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Monday

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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.

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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

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Phom(rom just' $9.9~
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Father, son slain at Dayton cookout

••
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...

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

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cellular
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ZIMI'IIIII Shoppin&lt;j COni•
1084 N. Bridvt St.
175-4141

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usee WII-MIIrt Kiosk
2145 e..t.. Avenue
(740} 441-1068

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Cloooic 1'11111

408 E. Huron
- 285-5001 .

•

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New Boston Shoppin&lt;j Cent•
4010 Rhodn Ave.
456-8122 or IBOOIBZ4-7775

2475 Scioto Tllil
285-5000
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1403 11111 St
(740)355-3001

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willt- Ill"' WII-Mort locttltllt. New Bolton, Jaobon.For your convonionct wt htvt -eo authori111hgant 1ocationo.·
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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

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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-

a1·

LFinances·

Y2K

Sports

••

Y2~
't•·

Southern downs Eastern 23-14, Page 4
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.

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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."

..

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.. -.......

~-~-- . - ~ ·---

'

Sports·
•

The Daily Sentin~l

.

'

Monday, October 4, 1999

The"Daily Sentinel •-Page ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

Monday, Octolaer 4, 1999' :

Reds .be_
at Brewers 7-~, head ~o playoff ·w,ith Met$ tonig-h t_
By G~EG BEACHAM
MILWAUKEE (AP)
Pete
Harntsch put the Ctacmnatt Reds on
hts ailing shoulder and earned them
to the edge of the playoffs
The Reds outlasted one of the
longest ram delays tn baseball htstory and forced a one-game playoff for
the .NL wtld-card spot, beating the
Milwaukee Brewers 7- I late Sunday
ntght on a ftcld soaked by about I 0
hours of continuous ram
Harntsch 's shoulder, whtch wtll
almost certamly need surgery after
the season, was m tembie shape even
belore he was forced to stt around
County Stadtum for SIX hours m
uncomfortable temperatures But
Cmcmnau needed a wm, and
Harntsc~. thetr wmnmgest starter,
threw 5;, superb mnmgs to get tt
-" He was pttchmg on wtii and
guts," ftrst baseman Sean Casey
satd. "He's JUSt a tough guy. and he
saved our htdes tomght."
Harntsch 's herotcs came tn

'''

btzarre, surreal condittons. There
were 55,992 ttckets sold for the
game, whtch woujd have been the
last one ever played at County
Stadtum before Mtlier Park's openmg was delayed a year.
But only abou t 500 dte-hard,
largely mebnated fans stayed
through the constant poundmg ram
to watch the game The outfield was
a quagmtre. and 'the temperatures
dtpped to eariy-wmter levels
After the game, the Reds dtd no
celebrating m thetr clubhouse.
Instead, they calmly made prcparattons to board thetr charter ntght
home, where 1hey wtll meet the New
York Mets tn a game bcgmmng at
7 05 p rn EDT
The wmner goes on to the playoffs The loser wtll have rushed to
Cmcmnatl for nothmg
The Reds controlled thetr playoff
fate as recently as Fnday afternoon,
but 24 hours later, thetr pttchtng staff
collapsed twtce m consecuttvc losses

to the lowly Brewers. Cmcinnatt
needed a btg start Sunday - and
Harntsch delivered, in spite of the
pam. ·
Harmsch ( 16-1 0) satd his ann
"dtdn't feel good at ali" on Sunday,
and the uncertamty of a ftve-hour,
47-mmute ram delay dtd nothmg for
ht s mechantcs or hts damaged ltmb
The game, scheduled to be the last
regular season L'ontest of 1999, fmally got underway at 9 52 p m EDT.
By the ttme the tarpaulin was
removed from the field and the water
squeegeed from the outfield grass,
the temperature 'dropped .mto the
mtd-40s
"The cold was a concern." he
satd "But tt was an tmportant game,
and were gomg to do whatever It
took"
Somewhere around the thtrd
mnmg. Harntsch was forced to throw
only fastballs - but 'fastballs that
were good enough to baffle the same
Brewers httters that scored 14 runs m

the prevtous two games.
As if that wasn't enough,
Harntsch's thtrd-mmng smgle off
Mtiwaukee starter Cal Eldred (2-8)
touched. off a .five-run rally capped
'by Greg Vaughn's three-run homer.
" Pete got tt gotng, not JU St on the
mound but wtth his bat," Vaughn
satd " We~ ust happened to-follow."
Harmsch already beat Houston
20-game wmner Jose Ltma on
Tuesday 111 a cnttcai matchup of the
NL Central's lead ~rs . Though hts
ann ts a wreck, he wtil be ready for
hts next start tf the Reds can get past
the Mets
"Thts ts what you itve for," he
satd.
When Harmsch ttred alter ailowmg four htts, ·Ron Vtilone came m
and provtded sterimg rehef Vtilone
reured etght stratght Brewers, but
gave up an RBI smgle 111 the mnth to
Geoff Jenkms before getting hts second save and sendtng the Reds to the
playoff.

·~
Ongmaily, that posstbie playoff stratght games.
was to begm at 2:05pm , but tt was
The Brewers'-5-5,992 ttckets sold. _..
pushed back to give the Reds time to were the franchtse 's largest regular-:-::
get home. T,he Mets, havmg beaten season stngle-game total Thts was tO: ~
Ptttsburgh 2-1 much earher l" the be the fmal game at County ·Stadtum :
afternoon, took a ntght to Cmcmnatl before a July crane acctdent post-' •
JUSt m ca~e. whtle the Reds were poned the opemng of M1ller Park : •
expected to arn\le home short ly
Notes: Reds nght fielder Drnttn
Young lost ius footing and took a.·.
before dawn.
Thts IS the second stratght year
nasty sptll near the foul hne Ill the:::
one-game playoff wtll dectdc the NL first mmng, though he suffered noth-. ~­
wtld card Last season, Chtcago beat mg worse than sodked unifonn pants.;~
San Franctsco S-3
. It was 45 degrees at gametlrne, and•; ,
There was no record of the some players wore stockmg caps m\
longest ram delay m htstory, but on the dugouts Many of the players' : :·
July 2, 1993, the first game of the frosty breath could be see n, and the• :-San Dtego at Phtladelphta double- outfield was still covered wtth stand-:\:
header was held up for 5·54 because mg water The Brewers won 13 o~
of three ram delays
thetr last 20 games to close out the-·:· ·
Eddte Taubensee drove 111 the season
TI1e only other Reds team: :·:
Reds' stxth run wuh a grounder m to avotd a four-game losmg streak:-:
the fifth, and Mtchael Tucker bn a was the 1940 verston Steve Parns•: ·
solo homer to open the etghth The - (11-3), who dtdn ' t make the roster ,.;
Reds had losl three stra1ght, but the out of sprmg trammg. was expected :;:
wtn made them the only team m the to start for the Reds agatnst Al Letter. -·
maJors thts season to not lose four (12- 12) 10111ght
• ·::

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Gallia's Swlsber wins boys title: Meigs' Thomas places 22nd in girls race

Meigs, S-o uthern run in Rio Grande Cross Country lnvitationa_l&lt;·

A LITTLE LATE - Eastern's Chris Lyons (left) Eastern player (behind Ryan Hill) watch during
SOMEBODY STOP HIMI - Southern's Adam late during Saturday night's TVC Hocking Division
swats at the pass too late to prevent Southern's Saturday night's game m Racine, where Southern
Ryan Hill (44) from catching the pass as the pulled ahead in the third quarter and claimed a 23- Cumings (36) and two of his teammates (left) get opener in Racine, wheril the host Tornadoes overto the scene of the Eastern touchdown run a little came a five-point deficit at halftime to win 23-14.
'fornadoes' Brandon Hill (7) and an untdenttfied 14 victory.

Southern erases deficit, notches 23-14 victory over Easte·rn
Sa(urday
nt ght s
Eastern Southern g.une had ail the twtsts and
turns of a of a modern -day m: ll un
mov1 e, but when the gaml'cndcd. the
ttde had settled 111 Southern's l.t' or.
23- 14 The wtn gtves Southcm lout •
wtns 1n a row over Eastern , the ilrst
ttme that has happened m the contm
umg senes.
Southern ts now 2-4 overall .md
1-0 111 the Tn -VaJiey Con ference
Hoc~mg DtviSion wh tle Eastern
drops to 1-2 and 0- I The game w,"
the league opener fm hoth clubs
Eastern dommated much o\ the
early first half. but Southern came on
strong nght before the close ol tile
half. Southern, dcsptte gcumg an
early safety m the second half, dommated the second half of play Ltkc
most nvai battles, both clubs were
piaymg aggresstve and htttlng hard ,
espectaliy m the trenches

Southctn h.td 16 ltrst downs to
Eastctn 's ntnc . while g,1tnc11ng 212
O \ c ra\1 yMUs vc1sus E..tstc111 \ Y6
P1 10I to the !'l t.ut nf the game.
Southern senllJr J.umc Baker report cdly blew out IHS knee 1n w.1nn -ups.
promptmg a sw 1h:f1 of JUntor Jimmy
All ey from tackle to guard Ailey
filled the role nt cc ly. wlulc havmg
btg shoes to I 111m Baker's absence
Sen tO[ Josh DaviS led Sou thern
rushmg wtth 20 carncs for 77 yards
Tommy Smtth was ~ -3 3 wuh two
touchd owns Man Ash was 4· I 2. and
Bnce Htii was 2-9 Ryan Htil caught
three passes fur · 39 yards Also
recctvmg "ere Matt Warner I -9,
Adam Cummgs I -20. and Br&lt;~ndon
Htii 3-59
Brad Wtllford led Eastern runnmg
backs wuh an 8-24 rush tng ntght
Chns Lyons was 5- I 6 Also rushtng
were Aaron Schaekel 7- 16 and Matt

Btsscll9-20 Ben Holter caught a 14yard touchdown p.tss Man Btsscll
had nne telCpl!Oil 1&lt;11 12 yards
Eastern sophomore Garren Karr
m.1dc a monumcnt,tl co mcbnck,
when he took the opcnmg ktck-off
from Southctn 's Andrew Collman
and ran 11 back down the heart of the
li eld 82 yards to pay-dtrt lor a 6-0
Eas tern lead Karr, forme rly the
Eastern starttng quarterback, su ffered a compound fracture to hts left
.mn tn the second game of the season
and was filled "uh a spectally butlt
soft-cast so he could play m the
game, Ius first smcc the acctdent
The two-pomt converston pass
Iat led
Both dubs struggled for fteld
posttton wtthout much success early
On ' Eastern's thtrd possesston, btg
Wtllford and Btssell runs and a pass
mterferenec penalty pushed the ball

to the 12 yard ime Southern's
delensc came to ltfe wllh Wtlhc
Co lhn s maktn g to btg tackles and
Clay Enslen puttmg a one-yard loss
on an Eastern runmng back An
tncomplete pass on fourth down gave
Southern the posseSSion At the end
of the fH'S( quarter the score stood 6-

0

Two possess ton s later wuhout
much bali move ment from euher
team , Southern fumbled the bali back
to Eastern That' set up a 3R yard dnver that ended wnh a Chns Lyons to
Ben Holter touchdown pass. The
two-pomt converston pass fat led at
the 6 33 mark of the second quarter
wllh the score 12-0 Eastern
After tradtng punts, Southern got
an advantage of field positiOn wllh a
45-yard Tommy Srntth boot
Southern had started to move the ball
on the ground wuh Davts up the rn1d-

die An unsportsmanlike conduct
penalty and pass mterfercnce call by
Eastern atded tn the 57-yard dnve
that ended wtth a one-yard Davts
plunge wllh JUst 14 seconds left mt
he half Andrew Colfman added the
ktck for a 12-7 halftii'ne score.
Wtlhe Coihns ended the half wtth
hts second sack
Although Southern earned the
momentum mto the half, Eastern
gamed SOll)e momentum when tt
sacked Jonathan Evans tn the end
zone on the thtrd play of the second
half The safety gave Easter.n a 14•7
lead and the ball , but free ktcker
Tommy Smtth booted the bail 56
yards to gtve SHS a good chance for
the hold
Southern's defense held, and the
Tornadoes took over on thetr own
33-yard hne foiiowmg a 38 yard
Karr punt and 17-yard return by

Brandon Htii. Southern trted to atr
thmgs out wnh a tatlback pass from
Adam Cutlungs to Bnce Htii , who
had beaten the EHS defenders by ten
yards The ball caromed off hts pads,
savmg Eastern from an early qutck
huter agmnst them
Matt Warner then caught a mneyard out after a Davts run for a ftrst
down Then Ryan Htii made a onehanded receptwn of I6 yards fo r
anoths r ftrst down Davts npped
down tlie mtddie on a 12-yard run,
then Tommy Smtth broke a 28yarder outstde for the touchdown at
the 6 35 mark Coffman added the
ktck and the score stood I4-14
Three plays mto Eastern's next .
dnve Tommy Smtth grabbed hts first .
of two interceptiOns and had a 10- ·
yard return to set up Southern's next
score . Davts broke an 18-yarder on ::

.-.

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(See CLASH op Pat~e S)

Scoreboard
Baseball
AL standings

..

Easlem D1vis1on

'II'

L &amp;.1.

98
94
84

68

78

84

69

"

78

.,

601

!ill

•

580
ll
48 1

s

14
20

426

29

Central DIVISIOn
~-CLEVELAND

97
11
69
64
61

Cht cago
[ktroll

Knmas C1ty
Mmnes01:.1

86

l99
466

21'

92

-129

27 '

97
97

198
194

liZ ''

"

Wnlun Dms1on
~

Tex as
Onkland
Seattle
Anaheun

• IItle
di\1510n
y won \\ lid card berth

95
87

67
7S

SM6
517

79
70

81

41:1K

92

-1 12

8
lo

"

II.·WOII

Saturday's scores

I miC}

foronto 7 CLEVELAND~
Se&lt;tttlc 10 Oakland Z
Boston H Baltunore 0
New York 1 Tamp:~. 83 ~ 1
Ch1lago 6 Mmnc~u t.l 1
Dl•trou -1 Knm,\s Ct ty ~
Anahe1m I 'i Te,.;,ls 1

Gonz:~lcz

)9

96
77
68
64

66
85
94
98

'"
96
18
75
74
67

ChiC8JO

!ill

&amp;.1.

616
591

7
26
15
19

m

420

195

199
591

I

484

18'~

466

21

460

22'

1

414

)()

Wnlern Divisioo

x-Anzon .
100
San Ftanc1sco .. .................•86
Los Anaeles
77
San Diego •
74
Colorado .... ,.:· :······:·:··········72
x-won dtYt,sJOn utle

62

~1~ r\ercll Houston '2~
RUN S IJ . J ~\\cll Huush1n I-I ' J B~ll t\nwna
I ~2 B1 gcm Hou,ton 12' Alfonm "'t·v. ) ork 12 1
Abreu Phdadc lptl1a 11 8 M.G\\ Ut! Sl I ow s Il l\
C J o nc ~ Atlmua 1\ 6
RBI McG&lt;..1.1re S1 Lou1 s IJ 7 M.ut Wtlil:~lll ~
,\ n wna 1-12 Sos:~ Ch1 cago 141 B1chcttr
Co lur.1do I ' 1 V Guerrero Mun1real I 'I O.tJ!WCII
Hou ston 116 P1azza New York 124
HITS L Gonzalez. Artzona 206 Glanville
Plulade\phm 204 Cmllo Milwaukee 1911, Casey
CINCINNATI 197 V Gue rTero Mon1real 191 N
Perez Colorado 19~ Mall W1lh ams Anzonn \90
DOUB LES Btggto Houston ~6 V1d ro
Montreal 4S L Gnnzalez Anzon&lt;l 45 f\hrkGrace
Ch1cago 44 Jenkins M.l .... aukec 4' Casey
CINCINNATI 42, C. Jones Atlanta 41 K Young
Ptttsbur8h J I
TRIPLES N Perez . Colorildo I I Abreu
Ph•ladelphla II. Womock Anzona 10 S Fmley
Anzona 10 Kotsay F l ond::~ . 9 Cameron CINCIN
NAn 9 A Gonzalez Flonda 8 Mart m P•tt~burgh
B
HOME RUNS McGw•re St Loms 65 Sosn.
Ch1~ago 63 C Jones Atl anta 45 , G Vaughn.
CINC INNArJ 45 V Guerrero Montreal 42
Bagwell Houston 42, P1azza. New York 40
STOLEN BASES Womack, Artzona 72
Cedeno New York fl.) E Young Los Angele' 5 1
L Castt ll o Ronda, SO Reese, CINCINNATI 18
Cameron CINCINNATI. ~8 Rentena St Louis H
Henderson New York l7
PITCHING (18 clecu10ns) Hampton Houstun
22·4 846 2 90 Millwood Atlanta IH-7 720 268
Bollenfield Sr Louu 18 7, 720 l 97 Sch•lhng
Plnladdphm 1~·6 , 714 J 54, G Maddu11 , Atlanra
19-9 679 n1 ltrna Housl&lt;ln 21- 10 677 1SK
Or11z San Franctsco 189 667, 38! , K Brown
l...us Angeles 18·9 667 \ 00
STR IKEOUTS Randy Johnson Amona ~64
K Brow n Los Angel%. 221 As1ac1o Colorado
210 Millwood Ailalmt 20~ Reynolds Hou s10n
197 H11chcm:k San Ou!go 194 L•ma Hous1on
Plu l adclptlt:~

Ctntnl DIHSIOn
6l
66
81
86
87
95

1l~

CINCI NNATI
~~ 4 Grudzicl.md. L u~
Anecles 126 Ctnl lo ~111\\&lt;l..Ukec ' 26 Gl&lt;ln\1\lt

fa..&lt;tll'r n Dnmon

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NL standings
II: L

L Walkct Co lor.1do H \1
AriZOil.l 1 ~6 Abreu Phtladelp lu :~

BAll iNG

Boston I Balumorc 0 101
Mmnemta 1 C'htc:u.m I l ue 7 tnn 1
Anahctm 1 TcJII:IlS 00akland ~ Seaule I

11.-Houston
CIN CINNAll
Putsbur&amp;h
St lou11
Mtlwaukec:

200 Sci..: rc,.;ns I ~6 Cone New

NL leaders

Toronw 9 CLEVELAND 2
fan1p.1 Hay 6 Ne" Ynrk 2
Detroit a1 Kansas C11y lCd r,un

II. ·Atlanta
New York
Ph1IJdelph1a
Monrrtal
Flonda

Anatle~m

York. 171 Burba CLEVELAND 174 Mu ss tna
B :~.. lumorc 172 Freddy Gam a Seattle 170
SAVES M Rl\ crrt Nc\\ York 4'i R
Hernandcl lampa Bay 4 ~ Weuel.md ln.ts ...jl 1\.1
bdson C"' EVIl AND VI M~ ~a Sc.mlc l~
Koch lui UIItO ' I r~ l l l \a l A lhlht:lll\ ,,

Sunday's regular-season finales

fum

Gnffey lr Sea!tle I ~4 JtJan Gonzalez lex:n 128
Jason G1amb1 Oaklund 123. S Green Toronto 121
HITS Jmr New York 219 Surhoff 8 ,\l!tmore
207 Bemu~ W1lhams New Vorl, 201 Velarde
Oukland 200 I Rudnguez Texllli 199 Randa
Kansas City 197, Beltran Kansas Cuy 194
DOUBLES S Green Toronto 45 Dye Kansas
Cny. 44 M1kc Sweeney Kansas Cuy 44
Gamapana Boston 42 Greer Texas 41 Zet le
Texas 4 1 T Fernandez Toronro 41
TRIPLES Offerman Boswn II Febles
Kansas Cuy 9 Damon Kansas C&amp;ty 9 Jeter New
York. 9 Dye Kansas Cny. 8 Durham Ch1cago 8
Rand.'\ Kansas Cuy. 8 Polon•a Oetrou 8
HOM E RUNS Onffey Jr Seattle 4¥ R
Palm.:1ro Texas 47, C Delgado Toronto .J4 M
Rall1.lrez CLEVELAND 44 A Rodnguez Seaule
42 S Green Toronto 42 Juan Gonzalez Texas 19
STOLEN BASES D l Hunter Seattle 44
Y1zqut'l CLEVELAND 42 r Goodwm Texm l9
Strwart Toronw n R Alomar CLEVELAND 17
Damon Kan sas Cuy 16 Brady Anderson
Baltnnore '!)
PrfCI·HNG ( 18 demmns) P Manmez Boston
2'·-1 ~52 2 07 Colon Cl LVELAND 18 ~ 71n
~ 95 Mussma Baltimore 18 7 710 1 SO Freddy
Garc1a Se:mre 17-8 6HO 407 Scle Tc,.;a§ 18 9.
667 4 79 0 Hcm.mtlet New York 17 9 M4
' 41 1 M o~e r Seaulc 14·8 b~tJ ~ K7
STR IKEOUTS I' ~brtm~;&gt;z Boston 111 C

76

617
5~ I

8~

475

MR

4~7

90

444

Saturday's scores
Flonda I.Adan!a0(10)
Mtlwaukec I 0 CINCINNATI 6
Ch1cago 6 St Loms l
San Franc1sco 16 Colorado I
Houston J. los Angeles 0
Montreal 13, Ph1ladelph1a I
New York 1. P11tsburgh 0
An zona 7. San Diego 5

IJ
23
26
2M

t

Sunday's regular-season finales
l\tlan1a 18, Ronda 0
Philadelphia (i Monu~al 5
New York 2. Pntsburth I
St l..outs 9 Ch1C11go S (4 '~ mn ra•n )
Hous10n 9, Los Angeles 4
Colorado 9 San Franmco 8
Anzona 10. San D1ego 3
CINCINNATI / , Milwaukee I

187

SAVES Urbma Momrtal 41 Hoffman San
"Diego 40 Wagner Housron \9 Rocker At lnnln 111
Nen, San Frnnmco 37. W•ckman Mtlwnukce 37
Shaw lo~ Angeles 34

Football

Tonighl's regular-season linale
New York (Leuer 12 12) at CINCINNATI
( ~arns 11 ·3}. 7 05 p m

BATIING Garctnparr~ Boston \-57 Jeter
, New York ~49 Berme W1ll 1 am ~ Ne\1 Ynrk lJ.1
E MurlmeL SC"att le 117 M R.tnmcz CLEV[
LAND 'B\ V1zquel CLEVELAND ·n1 I
Rodnguez Te..o.:as 112
•
RUNS R Alumar CLEV ELAND 118 k tcr
New York I ~4 S Green T'Oronto I q M Ramlrl'Z
CLEVELAND. I 'I Gnffey Jr Se nlll e I ~ l
t\..noblauch , New York 120 Bern1e Wdl1ams N ~ "
York I 16 I Rodn guez lexas 116
RBI M R:tm•rel , CLEVELAND 165 R
Palme1ro. TeMli 148 C Delgado furonkl !"'i4

fum

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CLEVELAN D

0 4 0 000 26 105

'"

Wrslrrn Dn•ision
1 I 0 750 85
2 I 0 667 14
220500 88
220500 9 1
040000 l4

-·-

La Salle 17, S1ena 7
Ltfayeuc 20 Darllnuuth 10
Leh1gh 63 Columbia 13
Ma1ne JS McNeese St 7
Manst 49, Camst us 7
N llhno1 s 45 Buffalo 21
Navy J I West Vugtma 28
New Hampshtre 38, Stephen F Austm 28
P11t~hurgh 55 Temple 24
Pnnceton 27 Fordham 0
Roben Moms 2J Wagner 21
Sr Franc1s Pa 24 Sacred Hean 21
Syracuse 47, Tulane 17
" Towson 14 Holy Cross!)

72
48

72
84
98

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Easll'm Dl"lslon

'll'LI&amp;f£ I'A

, 0 0 1 000 100 49
1 I 0 750 150 118

South

Alabama 40. t-londa 39-0T
Alabama Sr 35, MVSU27
Akurn St 41 , Murehou~ 27
Appalachian St
Etsu 19
Cent Flonda ' I E llhnots 21
Ch.u-leuon Southern 14, Leno1r-Rhyne 7-0T
Clemson '\ I North Carolina 10
D:.v1d5on 28 Gullrord 21"--J.
Dclnware St 43 Bethune-Co-an 29
Floqda A&amp;M 66 Morgan St I(]
Flondo St 51 Duke 2'\
I unnan 11 W Carolina 19
Gcorgm 1~ LSU 22
Georghl Southern 62 VMI 0
Jacksom tile 28, Aus ttn Peay 21 20 !
Kentucky 1 1 Arkansru; 20
L1berty 18 Jotlnson C Sm1th 2
Lowstana Teltl 41 Loms lan&lt;~ ·Lah\ette l I
Lnm s\11le J5 E Mtdngan 10
M1SS1ss1pp • 16 South Carolma 10
MISSISSipp i Sl 42 Vanderbilt 14
M1~soun 27 Memph•~ 17
N C.uohn.t A&amp;l 28 Norfolk St 14
Northwestern St 42 N t ~ ho ll s St 17
S.un(ord '"' b cksonvtlle St 18
Snu1h Florida 21 S llhn01 s 14
SoUihern U 21 Hampton 6
lt'nncssee 24 Auburn 0
T~nne uce St 16 Alabama A&amp;M 1~
Tennessee Tech 28. Tenn Marlm 2
llie Otode\ 10 S Cmohn:1. Sr 1-l
T1oy St 48 M1Jdle Tennessee l I
UA B 47 lou•smna Monroe 0
V•rgmtJ. Teen J I Virg1n1a 7
W Kentucky 21 Murray St l :'i
Wake Forest 17 Rutgers 10
West Georgm J4, Morehead St 28-10T
Wofford 41 ClutHa••ooga 34

205006894
~

0 250

102

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2'.

Central D1vis1on
2 I 0 667 72 66
2 I 0 667 66 67
220500646l

2 2 0 500 75
2 2 0 500 ~9
Wtstern

San Frat\U ScO
New OrlellnS
Carolma
Atlmla

'Cj~

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I 0 0 1 000 100
I 0 7'i0 7Q
I
0 '~~ 50
I l 0 250 9'
0 4 0 00{1 41

Sl I UUI S

7'

~

27
9-1
52

82
Q'i

Sunda,y's scores
lJllllas 15 Amona 7
U,tltlmm c 19 1\ tl:una 1' 01
Jackson\1\le 17 Putsbureh 1
New Engl.md 19 CLEVb AND 7
Clmago 14 Ne" Orleans 10
New York Gnnts \6 Plul .u.ldph t[l I 'i
St Louts 'R CINCINNAII 10
M1nnesota 21 lnmpa H.w I...J
Washmgton \8 C:~.rohna \6
S l1l D1q:o 11 Kam.• ~ Cuy 1-1
.New Yo1k Jets 21 Dlm e• I~
S 1n h:~n~ t s~o 14 Tenne ssee 12
Sc,,nlc 22 Oakl .md 2 1
OPEN lJetrOll Green Bay lnd1anapnl1 s

Tonight's game
Buflalo a1 Mmm• 9 p m

AP Top 25 college poll

Midwest
Akron ~1 Ball St 9
Bowltng Green 1-1 Toledo 2\
Onyton 42 Butler 7
t: Kentucky l7 SE M1ssoun 28
llhnr"'IS St 47 N Iowa 28
ln\llrtna 14 llhnms 31-20T
Kanm 27 . SMU 9

T.hc Top 25 te.1ms m The Assoctated Press col
lege foothall poll Wilt'! first-pla ce votes m porenthe·
ses records through Oct 2 poants based on 2~ pomts
for a first place vote through one pomt for a 1Sth
place vore and prevwus rankmg
Lad

Ilim
I Ronda S1

[64)

'll':J.
50

I&amp;
744

-

5·0 I 672

2

2JBYU
25 Mumesola

11
40

5 0 I 606

4

50 ~537
4 0 1.427

6
8

~

7

I I 346

1

'

l

I
I

\J(j ' &lt;6
0
0 7:'i0 10-'
2 0 100 66 71

""

"

Marshall ]2, MmTru , Oh1o 14
M1ch1gan 3g, Purdue 12
Mtchtgan St 49 Iowa 3
M1nnesot.1lJ Nonhwestern 14
Nebraska 38, Oklahoma St 14
Noh"t Dame ~4 Oklahoma 10
Oh1o 31 Kent J
SW Mnsoun St 27 W llltnms 17
Valparruso 27 Drake 17
W M~eh1gan 38, Cent M1chtgan 16
W1scomtn 42, Ohto Sl 17
Youngstown St ll. lndmna St 28

"

South•esl '

Arkansas St 45. Sam Houston St 20
Baylo"r 2J. North Texas l 0
Kansas Sl 15 Texas I I
Prrurte Vtew 47, Graml!hng St 19
R1ce 20, Tulsa 10
'
Texas Tech 2! Texas A&amp;M 19

18

Pelphos Jefferson 37. Ada 7
Fremont St Joseph 39, Fos1om St Wendehn 6
Gates M1lb Hawken 21. Newbury li
Independence 26 Rocky R1ver lutheran West 6
Malvern 42, Tuscarawas Cent Cath 6
McMechen. W Va Bnhop Donahue 39, : .
Bowerston Conotton Valley 21
N1les McKinley 26, Warren Howlatd 20
Oak Hlll 23, Ponsmoulh Notre Dame 14
Parma Ht s Holy Name 42 Oe Cent Catholic 0
Ph1ladelphta, Valley Forge Military 32 Hudron
Western Reserve 13
Shaker Hts 21 Parma Hts Vall Forse 0
Southangton Chalker 49, Manon Carh 12
Thompson l..edgernont 38 Ashtabula SIS John
&amp; Pau122
Wlli'Ten JFK ~6 Easr Cle Shaw 12
Wheelersburg 42 Newark Cath 10
7'...anemlle Rosecrans 1g lockland 7

Far Wtn

A1r Force 21 s~n D•ego St T2
Amona Sr 28 UCLA 27
Botse St 26, Utah 20
CS Northndge 41 Idaho St 27
Cal Poly-SLO 18 S U1ah l 0
Cent Wnshmgton 27 . St Mary s. Cal 7
Colorado St -16 New Mut co S1 7
E Wnshmg1on 14 N Amona lO
Fresno St 26 TCU 19
Hawa11 1' UTEP 1
Nc'ada 26 UNLV 12
Pon lnnd St 51 Mont.ln.•4K-Ul
s~n J o~ St -l4 St:mford l9
Squ rh crnC~ I ~7 Oie!fU11 St 19
WashIngton :W Oregon 20
Wa&gt;lungu'n St l l Cahforma 7
Weber St 'i2 Salra n~t:m o St -19
Wyommg 2M Idaho I ~
Y.1le 17 Sa11 D•cso 6

Ohio H.S. scores
SaturdaY's action
Akr Bu~htcl J6 Akr Ccnr Howe1 6

Ak1 Hobm 21 Lumsv11Je AqumJs IS
Akr North 51 Ah Kenmore tl
Beachwood 8 Co lumbm 6
• Bedfotd 42 Warrensvt\lc 6
Bellaue 5~ Steubenville Crtlh Om 14
Bcllatre St lotln 21 Whechng W Va Cent
Cllth 7
Campbell Memonal 14 Ene Pa MercyhurSt 0
C.n Oak ~hils 41 Zancsv111e 40 lOT
Cle East 42 Cle Ltncoln-Wesl 0
Cle Kennedy \R Cle E Tech 0
Cle St lgnallos q A1hol Spnngs. N Y Sr
Franc1s 7
Cle Vil la Angt'la St Joseph 27 Hunung Vall
Umvcrmy 22
Day ChallllnJ..dc-Juhennc 42 Cm McN icholas

Soccer
MLS standings
1wn

Eastern Conrerence
~ I ,SOWPt:~

y UC

x COLUMBUS

21 I 6
19 12 6
I ~ 17 'Ci
ll IIJ 5
II 20 4
7 2~ ~

Gf GA..

57 62

~H

4~

46

l7

29 4~
26 41
25 17
IS l2

46
S7
~l

64

Western ConCerence
\Los Angdcs
19 I1 1 )1 J8 29
Colorado
10 \0 6 48 ~8 16
x- Oallas
liS J 1 ' 4B S1 l4
x Ch1cago
16 14 2 .U 48
1-J
San Jose
IS l l. 10 l-1 47 49
KansasCny
812 2 20 '~ ~ I
y·Ll mctled cunference IItie
ll dmchcd pin) off be nt!
1
NOTE TI1rec p01ms for \ Jctory on(! no•nt lor
shootou t Win and zero pomls for loss Shootout
(SOW) 1s a subsc r of wms
..11..

New Engl,md 2 New York New Jersey I

Sunday's scores
Dallas 4, Los Angeles l
MIOITU 4 COLUMB US I

Wednesday's games
1ampa Ba) at DC Umted 8 p m
Chicago at Colorado 9 p m
Kansas Cny at S~n Jose 10 \0 p rn

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC- REGARDING TITLE OFFICE
The Meigs County Title Office Staff will be attending computer
training classes as required by the State of-Ohio during the following ' '
--·
dates:
Sept 7th thru the lOth
Sept. 13th thru the 17th
.
Sept 20th thru the 24th
Oct 4th thru the 8th
Oct 11th thru the 15th
The office WILL 'BE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, but we will be
running short staffed, especially the first two weeks of October.
We are asking for everyone's cooperation and patience during these
tinaes. We will try our best to avoid long lfnes and to issue titles in a
timely fashion. Thank you for your anticipaed cooperation and
patience.
Thank You:
Larry E. Spencer

3 I
4I
40
40

1.294
9
I 211
3
I 15 1
IJ
I 14S
10
SO Ill!
14
4 I 858
21
3 I 8SS , 5
50 851
16
S 0 692
17
50 690
19
4 1 ()41)
II
4 I S86
22
2 2 487
18
3 2 425
~2
H1
12
' I
28 1
4 2 2\R
l'i
12 1
I02

Othrrs rccetvlng volu: M1sms tpp1 9S
Wyom•ng 4!1, Oklahoma 4l An Force 30 P1ttsburgh
11 Arkansa5 19 8uston Cullc!!e 17, Vngmm 17.
Southern MISS I ~ Notre Dame 12 Kentucky 9
Washmgton 9 Colorado St 8 Oregon 8 Clemson 6
Maryland 6 LSU 4 Wake Forest 4 Mmoun l
Texas lcch 3 low,, St 2 Amona I

l':ast
Boston College n Nonheasrern 12
lluckoc ll 2' Penn 16
Colg.ttc l-1 Harvard 21
Connccttcut 10 Rhode Island 9
( Uluel l " Brown 28
.Delaware ...JI R1chll1 0ild H
Duquesne \1 Sr l1e1er s li
EiN Carohtl&lt;l n Army 14
fa1rheld Jl Cem Cnll n ~llloll St I-I
Georgl·town I&gt; C 1.'1 lon&lt;~ 0
Hnfsua ~7 Mm.ehuseus 14
J.unc5 f&lt;.l ouh ~n rt 2\ VJII,mn\,1 2fl

By ANDREW CARTER
OVP Staff Writer
RIO GRANDE
Gaiha
Academy 's Cnitg Swtshcr contmued
hts year of dotmnance by wmnmg
the mdt vtdualtttle at the 29th Annual
Rto
Grande
Cross
Country
lnvuatlenai Saturday Swtsher "on
the event for the second consecutive
season
Swtsher 's tnne Saturday was
16 07 87, about SIX seconds off hts
tune of I6 0 I that he set m 1998 at
Rto Grande The talented se mor
averaged 5. II per mtle and outpaced
the second place compclltor by
almost I6 seconds. Swtsher and ht s
GAHS teammates competed m th,e
seeded dtviSion.
Metgs placed 20th m the team
table wtth 537 pomts. Steve Beha
topped ail Marauders wtth an 85th
place fintsh Hts ttrne was 19 38 61

Joseph McCall placed I 26th wuh a
tune of 2 I 06 99 Ryan Well fmtshed
I 27th Wlth a It me of 2 I 07 26 Derek
Johnson fmtshcd 132nd wtth a tune
of 21 12 09. Adam Thomas placed
I 37 th wtth a ttme ol 21 28 01 Mtke
Wtihamson lmtshed 157th wllh a
time o\ 24 50 7 Oavtd McCiore
placed I 58th wtth a tunc ol 25 06 71
Southern lim shed 2 1st wtth 582
potnts Chad Hubbard was the top
Southern runner. placmg 87th wtth a
ttme ol 19 44 64 Garrett Ktse t ftntshed I 40th with a ttme of 2 I 47 13
Russell Retber placed J43rd with a
ttme of 22 00 93. Jeremy Ftshcr
crossed the ftmsh hne m 22. I I 39,
good for I 45th posttlon. Macy Rces
placed 153rd w11h a time of
23.10 32. Jordan Htil rounded gut
the Southern band by ftn!Shtn g 163rd
wtth a time of 30 52.
Derek Baker of Galha Academy

placed I 7th 111 the Rto meet Hts lime
was 17 40 39 Damcl Roush fmtshcd
the 5,000-meter course tn 18 35 82,
good lor 51st place. Chff Wheeler
placed I OOth wtth a lime ol 20 06 18
Tun McCam placed I U~th with a
tune of 20 19 57 Andrew Woodyard
placed \15th wtth a ltmc of 20 39 91
Galita Academy fmtshed lith 111
the overall team standmgs wuh 255
pomts .
Covmg ton captutcd the overa ll
boys ' team title with 115 potnts
Mtddictown fmtshed second wuh
127 potnts. Ctrcicvtlle placed thtrd
wtth I53 pomts
In the boys' un seeded dtvtston.
Shawn Taylor led Rtver Valley to a
I Sth pla~e fimsh m the team standmgs Taylor placed 22nd wuh a ttrne
of I 8 44 I to lead the Ratders
Ketth Stout fimshcd 37th wuh a
lime of 19· I 8 21 T R Edwards was

fimshed 67th wtth a tune of 25 17.5
Amber Vmmg c10sscd the ftntsh Ime
m 79th place wtth a It me ol 26 I 5 96
JesstcH Preast lu11 shed I lOth wtth a
ume of 3() 03 14 Mary Sc hultz
placed \ 18th wllh a lime of 32 14 I 7
Stephani Johnson ,led the Rtver
Valley sq u.td wtth a tune ol 24 08 54,
good lot 49th place Joh nson's average tmle was 7 46
Megan Godwm w.tsn't far behmg
Johnson tn 57th place wuh a It me of
24 37 67 Chnsten Batrd placed 76th
wuh a time of 25 58 83 Juli a
Mollohan ti mshed I04th wtth a It me
ol 28 58 0 I Mandy Weddtngton
placed I 13th wtth a ttme of
30 45 09
Solllhern had thre~ athletes 111 the
gtr is' race. Tammy Fryar placed
I 16th wuh a time of 31 41 3 Em tly
Sttvers came m I 17th wuh a ttme of
32 I 2 28 Stacy Lyons ftmshed

Wth wtth a ttmc of 19 26 52 Mtke
MaComber place.p ,j 23rd wtth a It me
ol 24 38 44 Hennque Costa lm!Shcd
I 36th wtth .1 ttme ol 31 58
Wtihamstown [W Va ) won the
boys unseeded team IItle wuh 6 1
pomts Milton Unton placed second
with R3 pomts Ravenswood was
tht~d With 123 pomts
Rt ve r Valley scmed 304 pomts on
1ts way to I5(h place.
In the unseedcd gtrls mce, Mctgs
and Rtvcr Valley ltm shed 12th and
I 3th, rcspecttvely, m the team standmgs Metgs scored 245 pomts Rtvcr
Valley had 281 pomts
Asl\ley Thomas ol Mctgs paced
the Lady Marauders by lmtshtng
22 nd Her tune was 22 56 78
Thomas averaged 7 23 per, m1le over
the 5,000-meter course
Beatnce Morgan placed 6 Ist wnh
a ttme of 25 01.04 Andrea Burdette

\20th With a lillie of 34 13 ~8
Wtli tmnstow n (W Va) won the·'
gtris' unseedcd team title wtth 79
potnts Boyd County (Ky) fmtshed::
second wllh 88 potnts Caldwell .
wasthtrd wtth I 43 pomts In
the "
g1rls seeded dJvJsJOn race. Pam
Snuth led .til Gailta Acddcmy runners by ftnt slung I9th wuh a time of
21 58 65 Smtth averaged 7 04 per
mtie
Andrea Vernon placed 23rd wtth
a ttme of 22 II 32 Vernon's average
tmie was 7 08
Em tly Shoemaker fmtshcd 111 ~
50th place wtth a ttme of 24 24 78
Courtney Lewts rounded out the
Gailta Academy contmgent by placmg 61 st wuh a time of 25 34 93.
Manetta won the team tttle wuh
80 pmnts. Cov mgton placed seCOJ1d
wtth 85 pomts. Mtddletown was.
thtrd wtth 87 pomts.

Broncos, Falcons join Bengals among league's winless clubs
other team 111 last January's Super tration ," Atlanta's Bob Christian
satd " He let hiS anger get the best of
BowL
Four weeks mto the season, htrn Most of the guys on the sideline
I
though, both-conference champions felt similar frustratiOn, but we've got
have set an ignoqunious mark the to be btgger than that."
By The Associated Press
Just as both teams were expected
By now, the Denver Broncos first Super Bowl teams to begm the
be much b1gger than tatienders
to
noo-stnke
season
by
iosmg
next
were supposed to be lookmg down,
Atlanta
was a team on the rise after
first
four
games.
theu
not up, at the rest of the NFL Same
decades
, of med10cnty Denver,
lost
Even
worse,
the
Falcons
have
thing for the Atlanta Falcons. the
Ail-Pro runnm g back Jamal despite the retiremen't of John Elway,
Anderson for the season wtth a was opumtstlc about lis que§t for a
wrecked knee, and the Broncos are third stratght title
''[' m kmd of 111 sjlock right now,"
fearful of the same fate wnh Terrell
Davts, who was tnJured m Sunday's Broncos imebacker Glenn Cadrez
21- I 3 home luss to the New York satd of being 0-4. "We've got to
sttck together and get one wm and go
Jets.
Davts hurt htmsdif chasing down from there "
(Contmued from Page 4)
The Jets (1 -3) went home wtth
the ftrst play for a first down, then Jets _safety ~or Green on an mterthetr
first wm of the year after makEastern roughed Evans on a pass for cept10n.
Q
another first down Eastern held after
"When It happened , they satd mg the AFC champtonshtp game last
R J Gtbbs got a sack on Evans there was some looseness 111 ht s season They forced ft ve mtercepAndrew Coffman was called upon knee," Broncos coach M1ke ttons and a fumble
Balttmore hnebacker Ray Lewts
for a field goal attempt and spht the Shanahan satd "We're gomg to
knocked
out Falcons quarterback
upnghts on a 37-yarder wnh 2.521elt keep our fingers crossed that It 's not
Tony
Graztam,
who started fur Chns
m the thtrd round to make the score an ACL But at thts ttme, It looks hke
ChandJer
(hamstring)
I 7-14 Southern The leao was It could be·
Elsewhere Sunday, tt was Seattle
Southern's first of the mght
Atlanta fell at home 19- I 3 in
Eastern moved the bali well on tts overtune to Bailtmore when Stoney 22, Oakland 2 I, Minnesota 2 I,
next posse.ss10n and had three ftrst Case connected on a 54' yard touch - Tampa Bay 14. Jacksonville 17,
downs, but fumbled wtth Ryan Htli down pass to Juslln Armour Eariter Ptttsburgh 3, Dallas 35, Anzona 7.
recovenng SHS got the bail rolhng 111 the game, cornerback Ray New _England 19, Cleveland," 7,
with a 32-yard reception by Brandon Buchanan was eJected Patrick Chtcago 14, New Orleans I 0, St
Htli . but the dnve stalled and Johnson danced over Buchanan foi - Louts 38, Cmcinnatt 10; lhe New
Coflman tned a 32-yard fteld goal, lowing a touchdown As Johnson York Gtants 16, Phtiadeiphta 15, San
but got under the baiL Bissell ran tt 1 was about to sptke the ball , Franctsco 24, Tennessee 22; San
back to the 30 yard hnc, where Buchanan put Johnson 111 a bear hug D1ego 21, Kansas Ctty 14, and
Eastern went three and out as . and slammed , htm mto the ground Washmgton 38, Carolma 36
Buffalo vtstts MtamJ on Monday
Southern's defense agatn exceied.
' Buchanan also punched Johnson 111
night. Green Bay. Detrmt and
Southern started to move the bail the back of the head
agam, starting wtth a 20-yard recep"! understand hts teehng of frus- Indianapolis were on thts week.
tlon by Brandon Htli , then controlhog the ball on the ground to use up
some clock. After a sack of Evans by
Gtbbs, Coffman JUSt mtsse~ another
field goal at the 3 38 mark
Quarter~
After an Eastern penalty. Eastern (3-3) ....................6
14
2
0=
6
Southern had Eastern third and 12, Southern (2-4) ................. 0
23
6=
7
10
but Southern roughed the passer and
• Eastern got four n\ure tnes. On the Team statistics
last attempt Tommy Smtih mtercepted and ran it back 62-yards to secure
.
Eastern Southern
the wm wtth LOS left on the clock. Categorv
Passing
yards..
...
....................................................
26
127
The kick htt the upright and Southern
Completions
&amp;
attempted
passes
..........................
2-11
7-13
h~ld on for the 23-14 win.
Interceptions thrown ...................................................2
1

NFL action

Seahawks 22, Raiders 21
Todd Peterson ktcked three fteid
goals, mciudmg the wmner from 45
yards, and M1chaei Husted was short
on a 61-yarder as ttme expired
Seattle {3-1) rail ted from a 21-9 hole
m the second half agamst visiting
Oakland (2-2).
Vikings 21, Buccaneers 14
Randy Moss, the 1998 Offens1ve
Rookte of the Year, had two touch-

down rec&lt;;pttons and set up another
score as the Vtkmgs (2-2) got all of
the pomts m the first quarter. Moss
had only nine catches for 123 yards
headmg mto the game, but had four
for 120 vs. the usually stingy Tampa
Bay (2-2) defense .
Rams 38, Bengals 10
Az-Zahtr Haktm tied a Rams
record wtth four touchdown s, three
on passes from Kurt Warner, the

fourth on an 84-yard punt return.·
Warner, a former Arena Football·
passer, became the first quarterback•• in the last 50 years to throw three:· :
touchdowns tn each of hts first three;;:

starts.

.. . . •

The host Bengals (0-4) became, ·,
the first .NFL franchise to lose I
games m the 1990s, breaking their •
tte at 99 wtth the Rams (3-0)
·

00·: ·

EHS-Southern

clash ...

Fall

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

Eastern-Southern statistics

Saturday's score

I

2 Penn St (S)
3 MIChigan
4 Nebraska
5 '¥•rg101a Tech (I)
6 lennessee
7 Georg1a Tech
8 Aonda
9 KansasSt
10 Georg1a
l l MtchJganSt
12 Alabama
11 l exas A&amp;M
14 MISSISSippi St
IS MARSHALL
16 Eas1 Carolina
17 Purdue
18 Syracuse
19 M1a101 (Ra)
20 W1sconstn
2\0HIOST
22 Soulhern C01 l
2J Texas

Saturday 1s action

AMER£CAN CONFERENCE
F.astern

79

0 4 0 000 55

NCAA Division I scores

NFL standings

ALieaders

2 2 0500

Plltsburgh
CINCINNATI

J

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Hunter education
class slated for October 25

An Ohio Hunter Education class
wtll be held start mg . Oct 25 at the
Pctrneroy Gun Club near Pomeroy
Class dates for the I0-hour course
are Oct. 25, 26 and 27, 6-9 p m.
mghtly, and Oct 30. 9 a.m. to noon.
Students must attend all four sessions. The class ts free- and all !"atenals will be pro' idcd the_ ftrst mght
of the class. No preregtstratlon ts
necessary, but class stze may be hm1tcd to the first 60 students regtstermg the fjrst night of the class
Completton of a hunter educauon
class ts mandatory for ail prospective
hunters wanung to purch~se an Ohto
hunting ltcense
'

Rushing attempts &amp; yards ...................................34-70
Total fumbles &amp; number losL .................................2-2
Total fif§t downs .......................................................2
Total yards ........................................ ........ ............ .96 ·
Penalties: number &amp; yards ...................... ... .. 10-115
Punts: number &amp; average ................... ...................S-31

On

,.

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

36-105
1-1
16
232
7-65
4-38

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Call Dave Barris
For Mora Information
992~~~21U

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SUN. -SAl 10 00 AM- 10:00 PM • 992-!)020

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Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Bank sponsors dress-a-doll contest

I,'

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
There's somethmg of a ch1ld 10
all of us And for so ne 11 centers
on a love of dolls
Agam th1s year !he Farmers
Bank and Savmgs Co ts giVIng
res1dents the opporlumly to create
an ongmal work of art by cos lum mg a doll for 11s annual benefn
dress a doll contest
fnzes w1ll be awarded 10 hv"
calegones - the prettiest, bndal
crl'lchet characler 1904 slyl e
dress and country
The coslumes will be judged
on the bas1s of creatiVI IY on gm al
lty and overall appearance and
the wmner m each calegory will
be awarded a pnze of a $100 sav
mg bond From th ose Winners Will
be selected a grand pnzc '"nn er
wnh !he pnze be10 g a $200 s.1v
mgs bond
The unclolhed 14 mch dolls all
wnh long ha11 wh~&lt;:h can be sl y led
to harmoniZe w11h !hen oullib
may be pr ckc d up al c1ther lhc
Pomeroy or IJalltpolls 11lltccs ol
The Farmers Bank They are 10 he
re!Urned coSiumed on or helorc
Nov 12
Alter 1ha1 !hey will be dts
played m !he Pomero) b,mk l obby
unlll an aucllon ts sc heduled usu
ally 1n ea rly December Proceeds
from the aucuon are dona!Cd 10
the Me1gs Counl y Untied Fund

DOLLS TO DRESS - These dolls dtsplayed by Joan Wtlllams,
cha~rman of the Dress-a Doll contest of the Farmers Bank, need
some clothes. The dolls may be ptcked up at bank offices tn
Pomeroy or Galhpohs. Once costumed they will be JUdged, pnzes
awarded and then aucttoned off to beneftt the Untied Fund
La s! year ~7 dulls
were
dressed by Metgs and Gallta cus
t om a~

ot

barmen~

Bank .tnd sev

cral lhou sa nd dollars were raiSed
for !he Unned Fund and la!er d1s

reuremenl be sure 10 s1gn up for
Medtcare when you reach age 65 In
some ctrcumstances your M edicare
premiUm will be h1gher tf you delay
applymg for !he med1cal msurance
If however you conttnue workmg
and have employer s group heallh
msurance you need only to stgn up
for Medtcare Pari A (hosptlal benefits) You don ' ! pay a momhly pre
m1um fof Part A tf you have worked
for al least 10 years under Soc1al
Securny co,erage dunng your ltfeume
And when you re ready lo rettre
call our loll-free number I 800772 121 3 10 make an appomtment
10 speak wtth a Soc1al Secunty represenlauve who wtll take your appltcatiOn Ask for our lree bookie! •
Retorement Benefits (SSA Pubhcatwn No 05-10035 ) The bookie! 1s
also a\ ail able on our website a!
www ssa go'

Reachmg age 65 mav be a stgmf
•cant rung on ltfe s ladder but 11
docsn '1 mean you have to rettrc and
• begm colleclmg Soc1al Secunty
benefits Many people choose to
extend thett workmg ltfc And when
they delay th eor retoremenl they re
mcreasmg the amount of the benefi1
they w1ll evemually rece1ve
By delaymg your reurement
beyond age 65, you can mcrease
your Soc1al Secunty benefit m lwo
ways
% Each addnwnal year that you
have taxed earnmgs you w1ll add
earmngs 10 your Soc.al Securny
record Most hkcly, those earnmgs
wtll be among your h1ghest ones and
h1gher ltfeume earmngs resull 111
h1gher monthly benefits
% Each year you \\ork alter
reachmg age 65 mcreases your Soctal Secunty ,respond s 10 youlhs
evenlual benefn amounl by a cerlam need 10 know
percen1age unul you reach age 70
The mosl 1mpor1ant mformat1on
For example, If you were born m a) oung person needs to know 10day
1934 xour benefll amount at relore
1s fmanctal plannmg and Socwl
mem w1ll be mcreased by 55 per- Sec urn} IS a b1g part of tlrat process
cent for each year you work between
Young people need to know
age 65 and 70
ahout Soctal Secunty loday even
Even though you delay your more !han lhetr parents dtd Fman

lrtbuled 10 loca l organ1zat10ns
C hamnan ol the community
~c r v1cc

proJ ect 1s Joan Wdltams

with Tammy Znklc co chatrman

c1al plannmg for a longer hie has
become !he most 1mpor1ant requtre
ment of thts genera11on
Socml Secunty has a spectal ktt
of teachmg matenals for htgh school
classrooms The kn prov1des all !he
malenals a 1eacher needs lo leach
Soc tal Secunty loa .!ugh school
Wtth the currenl nat1onal publ1c
d1alogue on !he fu!Ute of Soc1al
Secunty, th1s ts a chance to really
add relevance 10 such subjecls as
ctv1cs, soc1al studtes, hts!Ory and
math, as well as contemporary
lifestyle courses such as fmanc1al
plannmg and bustness admmtstra

twn
The ktt mcludes a !cachet s gutde
and lesson plans factsheets, handouts and qmzzes for !he students A
\Ideo fea!Ures young people pre
senttng Soctal Secunty 1o the11 peers
m a top1cal setting
The teacher s kn may be use lui
for people of all ages not JUst htgh
school students Anybody who
wanls lo arrange for workshops or
classes for lhetr organtzalton or
group would fmd !he teachers kll
tn,aluable
The k1t ts also available on the
Internet on a spec.al websne for
young people, called 'Youthhnk,' at
www ssa govlk1ds hlml

Local agency receives grant for abuse program
Ohw Parems for Drug Free
Youth recenlly awarded a mtn t.
gran! of $300 to Heahh Recovery
Serv1ces Inc on behalf of 1he~r
commltmenl lo a drug free Metgs
Coumy
Thts mtn1-gran1 w1ll be used to
strengthen the agenc/s efforls lo
prevenl !he abuse of alcohol
lobacco and o ther drugs
Each year Oh10 Parenls for
Drug Free Youth prov1des mtnt
grants to selected organtzaltOns
who have demonslrated an exemplary effort toward promotmg
drug free lifestyles and sa fe com
mum11es
Funding
for
the
statewide mmt granls has been
made avatlable through the sale
~nd promotton of products from
the annual Ohto Red Rtbbon Cel
ebratmn
• Oh10 Paren!s for Drug Free
Youlh ts a not for proftt organ•
zauon wh1ch provtdes leadersh1p
and fosters networks tn order 10
j)romote safe and drug free com
munnres lhroughout Oh10

'

GRANT AWARDED - Julie Wandling of Health R!!COVery Services, nght, accepts a $300 check for that agency's program of preventton of substance abuse from Belinda Flemtng, Oh to Parents for
Drug Free Youth.
,

Chester Council, Daughers of America practices for inspection
Prac11ce for tn spectton , obser
vance of quarlerly btrthdays and a
repori on the recent Daughlers of
eornenca's state sesswn, htghhghted
September meetmgs of Chester
Counc1l 323, Daughters of Amenca,
held at the hall
lnspecnon of the Counctl wtll
take place on Oct 19 and dunng the
meetmg members practtced for
recetvtng slale and nat10nal offtcers
II was noted !hat the new slale coun
c1lor ts Vtola Young the vtce coun
ctlor 1s Jean Bershen and the secre
tary ts Bertha Slaplelon
• Btnhdays celebra!ed were !hose
of Jean Welsh, Julte CurtiS Dons
Grueser Margarel Amberger M ary
Holter, Laura N1cc
Eltzabelh
Hayes, and V~rgmta Lee
Erma Cleland, comm1sstoned as
deputy for Chesler Council, reported
on the recenl state sesston notmg
!hal Bertha S!apleton was elec1ed
stale secretary, Helen Taylor was
honored for 22 years tn that posttton
~nd numerous scholarships were
awarded wuh five gmng lo children
and grandchildren of members of

SIOOS.rlea
HON
5903AB62T
(Burgundy)
HON • 5991 T (Black)
20 Pagoda Stacking Ouest
Chalra • 4070 S.rlaa
HON 4071 BP89T (Claret)
18 GUlli Sled Bill Chairs
• 2400 Sarles
HON 2403
WGG62
(Burguncfy/Walnut)
The
Commlaalonera
reaerve the right to reject
any and/or all bid' or
accept the best bid for the
Intended purpose
Malga
County
Commlaalonera
Gloria Kloea, Clark
(9) 22
(10)4 ~TC
Public Notice

Delaying retirement brings higher Social Security benefits
By ED PETERSON
Social Securtty Manager in
Athens

Public Notice

Chester Counctl
It was announced !hat !he dtstrtCI
fnendsh1p mee1mg will be held on
Oct 16 wuh a polluck at noon al
Chesler and reported !hat !he new
by laws have been relurned correct
cd The mcclmg hme was changed
lu 7 pm
The ways and means comrnJtlee
will have a s1lcn1 auc11on the scl.:ond
meettng m November Mrs Ntce
!han ked !hose who helped her al the
ttme of thl" death of her hu sb d
Will tam
Readmgs m observance of
Grandparents Week were gtven and
mcluded
A Strange Old Lady
Moved tn My House' by Joann
Rucfite A Grandmother' by JuJte
Curus
'Poelry of Grandma '
House by Belly Young 'Grand
molhcr s Story by Erma Cleland
Grandma Satd' by Ella Osborne
Recogntzed were Marcta Keller !he
oldest mother Julte Curtts !he
youngcsl and Joann Ruch te !he one
wuh !he mosl cht ldrcn
At !he moSI recent meetmg !here
was a st lenl auctton hy the mtscella

n eo u~

l:omm1ttcc

alter

wh1ch

refreshmcms were served by Helen
Wolf Mary Bamngcr a~d Paulme
Ridenour
Son1a Htll and Tun Puckett of
130
Seuy
Road ,
Albany
announce lhc btrth ol a daughter
Nalaltc Lashac Htll Puckell al
0 Blcness Mcmortal Ho spllal
Athens
Public Notice
NOnCE TO OFFICE
FURNITURE VENOORS
The
Meigs
County
Commlaalonaro will racalve
aealed bide In their office
located In the Courthouaa,
100
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789 until
1 00 pm on October .11,
1999 Said bide will be
opened and read aloud at
1 00 pm on October 11,
1999, lor the following furnl·
lure for uu at tho Melga
County Department of
Human Servlcte
No llama, Deocrlptlon
45, HOIII Comfort..k
Taaka Chelra with Arm Kilo

• Notice of Election on
Tax LeVy In Exceu ot
the Tan Mill LlmHatlon
Revlaed Code, Sections
350111(G), 570519,
570525
NOTICE Ia hereby
given that In purouance
ot a Reaolution of the
Board of Township
Trustees
of
the
Tclwnahlp of Lebanon,
Ohio Pomeroy, Ohio
paaaod on the 31&amp;1 dey
ot July, 1999 there will
be submitted to a vote ot
the people ot said
subdlvlalon at a General
ELECTION to be held In
the
Township of
Lebanon, Ohio, at the
regular places of voting
therein, on tho 2nd day
ot November, 1999, the
question ot levying a tax,
In excess of the tan mill
limitation, for the benetll
of Lebanon Township tor
the purpose of Fire
protection
Said tax being.'
A
replacement ot a tax of 1
mill at a rata not
exceeding 1.0 mills tor
each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounts to ten (SO 10)
cents lor each one
hundred dollare of
valuation, for five (5)
yaars
The Polio lor said
Election will opan at 6 30
o'clock A M and remain
ppen unti 7 30 o'clock
P.M of said day
By order of It'• Board
of Electlona, of Meigs
County, Ohio
John N lhle, Chairman
Rlla D Smllh, Director
Dated Sept 13, 1999
(10) 4,1t, 18,25 4TC
Public Notice
• Notice of Election on
Tax Levy In Exctia of
the Ten Mill Limitation
Revlaed Code, Sections
3501.11(G), 570519,
570525
NOTICE Ia hereby
given that In purauanca
of a Resolution of the
Bo11d of Township
Truslt18
of
the
Township of Scipio,
Ohio, Pomeroy, Ohio
pasud on the 7th day of
July, 1999 there will ba
submitted to a vote of
the people of said
aubdlvlalon at a General
ELECTION to be held In
the Township of Scipio,
Ohio, at the regular
placea ot voting theraln,
on the 2nd day of
November, 1999, the
queatlon of levying a tex,
In axceaa of the ten mill
limitation, for the benetll
of Scipio Township lor
the
purpose
of
Maintaining and opartlng
cemeterlea
A
Said tax baing.'
replacement of a tax of
112 mill at a rate not
exceeding 112 milia lor
each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounts to five canta
($0 05) lor each one
hundred dollara of
valuation, lor five (5)
yeara
The Polls for aald
Election will open at6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open unll 7:30 o'clock
P.M. of aald day.
By order of the Board
of Elactlona, of Meigs
County, Ohto
John N lhla, Chairman
Rita D Smith, Director
Dated. Sept 13, 1999
(10)4,11,18,25 4TC

Public Notice

Public Notice

Tewnthlp of Let11t,
Racine, Ohio, paaaad on
the 19th d.V of July,
1998 there will be
aubmllted to 1 vote ol
the people of aald
aubdlvlalon at a General
ELECTION to be held In
the filtvnahlp of Letart,
Ohio, at the regular
placet ef voting therein,
on the 2nd day of
November, 1999, the
queallon of levying a tax,
In exceu of the ten mill
limitation, for the benefit
ot Letart Townahlp for
the purpose of Fire
protection
Said tax baing '
A
replacement of a tax of 1
mill at a rate not
exceeding 1 0 milts lor
each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounts to ten (SO 10)
centa for each one
hundred dollars of
valuation, tor live (5)
years
The Polls lor said
Election will open at 6 30
o'clock A M and remain
open untl 7 30 o clock
I'M of said day
By order of the BoaPd
of Elections, of Meigs
County Ohio
John N lhle, Chairman
Rita D Smith, Director
Dated Sept 13, 1999
(10)4 11,18,25 4TC
Public Notice
ATTENTION
Owners of Rental
Housing In Village of
Pomeroy
Yearly
Inspection Fees are due
You may register at the
Pomeroy Water Office
Fees are due no later
than November 15, 1999
Po maro y
V lltage
Housing Authority
(9) 13, 20 27
(10) 4 4TC I
Public Notice
• Notice of Election on
Tax Levy In Excess of
the Ten Mill Limitation
Revlaed Cede, Sactlona
3501 11(G), 5705 19,
5705 25
NOTICE Ia hereby
given that tn pursuance
of a Resolution of the
Board of Township
Truateea
of
the
Township of Chester,
Cheeter, Ohio, palled
on the 13th day of July,
1999 there will be
submitted to a vote of
• the people of aaid
subdivision at a General
ELECTION to be held In
the Township of Cheater,
Ohio, at the regular
places of voting therein,
on the 2nd day of
November, 1999, the
question oflevylng a tax,
In exceaa of lhe ten mill
limitation, lor the benefit
of Chester Township for
the
purpose
of
Maintaining
and
operating cemeteries
Said tax being '
A
replacement of a tax of 1
mill at a rata not

__
110

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Annual Meeting of the
Metga county Council on
Aging Inc will be held on
Tuesday, October 19 at
1o 30 a m The meeting will
be held at the Meigs
Multipurpose
Senior
Center, 112 Eaat Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio
Thle meeting Ia open to
the public with Individuals
having paid mamberahlpa
having the opportunity to
elect officers and member·
ship to the Board of
Trustees The membership
will also be asked to
approve changea to the by·
laws of the Melga County
Council on Aging, Inc The
suggested changes will be
pooled at the Sarilor Center
10 dsya before the Annual
Mealing
(10) 4 lTC
Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order
of Sale Issued out of the
Common Pleas Court of
Malga County, Ohio, In
the caae of the Home
National Bank, Plaintiff,
va Linda Beaver aka
Linda D Beaver,et al ,
Defendants, upon e
Judgment
therein
rendered, being Case
No 99·CV-9 In ssld
court, 1will otter for sale
at the front door of the
Courthouse lh Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on
the 5th day ot November,
1999, at 10 00 am., the
following Ianda and
tenementa, located at
35261 Dexter Road,
Dallier, Ohio, 45726 A
complete
legal
description of the real
estate Ia as follows
The following real
estate situated In the
County ol Meigs In the
State ol Ohio, In the
Township ot Salem, and
bounded and described
as follows
The
1o Ito w 1n g
described real estate
situated In Martinsburg,
and commencing at the
Southeast corner of Lot
No land running South
three hundred and eight
feet to the place of
beginning, running West
ninety teet, thence South

_;~--

Help Wanted

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

•..

Public Notice

exceeding 1 0 milia for
each one dollar of
vaiUIIIOn,
WhiCh
emounta to ten cants
($0.10) · lor each on a
hundred dollan of
valuation, for live (5)
yaara
The Polls tor said
Election will open at 6•30
o'clock A M and remain
open unll 7 30 o'clock
P M ofaald day
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio
John N thte, Chairman
Rita D Smith, Director
Dated Sept 13, 1999
(10) 4, 11, 18,25 4TC

Monday, October 4, 1999

one hundred and ttn fte&amp;.
to the
piece oJ ••
beginning, btlng all ol. •
loft No Nine (9) and Ttb· :
(I O) aa recorded In pta( •
of Mtrtlntburg.
•
Reference
Detd, ·
Volume 313, Page 159
Meigs County Dttd
Recorda
Audhor'a
Parcel
Not :
1300403.000 and 13·
00404000
PROPERTY
ADDRESS. 35281 Dallier
Road. Dexter, Ohio
45728
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT
$5,000 00
The real
estate cannot be sold fOJ
less than two-thirds the
appraised value
TERMS OF SALE
10% down day of sale,
balance on delivery oJ
deed Sold eub(ect to •
second half 1998 en!J
accrued 1999 real eatatw
taxes
James M.
Soulaby
(10) 4, 11,18

Tt,~ppers Plarns, OH

St Rt 7

740-985-3813
Culverts 4' - 48" tn stock

8" Gravelless Leach
100' l 000' Rolls l" &amp; 3/4" 200# Water Lme
Fulllme of Gas P1pe &amp; Regulators Water Sloroge Tanks
l . ~ .. l.l A • ..,

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

1

I !I II I

Probate Court of Matga • ;
County, Ohio
•
NOTICE
" :
Ravlaad Code, Sac. : • ,
2717 01(A)
••
Notice Is hereby givJiri
that Elizabeth L Faulkner;
of 30245 Barringer Ridge
Rd , Portland, Oh, 45770,
has applied to the Common
Pleas Court, Probate
Division of Meigs County,
Ohio, lor an order to change
her name to Elizabeth L.
SUtton
Said application will be
heard tn said Court, at 1.30
I'M , on the 5th day of
November, 1999, at Melga
County Probate Court
nna L. SUtton
The State of Ohio, Melge
County
Personally appeared
before me Judith R Slaaon,
Chief Deputy Clerk of the
Meigs County Probate
Court and made aolemn
oath that tho notice, a copy
ot which Ia hereto atteched,
was published one lime, to
wit on the 4th day of
October 1999, (being at
least thirty days prior to the
5th day of November 1999,
the date the application 11
to be heard, as mentioned
In said notice,) In the Dally
Sentinel, a newspaper of
general circulation In the
County atoroaald.
Judith R. Sinon
Swom to before me and
signed In my presance, thla
tat day of October 1999
(10) 4

Every Tuesday
night is

Family Night
Large 1-item

•S\ut1\P
Gtll\6\1\9

$8.99
Open to close

Estimates

992-2124

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

BANKBUPTt::Y
reheve o debtor of lmonctol obltgoltons and ononga a lotr d~~tbulton of
usse~ among credtlors ApeliOn gomg through bankruptcy IIIDY relo1n certain
(op'1·opet'ly, known os exempt" proper!): for h11 or her personal usa Th~ may
ocor ohouse clothes and household gootk You should d1red any
~uesl10111 regordmg bankruptcy lo on ollornoy before procoodmg

William Safranek, Attorney

Btll Mood1spaugh Auct1oneenng
Complete Auc11oneer1ng Serv1c
es Cons1gnment auctiOn M1l
Street Middleport Tt1U rsdays
01\lo License 17693 740 989

·~ &amp; D Auto Upholstery • Plus, Inc
\
Rutland, Oh1o
1 Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
:~ruck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
1
boat covers. carpets, etc
Mon • Frl 8:30 - 5:00
'•
Over 40 yrs experience
0

~

and

EXCfiVfiTIHG

MYEBIPAVRfG

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks Low Mtles 1995 Models
Or Newer Smtth Buick Ponuac
1900 Eastern Avenue Galhpolts

WV

(304) 675·2457 Ollkt
(304)674·3311 Ctll Ph.
FREE ESTIMATES

I·

HAliTWELL

YOUR

CONCRETE

CONNECTION
Sidewalks, Patros
Complete Garages:
masonary/wood
25 yrs expenence
1 . Free Estimates

Every Sunday
1:00 P.M.

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

992-1717

START

DATING

TONIGHT!

lnformallon 1 800 ROMANCE
Exl 9735
Start Dat1ng Tomghtl Have fun

ptay1ng the OhiO Datmg Game 1
BOO ROMANCE extension 9681

30

Announcements

Qua/tty Dnveways,

740-742·8015
877-353-7222 (toll free)

Entitled To Rece1ve Your Diabetic
Suppl1es At No Cost To You For
More Information l 886 677

Hill'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740·949·2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Seek1ng motor bike wtth pedal
start up call M1ke anyt•me 740

992 1703

110

Club Bingo On

'

Thursdays
AT6.30 PM.
Main St,
' Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80 00
per game
$300 00 Coverall
•
$500 00 Starburst
r·' Progresslve top line.
Lie. # 00-50 11!19ftfn

"

.

r·

·'

Howard L Writesel
I

ROOFING

NEW•REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ES1'/MATES

949·2168
4!2 TFN

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

UNIQUE
OLDIES
115 Salem

St.

Rutland, Ohio

OPEN
10-5:00 Tues.

Wed.

5 Sox 1438 ANTIOCH TN
37011 1438 Startlmmed•ately

$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN
MENT REFUNDS NO EXPERI
ENCE NECESSARY 1 800 854
6469 Exl 5046
$800

740-992·7643

By Appointment

(No Sunday Calls)

R. L. MASH
CARPENTRY

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

Take the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.
Services
}louse &amp; f1 atle1 S1tes
Land Cleanng &amp;
Gradrng

Sel'''c Systems &amp;
Utilllles

Dump Truck or

• Prck-up rn

011 y~rd

• Reccnlly purchased
1, .(~mhan1's Wood Producls
Ftrewood DIVISion

1-740-992-6142

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message After

6 pm

740-985·4180
Free Estimates

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138
3/11/99 TFN

New Homes
Garages
Replacement
floors &amp; Wmdows
Wood &amp; Vrnyl S1dmg
Custom Work
Krtchens &amp; Baths
Insured
24 Yrs Expenence

All

Makes Tractor

&amp;

Necessary CALL TOLL FREE
1 800 966 3599 Ex\ 2601 $34 00
Refundable Fee
'DANCER~'

40

&amp;

446 3897
Spamel 740 245 5291
B g Screen TV

player

Wild kittens under bUJidtng 740

949 2087
60

MODERN
SANITATION SERVICE

7/22{TFN

740-992-3954

992-9178

·.

CREDI,. PROBLEMS???

Meigs, Gallla &amp;
Surrounding areaa

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

740-742-3119

l::~~;~::P:I:u:mblng

5R:ooflng &amp; Gunars
&amp; Painting
&amp; Porch Deckl
,,., Estfmlltl

C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

BRAMHI COAL
COMPAN1

WORRYIIO!!!
No Embarrassment
You're Treated with Respecll

Lost and Found

Lost brown/white female P1t Bull
on Texas Ad reward call 740

985 9822
70

740-38~12

ALL Yard Saleo Mual
Be Paid In Advance
QEAQLINE 2 00 p m
lilt day belore lhe ad

1110 run Sunday
edtUon- 2 OOpm
Fildey Mondoy edlllon
-10 00 am Salunloy

740 441

1428

Computer Literate Send Resume

to

Grace United Melhodlst

Church 600 Second Street Gal~

CLASS A COL DRIVERS Dedi
$ 30 /MI Teams $ 34 /mr /Spill
100% Company Paid Health Ben
ehts Medical Dental VIsion
Company Pa•d Retuemenl Plan

PLUS 401k Aller 90 Days (WIIh
Matching) Company Paid Vaca

perware Clothes Dlshware Some
Farm Equrpment 8 30 ? Bth 9th
845 Sowards A1dge Road Crown

City
Multi Family Inside outs de Yard

Sale A lillie ot everylhrng 'Tools'
Too much to ment1on Also
Mums Gourds Pumpkins Fall
Hanging Baskets Ferns Green
Beans Sweet and Hot Peppers
cumunbers Do not miss tt11s one
t mile west Rodney next to Jar
dons Gas at Perry Green House
October 1st Thru 10th

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
2 miles on Forest Run Rd
for signs furniture mise
9am ? Oct 1--4
All Yard Sele1 Mu1t Be Peld In
Advance Deadline 1 OOpm the
day before the ad 11 to run,

Sunday a Monday odtllon1 OOpm Fildey

Skale A Way Rink Chesler 9 6
furniture carpet microwaves. win
tar coats &amp; clothes tools toys
Rawlelgh lots of mise 740 985

9996

Hou1ekeeper for disabled prac
tieing attorney In Columbus l1ve
In some care duties room board

IMMEDIATE OPENING
Full Time Management Pos ition
W1th Lpcal Reta1l Jewelry Store
Aetall And Computer Background
Necessary Benefits Avai lable
Apply Acquisitions Fine Jewelry
151 Second Avenue Gallipolis

LINE /CABLE INSTALLER
No EKp Aeq d We Provide Tra1n
lng Good Salary And Benefits
Travel And Advancement Oppor-

tunlltOS To Qualrltea H S Grads
Age 33 And Under lncludmg ~e
qulred Relocation For More Info

Call 1 800.533-1657
MEDICAL BILLING Earn Excel
1en1 $ S S 1Processing Claims
From Home Full Tralmng Com
puler ~equ t red Call Medtworks
Toll Free 1 800 540 6333 EKt

MOTHERS &amp; OTHERS WORK
FROM HOMEI Mall-Order Part
Time &amp; Full Time $650 $3 600/
Month Full Training Provided!

call

740 992 5039

Monday

through Friday between Sam 4pm
only
Needed earners for Gall a Coun
ly Areal1 1800) 696 9706

Part Time Workers Needed Ap
ply In Person 220 Fourth Ave
nue At A&amp;A Auto Detail

PHLEBOTOMIST

lmmedrale

opening for eMperlenced phlebol
omist full or part lime Responsi
b1U11es would Include collecting
spec•mens from nurs1ng home
patients In South East Ohto Send
resume to Athens Med•cal lab

400 E Slate Alhons Oh 45701
PoSitiOns Avatlable For AN 9 &amp;
LPN s Expenence Pay &amp; Shift D1f
ferentlal Offered Apply At Scemc
Hills Nursmg Center 31 t Buck
ndge Road Bidwell Oh 10 740

446-7150
Poslat Jobs $48 323 oo Yr Now
H1r ng No Expenence Paid
Tratnmg Great Benehts Call 7

Touch Freight Satellite Communi
cation Credit Union Direct De
posit Assigned Conventlonals
Company Pa1d Un1forms Stock

POSTAL JOBS To $16 35 /HR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPERt
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1 800 813 3585
EXT 04210 8 AM 9 PM 7

EOE

Avenue Galllpohs OH 45631

WANTED
63 people to lose 30 lbs 1n 30
days &amp; earn $$$$$ whlle surfing

\he ne1 1 B88 229-8427 www tNI
tallty net!feelgood
Wanted Tractor Tra1ier Drtver
To Haul W1th A Coal Bucket Ex
penance A Must If Interested

Cal L sa 740 266-4951
Wanted Wanress at LaCanllna

Apply at Restauranl 4-12 Dally

CNC Programmer/Operator
lSI &amp; 2nd
W•re EOM Programmer
/Operator 1st

TlG WELDER I sl
Janitor 3rd

Days 800-429 3660 Exl J 385

Purchase Call 800 555 CWTS

Resume To CLA 461 c/o Gatlr

pOl iS Oa1ly Tr~bune 825 Third

salary 614 2li7 5354

tlon Ana Paid Hollaays 95% No

OENTAL BILLER Up lo $15 -$45

Movmg Sale Home lntenor Tup

Five fam•ly yard sale Oct 4·5

-

Bartender Wanted

hrna Pizza Hut 9 5 30 Monaay
Wednesday

6-7

SATURDAY

Shlfley Spears 304 675 1429

cwt jobs@con way com Conway
Truckload Servtces CWT IS An

Five family yard sale New Haven
Cecil Duncan residence October

HOUII5e 7am THRU 4pm
MONDAY·FRIDAY

AVON! All Areas• To Buy or Sell

Huge Fall /Wmter Holiday Decor
Infants Adults Clothes M1sc Be

3082

lUMP AND ITDIIR COIL
H.E.I.P. VOUCHERS
ICCIPTID
DEliVERY IVAIUill

www pc Income com

cated Regiona l &amp; OTR So los

F1ve family yard sate October 4
5 Beechgrove Rutland Personal
dolls and much more 740 742

Sr 124 Wellston, Oh1o

$25 $75 hir PTIFT
1 888 690 3481

Truck On ve r Needed W1lh Class
B Or A Wtth Hazmat And Tank
Endorsements For Home Heat1ng
011 Oel1very Weekends Off In
surance And Paid Time Off Send

LEAD MACHINIST 1sl &amp; 2nd
MACHINIST I Sl 2nd &amp; 3rd ,

OWN A COMPUTER PUT IT TO
WORK $850 $3 500 MO PT /FI
FREE Delarls Log Onlo hllp II
www hbn com Access Code 5298

Have A Computer1
Putlt To Work•

poliS OH 45631
Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

IUYIMIU IIIDD
For New Local
Referral Senttce

ATTENTION

Lbsll Black Shorl Lab Blue Collar Church Treasurer 24 Hrs Per
With License Answers To "K K • Week Oomg Bookkeeping &amp;
740 446 8080 Room •201
M1sc office Chores Must be

741H187-41383

Gravel
Top Soli

Broken Must

Reg•stered female Ca1rn Ierner

1000 sr. Rt 7Sourll

Limestone

Typing Great Pay' CALL 1 800
795 0380 Ext •201 (24 Hrsl

(304)675 8832

Coolville, OH 45723

STONE
HAULED

Toys Jewelry Wood Sewing

Equal Opportumty Em

Help wanted· caring for elderly

Need dependable person to work
weekends caring for the elder ly

ADVERTISING SALES REP

str~Jctor

payer

We need quahhed personnel to fill
positions on 1st 2nd &amp; 3rd Shifts

Need 7 Ladles To Sell Avon 740

Dally Tnbune 825 Third Ave "'o

Sta te Tested Nursmg Assistants
needed for t 00 bed skttled nurs
mg facli1ty Energet•c enthus•asllc
and dedicated staff to care for our
res1dents Classes are being se1
up and mterested ca nQ1dates
shou ld apply to Rocksprings ~&amp;
hab1hta110n Center 36759 Rock
spr ngs Ad
Pomeroy Ohto

1a1o www med~

446 3356

Send Resume to GALLIPOLIS

Haul (740)245 5101)

Dealers

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
985-4473

Part Cocker

HAVE DOCTORS NEED BILL
ERS FIT PIT Medical Billing No

9897 wwwcash 91 t comltlome

ASSEMBLY AT HOM Ell Cralls

3 Free Pupp1es

PomeJOy OH 45769

For FREE Bookie! Call I 888 234

Prov de own Transporratton
'must have ability to be aTEAM

Giveaway

Fast growing business Jook•ng for
cook cashiers and part t1me
cashiers Send resume c/o The
Dally Senunel PO Box 729 75

Dtrecl Care Slaff Slarllng AI $5 75
Hour Applica\lons Wrll Be Taken
FromSOOAM 400PM 740
446 4814

skills
• Must have good driving record

AM 6 PM Sheryl Mcdermott
owner 304·895-3728

Cat19 00 \o 10 OOPM 304 757
6577

Middleton Esta\es W1ll Be Hlnng

•Must have good CommunicatiOn

Shorylo Olnor Letart WV Open 6

Farm Work n South s de area
mostly seasonal mach1nery op
erat10n durmg planting and fall
harvest Wages Includes house

ADVERTISING
SALES REPRESENTATIVE

Thursday Monday thrl.l Saturday

900530

~33-1657

2312,

For Well Established local Co

Appomtment To Come To Nash
v lie Tennessee And Aud1t10n
For MaJor Aecord Producers In
ternet WV(W wc111 ac
~~

45769 sanay Bowen LPN In

ELECTRICAL
APPRENTICESHIPS

Top Dollar (740)992 6367

SERVING TAt COUNTY AREA

Factory Authortzed
Case-IH Parts

ROBERT BISSElL
CONSTRUCTION

POTENTIAL

Complete S1mple Government
Forms At Home No EKper•ence

740 592 1642

Eqmpment Parts

992-0437

WEEKLY

Quality clothing and household
1tems $1 00 bag sate every

740 698 3290

'

Linda's Pal•tlng

Help Want&amp;d

Brochures! Satisfaction Guar
anteedl Postage &amp; Suppltes Pro
vldedl ~ush Self Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO DEPT

9 West Stimson Athens

COMMIRCIAL and RISIOINTIAL

&amp;

drrvers com

nigh! shill 7pm 9am .740 992
5023

$2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400

New To You Thlift Shoppe

Free K1ttens to g1ve away

FREE ESTIMATES

F1ee 1 en 230 6002 www olr

crew net

Home, Anywhere Great Payl

6561

New Homes • Vtnyl
Stdtng • New Garages
•Replacement Wtndows
•Room AddttiOns
•Rooftng

&amp; Thurs.

Dnvers 2 Week Patd COL Tram
mg No Exp Needed No Money
No CredJt? No Problem! Earn Up
To $32 000 /1st Yr W /Full Bene
fils P A M Transport Call Toll

Call 1 600 697

$$$ Make $35 ·65 /Hour, SOl
Your Schedule 81 Your Own
Boll, And Work Out Of Vour

Tramed Inside Home Only 740

' Pomeroy Eagles

Orten Holiday 1Vacat1on Pay
401 K /Medical/Pres /Dental As
s•gned 99 T2000 s Atder Pro
gram 98% No Touch Fre1ght
Cal1 Butcn At Summit Transporta
Iron 800 876 0680 EOE

Expartl\nce Necessary Earn Up
To $40k+ Working At Home
Must Have IBM Compatible PC

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

1 Pair White K1t1ens litter

)

lol' ·•

•

Personals

Pr1vate Insurance You May Be

SIDRAGE

1:·

005

D•abetlc Pat1ents Med1care Or

Post 467
'Beech Grove Road
Gun Shoot
Slug and Shot
Matches

.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

gles In Your Area Call For More

Haultng*Ltmestone•Gravel
Sand*Topsoti*FIII Dtrt*Mulch
Bulldozer Servtces

SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY And EASY LISTEN•
lNG I Call 1 800 469 8164 For

vancement Call1 800

(740) 992·2753
or 992·1101

Have Fun Meeting Ellg•ble Sm

'

Rutland, Ohio

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All U S Stl
ver And Gold Coms Proolsets
Diamonds Ant que Jewelry Gold
Atngs Pre 1930 US Currency
Ster11ng Etc Acqulstllons Jewelry
M T S Com Shop I 51 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740 446 2842

Cont. NW'/003508

WICK•s HfiOLIHG

DRIVERS IMMEDIATE OPEN
tNGS REGIONAL /OTR Slarl AI
29 CPM /All Ml Untoaa1ng Pay
Personalized 0 spatch Home

800 540-6333 Ex1 2301

catron Gooa Benelrls1 Rap d Ad

s Aucuon ServiCe

Paid Vaoellonol Cati1·60G-721·
9172

IIi

lent Income Full Training Com
puter Aequlred Call Toll Free

90

Wedemeyer

Needed 740 245-9557

446-6647

Ages 17 26 H1gh School Grads
Openmgs In All Aspects Of Elec
tr cal work: Paid Tra1n ng Aelo

• Parking Lots
• Basketball Courts
·Driveways
• Grading Work
• Hauling Stone

(740) 992-3470

(740 74 -8888

Rtck Pearson Auct1on Company
full t•me auctioneer complete
a1Jct1on
serv1ce
Licensed
f66 Ohio &amp; West 111rg ma 304

MEDICAL BILLING Earn E&lt;eol·

GallipoliS Ohio 740 379 2720

Pomeroy

Co. Rd 19

7amTONOON

'

Auction
and Flea Market

Cooks Fryers &amp; Bartenders
Needed Part Time Day &amp; Even
lngs Expenence Helpful 740

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

•

35215 Ball Run Rd
Pomeroy Ohto

~

80

With Tanker COL Experience

CONS~RUCTION

Henderson,

WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS

Bankruptcy contact

Bob Ball

I

740 985 9996

Local Truck Driver Needed To

Haul Mrlk ~usl Have Class A

Own Hrs $25K $~K/ Yr 1 800
536 0486 ~ 7777 www 1cwp com

773 5785 Or 304 773-6447

We Do•••

Beginning Sept. 26th

For tnformatton regarding

Hourly Rates

We deliver
ALMOST anything
Call for details
740.992-0038

Exp • Ins Owner Ronn1e Jones

20 Yrs

Artytime-Ar~ywhere

24 Hr. Taxi QJ('
Delivery
Service

740-992-5232

SMITH'S
."{f\11\

Aluminum

,(~,,~

Five family yard sale October 4
5 Skate A Way Rtnk Chester
9am 6pm Furniture carpet mi
crowaves w1nter coats &amp; clothes
tools toys Rawlelgh tot or mise

Pomeroy, Ohio
9/27199 1 mo rxt

TREE SERVICE

Ball Logging
and Firewood

Gas-A&amp;C-Mtg

Phone (740) 593-66

JONES'

American Legion

Portable
IW11Idlng Services

Domino's

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohw 45701
"A Better

Computer Users Needed Work

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

2ii23

Public Notice
Probate Court of Meigs
County, Ohio
NOnCE
Revlted Code, Sec
271701(A)
Notice Ia hereby give~
that Kimberly A Faulkner,
or 30245 Barringer Rldgl
Rd , Portland, Oh, 4577il,
haa applied to the Common
Pleas Court, Probat•
Dlvlolon of Melga County,
Ohio, for an order to change
my name to Kimberly Ill
Sutton
•
Said application will b'
heard In aald Court, at 1.30
PM, on the 5th day of
November, 1999, at Melgf
County Probate Court
Tina L Sutton
The State ot Ohio, Malga
County
Personally appeared
before me Judith R. Slaaon,
Chief Deputy Clerk of the
Meigs County ProbatCourt and made solemn
oath that the notice, a copy
of wl)lch le hereto attaehed;
waa published one time, to
wit on the 4th day of
October 1999, (being at
least thirty days prior to the
5th day of November 1999,
the date the application Ia
to be heard, at mentioned
In said notice,) In the Dell~
Sentinel, a newspaper of
general circulation In the'
County aforesaid
Judith R. Sisson
Sworn to before me and
signed In my presence, this
tat day of October 1999
(tO) 4

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

I'

Public Notice

BAR-J

Card of Thankil

Steve Rtffle
Sales Representative
"-'
Larry Schey

...

Business
Services

• Notice of Election on
Tax Levy In Exceaa of
the Ten Mill Llmltetlon
Revised Coda, Sactiona
3501 11(G), 5705 19,
570525
NOTICE Ia hereby
given that In purauanca
of a Rltolullon of the
Board of Township
Truataaa
of
the

Now Renting

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

(7401 992·3838

Public Notice

The famtly of Mar1ha
would hke to express
the11 !hanks to famdy and
frtends for prayers,
flowers cards memorW
g1f1S food and the
kmdness shown dunng
our unexpected loss
A spectal thanks to all
of Manha s church family,
!he Rev Dwayne Sluder I
and Cremeens Funeffi
Home
M01her, Ethel Orr,
Sisters, Marilyn Newman,
·Janet Grueser Mara
Daughler Rebece2 Bentt

October 4, 199&amp;

\

DAYS fds Inc Fee

REGISTERED NURSES
Malemlly ll Family llntt

Mus! have experience to apply,
Pay rales accord1ng to experf
ence Health &amp; L1fe Insurance
paid vacaubn &amp; Holidays 401 (KJ
&amp; prom sharing Send Resume O(
Apply 10 Person Montgomery
Machine &amp; Fab Inc 206 Watt9
Blevms St PO Sox 247

Jackson Oh 45640 EOE
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 /HR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY
MAIN'
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NC)
EXP NEEDED FOR APP ANQ
EXAM INFO CALL 1 600 813
3565 EXT *4211 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS IdS InC Fee

140

Business
Training

Galtlpotlo Career Cottage
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446 4367

'8002140452
Reg *90 05 12746
150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Bachelors
Masters Doctorate By Corre..spondence Based Upon Pnor Ed
IJCallon And Short Study Course
For FREE lnrormation Bookie\

Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800-964-8316
180

Wanted To Do

Georges Portable Sawmill don t
ha~JI your logs to the mtll JUS! call

304 675-1957

Handyman seeking work ava11
able now 740 949 1035
J1ms Or~wal &amp; Constr~ctlon "
New Constructlon &amp; Remodeli
Drywall Stdlng Aoofs Addl
ttons Pamtmg etc (304)674·

4623 or (304)674 0155

1&lt;1ms Cleamng &amp; lntenor Paint•
lng Commercial Aes t denllal ~
Reasonable Rates Free est•
mates call304 674 4623
Reliable Lady Wt ll Do House ..
cteamng Or He p You W•th Youf
Fa t Housecleanmg Call Dtan~

740 245-5104

W1U clean your home or off•ce,
and do fall cleanmg have excel
tent references call 740 992
6530 or leave a message
Will do babyslttmg 10 my home I
have references (304)675 4637
Will Do Pa1nttng &amp; Odd Jobs

$4 00 A Hour 740 367-0140
W11l mow grass clean out old
buildings old nouses etc All
help IS apprec•ated 740 949~

0709
Will hint Houses (Interior &amp; EXj
tenor) Will oalnt Mobile Hgme
Boofa. Barna A Tin Roofa Ex"'
perlenced References &amp; Free

ESI males (304)695-3981

FINANCIAL

/Hr Dental B•lhng Software Com
parry Needs People To Process
Medical Cla1ms From Home
Training Provtded Must Own
Computer 1 800 223 1 t49 Ext
4(10

Reg1stered Nurses Are Needed
Immediately For 12 Hour Shtfts In
The Newly Renovated Maternity &amp;
Family Serv1ces Unit AI Holzer
Medical Center Full T1me And
Part Time Positions Are Avail

DRIVERS Cannon Expre$$ 99%
Dnver No Touch Freight Start At
32¢ Ml /5 Yr + Exp 31¢ Ml /3

able One (1) Year 01 OB Expert
ence And RN Licensure In The
State Of Oh1o Are Required

$20 $40 /HOUR Easy Med•cal
81fhng Full Tra mng Compute[
ReqUired Call 1 sea 869 7905
Ext 700

Yr 30¢ Mr 11 Yr 29¢ Ml 16
Mos 28¢ Mr /2 6 Mos S\ud
eniS Or 1 Mo Exp $350 Wk Pay

Excellent W1ge And B1neflt
P1cklge

$35 /Month Restdentral Long OisJ
tance Plant Oct: /MINUTEr $75 I

Aa1se Every 50 000 Miles. Bonus
es R1der Program Pa1d Vaca
t10ns Ins Avail www cannonex

Please Contact
ROSie Ward
Director Of Human Resources

Call For Delatls t

100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis OH 45631

H ll WTruc:ktng Compony,lno
40Yeel'lln8ualneta and Still

PhOne 740 446 5105
Fax/TDD 740-446 5106

0111Wing
(Were doing something Righi)
Company Drlvera
(Van &amp; Flalbod)

Rloplralory Theraplal
trechnlclan

•2 Excellent Pay Packages
'Paid Weekly &amp; Dlrecl Deposll
'Heallh Eye &amp; Denial

Full Time Position For CRTT f
ART Will Constder New Graduate
Possessing Valid Ohio License
Or Permit Must Be Knowledge
able In All Aspect Of Respiratory
Therapy Including ABGs And
EKGs Competnlve Pay Contact
Doctors Hospital Ne tsonv11Je 0

"Home 90'o of Weekends
Owner Operetora
(We Pay PermiiS &amp;Fuel Tax)
'Paid Weekly &amp; Direcl Deposit
"Insurance Plan

740 753 1931 Ex1 62ii2

'Salell\1&amp; Rental
You Muol Be AI Lllot 22'Yoira
of age 1 hlva1 Yoor OTR Ex~ CleooACDL,Hozmlll
ICteon MVR
11 this sounds greal and you

meet the requirements call Aan·

dy or ChrloUno at 800-126 3660
our

web

page

www hwtruck com
H 1 wTrucking Co., tnc
Ono WV 25545

Busmees
Opportunity

Monlh UNLIMITED CALL 24

n

Agents Wanted Huge MLM tn
come Potential Toll Free 1 977...

921 0713 ILv Msg) EMail
o ensworld@aol com

INOTICEI
,
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus•·
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through th~
ma11 untrl you have tnvestlga'led

the oflerlng

I

'401 K Retiremenl
'Paid Holidays &amp; Vacatkln

or visit

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

210

at

SECRETARY lor busy non profll
agency A minimum of high school
d1ploma and two year experience
Must possess good communlca
lion skills (wrilten and oral)
phone Skills and eKpertence In
Mlcrosolt Word and Excel

Kno,wre,age ol dalabase a plus
by Oclober 18
1999 to FACTS 45 Olive Slreel
Gallipolis Ohio 45631 EOE 1\4/FIH

2 9 Cenla PHONE CARD Ro·
ule $750 $3 000 IWk CASHr
FREE locations Free Card

Video 1 866-200 7551 24 HIS

o\

A 211c PHONE CARO Roule
EASY $$ MONEY! Local Area
Earn $500 $5 000 /Wk CASHi •
FREE lnlo 1 800-997 9888
ARE U LAZY? t Am And Earn
$1 000 A Day No Setting Nor
MLM For Free Information Pack;,

age Call 1 800 786 86&lt;9 24 H",
XT27
AT HOM~ DATA ENTRY $OUT·
STANDING INCOMES$! ProcosV
Modlcai/Denlat Clalma. Computer
Requii'Od Will Train 1 800 289,
4159 Ext 54

i

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentmel

Monday, October 4,1999~~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

M@nday, October 4, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

~
~ ~O~O~P~~------~----~~----~~~~~====~========~~~~~~ .

~

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

210

230

Business
Opportunity

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
0

20 Local ons $4K

$ 1OK

$4 000 +IMo
ncome
ALL
CASH 100"' c F nance Ava able

1 800 380 26 5 24 Hrs

Professional
Services

Mount s Tree Se v ce The Tre e
P ofess ana s
Bucke T uck
Se v ce Top Tr m Rem oYa
Stump G nd ng F ee Es n d e~
Ful y In sured WO ks Ca mp B d

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Repa r

wei OH Call And Save t BOO
838 9568 740 388 9648 Owner

ng NOT Replacmg Long Cracks

Rck Mount

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Want A Home Don Have Land?
We Do Hurry On y 10 los Left

BOO 383 6862

410

Repa ed New &amp; Aebu n In Stock

Call Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528

far Rent
Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bed oom mob e homes a r
cond1t oned $260 $300 sewe r
wale and trash nc lu ded 740

2 Bedroom Mollie Home In Ka
nauga $315 Mo $300 Oepos1t

Do The Rest No 0 re ct Sell ng

No Pets 740..446-4107

Free Info Package 1 BOO 831

2385 24 Hrs Ext 63
FULLER BRUSH CO Is Look ng

MENT Needed L rnted Time Only
Call 800 882 7270 Ema I lu ler
ettOaol com

MEDICAL BILLER Up to $ 5
$45 /Hr Mad ea. B I ng So twa e
Company Needs People To Pro

cess Medica C a1ms From Home
Tra mng Pro11 ded Must Own
Computers

800 434 5518 Ext

667
MEDICAL BILLING Unl m ted In

come Potentia No EKper ence
Necessary Free nformat on &amp;
CO ROM Investment $4 995
$8 995 Flnancmg Ava table Is
land Automated Med caj Serv c
es Inc 800 322 1139 Ext 050

Vend In KY IN CT

AI rea estate advert smg n
th s newspaper s subJect to
!he Fede al Far Hous ng Act
of 1966 wh ch makes I legal
Ia advert se any preference
mtalonordsc mnaton
based on ace color el g on
sex ram 1a status or nat ana
ong n or any ntent on to
make any such op ale renee
m tat1on or d s ~ m nat on

5885
HUO Homes Approval By Phone
S ng les Or Doubles 740 446

Moving Out Of Area Must sell at
sacr Ice 98 S W l ke New

MOVING OUT OF AREA Mus
Sell At Sac a ce 1998 SW L ke
New 304 733 9102
New 38R 2 Bath 14 W de $500
Down $21 per mo Free Air 1

o

800 691 6777
New 4BR 16 w de $500 Down
$245 per mo Free A r 1 800

691 6777

Stmple Easy And FREE Check
My Web S te www sec ets2suc
cess com/spec al49700

New Doub eW de Repo never
I ved n st II unde wa ranty

REAL ESTATE

START YOUR OWN VEND NG
ALL CASH BUSINESS
220-2985 24 Hrs

t 800

VENDING lazy Persons Dream
Few Hrs
Great Income Pr ced
To Se I Free Brochu e 800 820

6782
WE ARE ENGERGIZ Ntl E
COMMERCE ON THE INTER

310

Homes for Sale

$0 DOWN HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED
GOV T
FOR E
CLOSURES! CALL NOW FOR
REGISTRATION
t BOO 434
2434 EXT 3205 (NO FEE)
1 95 Acres Seven Room s Plus
Balh Two Garages Barn 10 5
M les To Ga I po s 740 388

Sale Pr ced French C ty Homes
Po nt P easant WV 304 675
Schutt New General on Sect oncu
28 ~~:64 LR Fam y Room Fire
p ace 4 Bedrooms 2 Baths
Thermopane W ndows &amp; Much
Mo e Pr ced To Move French
C ty Homes Pont Peasant WV

Money to Loan

$$$ NEED CASH ?? WE Pay
Cash For Rema n ng Payments
On Property Seidl Mortgages!
Annu lies Settlements' lmme
date Quotes
Nobody Beats
Our Pr ces Nat1onal Contract

Buyers 800 490 0731 Ext 101
www nat1onalcontractbuyers com

SSS OVERDUE BILLS II SSS Con
sol date Deb sr Same Day Appro

val NO APPLICATION FEES I
800 863 9006 Ext 936 www help
pay Dills com

SFREE CASH

NOW$

From

Wealthy Fam1hes Unload ng M
ons Of Dollars To Help M n m ze
The r Taxes Wr te lmmed ately

W ndfa Is 847 A SECOND AVE
SU ITE 0350 NEW YORK ~EW
YORK 10017
GUARANTEED

APPROVAL

Bank Card No Cred1 Check No
Up Front Cash Secur ty DepoSit
Requ red Must Be 18+ And
Have Vahd Check ng Account
Pre Approval By PhOne 1 800

66!1-1556
FREE MONEY' II s True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500
$50 000 Debt Conso dat on Per
sonar Needs Bus ness 1 800

511 2640
BANKRUPTCY $79+ Stops Ga,r

3 Bedroom House W 3 Acres
Land Few Fru t Trees 2 Bed
rooms Bath upsta1rs 1 Bedroom
Front Room 0 n ng Room UtI ty
Room K1tchen Bath Downsta1 s
S ts On Storys Run Road Off Rou e 7 Into mat on (740) 367
7576 After Noon $40 500 00

Schult New General on 16 x72 3
Bedrooms 2 Baths V nyl S d ng
Sh ng e Roof 2 x6 Wa Is Ga den
Tub Skyl gh ts Tdta Electr c
Free A C Sale Pr ced French
C1ty Homes Pont Pleasant WV

OBO

304-675 1400

ARIZONA RARE BUY Pnstine 40
Acre Ranches In Northwest Arl

zona From Only $495/Acre Lush
Vegetal on Mounta n V 1~ws No
Qual fy ng Low Down Aif&lt; About
6 Mo Inspect on P ogram! 1 800

711 2340

o000

1 3 Bedroom Local Government
&amp; Bank Foree osures F nanc ng
Pass ble For L st ngs Ca l 800

319 3323 Ext 1709
FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down Gov t And Bank Aepo s
Bemg Sold Now F nanctng Ava11

able Call Now! t BOO 730 7772
Ext 8040

sa com
CASH Or LOAN Farm Capital
Will Purchase Or loan Against

Must Sell 4 Bedrooms 3 Baths
Bnck Ranch On 2 12 Acres
Cathedral Ceil ng Full Basement
3120 Sq Ft Of L v ng Space At
tached 2 Car Garage Pool lo
cated Between B dwell &amp; V nton

Monthly Payments 20 50% Save
Thousands Of Dollars In In erest

Non-P oflt TCC 800 75B 3844
CREDIT PROBLEMS Stop Here
We Can Help Loans Ava1lab e

$3 000 And Up No Fee 1 B77
663-9269 Ext 22 t
CREDIT PROBLEMS
STOP
HEREII WE CAN HELP LOANS
AVAILABLE $3 000 AND UP
CALL TOLL FREE t 877 663
9269 Ext 231
CREDIT REPAIR AS SEEN ON
TV! Erase Bad Credit Legally
Free Info 888-659-2560
FREE TERM LIFE QUOTE Lock
n LOW Rates Now Exce lent Loca l Service 1 877 TermOnly

Ask ng $1 4 900 740 388 8074

Texas Road Gall po 1s C ty
Schools Five Rooms And Part ar
Basement Owner W II Finance
W1th 10% Down 740 441 1108

Mobile Homes
for Sale

91 Mans on mob le home 14x60
two bedroom one bath total alec
tnc stove refr gerator central a r
Ready to move St2 500 740

949 9016

12l!65 mobile nome remodeled
nclud ng furnace new pain extra
c ean ca ll alte r ~pm or leave
message 740 992 5419

dat1on $5 000 $200 000 Bad
Cred1t 0 K Fee 1 800 770'0092
Ext 215
NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
Olllce Visit Ne cessary Up To

$500 InStantly Call Toll Fre e 1
877 EARLYPAY 1st ADVANCE
FREEl Li:IICC70038

14x70 tra ler 1 112 baths 2 3
bedrooms some new carpet and
remodeling must se ll askmg

$1 1 000 740 992 5686
14x70 W1th E•pando Good Con
dtlon S6 500 740 446 8172 740256-6251
1982 14 x60 C aylon 2 Bed
rooms 2 Baths Cond ton Good
Ask ng $4
Contac Alter 6

ooo

800-888-6450

230

Pr~feaslonal
Services

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W nl
1-888 582 3345

73 Acres 3BR 2BA Ranch
Home 2 Barns Wood Pasture
Ca Homestead Bend Broker at

(304)8B2 2405 or (304)882 2221
8 2 acres Bashan Ad 14 acres
Mo n ng Star Ad owner flnanc1ng
85 &amp; 22 Acre Sect10ns Wooded
Farm land Harr son Townsh p

1 Bedroom 2 B ocks F om Unl
ve sty ~ o $235 Mo Plus De
post Ava able October 12th

1 Bedroom AIC WID HOOk Up
Near Arbors Nurs ng Home No
Pets Qu et locat ons $279/Mo
+ Ut ties 740 448 2957

2 br ap t 1n New Haven call after
noon 304 882 2937

23ACRES
2 Miles 0 I SR 7 &amp; SR 218 South
01 Galhpol s Smglew1des Allowed
Rough Mostly Wooded Road AI
ready Cut In Land Con tract

Ava lable Only $27 ado 1 BOO
213-B365
BRUNER LAND
7411-4411492

Gallla Co

Fr endly Ridge Rd
Hunters 15 Acres $12 600 cash
$14000 financed Wa e C ty
Schools
Rd

Sec! anal Couch Rec n ng Cha rs

W th Fold Away Bed 108 By

7795
0 yer for Sale &amp; D nette Set
$75 (304)675-6693

GOOD USED

Washers dryers refr gerators
ranges Skaggs Appl ances 76
Vme Street Cal 740 446 7398

1 68B 81B Ot2B
ltght
$150

New And Used Furn ture Store
Below Holiday Inn K~nauga

Stop And See us 740 446-4782
New dresser w/ mtrror &amp; a chest
super stngle water bed askmg

740 256 6382
1999 Daub ew de Repo Never
L ved In Ne N Home Wa ranty 0
Down If Quart ed 740 446 3093
Oakwood Ga I po s Onlyll

4BR 2BA $499 Down $259 mo
(304)755 5566

Apartment lor rent m Pomeroy no

pets 740 992 5858
Applications Now Accepted For
Sma I But Extra Spec1al One Bed
room Very Clean Stove Frlg
Washer Dryer Total Electnc /AC
Non Smokers Only No Pets

$300 DepoSit $350/Mo 740 446
2205 740 446 9585 Ask For
V rglnla
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS ~T
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Dnve

I om $279 to $358 Walk to shOp
&amp; moves Call 740 446 2568
Equa Housing Opportunity

Washer $95 Cryer $95 Electr c
Flange $95 Refrigerator $9~

Washers L ke New $205 w th 1
Year Wa ranty Skaggs App 1anc
es 76 V ne Street Gall pols 740
446 7398 1 BS8-818-Qt28

520

Sporting
Goods

530

Antiques

Buy o se I A verlne Ant ques
1124 E Man Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 600 pm Sunday 100 to
Moo e owner

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

30 ooo BTU vent less gas heater
al eady on stand or can wall
mount 304 882 3970

95 Window• NEC Computer
monitor hard d1sk &amp; soft disk
dnve Pr nter speakers new
co mputer stand &amp; mouse Aeady
for on ltne Excellent Cond1t1on
$500 OBO (304)675 1446

RENTALS

$0 Down Low

2 Houses On Lovers lane Over
lookmg A ver Each Wt1h 2 Sed
roms Smat House $350/Mo B g

House $450/Mo 740 446 t 243
740..446 1615
3 Bedroom Bnck Home 6662 S R
588 Rodney Contact 0 K Ph I
1ps 740 385 4778 For In forma

Nice Unfur01shed 3 Bedroom

Family Room $550 per month
plus Depos 1 One Year lease

(304)675 7873
94 P necrest D 1ve Adjacent To
Arbo s Nurstng Home 2 Bed
rooms CA Gas Heat 01shwash
er Range Refrigerator Washer &amp;
Dryer Furn shed Available 10!1 1
99 $425 lease Deposit Re

qulred 740-446-2957

ooo

For Lease 2
Sq Fr Execu
t ve Home Near Golf Course

$750 Mo 740 446-2957
Pomeroy th ee bedroom hOuse
two bedroom apartment relerenc
es secur ty partly hxn shed 740
992 6886 alter 5pm

Original Miles $2 500 Fl m 740
379 2926

You Don I Call Us We Botn LOSBI
7411-446-6308 1 800.291 0098

1970 El cammo 350 Rebu It Mo

Water ne Special

tor 350 Turbo Transmission
Came From Florida New Paint

$21 95 Per 100 1 200 PSI
$37 00 Per I 00 A I Brass Com
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio I 800 537 9528

New Parts Great Second Car

Wood splitter 5 hp 1o 112 ton
$400 cal 304 675-1206

550

Building
Supplies

Now $10 971

50x100x 6 Was

$27 590
Now $19 990
60X200K16 Was $58 760 Now
$39 990 t 800 406 5126

560

Pets for Sale

AKC Lab Pupp es Call 740 388

9398
AKC Reg stared Boston Terr er
Puppy Female Show Qual ty!
Sho s wormed Ready To Go

$175 740 388 9325

Month y Payments Y2K Compl
ant Almost Everyone Approved

Call FIROCOM Advanced Tech
nologles 1 ~17 3476
Fl ewood for sale $25

a

Two 10 Week Old Toy Poodle

Puppies Toy Poodle Dogs 1
Male I Female $150 Each 740
446 3398

570

Musical
Instruments

Lowery P

ano

Good Cond!Uon

$800 740-446-7551
Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

580

Red Raspberries Now Ava lable
Taylors Berry Patch Call In Eve

lngs 74tl-245 9047
Walnuts

Bought At Troyers

Woodcraft Open Monday And
Thu sday And Saturday Starting

9/25 Till 10/30199 9 l.lllos Wast
01 Gallpolls On 14 t

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

truck

load 740 949 0605

610

Farm Equipment

Firewood For Sale 740.256 1922

50 John Dee e new paint 3 po nt

Fl ewood for sate All Hardwoods

hitch field ready live power 740

992 6803

ton $50 740-992 5196

620

&amp; Deposit Roqulrod 740 446
1519
Valley VIew Apartments

~lo

For sale Pr mestar system also
hke to buy older RCA Direct TV
system with acc~ss card pay

cash cell 740 949 3315 leave
message
Foxt re c ossbow quiver T da ts
$125 locust post $2 each ca I

740 992 5690
Free PC Computerll Csll Nown &amp;
Learn How Internet Mercnant
Accounts Custom Webslles
New Business? Poor Credit?
OKIII Almt&gt;st Every Bus ness Ap
proved low Monthly Payments
I 888-671 4300

Wanted to Buy

Good Tailgate fo Fu I Size Jeep

Truck (304)675 1564

630

Livestock

1 Appaloosa Gelding 3 Years
Old One 4 Yea( Old Paint Mare
One 3 Year Old Appaloosa Geld
lng One 112 Quarter 112 Morgan
11 Year Old Mare 2 Arabian
Geldings One 3 Yeera Old One 7
Years Old lnatallment Plan To
Good Homes Wfth 25% Down

740-388-3358

Grande Oh Now Accepting ap
plicalions for Immediate occu
pancy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apts Air
Condition ng Kitchen appliances
Fenced in Playground Laundry
On Sight Management Water
Sewage and Trash Pad Full t1me
Students must meet Oh o Hous
lng Finance Agency Qualifies
tons Senior Citizens Welcorua

Grubbs Plano tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Noed Tuned? Ca I tha
plano Or 740-446-4525

8 Ftldlng Horses For Sale Prices

Hawal an Tsrlyakl Recipes $3
S A S E Kama aina Foode
PMB522 4224 Waialae Avenue
15 HonolulU Hl968t6

EHD For more Information call
(740) 245 9170 Monday thru
Thursday 9 00 12 00 noon

Club Call Sale Saturday October
9 1999 12 00 PM Lawrence
Country Fair GroJunds Steers &amp;
Heifers Born &amp; Raised in La
For

Invalid Bed ~aile Grocery Carl
Weedeater 740-44S-t82tl

1 Baby Jack Donkey 1 F ve Year

Old Donkey 740-446- t 158
Start$550 740 448-4110

t A J 6 2
• Q9

'f

f

,. *'

1998 Dodge 4x4 extended C$b..a. •
fu 1 s za p ck up loaded SLT Lar 1
am e 22 ooo mile s books lor •

Vans

t 983 Chevy Blazer New Pa!~~ I

Tires 4x4 Automalic AJC $2 300 ..
May Trade On Later 4x4 Truck-

:C~hw~ro=le~t~74=0-=2:56~~=34~-----;r'

t ~84 CJ7 W th Hardtop 32 Inc~·
Mlckeys With Ultra R ms $5 95!1;..•
OBD 740-441 0688

lltf·O~, LOOIC$

',

tires new paint asking $4300 1
DBO call 740 949 2644 eve ~
lngsor740-9921506days
1

'-IICf Ttlf Ffl&gt; IS TIGtfTfNI/tiG Ttlt
MONfY SVPP'-Y
AGAIN.

'

I

II

Front WO AMIFM Cassette
88 ooo Miles $10 500 740 446
2151
1997 Jeep Wrangler 41 000 4
5 speed

a/c

must sell

$12 800 cal 740-949-2809

_.;

1999 Expedition Eddie Bauer:-.J

Loaded 12 000 miles Wh~'J""
$34 500 F rm (304)675 7725
•

7 40

Motorcycles

•)

•

THE
~

-

BORN

'N\-\'( 00 YOU

I •••••• .,, ...
~

eoTI-\E~ Wl\1-\ f&gt;..

~6GE~T ION 00)( &lt;

1981 Harley Davidson Low Ald.( . ""
Lowered Two Inches lots Q11
Chrome Excellent Condition

Mile Warranty Good Condition
1986 buick Grand NatiOnal Ek
cellent Condition $7 500 OBO
740 446 4619

I=-·~J·

WOO\-\~~

mostly new engme
new b ke ncludes

I
many extras $1495 OBO
1AM005

BIG NATE
SUT OH, NO' HES
WI'IUO:.IN(&gt; Tl1 ROUGH

750

A TAACK 11EET
DURING THe JAVELIN
COMPETITION I

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1995 17 Hydra Sport 90 l'lp -t
Johnson t It trim trolling moto1 ~ 1 ~
trailer ready to go $7 800
_

M1les

1992 Olsmoblle Achleva 2 Doors

1992 Chevy Lumina V 6 Au
tomat c Pwr windows Pwr door

locks Cold AIC Clean Inside &amp;
Out

Eu o

Package

Asking

OUT 1

AAA!tltrt

Boat~

=

1997 18 Bass Tracker Pro Te~ -....
60 hp mar ne w1th troll ng motqr
&amp; tra ler $6 700

1998 IS 800 Seles NHro, 120 ~.II'&lt;
Mercury Dual Console buii~ J.tl!!.
battery charger Ua1 er S8 900
"
1998 24 Sweetwater pontoon ~~

East

'"'

Pass

2NT

48

13
18
20
21

8 Opera song

9 River In

Type of curve

Recede

Wild sheep
Drink ol the
gods
22 Trinket
23 Nile bird
24 Ac1s like a

Belgium
11 WWIIevent
12 Female a1ar

shrew
25 Plan1
containers
27 River In
France
28 Computer
screen
Image
29 Period of
foaling
31 Dreaa part
33 Wine
36 Maa·guya
40 Fur biNirlng
animal
41 Oldnawan
seaport
42 Wild alleep
43- me-down
44 Govt larm
agency
46 Brainstorm
47 PhOenix
eagera
48 Eleele
50 Sight organ
52 Edible tuber
53 Math abbr

Pass
All pass

By Phillip Alder
It IS mterestmg to watch game
show contestants Under lhe glare of
the televiSIOn hghts and knowmg
thai all 1hetr answers WJII be broad
cast nattonw1de lhey are under much
more pressure 1han we are st1lmg at
home wtth no money or pnzes al
slake
When at 1he brtdge table mosl
people behave hke conteslants nof
al home vtewers Yet 11 ts obv1ously
be1ler tf you can stay ca lm coolly
analyzmg the sttuatwns
Take thts deal You are m four
spades West leads the heart Jack
kmg ace four East cashes the heart
queen seven three five Eas1 con
tmues wtth ano1her heart How would
you con1mue?
Al1hough three no trump ts bener
here tt ts hard to cntlclze North s
JUmp lo four spades wtth 12 pomts m
hts par tner s two sutts (Why dtdn 1
Easl overcall one hean?)
Wtth two heart losers declarer
must avotd two lrump losers !Hts
club loser wtll dtsappear on dummy s
heart 10) lfWesl has lhree spades tt
doesn I maner what declarer does
But whal tf West has only two
spades' If West has queen ex dedar
er musl rulf low Yel tf West has 1wo
low spades declarer mus1 ruff w11h
the spade Jack Whtch 1s more I ke
ly? Well 1f\Vcst has (\\O spades Easl
holds lhree And lhe queen ts one
and a halfttmes (three to two) more
hkely 10 be m the 1hrec card holdtng
than m 1he doubleton So 1he nght
play 1s 10 ruff "tth the spade Jack
If you d1dn I lake consolatton that
the ortgmal declarer ruffed low and
went down dunng thts year s Euro
pean Champwnsh1ps on 1he Medtter
ranean 1sland of Malta

•

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce ebnty C phe cryptog ame a e c ealed urn quota! ons by tamous peOj)le pas artd p esenl
Eachlete n hecphe stands o anothe Todayscue UtQUSISG

Z F K

UWKBZKJZ

KHKW

WKOKXHKE

F NAN W

OBWKKW

LNZB

L BAA T

R N J

NA

H K

L T

XA

SBJKSBRR

X

L BAA T

L N Z

e

EBT

XA

BAUKRKJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION

I rose by sheer m11 tary ab11tty to 1he rank of

Corporal " - Thornton W1lder on

World War I army servtce

WDID
'~!~;~· S©\'lc41\t\-~r.trs·
lAM I
ldhod
CLAY I POllAN _.;...._ _ __
O four Jcramblod
letters of the
words be

I

~r

Rearrange

low to form

four

simple words

CE NB0

{

K

I

PEANUTS

hp Johnson tandem axle with

bakes $13 700 740 992 6520

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1992 Bonnev1Ue S E $5 000

OBO Call (day) (740)446 4290
(evenlng)(304)675 3290

LOOI&lt;

IC.Kf\l'"'

1988 Trans Am Damaged Left
F ong Runs Great V 8 Price To

69 000

;j

~

12Ft V Hull A um num
T11tTra1ter (304)675 15~

Corsica

IDIOOC.

t

1994 YZ 125 new

(304)675 1564

1990 Grand Am 4 Doors Auto
Air Clean Cer S1 850 Or Best
Oller 740-441 1083

ll

'"I
VEil.'&lt; WEll.,{ 1-!IU..&lt;.IVE~Olf.&gt;
~~~\10~ iO '(OJIZ.l)..\E!)\

f&gt;.N'( ~~~~TlOO 1\T

\

19B6 Cnevy Cavalier RS 2 0
Auto AC Tilt Cruise 76 000
o 1glnal mles Call (304)458
1997 After 6PM
1987 DoEige Daytona Pacifica 4
Cyl Turbo Cha gad Automatic
Trans Great Stereo &amp; Power Ga
lore Ca ll for more deta Is

~

YOU NEVE.IZ. C..IVE M.'( I~

t 985 Mercedes 190E G ey W1m
Leather Interior New Mercedes

North

••

•

Thinking clearly
under pressure

1972 Ford Van Runs Good New :

t995 Ford W ndstar Gl Garage
Kept One Owner Front Rear A r

Ana-to Prevlouo PUDie

Openmg lead • J

MAR I'M AT

Tires Asking $2 250 OBO Call
:An~~~~~m:e~7~40~44~6~n~59:_______ :

1989 Chevrolet B azer S 10 4x4
106 000 miles sunroof ale new

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

3t

ELVINEY KNOW

&amp; ~WDa

South
Pass

Ia

t BETTER LET

$25 600 will sale tor $22 500 •
304-675-7642
"

730

37 Rock concert
Item
1 Bar of metal
39 In regard to
6 Carriage
40 Dlaney World
10 UHCI a cooling
aile
device
42Cioae
12 Throaty
45 Ron-14 Demeaned
rose
15 Seea
46 Same
16 Southeast
(comb form)
Asian holiday 49 Hurry
17- Lingua
51 Delay (2 wda )
(airline)
54 Hook-19 Co~ atandarda 55 S1rt81
20 Indefinite
56 Take a chance
person
57 Compile
23 Aceuatom
26 Ule atory lor
DOWN
ahort
1 - -llrat
27 Cooking fat
2 Local movie
30 Financier
theater (al)
Bernard-3 Small lnaect
32 &amp;~~ginner
4 Crlcke1
34 Se1 on lire
poaltlona
35 Inventor
5 Golf peg
Thomas6 Mayday!
36 Draft
7 Glad
agcy

Vulnerable East West
Dealer South

t 997 Chevy Tahoe K t 500 4
M les Loaded $25 900 1!NI8
Dodge W 250 0 esel 5 Spe!_d..;o
Loaded $32 500 740 245-0379

Call

$3 250 00 080 740-256 1288

$1 oo Hay wagon $400 Hay
Condtoner $75 740 245 9551

Upsta rs Furnished 3 Rooms
Bath Clean No Petal References

Body Rough
$450
(304)895 3840 Afte 5PM

1991

Manchester Tamer 2 years old
House 1i a1ned Very Smart Male
Loves Kids! Needs Good Home'
Askmg $100 00 (740" 245 5616

1997 350 XL 7 3 Diesel Automtil;
lc Cab &amp; ChasSis 38 000 mii&amp;Si
A t Condition (740)256-6056

1985 Dodge Lance Runs Great

Sail 740.446 7928

740 256

• 7 4

$11 000 740-446 0947

$7 700 740-448 8657

For sa le July 1936 edition of
Gone With The W nd fa r cond

qulred Allor 5 740 446 0101
Before 5 740-&lt;46-3481

245 9100

Rio G ande OH Call 740 245
5121

One Bedroom Ap Furnished or
Not Ulll ttes Included 5 min

Lease Plus Secur ty Deposit Re

1984 Plymouth Reliant 87 000
Actua Miles New Rotors P-ads
Calipers AM/FM Cassette CB 4
New Tires New Muff er Toi Pipe
Just Tuned Up New Front Axles
N ce lntertor Needs Paint! 740

Engine With Remaining 48 000

Round Bale Feeder $65 Manure
Spreader $ t75 L me Spreader

Tara Townhouse Apa tments
Very Spac1ous 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 1/2 Bath Fully Car
peted Adult Poo &amp; Baby Pool

$800 OBO (304)675-3909

Block b 1ck sewer pipes wmd
ows I ntels etc Claude Winters

Steel Build ngs New Must Selll
30x40x12 Was StO 200 Now
$6 990 40x60K14 Was $16 400

I

53 000 M les Long Bed $9 995
740 256 1142

WD

1903 Plymouth Reliant Many

448 0041 After 5 PM

from otore .ochool &amp; hoopltol
Call (304)6r5-2117

740 256 1071

press1on Fittings In Stock

Full Size 3/4 Ton Truckload De
livered &amp; Slacked $45 (304)882
2555

Apartment Po1nt Pleasant 740

Pa 10 Start $350/Mo No Pets

A1r 2 Car Garage 2 112 Bath

9.2% Gas Furnaces Hei\J Pumps
Due Systems F ee Estimates If

59 ooo Ml es $4 295 1989 Ponti
ac 6 000 $2 195 Cook Motors
740 446 0103

COMPUTERS

All ed on 681 740 985 3504

1993 Chevrolet lum na 4 dr se
dan 31 VB auto ac newtres
non smoker 53 000 m les minor
passenger damage (runs &amp;

$50 740 446 8172
6251

800 701 7912

Grac ous llv ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VII age Manor and

2 Bedrooms Large LA Kitchen
Ommg Area $400 00/mo Deposit
Required No Petsl (740) 245
5053 after 4 OOpm

POUND Honda s Toyota s Che
vys Jeeps And Sport Ut 1111es

$2 895 1990 Beretta G T $2 495

740 441 1982

4313

CD player $2000 080 call 740
992 9190

Boston Te r er Pups No Papers
Part Boston Terre Part Temer

Recommended
Free Samples

large modern upstairs two bed
room apartment app lances air

83 Jaguar 87 000 m es good
condit on $4000 OBO call Rod
740 992 2478 or reave message

/25 Yr Manufacturers Warr.antee
Compete With 1 0 Overhead I
Door $2 993 00 Can De tver 1

We Pay Cash 1 BOO 213 B365
AnthOny Land Co

2 Bedrooms $325/Mo + Ut ties
and Deposit No Pets 740 446

68 Super Sport Camaro drag
car $15 000 OBO call Anthony
7-40 992 2478 or leave message

(304)675 1275

BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 lbs 30 DAY MONEY
BACK GUARANTEE! Natural Or

992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tunbes

$500 CARS FROM $500111 Buy

21 x20 TWO CAR GARAGE Full

&amp; 6 chars $2000 llrm 740 742
1019

Riverside Apartments In Middle
port From $249 $373 Call 740

Autos for Sale

AKC Registered Female Shih
Tzu Puppy 7weeks o d t st
shots/wormed Vet Checked

For Lease One Bedroom AC
Apt Corner Of Second And Pme
$2501Mo Plus Ut llt1es Security
And Key Depos t References Requ red No Pets 740-446-4425

500 Acres

710

t 987 Dodge Ca avan Good
Shape Good Ti res King Wood
burner 740 256-1424

side cane chairs 1 lg fru t wood
occas anal table 2 lg area rugs
w th runners (green &amp; western
style) quIt stand f oor amp lee
tern stand 740..985-4193

We Buy Land 30

TRANSPORTATION

1964 Ford Falcon 4 Doors 6 Cy
hnder 3 Speed On Column 27 000

www d amondsellers nat WE SELL

Antique dining room set tlutch
corner cabinet c aw legged table

F rst Avenue Gallipolis 1 Bed
room Apar1ment 740 446 1066
or Weekends 740 441-D952

740

WARMUP

DIAMONDS FOR LESS! THE IN
TERNETS BEST PRICES NO
COMPUTER NEEDED LICENSE
INSURED BONDED CALL TOLL
FREE 877 726-3753

Ca I NOW For Free Maps +
Owner F nanc ng Into Take 10°/.
OH L st Pnce On Cash Buys

1989 L berty Mob leHome 2BR

1993 Cayton 16 x80 Very Nice
Supe C ean 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths W th B g Round Bathtub
Heat Pump E ectr c $2 000

Pets (304)773 53521(304)882
2827

or hay for sate

dnves) ask ng $3 200 740 992
1506 days 740 949 2644 eves

forLsa

Antique writing desk &amp; dishes
Blue W~ngbach chair (velvet) 2

3 Bedroom House Central Heat!

$8 000 1740)388 9971

erator/Utihtles furnished A C
laundry Room Cei ing Fans
Garbage Disposal Very NICe No

Round bales

6988211

Fee ReqUired Call Now! 800 772
7470 EXT 7832

3/4 200 PSI

West
East
• 98
• Q 10 5
• J 3
•AQ862
.108743
• 9 5
• 10 8 6 5
a KJ 3
South
aJ7632

Auto wert ·~

I

STEEL BUILDINGS CANCEL
LATIONS! MUST LIQUIDATE!!
25X30 30X48 45XBO 55X160
Immediate Dehveryll Huge D s
counts 1 800 462 7930 11: t4

v6

Runs Strong DriV.t ~
Anywhere $5 400 740 441 ~
1595 Between69P:M
..- 11

I'M•inll&gt;iln ed.

1995 Dodge Ram Tru.ck 1500
SLT 4x4 360 Eng ne Automat c

$tOO $500 &amp; UP POLICE IM

$300 fo all 304 675 4525 ask

Ridge Ad 7 Acres $13 000

Real Estate
Wanted

1\-0 Very Good Cond ton $375

APPLIANCES

6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ

2BA Apt n Mason Stove/Refr g

Aces $17 000 Water On Brla

PM 740-446 1749
tBA Central A r Gas Heat Lo
cated on Rental lo t near Pt PI

3711 EOH

_:_:__:_:;__;..;__::_::.;_;::____

740 388-8355

Jackson Avenue (304)675 7388

SKS sem1 automatic assault r fie
uly k&gt;Rded $450 740 992 7370

Rutland Wh1tes Hll
11 Acres $14 000 Or 9 Acr

360

Prem urn F ewood Oak &amp; Ash

North
10 04 99
a AK4
• K 10 9 5
t K Q
a A742

1992 C~evy S 10 Pick Up ~;
Pay 011 '66 ooo Or glnal M lo""' r
740 379 2386
' ~;
1993 Chevrol~t

87 24 dual hood scope sun
roof 28 fuel n1ect on automatic

App ances
Reconditioned
Washers Orye s Ranges Aefr
graters 90 Day Gua antee
French City Maytag 740 446

stove 304 773 5577

2bdrm apts total electr c ap
pi ances furnished laundry room
fac I t es close to school n town
Appl cat ons ava table at Village
Green Apts •49 or ca I 740 992

BlOOdline Call 740 245 5672 Or
740 387 0583

CALL NOW For List ngsl t BOO
319 3323 M2156

$50 Load Fu Size Pick Up De
livered 740 992 4568

1980 Chev SB PICk Up Truck
350 V B Automatic Transmis _.,
sian PS PB CD Player Run t
Good
100 740 446 1849

s

Hamp Boar A tz

Pollee Impounds &amp; Aepos Fee

TV 25 740 992 6777

Household
GoOds

(304)675 2617

$52 000 740 256-8837

ton

RECEIVING PAYMENTS? In
vestor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Financed Mortgage
Real Estate Contract Insurance
Annuity Highest Prices Free
Quotes Why Wal11 Call R1ch I

(304)882 3383

LOOK' "

terest Rates! REDUCE Month y
Payments 20 40°o Cal 800 700
6812 x 1001 For FREE Consulta
Han www detltdebt com

Need A Loan? Try Debt Consol

3 t Ac es on State Route t43

5 Bedroom s 2 1 2 Baths over
948 5678

tal com

2 44 Ac res Homes e Green
Townsh p Gall a County Seen c
Qu et Close To Gall pols Some
Restnct10ns 740 245 5776

es $12 000 Danv1lla SR 325 9

GET OUT OF DEBT! REDUCE In

Call Settlement Cap ta 1 BOO
959 0006 W'IIW sett1ementcap1

510

1 Bedroom Apartment In Ga I po
1s water Paid $265/Mo Depos t

Requ red No Pets 7 40 446 4043
Alter 6 PM

Registered

z

lane Rocker Reel ner
Mauve
l ke
New

&amp; Acreage

740 949 2621

wwwTermOnlycom

Buyers Of Structured Sett aments
Annu t es And Government Farm
Payments Also Purchas1ng Lot
terles And Pnvate Mortgages

Lots

Malga Co

2 000 sq ft lor less than $400
mo FREE del very &amp; set 1 800

GET YOUR CASH NOW Oldest

350

Racme th ee bedroom $400
month phis ut I 1 es $200 dep&amp;s t
no pets references required

320

MERCHANDISE

7B06

2 b apt In New Haven $275 a
man Includes water t ash refr g

ava lable 740 992 5072

HOME FORECLOSURES NO
MONEY OOWNI NO CRED IT
NEEDED TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! 1 800 916
9191 Ext H5023

992 7945

CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced

1 bedroom apartment m Middle
po t a I utI t as paid $270 p('r
month $100 depos t 740 992

erator&amp;

lnte $600 ca 1740 742 2420

For Sa le Reconditioned wash
ers dryers an&lt;l elngerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407

1 and 2 bedroom apattments fur
oished and unfurn shed secur ty
deposit requ red no pets 740

(304)458 1727

BOO 872 5967 Gall po s OH
MTD woodsp l tter 20 ton Ram
ho zonta l o vert ca used very

RCA Color Trac 2000 console

leave message

House &amp; 5 acres heat pump
remodeled
ask ng
needs
$30 000 two m es east on long
Run from Bashan F~re Dept 740

Cap tal 1 88B FARM ACT (327
6228)

Apartments
for Rent

740 388 9994

8591 304 633 8937

nlshments! D1vorce $99+ Stop
Foreclosure $350 Bus ness Op
portun t es + Tra nmgt Fresh Start
1-388 419 9417 www freshstartu

Your Gover nm ent Farm Pay
ments (CAP PFC) Call Farm

304 675-1400

3 Houses F nanctng Ava labia
$18 000 Each 0 scount For Cash
All Pomeroy Area 740 386-

Buy Homes From $

Fu n shed two bedroom ale no
pets A1ver Park Pomeroy $300
pe month $150 depos t 740

Schult New General on Sect onal

28 x52 'Featunng Schult Country
K tchen 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths

160 ACRES /WYOMING Umm
proved Land $26 995 $195
Down $269 49 MONTHLY Owner
F nanced 1 800 BOO 8446 rura

220

garbage (304)675 4086

992 2218

TECHNOLOGY

lands com Or 1 307 320 3337

All Elec 12x65 P vate Lot
$200 a month $150 depos t No
ns de pels You pay elec water

440

675 1400

ian $3501 month $150 deposit
740 949 2093

3 BA Tra11er n Ga hpo s Ferry

1 Bath Vmy S ding Sh ngle Roof
2 x6 Walls Total Electr c Free AJ

1400

TCI28586

2BA T a er Cent a Au New
Heat ng System Qwet Neighbor
hood Washer!Oryer Hook Up No
Pets Second Tra ler on left on
Roush Fer e Dr ve of Camp
Coney Aoad $320 month plus
depoS t

Fqrnaces Ins aNed As Low As
$28 00 4- Month W1th App oved
C ed1t l:asy Over The Phone
Bank F nanclng Huge In ventory
or lnte herm M ller- &amp; Coleman
Furna c E~'&amp;
Heat Pumps And
Parts V ny Sk rt ng K ts $299 95
Doors &amp; Wtndows water Heat
ers Anchors Plumb n!7&amp; Electn
cal Parts Bennetts M6b le Home
HTG &amp; CLG 740 446 94 16 Or 1

For Lease

Pomeroy At 124 600 sq It cus
tom parking a c carpet ceiling

Schull Festa 14x70 3 Bed ooms
C Pr ced To Move F ench C ty
Homes Pomt Pleasant WV 304

Wanted to Rent

Wanted To Rent HUD App oved
3 Bedroom House Or Trailer Pre
ferab y In 8 dwel Porter &amp; Aver
Valley School D1str ct Needed
lmmed ately 740 388-0473

490

949 2093

B942

Cost G1ves You A Comp ete
Package w th Mentonng And
Tratnlng To Help You Succeed
Ca ll Ivan Turner 877 324 8135

446 2003 740-446 1409

(304)755 7191

NET!! Have Your Own Turn Key
Online Bus ness Through HAND

Low Start Up

470
2 Bedroom Natural Gas Fu nace
A1r ve y N ce In Gall polls 740

L m ted Ofle 1999 Double W de
3 Bedroom 2 Bath $1799 Down
$275 00 per month De ve ed
and set up Ca I 800 948 5678

(304)736 9102
Th s newspape w I not
know ng y accep
advert sements lor real estate
wh ch s n volaton of the
aw Our eaders are hereby
nformed that a 1dwe 1ngs
advertised n h s newspape
are ava abe on an equal
opportu y bas1s

949 2093

3583

MONEY MAKERS SECRETS
Make At Least $5 000 /Week

Bus ness For As L n e As $1000

Aver Park Pome oy (former ly
Browns) $100 per month 740

Free Money/Cash Rebates that
can be used towards you down
payment on y at Oakwood
Home s N tro WV (304)755

2 Purebred Llmousln Bulls For
Sa e One Aed One Black

MOYILE HOME OWNERS

992 2167

EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR
Send Us A One Pace Form We

For People Who Would L ke To
Start The r Own Bus ness Work
ng From Home NO INVEST

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Mobile Homes

tu e

BOO 826 8523 US Canada
www glassmecnan x com

Mlacellaneous
Merchandise

depost call7 40 985-4256

Daub ew des Free Decor &amp; Furn

In Windshields Free V deo 1

540

Apartments
far Rent

Two bedroom t'lome n Pomeroy
pr vale sett ng $260 man h $75

420

HURRY HURRY HURRY!
OAKWOOD HOMES
BARBOURSVILLE WV
BOO 383 6862

440

Houses for Rent

ACROSS

•

•

Budget Pr ced 1ransmlss ons ~~
and Engines All Types Access I
To Over 10 000 Transm1sslonli: •I

eve J01nts

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

740 245 5677

New Replacemenl Gas Tanks .(Q-Al

Gemmt Wound - Vocal Census UNDONE

&amp; R Auto Ripley WV (304)3~
3933 or 1 BOO 273-9329

D&lt;&gt;n 1 get Slung by hgh prrm'

Sbop th• clano(iod 1octoon

1992 Ford Tempo Auto /Air Runs
Great Good Work Car $1 600

Granny always told me that the secret of getttng thtngs
done IS to know what should be left UNDONE

IMONDAY

(740)448-4782
1993 Chevy Lumina Euro 2 dr
Red exira nice $5200 304 675
4893

OCTOBER41

1993 Ford Escort LX 4 door
60 000 m les a1r power mirrors
stereo tan with tan cloth mterior
minor r ght front damage runs

and dnves $1750 740 992 1506
days or 740 949 2644 evenings
1993 Mercury Sable 3 0 V 6 En

g ne Cranberry With Gray lntan
o 99 000 M los $3 900 Phone
740 992 7167

1993 Ponliac Sunblrd Automat c
AIC Rear Spoiler Aluminum
Wheels 2 Doors 90 000 Miles
$3500 OB07402586t69
1994 Cadi lac Sedan Dav1lle
Load.ed Excellent Condition

$12 500 740 388 8355 Also
1994 Mazda MX 6 Sport Pack
age Loaded Sunroof 12 Disk CO
Changer 740-446-8245

Unconditional
guarantee
local references !urn shed e~

tablshed 1975 C.ll 24 Hrs (740)
446 0870 1 BOO 287 0576 Rog
1994 Dodge Shadow 2 2 5 ers Waterp oofing
Speed Air S2 700 740 367 7263
1994 PQintlac Grand Am GT 4 A 1types of masonry wo1k brlclr

Doors 64

ooo

Actual Mies Full

Power $6 995 740 446-2957

773-9550

1994 P ymouth Acclaim 66 000
Miles Auto Air Cruse Tilt Alu
m num Wheels S3 800 OBO 740
256-6189
1997 Camara 40
ed-~~

ooo m tes

block stone concrete 20 yellri
e~~:perlence free estimates 30~

road

1997 Pontiac Bonneville 55 000

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years

eu

perlence All Work Guarantee,!!&gt;,
French City Maytag 740 448
1
7795
_ _;.;,_ - : - - - - - - -"""'
C&amp;C

General

Home

Main,t

I

tenence Palnllng vinyl sldlfW

Miles loaded Take Over Pay

carpentry doors wln!Jawa baths!W

78 Silver A:nnlversary Corvette
Call (740)446 9151

6323

mentsof$381 740 367 7755
rnolllte home repair and mora FrJI
__
.:..;.;,:_.:_;:.:::_.:.:;:;::___ 1 free
estimate call Chet 740 99'2-~

84 Cimarron good cond clean
xtra tlres8 rims $1 795 oo 304

675-4575

87 Olds 9 passenger SW new
motor and transmission ale PW
Pl PS cruise II t 8KCOIIent con
d1tion $2000 740-992 9098

ae

Ford Escort excellent cond

tlon $1200 080 74 992 7370
093 Mltsublshl $4 000 740 742
2665

liv ngston s Basement Wattl"
Prdof ng all basement repak'fll
done free eat1mates llfal meft

guarantee t 2yrs on job eJpofl
ence (304)895-3887

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

flas dential or commercial wiring
new service or repairs Master lJ

conoed electrician Ridenour
Electrical WV000308 304 671"
1788

• ASTRO-ORAPH
tuesday Ocl S 1999
• Some 1ype of 1dea you ve had m
lh!!' back of your head or a secondary
tntercst can be successfully brought
1Q die marketplace m 1he year ahead
A&lt;:r on evcn1s as th1ngs open up for
you
LmRA (Sept 23 Ocl 23) Sh•ftmg
condtuons 1ha1 were beyond your
control could work ou11o your ul11
't mate bencfilloday so don tiel yes
1erday s rumbles diSturb you Pul
1hcln oul of your mmd and ge1 on
W1tbl1fe Trymg lo pa1ch up a broken
romance' The Astro G111ph MaiCh
malcer can help you undersland whal
to do to make lbe rclauonshtp work
Mail $2 7S to Ma1chmaker c/o 1h!S
n~wspapet: PO Box 1758 Murray
HUtStauon New York NY 10156
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) Pu1
unprovmg relauonsh1ps above your
other actmues loday and you II do
well m all your endeavors be lhey
socoal malerlll or work rcla1ed
~GITIARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
2 t1 Zero m on troly meanmcful
Ob]tCIIVCI Joday and play IO WIO

lron1cally lhe larger your mvolve
menl or the b•ggcr the ISsue the bet
1er 1 ou II do allhmgs
C' \PRIC'OR"l tD&lt;, 1' Jon IQl
Provtded they arc not &gt;&lt;&gt;lcly ul t

financ1al or commercial nature com
pet111ve mvolvements could be your
cup of tea today Occupy your ume
tn areas tha1 s for lhe good of all
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
Don I d1scount sound suggestions on
ways to make or save you money JUSI

because they come from

fam1har peo-

ple or rclauves you lake for granted
They could come up w1th a few
gems
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
Somcthmg of mu1ual benefil could
resull 1oday from soctahzmg wtfh
persons who arc 1n your field of
endeavor You need 10 be a beuer hotener lhan a lalker at 1h1s ume
ARIES (Man:h 21 Apnll9) II sa
much beuer day than yesterday so
lake advanlage of 11 by trymg 10 do
some1h1ng pos1t1ve 1o •mprove your
eammg power Much can be accom
phshed now
TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20)
Even !hough lhe ttmes might be be.

ler than usual for advancmg acuvtues
lhat have pronounced elemenls of
chance be sure 10 take your gambles
only on lhat wh1c~ you know some
thtng aboul
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) Sttu
altons tha1 you already have gotng for
you can be 1mproved tmmensely
today 1fyou move along conslrucUve
postttve lines Make 1he good bener
CAN\CER (June 21 July 22) Take
ume today to analyze your mvolve
menls for more potenual benefits In
general cond1t1ons are much bencr al
thiS Ume than they have been for
awh1le
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Don I s11
on any br~ght 1deas you getloday lo
enhance or funher your amb11tons
Act on them now because the aspec1s
arc cspec1ally lucky fo; devclopmg
new lhmkmg
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sep1 22) Be
cenam you wanl for others thai

\\ f11{h \OU \\3nl for vourself and you
u1uld fl( c;XIn;mc;h h rlun u, hlth'
wllh Involvements you have "-tth

e1ther collective or one on one
endeavors

•
II

I

�""4 ......-' ... . ... -.. ~~ .... ..... _ . .... ,_...,... . .. ..,.~" .. ,,,,,._•• ,.• •.• •..~,~o.(i.. ~.:;:"'."'";,.c,_

'
•
·,

..•~. ,.. .,,.,, •.. ~~ . . ,.. .~ ....... ~ . .:··~ &lt;·"••

····· \" ·~' ·· ··-t · .• · ·' ·

· ··

. i

I

.

•

,·

..

• •,IJ#(

•••• ',.)-(1;

... '·' . \

",' ·f,

;

I

·

·

· Page 10

Mondat, October 4, 1999

Mother of child assaulted at school should ta;ke matters to police

I

~~==========~
By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs CountY Humane Society

In a novel I read some years back, "Towards Amnesia," about a
·· woman tempting to recover from a failed relationship (and of course
she did), there was one memorable scene for me. The protagonist
awoke in a chilly summer cabin, somewhere in Maine, I think, just
as Fall descended. Curled in her upraised palm, right next to her pi I·
low, was a sleeping bat. Well, this struck me as delicious, although I
rather doubt that I could have awakened to this without emittins at
least one frightened, horrified, astonished shriek.
·
My own interactions with these exquisite creatures have been far
• more prosaic. I have found them, or the cats or dogs have found
them, in that lethargic state on the floor of one house, in the back. yard of another. The bats were moved to a safe place via a shovel and
left alone. One I saw fly away, as I recall. Now we have one nesting
· at night on the front porch, and there is another on the back porch
overhang. I can tell by those little black pebbles on the porch. Amazingly, the back porch bat squeezes through a space the size of a thick
• dime.
I recall one bat visitor who lives in a space under the front porch
for a few years but was quite happy there during the day. But one day
when those ubiQuitous ladybug-type bu~s .crawled into its home, it
let out continuous protest squeaks. Then he or she left in a huff.
Bats should be left alone, particularly when they are hibernating. ·
Because bats are afraid of humans, any bat that may allow you to
, touch it could be sick, so you should never touch one.
The only mammal that flies, bats resemble rodents, although.sci·
enlists believe they are more closely related to primates. They are
gentle, nonaggressive and only bite in self-defense. The babies cling
to their mothers until they are too big to carry, then they are left in
the nursery colony. Gregarious with each other, and kind, they have
been known to adopt baby orphans. They have also been observed
risking their lives to share food with less fortunate bats.
'
Bats can range in size from the bumblebee bat, which weighs less
than a penny does, to Lyle's flying fox, which has a wingspan of
nearly six feet. North American common linle brown bats have the
longest life span of any mammal its size, sometimes living to longer
than 32 years.
Did you know that bats are highly beneficial in our environment•
A single liule brown bat can catch more than 1,000 mosquitoes in an
hour and a colony of 150 big brown bats can protect local farmers
from as many ·as 18 million root worms each summer. It's amazing
to me that more people don't purchase or build bat houses for their
yard. At dusk. they provide great, cheap entertainment. And we need
them.
Agricultural plants important to humans, such as bananas, bread·
fruit, mangoes, cashews, dates, and figs, depend on these creatures
• for their pollination and seed dispersal. Rain forests need bats to pollinate flowers and disperse the seeds.
It's important to remember that bats are susceptible to extinction,
: because their reproductive rate is the slowest of the world's smaller
mammals; th,ey produce only one young one a year. More than one
. · half of U.S. bat species are in severe decline or are already listed as
endangered.
Fewer bats means that more people will tum to pesticides
(remember the debate every summer in Athens?) and this of course
: . jeopardizes whole ecosystems of other animal and plant species. If
1
· you provide safe roosts for bats, then you will help improve their
· chances of survival. So get busy.
(Alden Waitt is happy to hear·from her readers. Qu~Dll
.. about pets and their care, humane issues, and ·otheranlmalrelated questioru1 can he directed to her c/o The Daily Sentinel.
Reuonable questioru~ of ceneral interest will he addressed in
· future columns.) -..._,

This is usually 'enough to set. .any violent confrontation, and that
them straight. • POLICE CHIEF he didn't have to prove himself to
ALBERT W. WEIR, RET., IMME- anyone. He is now making dec isions
DIATE PAST
PRESIDENT. as a rising corporate executive at the
ASSOCIATION OF CHIEFS OF age of 26. I couldn't be more proud.
POLICE, N.Y
Loulnille, Ky.: The Georgia
DEAR CHIEF WEIR: Thanks mother of that 7 year old boy may
for your professional opinion. Keep not be aware of a recent U.S.
reading for more on this provocative Supreme Court ruling that came
subject.
down firmly against such harassFrom Chicago: I am writing to ment.
protest the treatment of that 1 year
In the case of Davis v. Monroe
old boy who was being abused at County Board •of Education, from
school. That child's· mother must her own state of Georgia, the court
take control of the situation.
ruled that public schools have not
The school should be forced to only an obligation. but a duty to proconfront the bullies and their parents teet all of their students. gay or
immediately. What tran.spired was straight, from harassment of any
dangerous and illegal.
nature. If they don't, they may right·
I' m a 60 year old man who grew fully be sued.
up in the city, and I know how danIn the Davis case, school admingerous it can be.
istrators repeatedly refused to ,nterWhen my son was growing up, I vene when a young girl was being
told him to walk (or run) away from sexually harassed, despite her moth-

unconditional loving and forgiving
of God and to have forgiving heart
to one another.
Guests from the Middleport and
Harrisonville churches joined memhers and out-of-town friends for the
lunch which followed the morning
worship service.
After lunch~ all the grandparents
were recognized, and Doris Will was
the grandmother with the most
grandchildren and great-grandchil·
dren. Attending from a distance
were were Thurman Keiser of Ironton, and Anna Grace and Jim Oiler
of Thurman.
The day's program was conclud·
ed by special music from the Crows,
Pam, Meredith, Carrie: and Bob; and
from Jack Harris and Sheila Arnold,
gospel singers.
The homecoming was a time
members sharing their journey of
faith in support of one another.

••
...

~~~~!_!to~~re~m~e;m~b~e~r~th;e--------~----------------~C~hu;~;;h~-----~

MONDAY
JOPPA Olive Township
Trustees; regular meeting, 6:30p.m.,
township building on Joppa Rd .
Date changed from Tuesday due to
scheduling conflict.
POMEROY - Meigs Local
Bond Issue Campaign Commiuee
meeting, 7 p.m. Monday, Meigs
High School cafeteria. Meeting will
begin as an informational meeting,
and wi II include discussion of campaign strategi;s.
EAST MEIGS - Friends of the
Library, 7 p.m. Monday, at the Eastern Library.
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Elementary PTO, Monday, 6 p.m. in

cafetorium.

the Athens-to-Darwin U.S. 33 pro·
ject.

SYRACUSE- Sutton Township
Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
Syracuse Municipal Building.

.
CARPENTER -

Columbia
Township Board of Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the fire station.
POMEROY - Legal office of
Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer
closed Monday for staff training.
Title office will be open.

LETART - Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m at the
office building.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Salisbury Township Trustees, Tuesday, 6:30p.m. at
the township 'hall, Rocksprings
!toad, Pomeroy.

pa

.

JOPPA Olive Township
Trustees, 6:30p.m" township garage
on Joppa Rd.

POMEROY - Eagles Auxiliary,
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the hall.

POMEROY - Immunization
POMEROY - Meigs &lt;;:ounty
clinic, Tuesday, I to 7 p.m. at the
Commissioners meeting resched· ·
MIDDl.EJRT - Low impact Meigs Multipurpose Center.
uled for Tuesday at 6 p.m .
exercise class~ will begin at 6 p.m.
Tuesday, at Ash Street Baptist WEDNESDAY
.
RACINE - Racine Chapter, Church in Middleport.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Town~
OES, Monday, 7:30p.m. Election of
ship Trustees, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m
officers.
ALFRED ·..;.. Orange Township Pageville Town Hall.
:.
Trustees, T~esday, 7:30 home of
ATHENS - Athens to Darwin Osie Follrody,s:lerk.
MIDDLEPORT ,.... Middleport
Citizens Advisory Committee public
Literary· Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday,
meeting/working session Monday, 4
POMEROY - Mec;ting, Meigs ·home of Phyllis Hackett. Faye Wa[.
p.m. at the Ohio University Inn to County ~ouse, 7 p.m. to dis· lace to review books about man's
hear presentations by four engineer- cuss ex!~~~ open hours for the first landing on the moon. Members
ing consultants seeking the contract courthousc;:l\!~blic officials, busi- to pay dues.
to advise the CAC and Transporta· ness ownr and general public
tion Review Advisory Council on invited. 1:~

.

,

Third annual Stobart family reunion enjoyed at Star Mill Park

~- ------··- -.

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-Page 4 .

Hometown Newspaper
Stngle Copy· 35 Cent s

PREPARING FOR PAVEMENT - Work
began Monday morning oil Pomeroy'a
paving project with workers shown hare
milling old asphalt off Mulberry Avenue.
In other business, council :
- Approved making a $300 donation the Meigs
County Tourism Board to assist promoting upcoming
fall cruises on the Ohio River.
...;. Agreed to free up the parking meters Thursday
and Friday for the Big Bend Sternwheel Festival.
- Mel in executive session to discuss personnel

Pomeroy VIllage Council last nlglit added
Prciapact Hill and Martin Street to tha llat of
streets to receive blacktop. The $204,03~.~0
project Ia funded by grant monlea.
matters.
. .-. ·
- Discussed the Sugar Run Elementary School
building with Musser to report back on demolishing
the building by the next meeting.
Also present were Clerk-treasurer Kathy Hysell
and council members David Ballard, Geri Walton,
George Wright and Scott Dillon.

.I
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~enior

Community Association plans Middleport Christmas events
By BRIAN J. REED
Business owners' are being asked to open their
Santlnel Nawe Staff
businesses from Ito 5 p.m. on Sundays, beginning
ELYRIA
doctor
· that prescribed nir&lt;cotica
A Christmas parade, open houses and give· with the open house, and until8 p.m. on weekdays
10 a.patient
10 obtain sex 10 ~atisfy his foot fetish.
aways, a special &lt;:Andlclight service and a visit after December 13.
Dr. Saris E. Segarra, 42, pleaded guilty Monday in Lorain Ql1untJd from Santa Claus will kick off !he Christmas shopII was noted lliat some merchants may _choose
Common Pleu Court 10 108 counts of drug-trafficking and one '
ping season in Middleport.
·
not to participat~ in extended hours dunng the
theft.
·
;.:~
The Middleport Community Association, with shopping season.f
. Segarra, the former directpr of the Lorain County Free Clinic, also will
Myron Duffield presiding, met on Tuesday mom·
Merchants wil also offer five giveaways, either
lose his medical license and must repay Medical Mutual of Ohio,up 10 ing to discuu plans for the upc:oming holiday sea- merchandise, gift certificates or coupons, to be
$21,380 in restitution. Sentencing will be ill about two montiJJ, _ ..
son.
given away .in weekly drawings on the five
The plea caine moments before a jury wu '10 be choten for the~ of
"The Christmu Village" will once again he !he Wednesdays between the open house and Christ·
Segarra~s trial. Prollecutoll dropped .seven charges, including sexu~ bat·
theme for·the association's holiday events, which mas.
tery involving a patient.
&gt;;),,
will gel underway on November 21 with a Christ·
Duffield said that. th~ dr~winp h~vc been
Prosocutors said Seprra prescribed narcotics to addict his patient. Thai mas parade. Santa Claus will be at Peoples Bank· effective in encouragmg shopp10g 10 Mtddleport
forced her 10 return to his office, where he would take advflllage her ing and Trust Co. following the parade, and all in the past, and stressed the importance of contin·
and graljfy his foot fetish; prilsecuton said.
children will re&lt;leivc a treat and have their picture uing the giveaways during this upcoming season.
The county Drug Tuk Force began investigating Segarra three .I~
taken'wlth Santa at no charge compliments of the
Duffield and Mary Wise discussed recent
ago after a·patient sued him, alleging he traded prescrip\iqtlll for silt; A bank.
'
· · action by Middleport Village Council, 10 purchase
·
·• ..a.~ h $25 ()()()
·
•
ill' ·
The A•~"- will beoin at 2 p.m. on Ash Street, over $6,000 in ne.w Ch_ris.tmas decorations for_ the
Jury
aw....- er
' ·
·
··
·
1""..
deco
~I .II!!!
61 f
flll
·I · · - nliJtrll between Beech and Broadway, and will travel on downtown shoppmg dislrlcl. The new
ratiOns
TlfSar;;;ntlrgy 8 Ill'S ·
•8 etegUIBuun .
Beech, General Hartinger, South Second and into will incorporate lighted snowflake sillhou~ttes and
. COLUMBUS (AP) -Akron-based FintEnergy gotthe jump on Ohio's the shoppina district. ending near Dairy QuGCII. festive banners, and are expected to be m place
other electric utilities by filina its dercgulltlon plan with the Public ~tili·
Pre-registrations may be made by contacting well before the parade and open h?use. • .
tics c.Onim~ion of Ohio a day early.
"
Duffield al992-4197, although registration is not · Duffield noted thai''Talenl Rcvtew '99' wJII be
,.
· The plan submitted on Monday
necessary for participation.
. .
held on November 26. and 27, spo~red by the
·
seelcs recovery of $6.9 billion flom
The ann~al holiday open house for merchants Rivcrbend Arts Council and the Umted Fund for
customers lo plY, off. high·C(OSI will also be held on November 21. Merchants are Meigs County.
.
investments like nuclear po~er encouraged 10 provide refreshments,. door prizes,
He _also d~ ~ve_ral _buildi~g improveplants.
"
ind other incentives to shoppers dunng the open ments 10 the shopptng dtstnCI, 1~ludmg !he exteBut FbstEnergy said custom,~
house houll of 1 10 5 p.m.
rior painting of the Humane Society Thnft Shop,
will iave $759 million from IJie
A Christmas candlelighting cc~mo"y in Dave Foreman and Abbott, and Wayne'~ Place.
extenSion of an existing rate plin Diles Parll. scheduled for December 4, will be
Duffield reported on the opemng of a new T·
and enjoy S3S8 million In ~avirip conducted under the direction of tlie Ministerial shirt store on the ''T," and announced that the
resulting from the slate's electricity, Asiociation and sponsored by the Qlmmunity Wicker Buggy is in the process of moving from
_
deregulation law beginning Jan.l, Association:
''
South Second to the comer of South Second and

or

l

to

a·

Good Afternoon

-::Q:;b:=:=::!MLI

=~==1=1 ~~io·sothereleetric. utililies

=

I

expected to file their
, ,
jS:;====:~;L: plans today.
,
_
FintEnergy officials said !hey
~-----L---I. filed early to be fint in line in die
deregulation process and swt a 27S.·
day clock runnini for the PUCO
aa on the propoeal. The connmi~
.QIWl .
. .,
Sion will ,detenninc the amount
Pick 31 1·I·7; PICk 4: 6-1 ·8-6 .
~randed costs the company can '
Blldce1• 5: 2-10-14-15-29
recover through a temporary use
~.
tax.
Dally 31 ~-0-1; Dally •: 0-1·1·2 .
PUCO Ollinilan Alan Schriber: I
~
Wley .. r..
said lui week the cornmiiuijon

Lot teries

--~~

-·---- -- ·- ·-·· ···--··-·--··-·- . . ....L.----------------- -"··-- -

' " ·' "

•

~:.S,~I;h ~Iio ~oni~~nded

AS A "WRITE·IN"

~.-. . ..

~-

·each junior and
fair board member
atten'ding and noted their contributions to the overall success of the
fair program.
· A financial report was presented by Debbie Watson, secretary,
which showed a net profit of $45,338 from the $.312,632 receipts for
the 1999 fair.
While the gross income was down about $3,000 from' the 1998
figure of$315,000, the net profit more than doubled. In 1998the net
profit was $19,474. .
·
Dan
Smith credited Watson and the fair board members for "keeping a
tight r_ope on t~in~s" and annou~ced that t~e board will now be able Smith, center, co.;mendecl Melga CcturitY Engineer Bob Eaeon;
to go mto a bu1ldtn~ program wnhoul havmg to bo~row money.
lett and Jim Watson board mlmber,
their contribution• t~
The board prcstdent also announced that Mctgs County has the'Melge County Fair
·
received a $26,500 grant from the Ohio Department of Agriculture,
•
a part of the money designated by the Ohio Legislature for fair·
the board can now move forward on construction of a 38 x 100 foot
grounds improveJIIents.
.
.
horse barn o~ !he lower part of the fairgrounds, and a small animat
Using thai grant money with the funds already on hand, Sm11h sa1d barn on the htll.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363. F&amp;AM, Tues- ,
day, 7:30 p.m. Work in Master '
Mason Degree.

OF
MIDDLEPORT

·-·---·. -

.. . ',' 4/j ' •• '

Contributors to the success of the 1999 Meigs County Fair were
recognized at an · appreciation dinner staged Monday night in the
grange building on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
The event was hosted by the Meigs County Fair Board, Dan
Smith, president.
~ Given special recognition were Do~ Eason, Meigs County Engi·
neer; for IIi• work in securina .flaas fpt~c fairgrounds, and Jim Wal·
· soo; fair board member, for his . success in securing more than
$4,000 in sponsorship~. GHait e!len!S frlliiii'P,feiP&gt;~Punty busine~s·

POMEROY - Meigs Courify
Commissioners, regular meeting,_;,6

MAYOR

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Fair contributors recQgnized at board dinner

·,

WRITE :..IN BAUOT

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no action on tlie suggestion.
Council also approved spending up to $20,000 for
engineering costs on a new water well.
Musser said !he supplemental well is needed to
serve both the village and lo enhance the water sup·
ply in the event water is needed in Middleport.. The
total cost of the project is about $280,000 including
pipeline and drilling the new well.
Musser said the Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency has approved putting a new well on the existing well site.
.
Another project is being planned now that will
provide water to customers in the Naylor's Run area
and provide additional water to the Enierprise area.
Councilman Larry Wehrung said he has received
several complaints about the condition of the cemetery.
The .street department reportedly started work in
the cemetery last week . •
Council. discussed reestablishing a board of
trustee~ for the cemelery ..Vaughan said he· will have
names 9f prospective members by the Oct. 18 meet·
ing. ·
·
.
Fir~ Chief Chris Shank requested the purchase of
$2,963 in fire department supplies including boots,
flashlights, a cut-off saw and other items. The
request was approved.
Shank also present the fire department report for
Septqnber'\howing two automobile accidents, two
water,. rescues, four mutual aid calls, two structure
fires .,.d one helicopter ambulance assist.
He. also said the fire department will participate in
this week 's Big Bend Slernwheel Festival by handing
out literature, participating in the parade and helping
with the fireworks.

.&lt;

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meet·
ings and special events. The calendar is not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed only as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days .

•'

Meta eliminate Reds·
,J,.,.,,... the playoff hunt :
s-o victory

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 50, Number 82

RECOGNIZED - Eether Harden, Gertrude Nelgler, and Kathryn
Crow, left to right, wera honored for their many yeara of falthfulnes,
during the recent homecoming at the Syracuse Presbyter!~

SPECIAL NOTICE

I

'

tomorrow: Sunny
High: 801; Low: 401

er's fC!peated pleas that something be are going, what does?
·
done to protect her.
Dear Readers: Thursday is
·Such lawsuits already have cost National Depression Screening Da~.
sevei111 school systems ~undreds of Once again, the number IS 1-8()().
thousands o0f dollars in legal fees 242-2211 (TTY for the heanng
and setilements . money that could impaired: 1-800..855-2880). If you
have been used to educate America's are depressed, cir know someone
children instead.
who is, make that call now.
•.
DEAR LOUISVILLE: ·Thank
When planning a wedding, wh{&gt;
you .for a letter updating us on the pays for what? Who stands where9•
latest SuJlreme Court ruling on stu- "The Ann Landers Guide for Brides':
dent harassment. The letter that fol- has all the answers. Send a self
lows ~minds us how much things addressed, long , business size enve'
have! c~anged:
.
lope and a. ch~ck or money order fqr
Wikllette, Ill.: When I was m $3.75 (lhts mcludes postage ami
grade tchool, boys used to ."harass" .1\andling) to: Brides, do Ann Lan:
girls ~y 'l&gt;utting gum in their hair or ders. P.O. Box 11562, Chtcago, II!.
toads down the front of their dresses. 6061 _1-0562 . (In Canada, sen~
Today, ~ids come to school with $455.)
.
knives-:·.~rid guns.
To find out more about Ann LaoIn some Chicago schools, SIU· ders and read her past columns. VIS!!
dents must pass through metal the Creators Syndicate web page at
detectors to gel inside. If this doesn 't www.creators.com.
tell you the direction in which we

-The Third Annual Stobart · baskets of canned vegetables pro- Stobart as the oldest .family J!1em- and 'Roberta Thaxton, all of Racini;
reunion was held on Saturday, Sept. vided by Mary Grace Cowdery, win- ber5 in at~endance. Susan Kuhl J?rO· Ola Hysell, Pomeroy; Isabelle
25, at the Star Mill Park, Racine.
ner of last years reunion quilt. Those vided tho';l Stobart family tree and Couch, Ravenswood, W.Va. , Susan, .
The gathering spent the warm fall were won by Joe Stobart, Isabelle history If!· which many additions Kevin, and Karyn Kuhl, Pierce City,
day enjoying a picnic which fol· Couch, and Kayla and Michael Sto· were maciC:
Mo.; Shirley Roberts, Lexington,
lowed prayer by Ron Cowdery.
bart. Michael also won the chil·
Next year's reunion will be held Ky.; Ralph . and Joann Starr,
The group reminisced over old dren 's drawing, taking home a scare- on the fourth Saturday in September, ,. Charleston, W.Vf!- ; Jamie, Charity,
Llvestock Environmental Assurance Program and new family photos, and related· · crow decorated pumpkin and gourd 2000.
Kayla, Michael and Andrew Stobart,
stories of their ancestors. Several display.
Aue~C\i!lg were John and Naomi
Coolville;
and Ron, Mary Graee,
training session planned for October 19
prize drawings took place during the
Flower bouquets were presented Stobart,. Joe Stobart, Jodie Cum- Larry and Kim Cowdery, Long Bot-·
· The Meigs and Gallia Soil and Water Conservation Districts, along with afternoon for vegetable baskets and to Ola Hysell and John and Naomi mins,
tom.
the Ohio Livestock Coalition, the Ohio State University Extension and Nat·
oral Resources Conservation Service will be conducing Livestock Environ·
mental Assurance Program (LEAP) training session on Tuesday, Oct. 19 at
• 6:30 p.m. at the C. H. McKenzie building in G:Yiia County.
LEAP is a voluntary and confidential environmental Assurance program
for all major livestock species in Ohio (beef and dairy canle, swine ad poul- Singer Britney Spears
try) that helps livestock and poultry producers profitably manage environ- claims growth spurt
mental challenges that are critically important to the success of the business,
and effectively assess HOw farmstead practices affect water quality, says reason for·new figure
. IN THE UPCOMING ELECTION
David White, executive director of the Ohio Livestock Coalition.
MY NAME WILL. NOT APPEAR
NEW YORK (AP) - Singer
By participating in the local LEAP training session. livestock and poultry
I
Britney
Spears
says
that
a
growth
producers meet eligibility requirements for agricultural pollution abatement
ON THE BALLOT
To vote for a person NOT
cost-share programs available through their local SWCD, and can earn spurt, not breast implants, have
•
HOWEVER;
points towards qualifying for an EQIP grant, which is coordinated by the contribut~d to her increased pro·
on the ballot, write In
portions .
"
USDAINRCS.
I
AM
A
CANDIDATE
FOR
"When
I
first
signed
with
the
To register for the ir~ining session contact the Meigs SWCD at 740-992BOTH the title of the office
:·
record label, we took a lot of pho4282 or the Gallia SWCD at 740-446-8687.
,,, '
and the c.andldate's name
, tos. and those were the pictures
that got used . I weighed 105
on the lines below.
pounds; I weigh 130 now. I went .
buane Allman, Berry Oakley graves are open through
a major growth spurt,"
OFFICE
CANDIDATE NAME
to public, no matter what family members says Spears, I7, tells the Oct. 9 issue
MACON, Ga. (AP) - Duane Allman's and Berry Oakley's relatives are of TV Guide.
Spears , whose "Baby One
so adamant about protecting their grave sites, they bought the land imm~di­
Mayor
Sandy lannaralll
More
Time" album has sold more
aiely surrounding them and claim it's private- no trespassing.
THANKYOUFORYOUR~UPPORT
: "We don 't want anyone (kicked) out of Rose Hill , but don't deface the than 5 million copies, says the
YOUR CURRENT MAYOR, SANpY IANNAREW
graves. Don't have sex on the graves," said Lars Anderson, an auorney for rumors bothered her for a while.
''
In
some
intervil!'ws
I
would
two .relatives of the two Allman Brothers Band founders.
: They died in separate motorcycle accidents in the early 1970s.
: just start crying," she says. " I'd ·
· Macon Mayor Jim Marshall say the cemetery is public property and the be like . ' Why are you being so
rude to me'1' After a ,while people
Concerned Citizens 01 The Vllltlge,Of Middleport
~
:hundreds of people who flock to the graves each month are welcome.
stopped
staying stuff. But for a
,·
Suean Bur, Treasurer
·
: · It's also why criminal trespassing charges against a Macon Telegraph
408 s. 5th Ave.
while
it
got
really
tough."
:photographer arrested while taking photos of the graves were dropped FnMiddleport, Oh 45780
...
:day.
.
.

Bills reel in Dolphins 23-18, Page '5
Deadly medicine co.mbinations, Page 12
·Rise in college costs slow, Page 6

today: Partly Cloudy
~lgh: 801; Low: 401

Syracuse Presbyterian host homecoming celebration ~
Homecoming was celebrated
recently at the Syracuse Presbyterian Church with members and
friends joining in morning worship,
a luncheon, and musical program.
Recognized and presented nowers in recognition of their years of
faithfulness to the church were
Kathryn Crow who joined the
church in April 1939; Esther Harden
and Gertrude Neigler who became
members in October 1947. ·
The morning worship leader was
Bob Crow, and organist Eleanor
McKelvey ac~ompanied the congregation in singing. Pam Crow, pianist
with singers, Meredith, Carrie and
Bob Crow, presented a special
anthem "Heaven ·Came Down And
Glory Filled My Soul."
The Rev. Krisana Robinson, pas- ·
tor, gave the sermon using scripture
Matt. 18: 21-35: the parable of the
un~org:'ivi~tg servant. She asked the

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October 5, ~ 999

Weath er
'•'

About Bats

-,

Tuesday

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

I

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Dear Ann Landers: I am writing mother had a legitimate complaint.
about a recent column in which you It was ,not a case of simple harassgave advice to a mother whose ment. ,
young son had been assaulted in
The 'boy was physically assault·
school.
ed, and had to make a trip to the hosI never liked the idea that parents pital. In most stales, this is a felony,
~ould hoi~ the teachers totally
compounded if the bullies took his
responsible for their kids' problems. money or if the attack was racially
These 'parents also believe tbat motivated.
after school hour~. the police should
Those parents should go to the
take over. When are the parents sup- police and press charges. The delinposed to be responsible for their quents and their families would then
children'? When the kids are sleep· be brought to family court, and the
il)g?
judge would probably give a very
· When I read the leiter in your col- ·strong warning with minor punishumn; however. I realized 'that the ment or probation .

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Mill Street, on !he ''T." ·
·
Mike and Debbie Gerlach have opened a new
coffee bar in the Riverbend Antique .and Craft
M~l, also on ~he "T," ~nd Duffield satd that the
anttque st~re tn Dowmn~ House and the new
res.ta~rant ~n the fo~er Mtddleport Lunch Room
budding wJII beedopehnmg soon. ·
h' d
He also n.ot t at a new computer store a . 1
opened on Soul~ Second Avenue.
The group dtscussed the success of the Honey
Bear Festival, held in August, and the tribute_ to the
,Delta Que~n, held. a week later. Duffield saJd !hal
the fin~c·~ detatls. of the Ho~ey Bear Festival
were ~1111 bemg ~nal1zed, and SBJd th~l he IS ~o.rk·
10g W)lh the .to~nsm of_flce to de!enpmeprom1~10.g
dates for a stmJlar festival next year, usmg a s1m1·
lar honey and bee theme.
Duffield noted that l~c Feeney-Bennett Post,
American Legion, co
__nducted the ceremomes for
h Del Q
th th lh P
I e
ta ueen VISII, r.a ~r an .e om~roy
post, as was re~rted earlier mThe Druly Sentinel ..
The group d!scussedplans of the Feeney-Ben·
ne.tt Pm:t, ~er1~n Legton, to restore the_AII Wars
Mem~nal ·~ Legton Park,_ located on Mill Streel
Duffield sa!d that !he le~1~n post would oversee
!he restoratto~, whtch will mcl~de ne~ landsca~
mg and other Improvements, usmg pnvale conlrl·
butions.
.
.
Duffield announced t~at the M1d~leport Netgh·
borhood Watch group ~·II ~eet agBJn on Octo~r
19 at8 p.m. at the. F~•IY. Ltfe Center of the M•d:
dleport Church of Chnst.
.
,
He also encouraged mem~rs and restdents of
Middleport to attend the Big Bend Stemwheei
Festival. to be held !his weekend in Pomeror. ·

Marllvn Sheppard's remains exhumed; DNA testin9 to folloW; · ··

By JOHN AfFLECK
·
cemetery for DNA tests then reinterred, is part of the his father's name for all bme have also been the su.b; •
AaeociMid ,.._. wrn.r
state's effon to defend itself against a lliWSuit being jeet of a made-for-television moyie.
. · . ~~
· · CLEVEI:.ANI) (AP) _ Prosecutors trying to · brought by the couple"s son, Sam Reese Sheppard. • Mrs. Sheppard was beaten .to ,death m her ~ •
show Dr. Sam'Sheppard killed his wife 45 years ago
Sheppard believes his father was wrongfully and-floor bedroom at the faJmly s hom~ on Lak~ .
exhumed !he body of MariiY.n Sheppard this mom· imprisoned for his mother's death in 1!154. The doc- Eric. Her husband, w~ had been nliJlPing on. the
ing along with !he fetus she~u carrying when she tor was imprisoned for 10 years before being acquit· first noor, always ciBJmed thai a bushy-han~..
died. ·
ted at a retrial. He died in 1970.
intruder killed his wife and then knocked htm;.
After about one hour inside a two-story mau· .
The younger ~ppard is suing !he state to have unconscious when he heard her screams and ran 10;~
so1eum, three polk:e can led a convoy of lboul one his father declared mnoeent, a stronger legal Slate· · help.
..
doml cars, including 1 hearse bearing Mil. Shep- ~nl than _!he "not guilty" verdict at his ~d
Sheppard. and his !~gal team ':""te~ that DNA:·
pard's body from !he cemetery 10 !he coroner's cnmlnal bial. Sheppard could collect an estimated and other evtdence po10110 a famdy Wlndow·wash·:
office. . '
·
$2 million if he wins.
er, Richard Eberling, u the real killer. Eberling diccl.:
The snm procedure, in which the bodies ire 10 be
• The ~ helped inspire ,"The rugitive" lelevi· in prison last year, where he was serving a life liCit·:~:
'taken from a fimily crypt In a 111burbu Qcveland . ston scncs and film, and Sheppard s efforts to clear tence for an unrelated murder.
. · :)

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