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

Monday

Sunday, October 10,

October 11, 1999

Nevv tractors .out, but farmers not,biting yet
. AMANA, low~ (AP) - Farm
•mplement makers trotted out 'their
most high-tech. high-priced tractors
·
an d combmes at the Fann Progress
Show, and Mike Roquet didn' t hesitllle to make a purchase despite the
·
worst ag economy 10 years.
The Hedrick farmer one of thou'
sands who attended the first day of
the annual show this week bought a
'
shiny, brand new John Deere tractor.
F $
or 50· 1twas a toy.
"It's a lot easier to plunk down
~
f h .h
~one~.~ one_do t ese l an one_dof
ose,
e sa• , pomtmg outs1 e
Deere's
exhibition1ent
to a monster·
· ·
s1zed combme costing $179 000
' ·
~~~

Especially n~w..
Depressed pnccs, floods, drought
- all have put farmers nationwide in
th ·
1
·
h
·
th
eu mos precanous s ape smce e
fann crisis of the early 1980s chased
thousands from their fanns.
Y t th
d f'
d
e ousan s o .arme~s 1ume
out Tuesday under gray sk1es and a
· d
1 h
h 70
h'll
c ' Y wm to s og t roug
acres
of muddy fields to get a bird 's-eye
·
fh 1
· f
·
v1e~ o t e ate~t m ann mncl1mcry.
There aren t too many farmers
h0 h
• be
h
h
f
w
aven t en t roug a 1ot o
thiS. They know there are ups and
downs in farming," said Mark Rand
.
.
f
·h
1 nauona1s ows d~rector 0 one of
a'
the t' '
· f
1 th t
na iOn s premier ann even s a
rotates
Iowa Illinois and

.

lnd!.ana each year.
.
•
I would say the mood 1s far from
hoii'lindous. You don't find a big
d l'k h'
.
.
crow 1 e t 1s troopmg out m the
mud on a cold day if they were feeling depressed." Randal said.
F
·
.
. a""::ers, many accompamed by
the1r w1ves and ch1ldren, mspected
·
.
eac~ pew tractor and other farm
imp'Aments on display by Deere
"'
'
Case, Kubota, New Holland and
Caterpillar.
.
.
.
They chmbed mto cabs, some of
h' h
20 ~ 1 ff h
d
w ~c we~ed ~~~ ol / te grodu~:
an marve a e a es ga ge s.
climate-controlled
. . . air conditioning '
global posmomng
hydro.

ment.
,
"There are
d 111 t th
''
.d 1., R' d soml e ki~ sou ere, ·
sa1 1m IS on, oo ng over a
Deere
· ed bo ssg 000
"S troctorpn~ • ,at a hut
• , ··.
1
.om ell mesh, at s wh cthn you re
gomg to gett em - w en mgs are
tou h.,
Ng
h
R' d k
h'
evert e1ess
IS on
ept IS ·
h kb 00 k. h''15
·
c eDc H '"
pocket.
d
on err whogrowscoman
bea
'
.
. ns on some :),_000 acres at h1s ,
S1goumey farm also was there tojust .
'
•
100 k
·

~d Sox bomb Indians 23-7, Page 5
Ann looks at attitudes on obesity, Page 6
Humane Society, Page 10

=r"oclay: Partly Sunny
f.llgh: 70s; Low: 40s
Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: soa

ON REGISTRY - Karen Buffington of Karen's Korner In Gal·
llpolis displayed a plaque denoting her being named to the
1999/2000 edition of the Lexington Who's Who Registry of Exec·
utlves ehd Professionals, which recognizes Individuals who have
demonstrated leadership and achievement In their occupation.

Gallipolis business
owner joins registry
GALLIPOLIS- Karen Buffington, owner of Karen 's Komer (crochet
and gifts). located at 93 Pine St.. Gallipolis, has been named to the 1999/2000
edition of the Lexmgton Who's Who Registry of Executives and Professionals.
•
Lexington Who's Who 1s dedicated to the-recognition of individuals who
have demonstrated leadership and ach1evement in their occupation, industry or profession.
The Lexmgton Who's Who is compnsed of detailed biographies of outstanding executives and professionals throughout the U.S. Each listing
includes the member's name, and infonnation about the member's company and business expertise.
.
This award allows Buffington to post infonnation on the communications
board, as well as buy and sell producl&lt; and services to other members in the
classified section. The registry is published in three different versions including the printed edition, the searchable CD-ROM and the searchable online
registry on the Internet.
Buffington is a noted Gallia County craftsperson who specializes in handcrafted crochet items. She designs many of her own products. Her shop features items such as dolls, stuffed animals, holiday decorations , Afghans and
items which feature a sports theme. She accepts special orders and does repair
hand work articles and household items, such as crochet tablecloths.
She travels to Northgate Mall m Cincmnati, for a craft show on Oct. 2124. Buffington ts currently accepting Christmas orders Her store hours are
I0 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday-Friday.

•
,.
Meigs County's
Volume

so.

I.

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Big Bend Sternwheel Festival comes to rainy end
· A light but steady rain put a damper on the Big Bend
Danny Marr, Kevin Lane and William Kurnott were
Sternwheel Festival on Saturday, but participation in the winners in the line-throwing contest, with Jeremy
!he afternoon's events was still high, with several con- Brickles, Zack Shuler and Brandon Marsh winning the
tests an4 events wrapping up the three-day festival, junior division.
held on the 'Pomeroy Levee.
Winners in the chili cook-off were: Denise Bunce,
: A festival parade featured entries from the American Auomey, Stewart-Johnson Post, VFW, Mason, W.Va.,
Legion, several fire and emergency squads, the Meigs and Meigs County Girl Scouts, all winners in the
Marauder marching band and Meigs cheerleaders, vin- commercial division, and "Mama Jane" Slater,
tage automobiles and several commercial entries.
Jonathan Hobak and Andrea Sauvage in the individual
: On the parking lot, a kiddie tractor pull, chili cook- division.
off, and line-throwing
=--~----------.
The Pomeroy Mercontest for both adults
chants
Association
and children were
sponsored its annual
held.
Rubber Ducky Derby,
; Winners In the kidwith a large number of
~le tractor pull were,
prizes being awarded.
in order and by age: 3Those winneJS will be
il, Colton Hall, Jacob
amounced.
)md Caroline Wilson,
The Big Bend
all of Pomeroy; S-6,
Stemwheel Committee
~racie Hall, Pomeroy,
sponsored a CaptaiiJ's
;and · Kyle Young,
Dinner at the Carpen·Racine; 7-8, Willis
teJS Hall in Pomeroy
Marr, Olnton, W.Va.,
on Saturday evening to
John Poole, N. Col·honor the captains of
!ege Hill; and Heath
the 12 boats in attenOettwlller, Pomeroy;
dance during the festi9-10, Derek Brickler
val, and musical enterlind Klmmy Castor,
tainment by the OK
Chester, with Katie
Bayou Band and fire·
Poole, N. College Hill
works, sponsored by
and Jordan Pickens,
BAND, - The Mllgl High School Marching Ohio Lottery, conSyracuse tying for Band, under the direction of Tony DlngiH, Wll I high· eluded the festival on
third plade.
light of Slturdey'il StemwhHI Flltlvalln Pomeroy.
Saturday evening.

UNE THROWING - !)\is year'a lln•throwlng contest Included youngsters,
first time.
Here, a group of Junior line-throwers practiced for the competition on the Pomeroy parking lot. .

Yum. Bring on the sauerkraut fudge
•

IA0059, Auto, 4.0 L., V-&lt;3, AC, PS, PB, AM!FM Stet'eo

::::. $16 888

S...p!U~Rebltll!

(hd!LIJIC!,......,,

yield:~::

oltlcl John Jarvie,
tor hlllure to
1;l:151CCide.nt It
of Co. Rd. 28 end SR 124
According to the report, Jarvie lttlmptlld to mike 1 lett
tum end w11 ltruck by Nancy Prater of R1clne• •

•--· 1'-. Strottt Dlttti,IIC, PS, P8, Alllfll Cia.

(AP)- Police said they were looking for suspects in
shooting deaths of a couple at their home.
The bodies of Scott and Rebecca Grigaliunas were found Friday in
living room of their home.
Police'Oiief John Vermillion said he had sought the assistance of
Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation and the Hardin
County sheriff's office.
Vermillion said foul play was suspected because the bodies were "covered with something." but he would not identify the substance, The Columbus Dispatch reported.
Grigaliunas, 39, worked for Alltel Communications and owned Furst
Klass Racing, sponsored by Honda Riders of America Inc., according to the
H.1iaricln Star. He was a top finisher in International Drag Bike Msoctauon 1
competitions.
MIS. Grlgaliunas, 42, was an office m1111ager at Steve Myers Auto Sales.

~~~l!lc'll.'l

you're 50 or

you insure

995 SJ

home with us,
• through Auto-Owners
Insurance Company, w~'ll save
you
. ,.money! Statistics show that

, ¥Our age group experiences
fewer, less-ro;tly
[oo;es,

.-

us to
, pass the

Today's SeJtttiJtell

I

saving;

WAYNESVILLE (AP) - Yes, their origins, according to Judith
there is such a thing as sauerkraut De Luce, professor of classics at
fudge. And cookies. And brownies. Miami University. In a fast-growBut after this weekend's Ohio ing, increasingly rootless region,
Sauerkraut Festival, most of those festivals help create a sense of
goodies won't be on many menus community and place.
until next year.
"As our communities become
The 30-year-old sauerkraut fes- more complex and the lives of inditival in this southwest Ohio village _ viduals go in so many different
· o"riJy'one··c~hnany·'lhat Sl!elc1tt ·d'~\:11!&gt;115, "'tran·scemJI!f'g· ·~tass-..and'
satisfy every taste.
loc'ation, people develop ·a nostaiThere's one dedicated to wine gic longing for community and
and another featuring microbrews; activities," she said.
one for pretzels, one for popcorn
"Except in very rural communiand a couple for chili; one offering ties, people are more alienated
sweet honey and another apple but- from the cycles of nature that our
ter; and this one, offering all things ancestors used to celebrate in feslisauerkraut.
vals. Add to that the communities'
"There are absolutely more fes- desire to make themselves distinctivals going on - 1,300 festivals live, and you have some reasons
and •rnual events," including car why festivals are so popular."
shows and various community eelWaynesville showcases itself
ebrations across lhe state, said with a gorging of sauerkraut balls,
Chuck Jackson, director of the cabbage rolls and dozens of related
Ohio Festival and Events Associa- foods, including sauerkraut doughlion in Columbus.
nuts, German sundaes with sauerOver the past few weekends, kraut, big kraut hot. dogs, sauerpeople within a SO-mile radius in kraut tacos and sauerkraut pizza.
.Scott Dring, spokesman for the
southwest Ohio could choose from
the Microbrew Festival in Cincin- Ohio Division of Travel and
nati, the Wine Festival in Morrow, Tourism, said festivals are "a big'
Applefest in Lebanon, the Pretzel part of what our state is all about,"
Festival in Germantown, the as well as a big part of a $14.3 bilDamfest in Hamilton and the Pre- lion industry that employs 389,000
ble County Pork Festival in Eaton. people and draws 64 million peoThe festival boom stems in part pie - ranking Ohio sixth in the
from people's renewed interest in .nation in tourism.

HONORED FOR SERVICE- Preceding Thursdly nlght'l
meeting Syracuse Village Council honored Katie Crow tor 30
year1 of aervica to the village. She was presented 1 plaque by
Mayor George Connolly on behalf of village officials noting her
tour years on the Syracuse Water Boftrd, 1960-1964; her ·fou{
years as village clerk, 1972-1970; and ller 22 year• 11 1 member
of Council, 1976-1984 and 1986 to the present. At the surprlee
event Mrs. Crow was presented flowers and a decorated c1ke
which was served with other refreshments to council members,
several employees, other guests and· family membere, Bob
Crow, Jim and Pam Crow and daughter, Carrie, and Bobby and
Ruetta Crow.

Report: Government agencies not following Supreme Court directive

COLUMBUS (AP)- Many slate government there's nothing they can do about it."
agencies have not complied with a 1994 Ohio
Many agencies continue to overcharge because
Supreme Court ruling'limiting charges for copies of they have no incentive to stop, said Robert Schultz,
public rew~ Thomson Newspapers Statehouse a retired police officer who hosts public records
Bureau reported. .
seminars for law enforcement officers.
About one-third of Ohio's 88 county clerks of
"You gotta remember, there 's no penalty here
Bus driver won't be charged In child's death court charge more than 25 cents per page. Forty- outside of public indignation," he said. "The probfour percent of sheriff's departments and 39 percent lem is some public agencies look at this as a· monCOLUMBUS (AP) - A school bus driver will not be charged for the
of police departments charge more than 50 cents a eymaking exercise. There are those out there who
death of a third-grader who was run over, authorities said.
page for a three-page report, Thomson reported give very little weight to what this law is all about."
Melvin Smith, 3S, of Columbus, was not at fault in the Sept. 20 accident,
Sunday.
_The SuP':eme Court made its ruling after the 'J!i·
Detective Jeff Brandt said. The school district had put Smith on leave pendWhile
the
Supreme
Court
ruling,
did
not
say
bune-Chromcle
of Warren sued t~e Warren Pohce
ing conclusion of the investigation.
what
an
acceptable
fee
is,
most
experts
agree
it
is
5
Department
for
charging
$5 for the first page of any .
Nigel Green, 8, was killed when he fell under lhe bus .
cents
a
page,
Thomson
reported.
requested
document.
Wendy Watson, 46; driver of a bus direclly behind -Smith's, said she
"I work in an office with a photo copier, and I · The court, which charges 5 cents a page, ruled
honked her hom when the boy fell under the bus, but Smith did not hear the
know it doesn't cost 25 cents a page to m~ke the charge was not tied to actual copying c~ts, as
hom 1111d drove on.
copies," said J\my Ryder, director of Ohio Citizen state law requires. Charges can include the cost for
·Another witn~ said the boy slipped on grass and fell under the bus.
Action, a nonpartisan consumer and campaign paper, copy machine equipment and wear and tear
Ohio State canrrDBif~Jn advocacy
group. "I sec no other reason for this on the copier, the court ruled.
. other than to discourage people from getting the
Profiting off the copy.fees is prohibited. Howevnets $1 billion flOBI
information.
er,
some admit they charge people for employee
COLUMBUS
"We've
gone
in
and
told·agencies
that
they
are
time.
University's five-year f~ti1d-raising I
ovei-charging people. They just look at us ,.like
"The feeling is it's just a fair price for the cost of
campaign has reached
'goal
1 Section • 10 Pages
raising $1 billion nine months early.
The only olhe.r public universities
in the country to raise that mu.ohJ
'treaty is not of the same caliber as previous arms
By CASSANDRA BURRELL
money in single campaigns are
oonttol treaties."
Allocll1ecl PI'IM Writer
Michigan and Illinois.
Defense Secretary' William Co~en led efforts on
WASIDNGI'ON (AP) - Three Cabinet memSchool officials made the
beJS and the White House's national sec;urity advis- . the Sunday talk shows to press the Senate to delay a
announcement . Friday night at
.
er pleaded .!"e Ointon l!'fministration's case on ~e vote.
Rejecting
the
treaty
would prevent the United
nuclear
tes1
ban
treBly
before
the
public,
saymg
-=~:L:====j~=~
· fl811Y
celebrating the campaign's
_
1,400 volunteeJS.
rejection by the Senate could hun nonproliferation States from taking the lead in halting the global
The money enables Ohio State to
s~ of nuclear weapons, Cohen said on NBC's
effor1s:
_ .._-:_._~--bring the best faculty, scholars and
)3111 one Republican senator, Jon Kyl of Arizona, "Meet the Press."
researchers to the campus and ,said he looked forward to a vote this week thatis ali
"We are in a situation right now where we're
attract outstandina students,
but certain to kiD the Comprehensive '!Cst Ban about to send a signal to the rest of the world that we
gmQ
.
State President William ·Kirwan
Treaty and force the government to "so back to the are not as serious about oontrolling the spread of
Plck.3: 6-1-.1; Pkk41 O.S-04
nuclear weapons as we should be," Cohen said.
.
said.
drawing board."
,
S.per Lotto: 1-S-12-19-30-44
The univeJSity will use or is using
Kyl oontended a defeat. would strengthen the · Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said on
Klelcen 2-2-8.0-1-7
the money on 15 new buildings,
United States' hand in negotiations with other ooun· ABC's "This Week" that the United States needs "a
1061 that will prevent the. other countries from testscholarships for as many as 1,000
lY.YA.
tries.
·
Dllily 3: 6-3-2; Dilly 4: 2-4-9-4
studimts, 68 professorships and to
. :'I think the Senate must vole on this treaty and ing. We believe that we have a reliable stockpile (of
o 1999 OWo VoJtey Publilhlaa eo. ·
set up 237 research funds.
defeat i~" he said on "Fox News Sunday." "This · nuclear weapons). We don't need to test more, and

I

allowing

paper, use of equipment and use of the employee
time it takes to retrieve the documents," said Steve
Barnett, spokesman for the Hamilton County Sheriff's Department, which charges 50 ~nts per page.
A majority of requests come from media. whi~ll
use the documents to make a profit, he sru~.
Reporters often get copies but do not even use
them, he added.
'
"They just inconvenience our employees," Ba(nett said.
•
Schultz ~aid he and members of the state attoiincy general s office. have pushed law enforcemer(l
offices to comply w1th public records laws. .
"The Supreme Court couldn't have made 11 any
clearer," he said. "There is no reason public agencies can't comply with this."
•
The attorney general's office does not enforce.
publ1c records . laws, so changes must be made.
through litigation, '!'homson reported.
•
"The average ct~zen ~ts. the agency, to obef
the law, so they don t question 11 when they re ovet~
charged," said David Marburger, an attorney for th!lOhio Newspapers Association.
, ::

Administration presses for delay on test ban vote.;

on to you.
. Contact our agency
today for a customizeJ
, •proposal on your homeowners
· insurance protection.

Auto-Owners lmurance

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114 Court

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Number 85

Four· seek two seats
~n Gallia SWCD Board

Tickets for the banquet are $8 1f
purchased in advance, or $10 at the
door. The SWCD requests that if at
all possible, purchase tickets by Nov.

-Page 4,5

'

Mncu ry '1/f l

reside in Sidney; Mike, wife Momca
and daughter reside in Pittsburgh; and
Manny, a student at Columbus State
University.
Kemper owns 60 acres and rents
an additional 250 acres, on which he
operates his beef cow/calf and hogs,
farrow to finish operation. He also
raises corn, milo, hay and tobacco. In
addition to fanning, he plants about
I million trees for AEP, Mead and
various conservation reserve practice
participants. He-has been a 4-H advisor for 25 years.
During the annual SWCD banquet, Gallia County agriculture will
be promoted, with Gallia Countygrown beef to be served.

Sunday's NFL .
schedule provides
numerous upsets

•

"lboughtacombinelastyearthat:
listed for over $1~0 000 so there's ·
· I need now,' especially
' ·
nothmg
th• ··
. ,
.'·
way the farm economy IS, Herr srud.

·~ 1.1:--JC:OI.N

GALLIPOLIS - Four landowners in Gallia Cunty are candidates for
two positions to be filled on the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation Distnct Board of Supervisors.
The election will take place during the annual meeting and awards
banquet on Thursday, Nov. 4 at 7
p.m. at Buckeye Hills Career Center.
The followmg offers brief biographies of the candidates.
Jason Butler and his wife, Bryna
Vollbom Butler, reside in Ohio Township. Jason Butler, along with his
. father and grandfather, fann approximately 600 acres. They have 100
cow calves and 150 feeder calves.
They rai se 17 acres of tobacco, 250
acres of corn, 175 acres of soybeans
and about 50 acres of alfalfa. He 1s a
member of the Christ United
Methodist Church, a Cattleman's
Association board member and a
member of the Fann Bureau:
Jay Cnsenbery and hiS wife, Donna, reside in Ohio Township. They
have three children- (..eslie, married
to Roh R1der, who resides with their
. daughter Brook in Washington, Ind.;
: Bobby and wife Michele reside in
•Centenary wilh two children, Kelsi
-and Kaleb; and Amy Crisenbery, who
:attends the Untverslly of Rio Grande,
;lives at home and helps with the fann.
:Jay Cnscnbery manages Butler Here. ford Fann, whi ch consists of 675
:acres. of wh1ch 250 are ullable.
;Crops include corn, soybeans, barley.
•rye , wheat, oats and alfalfa hay, with
:heavy emphasis on no-till planting.
He served as director of the Ohio
··Hereford Association, is a member of
the Ohio Cattleman Association, a
:member and past director of the Gallia Cattleman's Association , and was
a 4-H advisor for 10 years. He has
. served on the board of supervisors
since January 1997. .
Mike Hughes and h1s wife, Debbie, reside in Addison Township.
They have two children - Jenny,
married to Jason Beaver, who along
with Kathleen reside in Mercervi lie;
and Tony, who lives at home and
•helps with the farm. Mike Hughes,
. along with his father Ray and son
~Tony have a 60-cow dairy fann plus
; a 30-head cow/calf operation, and
feeds out 50 head of beef.
• To help feed these animals, they
. raise corn, hay and wheat. Tobacco is
.also raised as a cash crop. Hughes has
served on the SWCD Board since
' January 1985. He is a member of the
. Addison United Methodist Church,
the Gallia County Farm Bureau and
' the Gallia County Tobacco Associa"tion.
William L. Kemper Jr., along with
his wife, Barbara. reside in Spring: field Township and have three sons
; -Matt, wife Vicki and four children

Sports

Pomeroy

992-6677
);
~

~I'

"1

. ,.
•

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.'

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we want others not to test"
.
At Cohen's s1de was Gen. Henry H. Sheltori;
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who sought t1&gt;
assure the public that the treaty would not handicap
the United States militarily.
,
"If the national security were in any way going
to be damaged, the joint chiefs would never rccorrt~
mend thai we ratify this treaty," Shelton said.
·:
Energy Secretary Bill Richardson joined Co~
and Albright in saying the Senate should not a&lt;:t olt
the treaty without benefit of full hearings.
•,
"What we have now is the need to explain it to:
the Senate, to the Congress," he said on Fox.
: •·
And national security adviser Sandy Berger tolj;l_.
CNN's "Late Edition:" "If we go forward and r~
fy this treaty, I believe Russia and China will ratify
and the voluntary moratorium they have on testllJ8
will become permanent That's in our interesta." • •
~I

.••.·'

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...

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- ····-

·- -··---·--·--

... . ..

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Monday, October 11, 1999

--

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

Paga•\2

rCommentary
.

Monday,~- 11,111111

Nancy Newman

I

.. ·'

; .The Daily Sentinel Health care wi.nners and losers
i

'•

..

'Lstllflfi.Wtltn 1948

'•'
'•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-11112·2150 • Fax: 11112·2157

,.

..

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

'

"
•
'•

CHARLES W. GOVEY
Publlahar

•

i

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
' 01nerelllaneglr

~

DIANE HILL
Controlllr

•:
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..,._, _.,.,..,.,..... -.s,.olfy • _ , , _ .• • ,.,...,,.."' • - - . , . - . - lo: L - . "'lfte - · l'lte Stnllntl, 111 Cowl St,
P
OK Ofakt _,., ar, FAX ID 7~167.

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1•

LSenator: State agencies need to diversify
:It PAUL SOUHAADA

~

PreN Writ..-

·, •;.· COLUMBUS (AP) _Sen. C.J. Prentiss says she held her tongue~ long
:• she could.
.
;" .. But when the last OhioRcads Council employee _ the one who was
.(misaing when the rest of the new hires were introduced- entered the room
.••4uringl•t week's meeting, the Cleveland Democrat felt compelled to speak
....
'"' · "Is that F'lith?" Prentiss asked, referring to Faith Lyon, the counciJis new
.•.tiilw 111t to Executive Director Holly Harris Bane.
.·~ ~ .. "I was hoping she was African-American."
_..-:The blunt weloome for Ms. Lyon carne after Ms. Bane introduced the
_1:Qtller memben of her team: two white women and 8 white man. Ms. Bane
c..tso is white.
' "··: "I can't believe_that in 1999, we have put together a staff that is all
,_·white," said Prentiss, a nonvoting member of the oouncil and president of
the Ohio Legislative Black Caucus.
••,•• "Thll'l 1101 KCCplable."
" ·' . Afterward, Prentiss said she was particularly disappointed with the coun.L,QI'a hiring decisions because OhioReads _Gov. Bob Taft's $50 million
:.;p110111ise to recruit an army of reading tutors and improve literacy among
. •:14Uill c:hildren- is suc:h a high-profile program.
.·-•· Taft's record of hiring minorities has been criticized several times since .
took office in January, and he has pledged to work with Prentiss and other
. .~liCk tawmaken to improve the situation.

c_.

_.;.. , Prentiss, though, doesn't blame Taft.
• "Mawhole,lhavebeenve,rypleasedwithTaft'sworktowardincreas~ ~ the number of minorities in government," she said.
"Bul the message of Taft needs to get down to Taft's people.
, 1 • "Frankly, it's embarrassing to bring this up," sh~ added. "I know it
..,_, ,~people IUiallltfortabic, but people have got to look at things differ, ,,.;nlly in 1999."
Ms. Bane explained thil she really had a say in only two of the hires: Ms.
~ . 1 Lyon and the person who is in charge of the council's gr::.nt program. The
supervilor of the AmeriCorps portion of the OhioReads program was
,, , ~ghl in by the Educational Service Center Association, which adminis.-!FI the federally funded volunteer program. The oouncil's administrative
~; ~• meanwhile, is a civil servant working for the Ohio Department of
.&lt;' ~ucalion and was assigned to the oouncil based on seniority.
.;•(; ; Thll said, Ms. Bane believes that people ought to take 1 broader view of
..... Oh'10Re-.._
..,. program.
",::.."'"'
~. "OhioRcllds
as an office is very small," she said. "Ohio Reads as a pro~is massive." ·
( ~ · There are plenty of opportunities for minority input- from the decision
......~erwho receives funding to who supervises individual literacy programs in
.lhe schools, llhe added.
· · Taft spokesman Soott Milburn agreed: "There is more than one way to
~ measure this. Ultimllely, it's about who is being helped by the program."
~"·" Milburn, who re-emphasized his boss' commitment to diversifying the
&lt; •we•a payroll, suggested that Prentiss and other lawmakers come up with a
till of potential job candidates.
_·&lt;2 Prentiss slid she hu and will again. .
· ,.:,,·..:"There are African-Americans who oould have panicipated in the
~ ..paccss," she Aid of the OhioRelds program. If no blacks applied, the peo, 1p1e doinathe hirina need to uk themselves, "'What's wrong with this pic·
. ;, taR?"' Pn:ntill said.
The issue is about more than who gets a job, she added.
, -. . "Divci'IC groups of people make better decisions."

i.:.: .

By Jack Anderaon
and Dougla• Cohn
WASHINGTON •• Seven years after
candidate Bill Ointon won the presidency
promising universal health coverage, the
number of Americans lacking health
insurance has skyrocketed. Statistics compiled by the Census Bureau signal the failure of incrementalism, the step-by-step
approach to reform adopted by Clinton
after Congress rejected his wife's wideranging plan to extend cov,erage to all Americans.
Fewer workplaces offer health benefits, and the
administration's attempts to expand government
programs have not kept pace with the growing
ranks of the uninsured.
President Clinton warned Congress in 1994
thaI 1'ts ma
. ct'10n wou ld swe lith e num be r of umn.
sured. Confronted with the census report, Clinton
said, "I told you so." In the midst of unprecedented prosperity, 44.3 million Americans are
uninsured, including II million children. Future
historians will debate whether Clinton deserves
credit for trying to pass universal coverage or
blame for mishandling a moment in history that
should have been his. Health care is an explosive
issue, and could affect the outcome of the presidential race, control of Congress and Hillary Rod·
ham Clinton's bid for the Senate. Among the like·
ly winners and losers:
-- Democratic contender Bill Bradley ignited
thQ health-care debate with a bold proposal to
allow the uninsured to buy into the same plan as
members of Congress. The Bradley plan laps into
voterresentmentoftawmakersforgettingtaxpayer-funded benefits that are unavailable to ordinary
workers. However, the $65 billion price tag is
e~orbitant, and prob~bly wouldn't cover the costs
anyway.
•• Vice President AI Gore's grab-bag package
of tax incentives and modest expansions of e~ist·
ing programs builds on what Clinton has offered.
It has the virtue of being realistic, but it won't
inspire voters, and it won't solve the burgeoning
problem of the uninsured. He must convince vot·
ers that the baby steps he's outlined will lead to a
bigger and better plan down the road.
·• Republican front-runner· George W. Bush

OIIC yw ago: Pope John Paul II decreed the first Jewish-born saint of the
e11: Edith Stcin,.a nun who died in the gas chambers of Auschwitz.
, Today's Birthdays: Actor Ron Leibman is 62. Country singer Gene Wat·
· is"· Singer-musician Daryl Hail is SO. Sen. Patty Murray, D·Wash., is
Rhythm-and-blues musician Andrew Woolfolk (Earth, Wind and Fire) is
Ac:treaa-din:ctor Catlin Adams is 49. Actor David Morse is 46. Country
oil I.;;;."!.· Paulette Carlson is 46. Football player Steve Young is 38. Actress
Cutlet is37. Actor Sean Patrick Flanery is 34. Actor Luke Perry is 33.
Jane Krakowski is 31. Rapper MC Lyte is 28. Singer NeeNa Lee is
Ac:ttr eu Michelle Trachtenberg is 14.
•
~em

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W.VA.

Cloudy

Showen

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f!aln

A return to summertime conditions for Ohio.
,
. Hot and dry weather is forecast for the state on Tuesday. The National
Weather Service said highs could exceed 80 degrees in parts of southern
Ohio.
.
Rain is likely to return on Tuesday night and spread across the state on
Wednesday, forecasters said.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Colum~us weather sta·
tion was 86 degrees in 1928 while the record low was 24m 1964.. Sunset
tonight will be at 6:59 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:39 a.m.
Today...Arcas of fog until mid-morning ...Then becoming partly sunny.
Highs in the low to mid 70s. North wind around 10 mph.
Tonight ... Mostly clcar...With fog developing after midnight. Lows in
the lower and mid 40s. Light northeast wind.
Tuesday...Mostly sunny. Highs in the mid 70s.
Exteaded forecast .
Tuesday night ...lncreasing clouds. A chance of showe111 late. Lows in
the mid 50s.
Wedncsday.. A chance of showers in the morning...Otherwise partly
cloudy. Highs in the mid 60s.
·
Thursday ... Mostly clear. Lows in the lower 40s and highs in the mid

By Joan Ry1n
.
I am Joan Ryan, born 10 years before the
Joan Ryan whose bioaraphy I am writing.
Technically, this is an autobiography because
Joan Ryan and Joan Ryan are essentially the
same person, but as a device to get at the truth
of myself, I have invented another Joan Ryan
to achieve a closeness of observation back to
the earliest stages of my life, which the actual
me doesn't remember so well....
It's difficult for a journalist to resist poking
fun at Ed.mund Morris. His book, "Dutch: A
Memoir of Ronald Reagan," has drawn
scathing criticisms from those who say his ·use
of a fictional observer •• a character sort of
himself but not completely •• renders the book
uselcss as biography. ·
They say the mingling of fact and fiction is
an outrage, a cop-out, a crime against journal ism.
Please.
I agree with the critics to this extent: Morris's unusual approach has raised legitimate
questions about the nature of truth in journal-

material into ' the voice of a single semi-fietional observer, though real people certainly
are quoted and all material seems carefully
footnoted. It seems to me that by using him·
self as a character, the author can more clean·
ly and dramatically imparl information with·
out losing readers under a mountain of facts
for facts' sake.
One could even make the argument that
Morris is being more truthful than conventional biographers. He is admitting from the outset
that the Reagan you're getting on the pages is
the Reagan as seen through the writer's eyes ·
• which is what you get in any biography,
except most biographers write at such a dislance from their subjects that they create an
illusion of objectivity.
Rather than being self-indulgent, as critics
have argued, Morris 's device can be interpret·
ed as a throwing-off of the conceit that he ·· or
any writer ··can be completely objective. And
he's throwing off the conceit that he alone, in
some disembodied God-like · voice, can
explain the subject's inner essence to the rest

im.

~UL

So the .question is: Can Morris's personal
point of view provide an accurate and truthful
portrait? Sure ·· as accurate as any other point
of view.
Because each of us observes life through
our own filters, Reagan's friends, family and
eyewitnesses are no more likely 10 provide the
"truth" about Reagan than Morris, who had
the benefit of weaving everyone else's observations with his own to arrive as close to the
truth as might be possible.
What it boils down to is eithei the reader
trusts Morris as an insightful, intelligent, reliable narrator or he doesn't..Whether the narra tor is a real person or a fictional character
doesn't affect the completed picture of Reagan.
Anyway, it's not like Morris's approach
hasn't been used before. Athletes and politi-

cians create fictionalized sel.ves ail the time,
and even refer to themselves in the third perso~. "Don't ever count out Reggie Jackson,"
Reggie Jackson was known to say.
·
Or how about Bob Dole? "Bob Dole
believes in America," Bob Dole said.
In an interview on "60 Minutes," Morris
told of watching Reagan in the Oval Office as
he was about to deliver a speech on national
television. He seemed distracted and kept
looking to the left in search of something.
Suddenly his picture popped on to the camera's monitor. and Reagan brightened and
relaxed. "Ah, there he is," he said.
There is .something so perfect about a fietional observer observing a president observing himself playing the greatest role of his
life.

60s.
Friday.. :Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 40s and highs in the
70s.

meet
goal for river clean up
COLUMBUS (AP)- The Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency
will not meet its goal of cleaning up
75 percent of Ohio's rivers by cen·
tury's end, The Columbus Dispatch
reported today.
Forcing industrial polluters to
treat their waste and new municipal
sewage-treatment plants helped the
cleanup.
But other sources of water poilution, such as runoff from farm fields
and parking 1\)ts, erosion aQd poilutants washed out of the air have

Hospital News
VETERANS MEMORIAL ·
HOSPITAL
Friday
Discharged: Mary Goebel,
Reedsville.,

.

The Daily Sentinel

Bank One............................. 35"1.
Bob Evans ............................19'-

(USPSZI~

eorg.wamer .........................42l.

- - eYtry anemooo. Moncloy throu!ll
Friday, lit Cou• 51., Pomlray, Ohio, by the
Ohio V.llty Publishin1 ComJ"'•Y· Soc&lt;nd d"'
poid •• """'""'·OhiO.
l o l - Tbc Aloocioled l'!oa ud lhc Ohio
Newtpopa Aloociolioll.
,....._. Send llldrea oomdioM to '1\e
Daily Scallocl, Ill Cou• St, .Pomaoy, Ohio

"'IS.

·"ln ~erica.z._en

hnour ~ forty min-

utes.

- Gennan saying.

.

SINGLE COPY PRICE

Dai)J. ............................- ...... 35 Ccnll
Sublcriben not desiring to pay the arrier rn~y
mni1 i1 advM&lt;lC direet lone DaityScmincl on
a lhrec, ail or 11 mont11 buil. Credil ~ill be
&amp;Ma c:alrier uc:b weet.
No aablaiplion bJ mail pennit&amp;cd in 11eu

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AT&amp;T ....................................47"1.

ans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy. "'
'
He was born Sept. 3, 1918, in Avella, Pa., son of the late James 0. and
Glennie Virginia White Smith. He was a B-24 bombardier, serving two commissions in the Army Air Corps during World War II, a past master of the
Guysville Masonic Lodge, a member of the Athens K. T. Crossen Post of the
American Legion, the Athens Post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, and the
Disabled Veterans Association. He was a self-employed farmer and a member of Rejoicing Life Church, Middleport .
He is survived by a niece and her husband, Norma Jean and John Holman
of Alexandria; several cousins, great-nieces and great-nephews.
He was also preceded in death by two brothen.
Services will be held Wednesday, 2 p.m. at the Fisher. Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with burial following in Meigs Memory Gardens, Pomeroy.
Friends may call at ·the funeral home Wednesday at1 p.m., one hour prior
to services.
In lieu of flowen, memorial contributions may be made to the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center, 112 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy OH
45769.

Kroger and union reach deal on contract
CINCINNATI (AP) - A union
representing Kroger Co. workers in
the Cincinnati area reached a tentative contract agreement with· the
grocery store chain early today,
averting a possible strike.
"We're very happy with the
agreement, and we also think it
keeps the company competitive,"
said John Marrone, spokesman for
United Food and Commercial
Workers Union Local 1099.
The union, which called off a
planned strike Saturday, had sub·
milled a contract proposal to
Kroger officials Sunday evening.
Negotiato111, working through a
federal mediator, failed to reach a
deal by the midnight Saturday
deadline and resumed talks Sunday
afternoon.
Marrone said Kroger agreed to
pay raises and improved health
benefits· for workers at no extra
cost to the employees.
He declined to discuss specifics
of the five-year agreement before
union. members had a chance to
review the details. '
Union members must approve
the contract with a vote, which
could happen as soon as ·Wednesday, Marrone said.
Calls to Cincinnati-based
Kroger went unanswered early
today. Spokesman Steve Jagers
said Sunday night that negotiations
would continue until a new contract was reached.
Casper Van Dien was pre-med
in college before ruming 10 acling. He is married Jo RobeR
Mitchum's greal-granddaughter.

Champion ...............................5\
Charm Shps............................s\

City Holdlng .......:.................. 20'1.

Federal Mogul ...................... 28'Flratar ....................................21'Gannett ...................................72
Knnart ....................................10,
Krogar ..................................23%.

SVISCRimON RATES
ar CUTler or MoleN' Roole

Ooo Woek.................................S2.00
Olio ........._ ............................ $8.70
0.0 Veor................................... $104.00

ioa period. S..blaipeion r~tc
by chonlinathe

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Landa End ............................811'-

Shonlly'a .................................1;.
Y(encty.•a ..............................

Worthington ........................ 15.,_

13 Woeb........................... .$27.30
:16 Woeb ........................Jl3.82
S2 Woeb ......................... .SI05.S6

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13 Woeb ...............- .........Sl!l.lS
:16 _ _........................ .IS6.68
S2Woeb ............_ ........ ..SIO!I.72

.. .

Reader Services

Correctton Polley

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8usl one Cf&gt;romlse...
9 "CQ.J!/1" C:Vo!ce gaur Opinions

··ELECT--

VictOr Young, IIJ .:

..... Departmlnt8

no . . _.,... .. M2-2l!l. Deport-

Candidate For

GHel'll Ma....c................... ExL 1101
Nrwt...- -........._ ...... ......Ellllltn
.
orEaL liN

Po11eroy Village COUNCIL

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The union's previous contract,
which expired at midnight Saturday, covered employees in
Kroger's grocery and meat sec·
lions. Drugstore and general mer·
chandise division employees are .
covered under another contract.
Union demands included pay
raises over a four-year period of
$2.40 for department heads, $2.20
for assistants and $2 for most other
employees. 'They also wanted better health insurance at affordable
rates and more full-time positions
with full benefits. The employees
make between $5.25 and $16 an
hour.
Union members voted overwhelmingly to strike last week
after rejecting Kroger's four-year
offer for raises of $1.50 for department heads, $1.20 for assistants
and $1 for most other employees .
Kroger workers from an eastern
Ohio River Valley local, meanwhile, reached a tentative agreement with the nation 's largest gro·
eery store chain ·early Sunday
morning, two hours after the midnight deadline.
Sterling Ball, president of Local
347, said that main negotiations
failed to come up with an agreement about wages, profit sharing
and other terms.
But a smaller meeting between
officials after talks ended enabled
the sides to agree on a tentative
contract, he said.
Workers must vote on the new
contract, which includes improvements in wages, pensions and
health care coverage.
Five meetings will be held this
week· so workers can discuss the
contract, Ball said.
The union represents about
4,600 workers at stores in eastern
Ohio, West Virginia and eastern
Kentucky.
Local 1099 represents about
8,400 workc111 at 66 Kroger stores
in southeastern Indiana, northern
Kentucky and the Cincinnati area.

Trick or treat ·set

November 2, 1999
.Pakl For By The Candklall THANK YOU
Vlctor Young Ill 856 E. Maln St. Pomeroy, Ohio

I

I .

-1

Racine Village will observe trick or treat night, Oct. 28, 6 to 7 p.m.
Sirens will blow to begin and end the observance.
.

Chapter to meet

·

.

·

~

Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will med
Thursday at the home of Clarice Krautter. Vera Crow and Charlotte Eibel,
will be hostesses.
'

OES sets session

i

·

Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern Star will meet Tuesda~
7:30 p.m. Initiatory work will be performed. Mcmbe111 are to wear chaP,
ter dresses.
·
•

Trustees in special meeting

:

Orange Township Trustees will have a special session to discu"
FEMA projects Thursday 7:30p.m. at the horne of Osie Follrod.

i
~

Right to Life

Right to Life meeting wilt be held at 7:30p.m. Monday at the Pomeroj
Library.
1

Support group to meet

:

wii

'The next meeting of the Athens Parkinson 's Disease support group
be held Tuesday, 2 p.m. at O'Bieness Memorial Hospital in the basernelil
conference rooms.
t

AA on for Thursday

:

Alcoholics Anonymous open meeting, 7 pm. Thursday,·Sacred Hea~
Catholic Church, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
•

Ohio ·native talks about his travel;
RIPLEY (AP) - It look Steven terday, because I'm constantly
Newman four years to walk around reliving my journey thr1&gt;ugh ·lily
the world, covering 15,500 miles lectures and stories. In a sense, you
through the United .States, Europe, could say I'm still on the joumey,
Southeast Asia and Africa. He may because all these people I speat·'lo,
spend the rest of his life reliving they want to be a part of sometblng
his travels.
'
like that, " Newman said.
" I feel lucky that people want to
One of his most vivid memMiles
hear it, and that I'm able to inspire is of hi~isit to· India's Ganges
them or motivate them and educate River, whiJ; h Hindus regard as
them, too," Newman said. "I wake sacred. Newman said he saw fiGd.
up every day thinl1ing this is prob· ies being burned by the river&lt;ll'nd
ably going to end real soon. But the women doing laundry in the river,
phone keeps ringing.''
· even as a large pipe dumped•Plw
Newman, 45, grew up in Bethel sewage into the water.
··~•
and lives in this Ohio River village
"I ran across every bizarre,
about 50 miles southeast of Cincin· unusual, fantastic character that
nati. He's written three books since ~n can dream of," he said. "P.eohe ended his walk in April 1987. pie who'd walked thousands 'lof
He now delivers about 150 talks a miles nude to go into this rirer.
year to schools and community and People going into the river to die.
corporate groups.
.The dead, being brought by ' ltle
He figures he has given more hundreds to the river, on handlethan 2,000 such talks.
bars of bicycles and piled on taxiNewman . still walks - about cabs.
four mites daily, but not alone. He
"One -day when I'm stand'ii!g
is accompanied by his wife of three ncar the Ganges, there was a big
yean, schoolteacher Darci New- bonfire and they're burning a body.
man, and their black Labrador All along the river, dozens of ofher
retriever, Gabriel. They often fol· bodies are being burned,. '·teo.
low an old stagecoach road near There's a mass of humanity."
their hilltop home.
He has revisited some of.·ihe
Newman said he still hears from places where he walked. ~ ··
people who know him only from
"I've been back to Australia;1 to
the stories he sent to The Columbus Ireland, England. Some of' 1'1ly
Dispatch and ·capper's, a weekly books have come out in otherliln·
publication based in Topeka, Kan.
guages, so I' ve gone on book t~iin,
"They call me up and read or have shown Darci some of the
poems to me. They still treat me things I gotlb experience," he ~Bld.
like a son or a brother, many of
His walk indirectly resulted in
them," he told The Cincinnati meeting the woman he married :~
Enquirer. "They say, 'You know,
"She had read one of my
it's been 12 years. I was just curi· books," Newman said. "She wrote
ous what you 're doing these days.' to me, said she wanted to meet' me.
"It seems like I came home yes· And we started dating."

Lawmakers considering tougher speeding I8Ws
AKRON (AP) - . Leadfoots
beware: State lawmakers are consid·
ering tough revisions to Ohio's traffie laws to crack down on repeat and
high-speed offenders.
The changes, contained in a
revamp of Ohio's traffic code, make
it easier for drivers to accumulate
points and give courts the option to
su~pend driver's licenses on the third
offense in a year, the Akron Beacon
Journal reported Sunday.
.
"If you get three tickets within a
year, then you are preny dangerous,"
said David Diroll, executive director
of the Ohio Criminal Sentencing
Commission, which developed the
recommendations for the bill.
State Highway Patrol figures cite
excessive speed as being the likely
cause of 7,255 injuries and 267
deaths from vehicle accidents in the
state in 1998, the newspaper report·
ed. Troopers issued 381,000 tickets
for speeding in 1997.
Under the current law, chronic
speeders can only lose their licenses
after accumulating 12 points in two

years, unless they have ~ickets ..for
oilier offenses.
•_;.
That system was designed to give ·
drivers more points for their second,
third and subsequent spe~g
offenses. In practice, however;1he
system gives varying points depald· .
ing on the posted speed limit.
The bill would restructure the
point syslem to emphasize how
much over the limit the driver is,D,ri·
.vers would get:
1
- Four points for going mqre
than 30 mph over the speed limit. 0
- Two points for going 10 ~h
over a 55 mph or 65 mph speed li it.
-Two points for going 5 mph r
more over a speed limit of less~\..n
55 mph.
;
Local courts generally an: giJen
discretion on how .many poin~Sho
assess, depending on the severi!Y :Of
the violation, said Andrea White,
spokeswoman for the state De~mcnt of Public Safety.
.)
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Oak Hill Flnl ......................... 1~
OV8 .........................................32
one valley .............................35\
Peoplea .................................'¥1'1.
Pram Ftnl ........... ;..................11'·
Rockwell ...........................53~
RD/Shell ............................... 57~.
Seara .....................................31~

.25.,.

MAIL SVIJliCRIPTION
-~~hi~&gt; C..IJ

.

Thoyght for Toda~:

Stocks
Am Ele Power ......................34'·
AkzO ...................................... 43'1.

J(J(ln RytJn is tJ . columnist for til• Salt
Frwncisco Chronicle. Send commrllls to ilrr
in cere of tilis neWSflllper or send iler •·11111U
111 joanrytJnsfgtJII.com.

)

slowed the pace of river recovery.
"We're not going to meet the 75
percent goal," said Ohio EPA Director Chris Jones, who took over as
director in January.
The goal was set earlier this
decade.
"We haven 't ratchetcd back
much. We're still saying 70 percent,
or close to it, by 2001," Jones said.
He said that goat is preliminary
because -water pollution control
strategies are changing too rapidly
to know exactly what to expect.
The state is starting a new program
to oontrol water pollution from runoff
and erosion, he said.
· "We're moving toward a more
watenhed-based approach. Rather
than fcicusing on a single PQint-source
discharge, we'll be taking a more
holistic approach," Jones sajd.

Saturday
Admitted: Nina Dixson,
Middleport
Discharged: Marcia Denison,
Rutland.
(Published by perml•ton.)

c-..i1r N....,...,. Holdlop, loc.

Bobby Joe Harper, 56, of Gallipolis Ferry, died Saturday, October 9,
1999, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
,
Born Feb. 23, 19!13 in Boone County, WV, he was a son of the late
William and Margaret (Cook) Harper. He was a machinist for Uttimara Co.
and a member of the Kingdom Hall Jehovah's Witness of Point Pleasant.
In addition to his parents, he was also preceded in death by his first wife,
Patty Glady Harper; and two brothers, William Harper and Johnny Harper.
Survivors include his wife, Donna Parsons Harper of Gallipolis Ferry;
two sons and daughters-in-law, Robert Joseph and Lori Harper of Berea, OH
and Ernest and nna Harper of Gallipolis Ferry; two daughters and son-in·
; taw, Susan Marie and Don Shields of Letart and Stacie Harper of Columbus,
OH; four brothers, Jessie Harper of Gallipolis Ferry,,Daniel Harper of Boone
County, WV, Jim Harper of Palmbay, FL and Shirl Harper of Newton, WV;
a sister, Patsy Smith of Point Pleasant; and two grandchildren.
Services will be held all p.m. on Tuesday, October 12, at the Deal Funer·
al Home, Point Pleasant, with Elder Terry Barney officiating. Burial wlll follow in Letart Evergreen Cemetery, Letart.
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Monday at the funeral home.

James Hiram Smith, 81, Pomeroy, died Sunday, Oct. 10, 1999, at Veter·

By Tha Alaoclatad Preas

In the same year, the FCC itself unani·
mously abolished the Fairness Doctrine as an
unconstitutional limitation of free speech.
. There are still members of Congress eager
to bring back the Fairness Doctrine. Apparently, President Bradley would agree.
While the debate about forced fairness on
the air was going on, and as more stations
fearfully left the free marketplace of ideas, I
spoke to Richard Salant; then president of '
CBS News.
Salant, along with Fred Friendly, -.yhq had
aIso once been pres1'dent of CBS News, was a
dauntless protector of the First Amend'ment
rights of broadcasters.
·
" Suppose," Sal ant told me, "the English
governor had lold Tom Paine that he could go
ahead and publish all he liked·· but only if at
the back of the pamphlets, he also printed the
Royal Governor's views.
That command, far from being an imple·
mentation of free speech, would have been
just the ot~posite."
On Sept. ~1, Republican National Commit·
tee chairman Jim Nicholson asked Bill
Bradley the following question: "If the
NAACP ran an ad promoting racial equality;
would Bradley's bureaucrats impose 'a 100
percent tax ' on the NAACP to pay for equal
time ads by the Ku Klux Klan?"
It would be instructive to find out how
deeply each presidential candidate has thought
about the dangers to the Fint Amendment
from those who, with the best of intentions,
undermine it.
NtJt Hentoff is 11 netiontdly renown1d
eutilority on tile First A.mendmrnt and til•
r~st ofth• Bill of Rigilts.

Bobby Joe Harper

James Hiram Smith

Flurritl

Dry and hot on Tuesday

On Sept. 21, Holly Ramer, an Associated Court upheld the constitutionality of that docPress reporter, was accompanying Bill trine (Red Lion Broadcasting Co. vs. FCC).
Bradley on his campaign rounds in Concord,
Newspapers and other forms of printed
N.H. She wrote that during an interview on speech could not be forced to give equal space
New Hampshire Public Radio's "The because they are not licensed by the governExchange," the presidential candidate pro- ment.
pos.ed that special-intere~t groups placing
But, the Court ruled, since broadcast fre·
political ads on radio or television should be quencies are lhpited, the public interest
given free ait time or, in fairness, should have required government intervention to ensure
to pay the other side of that issue the cost of an that other voices could be heard.
opposing ad.
Later; Justice William 0. Douglas, who had
"If you're going to buy issue ads," Bradley not participated in the earlier decision, vigorexplained, "there's got to be equal time for the ousl y dissented from it: "TV and radio stand
other side."
in the same protected position under the First
He called this "a 100 percent tax" to be Amendment as newspapers and magazines.
paid to the other side.
·
The prospect of putting government in a posiA caller named Robin was greatly dis- lion of control... is to me an appalling one,
turbed: "You are compelling people to support even to the extent of the Fairness Doctrine."
the opposing view. "
Biii ,Bradley, by the way, is in favor·· as he
Politely, Bradley would not be dissuaded. said in that New Hampshire radio interview ··
"It's simply a way to make the market work," of compelling free television time for candihe said.
dates 60 days before an election.
I called Holly Ramer and asked whether, on
Be does not fear this form of government
reflect.on; the candidate had remembered that enforcement of broadcast content either.
there might be a Fi111t Amendment problem
In the early years of the Fairness Doctrine 1
when the state·· the only possible enforcer of I was workint; for a radio station in Boston.
his plan ·• acted to compel speech.
Soon after listener complaints of unfairness to
"On his next stop," Ramer lold me, "I the FCC resulted in mounting legal costs to
·asked Bradley if that is indeed his position. He answer stern FCC inquiries, the· boss ordered
said the same thing to me that he had said on us to cease all controversial broadcasting. This
the radio::
also happened at other stations.
Bradley's concept of forced fairuess in
Nonetheless, Congress, in 1987, passed a
political dialogue is not entirely new.
law codifying the Fairness Doctrine.
In 1949, the Federal Communications Com·
But it was vetoed by President Ronald Rea·
mission created the "Fairness Doctrine." gan, who said it v·iolated the First Amendment,
Broadcasters had to provide equal time to each and that the proliferation of cable channels
side of a public issue.
and radio stations nullified the argument that
Twenty years later, a unanimous Supreme radio and TV outlets were scarce.

How does a journalist get at the truth of a
subject? All journalists would answer, at ·least
in part, that facts.are at the heart of an accurate
story. Facts can never be compromised. Facts
arc sacrosanct. I personally am a big fan of
facts. But I don ' t kid myself that they are the
same as truth. ·
.
I have· read biographies stuffed'to bursting
with facts , quotes and eyewitness recollections •• all of them double- and triple-checked
for accuracy. When I finished such books,
however, I was often left wondering what the
facts had added up to. I felt liS if I had been
shown the most minute .details of every piece
of a jigsaw puzzle but denied the completed
picture. I still didn't really know the truth of
the person.
What Morris has' done is distill and make
sense of hundreds of interviews and archival

PA.

0- - -~-·

By Nat Hentoff

ley

Nancy Newman Buckley, 65, Reedsville, died this morning at her honie.
Arran~ements will be announced by the White-Moquin Funeral Home,
CoolVIlle.
.•

&amp;my Pt. Cloudy

BI•11 Bra dIey '.s speec h t ax·

,

Tuesday, Oct 12

has the most to gain, or lose, depending on have the doctors in their comer, while the Repubhow he handles the health-care issue. licans are allied with the insurance industry.
House Speaker Dennis Hasler!, R-111., was embarTe~as has the highest number of unin·
sured people in the country, a statistic that rassed when cameras caught hjm emerging from a
should make him squirm. So far, all he has $ t ,000-a-plate breakfast with lobbyists on the eve
said substantively is that he opposes big- of debate over a patients' bill of rights. Renegade
government solutions. However, he has Republicans, including several doctors and a den·
distanced himself from the ' Republican ti&gt;t currently serving in Congress, are forcing the
leadership in Congress, and decried -the GOP leadership io reconsider its adamant opposi·
fact that the GOP too often appears mean- lion to regulation. Mosi outside observers believe
spirited when it deals with . human prob- the Republican Congress will boost its chances of
lems. Whether Congress takes the hint and passes retaining control in November 2000 if it passes a
credible legislation to regulate the managed-care modest reform bill to protect patients.
•• Hillary Rodham Clinton tried the big-govindustry is a first test of whether Bush will be able
ernment
solution, and it didn't work. There aren't
to curb the hard-liners should he win the presi many
second
chances in . politics, but she's got
dency.
-· Control of the Congress is up for grabs as one.
the two parties j '"key for position. Democrats

Fiction helps advance the facts

fI

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

- Blood Drive Pleasant Valley Wei/ness Center
Thursday, October 28, 1999
Noon to 6 p.m.

• fRff T-Shirts To All Donors
• Door Prizes

')

Sponsored By:
Pleasant Vdt&lt;!f Hospital
Auxil~ry
&amp;
Arn1iiaJ IRat Cross

l

f. •

r

J

�'

·~

...

...

·· · • •· · • ·

Sports

I ~· •

f.···

T4e D-aily Sentinel:;
.

..

•

Page 4. ~

·

Monday, O~tober 11 1999 -~

I

· .~, ·

Bengals edgeJBrowns 18-17
in return of 'Battle~ of Ohio'
By JOE KAY
.
CLEVELAND (AP) - With a last-minute drive so
sickeningly familiar to Browns fans, Akili Smith extract·
ed his revenge and got a rivalry going again.
. Smith finished his first NFL start by leading the
Cmct~natt Bengals 80 yards in the closing minutes and
throwmg a two-yard touchdown pass to Carl Pickens for
an 18-17 victory over winless Cleveland.
1 • Making good on his promise to prove something to
the team that passed htm by m the draft, Smith raised his
anns in celebration after his lob to Pickens with five seconds left, then pounded his chest in a gesture to the
Browns bench.
He felt they'd slighted him by choosing Tim Couch
instead of him on draft day.
"It was real personal," said Smith, who completed
25-of-41 for 221 yards with two touchdowns and no
interceptions. "The fans were cheering like it was the
Super Bowl, and that's how I took it This game was very
btg for me. I wanted to show them they made a mistake ."
The Browns (0.5) have never made it to a Super
Bowl, Josmg out on their best chance when John Elway
led Denver 98 yards on "The Drive" toward the Dawg
Pound to save the AFC championship in 1986.
Playing in a new stadium on the same site with the
Dawg Pound at his back, Smith put together hts own version of "The Drive" with training wheels.
"For a young quarterback in his first NFL stan to go
80 yards to score with five seconds left was more than
anyone should expect ," said Bengals general manager
Mike Brown, who chose Smith with the third overall
pick.
Couch completed 15-of-27 for 164 yards with one
interception, but led the offense to only one first down in
the second half when Cleveland had a chance to put it
away.
Cincinnati (1-4) got the ball back at 1ts 20 wtth 2:04
left and the 73,048 fans ready to celebrate Cleveland 's

first win since ·it beat the Bengals in 1995 in the last
game at old Cleveland Stadium.
When Smith ran onto the field, he gestured to the
Dawg Pound to keep up the din and the obscenities
directed his way. ·
"He loved that," offensive tackle Willie Anderson
~aid. "He was like, "'Bring it on.' We were just saying,
Hey, chtll out man. lf we can't hear you (during the snap
count), we can't block for you."'
No problem there. Smith completed his first four
passes in the drive for 49 yards, including a nine-yard
throw to Darnay Scott on fourth-and-four.
A pass interference penalty on Corey Fuller put the
ban at the two with 21 seconds left and the Bengals out
of ttmeouts. After two incompletions, Smith made the
final , decisjve lob to Pickens, then miffed the Browns
with his chest-thumping celebration.
· "It definitely angered me," Couch said. "I will definitely remember it. It was like he was taunting our
crowd, saying we should have picked him over me."
Operating out of a low-risk offense that emphasized
the short pass and ~andoffs to Corey Dillon, Smith occaSionally held the ball too long - he was sacked five
times - but made no glaring mtstakes. Dillon did most
of the damage, piling up 168 yards on 28 carries.
Until the end, the Browns were in position to get thCJr
first wm as an expansion team because their kickers were
overshadowing the quarterback matchup.
Phil Dawson put Cleveland ahead with a four-yard
touchdown run off a fake field goal , forced a fumble that
set up another score and added a fourth-quarter field goal
for a 17- 121ead.
It was as close as !he Browns have come 10 a win all
season, but 11 was still a few seconds shon.
'"I thought·we played well," coach Chns Palmer said.
"For 59 minutes and 55 seconds, we played well enough
to win . All we needed was one play, and they made that
play."

.

\Omorrow."
The teams return to Cleveland for
Game 5 tonight, and with Pedro
,Maninez nursing a sore back, neither
team will have its ace. Charles Nagy
will stan for the Indians and Bret
Saberhagen will pitch for Boston.
~ ·we still have to go out there and
wi~ . And they still have to go out
there and win," Varitek said. "But
we weren't the ones who were up 20."
John Valentin had two homers and
seven RB!s as Boston broke the
recond for postseason runs set when
Lou Gehrig and Joe DiMaggio led
the Yankees to an 18-4 vtctory over
the New York Giants in Game 2 of
the 1936 World Series.
Mike Slllnley had five of Boston's

CATCHES TOUCHDOWN PASS The Cleveland Browns. Pickens caught another fiveCincinnati Bengala' Carl Pickens (right) catches a yard touchdown pass In the game's final minutes
touchdown pa11 in the second quarter of to secure the Bengals"18-17 victory. (AP)
Sunday's AFC Central game against the host

Notes: The Bengals had lost their last seven games
against Cleveland since 1992. The Browns lead the
series 27·25. --:Di llon 's 168 yards trailed only his 246yard gap1e agatns! Tennessee as a rookie .... It wasn 't an
omen: Smith fumbled . the snap on the last play of
pregame warmups, forcmg the Bengals to run it again ....
After leadmg the league wilh fewest penalties through

four games, the Browns were penalized eight times for
81 yards .... Browns punter Chris Gardocki accidentally
got surrounded by the Ohio State marching band as he
warmed up at halfttme. ptckmg the wrong place to stand ·
as the band spelled out "Ohio" in script. Seeing no opening to leave, he went ahead and go! off a punt.

~ap ~:~h~:~~ ~~~sl~~ c;~u~~~~~~~ ~b~-~aid; "1~~~ at ~ r~c~t~c~ isnh't

man times.

"~ASCAR has the weather radar
on the side of their trans rter and
people will wear out a patrro .1 'That
'nice weather for ducks' - ~~ ets
pretty old pretty quick 100 }
g
Jeremy Mayfield, who finished
thind and second earlier this season in

0

tea

na a ·

sa a

e

or t e
the~si,s~~ !S:~~~~ t~e ~eodytrack. Btt
about it "
e o any
can o
B 1 ·M fi ld
~
.
u
ay le pre ers startl~g a
rae~wh~~ th~odd: of fimshtng 1~ are
~~ed ·~a b:J w!~th:;mg a race s ort"InyA pn.1, aII we h.ad to go was one

(B urton. the winner) was ,sitting .there
a11 tom up, and he ~ouldn 1 have gone
any further. If we d gotten back to
green. he was done too, and we felt
we .~ere the best car out there.
The Southern 500, who knows?
Jeff was good, but so was Ward and
so were we. The sad part about that IS
wasbetween
gomg tothose
be one
heck
sthhere
ootout
three
carsof ata

·.

When !he 334-iap race docs get .
underway, Bobby Labonte wtll be on
the pole wnh Rusty Wallace alongSide.
Dale Jarrell, who owns a 251 -point
margin over Labonte in the Winston
Cup standings, will start ninth, while
Milll&lt; Manin, who is third,_ 25 points
behmd
car
field.Labonte. JS fourth m the 43-

Scoreboard
Oaklond
Oenvct' ..

Baseball

WuhinJIOD

..

S...NIIy'•tcwt

11011oo9,

.. ..... 2 3 0 .400 72 105
............... 2 3 0 400 71 1011

Arizona ....

N.Y G111111
Phillldclpllia .

....140200l796

Boston

C..Urol Di•iaioo

aev~J"""""'
s......,·s......

~:•Y
lletraiJ

~ g .~ 12~ 16:/

•••·•···•·· · ··· 2j 2 0 lOO

Boc1oa 23. Cle'V!lud?. series tied 2-2
- "'MiMe.SOU
........ ~ 3 0 .400
Tonlpt"s Tampa Bay
............. 2 3 0 400
Bosoon (S-ea 10-6) M CJe,.laed (Nagy
17-111.117 p m. CFOXJ
Walom Dl,.....,;
S1. Louis ...................... 4 0 01 000
San Fnncisco ...
...3 2 0 .600
Cnlina ... ..
....I 3 0 250
New Orleans
.. ..... .1 3 0 .250
AIIMII ..
. I 4 0 100

97

82
142

National League
divisional playoffs

Adanla vs, HOOs!on
5Milrdly"IICOrt
Allama7. Houston'· AtlaMa wms

J. J

Arizona vs. New York

s.a.ra,·s SCOft

New YoR 4. Arizono ' f 101. New York wms

series J-1

AL Championship
Series slate
W.dntsdlly

f! .Rl

Thu..-y
Bosron-CiewJand winntr 111 NN Yorio. It

Sonday.O&lt;t.l7
WIMer.

i :SO

M.....y. Od.ll

~ Yort a1
p.m.. if netCIIIW)'

Bos10n.Ocwland winner.

Ill~

W.._y,Od.20

Bosmn-Oevtllnd winner
p m. or 8:1!5 p.m.. 1f~

.11

Saturday's scores
Akron 41 , OHIO l8

Denver 16. 01kl:uw:l l l
Mmmi J4. 1ndianapaln Jl
Gn:en Ray 26. T~:~mp-. Bay 2J
OPEN. Carolin:t Xartlc. W:uhmgton

Bowlin! Green at "-kron
Buffalo a1 W M~thagan
N. Illi nois 31 Cent Michtgilfl
OHIO at E MichiJ:UI
Mmnu at Kent

This week's slate
Thundav
Toledo &lt;U MARSHAU

•

Teni'pt's pme

NCAA Division I scores

New Ycxt. -1 19

, . , . . , , Od.ll
BottOII·Cteveland winner :M N11w York. 8 15
p m.. ifneccuwy

NL Qwnpiooshlp
/ Serla.!late
r

AP Top 25 college poll

Saturday's action
!loll
Air Force 19. Navy 14
Albany. N.Y .l7 Wagner 21

The Top 25 teanu in The Associated Press col·
k-Je foo&amp;haJI poll. lllh rirst·pfacc VOltS In pmnthe·
ses. records lhrouJhOct. 9. points based on 2~ potnts
(or a first place vot~ lhrouJh onr poim for :1 l~th
place vole and previous ranking:
La1

l't.ut

Bnrwn 5J. Princtton JO
C W Post 30 M011mouth. N J. 26

Cen1 CoDn«."liCUI St. ~~. St Francis. Pa. 1~

Cern. Michipn 111. Buffalo 19
Colp&amp;t 56. LDJayene 14
Columbia 10. Bucknell 7
Comrll 24. Harvard 2~
Duquesne 10. St John ·s. NY 3
Frurfidd 27. Stena 0
Geoctetown. DC 41 Marist 4().()T
La Salle 19. Canis1us 6
l.dU&amp;h JO. Dartmouth 14
MaMChuseru 71. Nonheaslern 0
New Havea l2, MO!dad St 22
Peftn 35. Fonlhun 18
T!"'f'le 24, Bostoo Colle.. 14
VirJmi• Tech $8. Ru1aen 20
. Yale 34, Holy Cross 14

:11':1. l'll.l!ilk

I Florida St(6)1
.6-0 1.7~3
2 ..... So t61 . ..
... 6-0 1.618
l . Nebraska .. ... .. . . .. ..... 6-0 J.l9l
4 ViiJ.iniaTec:h(l) ..
. ~..() 1.497
5. Mich11an Sc .
•• 6-0 1.408
6 Tl!nmovoe
4-1 IJ98

7. Florida ...
.. .......... 5-1 1.282
8 Cleo&lt;JiaTech .
.. .. ol-1 1.258
9 Kansas So

10. Midli&amp;IL ......

.... 5-0 1.212
.............. l-1 1.171

II AI. . . . ................................ol-1

I
2
4
5
II
6
8

7

9
3

~I
12
927 . 14
llTeo•MM ........................ol-1 9~ ll
Futurep14. Cleo&lt;Jia... ............ .............. 4-1 778 10
New York (Yothii 12-1)01 AI..... (Maddux 19- ' ll MARSHALL ............... l-0 760 ll
16. Syncwe ............ ...... ........ '-1 71l II
10), 8:12 p....

17 Wi-in ....................... ..4·2

606

r... . . . . . . ..

WodiiOtdly

NewYork"!'-~hp.m.:w........,

Football

'

Big Ten standings
Cool.

'

Ovonl

W L f.a. :II' Lfl:l.
Mi&lt;hillll Sl... .. .... J 0 1.000 6 0 1.0011
Penn St .................. 2 0 1.000 6 0 1.000
Michi1111 .
2 I .667 S I .133
Witc:Oftlin ..
.... 2 I .M7 4 2 .667
Jndi..................... .! I .6117 3 l .lOti

Iaa

NFL standings

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

=. ....... :. . . ~~~ -~~~ ~
New EIJ&amp;Iaoll ......................4 I ,1) .800 ItO
Mi0111L......................... J I 0 .7l0 109
.2 2 ·o .lOO 111
N.Y. Jou ...........::............. ! l .O.ZlO 72

..._!11 . . . . . . . .. . . .

93
91

118
17

Cooolnl________...........
... . I 0 .800 118 118
1-.;11e .....................) I 0 .7l0 ~ 46
. _............................ 2 J o .-400 n 11
, .. . . . .......................... 2 ) 0 .-400 100 90
CJNCINNATL ................. .I 4 0 .200 73 ll2
CLEVI!LAND ...............0 l 0 000 " 123
_

--

S.IJiii0 ...........................3 I 0 .7l0 94 5I

-

............................1 ·' o .7l0 Bl n

. -City .......

.. J 2 0 .600 104 16

MiMeiOLI ............... I

I .$00

4

OHIO ST......... .. ... I
Purdue ..... ............. I
UUnoio ........................ 0

I lOti
2 .3Jl

'
4

2 .000

l()WI .......................• O 2 .000
Nonbwellm ..............0

l .000

Saturday's liCOftl
. - 3 4, NDIIIiwatem 17
..... Sllle31.1owa7
Midlipn St ]4, M~hipo 31

Wiacon11n 20, Mi~IOU 17·0f
OHIO ST. 2l, Purdoe 22

'i'hla week'•
Mi-llllli!:'*'
Iowa It NordtwtJaetn
lndi~n~lf W'~~eon1i11

•tc

Alcorn 51. 61, Pnirie YICW 0

20

New Yorktllftd Il -l l1f R..... l-1)11 Allanla 18. OHIO SL..................:.. ....4-2 511 21
19.
'-2 454 23
(Millwood JJ-7), ( :09 p.m
20. ....cbo ...............................ol-2 3611
17
frilllly
341 24
AI- (Giariae Ioi-II) 11 New York (Jlftd II· 21. BYU ...................................4-1
22. MiolilllppL. ........................'-! 218
l or Leioot U-12). 1:12 p.m.
21 Eua Carolioa ..................l·l 20l
16
S.0.Noy, O&lt;t.l6
A&lt;-(Smokz 11-I)MNewYod! (Lrioerl)-12 24. Miasni (Fla.) .................. ..... 2-l 161 19
2l. Soubm Miss ........ .. ....... 3-2 124
or Reodll·l or JloFn '-1), 7:42p.m.
0111on ..,....._ _ , 1\lr Fooa: 67. Anzono
- ,,Oci.J7
59, Monnesou !16, NOft Dame ll, " " - 33
AI-M New Yod!. 4:09p.m.. if - . u r }
WashiaJion 2l, M.-ylaod 20. K&lt;aNd!l !(. N.c:
,....,..- t9
s- s, Ulllh s, Oldllboma 3. Pi....., , Sovlhetn
NewYod!IIA&lt;-.I:Ilp.m.. if........,
Cal 3, Sllllllonl 2. Wlk Fomt I, WyDOUftl I.
W , t· Oa.: ll

--

-

12. Mu•illlit&gt;Pi St.......... ... .. ...6-0

._,

'

s....n~.,

14. Bahimorc II

I~

S.hmlly

New York N Boston-Cleveland

61 112

Jacbonvtlle :11 New York Jets. 9 p m

New York :11 Bollon·Cirvtland wmner. -t ·l9

p.m

72

•

Central t.·hchtgan 38. Bulfalo 19
Mi:uni. Ohio 4.5. Bowlint Grten ) I
N Illinois 37. Ball St . 17
W. M1chigan 40. E. Michi&amp;IUI ]7 OT
Toledo 41. Kmt 7
• .....

Boston·Ckvclmnd winner · at New York. HI~

em.

67

West Division
W. Michipa .
..... 3 0 1.000
2 .667
Toledo ...........
...2 I .667 3 2 .600
N IllinoiS .......
2 I .667 2 4 m
E. Mtchitan
... I 2 .H3 I 4 200
Ccn1 Mu:hiJIR ....... .1 2 .m
2 4 ]~3
8•11 St. ... . ...... ..0 3 .000 0 6 000

At11ND 20. New Orluns 17
Chicaao 24, Mi11nes01a 22
.
CINCINNATI 18,CLeVELAND 17
Ptubcklphil l l Olllu 10
Kansas 01y 16. New f.n&amp;land 14
Buffak124. Pitt•burah 21
San Diego 20. Detro11 10
St. l.oois 42. San Franci~eo 20
Arizona 14. New York Gianu '
T~nesscoe

Future pmes

pm.

.f7

99 136
93 82

Ovmll

wl L0 1.000
r.a.

4 2 .667
4 2 .6117
2 4 Jll
l&lt;IM
'I 2 .Bl
I l 167
Bowling Green ....... I 3 .2l0 2 4 333
Buffalo ......................0 4 .0011 0 l .000

Su..tay's Kores

,
11.-r~ts

'17
79

Eut Division
Cont.
n..
l! L fl:l.
......... 2 0 1.0011
M••t.•n
Milnli .......
.. ........ J I .7l0
Alaoa ........ .... ... ...3 I .llO
Olio ........... . ....... ...2 I .667

I .8110
2 667

2 .667
3 2 .600

I 4 .200
2 4 .333

Bed!une.CookrMn

26, lobnaon C. Snith 6

Davidson 35. Wuhi- ol Lee 21

-

Duke 24, VirpDia17-10T
E . - , . 30, W. Ke-ky 10
Flooido3t,L'lU 10
floriclo AAM 40. Howlld 34-0T
Florida SLJI, Miami 21
F.,.... Jl, AptMI!aehi.. S1 21
GcorJia Soulhcm 70. W. C.Oiin• 7
Geoozja Tecll31, NOI'Ih Carolina 2oi-OT
Cllllnbtina St 42. MVSU 19
lll&lt;boo So. 44. A........ St 17
-KeDIII&lt;ky 30, Soulh c..Ji01 10
r.wy...,. 17, ww FomoJ•
Mempuo 31. UAB 14
Miuinippi 20, Tul~ne 13
,..:iuiaslppi St. 18, Auburn 16
Morpn St. 28, Tow1011 22
MIIITI) St 62, leon.·Mimn 14
N. Corol1n1 A&amp;T41. H1111p1011 zA
NC Slaoe ll, Ckmoon JI
Newllmy' 27, ~1100 S..lhetn !6
Ri&lt;bmolld 41, . _ !...... J8
S. CaroH111 51. rl, ~k SL 2l

SW 1eus 16. Nicholls&amp;. 0
Soulh Florida lB. Ubtny 0
S..hni Mlu. 39, Eu1 Caroli111 2l
Sovlhcm U. 29, Alaboma A&amp;M 12
T........ 37, GeorP• 20
Te_..., So 4l E Illinois 25
Tooy SL 24, NDIIII- Sl. ll .
v...JertHitl8, The CiJI4el 0
Wi1U101 AMooy 45, Vl.._aiO
-onl5l, VMIIO
I

-

Dayooo 41. San llieJoO

DrKe ]8, St Masy'o, C.l. 7

Illinois &amp;. 20. lndiiU St 17
Kwas StlO. Kanou 9
N. J.... 42, Cal Poly-SLO 21
Ndnskll49, Iowa So. 14
Noire Dllro 48, AriJAJnl SL 17

Tennessee Teth 21 . Sf: Missouri 7
Vtlpulito 38, Bud« 20

Shodysidc 30, Pilllbor&amp;h, PL Al!egheoy 14
SIWI&lt;r H~. 30, Elyna 14

W. Dlino&amp;slO, Elon 14
Yoonplown Sl 43, S. lllinoii37·0T

MAC standings

:II' L I I'll. l'f I'A
.. . . . 3 I 0 7l0 110 62
..... 3 I 0 7l0 llO 118

Oallu

New Yort 3, Texas 0; New Yort wins saia )..()

Micbisan Slate 11 Purdue
OHIO STATE at Penn Swe

EuttmDhlMn

l't.ut

New York vs. Texas
vs.

-·-

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

American League
divisional playoffs

Cleveland

.2 l 0 400 104 100
.. ........... .! 4 0 .200 70 Ill

Soudlwell
Arkansu 58, Middle Tenneuee 6
Houston 23, Cincianali 20
Oldllboma St 41, Te~u Tech 21
Sam HOWlon SJ ll , IIICb&lt;lnville St t7
Stephen F Austin 40, Me~ St 14
TC\J 42, San Jose St. 0

Tcxas38.0klahomalll
Tew A&amp;M 4l, Baylor 13
Tew Sovlhetn 20. Art -Pine Blull1
U'JEP 42, SMU l8
FarWttt
Anz0111 ll, Soulhcm Col24
BYU JA, California 28
Boist St 41. E. WasbingCOII7
Colorado 46. Miuouri J9-0T
Frtsno St. 44, Colorado St. IJ
Idaho 28. Nonh Texas 10

M(lntana U. CS NCHthrid~e 27
Monlanl. St 29. We'bc:r St . 6
N. Arizqna 4lldaho St 28
Nevalla 23. New Metico St 16
New Mexico 24. San Diego St 21
Rice 38. Hawaii 19
Sacramento St. 41. Ponland St 14
JJC Davis 24. S. Utah 9
UCLA .W. Ortgon 29
UNLV JS. Wyoming J1
Utah 42. Louisiana-Monroe 0
Utah St 20. Arkansas S1. 14
Waslungton 47. OreJon St 21

Wutungton St 44. Loualiana·l:irayene 0

Ohio H.S. scores
Saturday's acdon
Akron Buchtel· J4. Akron Ellet 17
Akron East40. Akron Ccntmi-Hower 0
Bedford .'8. Parma 8
Bellaire 28, Belmonl UntOn Local 12
Chardon NDCL 34. Elyria Cntholtc 7
Cle Glenville 2S , Cle. South 24
Cle H1s Luthcrnn E. ~6 . Ashmbula Stll John
And P~ull .\

Cle Rhodes 56. Cle. Collinwood 21
Cle St lanauus 29. Cnnton Mc;:Kinley I 5
Cle. Villa Angela-St. Joseph ~4. Tuscllutwils
Cent Calholk 7
CuyahoJa Falls W~tlsh Jesuit 31. Mentor Llke
C11hohcO
.
D~y. Dunbar SI. Day. Belmont 0
Ene. P1. Calhedral Prep 41. Lakewood S1
Edw;ard 6
Gales. Mills Gilmour 10. Brooklyn 7
Hanntbal River 20. BridJeport 0
l..iuly, W. V&amp;. J I. Hudson Western Rese~e 13
t.bl'lcm 8, Toronto 6
.
Maple Hu 42. Warrensville Hu. 28
N~alk St Pau121 , Monroeville 14
Poland Seminary 38, You. CMaey 0
Slndusky St Mll}s 42, Mil1r1 Edison 20

Tol. Stllt21, Tol ScottO
Warren JFK 10. L.ouinille St

Thoma~

Aquuuu

1

Wbeelmg, W.VL Cent Cai h 13, Slellbenville
Calli Ce11t 12 ·
..
You. Mooney 4l Cut lbn~y 6

Sunday's scores

Today's games

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Al....k Di•lslon
lil1ll
:II' L IBI &amp; g£ !iA
N.YRangers ..
.. .. 2 2 I 0 5 10 8
New Jersey ........... 2 i 0 0 4 10 8
Pitt~bur~h

Philadelptua I. Botton l ·tie
New Jme~ I, Tampa Bay 0
Buffalo 5, Alllulta ~ -lie
Dttto11 2. Flonda 2-tie
Dallas 3. San Jo~e 2
Sr Louis 4 Edmonton 2

N.Y. Jslarwten 4, Colorado 2
N.Y Ranam4. Plloen• 2
Nashville J, Chit~~o 3-tie

Hockey

. I I I 0

N.Y. Islanden . . . . . I I 0 0
Pll•ladclphia..
.0 2 I 0

14
2 6
3

I

I

Colondo at Bonon. IJOp.m
New Jersey at Ottawa, 2 p m
Carohna a1 Calpy, 3 p m

P!Joerux ill Buffalo, 7 p.m.

san Jose a1 Anaheim. 7 p m

Nashville 111. Toronto, 7JO p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at NY. hlandm. 7:.\0pm

14

Thesday's games

6
~

Ronda &lt;M Montreal, 7.30 p.m
PNiadelphia 11 Wuhmglon, ] :.~p.m.

Nltrtheut Dlw,i1ion

0
I 0
.. I 3 0
... 0 2 I
03 I

Ottnwa
Toronto ..
Montreal.
Buffalo .
Boston

........... .4 0
)

0 8 ll 1
0 6 I)
6
0 2 7 II
0 I 1 10
0 I ~ 12

Soccer

Flonda .

Cnrolin~

20
I
I I
.... .1 2

I 0 ~ 10 7
00 4 6 4
I 0 )
00 2 6 R
0 l I 0 I 1 16

.... 2

Washm,ton
T:unpa o.y ...
Allan til

• •

-·-

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ctnlral Dhlsion
l).o1rou
2 I I 0 ~ I)
6
S1 lou • ~ .
. .. l 2 0 0
II
R
Chtca!o .
.0 2 l 0 2 II IK
Nashvtllc .
0 2 I 0 I 5
R

Eastern Conference

Inm

y-DC
I-COLUMBUS .
~ - Tamp.!

Bily ..

l· M1am1

New En~ land
NV-NJ .

W I.SOIVPI! GE !iA

. . 2J 9 6
.. 19 I] 6

14 IK

~

.. IJI9 "i
1210 ~
.? 2~ J

~?

6~

4~

48

.. ~
40

·-i

.12 ~I 50
29 -'2 ~9
26 .lit ~~
I~ J2 "64

•

Nurlhwtsl Division
J 0 0 0 6 II
I 2 I I
4 1
I 2 I 0 3
9
0 1 .D 0 0 s

Van~:ou.,.cr

Edmonton .
Col()rodO
Ca l ~ary

PICinc Dlvlsion
Dallas
... 4 I 0 0
Los Angeles .. ......... J I I 0
San Jose
J I 0 0
Photnil
... 2 I I 0
Anabcim ...............1 2 0 0
Notr: Ovmim: losses will counr
and :a t!Julation lie

Saturday's stores
V:lncouver 4 Montreal I
Los Anseles 2, Washington 2-t•e
Ouawa 4. Toronlo J

6
~

II
J)

8 14 II
1 14 10
6 17
9
l 13
6
2 )
both :1! a loss

.

Saturday's scores
New England 2. D.C Umted l·SO
M1nmi 2. Cohndo 0
los Angeles I Ka.nw; C11y 0

Sunday's regular-season finales .

Ch~ago

l COLUMBUS 2-~
Dallal 2. Tampa Bay I

...

~~~~~~-----

-·I '

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC- REGARDING TITLE OFFICE
T~~

Meigs ~ounty T~tle Office Staff will be attending computer
tramtng classes as requtred ~y 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
. Th~ office WILL BE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, but we will be
runmng short staffed, yspecially the firs~ two weeks of October.
.we are aski.ng for everyone's cooperation and patience during these
times. We wtll try our best to avoid long lines and to issue titles in a
tim.ely fashion. Thank you for your anticipaed cooperation and
patience.
Thank You:
Larry E. Spencer
1

By The Aaeoclated Prell
It's no surprise that the expansion
Cleveland Browns are the NFL's
only winless team after Week 5. It's
shocking, though, that the St. Louis
Rams arc the only undefeated team.
After all, the Rams have had nine
straight losing seasons, haven't made
the playoffs since 1989 and lost their
starting quarterback Trent Green
with a preseason knee injury.
St Louis continued its amazing
turnaround Sunday, beating San
Francisco 42·20 to break a 17-game
losing streak against the 49ers and
improve to 4-0. Kun Warner, sensational as Green's replacement, threw
five touchdown passes, including
four to Isaac Bruce.
"T ve been waitmg all my career
to watch my quarterback take a knee
to beat this team," said defensive
tackle D'Marco Farr, a sixth-year
Ram who was 0-10 against the 49ers .
New England and Dallas got their
first losses Sunday, leaving the Rams
alone with a spotless record.
"We've finally caught up with the
best team in our division," said coach
Dick Vermeil, who hugged owner
Georgia Frontiere and blew kisses to
the St Louis crowd after Sunday's
game.
Warner, a former Arena League
quanerback. threw touchdown passes
of 13, five, 45 and 42 yiuds to Bruce.
He also found Jeff Robinson for a 22-

yard score.
Warner, who leads the NFL with
14 touchdown passes, completed 20
of23 passes for 323 yards. Bruce had
five receptions for 134 yards.
San Francisco quarterback Jeff
Garcia, making his second straight
start in place of ailing Steve Young,
was 22-of-36 for 233 yards but was
intercepted on the 49ers' last three
possessions.
In other NFL games, it was
Atlanta 20, New Orleans 17; Chicago
24, Minnesota 22; Cincinnati 18,
Cleveland 17; Philadelphia 13,
Dallas 10; Kansas City 16, New
England 14; Buffalo 24, Pittsburgh
21; San Diego 20, Detroit 10;
Arizona 14, New York Giants 3;
Tennessee 14, Baltimore 11; Denver
16, Oakland 13; Miami 34,
Indianapolis 31; and Green Bay 26,
Tampa Bay 23.
Tonight, it's Jacksonville at the
New York Jets.
'
Eagles 13, Cowboys 10
At Philadelphia, Doug Pederson
threw a 28-yard touchdown pass to
Charles Johnson as the Eagles (1-4)
overcame a tO-point deficit against
the Cowboys (3-1) in the four~h quartcr.
Dallas receiver Michael irvin was
taken -off the fie.ld on a stretcher in
the .first quarter after getting tackled
and hitting his head on the artificial
turf. Tests showed swelling in Irvin's
spinal cord and a herniated disc, but

he had movement in his hands and
feet.
Chiefs Ui, Patriots 14
At Kansas City, Adam Vinatieri
missed a 32-yard field-goal attempt
in the closing seconds that would
have won the game for New
England. The ball hit the right
upright and bounced backward.
Drew Bledsoe's 27-yard completion to Shawn Jefferson set up the
field goal try by Vinatieri, who
already booted three game-winning
field goals this season for the Patriots
(4-1). Elvis Grbac engineered three
second-half scoring drives for the
Chiefs (3-2).
Bears 24, Vikings 22
At Minneapolis, Chicago (3 -2)
forced five turnovers and turned
three of them into touchdowns to
beat Minnesota (2-3).
Vikings rookie tight end Jim
Kleinsasser fumbled twice, and
Bears linebacker Sean Harris recovered one in the end zone for a touchdown . Barry Minter intercepted
Randall Cunningham's tipped pass at
the Bears 18 with three minutes left
to preserve the victory.
Bills 24, Steelers 21
At Orchard Park, N.Y., Doug
Autie threw three touchdown passes
and Eric Moulds had six catches for
122 yards and a score to lead Buffalo
(4-1) over Pittsburgh (2-3).
Flutie completed II of his first 12
passes and finished 21-for-32 for 261

on."
That remark has stuck in the minds
of many Mets players and fans .
"It was a pretty mature slatemen!," Valentine said sarcastkally.
"and an incorrect one - w,c'rc not
dead yet. I don't think it was lack of
un rstanding. 1 think he was very
conf1 ent he wasn't going to have to
deal with them again this year. Guess
what? He's going to have to deal with
them this year."
Atlanta went 9-3 against New
· h
York for the secon d stra1g t season,
and blanked the Mets three times. The
Braves swept three games from the
Mets on the final weekend of '98 to

keep them out of the playoffs, and
nearly knocked them out again by
sweeping three '" Atlanta and winmng two of three in New York.
Jones was the biggest nemesis, hit·
ting .400 with seven homers and 16
RB!s in 39 at-bats. In the three-game
sweep at Tumer Field from Sept. 2123, he was 4-for-9 with four homers
and seven RB!s.
"I don't think he's going to be as
magical ever again as he was in that
one series," Valentine said on a con'
II S d
ft I ·
oerence ca
un ay ~ er eavmg
Mass. "I don't think anyone could

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - Bobby
Valentine loves trash talk -especially if it 's directed at .the Atlanta
Braves.
"I see no reason that we should
have any affection for them." the
New York Mets manager sai
Sunday, looking ahead to his ne t
opponent. "We have great respect r
them. I think we still have to earn o r
respect. They've shown us very lit·
tie.''
New York advanced to its first
championship series in II years by
beating Arizona 4-3 in I0 innings
Saturday, winning the best-of-five
fit:St-round series in four games.
Just nine days earlier, after going
S·l against New York over the final
two weeks, the Braves declared the
Mots finished. two games out of the
wild-card lead with three to play.
"'This is the next-best thing to
wl~ning the World Series." said
Brav!'S third baseman Chipper Jones,
a11noyed by taunts from the Shea
St.cllum fans. "I told them to go
home and put their Yankees' stuff

.

:8

..j

.
a
.·

I

I'

FIELDS GROUNDER - Boston third sacker series with the visiting Cleveland Indians, who lost .
John Valentin goes down to field a ground ball 23-7 to force a fifth game tonight in Cleveland . . .
during Sunday night's American League playoff (AP)
·
the series, homered to help Boston anccs, didn't have much luck, either. Karsay and eight more off Steve
win Game 3 and added another in the He allowed single runs in each of Ihe Reed - another record - to pile up •'
first uinmg on Sunday to make il 2- I. first two innings before he was a 15-2 lead after four innings.
Cleveland scored four runs -in the
In the second. Colon gave up con- pulled with twa outs and two on in
fifth as four Red Sox relievers
secutive singles to Stanley, Varitek the .second.
But the Boston bullpen came walked fiv e batters. But Rhea!
and Darren Lewis before Nixon
banged a double off the wall in cen- ,through where Cleveland's couldn 't. Cormier struck out Omar Vi1.quel
ter field to make it 5-2. Offerman fol - Rich Garces relieved Merckcr and and Alomar to end the inmng.
Boston answered with three runs
lowed with a two-run homer into the got Roberto Alomar to ground out to
in
the ponom of Jhe fiflh when ·•·
first
base
10
end
the
second.
Garces
screen above the Green Monster to
Stanley
hit an RBI triple into the gap
went
2
1/3
innings.
allowing
one
run
give Boston a 7-2 lead and end
in
rjght-cc
ntcr licld that Manny
on
one
hit
and
a
w~lk,
stnking
out
Colon's night
Ramirez kicked Jowards center.
Red Sox starter Kent Mereker. one 10 earn the victory.
And the Red Sox weren' J done- Varitek follow ed with a two-run
making his first career poslseason
starl after 12 playoff relief appear- far from it. They added three runs off homer to make 11 18-6.

tl

I

I.
I

Chargers 20, Lions 10
At Pontiac, Mich., Darry II Lewis
returned a fumble 42 yards in the
fourth quarter and San Diego (3-1)
shut out Detroit (2-2) in the second
half.
Lions coach Bobby Ross faced hi s
old team for the first time since being
forced out by the Chargers three
years ago.
Falcons 20, Saints 17
Morten Andersen , who mi ssed
four o( six field -goal attempts goin g
into the game, connected twice in the
fourth quarter as Atlanta rallied to
win its first game of the year.
Andersen hit a 36-yarderto lie the
game a! 17 early in the fin al penod.
then hn a 44-yarder with about six
minutes left to give Atlanta (1-4) the
lead for good. The defending NFC
champions beat the Saints (1 -3) for
the ninth straight lime.
Cardinals 14, Giants 3
At Tempe, Ariz., Jake Plummer
had hi s best game of the season as
Anzona (2-3) snapped a three-game
losing streak.
Plummer, who began the day ~s
the NFL's lowest-rated staning quarterback, completed 13 of 19 passes
for 156 yards and a touchdown with
no inlerceprions He left the game
early '" the third quarter wtth a sore
hip. but returned with 4.05 left. The
Giants fell to 2-l
Titans 14, Ravens 11

At Nashville, Net! O'Donnell
threw a 27 -yard touchdown pass to
Yancey Thigpen in the 1hird quarter,
and the Titans (4-1) overcame an
NFL record for penalty yardage to
beat Baltimore (2-3).
Tennessee won its lOth straight
AFC Central Division game despite
being penalized IS times for 212
yard s. The previous record was 209
yards by Cleveland against the
Chicago Bears in 195 L
Broncos 16, Raiders 13
At Oakland, the Denver Broncos
won their first game in the post-John
Elway era despite losing Pro Bowl
tight end Shannon Sharpe with a broken collarbone.
Bnan Gne_se, the last-minute
replacement for his own replacement, did a pretty decent Elway
impersonation as the- Broncos (1-4)
blew a 13-point halftime lead before
bouncing back to win.
Griese, benched earlier in the
week but forced back into the stanmg
role by Bubby Brister's rib injury,
threw for 234 yards and led the
Broncos on an Elway-hke drive at
the end of the first half. The Raiders
dropped to 2-3.
Dolphins 34, Colts 31
At Indianapolis, qan Marino
passed for 393 yards and htt Oronde
Gadsden on two big passes in the
closing minutes as Miami (3-1) beat
Indianapolis (2-2).
Marino, criticized by coach

Jimmy Johnson after last Monday "
night's loss to Buffalo, threw the
v,:inning 2-yard touchdown pass to · ··
Gadsden with 27 seconds left. '
Marino got a second chance after his apparent fumble earlier in the drive
was ruled an incomplete pass.
'
Packers 26, Buccaneers 23
'
At Green Bay, Brett Favre led the · -'
Packers on a last-minute, game-win- ' ;
nin g drive for the third time this sea- · ' ·
son, hitting Antonio Freeman with a
~ 1-yard touchdown pass with 1:05 • ~j
left.
•A
The pass capped a six-play, 73· : ~
yard drive Favre directed in 40 sec- : C
onds against the Buccaneers' top- · ....
ranked defense. The Packers (3- 1) &gt;C
racked up 452 yards against Tampa ·,_,
Bay (2-3), but had to rally after Mike · .'
Alston's 22-yard touchdown run . :·.
with I :45 remaining put the Bucs up
23-19.

Mcts . It's pretty much the' cnlire
Braves team.
"There's been a lot of comments.
subtle," Valentine said . " If the comments and actions they 've made over
the years were in New York. as a New
York learn. they'd be well known and
documented, but a lot of them have
slipped by some people."
He was asked to elaborate with
two specifics.
"I don't see it to be necessary." he
said. "We know it and those who
h
be
h. k
· "' 'II
ave en watc mg now 11. ne
just go on to earn our respect."
New York hit just .224 against
Atlanta this year, with Robin Ventura

baiting .1 40. Edgardo Alfonzo .159.
Mtkc Piazza .211 and John Olerud
.229.
Againsl Game I slarter Greg
Maddux , Olerud is 3-for-17 (.176) in
his career and Ventura is 1-for-10.
But Alfonzo is 8-for-23 (.348) and
Piazza JJ . for-36 (.306) with 1wo
homers.
"We're due for good things to
happen against this club, and I think
they know it," Valentine said.
He wouldn't reveal his rotation,
but 1.t seems certal·n Masato vosh1·1·
,,
(12-8) will stan against Maddux ( 199) m Tuesday's series opener at
Turner Field.

Phillips. hospnal admmi stration · •
. manager.
·_ , .
Shortly after the accident, police
charged Paul K. Synadinos, 20, of
Gahanna, Ohio, with drunken driving. There was no Immediate word .
whether further charges would be
filed against Synadinos. ·
A 6-foot-5, 313-pound lineman
from Cincinnali , Streck started 1g .
games and played 10 32 during his
K
k
career at cnruc Y· He started all 12
gamcsJast season at left guard as the
w 1·td
75
cats went · · making their first ·
appearance in a New Year's Day
bowl game since 1952.

yards.

'I
'

Ex-UK football
player Streck
dies after wreck
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Former University of Kentucky foot- · ·
ball player Jeremy Streck, a starting ·:
senior guard las! season. died
Saturday of injuries suffered afler
being hit by a car. He was 21
Streck had been in critical condi-

I.

.'

GALLIPOLIS
Friday, October 15th
7:00 PM - 9:30 PM

HOLIDAY INN

·

Mason Bowling
results
L•nes
'
.
Jariy Wednesday Mixed
~

League (as of Oct. 6)

R«om

'MiiiJ• Co. Golf C~urse ........... 34-14
Dalrt Queen Brazter ............... 32-16
,_ park Stde ........................ .30·18
Tqnl'_'s Carryout ......................22-26
P,o;e. 2171 .............................20-28
Mtl_p Industries .... ................. ..6-42
·Dam hl1h ·series: Meigs Co.
Oolf Course (1894)
Team . blab 1•me: Meigs Co.
Oolf Course (638)

Men

Hllh series: Sam Smith (5-77);
Loren Coleman (478)
·
m1h game: Smith (203); Steve
Bunon (179)

·

577 State Route 7

-·

(Near jet OH Rt 7 &amp; US 35)
.'
OS

Alexander Goen,
Founder, Author, &amp; Hypnotist

C.Ht., C.Hy.s RHy.
stop smoking system is designed
so you don 't gain weight or have
withdrawals. I can only guarantee it
because it is designed to 'work'. Come
down arid end this habiJ of :~~e."
- Warmly, l'fliA;

..'-

Private clients have paid $ 5 each to
comfortably. You can·benefit now from
seminar for ·only $39.99
Cash, checks &amp; credit cards

•:

Women

. ...a.

1.•
' I

·'

",... :.,.,
...

,,

, I

..

.

' ·'

.

..
.,,:
.. I

Roxann Russell
(443);-Pat Canon (440)
_pm11 Wilma Hill (184);
Maipm Eynon 8r. Russell (173)

I.

.

'

.RIP Hrlel:

I

v

The very same Red Sox who lost
the 1948 AL pennant in a one-game
playoff with the Indians, and blew a
14 1/2-game lead over the Yankees in
1978 to lose a one-game playoff on
Bucky Dent's home run.
And the very same Red Sox who
lost the 1946 World Series after leading.. the St. Lo'uis Cardinals three
ganl'es to two, then blew a 3-21ead in
the '8.6 Series after Bill Buckner's
notorious Game 6.
But in the Indians, who haven't
won a World Series since 1948
despite making the playoffs in each
of the last five years, Boston may be
meeting a team more cursed than
itself
"We're disappointed," Indians
reliever Steve Karsay said. "We had
every intention of finishing it up
here.''
Pitching on three days' rest for the
first time in his career, Indians. ace
Bartolo Colon allowed seven runs on
six hits and a walk. He left after
all owing a two-run homer to
Offerman with nobody out in the second- the first of Boston 's two fiverun innmgs.
"Everything that we threw up,
they hit. And when it came down, It
wasn't where we were standing,"
Hargrove said, getting the score
wrong several times . "Any time you
score 24 runs, you got a whole lot
right. And a whole lot wrong 1s going
on for the other team .';
Valentin, who twice commiued
costly errors at third base earlier m

.• - "

Mets want to 'earn our respect' against Braves ~;~~~~f.f1~i~~~;~;:~;~~~gf_

MLS standings

S.uthf:asl DiviYon

24 hits, and Valentin and Jason
Vu;itek had four apiece. Trot Nixon
and Jose Offerman each had five
RB!s and Varitek had a record five
runs as Boston scored in every
·
inning but the sixth.
Boston outscored 19 of 26 NFL
teams on Sunday, and if not for Wil
Cordero's solo homer in the ninth
inning the Red Sox would have
matched Cleveland's Indians and
Browns combined.
"We're right back in that hunt
now," said Boston manager Jimy
Williams, whose team had fallen
behind 2-0 in the Series and lost stars
tv!artinez and Nomar Garciaparra to
injury in the process. "It's one game
for both of us."
Known more for curses than ·for
comebacks, the Red Sox lost 18 of
19 postseason games before beating
Cleveland 9-3 in Game 3 on
Saturday. But that mildly one-sided
victory was nothing compared to the
one Boston put together in Game 4.
"We had to win. That was our
basic position. We had to win or go
home," Williams said. ··so now we
have another shot against a good
club. Hopefully it works out for us ."
Only once since the diviston
series was added to the playoffs m
1995 has a team won the best-of-five
seiies after losing the first two games
- Seattle did it to the Yankees that
first year.
And now the Red Sox - of all
teams - have a chance to make it
two.

'

Rams beat Niners 42-20, stand as last of NFL's unbeatens ~~

ste~~~~~~da~·~;c~:~ASCA~ ~~~d:yas rescheduled for II a.m. c~d games, tell so many jokes and rain-shortened races in Darlington, more lap and we win the race Jeff the end of thai race"
It is ihe first time in the 40-year
history of the suburban Charlotte
track that the fall race has been postponed. The last Winston Cup event
postponed by rain was in April of
1998 in Martinsville va.
"The worst part ~bout rain is the
sitting around~" said driver Ward
Bunon. '"You can only play so many

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

BoSox spank-Indians 23-7,
tie AL playoff series at 2-2
By JIMMY GOLEN
BOSTON (AP) - Cleveland
manager Mike Hargrove lost track of
the damage Boston inflicted on his
Indians, and the guy in the Green
Monster's manual scoreboard could
barely find enough crooked numbers
to keep track of the rccord-breaking
rout.
·
Twenty-three runs.
Twenty-four hits.
A 16-run margin of victory.
All playoff records.
"It was embarrassing . It was
humiliating,"' Indians catcher Sandy
Alomar said after the Red Sox beat
Cleveland 23-7 to force a deciding
fifth game m the first-round series.
'"But the good part about it is that
no~e of those runs mean anything

Steady rain forces NASCAR to move start of UAW-GM Quality 500 to today
officials to postpone the UAW-GM
Quahty_500 to today.
Hopm~ the weather might push
through m time to run the race as
scheduled on Sunday at Lowe's
Motor Speedway. offictals waited
until two hours after the scheduled 1
p.m. EDT stan to make the call,- .
The 500-mtle event on the 11, mtle

Monday, October 11, 1999

/

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5 ;

I

�I ... ., • ...., ..

I

By The Bend

The Daily Sentin,!!
.. , -:
· -' ~

•

40

l l . 'onday,

a

Marjorie Grimm. Lillian Hayman read the
White Cross askings, which include health kits,
school bags, baby layettes. quilt blocks, and
rolled bandages. along with money for the overseas askings. The group decided to fi lithe quota
requested.
Yost reported on the new scholarship person
and the three special interest missionaries. Barbara Gheen had the program "Handling Stress"
using scripture from I Thes. 5.
She said the church is a sanctuary for Christian sisters and brothers, and that although
every person has to find his own way to handle
stress, finding a good listener, who is not quick
to criticize. is a good start toward coping.
Linda Grimm noted that cards had been send
to several sick and hospitalized per·sons of the
community. Next meeting will be held at the
home of Lillian Hayman and Marjorie Grimm
will have the program ..
Refreshments were served by the hostess.

Winner announced
The wt nn er of the Farm all pedal tractor
awarded at Expo 99 was Tom Zicg: it was
ann oun ced by' the B1g Bend Farm Antiques
Clu b, whi ch staged the promotion .

110

Earns certification
Carol A. Russell of Harrisonville has fulfilled requirement s for certification as a medical assistant. On June 26 she passed the certification examination for medical ass.istant. She is
a grad uate of the medi cal ass isti ng program at
Hocking Co llege, Nelsonville, and IS now
emp loyed by Dr. Robert M. Holl ey, Point Pleasant Medical and Cholesterol Center.
Hosts meeting
Mary K. Yost hosted a recent meeting of
Bertha M. Sayre Missionary Society at
home 10 Syracuse .
She opened the meetin g with an article
Your Hut Burning '1" followed by prayer

the
her
u[s

by

· ··

and~iches

We Jo c IC en r1~ t.
·---.-----------------------·.
$2 7g SFREE
· S
k
11487ROP A

CKFC 1999

1 Te~der Roast®

I
I
I
1

I Ch1cken .
Sandwich
I
I •Tender Roast®
I Chicken Sandwich
I •Medium
Drink
p~:r courwm
ul
I Not vahd wilh Olh~r ~~mul ofrenP..Limtl 2
I pl!r cou l"'" · Tax r.r.tn Ell:ltirt!A JoJ26199

I

Limil four
1.artir.i llallns KFC
Re"tal.lranl•, No r&lt;eprothu·twnll uc:eepted.

.

""

I

I

:
I
I
·1
I

Strip Meals

OR

$299
3 All Broon S1ripo
'2 Sideo,
Choice
"' Brud

I

Meal

$299
Lell' ~ ThiJh

~ s.d..
Chou::e
o( Bread

,

IJmlt (our per coupon •t .partidpat•nl KFC
Reataunnt1 . Not vahd,w11h other spedal
o«~ra. T.. _e~~:tra. ExJllr'i;L 10126199

~

I
I
~ II
I
f(IC.

Limit four l)t!. f eGupon al pnticipattna KFC
Re.tauranl• . N~ reprorludiona accepted .
~ol valid wilh other special offera. Limh 2
per coupon. Tu: extra. Expire• 1012&amp;199

-------------4

1

1------------~-Colonels Crispy
Two Piece :

·
I
IZe 0 f t rin
1
With the Purchase of a Honey BBQ
Sandwich at Regular Price

~ II
·

Re~lar I

8 Pieces of · ·
Chicken
OR

Make- A
· Meal

.,C.

extra. Tu extra.

10126199

I

$1299:I

I $799
8 Piecoo Chicken
II. White/Dark
2 Sid"'
4
Breodo ~
I
Pieces
Limta foyr
eoupoa at pnticipillnf UC
I lacbuta
Rntaurantl . Not •alkl whll othlr apeelll offen. :
•
white/dark pieca. Breut pNee nakthutloe
I
Exptrn
pet

·

I

·

I
I
I

·--------------------------·

CROW'S FAMILY RESTUUNT
228 West Main

992-5432

Pomeroy

Manager,

More and more people with
disabilities are expressing an
interest in returning to work and·
contributing to society and t~eir
own feelings of self-worth. The
Social Security Administration
(SSA) is helping these people ful fill their desire and potentiaL
When a person files an application for Social Security or Supplemental Security Income disability benefits, specially trained
employees review the application
to see whether the person's medical condition qualifies him or her
for disability benefits.
At the same time, they also
evaluate the person's rehabilitation potential. If it appears that
the person may benefit fr9m
~ocational rehabilitation services,
they refer the applicant to the
state vocational rehabilitation
agency.

Public Notice

• Notice of Eltctlon on
TIX Levy In boeu llf
tht Ten Mill Umllatlon
lleviMd Code, Stctlont

Townahlp or Scipio,
Ohio, Pomeroy, Ohio
Plllld on tht 7th day or
July, 111110 thert will bl
aubmiHid to a vote of
the people of aald
IUbcllvlaton M 1 CliMI'II
ELECTION to be hlld In
the Townahlp of Scipio,
Ohio, at the regular
placaa of voting lltertln,
on the 2nd day of
Novtmblr, 1111111, tha
q!lnllon of levying atu,
In excua of the ten mill
llmllatlon, tor tht blnallt
of Scipio t:ownthlp lor
lhl
purpOII Of
Maintaining and opertlng

pleoaa of voting lhlreln,
on the 2nd day of
Novtmber, 111119, tha
quaetton of ravylng a tu,
In IXCIII Of the lin mill
llmltltton, lor the benlllt
of Letart Townahlp lor
tha purpoae of Fire
protaotlon.
Said IIX being:• A
reptacament of e tax of 1
mill at a rete not
exceeding 1.0 milia lor
each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounta to ten ($0.10)
centa for each one
hundred dollera of
valuation, for live (51

St. At. 7

3501.11(0), 571111.111,
571111.28
NOTICE Ia hereby
given thM In purauanca
of a Aaaolutlon of the
Board of Townalllp
Truateea of the
Townahlp of Lebanon,
Ohio, Pomeroy, Ohio
paaMd on the 31at day
of July, 111110 there will
be aubmltted to I vote Of
the people of aald
aubcllvlalon M a Gtntrll
ELECTION to be held In
the
Townahlp of
Lebanon, Ohio, at the
regular pi- of voting
therein, on the 2nd day
of November, 111110, the
queet1on ot levying a tax,
In exceu of tht ..... mill
llmltltlon, tor tht benefit
of Lebanon T-hlp lor
tha purpoaa of Fire
protiCIIon.

Said IIX being:• A
replacement of a IIX ol t
mill at 1 rata not
excHdlng 1.0 milia lor
each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounta to ten ($0.1 0)
centa lor each one
hundred dollara of
valuation, lor live (51

,..The... Polla lor aald

Election will cipan at 8:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
opan untl 7:30 o'clock
P.M. ofuld day.
By order of tht B011rd
of Elactlona, of Malga
County, Ohio.
John N. lhla, Chalnnan
Rlla D. Smith, Dlrtctor
Dltld: Sept. 13, 181111
(10) 4, 11, 18, 25 4TC

Public Notice
• NotiCe of Eltollon on
Tax Levy In Ell- of
tht 1-.n litH UmltaUon
AIVIIIICI Code, llecllonl
31101.11 (Q), 1171111.11,
57115.25

NOTICE Ia haraby
glwn IIIII In puiiUIIIOI
of a Reaotutlon .of tht
Board ot TOWIIIIIIp
· Truateta of the

cemetertee.

Seld llx being:• A
replacement of a tu of
112 mill at a rate not
exceeding 112 milia lor
each ona dollar of
valultlon,
which
amounta to live canta
($0.05) lor each one
hundred dollara .of
valuation, lor live (5)

yeara.

The Polla lor aald
Election will opan at 8:30
o'clock A.M. and rlftlaln
open untl 7:30 o'clock
P.M. ofuld dey.
By order of the Board
of Electlona, of Matga
County, Ohio.
John N. \hie, Chairman
Rna o. Smith, Dlrtctor
Dltld&lt; Sept. 13, 111110
(10) 4, 11, 18,25 4TC

Public Notice
• NotiCe of Ellotlon on
TIX Levy In Exctll 01
tht Tan Mill Umlt8tlon

AIVIHCI Coclt, Slctlona

3501-11(0), 5705.19,
5705.25

NOTICE It htreby
given that In pu,.uence
of a Ataolutlon of tht
Board of Townthlp
Truate.. of thi
Townlhlp of Letart,
Aaelnt, Ohio, palled on
the 18th day of July,
1flflll tllere will be
tubmlllld to 1 vote of
the ptopte of llld
aubcllvlalon at • Cllntrtt
ELECTION to Ill hatcl In
1111 Townalllp of Llllrt,
Ohio, 11 the regular

HO Help Wanted

e·-

Pieuapt Valley Hospital
Pleuant Valley Hcispltal's Private Duty Division is
currently recrultlna state tested Home Health Aids fur
immediate ualfiiUIICDI$ in Meip CoUIIty. Exc:eUent pay
and flexible Kbcdules. Requlra 6 months of facility
work cxperlcnc:e. For more lnfoiDiatioo contact Debbie
MitcbeD at (304} 67~-7400 or apply in ~rson at 1011
VIand Sn#t, Point Pleasant, WV.
loin our family of profcasionals to .be the resource for
commwill health service needa. AA/ECE

years.

The Polla lor aald
at 6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open untl 7:30 o'clock
P.M. of llld dey.
By order of the Board
of Electlona, of Melga
County, Ohio.
John N. lhla, Ch.trman
Rita D. Smith, Dlrtctor
Datld: Sept. 13, 111110
(1014, 11, 18, 25 4TC
Election will open

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By vlrtut of In Ordtr
of lillie luued oui of the
Common Pltll Court of
Malga County, Ohio, In
the caaa of the Homt
National Bank, Plaintiff,
VI. Linda Baavar aka
Linda D. Baaver,et at.,
Daftndanta, upon a
Judgment theraln
randared, baing Cue
No. tt·CY·II In ..ld
court, I will orrar tor uta
at tha front door of the
Courthouu In Pomaroy,
Mtlgt County, Ohio, on
tht 5th day of November,
181111, M 10:00 a.m.., the
follow In~ Ianda ."nd
tanamen a, located at
315211
eicter Road,
Dater, Ohio, 45728. A
complete
legal
duclllltlon of tha real
umtela'aalollowa:

The following real
aatate · aituated In thl
County of Melga, In the
Stett of Ohio, In the
Townahlp or Baltm, and
bounded and deacrlbad

.

~,

Tht
following
daacrlbed real eatate
alllllttd In Mllrtlnabul'll,
' lnd COiftiHIICing II tht
lolithaut corner of Lot
No. 1 llld running SOuth
thr• hundred and light
fltt to the place of
beginning, running Wnt
nlntty Me; thtnot South
-hundred and.., teet
to tht place of
beginning, btlng all of
1011 No. Nine (I) and Tan
(10) •• -ordtd In plat
of Mllrtinlllul'll.
Rtftrenoe Dud:
lllltuma 313, Paga 1511,
· Mtlga . County D1td

Racorda.

PROPERTY
ADDRESS: 35211 oUter
Road, Daxtar, Ohio

Larry Schey

...; .....

100' -1000' Rolk I' &amp;3/4' 200#WIIIer Une
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp;Regulators Waler Storage Tanks
Mon.· Fri. 9:00 to
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

._,

I IIII I

r·c

Jlfow Reatial

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

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone

(740) _,.,_,.Ul

c

Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232
9/Z1199 1 mo.

JONES'
• 'tr\111

• 5,ulll11 .
Gr\n6\1'9

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

on

t~~~~
24 Hr. taxi ~
Delivery
Service

· 1I ~ I .

! ~ I'

;. ·w

;,,

We deliver

ALMOST anything

Anylime·Anywhere

L....,;7;.,;40-~99;;;2;.;.()()3;.;;.;;.;8;......~

New Store Hours
For Deer Season
Mon-Sat

Portable
Welding Services
Gas-A&amp;C-Mig
Aluminum

Call for details .
1r ;,

BAR-)

740-384-6212
LIIIP AIID ROlli COAL
H.I.A.P. VOUCHIU
ACCIPTID
DII.IWIIY AVAILAIU
7am THIU 4prn
MONDAY·FIIDAY
7amTONOON

Hew scents, layaways &amp; uedit cards accepled
Regular Hours: Tue- Frl 10-6
Saturday 10-4
At 124 Minersville, OH 740-992-4559

EXPERIENCED OR NOT. We Can
Pul You Benlna Tho Whoelll Call
Frel 1·888·292-2002 &amp; I·888·
473-3584.

Diploma. Pa id Relocation. Call 1·

WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS

992-9178

.!Ill

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headltners,
•.. · truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
~~ . ~.
boat covers, carpets, etc.
_,.,,
Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00
. r
Over 40 yrs experience

...

.)
·(

Matdles

j

Ev.ery Sunday
,.,
1:00 P.M.
0 I· L..-.:.::::..:.::.:::~....1

and

EXCAVATinG

Hauling*Umestone*Gravel
Sarid"Topsoii*Fill Dirt*Mulch
Bulldozer Servicas

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

YOUR

JACKS ROOFING
&amp;CONSTRUOION
New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing

Frn E1tlmate1

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

. (740) 99Z·3470

740 742·8888

..GaShoat
Slug alld Shot

WICK'S HAULinG

~

-'

Rutland, Olio

(740) 992·2753
or 992·1101

•

'"' ,..,A,....&amp;=-=D-=a=-u.,...tf)~U::-p""l"'"'"1or-st=-e-ry--...,,..l--us-,o:ln:-:"'c

·' r

P01111roy

Co. Ad 19

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

Fa&lt; Wei Eslablished Local Co.

SEIIIIING TAl-COUNTY AREA
•Must have good Communication
skl~a

• MUS! lllMl gooQ llllvlnO reco&lt;d
&amp;Provide own Tl&amp;nsportaliofl
'Musl have ablllly 10 boa TEAM
player
Send Resume to:

GaUipatis Daily Tnbuno.
RE: Advor11~ng Sales Rep
825 Third Awnue
Clall!&gt;olts. OH 45631
ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crall&amp;.
Toys, Jewelry, Wood. Sewing,
Typing ... Greal Pay! CALl 1-800·
795-0380 ExU201 (24 tiro).
ATTENTION:
~~~ve · A Compullr'l
Pull ITo Worl&lt;l
$25 ·$75 /Hr. PTn'T
1-888·890-3461
www.pc-income.com

•Ntw Garagea
•Electrical &amp;Plumbing
•Roofing &amp;Guttm
•Vinyl Sltllt)9 &amp;Painting
•PIIfo &amp; Pori:li Dtckl
Fm Elffnvftl

Quality Driveways,

Sunset Rome Constraetfoa

Sidewalks, Patios
.complete Garages:
masonarytwood
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

New Consiruction &amp; Remodeling • Kitchen Cabinets
Vinyl Siding- Roofs • Decks • Garages

Free Estimates

740-742·8015
877-353-7222 (toll frea)

Pomeroy, Ohio

22 X.": Local

::Jj
:T'-'

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
I
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
'
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburlt
Prograulve top line.
Uc. f OD-50 "~""'"
•

tr.

• Bryan Reeves

.,

' 0I

~-

.,,•
.3

r

&lt;&gt;'

D.

ol •.

.

.I.

, ROOFING
NEW·REPIIR

OPEN
10.5:00 Tues. Wed.
&amp; Thurs.
&amp;

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

'

DEPOYIAG ·
· puft

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

· ·" eJJIIM

e&gt; .Bulldo~er &amp; Backhoe
"~

~ . ll401 992-3131

(No Sunday Calls)

CARPENTRY

,,....,,.11'0'"2''

Sen&gt;ice•
ql:' House &amp; Trailer Sileo
.,. , Land Clearing &amp;
·'~
Grad'tng
00 .
,'I' ·
Seplic Sy11enu &amp;
ed
Ulililifll

740·992·764~

R. L. MASH

HOWARD
;~ ·,EXCAVATING CO.
vn

FREE ESTIMATES

By Appointment

4!2Tf'N

You 'N build o bir ntsr tgg when
you sCM wilh 1M classi(i&lt;ds

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.
New Homes • VInyl
Siding • New Garages
•Replacement Wlnqows
•Room Additions
•Roofing
COMIIIACW 1111 IISIIIIIIIIAl

Rutland, Ohio

-~ ~~-~~:':":":~--.,
~·

r

115 Salem St.

. Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized ·
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 sr. Rt. 7 South

Coo/villa, OH

992..()437

• New Homas
• Garages
• Complata
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Cornpare
FREE
ESnMATES
985-4473

..

Domino's
Every, Tuesday
night is

Family Night
.Large 1-item

CLEAN HOUSE

Open to close

. 992-2124

7122{rFN

4#23

TtOIIJ.-a

'

!

STONE
.HAULED
· Llmastona
Gravel
Top Soli

MODERN
SANITATION SERVIa
'

740.992-3954

.

..
CREDIT
PIIBLEIIS???
No Credit • Slow Credit • Ban)lruptcy
.,.

:'

Personalized Dispatch • Home
Often • Holiday /Vacation Pay •

Work . Send Resume To: sees
P.O.Box 541, 1\Brr, OH 45643.

lOSE WEIGHT GUARANTEED!
ALL NATURAl!
DR. RECOMMENDED!
CALL: H88-248-2n9
OR VISIT: www.metl.. woy.IIOI
LPN Wanted For GrowinQ Home
Health Care Provider. Applica ·
lions Being Taken. Call 740·441·
1877 For More Information.

Maintenance Mechanic
This Gallipolis. Ohio, Based Position Requires A Minimum Of An
Associates Degree In Electron.
lcs . Additionally, We Prefer A
Candidate With. Experience In
Board Level Circuits, Solid State
Coiltro ls And PLC 's WIIM The
Ability To Troubleshoot Electronic
Equipment. Candidale Must Also
Have The Ability To work In A
Team Env ironmen t And· Would
Be Requ ired To Do Genera l
Maintenance Wort;.
Rockwell Automation Can Offer
You A Competitive Salary And
Benefit Package. For Considera·
lion , Please Send Or Fax You r
Resume To: Rockwell Automa·
tlon, Attn: Human Rnourcet
Representative, 250 McCor·

mlck Rood, Golllpollo, OH
45631·1597. Fox: 740·441-8305.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Supporting Diversity In The

Workplace.
MEDICAL BILLING. Earn Excellent tncome . Full Training. Com·
puler AequirecJ . Call Toll· Free

800-540-6333 Exl. 2:301.
MEDICAL BILLING . Earn Excel·
lent S S S ! Pro cessing Claims
From Home. Full Training Provid·
ed . Computer Required . Call
Mediworks Toll -Free 1·800·540·

Sell

Avon. 740·

''

Need dependable person teo work

401 K/Medical/Pros. !Dental As· weekends caring lor the elderly,
signed 99' T2000's - Aider Pro- coli 740-992-5039 Monday
Thursday. Monday thru SaiUrday gram · 98% No ·.Touch Freight lhrough Friday between 8am·4pm
Call Bulch AI Summil Transporla· only.
9:()0.5:30.
lion 800-878.Q680 EOE
OAK HILL COMMUNITY
DriYIIr&amp;: 2 Week PalO COL'Train·
MEDICAL CENTER
40
Giveaway
lng. No Exp. Needed. No Mo~oy.
3 ltmalt P\II&gt;Pit&amp; haH paek a poo No Credit? No Problem! Earn Up One Full Time LPN Position
To $32.000 11 Sl Yr. w /Full Btne· Available On Long Term Care .
304-676-3699.
fits . P.A.M. Transport Call Toll
Varied Hours. Qualified Candidate
3 Male Kittens , 6 Weeks Old, To
Free 1·877·230·§002 WWW.Olr· MuSI Be Graduate From Ac ·
Good Home. Call Allor 4 P.M. drivers.com
credited School Of Nursing And
740-4-41 -1707.
Possess A Va lid Oh1o License. 11
Envelope SlUffing Poslllons Avail·
Lost: Female Walker Coon Ho'und able To Apply Call Toll FrH. I·
Wiln An Orange Collar, loSI On 988-265-1935.
Georges Creek Road , Reward! EnYIIIOil8 sluffing poslllons avail·
Call 740-446·0223 Leave Mes· able. 10 apply call 1011 free. 1-888sage.
265-1935.

HILL'S
'SELF STORACE

70

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Slzes5'x10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours .
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates

Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138
3111/99 TFN

FIREWC)OD
D111p Truck 11
Plok·•r I• • ., ,.,.
Recent y purchased:
Graham's Wood Products
Firewood Division

Ball Legging
and f1rewood

No
Vou'ra Treated with Reapectl
Call Now for lnatant Applovllll"*

thO day bofofl 11M! od
It to run. Sundfly

ICIIUon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday ldltiOn
-10:00 ..... Solunley.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity
All Yard Solei Mull Be Potd In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm llle
day before the ad Ia to run,
Sunday 6 Monday edlllon·
1:00pm Frldoy.

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Moodlspaugn Auclioneerlngcomplele auction service. Buy
and sell estates. Ohio License

CALL Hl88-249-2n0
OR VISIT: www.getwealtlly.IIOt

(Von ~ Flalblld)
"2 E'""'lonl Pay Packages
"Poi&lt;! WHkly &amp;Direct Doposll
'Heahh. Eye &amp; Denial
"401 KRellremenl
'Poi&lt;! Holidays &amp;Vacation
'Home90%ofWeekends
0Wnor DpoiiiOII
fiNe Pay Parmls &amp;Fuel Tax)

surance Agency 3 days a week .
Compuler &amp; People Skills re·
quired. Insurance E11.perience
Preferred. Sene! Re sumes in etc:
Point Pleasant Register, M.L. 03,
200 Main Street, Pt . Pl. , WV ·

'Poi&lt;! weekly &amp; O&lt;oct 0epos11
'Insurance Plan

25550.

"Salellita Rernal
You Mull 8t AllAM! 22 yelll

Of age 6 hova1 Year OTH Ell·
perlonco. Cla11 ACOL, Hamal

&amp;CitonMVR.

If this sounds great and you
meet the requirements. call Ran--

dy or Chrilllno at 800-821·35&amp;0,
or visi t our web
www.hwtruck.com

page at

Ono,WV25645.
HOLZER HOME CARE OF
OAK HI~L COMMUNITY
MEDICAL CENrER

uled . Qualified Candidate Will
Provide Skilled Nursing Care Di ~

ver And Gold Coins. Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks. Low Miles.. 1995 MOdel&amp;
Or Newer, Smith Buick Pontiac,
1900 Eastern Avenue, Clall;poils.

1·740.982-6142
Leave a Message

For Ne,. LD&lt;ul
RefeiTUI So,..i&lt;e

Melge, GaiMe &amp;
Surrounding area•

.

lng And Have Valid Ohio RN Ll·

Surg Experience IS Required:

Home Health EKperience Pre·

!erred. Apply In Penon Or Send
Resume To: Oek Hill Community

Medical Center, Attention: Brenda
McKenzie, 350 Charlotte Avenue,
Qak Hil, OH 45656.

In Athens , Ohio. EKperience Re·

quired . Refrigerant Permit Pre·
!erred. Must Bt Capable 01 Diagnosing Problems And following

Through With Appropriate Repeir

Work . Installation Experience A
Wanted To Buy: 1987 Jeep PIUS.
Full-Time, $8 ·$14/Hour
Wrangier4'1berglass Top, 740· Commensurate
With EKperience,
251-8574.
Vacatton. 401 K Retirement. Call
Career Connections. 594·4941.
M-F, 9-5, EOE/M.
EMPLOYMEN T
SERVICE S
I!MEQOOE QPENJNQ
I

110

Help Wanted

Full-Time Management Position

Wlln local Rttall JIWIIry Store.
Relall And Computer Bllcllgroulld
S2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400 Nocouary. Ben111ts Available,
Una's
Srochurtal Sallsfaclion Cluar· Apply: Acqullltlone Fine Jt•lry.
anltOd) Poatage 6 Supplies Pro- 151 Second A..,.. ~ ·
.Take the pain out
vldedl Rush Soii-Addrtastd
' ·
·
Envelopol GICO, DEPT KHbter Company II Now Ac·
of paillting, and let· Stamped
5, Box 1438, ANTIOCH, TN. ctptlng Appllcallons For Thf'Po·
3701 f-1 431. Stant...-toly.
altlon 01 WHktnd Ma&lt;cllandiHr
me do it .for you.
1100 WEEKLY liE YOUR OWN In Tne Gallipolis Alia. Pilau
BOSSI , PROCESSING GOVERN· Coli 304-743-0717 And leave
INTERIOR
\
MENT REFUNDS. NO EXPERt- 1=Mea::'::ll!lll::::.;·E::DE::·:__ _ __
Before 6 pm leave
ENCE NECESSARY 1•800·854·
In nanny/houae worker
Ext.6046.
· needed, Iovino, maturt, llonnt,
message. Aftar 6 pm -!, 8488
cering, non· smoker. ElljllfltncEam $250 week, Running Tul and ,.,.,. ... a llqlllrld, IOIId reptua Oaii""ry Runo. 4 Tul Drlv· sumo In cere o1 Tlla Pt P1tllllant
nHdld, 2 Taxicab Dispatch· Raglater 200 Main Sl. Pl. Ptaaa·Free E1timates •era
1111 Neecladl (740)·4-IH!247
ant WV 25550
.

Palntlna

740-985-4110

Days 800-429-3660 Exl. J-365

Retail Furnilufe 5ales. El!perience
In Furniture, Carpet Or Drapery,
Sales Preferred, Apply At ToPft'S
Furniture Co .. 151 Second Ave·
ROCksprings Rehabil ilallon Center
is now accepting appiications.for
part time dtetary aide Position .
Must be able to work all shift s
and weekends. Apply in perspn to
lUI out application Of send resume
to : Rocksprings Rehabili tat ion
Center. 36759 Rocksprings Ad .•

Pomeroy, On 45769. EOE

SECRETARY for bu sy non·prol•t
school
diploma and two ve~·r experience.
Must possess good commu nica ·
lion skiUs (written and oral).
phone skills, and e)(per~ence m
Microsoft Word anct Excel.
Kn'owledge of databa se a plu s.
Send re sume by October 18,
1999. to : FACTS, -45 Olive Street.

racily To Paliants Of All Ages AI ·agency. A minimum ot hign

cense. 1 To 2 Years Of Med •

AbSOIUIO Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·

Postal Jobs $48,323 .00 •Vr. Now
Hiring · No EKperience -Pa• d
Training ·Great Benefit s. Call 7

nue. Gallipolis, No Phone Calls.

11.4 WTrucklll!l Co., Inc.

Wedemeyer's Auction Service ,

Wanted to Buy

PUT IT TO WORK I

$25 ·$75/IIR. PT/FT

Part· Time Emplo yment in In -

Residences. Must Be Graduate .
From Accredited School 01 Nurs·

90

www.hbn.com Access Code 529B

ColllfiiiiiJ Drive~~

773-5785 Or 3114-773-5447.

GallllOils, Ohio 740-379-2~ .

Oak Hili, OH 45656.
OWN A COMPUrEA. PUT IT TO
WORK. $850 -$3,500 MO. PT./Fl.
FREE Details: Log Onlo: hllp:l/
OWN ACOMPUTER?

Billy Goble Auclionoer. 740-992· One Full-Time RN Position Open
At Wellston Office. Mon · Fri., 8
7502.
A.M. -4 P.M.On Call DillY Scnltd·
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full lime auctioneer, complete
licensed
auction
service
t66,0hio &amp; Weal Virginia, 304 -

Interested. Please Send Resume
To: Oak Hill Community Medical
Center, Attention : Brenda Me·
Kenzie , 350 Charlotte Avenue .

OIOWIII!I.
.
(We're dolng somolhng Righi)

- M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second EOE
Avenue. Gaii4JOiis, 740-441&gt;2842. HVAC SERVICE TECHNIC'IAN -

.•·

WIIIYIIGU!
Embarra11ment...

&amp; VIcinity
AU, Yalll Solei Mull
8o Pold In Advance.
QEADLINE, 2:00p.m.

Rings. Pro·l930 U.S. Currency.

35215 Ball Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-742~19

Gallipolis

H&amp; WTnrcldng Company, Inc.
40 Yeoltln aualnoll and SIHI

Sterling, Be. Acquisitions Jewelry

Bob Ball

.

Repo • Dlvorded

Yard Sala

17693, wv 1338, 740-989-2E23.

)£ '

ROBERt'I ISS ELL
CONSIRUaiON

Full Time Help t arpel Cleaning.

light Construction And Remodel

DRIVERS · IMMEDIATE OPEN- 6333 Ext 23 I 2.
INGS - AEGIONAl/OTR Slart AI Naed 1 Ladies To
29 CPM /AI MI. · Unloading Pay · 446-3358.

60 Loat and Found

740·742-3411

UNIQUE.
OLDIES

Howard L Writesel

460.

local Cleaning Company Seeking

Quality clothing and household
Items. $1.00 bag sale e~tery

CONNECTION

•Room addR\ona 6 RemQdellng

by Harris
Farms will no longer be open to

public hunting.
New To You Thrlh S"9 Wotl Stlm&amp;On, Alhon$
740-592-1842

CONCRETE

odgo Of Ouickbooks Sollwaro.
I /Job Cooling /AP /AA Handlt Mulliplt Tasks 1
Con,sir~ctlo_n Knowledge APlus I
CALLS ACCEPTED
/SEND RESUME TO: CHRIS·
TIAN'S CONST. 1403 EASTERN
AVE., OAWPOLIS, OH 4&amp;831.

005
Personal•
CNA Classes Ara Baing Sa1 Up,
STAAT DATING TONIGHT! For October 11th, Immediate
Have Fun Meeting Eligible Sin·· Openings. Energetic, Enthuslas·
gles In Your Area . Can For More tic, And Oodlcalod Pooplt WantTo Care For Our Residents.
in1ormatlon. 1-SOO·ROMANCE. ed,
Apply Arbors 01 Gallipollo, 170
Ext.9735.
Pinecrest Drive, Gallipolis. Ohio.
Slart Dating Tonlghtl Have fun Or Conlact Judy Hall, LPN /Inploylng the Ohio Doling Game. 1- structor 74IH42·2370, EOE.
80Q.ROMANCE, oxtonskln 9691.
Computer Usera Needed . Work
Own Hrs. $25K ·SBOKI Yr. 1·800·
30 Announcements
536-0486 X 1m. www.1cwp.rom
Diabetic Pallents: Medicare Or
Private Insurance. You May Be DENTAL BILLER Up lo .$15 -$45
Entitled To Receive Your Dlabetk: /Hr Dental Billing Sollware ComSupplies AI No Cosl To You. For pany 'Needs People To Process
More Information 1·888·677 · Medical Claims From Home .
Training Provided. Must Own
6561 .
Compu1er. H00-223-1U9 Ex I.
land owned or leaseli

Gallia County DV Task Force
Seltlts Part-Time Facilitator For
Its Batterers Intervention Pro gram. Applicants Must Be li·
censed In Social Work In OMio
With Some Group Counseling EK·
perience. Mail Resume By 10/191

99 To Tom McGuire. SEOLS, 490
Richland Avenue, At hens. OH
45701 . An Equal Opporlunoly Empltyer.

ence, Computer Friendly, t&lt;nowl·

ANNOUNCEMENTS

r '1

800-533-1657.

ADVERTISING
SALESREPRESENrAnYE

BOOKKeEPER WANTE,D•Min.
01 2 Years On The Job Experi-

CONSTRUaiON

. Beginning Sept. 26th

' jt! I

·"

SMITH'S

8:30am ·8 pm
Sun 1 pm-6pm

Hourly Rates

$8.99'

WITH THE :;
.Ct.MSIFIEI:i$1

Sr. 124 Wellston, Ohio

___

FIREFIGHTERS WANTED
Must Ha't'e Ma"nual :' exterlty,
Gooa Vision &amp;· Ability To Use
Tools /Equipment. Musl Be Physically Fll, Under Age 30 Wilh H.S.

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell.
Shrtey Spears, 304-675-1429.

Alta D. Smith, lllrtctOf:
Dattd: Sept. 13, 11181 .

(10) 4, 11, 18, 211 4TC .:

I:.:==~:..:.:.;_

&gt;&gt;DRIVER PLACEMENT &lt;t«&lt;

November 5th 10-7 pm 6th 10·5 pm
Gift to 1st 25 customers (1 per family) '
Oaar Prizes, wooden Angels, Snowmen

TREE SERVICE

Public Notice·
' NoUca of EIIOikm
Tax Levy In Exce11 01
tht Ttn Mill Umltatlon
ReviMd Code, Secllona
3501.11 (Q), 5705.11,
5705.28
NOTICE Ia hereby
· tJven that In p..,..ulllt:a
ot a. Rttolutlon of the
Boerd of Townahlp
Truatau of the
Townahlp of Cheater,
Chllllr, Ohio, paaaed
on lila 13th day of ~ly,
19911 there will .be
aubmltted to a vote ol
tha people of alld
aubdlvlalon at 1 Gentrel
ELECTION to be held In
11M Townaltlp 01 Clllater,
Ohio, at the regular
placea ol voting the~ln,
on the Znd day of
Novtmber, 111911, lhe
quutton of levying a lax,
In IXCIII Of tha tan mill
limitation, lor the bliiellt
·of Chatter Townehlp for
tht
purpoaa • of
lhlntalnlng
af.d
·. operating c-....:
Said .tax being:• • A
replacement of ltu o11
mill at a rate )lot
exc11dtng 1.0 mute .lor
each one dollar of
VIIUitiOn,
whfch
amounta to ten oenta
($0.101 lor aech one
hundred dollare of
valuation, lor live ·(S)
yura.
•
Till POIII lor aald
Election will open at ':30
o'clOCk A.M. aitd rtmllln
open untl 7:30 o'clock
P.M. of uld day.
. ,
By order of the flolrd
of Elactlona, ot Melga
County, Ohio.
:
John N. lhlt, Chairman

Rof~Fta .

Christmas Open Houre

45728.

REAL
ESTATE
:AT:
APPRAISED
$5,000.00: Tha real
Hille cannot be aold lor
tua then two-thlrda:thl
appraiMd value.
TEAMS OF SA).E:
10% down day of 1111,
balance on delivery of
deed. Sold aubjecl to
11cond hall 1998 and
aeeruld 181111 ruteatate
taxee.
Jamea . M.
Soufaby.
(10) 4, 11, 18

At Homo. No Expert1nco cashiers. send ril&amp;ume c/o: Tho
Neceeaary. CALl TOll FREE ·
1 Senlinol, P.O. Box 729·75,
1·800-966-;15119 Exl. 2601. "$34.00
. OH 45'769.

The Country Candle Shop

Audltor'a

00404.000.

Sales Representative ·

Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock
8' Grav~less Leach

11' " '" A •

Riffle

Steve

Tuppers Plains, OH

740.985·3813

Public Notice
Parcel · Not.: '1300403.000 and .13·

Stop In And See

· G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

American Legion
Post467
Beech Grove Road

Public Notice

cook, caehlel'a, and ~art time .

~ormo

1

Public Notice

110 Help Wantad

Complete Simple Go'(ernment

37 year old robber was in custody.
An officer checking the route from
the convenience store tO the man's
apartment found ·a plastic grocery
bag in a trash bin, which contained
the hard hat wi'th the man's nanic on
it. Police also found the tip of a toy
pistol while sc.arching the man'~ car.
Do you have questions about·sex,
but no one to talk to? Ann Landers'
booklet, "Sex and the Teenaget,'' is
frank and to the point. Send II' .~elf
addressed, long. business size Oi)velope and a check or money order for
$3.75 (this includes postage; and
handling) to: Teens, c/o Ann :Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago; Ill.
60611 -0562. (In Canada, :~e nd
$4.55.)
::
To find out more about Ann: landers and read her past columns, )'isit
the Creators Syndkate web p:i£c at
www.creatorsxom.

Examples of services are: .tests
If the state agency is unable to
serve the individual, SSA may and assessments to evaluate. the
refer the individual to an alter~ client's physical or mental condi nate .participant in our vocational tion . skills and abilities; counsel ing and guidance; whcelcliairs,
rehabilitation program.
An alternate participant is any prosthetics and other devices: to
nonstatc public or private agency help restore the individual's
that is qualified to serve Social availability to work; training ; and
Security disability beneficiaries. job placement.
:
Referral to vocational rch~bili ­
Under a recent change in the
law, beneficiaries can refer them- tation services is just one way
selves for rehabilitation by con- SSA helps people with disabili tacting a management company ties return to work .
under contract with SSA. The
For more information call our
company, Birch and Davis, will toll -free number. 1-800-772assist them in finding appropriate 1213. and ask for the publication
rehabilitation services. Their toll- , How We Can Help With Vocafree number is 1-888606· 7787. ·
tional Rehabilitation .
SSA is allowed to pay for
·You may also be interested in
vocational rehabilitation services Workin~ While Disabled-flow
they furnish to people receiving We Can Help or If You Are Blind'disability benefits if certain con- How We Can Help .
ditions are met.
For more information and · to
The services must result in the access our publications electroniperson's return to work for at cally, visit our website at
least nine continuous months at a www.ssa.gov.
substantial earnings level, which
changes fr om year to year.

HelpWanted

$800 WEEKlY POTENTIAL Fu1 growing business looking 101

Social Security helps people with
disabilities return to workplace
BY ED PETERSON
Social Security
Athens

llte Dally Seotinel • Page 7

..

•

alcohol abuse.
food.
ed States are the most envied in the
Handicapped parking places
There is also the matter of metab- world. They are also probably the
should not be awarded to the fat olism. Some people can bum up fattest. Do you want to trade places
folks of the world. They are allocat- calories in their sleep, while others with someone in a less abundant
ed for the truly handicapped, who have trouble burning ihem no matter country? I don't.
J.
have no control over their condition. what they do.
Dear Ann: Here's one for your
Most fat people choo~ immediate
Those who sit in olftces all day "stupid crooks" collection. · It
gratification over long term health ·(now working with computers) are appeared in the Youngstown Vindiand appearance.-- JIM IN LLANO, bound to be heavier than people who cator. Keep up the good work. -CALIF.
are doing janitorial work or selling CONSTANT
READER
IN
DI!AR JIM: Your belligerent something that requires long hours YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO
attitude toward overweight people of traveling by foot.
DEAR
YOUNGSTOWN:
makes me wonder what is at the root
The only way to make up the dif- Thanks for sending it on. Here it is:
of your mean spirited hostility. I sus- ference is by exercising vigorously
It didn't take long for police in
pect that some obese person in your for several hours each week.
Fon Smith, Ark., to figure out who
childhood was mean to you.
Some folks eat and drink whatev- their prime suspect was in the
You are wrong when you say fat er they want and don't gain an holdup at a local cp~venience store.
people cat too much only because "it ounce. Others pay for every morsel The clerk remembered the pistol the
tastes go()!!." That 350 poulld of chocolate cake or ice cream sun- suspect carried and the hard hat he
woman probably got that way dae.
wore . The name of the robber was
because she was trying to compenLife deals more gently with printed in bold letters· across the
sate for whatever was missing in her some of us than others. It is a fact front of his hat.
life by filling the emptiness with that the people who li~e in the UnitFour hours after the holdup, the

sati~.~. ~~~~JlWIJIJ]~~·:;:;~c:·;::~:!(~::~i':.::;:ii:!;l:i·.':~

Octo~r 11

MOnday, October 11, 1~

Ann blasts reader's belligerent attitude on ·overweight peopl~
Dear Ann Landers: I have read qualify as a chemical addiction.
several letters in your column that Obesity is due to gluttony. There are
dealt with obesity. but I have yet to very few signs of obesity in India.
read one that addresses the fact that They cannot afford excesses such as
obesity is not a disease or a chemical overeating, so they don't get fat. Please, Ann, let us not shed any
addiction.
·
With the .few exceptions where tears for that 350 pound woman who
obes ity is caused by a glandular can't wedge herself into an airplane
malfunctiOn, it is simply caused by seat. She got that way by choice. She
wasn't hooked on chemicals.
eating too much .
If everyone ate and drank everyUnl1ke smokmg. doing drugs or
thing
they wanted, the world would
drinking alcohol. there is nothing in
be
full
of 350 pound hippos. And let
food that causes a chemical addic·
us
stop
pulling obesity in the same
tion in the human body.
category
as smoking. drugs and
'' Because it tastes good" does not

•

GaHipolis. Ohio 45631 EOE.MJFIH ,
SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY and EASY LISTEN·
INGI Call 1-800-469·8164 For
Appointment To Come To Nashvilla. Tennessee An d Audition
For Major Record Producers. In·
ternet: www.wcin.ac

Stat8 Tested CHHA 's Needed
For Exp11nding Home Heallh Pro·
vider. Starting Wage $7 .25 Hr.
Call 740·441 -1977 For More In·

10rma110n.
Wanled: Splicers For Telephone
Conskuction CO. Must Be Eligible
To Work For G.T.E. Home Even-

ings: 4:30-11 :00 P.M. 740-4&lt;63184; Olfico gays: 8:00-4:00 74o288-4165: Mobile: A.M.6:30 -5:30
740-441-7877.
WAREHOUSE /PURCHASE

No EK:per. Needed. We Will Train
You in Shipping/ Receiving And
Forklllts . Computer Knowledge

~lui . Excellenl Salary, Benellls
And Promotions. H.S. Grads
Ages 17 -30, Willing To Relocate
At Our Ellj)tlnso, Call HOQ.5331857.
WORK FROM HOME. $800 $4,500 !Month. can 1-188·2349897. www.celh-911.oomlhomo
Worll Part·Time /Full-Time. Oamonotrating Beauty Products
With An . lntarnetlo~al Cosmetic
Company, cao Ashley, 140·441~

11182.

I

�. . ..
'

'

l

•

• '

..

'' fl'

Pilge 8 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

BRIDOI
PHILLIP
ALDER

540 Miscellaneous
,, GoiHpolla c...., College
(Careers Closs To Heme)
Cell Tooay• 741&gt;-446-4367.
1·600-214-0452.
Reg 090·05-127&lt;B

180

Wanted To

Do

A&amp;J 's Cleaning Service, residenllat and bus1ness Call before

7.00pm, 740·992·9913 or 740·
992·2578.
CO&lt;ptt tnd Upholott~

Ctoonlng.
Our safe, low motsture so11 eKtraction method dMp cleans carpet and upholstery. No odor, no
tuss and m1n1mum drying 11me.

(1 ·2 hrs) Call Clearly Clean lor
~.. estomate. (304)675-4040
· Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the m111 just call

304·675-1957.
Handyman seeking work, avail·

ablenow.740-949-1035
Honest. Dependable, Weekly
House Cleaning . Reasonable

Cash For Rema ining Paym9nt s

On Pr o pe l!~ So ld! Mortga ges!
Annult test Sentements! lmme·
dtate Ouo teslll •Nobody Bea ls
Our Price s. ' Nalional Contract
Buyers 800· 490 ·073 1 Ext 101
WWN.natlonalcontractbuyers.can

$$$ OVERDUE BILLSIII $$$ ::Onsoltdate Debts! Same Day Appro-

val NO APPLICATION FEESII 1·
800-863-9006 Ext. 936. www.help-

Will prov'de careglving lor elderly Male or Female, Monday thru
Friday. 9-5. (304)675-2617.
Will take care of elderly in my
home . eKperlenced, 740-992·

7526.

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

$20 ·$40 IHOUR Easy Medical
Billing Full Tramlng. Computer Re-

CONSOLIDATE DEBT. Reduced
Mon!hly Payments 20 ·50% Save
Thousands Of Dollars In Interest

Non-Prohl TCC 800·758·31144

3 BA Aepos /Foreclosures. Fee.
4% Down. For Listings/ Payment

CREDIT PROSELMS'

Ootails 1·600-719-3001 x11&amp;5

· AVOid Bankruplcyt!t
' Stop Collection Callslll
• Low Payments !II

House and lot for sale· 4 bed·
rooms, two baths, located In Car·

Free Consumer Counsaung Call

terms, contact 08\lkt, 1·800·333·

6910.

CREDIT PROBLEMS Slop Hero.

Texas Road. Gallipolis Clly

We Can Help . Loans Available .

$3.000 And Up No Fee 1·877·
663-9269 Ext. 221 .
CREDIT REAPIRI AS SEENON
TV! Erase Bad Credit Legally.
Free lnlo. 868-659·2560
FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
Apphcallon W JS8rv1ce. Reouce

Payments To 65% IICASH IN·
CENTIVE OFFERII Call 1-600·
328·8510 Ext. 29

INOTICE!

Payments 20 ·40'1'. Call 800·700·
6812 x 1001 For FREE Consulta-

the olfering.
2.1 Contt /Min. PHONE CARD
Routt. EASY $$ MONEY!' Local
Areal Earn $500 · $5,000 IWk .
CASHI FREE Info 1·800·997·
9668, 24 Hrs.
A2.11e PHONE CARD Routt
EASY $$ MONEY! Local Area.
Earn $500 -$5.000 !Wk. CASH!
FREE Info 1·600-997·9888.
A Money ~a chine Be Your Own
Boss Get Your life Back. Home Based Bus1ness Manulacturer

Direct. Buy 30 Candy Machines
$9 ,995 Free Video. VENDSTAR
HI00·998·VEND
A truly revolutiOnary and tKPIO·
s1ve opporttJllty that will allow you
10 earn a 5·6 figu re annual in·
come Seno SASE for free lnfor·
matlon to ·po Box 976. Mason .

WV25260.
ABSOLUTELY NO $$$ DOWN.
HERSHEY. NABISCO. COKE
VENDING ROUTES SECURED &amp;
GUARANTEED LOCATIONS
FIN . AVAIL CA~l 1·877-933·
9461.

tion www.debtdebt com

Annuities, And Government Farm
Paymenls. Also Purchas1ng lot·
tenas And Private Mortgages.
Call Settlement Cap1tal , 1-800·
959-0006 www.settlementcapl·
lal com

Per Week . www.secrels2suc-

ee18.comlspaclal7080
MEDICAL BILLER Up to $15 •
S45 /Hr Madteat Boiling Software

START YOUR OWN VENDING
Bulinoaa For Ao ltnle As $10001
ALt CASH BUSINESSII 1-800·
:nd-21185, 24 Hrs
YEIIDING: lazy Persons Dream.
Fow Hrs. • Groat Income. Priced
'To Sell. Free Brochure 800·820• 8781!.
WE ARE ENGERGIZING E·
COMMERCE ON THE INTER·
' NETIII Haw Your Own Turn ·Key
Onllnt BUiinlll Through •HAND
TECHNOLOGY'. Low Start-Up
Cost Glveo You A Complete
Package With Mentorlng And
Training To Halp You Sueoaod.
C1H !von Turnor, 871·324·8135

rcmsee.

WOrk•WIII1 PUI&gt;IIely Traded, O&amp;B
Ra1ad eo,npony To Ganoralt Six
Flguroa 190 Dayan Not MLMI!I
IIQ0,743-8529.

220 Money to Loan
"T~E CREDIT DOCTOR' w,
Rtpalr Web Slle At www.erod·
·llmd com 801).733-0223.

350

F1ve Room~ And Parllal
Basement, Ownet Will Finance

Wnh tO% Down 740-441-1106.
320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
""LOOKI""
s Bedro9ms. 2 112 Baths. over
2,000 sq 11. . lor less than $400
mo. FREE delivery &amp; set. 1-600·
946-5678.
121155 mob1le home wilh room,

740-742·2652.
14160 Ft. SpaciOus 2 bedroom, t
bath , complete with carport and

Lol! (740)-446·8611 Leave Mas·
sage I
14x70 tra1ler 3 br. $3500 . 080
also to give away 12x6!5 trailer

304·578·2890.
14x70 W1th EKpando, Good Condillon, $6,500, 740-448·8112, 740.

First Avenue, Gallipolis, 1 Bod·
room Apartment. 740 -4.t6- 1088,

or Weekend&amp; 7~4Hl952.
Grac1ous living. 1 and 2 bedroom
aparlments at VIllage Manor and
Rl\'arsldt Apartments in Middle·

Lots ~ Acreage

2.44 Acrea , Homesite, Green

TownShip, Gallta County, SceniC,

Ou1et, Close To Gallipolis . Soma

ReolriC11ons. 740-245-5776
3.35 Acres. Corner ol Foglesong
aM Hanging Rock Road tn Ma-

son $25 ,000 OBO,
(304)862·34601or882-2833

port. From $249·$373 Call740·
992·5064 . Equel Houalng Oppor·
tunlles.
·
Modorn-1BR. All utilities paid,
except electric. GallipOlis Farry
Area. S250

GALLIA COUNTY
23ACRES
2 miles Olf SR 7 &amp; SA 218. South
01 Gallipolis. Singlowidas Allowed.
Rough, Mostly Woodad, Road AI·
ready Cutin. $27,000
20 WOODED ACRES
Great For Hunting, Near Patriot,
Olf SA 141 &amp; SA 233. $23,000 On
New Road Built T"at Continues

1n10 wayne National Forest.
MEIGS COUNTY

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments. Includes Water

Sewage, Trash, $315/Mo., 740·
446-0006.
Small. 1BR Apt. PI Ploosant
Area. $195 . month. Evenings

(304)875-4975.

Mount's Tree Service "Ths Tree
Professionals• Bucket Truck
Service. Top., Trim , Removal,
Stump, Gnnding Free Estimates
Fully Insured, Works Comp. Bid-

1991 141h72f1 2 Bedrooma, 2

Baths. Shingle Roo!, Vinyl Siding,
Excellent Condition 516 .000.00
(740)~6113

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1581?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
1-11611-582·3345

OoublewiOOs Free Decor &amp; Furni·

ture
HURRY, HURRY, HURRY!
OAKWOOD HOMES,

. BARBOURS\IIllE, WV
600-363-6862.
DoubleWida Display Sate. All
units must go. Save thousands.
Oakwaocs Homes. N1tro. wv:

(304)755·5885

All rea! estate advertlsmg In
this newspaper is subJect to
the Federal Fair Housing Acl:

ol1968 wlloch makes nKlegaf
10 advertise "any preference,
hmrtatiOn or discnmlnauan
based on race, color, reNg10n,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any intention to

make any such preference,
!!nutation Of discrimination •
Th1s newspaper will not
know1ngly accept
adVertisements for real estate
which IS In VIO\aflon Of the
taw. Out readers are hereby

informed lhet an dwelling&amp;
advertised 1n this newspapa'
c

are available on an equal
opportunity b8s1s.

Free Money/Cash Rebates. that
can b~ used towards your down
payment , only at Oakwood

Homes, N11ro. WV. (304)755·
5865
HUD Homos Approval By Phone ,
Smgles Or
3583

Oo~bles,

740·4.t6·

limited Ol!er. 1999 Double Wida ,
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, $1799 Down,
$275 00 per month . Delivered
ard sat up. CoN· 1·801).946·5678

M0¥1ng Out Of A-. Must sell at
sacnlice. 98 S. W., Like New .

(304)736-9102.
MOVING OUT OF AREA: Must
Sell AI Sacrafiee, 1998 SW, like
New, 304-733-9102
New 3BR 2 Bat~. 14 Wldo. $500
Down, $210. per mo. Free AM". 1·

6oo-e9Hm.

REAL ESTATE

Now 4BR 16 w•do. $500 Down,
$245. per mo. Free Air , 1·800·

310 Homes lor Sale
$ DOW ,

0
N. HOMES. NO CREDIT
NEEDED•
GOV'T
FORE·
CLOSURES! CALL NOW FOR
REGISTRATION! 1_600 •434•
2434 EXT. 3205 _(NO FEE)
3 Bedroom House, W/3 Acrea

Land. Few Fruit Treao . 2 Bod·
rooms. Beth·Upatalrs. 1 8tdroom
Front Room Dining Room, Utility

Room, Kitchen, Bath Downltalrs.
Sits On Storys Run Road, 011 Route 7, lnlormallon: (740)·387·
7578 Allor Noon, $40,500.00
080
3 Badrooms. 2 Bethe, _...11·3
Car Garage. 2 ·112 Acrao 5
Minutes From Holzer&amp;,
7~1.0132.
\

I8S,o0o.

3 Bedrooms. 11112 Ball\, Ranch
Style Home, Excellent Condition,
On Tho Corner Of Klnoon &amp; Taodora Ga!lpolts. Onto. (740)-448·
181!8 Ewningl.
~ lleOOiom Homo lor Bale. Wl1lt 2
Acml (741))-38IHISI6

A ZEIIO% DOWN l.OMI
No Down Payment Required With
Govornmonl S~onsorod Loan.
Good Crtdll And Steadr lnoome
Required. Call For More lnlcrmo·
1lon Ard For Otltlr Flrlaneing ap.
Ilona . lndoptndence Mortgage
Services. HI00:84S.Q038.

69Hn7
New OoubleWide Repo, never
lived 1n, sUit under warranty.

(304)755-7191 .
SChull F1esta 14x70 3 Bedrooms.
1 Bath. Vinyl Siding, Shingle Roo!,
2'x6' Walls Total Etectnc, Free N

C. Prlcad To Move. French City
Homes. Polnl PtoasonCwv. :!04875-1400.
Schult New Gonorat»n Sectional

.28'x52' Featuring Sc~ull Country

Klle~en, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Batl\a
Sate Prlcad, French City Hornoo:
Point Pleasant. WV. 304·8751400.

Sohun New Gonera11on Settlonol
28' x6~' LA. Family Room. Fir•
ptece. 4 Bedroom•. 2 Bathl
Thermopene Wlndowa

a Much

Morel .Priced To Movll French
Clly Homae. Point Ploasant, wv,
304-1175-1400.
Sohul1 New GOntllltiOn 16'172' 3
8-.troome, 2 Batna, VInyl Siding.
·Bhlngll Roof, 2'le' Willi. Gordon
Tub, Sk~llgnta. Tot1l Eltelrle,
Froe AIC, Salo Prleod. Fronen
Clly Homes, Polnt ·Pioasant, wv,
~-1175-1400 .

Spacial 26r80, 3 or 4BR. $1000
Down, $349. per mo. FrH Oo!lv·
ery &amp; Batup. 1-BQ0.811t-am.
Used Single Wldo. Around 5100
Per Monltl. cau: 1.8Q0.948-5678.

F1rewood for aale. All Hardwoods
Full Size, 314 Ton Truckload, Oellvared &amp; StiiCi&lt;ad $45. (304)882·
2555

Free PC ~uteril Call Nowlll &amp;
Le!lrn How ... 1n11rnet Merchant
Accounts. Custom Websilaa.

1-888-671~.

360

November 181. F'lease c811740-

Real Estate

992·2292.

Wanted

Upstairs Furnished. 3 Rooms.
We Buy land: 30 ·500 Acres. Balh, Cleen, No Petal Roleroneea
We Pay Cash. 1·800·213·6365, &amp; Deposit Required, 740·446·
1519.
Anthony Land Co.

460

RENTALS

Space for Rent

2 1ra11er loiS lor rant $ 75.00 eaen
across from New Haven grade
school304-862·2219.

410 Houeea for Rent

2 Bedrooms. $325/Mo.. + U1ill11os. River F'ark, Pomeroy (formerly
and Deposit. No Pets! 7~0-446 · Brown's). 1100 per month, 740·
949-2093.
4313.
2BR, 1BA &amp; lull

soze basement

lots ol land &amp; garden space

1400 sq. ft ol living space
(304)576-9991 . For rBnV18i!.
3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths, 2 Car Ga·

490

For Laaee

Pomeroy, Rt. 124, 600 sq. ft., CUI·
tomar parking, ale, corps~ coiling
fan, modern, $350/month, $150
deposM, 740-1149-2093.

Need Buyer To Make Ollar For
Large Group 01 Collectable /An·
11quos, Othar Misc . 740·448·
0639.
Nice Clothes· Dresses, Suits.

CoalS, Size 14, Very Good, 740·
446-6329.
Nice used lurnilure, and Ap·
pllances, Johnson a Used Furnl·

lura. (740)·446·1004, (740)·446-

~any time.

MERCHANOISE

3BR House In New Haven Area.

·

New 2 Bedroom Housa Near GOC
Also. 2 Bedroom Tra1ler, 740-4460893.
Pomeroy, 3 bedroom, $350 par
monrtl, deposit required, call 74()-

992-6445 aner l!pm.

Racine- three bedroom, $400

month plus u111111es, $200 daposit,
no pets, relerences required .

740-949·2621 .

Appliances:

Recondltloped

Washers. Dryero . Rangeo. RolrJgrators. 90 Day Guarantael
French City Maylag, 740·446·

n9S

For Sale: Reconditioned wash·
ers, dryers and refrigerators.

Thompsons Appliance. 3407
Jackson Awtnua. (304)875-73811.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES

420 Mobile Homee
for Rent
14x70 tra1ter, ttlree bedrooms.

to-

tat electric. no ptts, 1300 month
plus $150daposl1.740-742·2714.
Between Athens and Pomeroy, 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes,
$260·$300, 740.992·2167.
2 br. tra111r $275. a mon. + Ulil.+
$275. security dep. ref 11 must

4th St. Mason 304·675-1911
Furnished two bedioom, ale:,· no

pets. River Park. Pomeroy, 1300
per month, $150 deposit, 7~0·
949-2093.
440

Houaehold
Goods

Washers, dryers, refrigerators,

ranges. Skaggs Appliances. 78
Vine Stroot, Cat1740·446·739B.
1·888·818.0126.
Mapll T8llll w11 Leal &amp; 4 Chairs.
$125. Maple Drop-Leaf w/4
chOirs, $130. Round Oak Antique
Table. $165. &amp; Other old 1Urn .
(304)862·2438
Mollohan Carpals, Ouallly C.rpet
At Affordable Prien. 202 Clark
Chapel Road. 740-446-74-W, 740·
386.0173.
New And Used Furniture Store

Balow Holiday Inn. Kanauga .
Stop Ard Sea Us. 740-4ofe..4762.
R&amp;D's Ueed Furniture Groat Se·
tecllon. Priced To Sell! ·come

. And Browss. • Corner Of Route 7
&amp; Addoon Pike, 740-367.Q280.

530

Antiques

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques,

1124 E. Main Street, on At. t24

Apartments
for Rent

Pomeroy. Hours· M.T w. 10:00

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur-

a.m. to 6:00 ~.m ,, Sunday 1:00 to
8.00 p.m. 140·992·2526, Russ

nished end unturnished, atcurity

Moore~.

deposit required . no pats.
992·2218.

540

7~0·

Ou1 BUovillt Pike

Ping Pon Table: Paid $200.00 wll
Sola $60.00. Pompklna and
Gourds w111 Sail Whole Salol
(740)-245-5867
.,,
Premium Flrewoad, Oak &amp; Aah

Services, Inc. Toll-Free : 1·888·

838·4052.

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH71 MMX TECHNOLO·
GY Will Finance With

•o.• Down!

Put Cradi1 P.-mo No , _ . ,,
C.ilbl Freat-80CHI03-7537.
WANT A COMPUTER1717 BUT
NO CASH?? We Financo, '0'
Downl Post Credit PrOblema OKII
Even II T,.ned Down Beforoll Ra·
establish Your Credl111 .1·800·
859-0359.

WARMUP

Waterline Spec1al. 3/4 200 PSI
$21 .95 Par 100: 1' 200 PSI
.S.37 ,90 ,Per 100; All Brass Com·
·~ f1111ngs In Sild&lt; .
•
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacbon, Ohio. 1·600-537·9528'
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS

Ron Allison, 568 Watson Road,
BidweH, Oolo, 740-446-4336.
Whitfield (Fireplace Insert) Pollet
Stove, Advantage II·T, Motalllc
Black w1th brass tnm, BTU Ran·
ge?-40,000; Wotl\ 8 bags If wood

pel1els. (740)-448-2272. "95.00
Work Holst. Work Pony. Antique
Farm Wagon, Farm M~hlne~.
740-256-8203.
. ·.
550

Building
Supplies'

ows. lintels, etc. ClaUde Winters.

Rio Grandt, OH Call 740·245·
5121

560

1 Bedroom. Near Holzer's. Eco·

nom1cat Gas Heal, K1tchen Ap·

pllanees Furnished, $279/Mo , •
UtNIIo&amp;. 740-446-2957.
2 Bedrooms. Clost To Walmart,
UH1111o&amp; Paid. Oepoart, Aeiorences.
No Pots, 740-245-51193.
.

2bdrm. apts., total electriC, ap·
pllancaa lufnlshed. laundry room
factlitin, close to school In town.
Appllc:atlona ava1labla at VIllage

Groan Apts 1411 or call 740·192·
3711 . EOH. ,.
Apartment lorriiit in Pornon&gt;y, no
petS, 740-992·5858.
ApplicaUont Now A:ccepted For:

Smell But Extra Special One Bad·
room, Very Clean, S1ove. Frlg ..
Washer, Dryer. Total Elactrlc /AC.
Non-Smokers Only. No Pots,
$300 Oopotl1, $350/Mo., 740-2205, 740' 448·0S85, Aok For
Vllginfo.
BE.AUTIFUL APAATMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES llr JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
!rom $278 1o $31511. Walk 1o lhOp
&amp; movlu. Clll 7~0 -~40·2588 .

r.oat Houalng~.

1 Completed Doll House wl Lots
of furniture . $350 . DoiiHousa
ready lo assemble. will be 52"
tong, 45" tall, 27' wide. $250.
(304)882-2436.
21'x20' TWO CAR GARAGE Full
f25 Vr Manufacturers Warrantee

Complete With 10' Overhead I
Door $2,993.00 Can Deliver 1·
800-701-7912.
Basson Crlb·Solld Maple with
Maurau. $125. 1Wo Cherry Baa,
sen ChiS! ol Drawers. 1300 lor
both. (304)675-3440 alter 4PM.
Grubb's Piano.. tuning &amp; repairs.

Problems? Ntad Tunad? Calllho
piano Dr.740 448 ~e25
Hawaiian Ttrlyakl Roelpto 13
S.A.S.E Kema:Oino Fooda
PMB522 4224 Walatoo Avenue
15, Ho!IOiUIU. Hl88816

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rapalred, In 8locll.
Col
Ron EVIM,&amp;1-IOQ.a31-05211.

•
Loio Up To 30 lbe. In 30 Daya,
For 138, Ask Abo~l Frtt 81m·
ptaa, 740-441·1112.
IIOtiiLI . . ~ I .·
Furnaooo lnatlllltl Aa Low Ai
121.00 A Moni!&gt; wnn Approvec~·
Crtdl1, Elly Over The Phone
Bank Financing. Huge lnvtnlory
Of lntorthlrm, ..,Nler &amp; Collman
Furnecu, H•al Pumpo And
1'1111. VInyl ~ Kill 1281.115,
DOOfl I Windows, Wator Httl·
ora, Anchorl1 PlurM!rlg a Ellctrf.
~ Pl111. llfn111111 Moellt Horne
: HTQ I CLG 74tl-448·1418 Or 1·
BOQ.872·5987 Ganlpollo. 011.

'87 Z24, while, $750, call 304·
1182·3264
CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda's Toyota's,
Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport Ullll·
11os Fee Required. Can Now1 600n2·7470, EXT.7632.
CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUNDS. Honda's Toyota's,
Chovyo, Joeps, And Sport Utili·
tlal. Fee Required. C.! Nowl 600n2-7470: EXT.7832.
1993 Chevrolot lumina, 4 dr. sadan, 3.1 v-a. auto, ale, new tires,

non smoker, 53,000 mlleg, minor
passenger damage (runs &amp;

drlvas), asking $3,150 oeo. 740·
992·1508 ~ays , 740·949·2644

eves.

1970 Chevy Chevelle Aulomatlc

350 Stock Engine, /Transmission,

$3,000, 740-379-2568. .

1870 Et Camtno SS Clone 350
Rebuilt Motor. 350 Turbo Trans·
mission, Came From Florida, Now

Palnl, 740-2!16-1011.
1983 Oldo 2 Doors, Cutlass Su·
prrme Brougham, Black, One

Owner. Black, Full Power, AfT 5.0
Lnor V·8 Motor. E1eelllnt Cordi·
11on. S2m. 740-448·3217.
198S Mercury Cougar, Fair Con·
&lt;Ilion, 740-446-3479 After 5 P.M.
7~0-

Chevy Truck 1/2 Ton .cX4, Goot(:

• AK4
t AK

•KQ943

For Upcom•ng Winter, $3,5~0 .• '

740-36HI331 ,740·992*78· . , ::

----------.....;,.II
730 Vana &amp; 4·WDa ' , :!

..,
SCENERY tt

4~

engine. Extra Nice . (304)675-0:

• •I
•I

199~ Oldsmobile Silhouette vanii

loaded, 99,873 Milos,' 740-4410i!o
0955.
~11
1996 F· 350 Ford 4WD, powloi

stroke. air, lilt. crUise. PW. Ptl~
white with gray Interior, loaded~,,

$19,600, 67,000 mites. «&amp;11741· •~
992·6223 or 740·949·2045 avon-~

.
1998 Wlndstar 21,600 Miles,

,

UlgS.

,,

Ra·~

tails $22'075, Asking $18,000,:•
740-446-6987 A11ar 1 PM
'
740

Motorcyclea

1981 Harley Davidecin Low Rtde,~
Lowered Two Inches, lots Of':
Chroma , Excellent Condition.:.

$11,000, 7~0-448.00.7.

...

----~----------~
1988 Yamiha Warrior New Tires, ' •
Runs Good , Looks Good, St .~l
1996 Kawasaki 750 SS Jot $M~ ·

mE BORN LOSER

$2,800~
~

Low Hours With Trailer
740-441·1587

,..

T€0\t-lal..O(,I(N..l't'

$12,500080,740·992·2209.

~1111&amp;,

'Wv.'l', ['U.. &amp;.T "t'OU OCJt.ITEVeX
((J'oi()W 1\0IJ TO ~P\VIC*..TE '(OJ~

mudders. $2BOO, 74C·992· 41t:.; ;
atler 5Pm.
,,

.,
We:EKWD, [lOOK [·90, 10 t·TI,
TO

Tl-\t.-I~Tt.-mt:.T!

~~DE:I!:\1-\N..!

new•!

'i DO 50! JJ~i\\\1~ P~T

~"-'&lt; Nt.OU~P

'&lt;oom"

1996 Yamaha Tlmborwoll 4•'

wheeler with 1998 tllttraler,

.,

.

FN:.E.IT, 'ffiO~,

1989 Harley Davidson Softail,

t:- ..,so;ro 0er

m ""'&lt; N.l~r~
\\OU:£ 1

;-o..--...:

'

a.

750 Boata Motors · . '
lor Sale..
~

1990 Grand Am Wh11o. 4 Doors.
Auto, AJC, New Battery, Brakes,
Fresh Trans., Runs Good, $1,500
080, 740-441-1063.
1119i Dodge Shadow, 4 Cylinder,
5 Speed, Good Condition, Asking
$2,000, Serious Calls Only. 740·
441..Q816.
1991 Pontiac G.P. 4 Doors, Au·

tomaue, High Milas. 51.199 Neg.
74().448.0519 Or 7-3407.

1992 Pontiac Grand AM , 4
Doors, Cruise, Air, Stereo ICass·
111. PL. lOOK, New Body Style
740.245-9418.
.

1971 Seaslar, 16' lt'lh '

W

er. 70 HP, Chrysler 1 Motor. Mo
naads liUie wortc. $850. (304)578•
4016.
,
.I

BIG NATE

••• "

(',ET MIY

~

't'LL GET

;

YOU!I

§

I

Crall

60 HP Mariner. Low Hrs. Blmln~,
Top$3.800,140-256·1906.
1. ·;r
1995 17' Hydra Sport, 90 hp, 11

··'

i

Jo~nson. till trlm, trom~ ' moun &amp; ::

!railer, ready IQ go 17.800.

~

~

•

1997 18' Bass Tracker Pro Telm, ' •
60 hp. mariner wlt~ troHmg motor ~!
&amp; trailer. $6.700.
.
: .,
1998 16' 600 Sorios Nitro, 120 ~

II
.!.!.

Mercury, Dual Conoola, IHIII11~
banery Charger, trailer. suoo. ..,.,

THAT'S NOT ART..
'(OUR LINES ARE
TOO WIGGLY ..

1998 24' Swtatwattr po{'toon. 901;
hp. Johnson, tandem axle wllh!a

80'o

North

EllI

Pass
Pass

2•

Pass
Pass

Pass

"ECAUSE
YOU 8UMPED
M'&lt; EL80W ..

THAT'S

'(OU WEII.E TAKING
UP TOO MUCH

ROOM ..

I, I

0

By Phillip Alder
Would you like to run a casino?
With 2 percent or more in your favor
in all the games, apparently it is a
sure way to enjoy a steady income.
Of course, extraneous headaches like
food, staff and security might not
appeal to you. Yet maybe you can
find someone else, willing to work
. for a small salary, to talc:e care of
those .
Bridge experts lc:now that having
. a 2 percent edge in a line of play usu·
ally means nothing, all,ll sometimes
even less. Occasionally, the "incor·
recl''line of play works, whereas the
expert's approach fails •• but not
always. How would you play in four
spades here? The defenders take
three club tricks before casling adrift
in diamonds.
You have lost the three tricks that
you can afford. Both red suits are sol·
id, so the only potential problem is in
the trumps. However, with only four
missmg, surely a 3-1 or 2-2 split isn't
too much to request. And if the
trumps are splitting favorably, 'there
will be no further problems . So, you
should apply your mind to a 4-0 split.
If West has all four trumps, you
are down. But if East has all four, you
can pick them up as long as your first
spade play is low to the ac~. You must
keep both your honors, the kmg and
queen. hovering over East 's jack and
I 0. Then you can remove Eas1 's
spades without loss by twice leading
through him and covering his card as
cheaply as possible.
True. East will have all four
trumps only some 5 percent of the
time, but 5 percent is 5 percent. It's
a monumental edge for a casin.o boss,
and perhaps a match winner for a
bridge expert.

---==='

IOiclt.r
18 -llllrolll
19 lily
20 UnltiCI
22 Sollr 1y111tn

25 DlllncumiiiNd
27 Hawlllen
tlmlllr32-0 'Hira'aloc.
34 ••NonMn•1"
35 Cub
39 SceniiCI

43=-Dem
45 Cultlvltl
47 Bally
e~~rrllge

45 01111. ol NNW
49 Slrig under
the breath
50 Balllllll IIIII
52 Mlo- - lung
53 BandiUder
Brown
54 SuiiiAilve
ending

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Cempoa

... CfMied lrom
people. put . . PNMf'lt
ln11oo--roo-.TGdooy•&lt;M' OI-Y

Celrlbrttr ~etc:•"'
Eoch

ZBRT

RABJT

KAT

liS

R HN A X

'

ETJII

ZILN

XB

UBLRTLXHLN

KHXABYX

ZDLGR

LTK

GHRUBETJ

GBTRL'X

'B L T

D

~by,...,.

S B J

.

DLGJT

X H FT.'

.NHGT
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "I've grown In spirituality and as a human being since
I began to relate to Mo1her Earth." - Cyblll Shepherd

'::~:~;~' S© \\.JilCLAY
}AI.-L&amp;
£ ~s· ••••
- - - - - - 14ho4
POlLAN - - - - - 111010

~r

0

R-rantll lettort of the
four scrombltd words be·
...., to form four olmplt words

I

.I

LUCOCT

...

.........,o,_;,u,.,.....,.R.....,o-N----.1 ~,'

0

._

Sugar and vinegar are pre-

1 .__..1__.·1~....-.LI__..I_s.J _

.r. .,:. .

servattves So I have to decide

-r---;~:-:-~-::-'":'"--...., ill want to be in a jam or ••••

...H
,-A...,M--.s,_r_,,..., -fl ~. Complete

'

the chU&lt;kle quoted

by filling in the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

PR 11JT NUMBERfD LETTERS
IN tHESE SQUARES

e g~;~~~i~ L£m•s I I I .I I I I I
TO

SCIAM-UTS ANSWEIS
Greasy- Juice· Sadly- Junket- JUST the YEAR

and Englnos, All ~""' Aece ... :

Don 1gtlstung by htg~ priCes!
Shop rht clo•~fi&lt;d srctiolt.

To Over 10.000 Tranamtsstons ~ .

..'a,

"How soon will you be finished dressing?" the impalient husband asked his wife. "Nothing specific,' he
added, "JUST the YEAR."

OCTOBER11 I

I MONDAY

New Replacement Gaa Tanka .~ o'
&amp; R Auto. Ripley, wv. (30413~· ~

••

Campers &amp;
Motor Homea

13 Gree1, .. I

moclll

8

NO
BODY Cl-IECKJN6
IN ART ..
Tl-lEREr5

.,

01c Joints, 740-245-5677.

e Alflrmetlona

23 Giving hlnte
to
24 Relllt.te lOr

L -.J.-.J.l-..L._.L._.J__.J_

.....

Budget Priced Trantrillt~tona. 1

790

Weal

Modtl.'o
'I

:-::::-:-----::---'---1 _....,....,..,
__.:..:;_103:.:.·~------ 39:13 or 1·800-273-9329.
. 1993 Plymouth Ouster '8 cylinder
OHC, standard. tJeolient condl·
lion, looks groat. beautifLi Interior,
nleo wheels, 13500, 7~0 ·949·
2045 evenings.

r·.· ·wr•i'i'')t f"n "S ·"'"''

(',tRLS ~

=:-:-:----------:•
1989 20' Skipper
Pontoiln •:

Ranger. Late
(304)895·33114
.

~-

OON' T

1

minor right lront damage, runs
and drlvas. $1100, 740-992·1506
days or740-949·2644 evenings.

AKC Pomeranians , Female 1 Miles S3.995; 1991 Cavalier 2
year old, $150 00 Mate 1 year Doors . ...
•• 195. 1989 Pon uac eooo
$100.00 • Vory swoell (740)·256· LE 4 Doors. $2,195. Cook Mo1ors,

;'( ~'~'t

.. ALTHOUG.H ttl YOUit,
C-'!&gt;E, THE rHRME
SHOULD BE : r JusT

outdrlvo, hrsl $3500 OBO. 740- ,,
992· 1506 days or 740·949·284~ 1''

_740-:;:2-;45:-·92_13:.;.·-::---::----l
•
AKC Papers. Golden Retriever
Puppies, $250 Each Females,
S200 Each Males, 740-367-7706.

1993 Grand Am, 2 lloof1 $4,395;
1992 Olds AchiiVa 2 Doors, Low

' 'f '8Jf' "s'

1979 Starcrafl 23' cuddy cab1ri .l
boat, inbOard V-8, new c over;~
very good condition. no trailer, rk1 :1
evenings

9 Ape
to Ene
11 COUrt divider

5 Prevent,t.glllly
6 Foil
7 Word group1

The guaranteed
money machine

Red. 49,300 miles! 5 speed. 4.3 , ;

·-3 •

30M-million
4 --up
(repreued, like
lltiiOIIOnl)

31 ..,..
33 Atllmptlllt.
· 31 POI1erlor
37 - de Frenc:~~
31TUMI

A CHAN&amp;&amp; OF

·l

OfV;:J

III!'IOI'IIIIInce

Opening lead: • K

1991 Astra Van, AWD, $5,0
OBO, 1991 Plymouth Voyage .
$3,000 080. 740-992·2209.
~

7.":::::-::--=:--::--:-...;.::-,..,.-"
Aluminum Cap lor Long Bad Foro,:

,. ~

~.::;:

1994 CediiiiC OoVNie, loadad, ex·
cellent condition, calf 7&lt;40-992·
7506 alter Spm. ·

Two V.K.C. Reg. Femala Treeing
Walker Pups. Four Months Old. 1994 Plymouth Aeetalm 66,000
:1304::-:;)88=5·;:;;3394~,&lt;;..,;&lt;!,~----1 Mllea, Auto, Air, Crvlle, r111, Alu·
580
Frlllls
mlnum Whtlols. $3.600. oao 740y. '
255-6189.
;;::;-:;:::~!!'~ta:::;b;:.:le:;a_·~-11897 Camero. 40,000 milt._ loadRed Raspberries, Now ~vallabto, ad, 740 11611 0104.
Taylors Btr"' Patel\, Call In Evetnga, 740-245-g().l7.
1119 FORD IXPLORER 1100 I
=:-:-~=-:--:------1 oeo. s.tzad And eamng Locefly.
Walnuts Bought At Troyero FH. 1-600·~08· 7~11 Ext. 989&amp;.
Wooderau. Open Monday And Ftl.
Tl\ursaay Ard Saturday, Starting
9125 Till 10/30199, 9 Mllea Wta1 Ohio Valley Bank Will Offar For
01Gal1ipolls0o14f .
Solo By Public Auction A 1810 .
Pontile Grord Prix t309970 At
10:00 A.M. On 10123/99 At The
590
For Sate
0118 Annox, 143 ThiRI Ave., Gal·
llpolls, OH. Sold To Hl~host Bid·
• orTrade
der 'As Ia -Where Is Without
Registered Ar8lllan Stud Horoo. EKprtsstd Or Implied Warranty
(304)175-5821.Balo or~ .
6 May Bt Sttn By.Calllng The
C:OIItedon DIP! At 740-441-1038.
0\18 ROIIMI The Right To AC·
FAf1r.l ',IJPF'LI[ ~
ctp1 IRoltct Any &amp; All Bids, &amp;
&amp; LIVESTOCK
Withdraw Items Fro'!l Sate Prior
'To Sole. Terms 01 Sale: CASH
OR CIRTIFIED CHECK.

a.

110 flfm ·Equlpmtnt

SEI1VICES

BASEMENT
IIIATERPROOI'tHCI
Unconditional llftllme guarantee
Local relerencts furntshed.
1abllahad 11175. Call 24 Hrs (740)

e.;..

446·0870, 1·800·287-0578: Rag.
ers Waterprooling.
All lypas of mason"' worlc brick
blOCk, slona, concrete,

20 yeari

ex,.rlence, lree estimltoa

773-9550.

•ft•

. -·

Appliance Parts Ard 'Service: All
Nama Brands· Over :15 Yoara Ex·
pertence All Work Guaranteed
~;:;ch City Maytag. 7~a. 446 :

•100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE IM•
· ' POUND. HOntii'S Toyota's. Cht· C&amp;C Gintrol H01111&gt; Ml~·
t2 Poncltrosa earue trllltr (14'1 """ Jlepe &amp; •--rt Utili!'· c ·
tor 1111. St500 flr01, ·740'1t2· NowiiOQ.73Q.7772:
.,.,,
• """ EXT. 8336.
••· an tononco· Painting, vln~l•ldlng
803S.
earpentry, dooR, wlndowa be1ha'

830 Mustang Skid Loader. 720 Trucks for Sate
$6,750, Or Tradt II For Ttrmltt 1171 GMC 314 Ton $13,000 Now
Backhoe, 7 - 1 0.
Por1a, Price $1,100 Gall740-2!16ln1trno1f0nli TD-911 DOzer Poww [ ,.11_01!;;;.•;,;Aik;.;.;..For;;.k;;;.._ _ __;....
Shih And Winch Good Undtr 1HI NIIIID Pick·Up Good Worl! .
~. $13,400, 740-371-91!81.
'llur:l!, ~ ~. 1400, 740-2&amp;e8101.
.

130

WHAT I NEED 15

'

stereo, tan with tan cloth interior,

pupp11s for satel'i$100 lor mates.

BARNEY

1989 Chevrolet Blazer S-10 4x4,,
106,000 mUtt, sunroof, ale, newf:
t1res, new paint, asking· $4100 •,

1993 Chevy S-10 Tahoe

1 Dr811811CV·
2 Mil. gill

30~

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

4

080, call 740·949·2644 ev
lngs or 740.992-1506 days.

2t Flomln' 55

• 8 53

' ,.

1999 400 EX Exce llent Shal"!r '
$4,400,080 740-448·1627.
·.;~

1966 Plymouth Fur)' 88, 740·4467104
.

• A 9 4

Sc!ulh

DOWN

lflultrltor

• Q98

shaft. power windows, powen,
brakes, aif cond 304-882·2042. •,

AKC German Shepherd Puppies,

S150 lor females. 304-n:~-sato.

vorslly Alo 1235/Mo.. Plus Da·
~~t~~eble October 121h,

drive,:

renllll
55 Wlpel out
57 POll Dlckln1011 .
55 MOll doclt.

llllum

• J 10 8 7
• J 85

• tO 7 4 3
• K Q. tO 2

21=

..,.,_.,,

a28 En'**'
Aitdeao

Eaet

•• to 9 7 6 a

150alT Larlll, 302 fuel lrljeeUdn,
,auto .. naw american racing rtm1, ,,
new tires, towing package,re11ea;•

:b::ro::llas•'-'$,_13"',7"'00"'.,_7:'40-,_992=-11.;;.520=·~
' ::
760 Auto Parts &amp; ' ,:
Accesaorles
•'

up to cook on . $200 OBO.
(304)576-2343.
.45 KW Kohler Generator 6 Cylln·
dor Dle&amp;el 63 Hours On un11
$5.500; 740-2!16-1506

,.
77,000 actual miles, Ford F¥-::

"'PicniC"

, ....1.
41AcChllrlaM
7 Hlghwly12 .Mcilllllillllllll 42 True-blue
11 lunclle (lr8ln) 44 H.B. etudent'l
14 ln8ulllclenl
4*llftcN
11 Blllllul mount 45 Coel unit
11 Crul11or
45lklm.... hll1
e.tllcll
'41HolyP*e
17-Vegel
51 llo.. epl!ldlly
,. IA8 empio)'ll, 55 c.rt.ln
23 Mlrcury or

• J 7· 6

-

hitch, new heavy duty.

lo-11-llt

• A 6 52
• Q z
• J 8 52

E.EK&amp;MEEK

1997 350 XL 7.3 DIIHI Automat•
le. Cab &amp; Chassis. 38.000 mlltr."1•
.A.·_1.:..Cond:...:.•.:..
'llon:...:.(7_~;.;0)..:;·25H058,:.:_;:,;..:...;.-T' 1°

1993 Dodge Shadow Loaded. 3.0
5 Puppies, 2 Males. 3 Females, V-6. $1,700, OBO 740·446·2247
Eskmo Spitz. $75 Eeell. Mother &amp; 339-0336
'
FSihor On Promises. No Papers.
740-446·3261
1993 Fora Escort LX, 4 door.
-:::-::-;:._-:-~-:--:---1 60,000 miles. air. power mlrrora,

good condition Used approx·
lmately 2 Winters. Lid will raise

1 Bedroom. 2 Blocks From Unl·

1500 CARS FROM .500111 Buy
Pollee Impounds &amp; Re~os . fee.
CALL NOW For llsllngsl 1·800·
319-3323 x2156.

Pets for Sale

(King) Healing Stove for sate .

References Required, 136 Firat

Autos for Sala

1992 Ford Te11'90 Auto lAir, Runs
Groat. Good Work Car. $1.600
(740)·446-4782

Block. brick, sewer plpas, wind·

Nor1

1987 Dodge Caravon, Olttll.ot!1
condition, very reliable, S200q••
740-992·3686.
•• 1

740-448-6301, 1-1100-291·0098.

mant, Ronge, Re1rlgllrator, Dispo-

Avenue. Rear. Gallipolis. 740·
-2561 .

TRANSPOR fAllON

Duct Systems. Free Estimates, If
You Don't C1fl Us We Bolli Lose/

sal , Garage Provided. Water,

Sewage, GaJ1&gt;ago Paid. OeooeH &amp;

Rourd betel ol hay lor sale, 740.
1198-6211.

92% Gas Furnaces. Heat Pumps,

AKC Reg10terad Cocker Spaniol
pupp•os. llrst Sholl ard wormed,
bufl and buff &amp; ~hill spots. $200,
740-992·7371
Registered Ge(lnan Shepherd

1 Bedroom Unfurnished Apart·

&amp; Grain

1985 Monte Carlo, $400,
367-0331, 740-992-6976.

8162

Miscellaneous
Merchandlae

Hay

2 Doors, Hardtop New Paint New

STEEL BUILDINGS · 7 O'NLYI 2 •
30x60, 40x80, 45x90, 2 ·51x120,
60x200. Free Delivaryll Must Llq·
uldaitll 1·801).21 1·9594 x-82.

rage, 1 Acre Lot. Rlver Valley 1

Addavltle School DIStrict. 740·
367-7706

740-S92·2322, 7-.3531.

710

SOCIAL SECURITY tliSABILITY
Ctolm Donlad? We S~ectaltze tn
Appeals And Hearings FREE
CONSULTATION . Bonelli Team

Road. 740-446-6494.

menta Welcome, Hauling Avail·
ablt, Athens LIVIIIQCk Sates,

. New Bu~noss7 ... Poor Cradl11 ....
OKIII Almost Ever'j Buelnoss Approved. Low Monthly Paymonta.

dryer, ell utilities paid . 4vallable

www.coun'trytyme.oom

Special Fall Feodor Call Sale:
Saturday, October 23, 1999, 1
P.M. C.nll May Be BrotJQhl ln.Af·
tar 4 PM On Friday. All Consign·

640

Selling 1 Acre GJound PaKton

Anthooy lard Co,ltd.,

Club Catvaa AI Brad Ralltd The
Grand Champion Sitar In 1G99
Mason County fair. 740·2~5·
9315.

Two registered qu~rtar hOrses for
181t, cafl740-898-3290.

$50 LOad, Full Slzt I'ICII·Up, D•
livered. 740-992-4568

Other Properties In Southern
Oolo.

homo with anaehad garage,

600-363·6662

330.

Two bedroom apartment lor rent,
compielely furnished , washer/

For Free Maps On The&amp;e And

1999 Doublewlde Repo Never ' fenced back yard . large lot. at
L1ved In New Home Warranty 0 Meadow Land Estates, Pt. Plea&amp;·
Down II Ouahlied, 740-448·3093, . ant, $600 month plus references
Oakwood, GanipoiiS, Ooly!l
and daposlt, 304·82~·2460.

Want A Home, Don't Have Land?
. We Do, Hurry Only 10 LOIS left,

COMPUTERS • SO Down . low
Monthly Poymento. Y2K Compll·
ant. Almost Everyone Approved.
Call FIROCOM Advanced Tach·
nologloo 1·800·811·3476 Ext.

1-1100·~13-6365

Near Danville &amp; Rutland, Off SFI
325, 5 &amp; 10 Acree, $9,500+ Call

Three' bedroom all eletlrlc ranch

well , OH Call Ard Save, 1-800·
838·9568. 740·388·9648. Owner 4BR, 2BA, $499. Down, $259 mo.
(304)755·5566
Ad&lt; lolount.

dies call alter 6 pm. 304·675·
7223

Tara Townhouse Apartments.
Very Spacious. 2 Bedrooms. 2
Floors, CA. 1 1/2 Bath. Fully Car·
paled, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patoo, Start $350/Mo. No Pots,
Lease Plua Security Depoak Ro·
qu lred, Allor 5, 740·446·0101,
Beloro 5. 7-3081

1990 ~anYIIII14110 2 Badrooms,
2 Betht, Exee11ant Condition, 740-1n8.

Proleeslonal
· Services

deposit.

mont, call740-992-9191.

Real Estate Contract, In surance
Annuity. Highest Prices. Free

230

+

Britannia, 6sito, Groovy beanie
babies all 3 Ho l1day toddles &amp;
many more beanie babies &amp; bud-

One bedroom furnished apar!·

RECEIVING PAYMENTS? lri·
vas1or Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller F1nanced Mortgage,
Quotes Why Wal11 Call Rich. 1·
600-668-6450.

mo

Call : (304)675-1371 or675·3230.

1987 Kawasaki KX80, Now Jug ,
Naw Pls!On. Groat Cond1ion, Runs
Greet. 740-367-G306.

Company Needs People To Pro·
cell Medical Claims From Home.

Training Provided . Must Own
Computers 1·600·&lt;34·5518 Ext
867.
MEDICAL BILLING Unllmltad In·
come Rotenlial. No Experience
Necossa(y Free lnlormatoon &amp;
·
CO· AOM. lnveotment _$4 ,995 . .
SU95 Financing Available IS·
land Autometed Medical Servlc·
es. tne. 800·322: 1139, Ext. oso.
-In KY. IN. CT.

(304)675·4123

depos~. (~)675·1651.

EARN UP TO .540 AN HOUR

FREE SECRETS OF MAKING
MONEYI EaSily Make $5,000+

tng In Henderson tor ren1, lease,

1972 Needs Small Repairs, 7&lt;0.
386·9830.

AT HOME DATA ENTRY $OUT·
STANDING INCOME$$! Process
-•cal /Dental Claims. Compu!Or
Required Will Train 1·800·289·
~ I 59 Ext. 54.

Free Info Package 1·800·831·
2385. 2Uirs.. Ext. 63

' Efficiency Apanment beside Wal·
Mart $400 00 Uflltfi Paid' (740)·
3,000 Sq. Ft. Commercial Build· -:1515

dation. 55.000 • $200.000. Bad
Cradll O.K. Fee 1·800·770·0092,
Ext 215

age ·Cal-1·800·766·6849, 24 Hrs.
XT27

Send Us A One Page Form We
Do The Rest No Direct Selling.

Buslneai and
Buildings

$225 month plus ulllllles, plus 510

SI.OOO A Dey. No Selling. Not

www.giolsmochlnlx.oom

340

Kitchen, WID, Non Smoking! No
Pe!SI Raferenee &amp; Ooposlt (740)·
-0139

256-6251.

MLM. For Free lnformatton Pack·

EARN $90,000 YEARLY Re~alr·
log. NOT Replacing, long Craci&lt;s
In WlndShiOidS. Fret VIdeO 1·
8Q0·82&amp;·8523 US /Canada.

House. 740-38H504.

Downtown-Very nlee up1111ra 2
Bedroom, all Electric, Complete

Need A Loan? Try Deb! Consoli-

ARE U LAZY1 I Am And Earn

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 ·20 Locai!Ons. $4K ·$10K .
$4,0bO +IMo., Income · All
CASH! 100% Flnanco Available
1.8Q0.3fl0.2615 · 24 HIS.

Scnool~.

storage-building, Set-up on rental

GET YOUR CASH NOWI Oldest
Buyers 01 Struclurtd S.111eman1S,

Barn, County Water, 3 Bedroom

panter. 51000 down, WAC.. easy

Now 1-600-786-6777

GET OUT OF DEBTI REDUCE Interest Rates! REDUCE Monthly

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

HOMES FROM $1H.30 /Mo. 1 ·

Merchandlae

26 Acres MIL, With 8 StaN HO&lt;I8

or sal.r Call Sonny Reynolds ,

HOME FORECLOSURES • NO
MONEY DOWN! NO CREDIT
NEEDEDI TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! 1·800·916·
9191 E1t.H5023.

quired. Call 1-688-889·7905 Ext
700

recommends that you do busi·
ness w1th people you ·know. and
NOT to send money through the
mail until you have ln~esltgaled

711-2340.

You r Government Farm Pay·
6228)

males caM 3()4..674-4623

6 Mo. Inspection Program! 1·8QO.

CASH Or LOANI Fa rm Capital
Will Pufcl'lase Of Loan Against

J1ms Drywall &amp; Construction .
New Construction &amp; Remodel/
Drywall , Siding, Roots, Addi tions. Pamting , etc (304)674-

mg . Commercial. Residential.
Reasonable Rates. Free tstl ·

Vegetallon , Mountain Views ! No

Ouelllylng, Low Down. Mk About

abla. Call Nowl 1·800·730·7772.
Ext 8040.

monts (CRPIPFC). Call Farm
Capllal 1-888 -FARM·ACT (327·

Klms Cleaning &amp; lntenor Paint·

ARIZONA RARE BUY! Pristine 40
Acre Ranches In Northwest Arl·
zona From Only $495/Aerel Lush

BeauUiul 4 bedroom, two bath,
pay·bllls com
fenced yard, established small
SFREE CASH NOW$ From engine shop or run your own
Weaitny Families Unloading Mil- business from large commercial
hans Of Dollars. To Help Minimize , bolldlng Plus good rentol home all
•Their Taxes Write Immediately · on one block m Racine , Ohto.
W1ndlalls, 847-A SECOND AVE , With or without extras. 740·9•9·
SUITE 1350, NE)'I YORK, NEW 2606
YORK 10017
Buy Homos From $10,000
' GUARANTEED APPROVAL' 1 ·3 Bedroom local Government
Bank Card, No Credit Check, No &amp; Bank Foreclosures. Financmg
Up-Front Cash Security Deposit Possible , For Listings Call 800·
Requ ired 'Must Be 18+ And 319-3323. Ext 1709.
Have Vahd Checktng Account' . FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Pro-Approval By Phone 1-600· Down! Gov 'l And Bank Repo's
689-1556
Being Sold Now! Financing Avail·

Roles. Free Estimates. (304)675·
2892

4623 or (304)6!4-0155.

11

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay

3 Bedrooms, 1 1/2 Baths, Brick
Ranch, Laundry Room, 2 C.r Ga·
rage. Approx. 1 Acre. 740·~46 ·
1393, Or740-«6·6612.

40 AUihor ol

ACROSS

Uvlllock

111811 Chelly ~~~ Silverado, Long
Bod, Plck·Up Truck. (30~)&amp;75·
2Uitl. · ·

-

noma

""""arid m;n F«

::a~•timalt cell Chet. 740·~·

llvlrlgatpn•a Baaomont Wotor
Proofing, on bostmont repalrl
done.• troa UII01otu, llfttlme
glllranttt. 12yfo on job experl·
..... (304)885-3887. -

840 Eteclricatand

"

• 500 Roward lor arreai/Conv. of
Refrlgel'ltton ·~
perton(a) who Seddli lrvm ·
1I1V 111m at Goillpl)lls, Fllr)'. Cltal I~-:-:--,----- Rtlldonttol cir "'!lllmlldll wtrltiQ;
_rlotC.!1ttntl.(3b4~
1191 Fonl'llangtf, •"ndtrd. 4
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5 yaei old Palomino mare, - . qllndlr, IOoka good, runa ..,.~ oonud · olectriCian .. Rldtno~~t
Eleetrleal,
WV00030e,
304-575 •
PI! broke. $750, 740-992-o357':"
~~=~·.:;~~IK, 1788.

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AITRO·ORAPH
,.

Tuesday, Oct 12, 1999
The aspeets indicate thai in the
year ahead you should .be able to
:_brini ,an ambitious projccllo fnoition.
It could be !IOIIlelhing yoo've worked
on for a long lime and would benefit
.many.
; LI!!RA (Sept 23-0c!. 23) Everyone remembers acllons betler than
-words. Something nice you go out of
your way to do for anotherloday will
ro...ver be crediled to you in a most
nauering way. Trying to pau:h up a
·broken romance? The Astro-Graph
.Mau:hmal&lt;er can help yoo unden11nd
what ro do to make lhe "'lotionship
Mail $2. 7S 1o Matchmaker, c/o
this newspaper, P.O. Bo• 17S8, Mur·
fay Hill Station, New York, NY
JOIS6.
·• SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) One
!WhO has yout inte,Sls II heart Will
triger something today, albeilaublle.
thai could have tremendous futu"'
r.otentlal , for -~trengthenlng your
nnanclal position.
SAOITI'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
~II It'll be •yoor natural charm thai

work.

Thank goodness yuu 'rc
othe" find so appealinsthat will gel
you whal you want 1oday withoul
bei~g agg,.,ssive'or fOrceful. People
will want lo do lhings for you: .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Don't even attempt to seek favors
from 1)te hard-hearted today. The people who will be the 1110f11 helpful and
come through for you will be those

with compas!'ionate oaturcs.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 191 .
Others will instinclively r&lt;:ali7.e it will
he a sound choice to look lo you for
'leadership llMiny. They'll sec thai
you'r&lt;: definitely lhe guy or sal who '
&lt;hnuld be up front
PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20)
Secrel ambilions you'"' nurturing
should conlinue to be given lop pri·
ority today. You'"' on the righl track
ood any new Slep you like brings you
closer to fulfillment.
• ARIES (Mar&lt;:h 21 -April {9) One
of your g"'a1est asset&lt; is your abili·
ty to p"'scnt things with wit and
humor, even when you're heing crit·
ical. Today this ottribute will he
prevalenl in all your dealings.
T.t.URUS' (April 20-May 20)

1.1

Tnurus

blessed with broad shoulders,
· because a matter thai onolh&lt;r ho&lt;
mismanaged may be a lash on your
hack today. You' ll be able 10 so11
lhings out rather quickly.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Con·

sidcr everyone's views or suggtslions
•

IOclay, especially your male's, when
analyzing a eli tical issue. Your spouse
may. be just the one 10 offer a sound

solulion.

I

•

CANCER (June 21-July 22) A
sharp innovation you'll make today
will liahten your load considerably
for now and in the furun:. It will mod·
ify a procedu"' for a task that was
always difficulllo perfonn.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Try to he
a bit more attentive today to friends
or loved ones of whom you've been
n bit neglectful in the past wO&lt;k.
What y011 share together will turn out
quile plcosonr.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 2~) You'll
end •op feeling "'oily good about
yourself 1cMiay if a family member is
in need of assistance and you arc
reody nod available 10 help oul. Be on
cull .
·

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I·

MO

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.. . . . . . . . .

. . . . .\. . .

...

fl#

..

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�'to~·-~ ~

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Monday, October 11, 1999

Pomeroy • Mlddlepqrt, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally
.. Sentinel

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Tuesday

Humane Society:· TH~~ Dog_Warden's Job
By Alden Waitt, Pre1ldent
Meigs County Humane Soclety
There is a man, a longtime resident of the county, who many people
will never meet, but one who has
affected and continues to affect the
lives of hundreds of dogs and pups.
Bill Dye, the Meigs County Dog
Warden, quietly, diligently, goes
about his work at the county fairgrounds, looking after the thousands
of lost, unwanted, dumped, neglect·
ed and recycled dogs that come
under his purview.
Section 955.12 of the Ohio
Revised Code states that the Ohio
Dog Wardens are responsible for a
great deal associated with maintain·
ing clean, habitable quarters for
impounded dogs and for investigating claims that livestock have been
allacked or killed by roaming dogs .
In addition, Dog Wardens arc
required to keep records of all
impounded dogs. to patrol their
respective counties and seize and
impound on sight all dogs found
running at large and all dogs more
than three months of age found not
wearing valid registration tags. ,
This is of course a lot easier if
peop le reporting the sightings would
confine the dogs unt1l the Dog Warden's arrival.

tomorrow: Sunny
Hlg~J: 70s; Low: 50s
'.

with party for 95th birthday

Friends and family members
gathered at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center on Sept. 5 for a celeb'ration of the 95th birthday of Flo·
ren.;e Circle.
A fall motif with leaves and baskets of colorful apples was used in
POMEROY - Meigs County the decorations for the party honorHealth Department immunization ing Miss Circle, a grade school
clinic Tuesday, 9 to II a.m. and. I to teacher for a total of 58 years.
3 p.m. at the Meigs Multipurpose
Her training started by attending
Center. Every child must be accom- summer classes at both Ohio Uni·
panied by a parent/legal guardian. versity and Rio Grande College durThe immunization record is to be ing her high school years at Racine.
presented. For more information
After receiving her teaching certifi·
call 992-6626.
cate she was employed three years
in Columbiana County, 22 years in
WEDNESDAY
Washington County and the remainRACINE - Racine Board of
ing 33 years in Meigs at Letart Ele·
Public Affairs meeting Wednesday, mentary Racine Elementary and
10:30 a.m. at the municipal build- kindergarten.
ing.
The afternoon was spent singing
FLORENCE CIRCLE
old songs and reminiscing about
THURSDAY
personal incidents shared with the Larry and Pat Circle.
POMEROY - Veterans Admin, honoree. Miss Circle often remarked
The honored guest is the daughter
istration Medical Center of Chilli- that she would like to be able to of late Sullivan and Clara Moore
cothe health care enrollment Thurs· teach 58 more years.
Circle and now resides at the Skilled
day, 10-noon and 1-2 p.m. at the
The party was hosted by Miss · Nursing Facility at Veterans MemoVeterans Service Office, II 7 Circle's brother, Douglas Circle, and rial Hospital in Pomeroy. She has
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. Proof of his family, Wayne and Linda Rus- been a lifelong member of the
military service required. Call 992- sell,. Harold and Sue Hager, and Carmel United Methodist Church.
2820 for an appointment.

'-----Community Calendar
' The Community Calendar is
puhlished as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meetings and special events. The
·calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
hems are printed only as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to be
printed a specific number of days.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Chapter 53, Disabled American Veterans, Monday, 6:30 p.m. covered
dish dinner; 7 p.m. meeting.
POINT PLEASANT- Revival
services, Monday through Oct. 16,
Gospel Lighthouse Church, off
Route '2, 7 p.m. each evening. Special singing, John Elswick, evange·
list.
REEDSVILLE - Revival services ,
Nazarene
Church,
Reedsville, Monday through Oct.
17 , 7 p.m each evening. Doug Carpenter of Charlotte N. C., evangelist.
POMEROY
Meigs Local
Bond ,Issue Campaign Committee,
Monday, 7 p.m. , Meigs High
'School Cafeteria. Information and
discussion of campaign strategies.
Don Poole, chairman.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Special
meeting, Eastern Local Board . of
Education, Monday, 5 p.m ., purpose being to consider action on
. building project.
POMEROY - Big Bend Farm
Antiques Club, Monday, 7:30 p.m
at Meigs Couiny Fairgrounds .

.I

REEDSVILLE - Ohio Univer·
sity College of Osteopathic Medi·
cine Childhood Immunization Program will provide free immunizations for all area children, from
birth through IS years, Thursday,
11-1 p.m. at Reed's Store 10
Reedsville and at McDonald's in
Pomeroy fro;, 2:30 to 4 p.m.

Matt Lauer wishes Bryant Gumbel the best
with early morning rival news show

NEW YORK (AP) - NBC
'"(oday" host Man Lauer is wishing
the best for his morning show predecessor-turned-rival Bryant Gumbel.
Bryant will be cp-hosting CBS's
new "Early Show," set to debut at 7
a.m. on Nov. I from a new storefront
POMEROY - Meigs County ,;;tudio in the General Motors buildRepublican Party annual bean dm· ing across from Central Park. Jane
ner Thursday, 6 p.m. at the Meigs Clayson will be Gumbel's co-host.
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
"I love the guy," Lauer said in
All welcome .
the Oct. 16 issue of TV Guide. "I
. .---------.iwiiaiiint;.nothin~ but the best for him. I

know he feels the same for me. I
know he's going to put on a quality
show. Other than that, what can I say
except we both have a job to do."
Not everyone is feeling neighbor·
ly toward Gumbel and his new
show. In September, a posh Fifth
Avenue hotel went to court in a bid
to stop CBS from using the plaza in
front of the General Motors Building for the "Early Show," citing
potential annoyances.

'

'

RACINE - CHOICE Home
E,&lt;jucation meeting Tuesday, 1-3
p.m: at Star Mill Park. In case of
rain, the meeting will be held at lhe
Pomeroy Library. For more information , call Tammy Jones at 9926'743.

AEP plants do

-

t~. . ~o

; . . ,,.
plants in New Have.n,
receflily· ·Contributed to the New
Haven· Volphteer Fire Department
and the Mason VFD and Emer·
gency Medical Service. .
Contri~uiions totaling S1,2SO
were ·recently · presented to the
New Have·n VFD by represents·
lives of the two . power · plants.
Mountaineer Plant donated $750
and Sporn.Plant donated $500. The
jilants made the ·donations to the
department in recognit;,m and
~preciation of tbe valuable servtces it provides to the community.
, Steven Duncan, assistant chief,
sai&lt;l the donations would be used
lor new equipment, supplies and
daily operations.
·, ~·we .are ·pleased to support
lo~.al emergency services such as
,
the New Haven Volunteer Fire Simpkins, right, p,.HI)JI, dOnatJons to Mlkkl
Department," said Carl Pettry, Young of the Mason EMS and Paul Johnson
administr11ti~e services supervisor of the Malon Volunteer Flrtl Department. ·

Mason Cou

Plant. "We ·vie'N
as ·an investment
' the community and the emergency professionals who serve it."
In addition, Mountaineer Plant
made donations to the Mason VFD
and EMS.
Paul Johnson, chief of the Mason
VFD, and Mikki Young, chief of
the Mason EMS, said the dona·
lions would be used for everyday
operations. Young said the EMS
would also put some of the contri •
bution tbward the purchase of new
equipment.
"We are pleased to make these
contributions," said Pam Simpkins, senior clerk at Mountaineer
Plant.
"These are great volunteers. We
know the money goes to good use
and is an investment ill' the community."
Young said it is nice to receive
the donation from the plant.

Due to the absence of a quorum of members, Mon- process of seeking Community Development Blo9k
day night's meeting of Middleport Village Council G1ant and Issue Two grant funding, which would
was rescheduled for Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
cover most of the cost of improvements. He no~ed
Steve Houchins, president of council, presided at that loans are also available, but that the village
the meeting in the absence of Mayor Sandy Iannarel- would · have to find "other funding" if loans and
· Ii. Also attending was Council member Beth Stivers. grants do not cover the full cost.
:; : 1ay Shutt of Floyll .!Jrowne Associates, the viiShutt said that he ;md the board are continuing to
'lage 's consulting engineers, briefly discussed a meet- investigate options relating to water improvements,.
ing held earlier in the day with the Board of Public . including the purchase of water from the Village of
Aj'fairs, in which propo!l"&lt;! sewer and water system Pomeroy or Leading Creek Conservancy District, as
improvements were reviewed.
well as the possible development of new well fields
Shutt distributed a schematic map showing the in the village.
proposed locations of new sewer lines and sewer
Shutt also . distribut~d copies of the Combined
manholes ill the areas of. Rutland Street and Laurel Sewer System Operational Plan, which his firm
Street.
recently completed. The plan is required by lbe EPA
-:: A new lift station has also been proposed for the as a part of the MPDS operating permit application
Laurel Street area.
process.
. When asked by Stivers if the improvements would
Jean Craig, Donald Stivers and Myron Duffield,
lfOSI residents of the village anything, Shutt said that members of the board, were also present at the meet·
his firm and the Board of Public Affairs are in the ing.

Good A.fr:en:won
·oal!tv·s

Vinyl Sale

Sentinel

sfctlon ·10 Pages ·

• 13 Patterns in stock
Easy Care- No Wax

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Sale Price

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• No Obligation Quotes
• Moving Furniture
• Removal of old carpet

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Pick 4: I~9-9-1

~'li,~ti~; 5: '1·12·16-27;32

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6-1·1; Dally 4: 3-8-2-4
o i9?!1 Ohty.YaJt.Y Publllhlna i;o.

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The county will provide $3,000 in program
income as a match.
.
The board also passed·a resolution authorizing Trussell to apply for New Horizon Fair
Housing funds, also through the CDBG program.
Bids were opened for new chairs for the
Department of Human Services, and were tabled
pending review and a recommendation by Director Michael Swisher. Bids were received from
Office Service and Supply of Middleport in the
amount of'$11,199, Quality Print Shop, also of
Middleport, in the amount of $13,859.71, and
Anderson's Furniture and Appliances of
Pomeroy, in the amount of $15,732.
The commissioners approved funds transfers
for the fair ho11sing office and the prosecuting
attorney's office.
Also present was Clerk Gloria Kloes.

IIY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
A make-up day for all shots will be held their immune system- are at risk when they
Sentinel news staff
on Nov. 2 from 9 to 11 a.m. only at the come in contact with someone who has the
! 'An apple a day inay keep the doctor away, Health Department.
flu.
~ut a better bet is probably a flu shot.
The Health Department h~s also secured
· According to Torres, people of any age
· Vaccinations for influenza will be offered BO pneumonia vaccines to be available to can develop pneumonia.
{o all Meigs Countians again this year by the residents for $15. Those shots can be given
Those particularly at risk include all
t.feigs County Health Department either free . at the same time residents are in for the flu adults aged 65 or older and young children .
or for a small fee.
vaccine.
afflicted with chronic illnesses.
' On Oct. 29 from 9 to 11 and 1 to 3 p.m.
Norma Torres, director of nursing at the
Anyone over two years of age who has a
l)urses will be giving the shots to residents Health Department, stressed that the flu can disease or condition that lowers the body's
ss:and over at the Senior Citizens Center.
be a serious illness leading to a variety of resistance to infection shoul~ be vaccinated,
. The shots arc free to senior citizens with complications.
said Torres, citing a directive from the Cen~edicare part A and B, and $Ito those with·
She said that those with chronic medical ter of Disease Control and Prevention.
ciui Medicare.
conditions should not go through the year
It was noted that one dose of pneumonia
: On Monday, Nov. 1, resident.s under age without a flu' shot. People with heart condi· vaccine is all that is needed for most people.
55-can get the shot for $2 at the Meigs Coun- tions, lung disease, asthma, kidney disea~e.
However, under some circumstances a
ty Health Department.
diabetes, an~mia- anything which weakens second dose may be given.

Carpet During This Savings S~mKIJiarl

Store Hours
·Mon- Sat
9:30 to 5:00

officeholders, rather than the commissioners.
Thornton said that he felt the board needs to
"take the lead" in offering extended hours, but
Davenport, in particular, said he felt it would be
unfair to other officeholders to open the courthouse on Tuesday evening without a discussion.
In other business, the commissioners
approved a resolution authorizing Grants
Administrator Jean Trussell to pursue $50,000 in
grant funds through the Community Development Block Grant Microenterprise Business
Development program.
The program, already in place in Meigs
County, inakes funding available, through a
revolving loan fund, for small businesses owned
by low and moderate-inoome applicants. Loan
payments )118de are then paid back into the
revolving fund to make loans available to other
1
applicants.

Purnpk.ln sellers
plays are popping up throughout the county. Hat'l, a "pouting
doll" appeat'l to be checking out the pumpkin selection at
Karen'a Greenhouse near Racine Monday afternoon.

elect/On Of directors

A second dose is recommended for those
people aged 65 and older who got their first
The annual election of the Bqard
dose when they were under 65 if five or
of Director~ for the Meigs County
more years have past since their first dose.
A second dose is also recommended for AgricultunjJ Society will be held at
those who have· cancer, leukemia, lym· the secretary's office on the fairphoma, kidney failure , or are taking medica- grounds, Monday, Nov. 1.
tion that lowers immunity such as
The polls will be open from 5 to
chemotherapy or long-term steroids.
9p.m.
·
Since the department has only 80 doses
Only residents of Meigs County
of tbe pneumonia vaccine, it will be admin- who hold membership certificates
istered on a "first come, first serve" basis, for at least 15 days before the date
Torres said.
of the election are permitted to
She asked that senior citizens bring their vote.
Medicare cards and that those with Medic·
To file for one of the open seats
aid cards bring them along so that the on the board, candidates must file a
charges can be appropriately handled.
petition signed by 10 or more mem·
bers who are residents of Meigs
County with Debbie Watson, secretary, 4245?._ W~&lt;;J.~ ~oad,cCQglviUe,
45723 at least Seven days 1'&gt;\:foll!lhe
annual election is scheduled.

agenc.ies

New doctor joins VMH

· NEW HAVEN VFD - Sporn Plant'a Gary Jones,
middle, anergy production manager, preaent Staven
Duncan a $500 donation for the New Haven Volunteer
Fire Depsrtmant. Carl Pattry, !aft, administrative sar·
vices S!,!parvlaor, preaented Duncan with a $750
check from the Mountaineer Plant.
"These types of donations are what keep us going," she said.

Middl·e port Council reschedules meeting

Pick Up Some Dynamite Deals On Top·Qu,alit)

MIDDLEPORT - Low iinpact
aerobics, Ash Street Baptist
Church, Middleport, Tuesday, 6
p,m. Public welcome.

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Meigs County Health Department announces fall flu shot clinics Meig~ fair~rdsets

Sale Price

$16r/vd

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

By BRIAN 'J, REED
·
Sentinel Newa Staff
.
,
· . 'The Meigs County Commissioners may be
the first officeholders in the Meigs County Cour·
thouse tQ offer extended office hours.
, At Tuesday's meeting of the commissioners,
Commissioner ·Jeffrey ·Thornton suggested that
ihe· board open the courthouse and their office
from 10 a.m. until 7 ·p.m. on Tuesday evenings.
. While Thornton's motion died for lack of a
second, Commissioners Janet Howard and Mick
Davenport recommended meeting with all
officeholders in the courthouse to discuss
extended hours.
··:A recent public meeting was held to consider
extended courthouse hours, but the decision to
open on an evening basis, or on Saturday mornlng; as some merchants and other residents have
suggested, is a decision to be made by individual

• 9 Colors

20 Colors • C.F.
• Scotchguard
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Commissioners may offer extended
office hours on Tuesday evenings

• 10 yr warranty

TUESDAY
•. POMEROY - Meigs County
Soard of elections meetmg , Tuesday, 9 a.m. The office will be
closed Monday in observance of
Cqlumbus Day.

-.,.'
'f

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''i'r)••'

-Page4

•
Volume 50, Number B7

RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education, special session, Monday, 7:30p.m., Southern
High School, to take action on site
work package for elementary
school.

· : POMEROY - Meigs Local
ftond Issue Campaign Committee
meeting Monday, 7 p.m. at the
~eigs High School Cafeteria.
Meeting will start as an informational meeting and then discussion
01' campaign strategies. All are welcpme. li'or more information, contact Don Pooh:, chairman of the
cQmmittee, at 992-2071 .

by Reel Sox

Hometown Newspaper

"We did away with it because
ATLANTA (AP)- The living
we never used it," Mrs.
room 'is dying.
Long a model of stuffy grace · McCutchen said. And with the
and fancy furniture, the tradition- couple's children out of the
al livin'g room - employed house , the two "kind of live in
rarely and off-limits to children the kitchen," she said.
"II all boils down to
and pets - has all but disaplifestyles," sbe said. "People just
peared from American homes.
Its replacement? A zone that don't entertain formally any more
gets daily use in the form of Inter, -don't have time.''
net browsing, television watchThe traditional living room • ·.
ing, eating, drinking, exercising has morphed into entertainment
or conducling business.
centers, libraries, home offices.
"The idea of this room that is exercise areas and private space
set apart that you only use when for older people who have moved ,
you have g~ests, like our parents · in with their children.
"Most of the time I find that
did 50 ytars ago - people are
not planning those in their people who request a formal livhome," said Ann Platz, an Adanta ing room are usingJ it for a
interior de~i~ner. "They are·real- piano," said John Slappey, a relil
. ly trying to Jind rooms they have estate agent in Buford who plans
multiple functions for."
to install a pool table in his living
Decoratol:s say the technolo,. room. "I've got a formal living
gy-saturatell 1990s. have made room and it's got furniture in
media roomS the current darling, there that's just collecting dust."
Living rooms once were the ·
with people packing in computers, stereol, big-screen televi- domain of people engaged in
sions, CD'.f.Iayers, home satellite more structured, less manic
' lifestyles, where guests were
systems a:nd video games.
"The ' younger , generation entertained formally, books were
wants' to 'buy all those electronic read and drinks were sipped by a
gadgets and you need a space to fireplace. Such a space doesn't
put theni' in. The living room goes accommodate the way people
away,.. . said Atlanta interior live anymore, Ms. Platz said.
designer Hugh James, who has
"We live in a fast-paced
world,
and we drive into MeDon· I ·
seen tile less·than-subtle shift
away from living rooms over the aid's. It's kind of instant living,"
last decade.
she said.
Living rooms also have '
Bill and Tricia McCutchen got
become
physically less distinct
rid of their living room in their
last rno've,their third in'IS years. since homeowners have begun
The couple instead hang out in a knocking down walls separating
sunroom that adjoins their large kitchens from dining areas, and
kitchtn in Roswell, an Atlanta dens from living rooms.
suburb.

~

Cleveland loses third
straight, eliminated

~' . '

out due to fast track lives

RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education special meeting
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the Southern
ltigh School to take action on site
work package.

Sports

....

Couple to celebrate anniversary Miss Florence Circle honored Traditional living room dying
RACINE - William and Hazel p.m.
Family, neighbors and friends are
invited to attend. The couple welcomes cards but requests that gifts
be omitted.
~

Jaguars crash the Jets 16-6, Page 5
Guidelines for visiting terminally ill, Page 6
Time Out For Tips, Page 10

TC)day:· Sunny. ·
l;flgh: 80s; Low: 50s

This section ·of the code funher1 bave.to be ki~led. .
·
, a~ interest in the future in st~ for
states that if a ."dog warden has rea- .. Btl) Dye 1s the one who 'people h1s charges.
.
son to believe that a dog is being concerned with their "civil rights" as
For he keeps most of h1s dogs as
treated inhumanely on the premises ••oog owners (read this as their right long as he can, hoptng that the
of it owner, keeper; or harborer, the 10 allow their dogs to run loose or owner will claim them ,or thai so~e­
warden shall apply to the court of their right as owners not to feed or one will see fit to prov1de them w1th
common pleas for the county in vet their dogs on a regular basis) a good, stable home.
which the premises are located for i:ritici:ie when he shows up to pick
On the day that surplus, unwantan order to enter the premises and, if thei r dogs up after neighbors have ed, unadopted dogs and pups must
necessary, seize the dog.'_'
{~mpl~ned.
be euthanized ::-;, what .~ill D~e
In this way, the Me1gs County ,.;. He 1s the one who watches own- refers to sadly as· D-Day - he ts
Dog Warden works closely with the ·etll guzzle beer on their front steps as silent and depressed.
Meigs County Humane Officer, ~
· y insist that they can't come up
Inaneffontoensurethatsome~f
Carol ·Lemley, to make certain at . · ~ the paltry amount of money the dogs Mr. Dye . adopts out m
abuse does not go unreported.
· ired by the county to buy dog October do not contnbute to the dog
Mr. Dye has seen his share of the tags.
overpopulation problem m our
myriad cruelties that humans inflict
· ~e watches as the owners of just county, the Meigs County Humane
on their -own and others' dogs and ~dog bring·her litters twice a year Soci~ty will happily assist any perpups.
t~e pouJI(I "to be adopted.'' The son who adopts a dog from the
He has dealt with enraged owners pllflpies of this dog and many other pound during the month.
and irate citizens - spurred on by pups he adopts out are often
Visit the pound today, find your
gossip , hearsay, and unsubstantiated rett
. ed, months later, as the ramifi- new family member, and call 992rumors - who have no clear under- cat ns Of canine adolescence 9051 for details.
standing of what a county dog war- bee&lt;mes apparent to the irresponsi- · The grant monies that make this
den in a poor county must deal with ble, owners.
poss,ible, from the Kenneth A. Scott
on a daily basis.
I have seen Bill deal gently with Charitable Trust, are named m llo~or
The code also does not address terrified, mistreated dogs of either . of Dorothea F1sher, the late ~e1gs
these situations. Few know that Mr. sex ~ well as bitches debilitated by County Humane Society, prestdent,
Dye has frequently had to repa1r repeated htters.
who launched the soc1e1y s spay and
fencing cut by owners who will not ·
I 'have listened to his concise neuter program.
pay the fee to get their Impounded assesM)Ients of dogs' personalities
dogs back; to contend with the hor- and 41$erved him cradle 'unwanted,
(Alden Waitt enjoys hearing
ror of cats and kittens thrown over discarded pups in his arms.
from her readers. Address com·
into the kennels by sadists with a
Made wise by years of dealing ments and questions about pet
grudge, or to cope with the abused, with ~~,eople who scoff at the idea of care and humane issues to her c/o
neglected dogs made vicious and sterili{~tion or regular vaccinations, The Daily SentineL)
m1tisocial by ill treatment, who will Mr. OY.e still, incredibly, maintains

Mr. and Mrs. William Fox

Fox of East Letart Road, Racine,
will celebrate their 60th wedding
anmversary at the Racine American
Legion Hall on Sunday, Oct. 17,
with an open reception from 2 to 4

October 12, 1999i

Weather

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MARIETTA, Ga. (AP) - Newt ates, and a judge has ruled that a
Gingrich has asked a judge for per- 33-year-old congressional aide,
mission to question one of his Callista Bisek, must testify about
wife's longtime friends in their her relationship with Gingrich.
pending divorce.
A decision is pending on what
Carol Villio of Warren, Ohio, documents Ms. Bisek must tu.rn
was a witness to a 1987 separation over.
agreement between Gingrich and
Gingrich, 56, separated from
his wife, Marianne. Ms. Villio and his wife of 18 years on May 10 and
Mrs. Gingrich, who grew up near filed for divorce July ~9.
·He had stepped down as House
Warren, have been friends since
the late 1970s.
speaker and resigned from ConThe motion, filed Monday in gress after the Republicans' relaCobb County Superior Court, was tively weak showing in last
not specific about what the former November's elections.
U.S. House speaker hopes to learn
The earlier separation, in 1987,
lasted several years before the
from Ms. Villio.
Mrs. Gingrich has received per- Gingriches reconciled in late 1993
mission to question a number of or early 1994, Gingrich's attorney
her husband's friends and associ- has said.

Veterans Memorial Hospital has
a new doctor in its Rural Health
Clinic located in the medical building across from the hospital on
Mulberry Drive in Pomeroy.
He is Rohit Kashyap, M. D., a
specialist in internal medicine.
A graduate of the Dehli University of Medical Science in New
Dehli, India, Dr. Kashyap has spent
the past three years at Wright Stale
University School of Medicine
where he completed his residency
in internal medicine.
The new doctor joins Khawaja
Rahman, M.D. and Patricia Smith,
RNC:SNP. at the clinic.
He is currently accepting
appointments at 992-3632.
He and his wife, Casey, a phar·
macist at Krogers, reside on
Riverview Drive in Pomeroy.

Rohlt Kashyap

·ohio riverfro.n t much different than in steamboat era

CINCINNATI·(AP)- The seen~ presented to tourists this "collection of shaky and soot-begrimed frames, blackened old
Buildings along the Public Landing, where the Cincinnati
week tit the Thll Stacks '99 celebration on both sides of the brick dwellings, windowless and tenantless wooden cottages." part of this week's events will take place, will be much brighter
Ohio River will be a kinder, gentler version of what it was
l!llllll•
than that.
really like along the riverfront in the steamboat era.
. "We touch everything up, match the paint and try to
Costumed actors will portray pioneers and musicians
make everything look decent again," said Mark Trierweil·
of t~e mid-1800s, when commerce traveled by river and
er, one of about 1,000 subcontractors and volunteers
industry and retail trade smacked uP against the Ohio in
preparing more than 100 acres of displays, booths and
Cincinnati and the Kentucky cities of Newport and Coventenainment.
'.
. ington.
.
"We take the beat-up old flats and spruce them·up, try
Riverfront life in Jhose days was a lot less refined 'than
to make them look wonderful. I came in with a crew, make
it will be for this week's events, which will feature visits .
that a task force, of scenic designers."
by about a dozen steamboats. '
.
·
.
By midday Monday, six boats - - the Creole Queen,
"Jt really wasn 'I a glamorous ' place," said .Ken
Celebration Belle, Colonel, Tom Sawyer, Music City
McMumn. a volupteer for.tlie Cincinn~ti Museum Genter
Queen, and Jonathan Padelford - had arrived, with most
whose ~pecialty is lh~ city:s history.
,
of the others due in by this morning. The 'celebration gets
_ "Ii was a work.ing w.aterfront. You're nqt going to have
under way Wednesday.
.
·
parasolsdown tilere unl~ss they're codling by carriage
Another three- the American Queen, Delta Queen and
and getting on th~ steamer. Ther!l were roustabouts' anc!1
·
• Mlssi~ippi Queen - are due Friday.
· bales of things being shipped." .
. · · . · '
Tall Stacks spokeswom,an Karen Bender said Mon&lt;lay
Lafcaclio Hearn; a Cincinnati newspaperman of the
that workers were at least 24 hours ahead of Schedule.'
1870s, wrote thatli'fe along the waterfront at that 3time
\~~~~~
jii;iiiiiiW~ii of
"They're doing the finishing touches on painiing, setting
attracted scam amsts and thieves, prostitutes, and levee
New C
La., 11 he PllPIIII the boat for Tall Stacka up booths," she said. "Now they're hanaing signs. We had ·
hands a,nd people down on their luck.
at
along tl)e Qhlci ~lver .ln downtown Clnt;:ln· enough time built into the schedule where we could have
He ~e~cribed one ; eighll9rhoo4 neanh~ ~iverfro)ll ~~a •. '~·
Tsll ~tiler Feltlvaf ~~s.Wedneaday through Sunday, ra_i~ and still not fall behind...
I
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