
Interviews will be 1.00 pm tQ 3 00 pm
Oct
6

you answered yes to the questtons listed and
tnterested tn mak1ng a dtfference
and becom
0
an •mportant part tn a growrng anvtronment
tSCIMC may have a JOb opportumty for you
Excellent compensa1ton &amp; benefits

hab lollon Conte 36759 Roc~
BOO 540 6333 Ext spr ngs Ad Pomo oy Ohio
45789 Sandy Bowen lPN ln..

Quahftcattons MT/MLT (ASCP) certificatton or
gtble

MOTHERS a OTHERS WORK
FROM HOME! '-fa I 0 de Part
Tmo &amp; Ful Tme $650 $3 6Q9

Month Full T a n ng P ov ded
For FREE Book e Ca I I 686 2349897 www cash 9t 1 corrlhome

SOUTHERN OHIO MEDICAL CENTER
Human Resources Department Mercy Campus
1248 Klnneys Portsmouth OH 45662
356 7231

Need 7 Ladies To SeM Avon 740
446 3356
Need dependable pe son to work _ .:__....:..weekends ca ng to the elder y
call 740 992 5039 Monday
th ough F day between sam 4pm

-

-

---

only

110

ty Aeat1~800)

896 9706
NURSING POSITIONS

STAFF NURSES

E'"trgency Service• Includes
An 60"/o Pos tlon Cons st ng Of 3
8 Hour N ghts A 100% Even ng
Sh ft Pos ton (2 a s And 2 12s)
A 100 N ghts Po s t on 2 8 2
And 2 12 s) And A Full Tme
Even ng Sh fl Superv so And A
Casual Posit on We Requ e One
r ea Of Eme gency Serv ces fTi
age E~eperl e nce Or 5+ Years Of

Mld-Sutg Exporience

LEAD M•CHINIST I01 &amp; 2rd
MACHINIST 181 2nd &amp; 3rd
CNC Programme /Operata
1B1&amp;2nd
W e EDM P ogramme
~rao lSI
TIG WELDER 1st
Jan to 3rd

Wnerly

LFAD MACHINBI'
bt&amp;2nd
MACHINBI' 1st, 2nd &amp;3rd

ROUTE

SAL~----

when we can make your
furmture as good as new
We offer a large selectiQn
of sample fabncs new
foam quality
craftsmanship Call 446
3438 for a free est1mate
2250 Graham School Rd
Gallipolis OH 45631
Now accepting V1sa
Masrercard

Galha County Pnde
&amp; Tobacco
Assoc1at1on
Banquet
Thursday October 7
7 00 pm at the
Semor Ctttzen Center
Gaihpolts Ohto
For reservat ons
call 446 7007

DIABETIC SUPPORT
GROUP
at Holzer Med1cal Center

FALL WAlK
10/7/99 5 30 7 30 PM
Gallipolis Hub of Galha
County
H1ke &amp; B1ke Tra1l
Sponsored by Heart
Health of Galha County
Info Gall1a County
Health Dept
446· 4612 Ext 294
Gallipolis Park &amp;
Recreation Department
441 6022
Part1c1pants eligible for

Hosp1tal s

Iron Gate Gnlle

601 Ma1n St
5 Fam1ly Yard Sale
w1ll be open
Home lntenor shoes purses all
clothes m sc htgh chatr
Tue -Sat Even1ngs s 48ze Hubbard
Ave Kanauga
Mon
1
0/4
Tues 10/5
Mon ~~ for lunch
9?
675-2200
or 675-7030

Rt 7 P1zza
Express
X Large 3 Item $12 99
Two Large Two Item
$19 99
WE DELIVER

pad vacat on 6 Holidays 4011Ki

In

Enchanted
Flower Shop
New Locatron
2411 Jackson Ave
Pt Pleasant
675 7673
The Open House
Monday Oct 4th 9 6
Refreshments and
Red Rose to All the Lad1es
We Deliver and Wtre

Open 4 00 p m Da1ly

this IS the company for you! We are iooktng for customer
l .•,.,,,..,;r... oriented people to work wtth us Candidates must be 21
years or older have a clean dnvrng record and good work ethrcs
Base pay tra1n1ng penod and e}densrve benefits package
CAII1-800·336-7569
for a confidential Interview
Please refer to Ad #OHOS·X
Equal Opportunity Employer

•

Serenity House
serves vtcttms of domesttc
vtolence
call 446 6752 or
1 800 942 9577
R(}ad at R1o Grande
245 5747
Dnvtng Range Open All
Day/Everyday
25¢ ball dispenser
Lighted M1mature
Golf/Pro Shop
Open 4 pm ttl 8 pm dally
End of Year Reduction
Everything discounted
Getting ready for
the year 2000
3thru PW
x12 $500
DCI o/s $400
LCG
CD Owners
Are you rece1v1ng

700%
on your depos1t?
Ronn1e Lynch
THE LYNCH AGENCY
336 Second avenue
Gallipolis Oh1o

•

CHAMPIONSHIP
Broken Bone Productrons
French 500 Room
&amp; Bar S" Ranch Rodeo
Speaker
4 mtlas South of R o Grande
on Rt 325
Dr Rodney Stout
11-&gt;===:======91 Sat October 9
6 30 pm
Adults $8
Ktds 6 12 $4
6 &amp; Under Free

•

Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Problems wtth
your dnvmg record DUI s
speedtng t ckets etc
Same Day SA 22 s tssued
Call for a quote
Brown Insurance Agency
446 1960

446 8235

Programmer/Operator bt
TIGWELDERbt
JANITOR3rd

&amp; p or t shar ng Send Resume or
App ly n fa son Mon game y
Machine &amp; Fab Inc 20 ~ Walls

&amp;

Sunday Oct 10 1999
2 4pm

or Try

CNC l'lopammtr/
Operator 1st &amp;2nd
WtreEDM

•

Must have eJCpe ence to apply
Pay a es acco d ng o experl
enc e Hea ttl &amp; l fe nsu anoe

Blevins Sl PO Box247
Jackson Oh 45640 EOE
etudes A20% Casua Pos 1on At
Our Waverly S te We Requ e WILDLIFE JOBS To $2160 HR
One Year 0 Erne gency Se v ces INC BENEFITS GAME WAll
SECUR TV MAIN
fT age Ellpe enca Or 5+ Yea s DENS
TENANCE PAR ~ RANGERS NO
Of Mod Surg Expo lance
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
Quailed Cand date ShoUld Sub EXAM INFO CA •• 1 800 9t3
m t A Resume To Human Re 3565 EXT 14211 8 AM 9 PM
sou ce Development ADENA 7 DAYS fda nc Foo
HEA.TH SYSTEM 272 Hospllal 140
Buelnee•
Rood Chillicothe Oh o 45601
FAX 740 179 7902 Or TOO 740
Training
779 7933 II You Have Questions
Gl tllpollo Comr COitogo
Regarding Tho Emergency Post
(CirooraCioleTb Home)
tiOnl Please Call74CI-77Q.7894
Can Todal't740.446-43fl7
I 800-214-0452
Rog 4190-05-1274B )
Urgent C•rt

UPHOLSTERY
Why buy new furniture

Wanted

Needed Carriers fo Ga a Coun

Adana Reg onal Mad cat Cente
A 231 Bed Acu e Ca e Fac ty Is
Cur enr y s eek ng Tl'le Fo ow ng
Nurs ng Pos tiona

446-3100

twNote:;
Galhpohs, Ohw

you an enthusrast1c person?
you enjoy respondtng to customer requests
then exceedtng thetr expectations?
you relate well to people?
you smtle when a customer comes through
the door?

struc o Equa Oppo un y Employe

Church T easure 24 H s Per
Week Do ng Bookkeep ng &amp;
M sc o I ce Chores Must be
Compute L te ate Send Resume
o Grace Un ted Method st
Chu ch 600 Second Street Gal

740-388-9515
388-8030

WAL-MART

Calli 800-533-1657

Toll F oe
2312

Responstble for 24 hour admtrwstratron of
nurs1ng serv1ces on Sktlled Nurs~ng Fac1ht~
Must be an Oh1o Ltcensed RN prefer BSN
Adm1mstrat1ve and Chntcal expenence tn
genatncs preferred but not requrred
Contact Human Resources
115 E Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740 992 2104

Gal po s Olio 45ti31EOE MIF/H

IJIEDICA• BI.UNG Ea n Exce
tent $ S $ I P ocess ng C a ms

Call for appt

HEAD NURSE

• Fne Fun for the Whole

No Exp R&amp;qd We P ovdeTian
ng Good Sa a y And Bene! s
Trave And Advan cement Oppor
tun t es To Qua ed H S G ads
Age 33 And Under Inc ud ng Re
qu red Re ocat on For More In o

Put It To Wo kl

$25 $75 /H PTIFT
686 B90-3461

20 Yrs Exp
License &amp; Bonded

Help Wanted

and MJI'OII D1lllleld

I ce Must know o qu ck y be able

740-446-2545 or 740-446-0724

Horse Trailers Boat Tra1lers
FREE Estimates

CREDIT PROB.EMS STOP
HERE WE CAN HELP I LOANS
I)JA .AB.E $3 000 ANI&gt; ti P
CA•l TOa FREE 877 66 3
9269 Ell 231
CREO T REPAIR I AS SEEN ON

110

• Pll a.... with all the Rwlnp

Send Resume to GAWPO• S
Da ~ Tr&lt;bune 825 Th rd Ave %
ADVERTISINGSA•Es REP

F ve lam y ya d sa e October 4
5 Beechg ova Au and Pe sana
dolls and much mo e 740 742

REAL ESTATE

Free Info 8B8-659 2560

•Cnft Sb- (No Chari• For

P~l'lr

30 Ft Boom Good ConditiOn Clean
Pnce $16 000 00 or Best Offer

DEADLINE 2:00P.M.
Complete Pa1nt &amp; Repa1r
Backhoe &amp;
Cars Trucks (Any Stze)
Farm Tractors
Dozer Work

TV E ase Bad C ed t Lega ly

Center's :.;a•t~l
Annual Oetoberfest!
Saturday,
October z~, I999
Noon·4PM

Re•ote
Control

GRAHAMS

~ 01ve••broolk

ces

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 JaCkson Pko
Gal pols OH45631

Mus have gQOd drMng recorll

sa com

Annouocements

Please Contac
Ros e Ward
0 acto Of Human Resou

Must have good Commun cation
skiUs

-8ll8 582 3345

mp e Easy And FREE Check

START YOUR OWN VEND ING

G660

9 9 Ex H5023

My Web S te www sec ets2suc
cess com/specll.l49700

Med cal Con o Full T me And

Fo We Estab shod loca Co
SERVING TAl COUNTY AREA

No Fee Unless We W n

MONEY MAKERS SECR ETS
S

:Reg s e ad N~rses Are NeedJd
lmmed atety For 12 Hou Sh hS In
The New y Renovated Mate n ty &amp;
Fam ty Se v ces Un At Ho tze

HAVE DOCTORS NEED Btl• ence And AN l cansu e In
ERS FIT PIT Med ca B II ng No State 01 Ohio Ae Requ od

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC A. SECURITY /SSI?

310 Homes for S&amp;le
$0 DOWN HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED
GOYT FORE
URES CA•• NOW FOR
CONSOLIDATE DEBT Raducod CLOS
REGISTRATION 1 800 434
Mon hly Payments 20 50% save
2434 EXt 3205 (NO FEE
Thousands Of Dalla s In nte est
Non P oil TCC 600 758 3844

Make At Least $5 000 Week

LOOK

992,7945

- - - -- - - - - -

Business
Opportunity

1985
Gradall

5 Bed ooms 2 t 2 Bath s ova
2 000 -sq It lo ess than $400
mo FREE ae ve y &amp; set
800

House &amp; 5 acre s heat pump
emodeled
as k ng
needs
$30 000 two m es eas on long
Run om Bashan F e Dept 740

.667

POSTAL JOBS To S18 35 /HR
INC BENEF TS NO EXPEill
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CAll 600 8q 3585
EXTU2106AM 9PM 7

abe Ono( 1) Yea Of OB Expo

Equal Opportun 1y Employer
ADVERTISING
SA.ES REPRESENTATIVE

watch

210

Pa r T me Pos r ons A e Ava I

O..WV25545

Fax 740 779-7902

FINANCIAL

Postal Jobs I4B 32~ oo Yr Now

0

BULLETIN BOARD

MEDICAL BI.LER Up to $15
$45 H Med ca BII ng Soltware
Company Needs Peop e To P o
cess Mad ca Cia ms F om Horns
Tra n ng Prov ded Must Own
Compute s t 800 434 55 8 Ell

HURRY HURRY HURRVI
OAKWOOD HOMES
BARBOURSVIL•E WV

HOME FORECLOSURES NO 948 5676
MONEY DOWN NO CREDIT
NEEDED TAKE OVER VERY
W W PAYME NTS 1 900 9 6

4oo E State Athens Oh 45701

portence Clall A COL Hazmot
&amp;Cieln MVR

Friday Monday edition

4BR 2BA $499 Down 5259 mq
1304)&gt;55-5566

1 3 Bed OQm loca l Governmen
&amp; Bank Fe ec osu es F nanc ng
Poss b e Fo L st ng s Ca BOO

877 EAR.YPAY s ADVANCE 3 9-3323 Ell 1709
FREE l c•cc70036
FORECLOSEDHOMES Low 0 0
RECE VIN G PAY MENTS? n Oow n Go And Bank Rep o s

689 1556

•

Hea th Eye &amp; Dental
40 K Ret ement
Paid Holidays &amp; Vacation
Home 90o/c of Weekends
o-r Dperotcn
Wo Pry Pe mIS &amp; Fue Tax)
Pad Waokty &amp; D eel Depos
lnsu ance Plan
Sa e te Rental
You Mutt a. At L111t 22 ynrs
of age &amp; hove I Yoor OTR Ex

Yard Sale

1999 Ooub ew de Repo Never
L ved n New Home War anty D
Down f Qua fed 740 « 8 3093
Oakwood Gal pol ~ Only I

.:..::=.:.:._----=====l--~800-~
383-61162

Buy Homes Fom$10 000

800 868 6450

Growing
(We e dong someth ng Rgh)
Company Drtvero
(Van&amp; Flatbed)

70

740 256 6382

tac hed 2 Ca Ga age Poo Lo
cated Between B dwell &amp; V nton
A&amp;
kng $114 900 74Q-388 6074

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No

600 626 8523 us Canada
www glass mechan x com

'W I do babys t ng n my home I

3 Bedrooms ~

Heal Pump Electr c $2 1 OOt

uo

ng NOT Replac: ng Long C acks
In W ndsh e ds F ee V deo

EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR

t h 80 Very N Cl

Clean

Wpnt A Home Don Ha'f'e Land?
We Do Hu y Onl~ 10 Lots le t
600 383-6862

$4 000 + Mo Income
ALL
CASH! 100o;. F nance Ava lab e
160D-360 2515 24 H s

Send Us A One Page Fo m We
Do The Aes No D eel Se ng

1"'9'93 C la~to n

Baths wlh Bg Roun~ Bathtub

TC.28566

AVAILABLE VEND NG ROUTE
10 20 •ocat on&amp; $4K $1OK

S ate Rou e 80 Ga I po l s
Ac oss F om l'io ze Hosp tal No
Phone Cat s P ease We 0 fer A
Ca ee Not Jus A Job Fu T me
Pos t on W th Poss b e Re m
bu smen t Of l censu e Fees
Cu rent Tech Reg 5I a on NQT
Requ red

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Supe

Sa e (740) 446-2857

3 20 Sq Ft 01 L v ng Space AI

TECHNOLOGY low Sla I Up

Mad cal /Den al Cia ms Compu e
Requ rod WII Ta n I 600 289
4!59Ell 54

App y A F uth Pha macy 2991

2 Exce lent Pay Packages
Pad Weekly &amp; D ec Depos

320 Mobile Homes
fDr Sale

Must Sa 4 Bed ooms 3 Baths
B ck Ranch On '2 12 Aces
Cathed al Ce ng , Ful Basement

NET! Have You Own Tu n Key
On na Bus ness Th ough HANO

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Repa

PH.EBOTOM IST

220 Money to Loan

40Yurs In Bualneas and Sill

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Info ma on

Buelne88
Opportunity

age Call 1 800 786 B849 24 H•
XT27
AT HOME DATA ENTRY$OUT
STANDING INCOME$$ Proce&amp;&amp;

pany Ne~s Peo p e To P ocess
Mad ca l Ca ms From Home
T a n ng P ov ded Must Own

Need s New 0 E11pe anced
Salespeop e We Otfe
• E11cellent Sa as T a n ng In A
High Repeat Bus ness
• Ba se Comm ss10n + Prot t

210

-'ambv Gluu• -'entmel • Page 03

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Po1nt Pleasant, WV

&lt;MLM For F ee lnlo mat on Pack

H Den at B ng So ttwa e COI'Jl

Control Time )lOT MLM
Ha WTrucking Company Inc

272 Hospta Road
Ch ICOihe Ohto 45601
740-779-7562

EKI 9735

180 WantadTo Do

DENTAL BILLER Up to $ 5 $45

ales On Pos t ve An ude And
Suppa t To App y Fo Sta ew de
Pas ons Ca l
1 600 253 6822 BAM 5 P M

Human Resource Development

005
START

Phone CAMBRIOGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 600 964 6316

446 6647

Ou Fam y 01 Sak!spoop e Ope

116~5

D Froe Distribution by
Mall 0
E
Free Dlalrlbutlon
Outside the Mall (Carrier or
Other Moana) 95

Help Wanted

GOOD SA.ESPEOP.E IMGRS
ARENT BORN THEY RE
TRAINED &amp; SUPPORTED!
Expand ng ndust y •eade

DANCERS
Top Do a 740)992 6387

SALEM Ore (AP) - Oregon s
hazelnut growers should have a
healthy harvest thts year producmg
crops that could be among the most
plenuful tn state htstory accordmg to
prOJeCtiOns
The currenl crop should reach
37 700 tons accordmg to a forecast
by the Oregon Agr cultural StaUsllcs
Serv ce That s up from 15 565 tons
produced 111 1998 but down from the
record 47 000 tons tn 1997

D Free Distribution by
Mall 0
E
free Dlatrlbutlon
Outside the Mall (carrier or
Other Means) 95
G Total Distribution
11709
H Coplea Not Distributed
1 Ofllca Uoe Ltfl Over
Unaccounted Spoiled Alter
Prlntl~g 451
2 Returns from News
Agante 1104
I Total 13264
Average No Copies of
Single lseuo Publlehod
Nearellto Filling Data
15 Extant and nlluro of
Circulation
A Total No Coplee
Printed 13080
B Paid Clrcullllon
1 Sales through Deeloro
and
Carriers
Strtlt
Vendors and Counter S1lt1
10954
2 Mall Subacrlptlone 701
C Total Paid Circulation

Openings n 'A I Aspects 01 E ec
t leal Work Pad Train ng Ae lo
cat on Good Benet s Rap d A.d
vancement Cal 1 800-533 657

110

Schoole
Instruction
EARN A LEGAL CO. ~EGE DE
GREE QUICKLY Bachelors

FREE De a s Log On o hip
www hbn com Access Code 5298

cooperallve markeung efforts 111 the
last two years trymg to promote that
market
State agncuhure offi ctals have
lobb ed grocers ltke Kroger to get
more Kentucky produce on the
shelves w th labels that stand out
And the agency has granted $2 2 m I
lt on to value addeq farm products
hke horttcullure last year

Public Notice

ELECTRICAL
APPRENTICESHIPS
Ago&amp; 1 26 Hgh School Grads

5 Box 436 ANTIOCH TN
3701 438 Sta 1 mmed a ely
$800 WEEK.Y BE YOUR OWN
BOSS PROCESS NG GOVERN
MENT REFUNDS NO EXPERt
ENCE NECESSARY 600 B54
6469 Ex 5046

Company Pa d Ret rement Plan

Public Notice

Help Wanted

Ru sh Se t Add eased
Stamped Envelope GICO DEPT

ADENA HEA•TH SYSTEM

~.;;;;.;;.:;..;,;.,.;;,;;...;,;.,....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.-:----1

Public Notice

110

v da d

MEDICAL ASSISTANTS

her oat lcll I c r to \ J 12 1/4 a
bushc and No c 1 be oybcans Iell
10 1/4 entto $4 81 a bu hel
Lean hol! Iutures p ces rose n
radmg F td y on the Ch cago Mer
canuk Ex c ha n ~c amtd con11nued
stron£ demand and cxpcctat on that
exports wtll t engthen th s lal Ll\ e
cattle tnd p rk bell cs luturc also
rose
0 tubct I vc caul ose 0 50 cent
to 68 77 ce nts a pound October feed
er catt le rose 0 78 cent to 81 85 ce nts
a pound October lean hogs rose I 40
ce nts o 50 37 cents a pound and
February pork belites ruse I 70 cems
to 65 60 ce nts a pound
Gold rega111ed some of lls value
Fr day on the New York Mercanttle
Exchange f1111 shed up $5 80 at
$305 30 per ounce buoyed by the
doll ar s cont111ued decl111e aga111stthe
yen as well as the slump tn bonds
and stocks Pnces had retreated
Thursday revers111g a frenzted pr ce
rally earl er 111 the week that saw
pnces as htgh as $329 Tuesday
Plaunum and palladmm also rose nca ne season
December palladmm rose $7 35 to

Lots of tobacco farmers are on
the out s de look111 g 111 and wantmg to
test the water Rowell satd But
when you rc starttng wnh a whole
new technology and n thts case a
real cultural hange you ve got o
have lots ol hands on help
But II could be a tough sell f r a
state outpaced by vcgc abi es gro" n
n other tobacco s ates Vegetables a e
a $40 m jl on rop n Kentucky Fel
lo" tobacco state North Carolina
already se ll I 0 I nes th a a noutl
accord tng o the USDA
You st II can I get any crop
nsurancc because the qllant es of
vegetables grow n m Kentucky are too
small to at r tel an nsurc
sa d
Ge rgetow n grower Ann Bell W th
out nsurance bankers won t lend
money for ho t culture ventures and
start ups
Overall $900 000 tn state and fed
era) match111g money has gone 11110

Paid Vacatlonot Call 1 800.721
9172
$2 000 WEEKLY! Ma I ng 400
B ochu es Sat slact on Gua

Substitute sought for tobacco
LEXINGTON Ky (AP) -You
5ay tobacco Brent Rowell says lorna
to
Rowell ts a Umversuy of Ken
tucky vegetable spectaltst studymg
ways to make the Kentucky grown
tomato a vtable alternat ve to tobac
eo
I thtnk after tht s year we wtll
have one that wtll work Rowell
Satd
HIS work ts pan of efforts by fam
dy farm advocates 111clud111g the
Kentucky Department of Agnculture
Communny Fann Alhance and Com
mod1ty Growers Cooperalt ve to lielp
the stale s 62 000 small farmers
retooltfthey can l hve off the state s
No I cash crop anymore
Agnculture leaders want to use
half of Kentucky s $3 45 btlhon first
phase tobacco settlement money to
hue field staff and conduct held In
als 11110 altemattves

Yot~r Schedule Bt Your Own
8011 And Work Out Of Your
Home Anywhere Or.. t Ply!

anteed Postage &amp; Supp as P o

Sheryla Diner Letart WV Open 6
AN 6 PM Sh er y l M~::d e rmott

Futures in soybeans nosedive
as gold, natural gas increase
By TAMMY WEBBE-R

110

150

·"

•

Sunday, October 3, 1999

Sunday, October 3, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

•

For More Information
'
446·2342 or 992·2156

Kyger
Assoc1at1on w111 be
holding s1gnups for
basketball 2nd to 6th
grade Cheerlead~ng
K thru 6th grade on
Tuesday October 5 and
...,r~,., October 7 5
t1l 6 30 P!Tl at Addav1lle
Elementary and Kyger
Creek Middle School
5th Annual
Health Information Fa1r
Thursday October 14th
12 oo p m 3 00 p m
at the Me gs Multtpurpose Center

78 S 1lver Anmversary
Corvette

Call
446 9151

I

!

�.

.

--- ----.--

Sunday, October 31~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
320 Mobile Homea
' for Sale

320

..

Mobile Homes
!or Sale

320

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

2UCRES
2 M l~s 011 SR 7 &amp; SR 218 Sou\h
01 Gallipolis Slnglewld&amp;s Allowed.
Rough Mostly Wooded Road AI·
ready Cut In Lai"'d Contract
Avallabl~n l y $27,000 1 800·
213·8365

DoubltWido Dlaplay . Sale .t.ll

units must go Save lhousanca

Schult New Generation Sectional

Frta MoneyiCash Rebates that

28 x64 LR Family Room Fue
place 4 Bedrooms 2 Batt\6
Thermopane Wtndows &amp; Much
Moret Priced To Mo't'el Frenc h

Oakwood Homoo. Nitro wv
(304l755-5885
can be used toward&amp; your Clown

payment, only at Oakwood
Homea, Nitro, WV 1304l755.·
5885
HUD Homes .t.pproval By Phone
Smgtes Or Doubles , 740·44 6
3583

304 675-1400

Schult New Generation I 6 x72 3
Bedrooms 2 Baths Vinyl Siding
Shingle Roof 2 x6 Walls Garden
Tub Skylights Total Etectrtc

Free AIC Sale Pnced French

Lmiited Otler 1999 Double Wide
3 Bedroom, 2 Batt1 $1799 Down,
$275 00 per month Delivered
·aM set up Call 1·800-948·5678
Moving OUt 01 Aroo. Must sell at
sacrifice 98 S W like New
l304l736-9102
MOVING OUT OF AREA MuS\
.' • Sell At Sacraltce 1998 sw Like
• • New 304·733-9102

ij

Ctty Homes Point Pleasant. WV

New 39R 2 BBih 14 W1de $500
Down, $210 per mo Free Air 1
800-691-6777
New 48A 16 wtd&amp; $500 Down
$245 par .rna Free Atr, 1·800691-6777
New Doubi&amp;Wtde Repo, never
hved In, Still under warranty
1304l755-7191
Schull Fiesta t4x70 3 Bedrooms
1 Balh, Vinyl Siding Sh1ngle Root
2'x6 Walls Total Electuc Free AI
C Pnced To Move French C1ty
Homes Point Pleasant WV, 304675-1400
Schult New Generation Secttonal
26 x52 Featurmg Schult Country
Kitchen, 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths
Sale Pnced French C1ty Homes
Point Pleasant WV 304-6751400

Ctty Homes Po1nt Pleasant WV
675 1400

•
All real estate advert1slng
In
this newspaper Is subJect to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
pi 1968 which makes 11 1llegal
to adverttse M
any preference
hmitat•on or discriminatiOn
tJasea on race, color reltgton
sex fam1ltal status or nattonat
ongm or any 1ntent1on to
make any such prelerence,
hm1tah0n or d1Scrlm1nat1on •
Thts newspaper will not
knowrngty accept
adverttsements for real estate
whtch ts m vtolatton of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwe llings

advertised tn ttfts newspaper
are a'/atlable on an equal
opponumty basts

110 Help Wanted

WANTED
INDUSTRIAL SEWERS WITH
MORE THAN 1 YEAR EXPERIENCE
$$ $500 REWARD $$
(NO EXPERIENCE-WE WILL TRAIN)
DO YOU WANT
$500 HIRING BONUS?

.I

$100 TO $400 REFERRAL BONUS?

I

COMPETITIVE WAGES?

•

I

MATCHING 4011 PLAN?

2 44 Acres Homestte Green

360 • Real Estale
Wanted

Townshtp, Gallla County Scan•c I:::-'7.'"~:-"'~-::-::-:::-:-:::-=
Quiet, Close To Gi!lllpohs Some Do You Need To Sell Vour House
Restrictions 740-245-5776
NOW? We Will Pay Cash For
Aestdentlal Properly In Gallla,
3 + Acres on Stale Route 143 Jackson Ross Scioto &amp; Ptke
!3041882·3383
Count••• Calli 800·388·8194
73 Acres 38 R 29 A Ranch For ANo Obligation Evaluation
Home 2 Barns Wood Pasture We Buy Land 30 -500 Acres,
Call Homestead Bend Broker at We Pay Cash 1-800·213·8365,
[304l882·2405 or (3041882·2221
Anthony Lard Co
a 2 acres Bashan Ad 14 acres
RENTALS
Morning Star Ad , owner llnanc1ng
avatlable 740·992·5072
Acre Sect1ons Wooded 410 Houses lor Rent
Farm Land Hamson Township
$52 000 740 25~637
' 2 Bedrooms Large LR Kitchen.
Dmlng Area $400 00/mo Deposit
Required No Peisl l740l 245·
5053 alter 4 OOpm
BRUNER LAND
741H41 -1492
2 Houses On Lovers lane Overtookmg River Each Wtlh 2 BadGallle Co Fr1endly Rtdge Ad , roms, Small House $350/Mo Big
Hunters 15 Acres $12 600 cash House $450/Mo , 740·446·t243,
$14000 financed Water Ci ty 740.446 1615
Schools
3 Bedroom Bnck Home 6662 S A
Melga Co RlJtland Wh1tes H1\l 5BS Rodney Contact 0 K Phil·
Ad 11 Acres $14 000 or 9 Acr- l1 ps 740·385 4778 For lnformaes $12 000 Danvtlle SA 325 9 !ton
Acres $17 000 Water On Bnar 3 Bedroom HallS&amp; Central HeaV
AtdgeRd ·7Acres$13000
Alr 2 Car Garage 2 112 Batl1
Call NOW For Free Maps + Family Room $5!50 per montl1,
Owner Flnancmg Info Take lO % plus Deposit One Year Lease
Off List Price On ca~sh~B~u~ys::_'_ _J...:;(3=04=l6=7=5=·7:;
87=3=------85 &amp; 22

110

Help WaAted

EXTENDICARE HEALTH SERVICES,
INC,. IS CURRENTLY SEEKING A
HIGHLY-QUALIFIED, SELF-MOTIVATED
ADMISSIONS COORDINATOR FOR
ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS
ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS OFFERS:
•COMPETITIVE SALARY
•EXCELLENT BENEFITS
•EXCELLENT TRAINING PROGRAM
•JOB SATISFACTION
•PROFESSIONAL WORKING ENVIRONMENT
The Quahfted Candtdate Wtll Have Expert
Management, Marketmg, Commumcatton, And
Orgamzat1onal Sktlls. Soc1al Servtces Or Ltcensed
Nurse Preferred
To Take Advantage Of ThiS
Exciting Opportuntty, Please Forward Resume,
lnc~udtng Salary Htstory, In Conftdence To·
Wtlllam Btas, Admtntstrator,
Arbors At Galhpolts,
170 Ptnecrest Dnve,
Galltpolls, Ohto 45631
Public Sale and Auction

A FRIENDLY AND HELPFUL WORKING
'ENVIRONMENT?

RT. 7

GALLIPOLIS, OH

(Off Rt. 35 take Rt 7 south two blocks)
WEDNESDAY OC rOBER 6 ,,,. 11 A 11.1
lnspt'CI &amp; RC'gtstet •" TO 00 ,1 111

PLUS, 90% PAID MEDICAL PREMIUMS?
INCLUDIIG MEDICAL, DENTAL AND DRUG
THEN CALL IKEDA
INTERIOR SYSTEMS, INC.
937·492·2701

94 Pinecrest Drive, Adjacent To
Arbors Nursing Home. 2 Bed·
rooms CA, Gas Heal, Dlshwast'l·
er, Range, Rtfrlgtrator Washer &amp;

Dryer Furnished. Available 10/1/
99 $425 Lease. Deposit Re·

Qutred , 740·~2957

For lease 2.000 Sq Ft E~eecu ­
tlve Home, Near Goll Course,
$750/Mo, 740-446-2957
Pomeroy three bedroom house
two bedroom apartment references security partly furnished 740.
992-6886 attar 5pm
Two bedroom home In Pomeroy,
private setting $260 month, $75
deposit call740.985-4258
420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

440

2 Bedroom Moblle Home, YOu

Pay Utilities, &amp; Deposit, In Porter
Area 740-388·9t 62
2 Bedroom Natural Gas Furnace,
Air, Very Nlca In Gallipolis 7404~6 2003,740.448-1409

Bedroom on Cora Mill Ad De· - - - - - - - - - posit and- References Required! 1 Bedroom Apartment In Gall1po
No Petsl l740l·245-5622
lis Water Paid $265/Mo, Depos1t
Required No Pets, 740 446·4043
2 Bedrooms In Small Trailer Park After 6 PM
7404461104
1 Bedroom, 2 Blocks From Uni2 br elec heat with central air versity Rto $235/Mo , Plus De
121164 on nice lot Mason Phone posit Avatlable October 12th
740·388·9994
304·882 3287. leave message
28R Tratler Central Atr New
Heating System, Qwat Neighborhood, Washer/Dryer Hook-Up No
Pets Secon[j Trailer on left, on
Roush Ferrall Drive ol Camp
Conley Road $320 month plus
deposit
All Elec , 12x65 Private Lot
$200 a month $150 deposit No
Inside pets You pay elec water,
garbage (304l675·40ll8

2 Bedroom MoblfiHome In Kanauga, $3t51'MO.,- $300 Deposit,
No Pets 740-446-4107

Furnished two bedroom, ale, no
pets, R1ver Park Pomeroy $300
per month, $150 deposit 740-

3 BA Trailer, In Gallipolis Ferry

------~~7=~~94~9·ro9~3--

OR CONTACT THE RIO GRANDE BUREAU
OF EMPLOYMENT SERVICES ON BUCKEYE
HILL ROAD AT
740·245·9 509.
RE11JCATION ASSISTANCE AVAILABLE

Public Sale and Auction

Bachelor's Degree in Accounting
preferred Associate' Degree in
},\ccounting wllh three years
accounting experience requtred.
Computer skills required . Proficiency
1n ten - key skills, data entry, word
processing . Ass1st Boo(c:keeper II in
processtng requisitions and purchase
orders, accounting reports, electronic
receipts and disbursements ; payroll,
accounts receivable, vouchers,
journal e ~a nd ledgers. Position
in the Rio Grande Office . Submit
resume and references no later than
4:30p . m on October 4, 1999, to
Human Resources, Area Agency on
Aging Dist11ct 7, Inc . F32 URG,
P . O, Box 500, Rio Grande,
Ohio 45674.
E
Public Sale and Auction

PUrJ£9(! 11Ue'f90}J
oecr. 23,

10:00 r4,frf•

Stamless Steel Sinks (Commencai), Florescent
Lightmg. Metal Cabmets, Tables &amp; Desks,
Multi Power Outdoor L•ghhng. Commencal
Deep Fryers &amp; Toaster, Blackboards, Bi-Fold
Doors, Misc. Doors, Misc . Books, Copy
Machines, Typewriters, Computers, Printers,
Misc. Student Desks &amp; Chairs, Trampoline,
Sports Equipment To Include. Band Saw,
Planer, Lathe Stand, Much More Not Lisled ..

f40-388 O!I?J {llra.Jw,l or ~9566 (!1clmJ
"£lcensed and Bonded bfl State of Ohio"
C!ashlr!lprwoved C!heclc Onlf1ll
··~ C?ol4ntfl CDctll Sdtoc/1 ljolltd , . _ _
~ 'fD .4cq t c:r
8fd.

''Natn '"' n• "jWII4cd:kats

Barn Phone

r

Friday,

Public Sale end Auction

OCT. 8

at 7 p.m.
'

Rt. 7 South
Crown City, Ohio
5 Mi. Below the DamS Mi. Above Crown City

Santa hu Somethlni Eor EVERY AJe
Large Wnrehoute Dealer frorn lnd1011a
fnn' ...Ridmg toys, Games, Dolls,
Friction-Bump &amp; Go--String P.\!11 trucks &amp; cars, dolls-·
from play with 10 collectible Porcelam, pull stnng
FURBIES, Laser hghts, Swords, Educational, Skate
Boards, Soo Much More 11
M n, Pnnd•• (;f Aqn1 Reg-Candy d1shes,
Angels, Pitcher/Bowl &amp; Stands, Clocks, Beautiful
Electnc &amp; Oil Lamps, Cast liOn door stop~ perfume,
Jewelry Oak Cuno, Many Man) Ceram1cs &amp; Knick
Knacks
.,

Wn Opt'• To

''
•

Qed
QnpdM II Unclt Cjtorst-Dnlls,
Grinders, Saws, Knives, Collectible Cars &amp; Trucks
(Scale Size), Pelle! guns, Cross Bows, Cast liOn bells,
!!• pratlpp•I.tght up Santa, Snowman, Drummer
Boy&amp; More

FANTASTIC BARGAINS
DOOR PRIZE.. GOOD FOOD

,,

luctlonttr•Marlln WtdtMtyer
Ph: (740) 379-2720

lpp. luctlonHr•Ray•ond Jollnson
Ph: (740) 256-6989

Regular Colllig11ment Sale Sar., al 7 p.m.

85in St. Rt 588 (Old Rt 35) ~alb
1'-'U''-""'-'uia Cooler (Westinghouse, Chest
50's), AMF Fire Chief Hook &amp; Ladder
Car (All Orginial), Smail Primitive
Meal Bin, Walnut Music Cabinet, Large Wood
Chest, 3 Old Bicycles (Huffy, Firestone,
l .l ;rhwin), Smger Treadle Sewing Machine
ice), Also Smger Machine For Sewing
Lea:mer (Pedal), 2 Old Rockers, 5 Leg Oak
ng Table, 1 Gal. Hamilton Greensboro Pa.
1Stt3ne Jar, Oak High Chair, Hoosier Cabinet
30's Vanity &amp; Slool, Wmchester
IA(jvertisin Items, Old Adv. Boxes, Local
Tins,
Corn Sheller, Horse Collar
"''···--, Small Glass Washboard, Nice. Variety
Old Toys, Mad Magazines, Books,
ILIUI.alrens Books , Paper Mache Items,
Costume Jewelry, Antique Tools,
IUta~~swiue .... Lms Of Good Country. Antiques,
Many To List ...

Auctioneer: LeaUe A. Lemley
740oJ88-o8ZJ (Home) or ,
740oUH866 (Barn)
"Lilcen,HCI and Bonded By State
Ohio"
Caah/Approved Check OnlY!!
Food
.
i\eaponalble For Ac:oldent
~
l.olt Property!"

* * *Next Sale: Friday, October IS

_..__

_......--..--~-----~ ~~~~~Ba;;:r;n· Alao

Nice, Quiet 2 br ktt appliances&amp;
AIC &amp; carpet References/DeposIt 304-675-4302

Auctton

2bdrm apls total electric BP·
pilances furnished, laundry room
facilities, close to school In town
Appllcallons available at Village
Groan ApiS f49 or call 740·992·
3711 EOH
2BA Al)l In Mason Stova/Refrlg·
erator/UIIIItles furnished A C ,
Laundry Room. Ceiling Fans
Garbage Disposal Very Nice No
PelS (304l773-53521(304l882·
2827
Apartment for rent In Pomeroy, no
pats. 740.992·5858
ApphcattQrls Now Accepted For
Small But Extra Spectal One Bsdroom Very Clean Stove, Fflg
Washer, Dryer Total Electric /AC
Non -Smokers On ly No Pets,
$300 Dapos•t $350/Mo 740·4482205 740·446-9585 Ask For
Vtrglnl8
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740 446 .2568
Equal Hous1ng Opportunity

'-' '-'

8580 St.

Id eal For SENIOR PERSONS,
First Floor ALSO MOBILE
HOME FOB BENT In Gallipolis,
For An Appointment To VIew,
PHONE 741H46oi539

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
COAD, Seniors Teaching and
Reaching Program (STARS) is
recruiting volunteers over the age
of 55 to tutor · at · Pomeroy
Elementary School. Volunteer~
will receive a $2.50 per hour ~non­
taxable) stipend or tuition units,
plus mileage reimbursement.
VolunteerS will be asked to make a
commitment of 10-15 hours ~r
week Contact Jeanne · NaguCki,
Coordinator at 740-594-8499.

PUBLIC
AUCTION

47!1 Wanted to Rent
wanied To Renl HUD Approved,
. 3 Bedroom House Or Trailer Preferably In Bidwell Porter &amp; River
. Valley School District, Needed
Immediately 740·381Hl473

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1999
5:30 P.M.

490

For Lease

.Pomeroy AI 124, 600 sq fl cus·
tom parking ale carpet ceiling
fan $350/ month $150 deposit,
74().949·2093

'

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
washers dryers, refrigerators,
: · ranges Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vine Street Call 740-446-7398
. 1 888 818 0128

Auctioneer: Leslie A. Lemley
740-388-0823 (Home) or
740-245·9866 (Barn)

MAPLE VALLEY FARMS

TERMS: 10% down day of Auction, balance by 12/10/99

Call 1-800450-3440 for Biddens Packet

New dresser w/ mirror &amp; a chest
super smgle water bad asking
$300 lor all 304·675·4525 ask
tor Lisa

Washer $95 Dryer $95 Electric
Flange $95, Refngerator $95,
Washers like New $205, Wtth 1
Year Warranty, Skaggs Apphanc.es 76 Vine Street Gallipolis, 740.
,!148-7398 1 888 818-0128

Larry Joe D11goll
You're left us 3 years
ago Ocwber 1st.
Yott gone but not
forgotten. You're ;,.
our laearta and
rni"rp daily.
Sadly Mi.sed by
Wife Maxine,
Children &amp; Family

Building
Supplies

Block, bnck, sewer p1pes windows lintels etc Claude Winters
Rlo Grande, OH Call 740·245·
5121
'
560

Pets lor Sale

AKC Lab Puppies Call 740·388·
9399
AKC Registered Boston Terner
Puppy, Female Show Qualllyt
ShOts Wormed, Ready To Got
$175 740·388·9325

560

Pets for Sale

AKC Registered Female Shih·
rzu Puppy 7weeks old tst
shots/wormed. Vet Checked
1304)675 1275
Boston Tamar Pups No Papets,
Part Bo§ton Terrier Pari Terrier
$50, 740 446·8172, 740·256 ·
6251
Manchester Terrier 2 years old
House Tratned Very Smart Mala
loves Kids• Needs Good Home•
Ask1ng $100 00 (740"·245·5616

Check out our

CITY1~~~J~;~~~~.t.VE
l
Thle tlome

hao grut curb oldo oppool
admllt the treed dri~Jewey
and tall ttmbers 1n tl1e
background makes a stately
senmg ThiS home 1s a couple
blocks from the Holzer
Sycamore Branch, and The
BaptiSt Church
Bnck 2 Story features B 2t'x13' j
New living room wfiols of
Glass and a W B Fireplace
th1s Is a beauttful room Formal
Entry 2 bedrooms on ma•n
level
Complete Kitchen
Otnmg Room and from there a
large sun room Second level 2
large bedrooms 18'1117' &amp;
19'x14',
Full
f1nlshed
basement

Henrv E. Cleland Jr ..............
.............................. 992·2259

Gt

--

A exercise room 13x11
Mostly all t1ar9wood floors m
lhe home Breezeway room
w/same destgn as the sun or
Florida Room Garage Top of
the ground pool 2 St?rage
Bulld1ngs Thls home IS on 4
lots which makes lots
pnvacy and yard No 215
24~e28

LENDER

Kt:tJu~;t:u • POMEROY·
rust
out of town. Thts spacious t 1/2 Story Frame
home contams 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths,
carpeVvmyl lloonng, H P /C A , utility room,
lamtly and ltvtng room, 12x1 6' deck, out
butldtng 2 years old · "IS LIKE NEW'
throughout. The home stls on approximately
1 1/2 acres, has a paved dnveway and a
beauttlul country v1ew
Very ntce

IJt:LUNU RD.-A gorgeous In-level sttttng on approx 5 acres

to town but fairly secluded Has 3 to 4
I~~:~~~~~~~·~· 3 baths, a sun room, lamtly room, an equtpped
II '
a 2 car attached garage, and 3 pole barns
Decorated mce and has 5 skylights Wtll not last long at
$119,000.00

IMIOilLEoPCIRT··North Second St ·A 2 story bnck butldtng on

streettn downtown Mtddleport Approxtmately 2600
lsc(uatre teet wtth a wooden floor Just the nght stze for a
bustness
$12,500 00

II~II'~'Lt:

GROVE-DORCAS RD.·Sitttng on approx 2 acres IS
1991 Sunshtne mbbtle home wtth a 2 room addttlon Has
bedrooms, 1 bath and a front porch Has several I lrutl
Jl.tst $29,900.00

• . LUMP AND STOIIII COAL
·.
H.I.A.P. VOUCNIRS
:·
ACCIPTED
: . DIUVEIY AVliU~ll
: · HOURS: 7am THRU 4pm
::
''

MONDAY-FRIDAY
• 7am TO NOON

i·

SATURDAY

'.

....

Announcements

S.R. 124 NEAR RACINE • 2 StorHrame
Home approxtmately t level acre
older home, 10 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 2 baths,
part basement Gas fireplace, woodburnlng
ltreplace. Electric B.B and gas furnace TPC
water, plus well an~ CIStern Stain gla8s
windows, ongtnal woodwork and chandeliers
Huge family room Back porch, from wrap
porch, ltbrary With shelving Detached 1 oar
garage Very big home, open and spacious
River View! lmmedtate Possess10nl ASKING
$87,500

.

can for Detallt

,_
'· 1-800-686·1763

1

'

ST.·A 2 story home wtth part basement Has off street
on Brownell and 2to 3 bedrooms A one car garage
lot
$21,000.00

I~"'"""'Y

LINCOLN ST.-A freshly patnted 2 story home w•th a nch
look Has a formal d1n1ng room. btg Ioyer, kncnen kitchen
nook, enclosed glassed-tn rear porch , front porch. 2 baths, ·
and 2 to 3 bedrooms
$69,900.00
BROWNELL AVE.·A one story home w1th 2 bedrooms, one
bath and a newer roof Stts almost at the end of the street
and has little extenor matntenance wtth bnck &amp;

MIDDLEPORT • Older home that has been
remodeled and ts almost like newl New roof,
vmyl s1d1ng, doors, Windows, paint, paneling,
electric, kitChen cabinets, bathroom, central
air and gas furnace This 2 Story home has 4
bedroom,&amp; nice front porch and apprbxtmately
100'X50' lot Wtlhtn walking distance - to
schools, and locet shopptng Very nlcel
Needs some trim work completed upstairs but
matenalts there and ready Owner relocating
ASKING ..1,000.

Gall
for
"' An
Appointment

POMEROY • ATTENTION HUNTERS • 120
vacant acrbs loaded Wllh ail typeS Of Wildlife
Very remote. wttlt gas welt Owner 8S\Xtous
sell, wilt take any reasonable oWer A!IKING
79,100.,

Today!
~~~~~~~~~ RD. $23,000.00 Surveyed 5 66 acm wooded

P

POMEROY . Take a Look! Thts unique 2 Story Home has 9 rooms. 5 bedrooms, 1 3/4 betlt,
floored attic, pan basement, and a large from porch several features, Uke large rooms,
ongtnal woodwork, hardwood floors , claw loot tub, sta1n glass wtndow. A LOT OF HOUSE
FOR ONLY 537,1100

tfiLL AD

~

$16,000 00 Surveyed 2 acres GreenTwp

~~~;~~CHURCH
Twp NOComer
tt1 Acreage Surveyed 2 81 acres

LIST WITH CLELAND R_EA.LTY AND SEE RESVLTS/11

\'

'.

Terrace·2 corner lots and a two story

4 rooms and t /2 bath down &amp; 3 bedrooms and a

up Has a newly remodeled k•tchen and ma•n bath
roof Beauttlul fireplace. wrap·around porch and
I Fremch doors
$40,000.00

NEW LISTING • SYRACUSE - Level Corner
Lot w1th t 112 Frame home, vinyl sldtng,
recently remodeled, new gas furnace. C/A, 3
bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths Detached 2 car
garage Chain hnk lanced yard with some
privacy fence
Paved street, very nice
locatton 1n a quiet community
ASKING
$52,000

RACINE • Real cute home on Oak Grove
Road One story with 2 bedrooms, bath
storaae building Approximately 1
,000

low prtoo . . . -

II ~~~eE~~{~~y~~~~

each umt has 2
lloadng, t bath, gas space heat,
Remodeled wtth many new repairs
Investment lor someone!

. . Sr. 124 Wellston, Ohio
•
740-384-6212

l·n•-"' ttr•llllti. -,.,_,

'

550

Sadfy Mi11ed and alway• rernembered
by your family and j'rWmu,
""•c••· Debbie, Sr.erry, So1my and
Grarult!hUdren ofld
St..e &amp; Carol

BRAMHI COAL
COMPANY

Auctioa Group

Sale

In Lovmg Memory o

Announcement

Wilson-Harvey

Responsible For Accidents Or Lost
Property!"

If love could have savrd you
You rtt11tr would¥iave d1ed
In life tvt loU&lt;d you dearly
In death we /o11t you snll
In our hearts you froid a plarc,
%at 110 o11t efse ca11 fill
II bro~t our htarl5 lo lose you,
'But you drd not ,qo alone
r"for part of us wrrrt 1V1tfi you
'11ie dny c;od tooli you liomt

3,000 WEEKLY! Matltng
400 brochures AT HOME!
Guaranteed FREE supplies
Start Immediately Rush SellAddressed Envelope MOl,
2472 Broadway, Su•e -381!·
AP, New Vorl&lt;, NV 10025
1·877-689-41 09 toll free

REAL ESTATE, INC.

Cash/Approved Check Only!!! Food

~

Waterline Special 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1." 200 PSI
$37 oo Per 100 All Brass Com·
press1on Fittings In Stacie:
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 800·537·9528

Help Wanted

WILSON~

"Licensed and Bonded By State Of Ohio"

Honda EX 1000 generator, 2
years old, 3 tanks used $325
74&amp;985-4193 •

540 Miscellaneous ·
Merchandise

Lane Rocker-Recliner, Light
Mauve like New S150
(304l675-2617
New And Used Furnlt1.1re Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga
Stop Ard See Us 740.446·4782

Sat. , OCTOBER 3 0 - 1 :00 PM

PREVIEWDATES:
Sots . Oel 9, 18 &amp; 23- 10
a m to 12 Noon, Suns., Oct.
10,17&amp;24·1to3pm •
Walk at your leisure

Merchandlaa

Fof Sale Reconditioned wash·
ars dryers and refrigerators
Thompsons Appl1ance 3407
Jackson Avenue,[304l675 7388

Selling In 35 Tmcts- 1.6 Ac. to 2IJ ~c.
Sells ~n Premises· Under Tent

btns

1-;;::::::::::::==;.

Household
Goods
Appliances
Reconditioned
Wasl1ers, Dryers, Ranges, Rein·
graters 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maylag 740-4487!95
Dryer for Sale, &amp; Dinette Set,
$76 (304)675-6693

110

gr~ln

Grubb's Plana- tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Dr 740-446·4525

540 Miscellaneous

510

Rt. 588 (Old Rt. 35), Gallipolis, Ohio

NOTE: Selling Separately- (2) 5500 bu

Electric hospital bed $1 oo re·
cllnlng 1111 chair, $75, 1993 Chevy
S 10, 61 000 miles, standard, PS,
air tool box $4500, 740·992·
2019

MERCHANDISE

Rick Pearson 166
Apprentice Auctioneer: Greg Blain ltA-177
Masonw. va
Res. 773-5785 or Auction Center n3-5447
Terms: Cash or check w/10.
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property.

OPPORTUNITY OFALIFETtME
• 8eauttful trads w/lg frontages - public water
• Scen1c wooded trads · Beautiful rolltng pastures
• Panoramic vtews - Excellent bldg trads
• Lg 2-Story Ccilontal home (fixel upper) w/1 60 Ac
• 1 112 Story-3 BR home (fiXer upper) w/70x80 bam
w/4 59 Ac

540 Mlacellaneoua
Merchandlaa

Russell D. Wood, Broker

, fllver Park Pomeroy (formerly
Brown's) $100 per month 740·
949-2093

LOCATION:75mt S ofColumbus, 100mi.E oiClnclnnatl,
30 m1 N of Portsmouth, 36 m1 S of Chillicothe 6 m1 E. of
Jaekson·takeRt 32fromJacksontoRt 35E Go5112miies
to SR 327 Tum left off ramp. Go to stop sign, tum nght on ·
Otxon Rd to Auctton Sne (Follow stgnsl

SKS semi automatic assault rille
fully load9d $450 740·992·7370

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

PubliC Sale and Auction

• 22 Pc. Jadite, 50 Pes.
faltzgraff Dinnerware (Village r Pattern ), 25
cs. Homer Laughlin Dogwood Dishes, Some
lue Ridge, Jewel T, Quality Pattern
lassware,
Depression
Glass,
Fenton,
ccupied Japan Pes., Nice German &amp; Enghsh
hina, Crystal Wall Coffee Grinder, Hemz
ood Box, Primitives, Bundy Clarinet, Old
ims, Ponery Items, 4 Silhouene Pictures,
1939 Large Wizard of Oz Poster, Washboard,
aut Cutter, Stoneware, Granite Pitcher &amp;
ups, Buttons, Butter Mold, 2 Miniature Irons,
reen Depression Oil Lamp &amp; Others,
tereoscope, Mens Top Hat (Circa 1800's), 7
ld Quilt Tops, Nice Linens, Spreads, Rg
ugs, Books, Kitchen Items, Lots )'lot Listed
et!!! This Is Another Good Quality Sale!!

Sporting
Goods
Set ot tltallst DCI irons 3 pltchlng
wedge 2 man old $450 304·
675·1275

NEW LISTING!

Help Wanted

Located on Rt. 33 at the Auction Center In
Mason,WV.
LONGABERGER BASKETS
Chnstmas Collection Baskets· 1995 CranberiY, 1990 Gtngerbread- 1994 Jingle Bell &amp; 1996
Holiday Cheer plus Pansy basket
FURNITURE &amp; GLASSWARE
Fancy Flatwall cabtnet, oak- ht boy, oak press back
rocker, mah desk &amp; chatr, tables, rockers, table &amp; 2
chairs, plus other furn 1ture, CarniVal glass, mtlk glass,
Green Depres.s ton , Amber Dpresston, glass plates &amp;
etc, McCoy bear cook1e jar, very large head vase.
Ftesta blue p1tcher, ftgunnes, child's China set, old
mtlk glass sptce set. Curner &amp; Ives plates, rntlk
bottles, statn glass lamp, Hall pitcher, Weller Lou
Welsa planter, Rosevrlle # 456·6, Rare Hull Wt3-7
112 Wall pocket, stoneware pitchers, Hull art, Red Ball
churn, old lunch boxes, Sesame Street- Mr T,
buttons, dolls, rolltng ptn, old toys, Sasson manta!
clock, bedspreads &amp; good selectton of linens, plus
much more not listed

520

Premium Firewood Oak &amp; Ash
Hawaiian Terlyakl Recipes S3 $50 Load, Full Size Plck·Up, DeS A S E Kama'alna Foods ll,ered, 740·992-4588
530
Antiques
Firewood lor sate- S25 a truck· PMB522 4:124 Walalae Avenue RCA ca'tor Trac 2000 conso le
15, Honolulu.'HI968t6
While Whirlpool Washer $75 oo
Buy or sell AtiJerlne Anllt:~ues load 740.949-0805
TV, 25", 740 992 6777
JET
While Meytao Dryer $60 00 Call
1124 E. Ma~n Street "'bn-Rt 124 Ftrewood For Sate, 740 256-t922
Sectional Co~h Reclining Chairs A«er 5 30 (740l·446·9066
AERATION MOTORS
GraciOlJS living 1 and .2 bedroom Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
1With Fold Away Bed 1.08* By
apartments at Village Manor and am to 600pm, SlJnday 1 OOto Firewood lor sale All Hardwoods Repaired, New &amp;Rel;)ul\1 In Stock
Wood spl itter 5 hp 10 112 ton,
1 tO" Very Good Condttlon $375
A•vers•de Apartments In Middle- 6 oo p m 740·992·2526 Russ FlJtl Size 3/-4 Ton Truckload, 0&amp;· Cal Ron Evans, 1 B00-537-9526
$400 call 304-1375-1206
740·388·8355
livered a Stacked $45 (304l882·
port From $249 $373 Call 740· Moore owner
2555
992-5064 Equal Housmg Oppor
STEEL BUILD INGS CANCE L www dtamondsellers net WE SELL
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
540 Miscellaneous
tunitles
For sate- July t 936 edition of Furnaces Installed A. s Low As LATIONS' MUST LIOUIDATE II DIAMONDS FOR LESSI THE IN·
Mer(jlandlse
TERNETS BEST PRICESI NO
Gone W1th The Wmd, lair condl· $28 00 A Month With Approved 25X30, 30X48 45X60 55X160
Large modern upstam;: two bed·
COMPUTER NEEDED LICENSE
Credit Easy Over Tt'le Phone lmmed•ate Delivery!' Huge Dts
room apartment, appliances, atr 1987 Dodge Caravan Good lton 150,740 992·5t96
INSURED BONDED CALL TOLL
Bank Financing Huge Inventory countsi1 ·8Q0-462-7930 IC- 14
Allred on 681 740·985 3504
Shape, Good Tires , Klng Wood For sale Prlmestar system. Elisa Of
FREE 8n·726·3753
lntertherm
M
iller
&amp; Coleman
like to buy older RCA Direct TV Furnaces Heat Pumps And Twin Stze Oak Bed Mattress.
Nice one bedroom furntst1ed burner 740.256·1424
Building
apartment In Middleport no pets 21 x20 TWO CAR GARAGE Full system wltl1 access card, pay Part&amp; VInyl Skirting Kits $299 95, And Box Spnngs $100 2 Beauti- 550
Area Rugs Hunter Green &amp;
references and deposit required, /25 Yr ManlJfacturers Warrantee cash call 740 949-3315, leave Doors &amp; Windows, Water Heat· ful
Supplies
message
74().992·5633
ers Anchors. Plumbing &amp; Electrl· Burgundy, 4116, 3x5 $70 Both
Complete With 1 0' Overhead 1
740·446·7928
Steel Bulldmgs New Must Sell!
Door $2 993 00 Can Deliver 1· Foxflre crossbow quiver T darts, cal Pans Bennells Mobile Home
Nice Unfurnished 3 Bedroom 800·701-7912
HTG
&amp; CLG 740-446 9416 Or 1·
301140x12 Was $10200 Now
WARMUP
$125,
locust
post
$2
each
call
Apartment Point Pleasant 740
600·872·5007 Gallipolis, OH
92,-.. Gas Furnaces Heat Pumps $6 990 401l601C14 Was $H3 400
740 992-5890
448-004l, Alter 5 PM ..Now $10 971 501C1001116 Was
30,000 BTU vent less gas heater
MTO woodsplltter, 20 ton Ram Duct Systems, Free Esllmates If $27 590
Now $19 990
on stand or can wall Free PC Computer!' Call Nowlll &amp; horizontal
You Don't Call Us We Both Lose!
Now Taking Applications- 35 already
or
vertical,
used
very
60x200x16 Was $58,760 Now
740·446·6308
1·800·291
·0098
West 2 Bedroom TownholJse mount 304 882 3970
Learn How Internet Merchant tittle ssoo. caii74G-742-2420
$39 990 1 800-406 5126
Apartments, Includes Water 6'x11 Utility Tra•ler W1\h Lights Accoun\s Custom Webs!tes
Sewage Trash $315/Mo, 740· And Brakes 740·245·9551
New Business? Poor Cred1t?
N•ce used lurnl\ure, and Ap
Rial Estate General
448-0008
OKtll
Almost
Every
Busmess
Ap·
pllances,
Johnson's
Used
F1.1rnl·
l.p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~
proved Low Monthly Payments ture (740l 44ij·1004 1740l·446·
95 Wlntlowa NEC Computer
One Bedroom Apt Furn ished or mon1tor hard dlsk &amp; soft disk 1·888·671-4300
4039anyllme Out Bulavllle Pike
Not Ultllttes •nclud&amp;d 5 min dnve Prmter, speakers, new
hom store, school, I hoapltal. computer stand &amp; mouse Ready ~~~~~c=a=rd=o~f~T~ha=n=k=,==-------Call. (304)675-2117
for on line Ex:cellent Condition
$500
OBO l304l675-1446
Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2 Antique dmmg room set, hutch,
We would like to extend our sincere thatth
Floors, CA. 1 112 Bath FlJIIy Car corner cabmet, ctaw·legged tab!&amp;
peted Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, &amp; 6 chatrs $2000 firm , 740 7-42·
to everyone tvlw held tu cloae in their
Pallo, Start $350/Mo No Pets, 1019
tlwttglots and prayers duriltlf the time of our.
Lease Plus Secunty Deposit Required, After 5, 740 446 0101, AntlqlJe writing desk &amp; dishes,
loss. Your compasaio11 has comforted ua
Blue Wlngbach chair (velvet), 2
Before 5, 740·446·3481
side cane chairs 1 lg frUit wood
greatly and we are forever grateful. Specia
Upstatrs Furnished 3 Rooms, occasional table, 2 tg area rugs
Bath, Clean No Petsl References with runners (green &amp; western
tltanks to Waugh HaUey Wood Fu11eral
&amp; Deposit ReqUired 740 446·
style), qutH stand, floor lamp teeHorrw," Rev. Bob IIIIP'am, AbigaU Circle o
' 1519
tern stand, 740.985-4t93
Grace United Methodi.t Church, and
yalley "!lew Apartments Rio BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Grande Oh Now Acceptmg ap- Up To 30 lbs 30 DAY MONEY
Holzer Se11ior Care.
pllcattons for Immediate occu- BACK GUARANTEE! Na\ural Dr
661 Second Avenue ... A rare ftnd tn this 2 story brick
The
family
of Bernice ChUdera
pancy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apts Air Recommended 740-441 t982
Cond1tiomng, K1tchen appliances, Free Samples
beauty. Offers lots of hvtng space w1th not only
Fenci d m Playground laundry
character but charm
Lots of updates tncludlng
On Sight Management Water. Collectors Item German 35 MM
newer furnace
Included 1s rental 1ncome from
Sewage and Trash Paid Full time Plate Camera, World War II,
apartment and mobtle homes
Ntce large stzed
Students must meet Ohio Hous- lloyd E Esque Phone 304 773·
corner lot A must see Thts one Will go last
ing Flnanca Agency Ouallhca· 5479, Mason, wv.
would like to expre•• o•l heartfelt ,-atirude
lions Senior Citizens Welcome
to all of you who •hoUJed ut lcind11e11, love
EHO For more Information call COMPUTERS · $0 Down Low
(740l-245·9170 Monday ·lhru- ' Monthly Payments Y2K Compll·
mad
•uppor1 111 rna11y ways during the illr•e"
ant Almost E~Jeryone Approved
Th1.1rsday 9 00 ·12 00 noon
and death of our beloved hu1ba11d,
Call FIROCOM Advanced Tach·
jatl1er c:md gro11dfathsr.
nologles1 800 617 3&lt;176
460 Space lor Re)"tt
A •pet!Utl lhluakt pet out to the rru!dical •taff at
Large private mobile home lot at
510 2nd Ave., Gallipolis
Pleo•a111 VaUey Hoop11oiiCCU o11d I.South
Santa's Forest on RT 87, water/
a
mdlwn
/11/lfj, we lit' llttdtd you
(740) 446-7101
sewer, $90 00 a mon ,references 1--~~~----a' nulboiJ wues wt' lit' cned
304-675-4' 38
In Memory
For Lease' One Bedroom, AC
Apt Corner Of Second And Pine,
$250/Mo Plus Ulll1tles Sacurl\y
And Kev Deposit, References Ae·
qu~red No Pets 740.446·4425

374 ACRES· JACKSON COiiJtiirY,"i

"Not

Apartments
lor Rent

Firat Avenue Gallipolis, 1 Bltdroom Apartment, 740·446·1 066
or Weakerds 740·441-0952

Tuesday, October 5, 6:30 pm ·
Lemley's Auction Bam

~Oa.kLa 8,680 PM

Lemley's Auction Bam

2 br apt In New Haven $275 a
moo Includes water ,trash, refrigerator&amp; stove 304·773·5577
leave message

440

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co.

Or t:Mt (Jropel'f¥'

n ;{Antique ~ C.ollectiblesn r!i
(740) 256-6989

noon 304-882-2937

Apartments
for Rent

•

I
Pomerqy • Middleport.• Gallipolis, 9H • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, October 3, f999

AUCTIONEER NOTE Private collection, out of
Athens County, Ohio. Great smalls, super Internet
Item's. Don't miss 1111

Je.ject....,

'-' '-'

2 br apt In New Haven call after

110

rtluctloneer: .Cesfle Jill• .Cemlefl
i
Scrap: Copper reln!jeratton lmes
•uc,,u,,u contractors·style liabtlity policy)
Brent Semple, CAl Auclloneer
TERIIIS:Cash orcheck w/106
S S • Ten percent Buyer Pre·
m!Um •n effect All paid day ot
sele 3 dty rwmovtl
Web Stte
• E Matl

1 Bedroom AIC WID Hook-Up
Near Arbors Nurs1ng Home, No
Pelf?, Quiet locations $279/Mo ,
+ Utlhlles 740.446-2957

Wanted

Bookkeeper I

Sr4ttURDr4!1,

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
nlsl"le and unfurnished, security
deposl required no pats 740992·221
1 bedr"Oom ~rtment In Middleport alllltllllih..l!ald, $270 per
month $100 deposit 740·992·

2

Between Ath~l{s and Pomeroy, 2
&amp; 3 bedroonfmoblle homes air
conditioned, $260·$300 sewer1
water and trash Included 740·
992·2167

110

440
1

Apartments
lor Rent

~------~--~~-178~

Elementary)

10 PAID HOLIDAYS?

SCRAP BONUS?

'
2 Bedrooms, S3251Mo , • Utllllle&amp;,
and Deposit No POisl 740·448·
4313

420

LOCATION: Sale to be conducted at Galiia
Counly Local Schools Warehouse on St. Rt.
54 in Bidwell (Old Bidwell-Porter

PAID VACATION AFTER 6 MONTHS?

AnENDANCE BONUS?

410 Houaealor Rent

-

$t4,000 Natural gas

con For Moro

.

'•'

-

�'

•
•
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
560

Pete for Sale

Squirrel dogs

590

For Sale
or Trade

630

Livestock

TRANSPORTATION

new a ge dog

$500 CARS FROM $50011rBuy
Po ce Impounds &amp; Repos Fee
CALL NOW Fo L st ngs 800
319 3323 x2156

Two 10 Week 0 d Toy Pood e

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Male 1 Fema e S 50 Each 740

448-3338

570

SUnday, October 3, 1999

710 Autos for Sale

710 Auto a for Sale

71 0 Autos for Sale

bO•s 30H75-6132

Puppies Toy Pood e Dogs 1

Sunday, October 3, 1999

710 Autos for Sale

1i97 Cama o 40 000 m es loatl

1989 P ymouth Rei ant Many

ed,&lt;41l-669.0904

New Pa ts G eat Second Ca

$800 OBO (304)675 3909

A 1 Cond t~n

Bundy T ombo ne

c... $150

used

$4 000 740 742

Lowe y P ana Good Con d t on
$600 740 446 7551

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1969 Chev oe Blaze S 10 4K4

(740~256-6056

810

Home
Improvements

All types ol maaon 'I work br ck
bock stone cpnc ete 20 years
e~~:pe ence I ee e&amp;t rna e&amp; 304

OBO call 740 9'9 2644 even
ngs o 740 992 1506 days

773-9550

810

998 Dodge 4ll4 extended cab
lu s ze p ck up oaded SLT Lar
am e 22 000 m es books to

li uck T res M&amp;S 4 EA moun led

dn 15

810

L

-

Home
Improvement•

v ngston s

Ba sem en

Wa e

P oo ng a ba se ment ep a rs
done I ee est ma tes I fe me

gua an ee 12y s on job expe
ence (3()4)895 3887

SERVICE S

840

Home
Improvements

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Fod Rmsw4 HubCaps

o I ol 4K4 Fo d $120 (304f675
73

S25 600 w sa e fo $22 500
304 675 7642

580

790

Auto Parts &amp;
Accesaorles

Motorcycles

106 000 m es sun oo ale new
t res new pa nt ask ng $4300

1997 Chevy Tahoe K 1500 47K
M les Loaded $25 900 1998
Dodge W 250 D ese 5 Spood
Loaded $32 500 740.245.0379

(304)675 3534

740

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDa

720 Trucks for Sale
1997 350 XL 7 3 0 esel Automat
c Cab &amp; Chass s 36 ooo mtes

Musical
Instruments

-

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

790

I

Cam~M~rs &amp;
Motor Homes

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
1 800 585-7101 or 446-7101
e mall us for Information on our listings
big bend@eurekanet com

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

RUSSELL D WOOD BROKER

CLASSIFIEDSI
Real

Sunday, October 3rd
1.00 to 3.00 PM

VIRGINIA SMITH BROKER

Blackburn Realty
;ro~

Ul 1101

GAIL BELVILLE, .................................... 4*12011

A.

U1oor~

'Broku(Owtw

GaUlpoU.

(DIRECTIONS State Route 588 to Centenary
Ro.d comtnue to Beech StrHt (2nd StrHt to the Len)
house on right
Let Dana Atha show you th s ovely Colon at sty e home
located n a beaut fu sell ng close to Hotze and also
Green Elementary Th s home s loaded w th all the ext as
3 4 bedrooms (4th bedroom dea fo off ce area) 2 112
beths formal I v ng room S. din ng large fam ly com w 1h
bnck fo eplace 2 car ga age If you a e look ng for a g eat
place to ra se a fam y then th s could be the one Hope to
see you Sunday October 3rd 12024

Land Listings

Hope To See You Theft!

U340
POSSESSION Sp It level 3
bedrms 1 bath 5 Ac mJ1 QUIET
lOCATION cent a a bottle gas
fU nace v nyl ga age &amp; D&lt;J d ngs
13021 VACANT LAND 51 AC
MIL love y Locet10n Land Lend
s wooded and may be some
t mbe Close to freeway VLS

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
Russell D Wood Broket
510 Second

Avenu e Galhpohs

OH 45631

(740)446 7101 or l 800 585 7101

11088 NEW LISTINGII LANDI
LAND
LANDI Gal po s

133M IN~ESTIGATE ALL THE

POSSIBILITIES C ty Home 1hJt
can be comma cal etc L vlflQ

Townsh p 7 5 Ac M L StJper
Potent a fo hous ng comp e)(
Subd v s on o sec uded tam y
home s te m nutes f om
downtown Ga pol s and
p oposed new H gh School a
portion of the p operty s ocated
ns de the
corporal on
m s $ia000

m Kt wdnngaea 2bedma
on st f oor 3 bed ms on 2nCI
floc New carpet app ances
some new w ng new gas J.
wate nes New gas fu nace

w AC 2 car garage 52 x 74 101

located 609 2nd Ave A pr me

offering VL S 446-6806

' ' "' ' '

~~t

/Ji.JI.J

:.~'

'

.

',~'l'l~y

Real Estate

13025 IrS A PERSONALITY
PLACE WITH AN AWESOME
VIEW OF THE OHIO RIVER
a711 SA 7 SOUTH ON THE
RIVER EDGE Sp ng Summer

WOOD IIELIL Tl', INIJ

Wnte o Fal wll be moat
enJoyab e I v ng here 26 )(28
G eat Am
Fo mal Ent y
w/Parquet floors hv ng rm d n ng
rm EqUipped ktt tst nco bath &amp;
bad m Deck w/Hot Tub Ca port
o en erta nment 3 bedrms up
Basemen Wrap front porch
aHached 2 car ga age Plus a
24 x44 garage apartment 3 2n
acres more o ess Float ng dock

32LOCUST STREET GALLIPOLIS OHIO 45631

Allen C Wood Broker 446 4523
Ken Morgan B oker 446-0971
Jeanette Moore 256-1745
Patncta Ross

740-446-1066 or 1-8CJ0.894.1066

Home needa an
Get1w1y loceted
rolling hllle of lito Grand.:
1994 frame ranch
woth 2 bedrooms t
garage and 2 acres M
W thon Ga I pol s
Schoo s and best of all It
reasonably pr ced n the
Wonderful view of the 30 s Call and ask for 1180
Ohio River from the I v ng
room of th s rased anch Looking lor a groat
Very neat &amp; clean home to ralao a lamjly?
has 3 BR s t bath lull year old home w th
bsmt FP &amp; 2 car garage bedrooms
2 baths
Lots of extras that are too I replace Yard s
many to mont on Call to 5 9 acres for lots
go take a took for yourself
Located n Clay Twp Cal
Ask for 1171
racuest a showong for 1159

w/o sk ramp Satell to MAKE
LIFE WORTH LIVING
Call
VIRGINIA L SMITH 446 6606
or 448-41102

O'Nn • Corner of the Town
Located on the co ne of Th rd
and Cou
th s comme c al

13314 WHAT A PLEASURE TO
ENJOY THE COMFORT OF
THIS NICELY REMODELED
RANCH HOME 3 Bed ms 2

bU ld ng offers a total of 9 060 sq

ft a potent al Pnced at $;1 500

baths fa ma d n ng rm cozy
Mng rm encloaed po ch kitchen

Cal fo comp ete details 11e20

equ pped with loads of CHERRY
CABINETS and woodwork Oak
trim throughout the home

Garage wAarge wo kahop Treed

13330 RANCH HOME Located
820 Air ca Ad 3 bedrms 2
baths
Kt wdnngaea New
added to the rea

~~~r

3

1 acre M l

13353 PRESENTING A
PICTURESQUE HOME WITH
HIGH QUALITY 6 LOW
MAINTENANCE
LOCATED
ATOP OF HILL Featu ng 5

13352 NEW LUXURY WHrrE
BRICK
HOME
undl
construct on
Located n ,a
pes gousaea nGeenTwp 5
mn

om Hotze Hosp ta

bed ms 4 baths Forma entty
w/skyl ght &amp; cathedral coiling
d nlng "'I' living rm convenleot
k t oa~ cab nets 1st floo
laundry Master su te on 1st floor
nc ud ng a super bath rm &amp;
closet 4 Bedrms 2 bath~n
2od
ftoo 24x24 amy m a ox
4 000 sq ft Beautiful 3 acre
av ned ot and ve st earn )t
wou d be my p easu e to shaw

448-6806
11038 1ot Acres M L Road
f ontag
S e - n&amp; bodes
Raccoo
rt House
epo ts
~ab e 20
pasture
wooded
w ng on
Located IWIIP
S81100

asl

bedrms
6ath lam ly m
Woodbu n ng f eplaca Also walk

1 33 AC
CgnJracJ.

out to a beaut ful landscaped
lawn Cove ed pat o attached

garage Outbu ld ngs baon and
g eat workshop w/elect c wale &amp;
heat 2 mob le home pads fo

•
••

36 M/L Acres Take a

s ~en c st o I through the woods
An outstand ng p operty fa
who appreciate peacefu

••.

''

chandel e s throughout
Ful
bsmt w h complete k t s one

WBFP

BR w/gas I replace

Ga age
Landscaped lot
8)(Cius ve vew ng w lh Vi gma L

Snilth 448-880e

Home thlt 11 Priced to
Still In the 30 s home has
3 b e d · t - lui
bas~
c
ar
Ga
choo s
Th s me cou d be yours
Ask for 1187

BINGO

AMERICAN LEGION
POST 467
~
RUTLAND, OHIO
GUIUNTEED 60 A
GAME, OVER 80
PEOPLE 80 I
GAME, OVER 99
PEOPLE 99.00 A
GAME STIRIURSI
$1,450.00 AND
COVEULL MON &amp;
WED. DOORS OPEN
•• II 4:30 GIMES
..
START AT 6:30

HOME 4 5 Bed ms 3 baths
k t fo (!la DR &amp; LA Crysta

Be aggre11tvo and
your money work lor
with
t

11035 You will not find 1 nicer 4
n BR home for thle pr eel Take
advantage of the Jnte est rates
now 11nd be n you new home
befo e he hoi days! Newe roof
s o m w ndows cent a coo ng

'

~

acreoM/L
A t991 Palm
mobile home w th 2
and 2 baths Tra ler only!
Call and request for
show ng of 14006

11012 Four City lola near
Downtown Gllllpolla The
lo mer M er Fune a Home
offe s f ontage on Second Ave
as we as Th d Ave a
cons st ng of 4 C y Lots Ca
11037 A Greet Loclllon Low for Map and de a led
Malnten1nce 1nd 1 Min cured nformat on
Setting a I comp men th s 3 BR
1 1 2 BAb ck anch Loca ed on

5

bed ms 4 beth&amp;
A 1 oak
woodwork &amp; cab nets La ge eat
n k chen ce amc tie loo s
fprmal lvlng rm Master su te on
f &amp;I 11oor
Basemen w/k t

Income

f2018 WOOOED 1t AC MIL
$41 000 Loca.ted on Kempe
Ho ow Ad 1996 Mob le Home 3

I •

Close to Ale

.. .

Goan~t

gatherings and cook outs Owne
wants th s sold

system N ALL A SHOAT WALK
TO CITY POOl &amp; PARK CALL
CALL CALLI$4et00 00

Attention bulldera
mobile home ownora
Vacant Land tust mirotue,sl
from the hosp tal &amp;
Approx 9 acres M L
for the local on &amp; price
mJ20

cra..lc

ranch etyle tog
home thlt h• 1 touch of
an Interior decorator and
..nd-pe• A retreat wth
a large stone f replace 3 4
bedrooms 3 baths 2
kttcltens finished basement
lor enterta n ng Approx 5
acres with a v ew of the
countryside 10 m nutes
from Holzer Cl n c 116t

NIW Lllllngl We
acreage 37 acres M/L
a pond and bsrn "PIP'O&lt;.
10 acres of pasture
us a call for
nfo mat on 12021

CAU
_._.,OR
r

VIEWING.'

We .,. alweya glad to help you 1111 or buy propet1Y
R-1 property II 1110 IVIIIIble Two badroom
apartment naar hoapttal &amp; In the City School dlatrlct
Give ue • cell at 446-1068

11058 Camp ete y set up on a
n ce ot and eady to move

nto Th s 2 BR 2 BA 1999
br ck anch 3 4 bed ms

mob le home oca ed jus m nu es
from town ofle s coun y v ng 1081 A 5 BA 2 Story ust c
w h the conven ence of the c ty co on a nestled n a qua nt va ey
10 m nutes I om Hotze
New
wndows sld ng metal oof Wlr ng
and p umb ng comp ete the
upda es of th s count y sett ng
Add tlol1al features nc ude 967 2

2 1/2

ba ho fo ma LA &amp; DR fam rrn
2 lg wndows Loads of csblnAtl
&amp; storage Ful d vlded besemenl
2 woodbu n ng fi eplaces lanced
In en ths
un Que bu ld ng
Pu ch"ase
bu d ng and 2 lots
New y
emodolod all brick bu ld ng on a
carne ot with 2 ots
An
apartment o office space etc on
the second flo.ot
2 baths
sepa ate uti t es new roo
cent a a r 2 fu naces Make an
appo ntment w/Virg n a 446 6806

11015 00 YOU HAY! BUILDING
IN MIND? Don t ova look hose
g eat los at a su prsngly ow

p co for a SPR NG SALE
3 bedroom home on Cedar St eet
s spacous and wth a ltte ebow
grease w I make a g ea buy 1
2 baths v ng oom d n ng
oom k chen Ha dwood f oors
New w ndows $44 (lO() 1213

Call
For
Appointment

m
oo

WISE!\IAI' HEAL ESTATE, INC.
(740) 446-3644
E MC:Jtl Address wtseman@zoomnet net

DAVID WISE'MAJ'&lt;i, lHWKER,GRI- 446-9555
Sonny Games 446 2707

Carolyn Wasch 441 1007

Robert Bruce 446 0621

Rl1a Wiseman 446 95SS

Located on Lakev ew D ve off
ChaoasLakeD 23Ac mJ

$10 100 00 Aloo 5 AC lilf
$25 goo 00 VLS

b..J
:DCILER 'S PANTRY
loootod In the loFAYETTE
IIAI.L. Own an es abllshed
bus ness Buy all the nventory &amp;

equ pm&amp;nt Owner w I l&gt;(ovlde the
tra n ng &amp; bU1 ng Sk IS WORTH
THE TIME TO INVESTIGATE
MOVE FAST ON THIS ONE
LOTS LANO
COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
f873 REDUCED PRICE 117
acres close to new Fwy hosp tat
shop ctr Wa e gas sewer
Adjo n ng Pinecrest Nu s ng
Home
13344 COMMERCIAL LOT &amp;

BUSINESS Located on Eastern
Ave
Groat Opportun tyl
Purchase the corner k»t with or
w~hout the buslneaa

12117 CHOICE OF THE
COUNTRY GENTLEMEN Real
value for someone need ng plenty

yad gao &amp;capon ancsoage
1 Ac m/1 fronl ng on the beautW~I
Oh o A ve Cfty schools &amp; vetf:
close to town VLS 44eB806

44 1 1919
742 3 17 1
379 9209
245 5855

Townlhlp

Live For
The Moment

11otlt THE ANSWER to oil your
drtomo to wllhln your
moonollfl Mony pooolbltllloe
with thlo booutllul 2 otory
home t onora 3 bdrm 1 bath

FEEL LIKE COUNTRY
LIVING
IN
THE
ClrY Overs zed ranch
home w th basement Large
fo mal d n ng room and I v ng
oom
spac ous eat n
k tchen w th rea ly n ce
cab nets
3 Car carport
au ck possess on he •
12018

LISTING! LOCATION
LOCATION LOCATION! 3
4 Bedroom 2 t /2 bath home
that featu es a ge ooms
nclud ng large fam ly room
w th attract ve I replace
large broght k tchen 2 car
attached garag e n ce
man cured lawn Green
Elem GAHS m nutes from
Hospllal &amp; shopp ng Call
vie,wi;on for
Pf son at

best
descr bes th s I vable 3
bed com 2 bath home I v ng
room d n ng k tchen largo
wrap around deck All th s
and mote s tuated at 278
IT
of
Debb e Dr ve
Close &amp;
conven ent to shopp ng &amp; room for the grow ng lam ly
schools! Let us show t to 3 Bedroom ranch home
Replacement w ndows
A
you $89 800 00 *1066
newer oaf Enclosed po ch
N ce lawn w th good ga den
spot lmmed ate possess on
w th thos home Must see to
apprecoala 11099
LIKE MONEY? Lei lh s 2
story br ck bu d ng make you
some Good rental ncome
Commerc at lease n tact on
downsta rs &amp; es dent at
rental up Remodeled C ty
ut I I es
Call for more
AREAl 1 1/ 2 Story home
nformal on It 095
w th 5 bedrooms 3 baths
Th nkng a bg prce? Nope
THIS IS ONE OF THOSE $79 900 00 Between 7 9
PROPERTIES THAT IS acres I v ng room tam ly
GETTIN.Q HARD TO com part basement Let us
FIND
Home w th a small show Ito you ~000
tract of land be ng approx 24
acres J'bedroom ranch w th LIVABLE $19100 00
I v ng room k chen ba n Smal one s o y home 2
tob8"CCO a lotment and lots bedrooms
v ng oo m
more And at an affo dable k !chen bath AI the edge of
pr ce of $85 000 00 lr.I023
1own Not a lot st I ava tabl e
n th s prce range #t 03B
NEW USTINGI LOTI G eon
Elementary/GAHS n ce and LOT LISTING! $t 4 900 00
evel w th publ c wale
N ce bu d ng ot cloa ed &amp;
ava table
Conven ent has do veway elect c &amp;
local on I Hurry! $19 900 00 water Paved cad #2005
12025
THIS PROPERTY MUST
SELLI PRICE REDUCED
LOTS ACREAGE RIO
$35 000
NEW PRICE
GRANDE/RODNEY
AREA lots sta t f om 5 6 $120 000 001 Owner v I
even he p w th th e f nanc ng
4 15 acres
acres to
Really n ce modern og home
(acreage w I be doterm ned w th lhe lam y n m nd 3
by survey) and a 48 acre Bedrooms 3 baths FR
tract $19900,00&amp;up Cal d n ng &amp; k tchen basement
fo complete I st ngl 12001
Overs zed delache d ga age
Over 1/2 acre o that bo d•rs
MOTIVATION
MEANS Raccoon Creek 11089
ALOl: and the se e that
I ves n th s atones brand new L SHAPED RANCH WITH
home s sor ous Broght and LOTS OF APPEAL INSIDE
Cheery 4 bed com cape cod AND OUTI La go LR &amp;
ea
w th 3 baths ceram c t le formal d n ng oo n
entry den &amp; d n ng w th exposed to ba ck pat o next
French doo s hat open to to Ia ge at um doors Newe
rea pat o
Neutra colors k tchen 3 BRs 1 2 baths
th oughout
rantles Low ma n eve p us b sn t w th
ma ntenance
Truly an bath &amp; fam y rec room 2 ca
garage
16&lt;32 ng ound
excoptlonal home 12003
pool Ove 4 5 ac es a less
than 5 m es oltown #2013

wa

MEIGS COUNTY

LA w/1 replace OR hardwood
emodeled kitchen
enclosed back po ch only

f oo ng

3 eR 2 BA b ck

ranch ~hh full basement locp. ad
jus m nutes from town tti s low
maintenance home offe a a
peaceful n~lghbOrhood fron and
back covered porches ample s ze
kitchen w th b eakfeet nook and
Cl n ng oom adjacent ACid dona
features nclude a 2 car attacheCI
gaage wth wok aea and a
24x24 wo kahop for the handy
man Cal tor your appo ntment

$15 000 00 YOUR SEARCH
HAS ENDED CALL TOOAY
FOR MORE DETAILS
today $121100

11013 NEW USTINGII A Home
With a Btautltul

t

LA w/fl enlace OA A k chen

wood bu n ng FF's cent al a

CALL FOR YOUR SHOWINQ

deck front CO't'O ed po ch 2 ca
ga age anached 1 detached
garage 2 sto age outbu ld ngs
TOOA"t 11010000

CaU for vr.ewmg!

Country

Sontnt Close To Town Th a 3
BR and a balh anch home rests
on 17 ac es of plush count y
meadows A stocked f ah pond
and
nv I ng f onl po ch
surrounded by flower ng plants
add to the coz ness o th s
gent eman s farm ca o deta Is

f1058
• ...,.,., F1nte1IIC 3 bedroom

comblnallon N celeve lot Back ftOII-NEW

PRIVATE
2 60\) aq ft

Then th s s a del n le
I nd approx 25 acres come
with th s br ck 1 1/2 story
home w th fu I basement w th
extra space 2 Fu I baths 3
4 bedrooms tarpe detached
garage plus m sc sheds
Pasture land that s fenced
Ca I today 11 OS3

86
KELLY
DRIVE
$52 500 00
3 Bed com
ranch with living room
k tche n fam ly room large
lot Newer roof and some
ca pet ng
lmmed ate
possesson
County
schools 12012

Cher:yl Lemley
742-3171

ol space 4 large BRs 3 beths
LA formal DR k t wlbUI~ In 880
Full bao"f"ant w dlv dod rms 2
large garage
lOCATION

NEW LOTS LISTING! 5
ACRE TRACTS $15 000 00
each
County water
ava table and elect c
B dwell Elementary/RVHS
12027

ONLY THE BEST th oughout
th s e egant 2 story home
Fo mal ent y FR DR
k tchen w/ cus om made
cab nets 3 BR 2 5 BA 2
car atta ched garage
Concrete dr ve
N ce
attract ve landscaped awn
Idea local on w th n m nutes
of shopp ng &amp; hospital
11098

Sid ng new roof new
easy cleaning w ndow 10/98
New ca pet wa I cove ng and
h gh eH c ency hea and a

12885
YOU MIGHT BE
OVERLOOKING THE BEST All

NEW
LISTING!
HANDYMAN OR NOTI N ce
lot to bu ld new home or
place a mob le home or tust
remodel th s older ranch
style home N ce ot app ox
85 acre Just off SA 160
and m nutes of Hotzer/Sp ng
Va ley area
Pr ced at
$24 900 00 12025

town You wll Ike ths 2
bedroom home w th arge
ltv ng room &amp; k tchen plus a
n ce fam y room and 1 car
ga age
Sma I ot to
basement
ma nta n
Ba ga n at th s p ce 11037

1 2 baths

bodrnts 2 baths Heat Pump &amp;
11411,000. VlS 446 6806

346 CARMEN DRIVE Broker
owned Mo e than mot vated
to sell th s mmaculato br ck
ranch that offers tots of
co'1)fort 3 Bedrooms 2 full
baths large I v ng room
k tchen w th formal d n ng
a ea rear covered pat o and
front porch anached 2 car
garage concrete dr ve
lmmed ate possess ont You
w II really ke II s one Make
Russe I an offe and you may
be surpr sed what t w II take
to buy this home fOOt

$35 000 Just at the edge of

Fenced n back ya d w th a large
deck Excellent fa hose fam y

C A Good w ndows and many
extaa on ths cusom but unt

Need city conventenc11?
Let th s omode ed two
story home g ve them to
you by puttong you w th n
walktng d stance at schoo s
&amp; shopping Home has 3
bedrooms 1 5 baths full
basement nground pool
and os acu pped with central
air Located n Gall pols
Call lor your show ng today! For Sale
Walters H II Subdi••isioon
Ca I today and
12018

3043 BULAVILLE PIKE Act
quickly on th s neat 3
bedroom 2 balh home w lh
arge open living room w th
arge open I v ng room to
din ng a ea
Equ pped
~ Iehan lots of landscap ng
wth ths nee approx 1/2
acre lawn
Large covered
deck on rear
N ce for
barbecu ng and n ce 2 car
detached garage Let us set
an appointment to v ew
'""' 0110
t 12009

y

awn and many fru trees One
hlng for certa n you can have a
great
life
a garden
and hriVng
4 or t6

Wentlng to buy your llrat
home well thla Ia ttl Vinyl
1 5 story w th 2 BR s
upeta rs &amp; 1 BR 1 bath LR
DR &amp; k tchen dOwnsta rs
Located on St Rt 554
Pr ced n the h gh 20 s Let
thos home be your I rst
Aek lor 1189
PRICE
IIEDUCEDf

Manha Smtih
Cheryl Lemley

Real Eatat&amp;' General

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

90 Beeeh

446 461 8

Judy DeW tt
J Mernll Carter
Tamm1e DeWotl

Prima locotlonl

109

Feet F ontBae on 2nd Avfln ...
La ge 2 story b ck house with 5
BR 2 BA new oof natu al gas
fu nace and cen a a
Add to

that TWO 2 8R 1 BA mob le
homes w th cent al a AND a
room and
mob e home with a frame ac!tl tlon
comb nat on
that s cur ent y used as a beauty
basement you w I f nd a .cozy saloo Cal to mo e data s
lam y room wnh 11 eplaco AI th s
makes for a deal to steal 60s

LOCATION
LOCATIONII
This ranch horne sMuale don
n co level lot n Middleport
Village
The home Is
located close to publ c poo
and park
You w II be
p eased w th the lloor plan
and the overall cond ton of
th s well bu t three bedroom
home Cal us today You
w II be pleased at the pnce
ol $59 900 00 lr.I015

36115 Sll 143 POMEROY
Plann ng on bu ld ng a new
home waste no t me here
P ck your own colors n th s
newly constructed home 4
Bedrooms 2 1/2 baths den
living
room
equ pped
kitchen 2 car attached
garage
Immediate
possess onf lr.I010

THIS HOME IS IN THE
COUNTRY But fust minutes
from town
The
features
baths
well
34710
WHITES
HILL Car
liD~~~~~:
ROAD $49 900 A ulll/Brck with
entoy
anch With 3 bedrooms ~ on 2 44 acres at Crew Road
ltv ng room d n ng a ea
You must ook at this home
kotchen 1 car attached to see all the additional
garage Approx 83 acre lot
features 11088
12019

Call for viewing!

SUPER NICEII
VOUR
OFFER MIGHT BUT THIS
HOlliE 3 4 bedrooms 2
full baths lam y room w th
Frenph doors thai ead to
mu~ level deck perfect for
entenatnlng this summer
Over2acres A o vewth s
qual ty
A
Ame can
Home s tualed at C ew
Road 1940
0
THIS IS YOUR CHANCEl
Gravely
Traclo
Sales
bus ness at set up and
eady to go Everyth ng s
here that you need to
ope ate your own bus ness
from the bu ld ngs to the
nventory Th s turn key
operat on
s a
great
opportun ty lor a person
who has the des re to be n
bus ness for yourself Give
us a Clill you wll be pleased
w~h the Inventory and
112021

�I

Monday

."
'

Sunday, October 3, 1999 :

Pomeroy • Middleport • G!illlpolls, OH • Point Pleasant, WV • ·

·Ke·/logg's _
getting into veggie burgers

~OW OPEN- _Bahralm Heldarl, co-owner of the new Speedo's
Chtcken Rotlsserte at 28 Cedar St., Gallipolis- formerly Kelley's
Kitchen - reviewed
the menu for the restaurant' which had Ita
.
grand opentng on Seturday. The restaurant, offering rotisserieprepared chicken, paste, gyros and aelads as well as other Items;
is managed by Heidi Abedi, and prices begin at $3.95. The reateurant will be open Monday through Saturday, 11 a.m.·10 p.m., and
from noon-9 p.m. on Sunday. The phone number Is 441--0022. The
Heidaris currently operate ~o's Pizza at tha Spring Valley
Plaza, a restaurant and dell In Rio Grande, and have recently tek·
en over supervision of the Porterhouse ·In Wellston. Another
Speedo's location with delivery of dell Items is planned for
Sycamore Street In Gallipolis. The Rio Grande dell also delivers.

By LISA SINGHANIA
Aaaoclated Preas Writer
Less than a week after·unloading
its frozen bagel division·. Kellogg Co.
on Friday got into the vegetarian
burger business by buying an Ohio
company with hopes of broadening
its appeal t6 health conscious consumers.
The Battle Creek. Mich.-based
cereal maker, which has suffered in
recent years with sagging sales and
profits, agreed to acquire Wdrthington Foods for $307 million. The company is based in the Columbus, Ohio,
suburb of Worthington.
Worthington Foods specializes in
manufacturing and marketing products including veggie burgers -and
meatless sausage, chicken, and hot
_dog products. Its brand names include
Morningstar Farms, Natural Touch,
Worthington and Lorna Linda.
Worthington stock surged 60 percent, rising $8.69 to $23.06 a share in
trading Friday on the Nasdaq Stock
Market. Kellogg slipped 31 cents to
$37.12 a share on the New York

I

·I

Tomorrow: Sunny \
High: 60s; Low: 401

Meigs County's

By JIM FREEMAN
_S tntlntl Ntwl Staff
Work conti!lues on the new Hobson Bridge over
Leadin~ Creek in Middleport, with workers awaiting
th~ dehvery of huge steel beams that will support the
br1dge deck.
·
Fo~ the past three-and-a-half months, motorists
1ravehng 10 and from Middleport from stale Route 7
have .detoured around the construction site via nearby
Leadmg Creek Road.
Dial Construction Inc. of Stockdale is buil~ing the
new $835,679.46 three-span, concrete box beam
structure at the site of the former Hobson Bridee.
The new bridge is expected to be completed
around the middle of November.
The previous bridge was built in 1927 by the State
of Ohio. Its 1wo-lane, steel truss spanned 185 feet
across Leading Creek near the Ohio River.
Friday morning, the Ohio Department of Transportation 's project engineer; Phil Roberts, and County Engineer Robert Eason displayed lhe work that has
la_ken place to-date.
. Piers for the new bridge have been installed at the
site and workers are doing that work which cao be
done pending delivery of the steel beams.

..

I.

'

CERTIFICATE
OF DEPOSIT
SPECIAL

price

$20.95:
ininutes

Woman charged In test drive shooting

·

CANTON (AP) - Another person has been charged in the fatal
shooting of a man who turned up missing after taking a couple for a
test drive of his car.
Kerry Lynn Vadasz, 20, of Akron, was arrested Friday after being
indicted on charges of aggravated murder, aggravated robbery and
kidnapping in the death of Ryan Stoffer, 21, Stark County-sheriff's
·
.
·
.
deputies said.
Vadasz' boyfriend, Michael D. Scott, 22, of Akron, was arrested
Sept. 16 on the same charges.
·
He also is charged in the Aug. 24 shooting death of Dallas Green.
Police originally suspected gang members ill Green's death.
Authorities believe Scott and Vadasz met Stoffer, of Nimishillen
Township, at his gr,andmother's honie on Sept. 12 ·for a test ·drive
his .1990 Ford Probe.
· ••
_ He lef1 ':"i1h !hem and was missing for three days until his body
was found m a wooded area near a gas well in Jackson Township.
Stark County Coroner James Pritchard said Stoffer had been shot
·
repeatedly in the back of the head .
His car was found later in an abandoned warehouse in Summit
County.

$49.95

..

minutes

·sso

300

lYEAR

Phom(rom just' $9.9~
............................ ~------...--_;_

__

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

..

6.18% *·APY

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

Father, son slain at Dayton cookout

••
•

...

With our three new loll!· priced calling plans, ;.you'll 11ever ru11 out of time to talk.
Which is great for people who never r#n out .of things to talk about.
· AdditioHallines available f~r $10.95 a month.

.,

*CD requires a minimum deposit of $1,000.00 to
. · open and obtain the Annual Percentage Yeild
wh•ch is accurate as of 9/30/99. Apenalty will be
imposed for early withdrawal.

minutes

_____ __

''
I

.

:1

0

·*u.s.
cellular
n._,.,.,...,._Mnl'
;

Clitlh:ltltl
U.S. Celullr
ZIMI'IIIII Shoppin&lt;j COni•
1084 N. Bridvt St.
175-4141

0 "p llh

usee WII-MIIrt Kiosk
2145 e..t.. Avenue
(740} 441-1068

........

Cloooic 1'11111

408 E. Huron
- 285-5001 .

•

-Nowllooloo
U.S. Cellular
New Boston Shoppin&lt;j Cent•
4010 Rhodn Ave.
456-8122 or IBOOIBZ4-7775

2475 Scioto Tllil
285-5000
I'

Portomd

Be In Touch Communlcllionl
1403 11111 St
(740)355-3001

t

'111

.

•

~Kiolk'

• 900 w..t Emmit A;;:,.
947-(1069

.,.

Also,-..,

willt- Ill"' WII-Mort locttltllt. New Bolton, Jaobon.For your convonionct wt htvt -eo authori111hgant 1ocationo.·
• Outtido conUamtt ... l'lliltblt upon rtCJIIIt.

..

',

""=~'~~~
Hiltop
Center

:I

•
.~

.·.

....

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...

.', '
'

. •'

DAYTON (AP) -A father and son attending a cookout after a soccer game were shot and killed by
1wo men, police said.
.
Ten to 29 people were gathered
in the front yard ·of a home on 1he
city's wes1 side when .the shots
were fired Sunday, Lt. Phil Han·
ner said.
I Section ·10 Pages
He said police did.not know the
motive for the ~hootings.
'
The Montgomery County coro·
ner's office today identified the
vic1ims as Tomas Martinez, SO, and
Juan Martinez, 23, both' of the same
address in ~uburban Trotwood.
Hanner said he did not know
1he gunmen had been invited 10 the
party or how long they were there
before the shootings.
The men fled in separa1e ¥chicles.
A neighbor said he saw orie of the
gunmen fire what appeared to ~ ~
.22-caliber handgun four or fiV$
times, the Dayto11 Daily News
reported.
Uy 3: S-6-3; DaUy 4: 4-7-2-3
The newspaper did ,.no1 identify
o ,1999 Ohio Volley PublloltlnaC.the neighbor.

Good Afternoon

_; /""'-.

........

Following construction of the Rt. 7 bypass around
Middleport and Pomeroy, the road was transferred · EXAMINING WORK - County Engineer Robert Eason and Highway Department Office ManiiJinto the county system as Co\lnty Road 21.
er Davo Spencer, left, and ODOT engineer Phil Roberts, right, examine the work done 10 far on tht
In 1989, Middleport anneKed the Hobson area and new ·Hobson Bridge In Mlddlepon. The new $835,679.46 span will replace a bridge that atood at
County Road 21 became a village street.
·
the site for 72 yeara.
·
·

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- Members of the l,Jnited Food and
Commercial Workers Union have authorized a strlke against The
K,roger Co. if a new contract is not reached by midnight Saturday, a
union .spokesman says.
.
·
"There were only seven votes against a strike so that obviously
means there's a great turnout for a strike," S1erling Ball, .president
Local 347, said Sunday.
_
"We hope thai after to~ay's meeting the status of the negotiations
will change."
The local, which represents about 2;300 workers from 50 Stores in
Ohio. Kentucky and West Virginia, voted Sunday at the Charleston
Civic Center to reject a proposed contract to go into effect Oct. 10.
Workers want improvements in health and welfare benefits, pen•
sion, wages, profit sharing and a 3-year con1ract instead of the 5-year
one proposed by the company, Sterling said.
.
·
"l·f we don't strike now, they are just going to run our life so i1's
time to take a stand," said employee Dana Samson of Huntington.
Calls to Cincinnati-based Kroger were not immediately returned
Sunday.

price

$32.95,. .

7.

Union members authorize Kropr's strike

f)

price

The new bridge is eKpected to be a major improvement over the span it replaces.
In comparison with the old bridge's rusting s1eel
trusses, the new bridge will be a wide, flat span offering better visibility for motorists, and a sid~walk for
pedestrians and provisions for a future water line
requested by the Village of Middleport
An inspec1ion in 1996 revealed structural damage,
mostly scoure~ rivet heads, and the bridge was closed
to allow temporary repairs and was reopened to automobile traffic only.
The new bridge is being financed by a combination
of federal.- state and county funds. County funding is
comprised -largely of county bridge credits and comes
to $270,073, according to County Engineer Robert
Eason.
Th~ previous bridge had changed hands several
times ·during its 72-year lifespan. It was originally
constructed as a state-owned structure on state Route

woman and her two young daughters
COLUMBUS (AP) were killed in a house fire early Sunday, police said.
Margaret Anderson, 28, and her 1wo daughters. Melissa, 3, and
Mellodie, 8 months, died in the fife ~hal- ~roke ()Ut i&amp; thefr 1wo-story
·
home around 1 a.m .
Their bodies were found in an upstairs bedroom. The home was
engulfed in flames when firefighters arrived.
" There were no smoke detectors and the bedroom doors were all
'
·
" said fire Lt. Rick Artrip.
He said he could not contirm broadcast reports from neighbors
that Margaret Anderson eS'Caped the fire but went back inside 'the
house to save the girls.
. •
A cause had not bee~ determined, he said. Damage was estimated
at. $50,000.

)II.

AND ··~ON

Single Copy. 35 C e nt s

Eastern Local School Board handles personnel matters

'---

NOW RAMBLE ON
AND ON .,AND ON AND ON
AND ON AND ON AND ON AND
ON AND ON AND ·ON AND ON
AND ON AND ON AND ON AND
ON AND ON AND ON AND ON
AND ON AND ON AND O N

-Pages __

Work continues on new Hobson Bridge

YouR

"''"lllgt

game playoff tonight ~

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 81

In I; is cancer prevention research,
URBANA, IlL (AP) - UniversiAND
FINANCES
agribusiness
giant Archer Daniels
ty of Illinois researcher Michael Plewa has heard the talk about lifesav- Midland Co. provides the soybean
No ont fttunm for Sf4rt IH1tM computer-rt!Ated ifsun
ing drugs that might found in the byproducts. The U.S. Department of
mtlJ aJfoct us, bus thtrt Art sups you CAn tllltt whm it comes
exotic plants and trees of the rain for- Agriculture fractures them into compounds
that
arc
applied
one-by-one
to
t. JliU' fillilnfiS. fAr OM-hour wor/ahop will giw JOU the
est.
the
ovary
cells
of
hamsters.
But Plewa would rather do his
info1711111ion on .Y.2K poo insight on how fiJ
The ce ll s then are blasted with a
By THE EDITORS
research on the common plants found
ynr 'INlnty in tht 21st cmtury.
OF CONSUMER REPORTS
'tt in the fanners' fields that surround his carcinogen, or cancer-causing substance, and Plewa uses a new techThese days, almost all cordless phones are 49 megahertz (also called 25 umvers1ty.
Hosno Br:
channel) or 900 MHz.
" We're sitting on 2.5 pillion nique to determine whether the soybean
compound
protected
the
.cell's
Ryan
S!nith,
lnvtstmmt
Em-Utive- Admt. Inc.
With a 900 MH z phone. you're likely to get less· interference and will be . bushels of soybeans and 10 billion
DNA
from
being
damaged'
able to take the handset much farther from the base while you talk. On the bushels of corn in the United States,"
FEATUIIED GUEST SPEAKE&amp;:
"We're looking for an agent that
other hand, 900 MHz phones tend to use up battery power faster than 49 MHz said Plewa, a genetics professor. "I
Jim -,vhitc. Sun Li~ ofCATIIIIiA (U.S.) DistributiJn Inc.
models, meaning that you have to be more conscientious about putting the thmk there should be a thorough can stop this process or put up roadhandset back in its base.
.
analys1s to look for ant1-mutagemc blocks to this process of mutagenic
DATE&amp;TIME:
activity - in which DNA is damAll 49 MHz phones use analog technology. A 900 MHz phone may use properties in those plants."
Tuaday, Oc;wbcr U, 1999 • 1:00pm -8:30pm
analog, conventional digital, or digital spread speqrum (DSS), a more robust
Plewa's work centers on finding aged, a cell loses its shape, becomes
a
tumor
and
then
metastasizes
to
othvariant that is likely to be the standard type of digital cordleSs phone in a compounds m soybeans that could
Loc,moN:
,.
year or two . You' ll notice a difference in price: Analog phones can cost $35 help prevent cancerous tumors. He er tumors," he said .
Holiday
Inn
•
Gllliipo/is,
Ohio
Much attention has been paid in
to $1 00; dig1tal . about $50 to $1 80; DSS, abou( $80 to $200.
also IS lookmg for compounds that
lhe
last few- years to isollavones And you'li notice some differences in performance. When you exceed the could right lumor_s, which coulu be a
estrogen-like
compounds in soy prorange _in an analog phone, for example, the signal gets drowned out by sta- g~at help m chemotherapy_treatment.
!,t · Light rrfrrshmmts will be snwd.
tein
that
appear
to somehow protect
ti c. A 49 MHz phone has a maximum range of about 400 feet - if you' re H1s hope_IS to find somethmg that
~llli"f is limiuJ, rtm1111tWns llrt l'tf{Uired.
·
standing in an open field and the conditions are ideaL A 900 MHz analog could be mco~.orated mto food. .. health.
R.S. 9.'-P. bJ cllliint Lori Young or Hcather.Foldcn lit
But Plewa has found that so- far,
phone has a far longer max1mu~ range- typically about 1,400 feet. given
In a case of waste no1, want not
other
compounds
called
saponins
(740) 446-8899 or t1J0-ftrt (800) 446-0226
the same conditions.
·
research, Plewa IS Jookmg at the parts
seem
to
do
the
best
job
of
protecting
It's also easy to eavesdrop on an analog phone; all it takes is a scanner ~f the soybean left over after products
or another cordless phone. [n our tests of seven single-line, phone-only ana, hke soybean 011 or soybean meal arc cells from cancer-starting activity.
tr,
Another aspect of Plewa's work is
log models. we were able to intercept transmissions on all but one; the 49 produ7ed.- . .
. .
.
\
MHz Cobra CP-9125. This $110 phone has a scrambling system that makes
He s fmdmg some promiSing determining whether certain soybean
Sm.,/_#iirSirwlf~
it hard to crack conversations.
results, although he cauuons that compounds could slow the growth
~ l~~t. MnUtr. NYSE. NASD, S/PC • ........ ~...,;;
When you exceed the range on a digital phone_ durs were all 900 MHz much w?rk remains to be done and rate of cancerous tumor cells while
leaving
healthy
cells
·alone.
models- words or_phrasesare cut out of a conversation, though the back- his fmdmgs are a long way from
ground remains fairly static-free. As for eavesdropping, it's very hard to crack bemg apphcd to human s.
into conyersations on digital phones. We weten' t able to listen in on any of r - - - - - - - - - --,--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -----=----===:::;
the seven stand-alone models we tested.
·
You're likely to get the longest range- up to 2.000 feet, in our outdoor
tests - from 900 MHz DSS phones: What's more , you'll get even less interference than with standard digital models. And DSS phones provide eKcellcnt security by using a "cipher key" that scrambles conversations across
For the price of
frequencies.
Shop for a cordless phone with .an eye (and an ear) toward what's most
rambling on and
important to you. Here are some considerations:
.
• If value rules. We liked the Uni,sJen EXP 7900, a 900 MHz analog model lhat sounded as good as a corded phone. At $45, it proved to be one of
our Best Buys. The AT&amp;T 7220, a 49 MHz phone, is also a good value at
$35. but it has a limited range. and it failed ou1 power-surge 1est tha~ simulates a nearby lightening strike .
·
__j
/.
.
I
•If range is key. Any of the several900 MHz phones we rated highly will
do. As a rule. a phone with a longer range will work better whether you're
indoors or out, but you can still get static or broken speech when you're a
_room or two from 'the base. In typical use, you're not likely to require the
full range of a cordless phone.

Cut that phone cord

Reds and Meta to
square off In one-

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Take steps, against haras$ment, Page 10
Humane Society, Page 10 ·
·

Today: Showers
High: 608; _Low: 401

lot of experience working with soy'... million shares outstanding or approx-__ ,
Stock Exchange.
and
we are looking at different prod- imately $307 million . ~ellogg :
The announcement comes five
days after the cereal make-r ucts with soy," Gutierrez said. "This _expects to complete the transactiOn :
announced it. was selling its strug- will give us a bigger head start once · by year end and said the purchase .
gling Le11der's Bagel business to soy-takes off; which we believe is the should have little effec t on 1ts earn--·
Aurora Foods Inc. for $275 million, next big .hot food product."
.
ings for the next year.
_ "Secoming a plirt 1,&gt;f Kellogg will
In an attempt to cut costs and turn
'41 percent helow the 1996 purchase
greatlY accelerate Worthington 's· around its business. Kellogg has
price of $466 million.
"Their past management bought · growth potential," Dale Twomley, gone through signilicant restructurmg :
Lender's, which was ycsterJay's Worthington's president and chief recently, includin~ slashing jobs and ·
closing its historicllattle Cree k cere- ~
product, " Prudential Securities ana- executive, said in a statement.
lysts John McMillin said. " Kellogg's
t':lomi Ghez of Goldman Sachs al plant.
new managemenl is lrying to buy said th!s appear~ to be a competitive
Worthington employs 650 hourly •
tom'Orrow's produ(J(s, which they acquiSition. wh1c~ IS an Important and salaried people at its headquarbelie-ve will be healthier foods."
P~. Qf a c&lt;:'mpany. s .growth.
ters and plants in Worthington and
Since he took the helm of the
Worthmgton 1s m a very strong Zanesville, Ohio. The company's
company in April , Kellogg chief growth category and one ~h1ch has management team, including its chief
executive Carlos Gutierrez has very low consumer penetrauon, about execulive, is expected to stay on at
stressed the need for the company to _15 percent. It cle~rly --· has strong least through the transition.
.
.
expand its product line, especially growth prospects, she sa1d.
"' th' 1 F d ·
· t ·d t
The company got 1ts start m 1939
since fewer Americans are eating
nor mg on oo s IS expec e o b
'd'
- , d '
have sales in excess of $170 million . Y provl mg vegetartan .oo .or
ce real .
.
this
year, more than 20 percent above Seventh Day Adventist Church memFriday, he told analysts that Kel.
I · 1998.
bers. •
.
logg has the marketing e~pertise to M~~•n
Kellogg
will
pay
$24
for
each
of
_ A Kell?gg spokesman sa1d no
mcrease the sales of Worthington's
existing product lines, and perhaps Worthington 's approximately 12 _8 1mmed1ate JOb cuts are planned,
develop new ones.
·"Their research department has a

Researcher seeks anti-cancer
agents from soybean ·leftovers

October 4, 19911

Weather

oday's

Sentinel

'I.

.

'

•

Substitute employees, supplemental contracts
and other per5&lt;1nnel mauers were decided when
the Eastern Local Board of Education met in reg•
ular session last week.
The board approved the following substitute
employees for the current school year: Robin Putman, Anna Bell Lockhart and Cynthia Davis,
cooks; Cynthia Davis, custodian; Da~id Sbuler,
mechanic; and Patrece Beegle, Sharon Thompson, and Kimberly Roush, teachers.
The board accepted the resignation of Patricia
Shrivers, a teacher, effective November 30, due
to her retirement, and also accepted the resigna·
tion of Michelle Gillilan due to full-time employ·
ment.
AI Green, Jayne Ann Collins, Rebecca
Edwards, Martie Baum and Angela Rigsby were
approved for home instruction.
Grace Weber was employe~ _as an in-school

suspension monitor, and Cathy Elliott was
employed as a li~rary media aide.Temporary run
contracts were aP,proved for Keith a Whitlatch,
Carolyn Ritchie, and Nita Jean Ritchie.
Supplemental contracts were approved .with
the following employees: Sheryl Roush, National Honor Society .advisor; Tim Roberts, National
Art Honor Society advisor; John Redovian,
junior class advisor; David Weber, Girls' JV basketball coach; Billy Sheppard, Boys' JV basketball coach.
Jeannie Ridenour was approved as a volunteer
band assistant.
The board approved the posting of a threeeighths position for a junior high teacher, and
approved posting of a Title VI-R teacher position, to reduce class size in the elementary building, and a Title I aide to serve Title Parent
Resource Room dutie~ during the current school

year.
In other action, the board took actiQn on sever:
al fiscal measures, including approving financial
statements for the month, approving permanent
appropriation resolutions and the SM-1 ~pending
plan, approved a purchase service agreement wit~
the Ohio Auditor of Slate for the upcoming FY99
audit, and se~eral transfers of funds.
·
Bo-Dara Lee Powell and Raven Etheridge
were approved as open-enrollment students.?? ·
The board also approved the purchase of
snow plow for snow removal.
The board approved a contrat1 with Medical
Claims Services for. administration of the dis·
trict's health care insurance through September
30. 2000.
The board's next regular meeting will be held
on October 20 at 6:30 p.m., at the elementary
school cafetorium.

a

Woman says ~husband's - slayil1g robbed her of speech
_ SI,ONEY (~P) - A woman ~hose husband doing now."
d1ed •.n a shootmg spree that also k1lled three teenFor weeks, Ms. Wildermuth could speak only
age g1rls says she lost the ability to speak after her a few simple words at a time .
husban.d's d~atb.
.
.
Neighbors rallied around with their cell
Sheila Wd.dermuth sa1d she ar~1ved h?me July phones, askmg, " Who do you want us to call?"
8 and found 11 surrounded by pohce cru1sers and ·
A fellow church member, Lawrence Michael
emergency vehicles. Authorities then told her that Hensley, 30, of Sidney, has been accused of
her husband, Brett. Wildermuth, a Bible study killing Wildermuth. Hensley has also been
teacher, bad been k1lled.
charged with killing neighbor Sherry Kimbler,-16;
At that moment, "I lost my speech in front of her cousin Tosha Barrett, 16; and their friend Amy
everybody,'~ she told the Dayton Daily News for
Mik~sell, 14, at Hensley's home the same day.
a story pubhshed Sunday.
.
F1ve days later, authorities say, Hensley
About an hour later, she faced her most pamful wounded a motorist, fired a shot at the home of
task: telling her three young children.
another Bible study teacher and took three
"I gathered them around, and of course we hostages at a Sidney filling station before surrcnwere all bawling," sh~ ·said.· :'They couldn't dering.
. .
und.erstand what was gomg on With my speech; I
Hensley, who has pleaded innocent, could face
couldn't put a lot of words together, like I'm the death penalty if convicted. His trial is to-begin

in April.
Hensley got involved in the First Church of
God last October when the pastor, the Rev. Ben
Davis, received an urgent early morning call from
Hensley and his wife, Julie.
·
"Mike said be wanted to walk a new life in
Christ." Davis said.
Hensley was active in the church, attending
marriage counseling, Sunday school and small
prayer groups in the home.
:
"I've met a lot of people trying to scam me
and go through the motions, but Mike was sincere," Davis said.
Hensley attended a world religions class taught
by Wildermuth and Tom Looker.
"He talked about the draw of the enemy and of
Satan, but there were holds on his life he 'wasn •t
telling us about," Looker said of Hensley.

.Administration will face verification problems in test~ban fight
. By WIWAM C. MANN
Alloclsttd Prell Writer. .
WASHINGTON(AP)-AsupressesforSen·
ate ratification of a nuclear test ban treaty, the
Clinton.administration mu~t o~~rcome Republican anx1ety over the CIA's mab1hty to verify lowlev.el ~nderground nuclear explosions in other
countnes.
. The administration contends the shortcomings
in the CIA:s monitoring capabilities give reason
to ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty.
Republicans, who con1rol the Senate, disagree.
T~ey ~!so conte~d the treaty, signed by 154 countnes, IS flawed tn other ways and would amount
to unil_ateral disarmament by the. United State~.
Tw1ce last month, U.S. mtelltgence saw s1gns
of activity in Russia that could have in!licated
secre.t testing. The CIA was unab!e to say with
certatnty e~actly what was happenmg.
,

"We don't know that there was any testing
going on," White House Chief of Staff John
Podesta said Sunday on CNN's "Late Edition."
He added ; "This is really an argument for the
treaty."
, After the fall of the Soviet Union, President
Bush signed a limited testing moratorium to take
effect Oct. I , 1992, for nine months. President
Cli'nton continued the mmatorium - the country's last test was in September 1992 - then ·
signed the comprehensive global treaty in 1996.
The treaty, a plank in the -1992 Democratic
Party platform, went·to the Senate for ratification
in 1997. It languished in the Senate .until last
week, when Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss..
unexpectedly scheduled a full Senate vote for
Oct. 12. '
Struggling for the 67 votes necessary for ratification, the White House began a campaign this

weekend to boost the treaty, complaining of a
sneak attack by Lou in giving only 10 days to
make a case.
Lou's spokesman John Czwartacki said Sunday that Lou oppos~s tbe treaty for S::veral reasons. The " verifiability issue" is one, he said,
"but that's not the primary one. "
Testing is vital to maintenance of nuclear
stockpiles, Czwartacki said. It is not wise "to unilaterally disarm at a time when North Korea is
making strides in its nuclear program, and China·,
through ill-gotten mean also is rna in progress
in its program," he said.
" If this administra1ion oases not t lest th:Uis a decision they will mak
ut why w uld we
want to handcuff future administrations?"
CIA Director George Tenet . is scheduled t
give secret briefing~ in Congress and testify i .
private hearings this week.
' ·.

Study shows tax credit a popular way for poor to get ahead.
"These uses suggest that the EITC also plays a:
By CURT ANDERSON
might harm the working poor.
AP Tax Wrlttr
Created in 1975, the credit is intended to keep large role in improving social mobility, a finding :
WASHINGTON (AP) - -The tax credit for the people working and to offset the payroll taxes they we did not eKpect," Smeeding said. "There is a·
working poor !hat House Republicans want 10 contribute for Sociat Security and Medicare. Last large and growing recognition of the program and:
convert from a lump sum to monthly payments year, taxpayers earning between $10,000 and the potential payoff for working households." · ;
The study found that many working people use .
provides crucial annual savings for people trying $31,000 were eligible, dependi~g on number of
to get ahead, a study finds.
children. The average 1998 claim was $1,459 for their annual paymen1s to open their first cheekinf
or savings account. Without such account~,;
Half the 1998 earned income tax credit recipi· 19.4 million taxpayers.
ents questioned in the draft Syracuse University
Among the GOP arguments for making 12 pay- Smeeding said working poor are "less likely to bC;
study said they planned to save at least a portion of ments over the year is that poor people actually able to effectively prioritize" how to use a largt•
&lt;
their annual check so !hey could move to a better need more help making monthly ends meet and check.
To that end, the study recommends that the fe&lt;!- ·
neighborhood, pay tuition or buy or repair a car.
that the single payment is more difficult for people
eral government consider using electronic trans; :
"The EITC appears to be our most effective to manage.
·
·
federal program for leading low-income families ·
" I think it's something that helps families in fers of the payments to banks or other financial :
on a path toward true economic independence," need to get their mdney on a monthly basis instead institutions so that recipients are encouraged te
.------ .
:said Timothy M. Smeeding, director of the Center of one cash drop sometime in the spring," said open those accounts
" Checking and savings accounts offer fhe pos:for Policy Research at Syracuse. "The EITC is House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill.
what makes these expenditures possible."
. But the Syracuse study suggests otherwise. It sibility for having both precautionary ~vings and
flouse Republicans wantto spread the tax cred- was based on interviews with 826 Chicago-area f(!r asset building," Smeeding said.
Recipients seemed less interested in paying o(f
it paymen1 over a year, saving $8.7 billion in fis- EITC recipients who used a free tax clinic 10 do
credit card debt. About 25 percent of the group had
ca12000 and pushing the cost of1he credit into the their returns in 1998.
following budget yw; That would help balance
About 80 percent -of that group expected a · credit cards and 80 percent of them had debt aver~
the 2000 budget without dipping in1o Social Secu- refund when they came into the clinic and had def- aging $2,400, yet Smeeding found that only .18
rity accounts or breaking self-imposed spending inite ideas of what to do with it, the research percent listed paying off the cards as a priority f&lt;l!.
caps.
•.
shows. Three-quarters said they would use the their money.
.
. Prcs~ent Clin1on has pledged to veto appropr~.:&lt;"" money to pay bills or meet household expenses,
The .study concluded that the credit enablesat1ons bills t~at change the payments. GOP pres•- but 49 percent of ihose added they would save working poor to meet most of their pressing con~
dential fron't-r_unner George W. Bush has joined some moneY for bigger purchases,. tuition or mov- sumption nt:eds and also set aside money for'
Democrats in questioning whether such a change ing expenses. ·
-v
· " upward mobility."

..

I

I

•.

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