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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.

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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

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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
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Sentinel

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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

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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

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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.

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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

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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
'
"
.

•

i
'

�'I

•

Tuesday, October 12, 1999

&lt;

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

! Commentary

Death Notices

....._

~sa. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~.__._..__..__._._.. ._._._.. . . ._.. . . . . . . ._.~~-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=B..-

Nancy Neuman Buckley

~r·~~--~~------~------------~------~

~

.The Daily Sentinel Congress can save health care from ruin
~y

By Morton Kondl'llcke

Congress won't rc:form Medicare this year. It
probably won't pass a patients' rights bill. But it
can save hospitals, nursing homes and other
,',,
..,,
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
health-care providers from ruin .
740-8112-2151 • FIX: 11112-2157
After months of lobbying, advertising and
:·
expert
analysis, th~ providers seemed to have
·'
'•
convinced
key members and the Chnton adminisCommunity Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
'•
tration that they are being driven into the red by
major miscalculations in the 1997 balanced-budCHARLES W. GOVEY
get agreement.
Pubhher
The Congressional Budget Office reported that
instead of cutting $115 billion from Medicare out·
,, CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANE tiLL
lays over five yem, provisions of the law and its
Conlraller
'' o-JIIIInager
administration will actually cut double that .. creating havoc for providers.
I
Last month, the health-care information firm
'•
n.S.ndnel 11
HCIA and the accounting firm Ernst &amp; Young
'\\ J)!Mif _ _ , _ , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~
reported that the balanced-budget-agreement cuts
•.
1 53 , ........ ,.,. ....... ,.,I.,..,....• etD••
"could leave a majority of the nation's hospitals
::
- . , - _ , , ~ lo
n. S.ndnel, Ill Cciurf lit,
'•
,._,• •, ONII41111;•, FNtlo 1..,._,1n.
in
the red by 2002 if Congress and the adminis'·
tration don'ttake action."
The study found that hospitals' profit margins
: ·•rM
11'1
1'1
:1'1
1ne
nationwide would fall from 4 percent this year to
-~ ·~'~-_._
comlftl ~~aft~
below zero JM:rcenl by 200~. forci.ng reductions in
; .:»1"'-'Vf lUI
,...,.,.., 16.1WU ,-11
staff and serv1ces and hurtmg patient care.
:: By LAURAN NEERGAARD
Similarly, a study in June by a Washington
:; Aft Mecllatl Wrtt.r
consulting firm, Muse &amp; Associates, showed that
:: \VASHlNGJ'ON (AP)- Louis Garcia's eyes seem a little yellow. He feels f Medicare paym~n~ to skille~ nursing facili!i~s
'. inc, but his wife worries his new cholesterol medicine might be causing a sid would drop $2 bdhon a year mstead of the ong•·
;' e effcrt
nally projected $1.3 billion, causing the facilities
; The medica! student uaigned to his case uk.s if Garcia drinks alcohol, order to refuse patients who would otherwise be
: ssome lelts and sends him home to await the results- he has no other symp released from hospitals.
~ to1111.
And 200 managed-care plans have dropped
·: But a few days Iller, Garcia arrives at the emergency room at S a.m. with a f 700,000 M~icare patients. from coverag~ in the
) ver and abdominal pain. This routine case of jaundice suddenly got worse- past year, Wilh the HM_O m~ustry chargmg that
~ he needs emergency drainage of his bile ducts and may have cancer.
!he federal governmen.tls paymg HMOs less than
~ :Jcaching medical students how to deal with a bicky case like Garcia's is get· 11 p~ys fee:for-serv1ce doctors to care for
' tins more difficult in today's health-care environment: With more outpa· Medicare pat1ents.
: tient e1re and shorter hospitalizations there's less time for hands-on learnThe providers have mounted major advertising
: ing about certain illnesses at the side ~f the experienced physician.
campaigns. On~ of the cleverest, sponsored br the
:1
Telllboilk instruction on how to handle various symptoms cannot substi· nursmg-home mdustry, addresses Vice Pres1dent
,: lute for that start-to-finish experience of diagnosing a mysterious com- AI Gore.
. ..
.
~ plaint, chooling a treatment and getting the patient through sometimes side e
The daughter of a sentor clltzen wntes that her
'' ffect-prone therapy.
.
father "can't get the care he needs" because of
) Enter Oan:ia: He's a "virtual patient," a computer simulation based on a real ~e.licare ~uts, but ·~you have th.e power to re~tore
., patient treated by Dr. James McGee, a gastroenterologist at Beth lsraci-Dea- vttal Medicare fund1ng for nursmg-home pallents
:; coness Hospital in Boston.
like my dad."
:; He's so sophisticated that diagnosing and treating him is pretty close to a fac
As The Washington _Post reported Tue~ay, the
:• C'·to-faa: doctor visit.
message .. conveyed m newspaper ads m Iowa
:[
Type in a question about Garcia's health and a videotape of him answer- and New Hampshire .. has gotten throug~ . to
" lng immediately pops up. An actor wu taped answering every question Har- Gore, who announced that he fav001 rewntmg
v)rd Medical Sehool's physicians and profCSSOill could think of.
baiJl!lced-budget-agre.emenl ~rovisions to help
Student-cloc:lcnconducting a "physical exam" sec close-up video of the pati n~rsmg homes, leachmg hosp1tals and rural hos~S'nt's body. Even the faint curve in the spine of a female virtual patient clear- pllals.
If shows, 1 sip of her bone-destroying osteoporosis.
The most aggressive ad campaign has just
The simulatora "won't replace real patients by any means," McGee stress· been mounted by the managed-care-industry
, ... But they give student-doctors more practice with conditions they may not lobby, the American Association of Health Plans,
, scc enough in1medical school, so they're better equipped before treating you showing an older man saying that "politicians
' ,r ,family.
down in Washington decided. to ~ut too much
l:larvard is prosrarnming virtual patients with conditions ranging from HIV a from Medicare HMOs, and semors hke me end up
~ nd chest pain to depression and pregnancy.
paying more and getting less, even losing our
:,T}rey're like flight simulators that pilots use -better to learn by hurtins a vi drug coverage."
· ~ual patient than a real one.
Congress, which won 'I be able to pass much
~ !ildeed. the simulllors pose numerous pitfalls for would-be doctors, whose e else on the health-care front lhts year, probably
. v~ry decision, and every mistake, is analyzed.
will do something on Medicare "givebacks" ..
,.,· ."You just ordered $740 of unllCI:CSSary medical tests," the simulator inter·
rupts1t one point.
,- ~other lesson: Plan ahead. Take virtual patient Carolyn Smith, a 79-year-ol
,il who fractured 1 hip four years ago but complains that " I'm still wob,bling" and acems to be getting shorter.
By Jo11ph Perkins
.. Clusic osteoporosill signs. ao you ask about calcium in her diet, osteoporoI put in a call to Barbara Boxer to get her take
sts in her family and whether she's ever taken estrogen, a hormone that pro- on the sexual harassment complaint brought
.• ~ women's bones. You examine her spine and run 1 fc\v tests, includ- against Montana Sen. Max Baucus by his former
,. jng ruling out ~bone-weakening thyroid problem.
chief of staff, Otristine Niedermeier. I'm still wait·
,",Whoa," the stmulator says, "you forgot to order a mammogram." A breast ing to hear back from California's junior senator.
:,)~·ray for a bone complaint? Yes, because if you ultimately prCKribe bone-p
I tuoughl I might have better luck with Patty
; ,1'91ective estrogen, you first need to know she is free of breast cance~~ tha Murray or Barbara Mikulski. But, alas, both the
"t hormone can stimulate.
Washington state and Maryland senatotS dissed
_.V,irtual patients even leach the art of talking with and educating worried pati me.
'ents.
I found this quite disconcerting. Because Boxer,
· , Smith's mammogram, for instance, finds a slight abnormality that a radiol· ' M~rray and Mikulski are ~e soi dissant con,ogist might merely want to re-examine in six months. A frightened Smith de sctenccs of the Senate when It comes to matters of
~ ll)andl a biopsy. At !lome point, the med student realizes that salving a patien sexual harassment.
.
t's fcclinp can be worth an unnecessary test.
Indeed, wh~ can ~orget how delef!Dmed Boxer,
_And one day Smith's teen-aged granddaughter accompanies her to the "doc· Murray and Mikulski were to get the11 former col, tqr." Knowing osteoporosis is in the family, a good student-doctor will whee league, Oregon Sen. Bob Packwood, c_xpelled ~
idle oul of the girl the admission that she chooses Coke over milk and shuns 0 the Upper Clamber for sexual mtsconduct m
' ther calcium-rich food like brocalli.
office?
, "~want to teach how to work with people to prevent disease," McGee exp · "They're just protecting one of their own:"
lains.
Boxer thundered, when the Senate leadership
·: ' Some medical schools already use various types of simulators, but Har· (mal~-dom~naled and Republican) resisted holding
..:VI!Ri II!)'S its venion is more lifelike, allowing multiple p.atient interK- pu~!IC he~ngs.
.
•· .
lions over time and numerous outcomes.
II remmds me of a trial where only one s1de ts
:~ ':nrey're expensive, CXlSllng over $200,000 each to create, funded mostly by t heard," she ~de;~ "a miscarriage of justice, any
he nonprofit Macy Foundation.
way ~ou sb~ •!·
. ..
But Harvard says the virtual patients are important enough that it current·
Mtkulski chtmed m. When women are assault·
ia negotiating to create a library of simulators available for every med- ed and battered," said she, "they themseiYCS are
ac:hool.
made to look like the problem rather than the vict . . - NHtplllfl «Wir. II«&lt;IIIIIUIII lfNII/cal-..r ftw TIN Jlaociat- tim."
Prw• 111 w...,;o.,
So that brings us back to Niedermeier. Baucus
hired the attractive, unmarried fortysomething
lawyer in May 1998 and began making overtures
toward her, she says, a month later.
fo
Some of it wu innocuous .. like commenting
'LstiWllsfrd 1111948

''

,.,_,1110 ___ ..,.,_....,..,,.,..
......... -,..-"'_, -1110--.,...., ... •.,.,.
to.,..
1110-.
·~

' IAIASH'IAIGJiQ•AI TiOD.IAV.
J: a• d
:
treat
'nA·J·ent'

also known as "BBA fixes." How much •• and
• what kind .. are still up for grabs.
No plan, however, comes near to .::c&gt;rrecting the
$100 billion-plus error made in 1997.
The most generous proposed fix was unveiled
last week by Senate Minority Leader Tom
Daschle, D-S.D., calling for $22 billion over 10
years in givebacks to various categories of
providers.
For hospitals, Daschle provides a mechanism
to stop huge losses incurred because of a new system to advance-pay an estimated CXlSI for outpa·
tient services, instead of paying actual costs - a
$13 million reduction that hit$ cancer hospitals
especially hard.
Another bill, sponsored by Reps~ Mike Bili·
rakis, R-Fia., and Peter Deutsch, D-Fia., would
correct what HMOs regard ,as an unfair $11-billion cut imposed by the government's Health
Care Financing Administration only on them, not
on fee-for-service providers.
A key player in the effort is Rep. Bill Thomas,
R·Calif., chairman of the House Ways and Means
subcommittee on health, who has proposed $7.5
billion in "givebacks" and is· insisting that the
Clinton administration make administrative deci·
sions worth a similar amount.
The administration, which until recently was
dubious about the providers' claims of damage,
has come around to the view that there are sys·
tematic differences. The administration has put
out a "fix" figure of $7.5 billion over five years,
but officials say it is " neither a floor or a ceiling."
One key factor involved in what's done is politics. Both parties are pursuing the votes of

seniors, who have trended Republican in recent
years. The administration had been hoping to win
them back for Democrats by proposing a pre·
scription drug benefit for all seniors as part of
Medicare reform. It also wanted to expand
Medicare to workers who lose their private insurance after age 55.
However, the ad blitz by hospitals, nursing
homes and HMOs has created the impression that
instead of helping seniors, administration policy
is hurting them. So the Clinton administration is
scrambling lo change its tune.
First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton (D~ once a
critic of providers, suddenly is an advocate for
hard-pressed teaching hospitals now that she is
running for the Senate in New York, which hu
several such institutions. Her involvement may
have a backlash effect, though, because Republi·
cans are reluctant to help teaching hospitals ifshe
gets the political benefit.
Complicating the picture is money. Some
Republicans view any spending .. even on
Medicare .. as money that could otherwise go for
tax cuts.
Others think that money spent on Medicare
will force Congress to break open the "lockbox"
it is trying to use to protect Social Security sur·
pluse$. The message that the providers are trying
to send is: Medicare and Social Security benefit
the same people. If you hurt their health care,
you're doing as much damage as if you cut their
income.

get out

By ALAN FRAM
AIIOcllted Preu Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)-The high-volume duel
between President Ointon and Congress over
~al Security obscures a crucial reality: Protect·
mg its huge.surpluses, as both hav_e pledged to do,
Kbnlllrly ~ would not dnectly bolster the pens100 system at all.
s.a.u,, llJIIIMd FIV!rtlq 6anlnrla
Social Secu~ty collects ~!lore e~ year in payroll taxes and mterest than 11 pays m benefits. By
law, Social Security gives the excess cash to the
Treasury Department and gets Treasury bills in
return.
Thanks to that internal government transaction,
- By 1lle Alia clllld ,...
the amount of Treasury bills held by the Social
Today ia Tucaday, Oct. 12, the 285th day of 1999. There arc 80 days left Security system ia unaffected bY whether the Trea·
tk year.
surr Department then '.*" the cash to retire the
Today 's Hi&amp;hli&amp;ht in History:
n~tonal debt or ~cis 11 to clean hazardous wute
Oa Oct. 12, 1492, Christopher Columbus arrived with his expedition
Illes~ pay ~ld1en. . ,
present-day Bahamas.
,
Using ~al ~nty s surplus c.uh to lower
• On lhia date:
the $5.6tnll'?". nat!onal debt ~nq.uesttonably helps
,; ' Ia 1870, Gen. Robert 1;. Lee died in Lexinaton, Va., at age 63.
!he program m an tmportan~ mdirect way. Reduc... In 1933, bank robber John Dillinger CKapcd ned I jail in Allen County, mg the debt lCIIds to.lower mterest rates, stre,nath·
o•lo, with the help of his pna. who killed the sheriff.
en the economy and tmprove the government s fis·
: In ~42, durina World War II, President Roosevelt delivered one of his cal ~i~on: And that shoitld hel~ when Social
10-c:11lled "fireside chats" in which he rtcommended drafting 18· and 19· Secunty htts tiS next crunch: The retirement of t1Je
year-old men.
76 million baby boomers, beginning in a decade.
~ In 1942, Attorney General Francis Biddle announced that Italian nation. But despi!C whll bo!h sides' _rhetoric ~ms to
in the United States would no longer be considered enemy aliens.
tmply, spendmg the Social Secunty surplus tnstead
In 1960, Soviet premier Nikila Khrushchev disrupted a U.N. General of using it to reduce debt would !I·steal from
Aucmbly acsaion'lly pounding his desk with a shoe duriJt a dispute.
some fictitious kitty from which eitller current or

oday In History

Obltuortoo oro paid onnauncomonto orrongod by local tunerol h0111M. Obltuorln
oro pubtllhod •• roquootod to occommodala thooo daolrlng moro tntor1111111on than
11 provided tn the accompanying Death Notlcaa.
C 1999 AccuWeather, Inc

Nancy Neuman Buckley

Rain .expected on
By The Associated Press
Clouds will start buildong over Ohio tonight ahead of a cold fron!:iind
showers and thunderstorms will develop on Wednesday, forecasters said.
Lows tomght will be mainly in the 50s.
Highs on Wednesday will be on the low to mid-70s.
The rain should end Wednesday night, the National Weather Service
said. The sk1es w1ll be fa1r mto the weekend.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather stati~,&gt;n was84 degrees in 1928 while the record low was 27 in 1964. Sunset
tonight will' be at 6:57p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:40a.m.
. Tod~Y, .. Are~s of fog until mid-morning .. Otherw1se mostly sunny.
H1ghs on lhe m1d 70s. Southeast wind 5 to 10 mph.
Tonight .. Mostly clear early .. Then increasing clouds. Lows in the mid
50s. Southeast wind 5 to 10 mph.
Wednesday ..Mostly cloudy w1th a chance of showers Highs in the
lower 70s. Otance of ram 50 percent.
Extended forecast
Wednesday mght...Mostly cloudy. A chance of showers before mid·
mght. Lows in the lower 50s.
Thurs,day ... Mostly clear. Highs in the lower 70s.
Fripay... Partly cloudy. Lows 45 to 50 and highs in the mid 70s.
Salurday...Mostly cloudy. A chance of showers during the n1ght. Lows
near SO and highs in the lower 70s.

(Morlon Kondmck1 is 1:tt1crdiv1 lditor ofRoll

Nancy Neuman Buckley, 65, Reedsvill e, died Monday, Oct. 11, 1999, at
her home.
She was born Apnl 10, 1934, m Pomeroy, daughter of the late Charles
Lewis and Margaret Adams Neuman, she was a member of the Reedsville
United Methodist Church where she was very acllve in the women's soc1ety.
She was a former telephone operator w1th General Telephone.
•
She is survived byeher husband , Chester Buckley ; a daughter and son-m·
law, Ann and Phillip LaComb of Reedsville; a son and daughter-in-law,
lames Lcw1s_and M1chelle Buckley of Reedsville; one granddaughter, Julia
LaComb; a SISter, Sharlee Neuman Whittle of Scollsdale, Ariz.
Services will be Thursday, I p.m at the White· Moquin Funeral Home in
Coolville with the Revs. Charles Mash and Wendell Stuller officiating. Bur·
1al Will be m Brownmg Cemetery, Portland.
Friends may call Wednesday, 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. at the funeral home. Flowers will be accepted and donations may be made to the Reedsville UMC.

Sailor honored for W.W.II heroics

ELYRIA (AP) - An Ohio teen- always wondered why I nc/er got
ager who jomed the Navy dunng the medal that day at the hospital.
World- War II and who helped at My crewmate got his right on the
Omaha Beach to recover the wound- spot."
ed of the Normandy Invasion is
Elizabeth Thames, distncl direc·
finally gelling a Purple Heart
tor for US. Rep Sherrod Brown's
John Polgar, 74, was to receive office in Lorain County, said Polthe medal today from his congress· gar's records never indicated that he
man.
had been injured. Thames said
Polgar, with the help of three Brown's ofhce was able to cut
other Navy crew members, used a through the bureaucracy and subm1t
boat to pick up the wounded soldiers enough documents to substantiate
+h
and transport them to a ship off that Polgar indeed had been woundrlQme.f·. Qiti~Of•COUi:'t
Omaha Beach, the deadliest of the ed and deserved the medal.
D-Day beachheads. The boat hit a
Polgar acknowledged he didn't
1, •
mine and exploded, plungmg Polgar give the medal much thought when
mto the water
he returned to Ohio. He was busy
COhUMBVS (AP)- An agency
Netcare was tQ '(lonitor Hessler
"The w.hole bottom part of the starting a new life, wh1ch mcluded
that was accused of failing to ade· after he left the hosp1tal, sa1d Gerald boat JUSt disappeared," Polgar said marrymg his wife Man an.
quately momtor a former mental Lceseburg, attorney for some of the '\ It's pretty hard to explain what that
He also was busy for 34 years
patient before he went on a killing plaintiffs.
.irl,;
day was hke . It 's a muacle our crew working at Bendix-Westinghouse in
spree .hos llgreed to a $1 million out· - . ~The-199Jcs\li'fl~tns ¥tat Neicare - diiln 't get killed."
EIY,na. He retired from the company
1
of-court settlement.
was negligent.
The D-Day landings along in 1983, when it closed its office.
' •
Netcare Corp., which assesses and
"Hessler had been mvoluntanly France's Normandy coastline tore
It was only recently that Polgar
refers r;..•ients
for mental-health treat· comm'tt
· wall. But the started thinkmg about the medal.
• ed to "...... n1ra I Oh 10 Psyc h'I· Germany •s At1ant1c
menl, agreed this week to the settle· atric Hospital in June because his Allies paid a heavy pnce. There are Last fall he contacted Brown 'sofflce
rnent wilh survivprs ami family mem- fam1ly was terrifie~1 of him and they 9,386 U.S. serviceman buried on the after reading an article explaining
bers of l,e~let:s:vl(&lt;fii1Js, Till! . ret.Qgn!Ztil he 'was ~ngei'ous to them Normandy bluff.
how veterans could ask fol\ their
tolumbus Dispatch reported today.
as well as the people he eventually
The last thing Polgar remembers medals.
·. Netcare is one of several agencies shot," Leeseburg said.
.
after being Lhwn out of his boat is
Marian Polgar said her husband
,that ha~e settled lawsuits in connec"Netcare
· · to s hb re an d then waking of 51 years has been eagerly await.
,neverth
.
eIess prescn be.d sw1mmmg
lion with the shootings that killed f?r h1m ~ mm1ma!. level of superv1· up at a hospital in England. Polgar ing his medal ever smce he was told
four people and inJured two. So far, SIOn on discharge.
said he was treated for trauma and he would receive it.
.survivors and family members have
The superv1s1on la1led to ensure had shrapnel in his right leg.
''He.deserves it," she said. "He
:been awarded more than $3 million. he was taking the medication he need" It took 55 years and 93 days but was lucky he came out of that place
· Hessler .was convicted and sen- ed to manage his mental illness, he I got the medal," Polgar said: "I alive."
tenc~d. to death three years ago for tne
sa1d
,Nov. 19, 1995, shootmg spree that
. Netcare spokeswoman Laurie
tarseted former co-workers at Bank Zmn today sa1d the company had no
•
·
One and women he was obsessed comment.
..
with. He remains on death row.
Hessler, fired from Bank One m
CINCINNATI (AP) ...:_ A
. slate because they mel with h1m, some. He had been involuntarily com· 1994 for alleged sexual harassment of
milled to a psychiatnc hospital in Tracey Stevens, killed ~fS· Stevens, court has ruled that a hosp1tal owes times at a local bar, to arrange costJune of that year but was allowed to her husband, Brian, and their 5• money to three people. treated there free, no-paperwork services.
Judge J. Warren Bettis ruled that
,check hi~lf out a few months later. month-old daughter, Am~~da, all of by a man who passed hun'!"lf off as a
their
effons to circumvent hospital
Columbus. He also killed P. Thane doctor, but had no credenllals. .
paperwork,
billing and other policies
Griffin of suburban Worthi.llgton, the
~wyers for the thre~ received
made
them
partly
at fault.
father of a woman who had rejected nouce Monday that the Oh1o Court of
West
pleaded
guilty in 1991 to
Hessler's romantic advances 10 years Cla1ms .'" ~lumbus .ruled on Oct. 7
(USPS lt3-MO)
earlier.
that U~tversuy Hospital was 60 per- practicing medicine without a license,
c.,....al9 Ncwopaper HDicllnp, In~
cent hable for damages caused by submitting fraudulent prescriptions,
Pubhshed every afternoon, M()nday through
Thomas David West of Erlanger, Ky. and assault, based on his use of med. ' Friday, 111 Court St , Pomeroy, Oh10, by the
West passed h1mself off as a doctor Ical instruments on unsuspecting
Obio Vall~y Publlshmg Company. Seoond class
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for about four years at five Cincin- patients.
~..Cpa~ at Pomeroy, Ob10
M
r: 1be A.\tocialed Press and the Ohto
nati-area hospitals, according to testi·
ADMITTED
MONDAYHe was released in 1993 after two
Newspa~JM AalociattOQ,
mony
the court heard earlier th1s year. years in prison, but was returned to
Mary Goebel, Reedsville.
Pottmuter: Send addrca correcttOll5 to The:
Datly Sen!tnel, 111 Coun St , Pomeroy, Ohto
DISCHARGED MOND;AYThe court ruled that the hospital the Allen Correctional Institution '"
45769.
staff's repeated failure to enforce Lima months later for violating proNone.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Canitr or Motor Route
basic security procedures allowed bation by posing as a lawyer. He is
One \1\:ek ................................ .Sl 00
West
to impersonate a doctor, thus eligible for parole in 2002.
One Month ...............................$8.70
making the hospital panly responsible
Those who sued West and the hosOne Year,_,, •••••••.••• ·····-·· ...... $104.00
SINGLE COPY PRICE
f&lt;lr his actions.
pital
are each asking for at least
Dally........................................ 3S Cc:nlS
Am Ele Power ...................~o::33,,
It also ruled that the vict1ms bear a $25,000 compensation for pain and
Su~bers n~ deli~l 10 pay lite c;:amer may ,
Akzo ......................................43~
remil madvance direct 10 1lie Datly Sentinel on
40 percent habllity for their suffenng emotional distress.
a three, stx or 12 month blsts Credtt Will be
SBC .......................................51~.
JIVCR earner C¥h week
Ashland 011 ..........................~'·
No 11.1bscriptilin· by ~~~ permllted 1n* uels
wheie home dmer service IS IVa&amp;llble.
AT&amp;T................................... ::.1111~
Publisher reserves lbr: nghl to adjust rates dur·
Bank One ..............................35\
ins tbc s•bscriphon poriod. Subscription ntc
Units of the 1Meigs County vehicle accident, Jennifer Johnson,
chanps may1 be implcmc11cd by changmatllc
Bob Evans ............................ t.,,
Emergency
Med1cal
Serv1ce Sara Newland, Holly Papaha,
duration of the su~puon.
Borg-Warner .........................42~
recorded five calls for ass1stance Katherine Merntt, Mandy Reidold·
Champion ..............................
MAIL SUBSCRIPI10N
Monday. Units responding lftclud· Fishking and Tony Kennedy,
Illli&lt;lo Molp Counl)'
Charm Shps ...........................5't..
refused treatment; Olander Thoma·
ed:
13 Weeks.................... ,.... i.$27.30
CI!Y
Holdlng
..........................
1
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son-Stacy
and Kimberly Clarkson,
CENTRAL
DISPATCH
26 W.ob .......................... .S53 82
Federal Mogul ......................28\
I 52 W.oks ... , .................. ,... .SIOS S6
7:17 a.m., South Second O'Bieness Memorial Hosp1tal,
Rota~MolpCootDI)'
·flratar ................................... .26,,
Avenue, Middleport, Mary Wells, Central Dispatch squad assisted.
13 \\le&lt;ks ........................... .$29.2.1
REEDSVILLE
26 W..b ........... ...............$5668
Gannelt ......,.........................71'·
HC\Izer Medical Center.
52 W..ks .........................$109.72
2:37 a.m., state Route 124,
Kmart ...................................10"•
POMEROY
3:10 p.m., Kerr Street, Edna Nancy Buckley, dead on arrival.
Kroger ..................................... 23
Reader Services
TUPPERS PLAINS
Slusher, St. Joseph 's HOSJ?Ilal;
Lande End ............................71,.
8:47 p.m., Bookman Road, Mae
8:39 p.m., volunteer fire depart·
Umlted .................................44~.
Correction Polley
ment and squad to U.S. 33, motor· Jordan, HMC.
Oak Hill Flnl ......................... 1rt.

·

ment
A
., ,. ., , . ,
··
in fata1'ShQQting spree cAse

on what Niedermeier was wearing or inquiring
about her boyfriends. Some of it less so .. like
comparing her to the senator's wife (his second).
And some was overt --like asking his chief of staff
to accompany him on a weekend trip.
Niedermeier says her repeated rejections of
Baucus' advances, as well as the senator's fear that
she was going to file a sexual harassment suit, led
to her recent termination.
Baucus says she's lying. "Let me state unequiv·
ocally that I have never, under any circumstances,
sexually harassed Otristine Niedermeier," he
deClared in a written statement.
The reason he fired his chief of staff, Baucus
explained, was because she had bad relations with
the office staff. And to substantiate his claim, the
senator mentioned a grievance petition against
Niedermeier signed by 36 members of his payroll,
er, staff.
This is, of coune, another "he said, she said"
dispute that cannot be proven or disproven beyond
a reasonable doubt. And for mpst senators, this is,
arguably, sufficient grounds to give their cOlleague
Baucus the benefit of the doubt.
But Boxer, Mikulski and (to a slightly lesser
degree) Murray are a different story. They have
consistently rushed to the defense of women claiming sexual harassment when the Senate has been
involved in any way.
Indeed, they spoke out on behalf of the women
claiming harassment by former Sen. Packwood.
And they voiced their solidarity with sister Anita
Hill when she .aired her harassment claim against
Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas before
the Senate's Judiciary Committee.

Yet, nol one of these crusading senators hu
offered a word of support for Niedermeier. Which
leaves her to fend for henel f against a man oa;u..
pying a poweiful position.
Boxer, Mikulski and Murray could get away
with withholdins their support from the likes of
presidential accusers Paula Jones and Kathleen
Willey. Neither of these women was pedigreed.
And both were secused of being unwitting tools of
the "viS! right-wi!Jg conspiracy" that aimed to
bring down the Democrat in the White House.
But Niedermeier is an altogether different c:IISC.
She's a credentialed professional. And she's a
faithful Democrat (who actually sought to repre·
sent her party in two Connecticut House races}
That Boxer, Mikulski and Murray have given
Niedermeier short shrift reveals their hypocrisy.
For had she accused a Republican .. particularly a
conservative - they would be standing by her side.
But inasmuch as she has secuScd a Democrat, the
lady senators have chosen to stand by their man.
Niedermeier be damned.
. If there is one positive aspect to all this, it is that
· Demotrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives and women and men may finally '. agree, if
only tacitly, that sexual harassment should ,no
longer be used as a weapon to attack and destrOy
political foes.
That's the way it should have been going all the
way back to aarence Thomas and Anitl Hill. And
that's the way it should be with Max Baucus and
Otristine Niedermeier.
Jo111pll Perlcins is

11

columnist for 1'111 &amp;m

Diego Union-Tribun1.

Protecting Social Security surpluses achieves less than meets eye
An AP News Anllylla

O·b ituaries-

Call, tile nBWSptlper of Capitol HiliJ

Using sexual harassment as a weapon

!!~

Nancy Neuman Buckley, 65, Reedsville, d1ed Monday, Oct. 11, 1999, at
her home.
She was born April 10, 1934, m Pomeroy, daughter of the late Charles
Lcw1s and Margaret Adams Neuman, she was a member of the Reedsville
United Methodist Church where she was very actove m the women's soc oety.
She was a former telephone operator with General Telephone.
She is survived by her husband , Chester Buckley ; a daughter and son· m·
law, Ann a.nd ll'hlll~p LaComb of Reedsvi lle; a son and da~ghter- in-law,
lames Lcwts and Mtchelle Buckley of Reedsville; one granddaughter; a SIS·
ter, Sharlee Neuman Whittle of Scottsdale, Ariz.
Services will be Thursday, 1 p.m. at the White-Moquin Funeral Home in
Coolville With the Revs. Charles Mash and Wendell Stutler officiating. Burial will be in Browning Cemetery, Portland.
Friends may call Wednesday, 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. at the funeral home. Flowers will be accepted and donations may be made to the Reedsville UMC.

future recipients are paid.
No one doubts that most of this year's projected
$147 billion Social Security surplus will be used to
reduce debt. At stske in this year's budget fight is
whether put of it- perhaps $10 billion to $40 billion- will be used instead for federal spendins,
ranging from hiring teachers to purchasing warplanes.
. That is clearly a lot of mo~y. But if it is ~nt
11181cad of uSed to reduce debt, 11 would have a vtr·
tually undetectable impact on the long-term growth
of the U.S. economy, which currently surpasses $8
billion in size.
Most experts say that while using the surplus to
pay down debt is wise, it won't solve Social Security'a real long-term problem: More retirees and
fewer workers, wh~ pa~roll taxes cover retirees'
benefits.. What will ult1mately be needed are
changes m the system's benefits and revenues, they
say.
..
The pol,111cal fight. has caught the attention of
Federal ~rve ~Birman Alan Greenspan, who
last week satd ,1~ohcy-makers should be focusing
more on expanilmg the economy.
':I'm terribly ~necmed ~at everronc keeps
talking about solvmg the Soc1al Secunty problem
by how they are moving around budgetary funds,"
he told business leaders in Minneapolis.
But that hasn't s ! t both parties from tout·
ing their promise to otect Social Security. The
vow hu taken on ali e of its own, with polil}cians

worried that grabbing the surpluses rl$1!1 enraging
its 44 million elderly and disabled recipients.
"I'm here to assure the hardworkina taxpayers
of this country ... that this Republican Congreu
will not schedule a bill that raids their Social Secu·
rity," House Majority Leader Dick Armey R·
Texas, said Tuesday.
·
'
As recently as Friday, Clinton said he wanted to
"not dip into the Social Security surplus any
more." The day before, he hinted he was open to a
bipartisan deal to spend some of the Social·Security money, though "both parties neid td
on
that."
·,· · ' :
Republicans ignored that offer.
·' 1 '
Analysts across the political spectrum aay the
rhetoric is misleading.
·
·
"What they're doing is coming up :ovith nice
sounding words that are buically meaningless,"
said David John, senior policy analyst for the conservative Heritage Foundation.
,
"The solvency of the Social Security lrilst fundi
is not directly affected at all" by wheth~r part of the
program's surplus is spent, aaid James Homey,
senior fellow with the liberal Center on Budget and
Policy Priorities.
Until this year both parties routinely ·used
Social Security su,Piuses for decades to ~tiP pay
the government's bills. Even so, Social ~rity'a
aucts - in the form of Treuury billa - have
grown steadily, hitting $887 billion this year lnd 1
projected $2 billion by 2010.
• t1

p

Hospital ruled partly liable for
damages In fake-doctor case

The.Daily Sentinel

Hospital News

Stocks

Meigs EMS logs 5 calls

&amp;,.

'

Otor ......_... ·ll ollstorln Is 10 ,bt
1&lt;eonte. If yo• luww of 11 • ...,.. ll 1
olocy, ..U ... 1eworoam ot (740) '1192·
215$. We wll ch"'t your lofonnelloll
eocl
comctlootrwornoted.

35,.

Oria Valley ............................
Peoples........................:.........26'l.
Roekwell ...........................53'l.
RD/Shell ...............................58~·
Sesra ............................... :....31~.
Shonay'a ................................
Wendy's ................................ 25"
Worth,ngton .......................... 16\

New• Department•

1,.

. Tile 11011 oombtr ls t9Z..2155. lloP.Itrl·
11e11 "'!leulooo ore:

· Ge~"!l Mo....t ...................... .ExL ilOI
Ntwl................... .. ....................ExL 1102
or ElL 1106

, . ,Other Service•

. Ad.eriii&amp;M............................ ....Ex~ 1104
Ctreof8!10,i ....................,..,_,..... ~L 1103
• Clullned ~~.: .................:.... .Ex~ 1100

'I

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,

Stock reports era the '0:30
a.m. quotes provided
by Advtiat Gallipolis.

ot

--

--- ------------- -

I
-J

Assault reported
Robert Berry, Reedsville, reponed to the Me1gs County Shenf{'s
Office Sunday evening that someone drove by his residence and shot hii
w1fe with a paintball gun. The incident IS under investigation .
•

.

Woman's Conference scheduled.

A Women's Conference Will be held at the Ash Street Bapt1st C hurc~

Fnday and Saturday at7 p.m. each evening. Speakers Will be Debbie Cuno
d1ff on Fnday, and Betty Johnson on Saturday. Door prizes w1ll be awar"
~d and refreshments w1ll be served after the Saturday serv1cc. The churcO
IS located at 398 Ash Street 1n Middleport. Diana Bmg may be contactell
at 740-367·0126 for additional informatiOn.
;

Correction

:

Morning Star homecoming planned

:

The name of Jacob Smart, a wmner in the k1ddie tractor pull at Ia~
weekend 's Big Bend Sternwheel Fest1val, was mcorrect ly reported IR
Monday 's ed1tion.
:

Homecommg at the Morning Star Un1ted Methodi st Church w1ll b;
held Sunday with a basket dmner at 12 30 p.m. and song serv1ce '" thi
afternoon.
•

Hymn sing slated

.I

.:

I

I

A hymn sing featunng Earthen Vessels w•ll be held Sunday, 6 p.m.'Jl!
the Harvest Outreach Church on R1ebel Road, Chester Pastors Harold and
Mary Cook mvite the public.
•

Shade River Lodge
Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM, Chester, w1ll hold a regular meetift~
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the lodge hall Wllh work irr the F.C. Degret.
Refreshm ents will be se rved.
•·

Book sale

•

Church homecoming

:.

Fnends of the L1brary wili hold a book/muffin sale Thursday, noon~~
7 p m. and Fnday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
••
. Homecoming will be held Sunday at the Carpenter Baptist Church
w1th Sunday school at 9.30 a.m followed by morning services at 10::!0
a.m. with Pastor Paul Elswick, a carry-in lunch at noon and afternoon s~I­
VICes at 1 30 p m. Spec~al singing will be by Evelyn Roush, Sandra Lon.S,
and the Builders Quartet.
·

Athens-Darwin CAC meeting

...

The Athens-Darwin C1tizens Adv1sory Committee will meet with 115
consultant, McCorm1ck, Taylor and Assoc1ates to discuss the proposed
U.S. 33 from Athens to Darwin Monday, 3 30 p m. at the Me1gs Counit
Multipurpose Bu1lding/Semor Cit1zens Center m Pomeroy.
'

Club to meet
The OhKan Coin Club will hold 1ts regular meeting Oct 25 at the Tr~
ley House in Middleport. An auction will be held and refreshme ni~
served. The meeting is open to the pubhc.

Slain man was a natio
champion drag bike racer
KENTON (AP) - A longllme
police officer said the deaths of a top
drag bike racer and his wife aren't the
kmd of cnmes law enforcement officials in this northwest Ohio city are
used to investigatmg.
Police are treating the deaths of
Scott Gngaliunas, 39, and h1s w1fe,
Becky, 42, as homic1des. Police Chief
John Vermillion said Monday that there
are no suspects m the slayings and no
motive has been detem1ined.
"I've been on the force here for 32
years and I can't remember any oth·
ers," Patrolman John Sponsler said
Monday night after being asked about
prev1ous homicides in the city. The last
hom1c1de m Kenton was the death of an
IS-month-old child as the result of
abuse In 1992.
News of the deaths surprised many
of the Hardm County seal's 8,500 residents.
"It's a pretty big topoc of conversation. It 's JUSt scary, bemg here in a little
town. You don't ecxpect it to happen
here," said Marcy Beaman, a convenience store clerk.
Grigaliunas, 39, was a four-lime
season champion m International Drag
Bike Association events. Two of those
t1tles were won this year in separate cat.
egories.
A fam1iy fri end had called pollee
after Becky Gngahunas d1dn't show up
at her JOb at an auto dealership
"lust the Circumstances of the cnme
scene tells us 11 was not a murder-sui·
cide," Vermollion said. He wouldn 'tsay
what covenng was on the bod1es, but

sa1d no weapon was found nearby.
Police removed several handgUns
and ntlcs that apparently belonged .to
the couple from theor home. Vennilfi~n
said he didn't knOW If the guns were
connected to the shootmgs.
;"
Gngahunas' son, Brandon, 15, liv~d
at home He was at school when 'ihe
bodies were tound. Vem11llion sAid.
Mrs. Grigaliunas, who was divorced,
has two sons and a daughter who did
not live at home.
•··
Vem1illion d1d not know whet~er
Brandon was at home Thursday nigljt .
The ch1ef saod the home was not tlinsacked and there were no visible s1~
of a burglary.
•
Grigaliunas was lhe first drag Bike
racer to mterest Honda Motor Co! in
sponsoring motorcycle drag racing,
which consists of lwo bikers racmg
Slde-by·slde at speeds as h1gh as ~
mph down a quarter-mile straightawaY.
"He was probably the most wdlrespected sportsman nder in our membership in that he was not only a successful racer, but he was an advOCllle
for our sport, " Leigh Ann Min, !he
assocmt1on 's president, sa1d Monda~.'
Gngahunas grew up around motlircycles. H1s parents, Janice and Stanl~y
Grigalounas, also of Kenton, often tdok
the1rchlldren on motorcycle trips. ; '
Smtt Gngahunas' m0ther said h~r
daughtcr·m·law "would go with him
whenever she could. Even if they
weren 't gmng to a race, they'd get on' a
b1ke and go for a day tnp or '&lt;Ill
overnight trip. She was behind him 100
percent."

I

t

'

MON 10/11· THUR 10/14/99
lOX OFFia WILl OPEN AT

6~ PM FOR !VINING SHOWS

THE SIXTH SENSE (PG13)
•7.10DAILY

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7:00DAILY

BLUE STREAK (PG13)
7:20DAILY

DOUBLE JEOPARDY R)
7:10DAILY

FOR THE LQVJ: OF fi1E GAME (P013)
7:00DAILY

RANDOM HEARTS (R)
7:00DAILY

THREE KINGS (R)
7:15DAILY

FOR Ct,ISTOMER APPRECIATION,
PRESENT TICKET STUB AND
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ova .........................................32

••k&lt; •

,

The Oaily Sentinel • Page 3

BEAUTY, QUALITY, CRAFTSMANSHIP
Enduring Memorials Priced

To Suit Your Budget
520 W. Main St. - Pomeroy, 0

Phone 992-2588
Yjnton - 388-8603
Gallipolis - 446·0852

I

II

�A

,,

.:Sports
~aguars

,,

The .Daily Sentin..t\
October 1 '1999

defeat N.Y. Jets 16-6

By BARRY WILNER
EASTRUTilERFORD, N.J . (AP)
-If the Jacksonville offense doesn't
come around unul January. that
might not he so bad for the Jaguars.
• By then, they might be at the top
of the AFC and own home-f1eld
advantage for the playoffs. thanks to
a stingy defense.
Wh1le the supposedly potent
offense stumbled once more Monday
ntghl, the defense once agam was
staunch m a 16-6 VICtory over the
New York Jets. That lifted the AFC
eenlral's first-place learn to 4-1, and
only one team on the remammg
schedule has a winnmg record.
That's Tennessee, wh1ch doesn't face
Jacksonvtlle until Dec 26.
"They're playmg great." quarterback Mark Brunell sa1d after the
Jaguars allowed the Jets ( 1-4) JUSt
230 yards, much of It on a final desperation dnve to nowhere. "It's the
lc'md of defense that can carry a team
when the offense IS strugglmg "
The offense 1s strugglmg, managIng only a three-yard touchdown run
by James Stewart and three field
goals by Mike Holl1s. Still, that was
plenty agamsl the spullenng Je[s,
who are hurtmg physically and emotionally these days
· "It's defm1tely frustratmg afte1
last year," rece1ver Ded11c Ward
said, noting how the Jets went' to 1he

AFC IItle game for the 1998 season.
but are a long shot to gel to 500 th1s
year. "R1ght now, we're not fmdmg
what we need on offense Obv1ously,
when you score only six pmnts, you
have some problems."
Those problems - backup R1ck
M~rer at quarterback mstead of Pro
Bowler Vmny Testaverdc (seasonendmg·torn Ach1lles' tendon suffered
m the opener). no Wayne Chrebet
(broken fool) at recc1vcr or Leon
Johnson as a th1rd-down back were exacerbated by Jacksonville 's
def ens1ve bnlllancc .
New York couldn't handle linebacker Kevin Hardy (10 tackles . one
sac k), dcfens1ve tackle Gary Walker
(nme tackles. 0ne sack), or DE Tony
Brackens (seven tackles, I 5 sacks)
"We can be as good as we "ant to
be," smd safety Carnell Lake, whose
signmg as a free agent was a major
step m rebmld10g the defense. "and
we want to be the No I defense "
They·,e y1elded no 1oud1downs
10 three of theu VICiorles and 52
pomls overall
"We got good young guys we go1
good older guys If we do a few
thmgs, we can get there," added Imebacker LJ&gt;nme Marls. another freeagcnl add111on
They got another voclory Without
ge111ng much when they had the ball
Sicwart d1d IU ~ h for 96 yards. bul 01

took 26 cames and he was late hitling some gapmg holes.
Brunell. reportedly fcudmg wuh
coach Tom Coughlin, was 21-for-35
lor 215 yards, but often rolled out
and threw the hall away rather than
search for secondary receivers.
" It wasn't what we had m mmd
oltens1vely," Brunell sa1d. "B ut 11
was enough."
And a lot more than New York
managed - only John Hall's two
f1eld goals
'' I am extremely d1sappomted m
our perforn1ance," sa1d coach B1ll
Parcells, who lost for the first lime m
four meetmgs (two m the playotls)
w1th Coughlin, his former rece1vers
coach w11h the G1ants "Particularly
the offense. Our execution was very
poor ''
The Jets already l)ave lost as
many games as they d1d m theu run
I() lhe AFC mle game last season.
Whole th e1r prospec ts are bleak ,
Jacksnnvtlle's are soanng - even
wnh a struggling auack
" We have as many wms m our
conference as anyone," Coughlm
smd. "and wc'1e 3-0 on Ihe road"
But they haven't played pm llcularly well smcc lOuting San
Francasco m the opener
LAUNCHES PASS - Jacksonville quarterback pressure during Monday night's AFC East game in
Mark
Brunell (8) launches a pass as New York Jets East Rutherford, N.J., where the Jaguars won 16-6.
" II woll come," Hardy smd. "L\nd
defensive
tackle Jason Ferguson (72) applies (AP)
that w1ll be excnmg "

Philadelphia mayor criticizes fans for cheering Irvin's injury
By KEN BERGER
' PHILADELPHIA
(APJ
Booing IS a way of life for
Philadelphia sports fans , some of 1he
n\ost raucous, passiOnate and surly m
the country
The trouble th1s 11me was the
cheering.
Phdly's fans may have sunk to a
new low by cheenng Dallas
Cowboys rece1ver M1chael lrvm 's
p'Otenllally senous n~ck InJury It disgusted even those who thought they
hlld seen 11 all m the "Cny of
li,rotherly Love. "

'This, 1n terms of bad taste. was
as bad as 11 gets,'' smd Mayor
Edward Rendell , an av1d sports fan
The 33-year-old Irvm landed
awkwardly on h1s head after catchmg
a pass from Troy, A1kman 10 the first
quarter of the Ph1ladelphw Eagles'
13-10 VICtory over the Cowboys on
Sunday He lay motionless on the
artifiCial turf for nearly 20 mmutes
wh1lc mcd1cal staff altended to h1m.
Many fans m the crowd of 66,669
cheered when they realized lrvm was
hurl, and agam when paramed1cs
wheeled a stretcher onto the f1eld

Many also cheered respectfully when
he was placed in an ambulance. but
the damage was done.
" I cou ldn't
believe thev
chee1cd," sa1d Donovan McNabb,
the learn 's No. I p1ck who was nearly booed off the stage by Eagles fans
auendmg the draft. "You don 't know
what to expect from them."
What makes Phdly lans so foul&gt;
One theory IS the longtime failure or
their teams . If they can't be first 1n
the stand1ngs, some figure they
m1gh1 as well be No. I m nastiness.
The Eagles haven 't won an NFL

champ1onship s1nce 1960. The 76ers
had the worst record m NBA h1storv
when they were 9-73 m 1972-73 ·
The Phlllles have lost more games
1han any team m baseball history
They also blew the pennant in 1964,
squandenng a 61,-game lead wuh 12
to play wuh 10 straight losses.
M1chael Zellman, an 18-year-old
fan from Pb1ladelph13, sa1d he won't
anend Eagles games anymore. Fans
are so rowdy that a mumc1pal judge
holds court at the stad1um to charge
offenders dunng the game
" If you're not weanng 1he nghl

Jersey, you're guaranteed to get beat
up," Zellman sa1d
Other c111es have rowdy fans.
Arrests are routone at Yankee
StadiUm, and Cleveland 1s still
scarred by the bloody 10-cent beer
mght not m 1974. It doesn 't gel
much nast~er than shooting a coach's
dog, but that 's what Green Bay
Packers fans did to Dan Devme m
the '70s ·
But Ph1ladelph1a's list of embarrass mg moments 1s gettmg lengthy.
"I thmk too many of our fans
have gotten caught up m our image

of bombmdmg people and boumg, ..
Rendell smd.
On Nov 10, 1997, a fan shot a
flare gun ac1oss the field into the
stands durmg a natiOnally telcv1sed
.Monday n1ght game agmnsl the San
Franc1sco 49crs. Fans pelted national
TV broadcasters With snowballs durIng a Cowboys-Eagles game m 1989
Th1s year, fans threw batlenes at
St. Loms Cardmals outfielder J.D.
Drew. exprcssmg the1r anger that he
d1dn 't s1gn w11h the Ph111ies after
they drafted h1m m 1997.
!See BOOBIRDS on Page 5)

~ordon outruns Bobby Labonte in last laps to win UAW-GM 500·
By JOE MACENKA
· CONCORD, N.C. (APJ -An old
friend was back on the rad1o, and
Jeff Gordon broke into a smile when
he heard the familiar vmce resonating through the headset in his helmet.
• "He told me he was glad I was
here, and I told him I really would
like to go to Victory Lane," car
owner Rick Hendrick said. "I was
kind of
kidding h1m. "

Gordon a~parently didn't think
so. He put on a !ale-race charge.
overpowered Bobby Labonte with
less than eight laps rema1mng and
won the UAW-GM Quality 500 on
Monday.
Whtle it was Gordon's second
VICtory m as many weeks under new
crew chief Bnan Whitesell, the occasion was memorable to Hendrick for
a different reason. Because of his
battle with leukemia and a mail-

»CLI&amp;I'f

Baseball

3
3
2
2
I

American League
divisional playoffs
Cleveland vs. Boston
Monclly's

nn11~

Bos10n 12 Cleveland 8 Boston wms senes l 2

American League
Championship Series
Wednesday
Boston at New York, 8 15 p m

Thursday

Green Bay
Ch1cago
De1roa

M1nneso1a
Tampa Bay

I 0 750 110
I 0 750 150
1 0 400 72
l 0400 71
~ 0 200 57

Central Division
1 I 0 7'i0
1 2 0 600
2
0 500
2
0 ~()()
2
0.000

Saturday
Sunday, Oct. 17
New York at Bustun. 7 50 p m

Monday, Oct. 18

New York :ll BosiOn, 8 l'i_1.m tf n~cessa ry

Wednesday, Oct. 20
Boscon at New York 4 19 p m or 8 J&lt;; p m tf
necessary

Thursday, Oct. 21
Boston a1 New York. 8 1:5pm , tfnecessary

' '

~National

League
Championship Series
Tonighi
, New York (Yoshn 12-8) at Allanta (Maddul J91016·12pm

-·

Wednesday

·~

Friday

1

• New York {Rogcn S-1) at Atlanta (Mtllwood !87,0f:O!lp m
••Atlanta (Giavme 14-11) at New York (Letter Jl-

1~8.12pm

~

~ Adanta

11

7Npm
:~

Saturday
(SmoJu 11-8) at New York (Reed 11 -5)

Sunday, Oct. 17

t~lanta at New York. 4 09 p m If ~cwary

•,.

Tuesday, Oct- 19

~ York 111 A.llallla, 8 12_p.m, If necessary

...
lli. 1

•.

Wednesllay, OcL 20
New York 3t Atlanta, 8 12 p m , tf necessary

·-~

Football

97

82

Hendnck's ban from racing ended
m January, and he is anticipating
even beller news soon on lhe health
front. Hendrick is 50 days away from
the completion of a three-year course
of chemotherapy -two inJections a
day for nearly 1,100 days- and he
is hopeful that when he meets with
doctors m Houston on Dec 9, they
will declare h1m cured.
"I can see the hght at the end of
the tunnel," he said. "At one time, I

wasn't so sure."
Hendrick saad he still has some
bad days, but he is gradually regaining weight, strength and endurance
as he draws closer to what he hopes
will be a completely clean bill of
health.
" I feel very fortunate," he said.
He also felt nervous Monday, as
ev1denced by the fact that as he was
speaking with a group of reporters
after the race, Hendrick stopped in

Carohna at San Franc•sco, 4 15 p m '
Green Bay ut Denver 4 I~ p m
\\astungwn at An zona, t:1 20 p m
OPEN Baltimore Kansas C1ty Tampa Bn)

WESTERN CONFERENCE

-·-

Wednesday's games

San Fran LISUJ
C.1rolma
New Orleans

AI lama

-1 0 01000 I·H

90

"
97

79

7J

140 2006 1 112

Monday"s scure
Jndson\l lle 16 New York Jets 6

Week 6 slate
Sundav, Oct. 17

CLEVE LANLJ at JaCksonVJIIe I p m
lndw.no.pol1 s at New York lets I p m
M1am1 al New Eng bnd I p m
Mmnesota a! DetrOit I p m
Or~kllllld at Ouffalo I p n1
Ph•lad~!l phl a at Ch•cago I p m
Plflsburgh at CINCINN ATI I p rn
St Louu at Atlanta I p m
Tennentt at New Orleans I p m
Seallle at San D1ego 4 05 p m

Vancou\er
Edmonton
Colorado
Calgary

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE

-17

82

St Lo u1s
Nash\llle

Hockey

87

'2060099 ]l()

I l 0 2'i0 91
I 1 0 2'0 67

:rwn
Detroit

Monday, 0£t, 18
Dallas at New York Gmnt~ 9 p m

\Ve!&gt;tern Dlvui()n
S1 Lmm

Boston at New York, 8 l!li p m

New York at Boston. 4 19 p m

92
88
M2

fraud conVICtiOn that led lo a oneyear ban from Wmston Cup racmg,
Hendrick had not been on hand lo
witness any of Gordon's 29 victories
since September 1996.
'T ve been waitmg lor lh1s day
for a long time, " Gordon said. "For
me lo be able to take Rick Hendrick
to VICtory Lane was very emotional
and probably one of the highlights
not only of this year but of my
career."

Atlantic Ohi5ion

fum

N Y R.:wgen
New Jeney
P1ttsburgh
N Y lslonders
P~ • lade lph 1a

OunwJ
Toron10
Montreal
B o~t o n

Buffalo

.!!: L IBI fl&gt;. !if Ga
l 2
l
I

I

0

I 0 7 14 10
I 0 5 11 10
I o. l 14
0 0
2 R 10
I 0
I I 6

Northeast Dtvislrm
0 I 0
l 2 0 0
I l 0 0
0 l 2 0
0 2l 0

'

Southeast DIVISIOn
2 0 I 0
l I I 0

I I I 0
I 2 00
0 2 I 0

··STOP.

"

"62 15II

7

2
2

8
9

9

10
II
II
12

Ctntral Otvlsion

.l!:L IBI&amp; !if Ga

2 1 105D6
2 2 0 0
4 II
g
I 2 I 0
l
9 10
0 2 1 0
2 I I 18

North\\tst Dtus•on

l 0 0 0
I 2 I

1

l 2 2 0
0 l I 0

Panrl( 01\ ISlOn
&lt; I 0 0

6
4

11

6

7

9

4
I

12
R

14
16

~

I~

II

1 1 I 0
7 I"' 10
1 2 0 0
b 20 '"'
1 I 1 0
6 J'i
8
Anahc1m
1 1 0 0 "' 8
9
0\erwnc losses \\ Ill coum both .Is a \loss :md a
rcgulauon t • ~·

Monday's scores
Colorado 1 Bost'bn 1-lle
Ne\\ Jerse) l Utt,1wa 2-t•c
Carohn.l 1 c~J gary ' · Ill'
Annht••m 'li San Jose ~
PhotmK 2, Bulftl.lu 2 11e
N,JShv1 1lc 4 Toromo 2
NY Rangers 4 NY lslnntlers 2

Tonight's games
Flondn 111 Montreal 7 10 p m
PlnlaJe l pht~ at WnshtngiOn 7 10 p m

St LoUIS at Detrott, 7 p m
F. londa ill Toronto 7 10 p m
Anahe~m at New Jeney 7 10 p m
San Jose at Dallas 8 ~0 Jl m
Boston at Colorado, 9 p m
Carolma at Edmonton 9 p m
Calgary at Vancouver, 10 p m.

Transactions
Baseball
American teague
ANAHEIM ANGELS Designated RHP Pep
H:J.ITIS .md INF lusun Baughnmn lor ass1gnment
DEffiOff TIGERS Sent INF l.1san Wood INF
Jose M,•t.: ms and RHP Be1ker Gralerol ourngllt to
To l ~do ollhe InternatiOnal League
SEATILE MARINERS S1gned RHP k:eHn
Hodges ~nd RHP h•an Montane Acllvared RHP Enc
Wc:l\ l'r !rom the 60·dlly disabled hsr Sen t WeuH:r
RH I1 Com Smith nnd OF OlZIC limmo n ~ outnght tu
Ta.:o1na ,of the PC!. All three dcclmed the asstgnmcnts .md chose free agency

Nalional League
NL Suspended Cook1e RoJas New York M'ets
t~ l rd- b,J se coach tor fh e games lor shov1ng ump1rc
Ou~rh e W1lhams on Oct 9
CINCINNATI REDS Adtled RHP Pm Aury
RHP John Rtedhng and 1B D T Cromer to the 40man roster Promoted Terry Abbott to area scouung
supen'ISor Named Butch Daccaln ~pec .al ass1gnmenr

m1dsentence and announced that he
forgotlo eat anything all day.
Given the events at Hendnck
Motorsports in recent weeks, theowner could be excused for feeling
distracted.
·
Reports circulated throughout the
month of September that crew ch1ef
Ray Evernham, Gordon 's long11me
mentor, fnend and business partner,
was thinkmg about leaving Hendrick
(See UAW-GM 500 on Pa11e 5)

MILWAUKEE BREWERS Named
Hansen mmor league pllchmg coonlm&lt;~tor

GaT)

Basket hall
National Basketball Association
NBA Named M1ke Bamom Vllt: prt:sldcnt and
group managt:r pla)t:T and basketball deve lopment
NEW JERSEY NETS Named Fred MangiOne
semor dtrector of sales
INDIANA PACERS W.med F.c Adn.tn
C.1ldwell and G Terry Deht!re
SACRAMENTO KINGS Waned C Makulm
Mackey G Ke1th Veucy and F Tywr~ n Sunt ord

Football
Nut11.mal Football Lf.aguc
CINCINNATI fl[NGALS Adl\,lled OT Jn111.11n
Stt:phem W;uvcd LB hmmy Sprotte
IND IANA POLIS COLTS Released LB Andre
Royal
\\A SH INGTON REDSKINS S1gned LB Kurt
Gou\t'la Pbc ~d LB M.lktllm H11n11hnn on IIIIUietl
rese rve-

Hockey
National Hockey Lcacut
NHL Suspended Phoc:mx Coyotes 'C krcmy
Roe n11; k lo~ f1ve games for slashmg Chtlago
Blackhawk s RW Tony Amonre 1n a game Oc t 8
PmSDURGH PENGUINS Recalled G JeanSebasttcn Aub111 from W1 lkes Barre Scranton of the
AHL S1gned RW To•n Kostopoulos and a~s•gm.:tl
hm1 to W1lkes Bam:·Scnmton of the AHL

~cout

Tuesday, October 12, 199~

:Red SQx outpace
:Indians 12-8, head
.to ALCS vs. Yanks·
ay TOM WITHERS
"o •
CLEVELAND (AP) - As champagne sprayed around him, John
Nalentm jumped up on a podium in
thtJ m1ddle of Boston 'S clubhouse
and screamed for quiet.
"Hey!" Valentin yelled to h1s
i1 teammates.
• Unsuccessful, he tried again.
: "Hey!" he said.
: Fmally, w1th most of the room's
attention, Valentan had a message for
ihe Red Sox - and maybe one for
the New York Yankees.
· "They'd better sweep us 1"
Valentm said.
: Boston's stunmng comeback from
an 0-2 deficit to win the d1v1s1on
senes over Cleveland with a 12-8
VICtory in Game 5 Monday night
ended the Ind1ans' season and fore·warncd the Yankees they had better
not be overconfident 1n the ALCS
beginnmg Wednesday
Whatever the Indians d1d. the Red
Sox d1d better
They outslugged them. outsconng
baseball's h1ghest-scormg team in 49
years.
They outpllched them as Pedro
Martinez contmued h1s dommant
1999 season wllh a comehack as
Improbable as Boston's.
And they beat h1story, becommg
just the fifth maJor league learn to
~a lly from an 0-2 def1c11 in a bcsl-Qffive playoff series.
'There am't no scale that can
measure the heart of th1s team,"
Boston's Trot Nixon said. "Whether
we 're down two games or three
games, there is n~ quit m this team. "
And certamly none in Martmez,
who p1tched s1x h1tless mnmgs JUSt
two days after he couldn't even play
a game of catch because of a back
mJury
Oh, and that so-called Boston
curse. If the Red Sox are haunted,
then Martmez m1ght JUSt be the one
io exorctse all those demons - from
the Babe to Bucky lo Buckner.
"You m1ght say we're celebrating
a little too hard," pitcher Bret
Saberhagen said in the middle of the
Red Sox party. "But after a series
like this, you have to kick off your
shoes a little bit."
Making a surprise relief appearance. Martmez refused to come out
after manager Jimy Williams put him
in and struck out eight in a s1x-innmg
stmt. The right-hander, who had to

leave Game I With a strained back
musCle, fi'mshed with 10 shutout
innmgs in the series.
"I wouldn't come out," Marlmez
said. "As long as I was able to throw
the ball over the plate, I was going to
stay in there."
Troy O'Leary supplied lhe
offense, tw1ce thwartmg the Ind1ans·
strategy of intentionally walkmg
Nomar Garc1aparra by drivmg m
seven runs w1th a patr of homers mcluding the first postseason grand
slam m Red Sox history.
W1th the shocking wm, lhe wildcard Red Sox will play their hated
rival in the postseason for the first
t1me, startmg Wednesday ntght at
Yankee S1ad1un\.
It was too early for Williams to
hegm worrying about p1tchmg
matchups agamst the defendmg
World Senes champiOns
"Who we gomg to p1tch ? · he
said. "What day IS 11?"
The f1ve games were a hlur ol
comebacks.
inJUIIes.
pllchmg
changes and runs, runs and runs 79 10 all, three short of the record for
any pos1scason senes
O' Leary, who wcnl 0-for-5 m
Game 4, hn Ius slam 1n the lhlfd and
~ napped an 8-8 lie m the seventh
with a three run homer for the Red
Sox, lrymg lor their first World
Se11es lllle smce 1918
For years, the Red Sox have been
haunted, from the trade of Babe Ruth
to the Yankees m 1920, to Bucky
Dent's homer over the Green
Monster that propelled New York to
v1ctory m the 1978 AL East uebreaker, to B1ll Buckner's error that helped
cost them the 1986 Senes agamst the
Mets.
Maybe Martinez will be tbe one to
end all that suffenng
It sure didn't look promismg for
the Red Sox a few days ago when
Martmez pulled h1mself from h1s
start in the opener after four mmngs
with a strained muscle in his back.
And il got worse for the Red Sox
when Garciaparra was unable to go
in Game 3 because of an mjured
wnst.
But
Boston
pounced on
Cleveland's shaky pitching staff,
scormg nine runs m Game 3 before
shanering records with their 23-7
rout in Game 4.
But Martmez brought some sanity
to a series of atrocious pitchmg,

The Dally Sentinel • Palu• 5

O'Neill's fractured
rib may keep him ~
out of AL title series
By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - The New
York Yankees were hopmg the11 AL
championship series opponent would
come into town hurtmg They didn 't
expect to have thw own worries to
deal wnh.
As the Boston Red Sox amved
today, New York hoped to fmd out
whether Paul O'Neill's fractured nb
would keep h1m out of the league
champ10nsh1p senes, wh1ch starts at
Yankee StadiUm on Wednesday
night.
O'Ne1ll, who hasn't played s1nce
Thursday, Intended to lake balling
practice, along w11h runmng and outfield dnll s
.
''I'll go out and soc 1f11's puss1ble
to play," he sao d.
O'Neill was InJUred Ocl 2 when
he crashed tnto a low fence chasang a
foul ball at Tampa Bay, lhen went 1for-4 m each of the f11s1 1wo games
YES! - Boston pitcher Pedro Martinez (center) hugs catcher of the AL pl ayulfs agamsl Tc-Kas
Jason Varitek as teammate John Valentin joins in the celebration of
Yankees manager Joe Torre
the Red Sox's 12-8 win over the Cleveland Indians Monday night. benched h1m for the chnche1 . conThe Red Sox completed a comeback from a 2·0 series deficit to earn vmced the mJury was hampenng
a shot at -the New York Yankees in the American League O'Nc1ll. The team sent the 36-yearold outfie lder to ColumblaChampionship Series Wednesday. (AP)
punmg an cxclamatooh poml on h1s momentum . it was like trymg to Prcsbytcnan Med1cal Center on
dommatlng 1999 season The nghl- cl1mb Mount Everest "
Monday lor new X-rays and an MRI .
hander, who went 23-4 dunng the
Cleveland's oil season also could which showed a small fracture of the
regular season. w1ll now gel a chance mclude an agreement to sel l the team IOth nb on his ngh1 side.
to pnch the Red Sox back to the that came wnhm two oub ol wmnmg
"Someumes, I guess,}! shows up
World Senes for the f11sl 11me s1nce the Senes m 1997 and has won five later;" O'Neill sa1d In the parkmg lot
1986
outs1de Yankee Stadium after return511 a1ghl AL Central titles.
" He couldn't even pock II.P the
" I sll ll can't believe we lost," wg lrom the hosp11al
ball two days ago," Saberhagen smd, Omar V1zque l sa1d
Boston, wh1ch fmishcd four
··and was almost 1n tears. He's JUSt
Wnh the score 8-8 m the seventh, games back In the AL East and won
the most unbelievable pncher I've O'Leary made the Ind1ans pay for lh~ Wild card, has a d!llerent problem
ever seen In my life. "
electmg to walk Garclaparra agam
gomg mlo the best-of-seven senes.
Meanwhile. the Ind1ans, who have
Facmg loser Paul Shuey, Valentm · Pedr~ Manmez, who won Monday
been wmtmg smcc 1948 to wm a smgled and, after a forccoul, lnd1ans mghl s 12-8 lhnller ": 1th SIX hitless
Senes, were demed a th11d stra1ght manager Mike Hargrove dec1ded to mnmgs of relief, won l be available
trip 10 the ALCS when thw pitchwg walk Garc1aparra, who hll .451 to start until Game 3 at Fen way Park
agamsl Cleveland during the regular on Saturday.
.
staff collapsed.
J1m Thome homered twice and season (23-for-5 1) with 17 RBis m
H1s brother, Ramon, probably Will
Trav 1s Fryman hn a solo shot for the 12 games.
start th~ opener against Orlando "EI
lnd1ans, who will now spend the
And for the second lime the strat- Duque Hernandez
winter wonderjng why they could egy blew up in Hargrove 's face, with
''It's gmng to be g.~eat senes. Its
never shake an injury bug that O'Leary hittmg Shuey's first pitch gomg to be exc~tlng, Ramon sa1d
plagued them all season
over the right-f1eld wall for an 11-8 am1dst Boston s celebratiOn at
Cleveland, which lost Game 3 lead
Jacobs F1eld "Each game we played
"We chose 10 put him on rather dunng the regular season was excnstarter Dave Burba to mjury, also
watched center fielder Kenny Lofton than p1tch around him tomght," mg."
.
, .
dislocate his left shoulder slldmg Hargrove said. "We had been hanNew York .was JUSt 4-8 agamst
mto first base Monday mght.
dllng O'Leary 'up until tonight. "
Boston, mcludmg three stra1ght loss" We were shorthanded, beat up
Given the cushion, Martmez took es at Yankee Stad1um from ~ept. 10and we still went out and gave a great the Red Sox home from there, fan, 12 that cut liS AL East to 31•. games.
effort," Ind1ans catcher Sandy ning Vizquel for Ihe final out lo g1ve The only ?ther t~ams to wm theu
Alomar said. "We hauled, but we Boston 1ts first win in a postseason season sene~ agamst th~ defendmg
JUSt got beat. Once they got the senes since 1986.
World Senes champiOns were
0

Anaheim and Kansas City.
St1ll, the Yankees got their wish
- their opponent's p1tchmg is
pooped.
"I' m hoping for a 21-innmg game
tonight," general manager Brian
Cashman sa1d before Monday mght's
game. ''I'm hoping for an extramning, ram-~elayed slugfest."
·.
Th1s w1ll be the first time tile
Yankees and theu trad111onal rival
have mel m postseason play New
York's wm at Fenway Park in till:
1978 t1ebrcaker lor the AL East 1s
cons1dered a regular-season game . .
Rosters for the championship
series must be set by I0 a.m. EDT
Wednesday, and the Yankees won'J
make any deciSions until theq,
accordmg to Cashman
O'Nc1ll , who h1t 285 th1s season
wnh 19 homers and I lOs RBis, IS a\i
mtense competitor who plays
through pam In 1996. he hobbled on
a torn hamstnng for much of the sea,son
·
.
" I lhmk Joe TmTe and the medic~/
staff w1ll be able to see how deb1li :
latmg n's gomg to be ," Cashman
sa1d
1'
If O'Neoll can't play for the start
of the best-of-seven series, tlw
Yankees probably would activaui
Shane Spencer, who wasn't on the
roster for the first-round sweep Qf
Texas. O'Neill's teammates ~tHI
hope he'll be able to play.
"W1th him m there. we have a hi\:!
ter capable of producmg a lot of
runs,'' Darryl Strawberry said.
1;
To open a spot 1f O'Ne1ll IS que~.
tionable, New York probably would;
cut either Clay Bellinger, used mos~,
ly as a pmch runner, or p1tcher
Hideki Irabu, who d1dn 't pitch,
·
against the Rangers .
Hernandez was 2-1 With a 2.7p,
ERA agamst Boston dunng the regu-.
lar season after going 1-0 versus the
Red Sox last year.
'
He allowed two hilS in eiglk
shutout 1nnings durmg the playoff:
opener and IS 3-0 with an 0.41 ERA
in three postseason starts.
Torre must decide whether to fof,
low h1s first-round rotation - And9
Peuitte in Game 2 and Roger
Clemens m Game 3 - or try tli
insert Dav1d Cone, who didn't pitch
agamst Texas because the series
never got to a fourth game.
-·
Kent Mercker is likely to pitdi
Game 2 for the Red Sox.

..

Braves to entertain New York Mets in NL title series opener-:
By BEN WALKER
ATLANTA (AP) - Bnan Jordan
had his chance. "
:· A free agent last offseason, he visited Shea Stad1um, shook some
hands and thought about s1gnmg
with the New York Mets.
Instead, the big-h1ttmg outfielder
JOtned the Atlanta Braves and spent
the season helping them beat up the
Mets. And he's not shy about admitting a d1sllke for them, l,Do.
"I mean. I could say so," Jordan
sa1d after Monday's workout at
Turner Field.
"It's JUSt that New York Clly
thmg,'' he sa1d "Whenever you go
there, the fans try to rattle you and
gel all over you. Eventually, you say,
'I can't stand New York '"
He was not alone going mto
. Game I of the NL championship
senes tomght agamst New York.
Greg Maddux was to pitch for
Atlanta against Masalo Yosh1i, and
Mets slugger M1ke P1azza was
expected to return to the lineup.
"We beat them nine out of 12. I
don't know how Bobby Valentme
can say a word," reliever John
Rocker said. "Just as we have
respect for them, Bobby Valentme

UAW-GM 500•..
I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

dedsn' t have much respect for us "
( How about it, sk1p? Braves manager Bobby Cox has a kind word for
everybody - surely he would have
somethmg mce to say about h1s Mets
counterpart.
"I really don 't know Bobby
Valenlme that well," Cox sa1d.
Asked about such remarks,
Valcnlme rubbed h1s forehead and bll
hiS lip
"Ammos1ty''" he sa1d "Our guys
arc lovmg, canng, good fellows who
go about their bus mess "
Enough sa1d?
"You either come to play baseball
or you come to lalk, " Cox sa1d "You
beuer come to play baseball "
Clearly, though, the edgy Mets
and the usually busmessllke Braves
are acting a b1t snippy.
Even New York general manager
Steve Ph1lhps seemed a bll peeved
after the Mets began the1r workout
two hours early Monday mght after
bemg not1fied by lhe Braves that
thunderstorms were coming. That
storm never arrived.
But at least there was th1s encouragmg s1gn Piazza. seemed confident
he w11l be able to start.
, The All-Star catcher m1ssed the

last two games of the first-round victory over Anzona because of a
swollen left thumb. He looked good
m battmg pract1ce Monday.
"I don't .&lt;ant to say definitely."
P1azza sa1d. "But I'm feelmg close
to 90 percent. "
The Mets, however, woll be mmus
third-base coach Cook1e Rojas. He
was suspended for f1ve games by NL
pres1dent Len Coleman on Monday
for shovmg ump1re Charhe Williams
dunng Satmda) 's cllnch1ng won over
the Diamondbacks
Foamer Braves calchea 81 ucc
Bened1ct. currently 1hc Mets' bench
coach, w1 ll take over al thtrd He
m1ght be the only peo son 111 a New
York umform getung a mce reception
" I thmk eve1ybody is trymg to
budd up thiS thon~ between the Mels
and Braves,'' he smd
Rojas declined comment on IllS
penally unti l meetmg w1th Coleman,
wh1ch was lokely to occur today
"Some people thmk all he does IS
coach th1rd base," Valentme sa1d.
"He does a lot more He Will be
missed dearly"
Maddux w11l be followed by
Kc~m Millwood, Tom Glavme and

John Smoltz m 1he best-of-seven
senes. After Yoshu, Kenny Rogers,
AI Leiter and R1ck Reed w1ll pitch
for the Mets.
Yosh11 was 0-2 m three starts
agamsl Atlanta this year He smiled
when asked about bitter feelmg s
belween the teams
"I don ' t dislike them. or anythmg,'' he said through an mterpreter "We JUSt have to beat them "
Maddux was a b11 surpnscd to see
the Mets 111 October, cons1denng
they were 1wo games out of the Wildcard &gt;pol wnh only th1 cc left m the
1cg ular season.
Rockel was mo1c complimcnlmy
- sort of. He p1a1Scd the Mets' hittong . p1tclnng and l1cldong. then
added , "''m really shocked to see
how they had to squeak mto the play-

tam to enJOY. crowd support. As of
late Monday, the Braves had 6,500
uckets left for Game I and nearly
10,000 remainmg for Game 2 at
Turner F1eld
Jordan, who talked to the Mets

oils "

Valentine was aware ot that
assessmenl.
"I never heard them say anythmg
other than we underachieved,'' he
smukcd
Piazza laughed off the supposed
hostilities.
"It's tunny how the trash talking
gets magmfled,., he smd.
One edge the Mets appeared cer-

(Contmued from Page 4)

came in t1 race delayed one day by
rain , 11ed Gordon w1lh Rusty Wallace
for lOth place on the sport's victory
list. Next up, in a nmth-placc t1e with
50 VICtories ap1ece, are Ned Jarrett
and Junior Johnson.
Rounding out the top five finishers Monday were Mike Skmner,
Mark Martin and Ward Burton.
Dale Jarrett, who came w1th a
251-pointlead over Labonte atop the
season standings, led twice for 33
laps in the early stages, but wound
up a distant seventh
"We're fine with it," said Jarrell,
whose lead was cui to 222 with five'
races lett "We did what we could
bOO•bl"ti'U
'*"S.
• • (Contl'nued from Page 4)
team," Labonte said. "J~ff's obvl11
·
ously a greal driver They've got and made the most of it. It's another
In the most 10famous case, Santa 10 a row, and on the 15th one he had great sluff. To carry on like they have race marked off and we didn't lose
many po101s "
Claus was booed and pelted wllh an mcomple110n and they booed really isn't a surprise."
Career
victory
No
49.
which
snowballs during a game between him," sa1d Randall Cunn10gham, the
Eagles' star quarterback from 1985the E3gles and Minnesota m 1968.
The fan reaction to Irvin's injury 95.
lrvm, who stayed overnight in the
If the 992 Exchange Is Free
of Your
was criticized in the city's newspaspmal
trauma
umt
of
a
Philadelphia
pers and on talk rad1o Monday.
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
"Unspeakable, even for us," pro- hospital with swelling m his spine
claimed a headline in the near the base of h1s skull, was
Hol~er Clinic In Gallipolis
released Monday and new home.
Philadelphia Da1ly News.
.
Toll Freel
No one is safe from the boo b11ds. The Cowboys arc op11m1sl1c he' ll
Mike Schmidt, one of the best third ,play agam th1s season
DIAL
"Some people need lo grow up
basemen 10 baseball history, was
and
f10d
some
10ne1
peace.
because
booed for much of h1s career with the
there IS no peace m watchmg somePhillies.
~~
~.~~~~..~,~~~l i
"Ron Jaworski told me one time body suffer,'' said Irv111 's teammate,
that he had completed like 14 passes Emm1tt Sm1th.
Holzer Clinic ... Keeping tile Promise!

Motors ports.
another step in erasing any doubt that
Evernham asked for and was he can lead the team as effectively as
granted h1s release Sept. 28, and Evernham, who gUided Gordon to 47
Whitesell was named to replace him, race victones and three series titles.
even though he lacked any experiWhitesell directed a crew that
ence as a crew chief. Five days later, gave Gordon fast p1t slops and
Whitesell made a late-race decision improved h1s Chevrolet throughout
to keep h1s driver out while the other the race at Lowe's Motor Speedway
contenders pitted, and Gordon held al Charlotte The result was that
on to win in Martinsville, Va. ·
Gordon came from the 22nd starting
Three days after that, Hendrick spot to finish with an ~verage speed
s1gned Gordon to a lifetime contract of 160 306 mph, a record for a 500and gave his star driver an equity mile race at Charlotte.
ownership share in the team.
Whitesell joked later about retirOn Monday, Whitesell took ing w1th a 2-0 record, but he turned
_,;.;;_~_...:.;________....;;...___________

serious when asked what he reasonably expected in his first two races
"What I tell we could really do
was a top I0 each week just to get
our feet on lhe ground,'' he said
"And then we could see what we
needed to change and what we needed to address."
Gordon led just three t1mes for 16
of the race's 334 laps. Labonte started on the pole and kept h1s Pontiac
up front five times for a race-high
136 laps, but it wasn' t enough to
keep up with Gordon and his new
crew ch1ef
" Brian's obviously gol a great

OHIO VALLEY
HECK CASHING &amp; LOAN
Comer of Court and Main St.
Pn••u•r••v 740-992-0461

P'J./•lly

a

992-7834

\,

Part

,.

Jenay Shlrley·Manapr
•Check Cashing
•No Credit Checka
• Loam TU Payday
Ucense

CC7000n-006

4.•

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during his free-agent lour in the offseason, knows what tixpect when
the senes shifts to Sh
"That's a no-brain ,"he satd.
mean 1t's pretty Iough 10 New York ~

�~~ ,;.,.~

.'

'
L

.T he Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

The

Page~

·

Tuesday, October.12,

Vard

1 ~t·

::·Reader suggests gui;delines for visiting those who are.n terminally i ~l
.,
,

,

.

Dear Ann Landers: The letter
I'm encloSi ng appeared 111 your column almost 20 yea1 s ago, and I
saved 11

hccm s~ It

nwJc a h1 g dllfcr-

cnce Ill my l1 k I' m sure 11 will help
others get throug h a tcrnhlc wnc in
th~1 r l1 v~"· as 11 helped me . Pk a"l.'
run 11 aga111 - HEALED IN
_ TO RONTO
DEA R TORONTO: Hc1c\ the
lette r you rcquc~ t cJ T ha nks f{1 r kt tl ng me k !hlW 1t he lped 'I ha t\ what

I'm here lor
Dea r Ann Landers: I am wnt1n g

help somebody else.
anything I can do." I am not gomg to
.
.
'
1. Don 't just drop in. Call ftrst. call . If you want to help, use your
This means everybody - parent s tmagination. There arc many things
included.
you can do For example , say, "I can
2. Don't as k personal questio ns vi :it John Friday or Saturday. Which
such as: "Does John have a will?" day would you like to gel your hair
"Where will he be buried?" "Does washed or run errands?"
he have a good insurance policy?"
6. Don't bring candy, flowers or
this lener out of an xiety and frustra- "How much longer can he las!?" books. We have plenty. Do brin g a
!lon. I reali ze it ts too-long to print, Thi s information is not your busi· casserole, a crock of soup or some
but perhaps you can usc parts of it to ness, and bemg forced to respond to homemade cookie s.
educate the well mcanmg public.
such questions makes me uncom7. Please leave the kids at home.
As the w1fe of a termmally 111
fortable.
John is too ill to appreciate Suzie's
patient , I have become a pnsoner in
3. Don 't describe your Unde new song and Tommy's stories about
my own home. Sometimes. lthmk 1f
Sol's bout with cancer It doesn't his base ball activities. Even though ,
I hear one more knock on the door. I help the fam1ly to know ··he had the he loves children, the commotion
scream. People I don 't know, same trouble and suffered some- makes him nervous.
"J ohn's" C()- wmkcrs, UistMII aunts.
thing terrible at the end. " John doesI know thi s lellcr sounds ungracoustns and friends of the famtl y n't need any more stress, and neither cious. I don't mea n it to be. We love
dro p 1n anywhere Irom 'I a m unlll M
our family and fri ends. Company is
do (he rest of us. '
p m. l am expec ted to entertain
4. Don' t offer mcd1cal advice. We ··good for John , but nor a constant
them. serve them rcfrcshm ~ nt s and
are not interested in takmg John to stream , every day, all day.
he cord1al. eve n thou gh I may have
Mex1co for some rare herhal cx!racl.
No maHer how close you are to
bee n up most of the n1ght and am or to Califorma for some new fan- us, please call before you come
Jc.1d &lt;111 Ill ) feet
gl ed , unproven treatment, or to a over. and ask 1f 11 is a good lime. I
Wil l you please pnnt t hcs ~ gutde- lailh healer mlnd1a We are li stening know John hasn 't much time left .
lmcs lor well mcanmg htends and
to our own doctors.
and ll would be lovely if the chtldrcn
relau ves'' It ts too late for me. I'm
5. Don't say, "Call me if there is and I could have a few evenings of
already a wrec k - but maybe I can

The OhiO Mus1c Teachers Associ ation. Southeast DIStnct, w1ll sponsor
a workshop given by Dr. Paul Baric .
a;mlanl professor of mu s1c and
organiSt at the Ohio University
School of MuSic, on Friday, at 9:30
a m. at the Galbreath Chapel on the
campus of O.U.
Dr. Baric's topics arc "lntroduc-

tion to the Organ" and "Dispelling
Bach Myths". Dr. Baric graduated
from the Eastman School of Music
with a Doctor of Mustcal Arts degree
m 1995. He has completed a dissertation on the keyboard manuscripts of
Johann Christoph Bach (1673- 1727)
of Gehren - a second cousin of J. S.
Bach .

News Hotline 992-2156

TO PRESENT PROGRAM
Patty Spaeth of Athens will be
presenting "The Princess in
You", a program on understand·
ing position in God 's royal !ami·
•• ly, at the South Bethel New Tes. lament Church on Saturday,
Oct. 16, 10 a .m. to noon.
A luncheon will be served at
the church which is located two
miles from Route 7 on Silver
Ridge Road across from Eastern
: High School.
Her message is one of "being
more than a conqueror", of
being the daughter of the King.
She has been sharing her mes·
sage with women's groups for
• more than 16 years since she
and her husband, Don, formed
"One Heart Ministry" to teach on
: God's design for marriage and
. how God blends two hears into
one.
Responses are to be made by
', calling 985·9847 or 378·9807.

Fruth Pharmacy

At Ohio University. Dr. Bane currently leaches organ and harpSichord,
early keyboard literature and music
htstory classes. He also serves as
organiSt (or the First United
Methodi st Church in Athens
The Ohio Mus1c Teachers Association, Southeast Di strict, is an affili-·
ate of Music Teachers National Association (MlNA). Founded in 1876,
MlNA, the oldest professional nonprofit music organization in the country, represents more than 25 ,000
independent and collegiate music
professionals. Regtslrat1on will be
held from 8 to 9 a.m. and the public
is invited to attend.

Oct. .1 6th
10:00 am - 4:00pm

,

• Rl160 &amp; 2nd Ava, Gallipolis
740-44-8820 I 740-441-0781

• 786 North 2nd Ava, Pomeroy

Sentinel

person.

.,
~.
0

Unless exceptions are
flied thereto , sa id
account will be sal tor
hearing before said
Court on the 12th day of
November, at which time
said account will be
considered
and
continued from day to
day until disposed of.
Any parson Interested
may flied wrllten
exception to said
account or to matters
pertaining to the

·;. execution of the trust,

··

not Ieee ·than five days
prior.to the data sal lor

'' · hearing.

Robert Buck, Judge
Common Plaaa Court,
_ Probate Division Meigs
·•· County, Ohio
(10) 12 lTC

.,,
,,
,,

v

.,.

"
''
,,

Public Notice
'NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS Of
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
Revlnd Code, Sections
3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
5705.25 •
NOTICE Ia hereby given
thai In pursuance of a
Reeolution of the Village
Council of the VIllage of
Pomeroy, Pomeroy, Ohio
passed on the 16th day or
August, 1999 there will be
eubmltted to a .vote of the
paople ol said subdlvlalon
at a General Election to ba
held In the Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio, at the regu·

100' · 1000' Rolls I"&amp; 3/4" 200# Water Line
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp;Regulators Wafer Storage Tonks
:~~"~
11 1111

740-892-11481

Public Notice
lor placea of votlng therein,
on the 2nd day . of
November, 1999, tho que•·
lion of levlng a tax, In
excaas of the ten mlllllmlta·
tlon, lor the benefit ol
Pomeroy VIllage for the pur·
pose of Fire Protection.
Said tax being:• A renewal
of a tax of 1.0 mill at a rate
not exceeding 1.0 milia tor
each ons dollar of valua·
lion, which amount• to ten
($0.10) centa tor each one
hundred dollars o1 valua·
tlon, lor live (5) yeara.
The Polls tor said Election
will be opan at 6:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain OPJn until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of said
day.
By order of ths Board
Elections of Meigs County,
Ohio.
Deled Sept. 13, 1999
John N. lhle, Chairman
Rlta D. Smith, Director
(10) 5, 12, 19, 26 4TC

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Gtll\d\1\9
20 Yrs. Exp . • Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

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We deliver

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992·9178

' details and a competitive prnpa;al.

vluto-Owner6..1mutYuu:e
Life Horne Car Bustness
T!.iNo&amp;llm"~•

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Insurance Services

Rutland , Ohio

214 Eall Main :
Pomeroy
992-6687

Public Notice
'NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code, Section•
3501 .11 (G), 5705.19,
5705.25

NOTICE Ia hereby glvan
that In pureuanca of a
Resolution of the Board of
Township Truoteae of tho
Townahlp of
Sutton,
Racine, Ohio paend on the
5th day of ,July, 1898 there
will be submitted to s vote
of the people of aeld tubdl·
vision II a General Electlon
to ba held In the Townehlp
of Sutton, Ohio, at the ragu·
Jar placeo of voting therein,
on tho 2nd day of
November, 1999, the que•
tlon of laving
tax, In
exceaa of the ten mlllllmlto·
lion, lor the btntflt or
Sulton Township tor tho
purpoaa of Flre.Protectlon.
Said lex being:' A replace·
llltlnt of lex oil mill at a rate
not exceeding 1.0 mutt tor
each one dollar of valua·
lion, which amounts to ten
($0.10) cents tor each one
hundred dollara of velua·
tlon, lor live (5) years.
Tht Polls lor aald Election
will be open at 6;30 o'clock
A.M.. and remain opan until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of aald

*

6TC

·Public Notice
'N011CE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
Revleed Code, Sectlona
3501 .11 (G), 5705.19,
5705.25
NOTICE II hereby given
that In pureuanco of a
Rllolutlon of the Vlllt91
Council of the Village of
Racine, Racine, Ohio
pa11td on the 5th day bt
July, 1989 there wll be eubmltted to 1 vote of tho .,_
plo of llld IUIMIIVIalon II I
Genorol Election to be hald
In the Vlllego of Roclne,
Ohio, et the regulor placea
of voting therein, on the
2nd day or November, 1898,
tho quoatlon of l~lngalex,
In eXCIII of tho ton mill lim·
ltstlon, for tho bontllt of
Racine Village lor tho pur·
pose or Fire Protection.
Said tax being:' A replacement of lex of 0.7 mill II a
rate not exceeding .07 milia
lor each one dollar of valua·

Beginning Sept. 26th

WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS
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CAIPEITER SERVICE

Rutl111d, Ohio
Americ111 Legion
Post467
Beech Gro.ve Road
Gun Shoot
Slug and Shot

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PL\bllc Notice

Retreshements

• ~~~~ ~

1

: :~.;,

ooorPr\-z.es

11

:

•

9J

=:. -.

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Tho annual election of
the Board of Directors
lor the Melge County
Agricultural ~oclaty wlll
be held at the secretary's
office at the lalrgroundo,
Monday, November 1,
1999. The polle wlll be
open from 5:00 p.m. to 9
p.m. on Election Day.
The election ahall be
by ballot. Ballota muat
be marked with en "X"
opposite the nama to ba
counted. The caetlng of
votee for directors by
proxlaa Ia not to be
parmltted.
Only realdent of Melge
County
holding
mamberahlp certificates
tor at laaat 15 daye
before the data of
election may vote.
Member• or the
aocloty muat d.tclare
their candidacy lor the
office or Dlractor or the
aocloty by filing with the
Socrotary
Debbll
Wataon, 42455 Wooda,
Rd., Coolvtlla, OH 4&amp;723:
a patltlon algned by 1o
or mora membere of the
eoclety who are
ruldante of Malga
County, at leaat 7 dayo
beloio the annual
election of dlractora 11
held. Only regularly
nominated candidate
who have met the flUng
requirements will be
eligible for the election
ae director.
(10) 12, 19, 28 3TC

NotlceofEiectlonon

r

3501.11(0), 5705.19,

5705.25

3ij.:· :gl~t~Tt
;.~ ln ~ur~~~~~~
·of a Resolution of ths
1

1

• v; , J

= Board of Township
• -' ··T ruaten
of the
~ ';" ·Townahlp ot Columbia,
I Albany, Ohio, palled on
il! ,...... the 5th day or July, 1898
·_there will be aubmiHed
. to a vote of the paople of
"t ~ •aald subdivision at a .
~ !· General ELECTION to be
I held In the Townahlp of
cc
,Columbia, Ohio, at the
•11
regular places of voting
! ! " •theraln, on the 2nd day
i!; p_; :of November, 199g, the
queetlon ollevytng a tax,
• •- ·In axceu ol 'the ten mill
llmlletlon,lor the benefit
li "'· of Columbia Township
~ 'I&lt; , · for the purpose of Fire
• ,... . protection.
: :; , Said tax being:• A
• , . . renewal of an existing

•I,.....
1:
l
2

tax of 1 mill at a rote not
exceeding 1 mille tor
each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounta to tan ($0.10)
cents for each one
hundred dollars of
valuation, lor five (5)
years.
The POIII lor Slid
Election will opan at 8:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open untl 7:30 o'clock_
P.M. of aald day.
By order ol the Board
of Electlona, of Malga
County, Ohio.
John N. lhle, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, Director
Dated: Sept. 13, 1898
(10) 5, 12, 19,26 4TC

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Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive top line.
LIC. # 0().50 11NI,;,

45771

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Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates

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Stop &amp; Compare
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ESTIMATES
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7/22/IFN

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800-ROMANCE. eKtension 9681 .

30 Announcements
Bake sale at Pageville Town Hall
Friday, October 15th, 9am-2pm
Rain or shine

public huntng.
Now To You Thnft Shoppe

·

9;00-5:30.
40

Giveaway

3 female puppies hall pek a poo
304·675-3699.
3 Male Kitlens, 6 Weeks Old, To

1·740.982-6142

IUYIIftiU IIDID

60 Lost and Found
LoSI- 3 pygll'tf goalS, 1 malo, 2 le-

, Leave a Message

For Ne"' weal
Referral Seroice

Melga, Gallla &amp;
Surrounding areas

740-742·3119

m&amp;les, Rutland area , If found
please call740·742·2486.
Lost- In Rodney Area On Cora

Mill Ad. ATannish· Rod 3 Monlh

Old Pomeranian Puppy, Very
Playful And Fruendly. If Seen Or
Have "Please • Contact Me At

740·245·9250

Linda's Pai•tlng
Take the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.

70

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
l VIcinity
AIJ. Yard Stlel Mull
Be Paid In Alive....
DEAQLINE:
2:00p.m.
INTERIOR
.... dey bolorelhtecl
Ia to rvn. sunday
Before 6 pm leave
edition' 2:00p.m.
Friday. Monday ecllllan
message. After 6 pm
• 10:00 o.m. Sotunley.
Big Garage Sate 177 Hilda Dl.
Wad.· Thurs., 9:00Am ·5 OOPm.
Free Estimates Kids
Clothes,
Chest , Toys, Toy
.__ _ _ _ _ _ ___. , sox,
Tools,
MuchMore.

740·985·4180

II

740-592-1842

6uallty clothing and household
items . $1 .00 bag sa le every
Thursday Monday thru Saturday

Good Home. Call Aller 4 P.M.
740·441 -1707.
s Puppies- Sha1pei &amp; Black Lab
Mix. 740-245·5747.

35215 Ball Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

cen se. 1 To 2 Year s Of Mad •
Surg Experience Is Requ ired ;
Home"HeaUh Experience Pre·
tarred 'Apply In Parson Or Send
Resume To· Oak Hill CommuMI!y
Medical Center, Attention: Brenda
McKenzie, 350 Charlotte Avenue,

EOE
HVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN -

Wanted to Buy

AbsoLute Top Dollar: All u.s. Sll·

ver And Gold Coins, ~roofsats ,
Diamonds, AntiQue Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre- 1930 U.S. Currency,

Sterling, Etc. AcQulslllons Jewelry
· MTS. Coin Shop, 151 Second

Awnue, Gallipolis, 740-446-21142.

Clean Late Model Cars Or

Trucks, Low Milos, 1995 Models
Wanted To Buy : 1987 Jeep
Wrangler Fiberglass Top, 740·

256-6574.

In Athans, Ohio. Experience Re
qulrad Refrigerant Permit Pre·
18fre(t. Must Be Capable Of Diag·
nosing Problems And Following

Through With Appropriate Repa"

Work Installation Experience A
Plus. Full-Time, $8 · S14 /Hour
Commensurate With Experience,

Vacation, 401 KRetiremenl. Call

Career Connections, 594-4941 ,
M·F, 9-5, EOE!AA.
IMMEDIATE OpENING

Full-Time Management Position

With Local Retail Jewelry Store.
Retail And Computer Background
Necessary. Benefits Available,

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Apply: AcQuisitions Fine Jewelry,
!51 Second Awnuo, Gallipois.

Keebler Company Is Now Ac-

110 HelpWantad
$2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400

Brochures! Satisfaction Guar·
antoodl Postage &amp; Supplies Pro·

vldedl Ausn Stii·Addressod
Stamped Envelope! GICO, OEPT .
5, Box 143e, ANTIOCH, TN .
3701 H 438. Sta~ Immediately.
$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN·
MENT REF UNDS. NO EXPERt·
ENCE NECESSARY 1-800·8546469 Ext. 5046.
S800 WEEKLY POTENTIAL
Complete Simple Government
Forms At Home. No Experience

Necessary. CALL TOLL FREE ·
1·800·966·3599 Ext 2601. $34.00
Relundable Faa.
DRIVERS - IMMEDIATE OPENINGS · REGIONAL IOTA Sta~ AI
29 CPM /All MI. · Unloading Plr(' ·
Personalited Dispatch • Home

Ollen - Holiday /Vacallon Pay 401 K!Modtcal/Pres. /Dental As·
signed 99' T2000's - Alder Program • 98% No ·Touch Freight
Call Butch At Summit Transport&amp;·

Lion 800·876-0680 EOE
Drivers: 2 Week Paid CDL Train·

ing No Exp Needed. No Money,
No Credit? No Problem! Earn Up

To $32,000 /1st Y1. W/Full Benefils . P.A.M . Transport Call Toll
Free 1·877·230·6002 www.otrdrivers.com
Earn $250 week, Running Taxi
plus Delivery Auns. 4 Taxi Drlv·
ers needed, 2 Tax:icab Dispatch·

ers Needed! (740)-441-0247

cepting Applications For The Po·
sttlon 01 Weekend MerchandiSer
In The Gallipolis Are a&gt; Please

Cali 304-743-97 17 And Leave
Messago.EOE.
Live· In nanny/house worker
needed, loving , mature. honest.
caring, non- smoker. E»cperlance
and references required, sand re·

sume In care ol The Pl. Pleasant
Register 200 Main St Pt PleasantWV 25550
Local Cleaning Company Saeklng
Full Time Help. Carpel Cleaning,
Light Const1uction And Romodal
Work . Send Resume To: SCCS

P.O. Box 541, Kerr, OH 45643.

LOSE WEIGHT GUARANTEED!
ALL NATURAL!
DR. RECOMMENDED!
CALL: 1-8811-24&amp;-2779

OR VISIT: www.mett-oy.llll
LPN Wanted For Growing Home
Health Care Provider, Applies-

lions Baing Taken, Call 740-441 ·
1877 For More lnkmretlon.
llalntana,.. llachanlc

This Gallipolis, Ohio, Based Pos1·
tlon ReQuires A Minimum 01 An
Associates Degree In Electron·
lcs . Additionally, We Prefer A
Candidate With Experience In

Board Level Circuits. Solid Stale

Contro ls And PLC's With The
Ability To Troubleshoot Electronic
Equipment. candidate Must Also

Have The Ability To Work In A

Team Environment And Would
Be Required To Do General

Mantenonce Work

Envelope Stuffing Positions Availab le To Apply Call Toll Free, l·
888·265-1935.
Envelope sluffing poslllons &amp;\'&amp;ll·
able, to apply call toll free, 1·888265-1935.

Rockwell Automation Can Offer
Yol.i A Competitive Salary And
Benefit Package. For Conslderatlon. Please Send Or Fax Your
Resume To: Rockwell Autom•·
tlon, Attn: Human Aeaource1
Repr11ent1tlve, 250 M'Cor·

Tools /Equipment. Must Be Phys·
lea l~ Fll, Under Age 30 Wll1&gt; H.S.

Supporting Diversity In The

.:..:..:_.:..:..:__.:_ _ -::---- I

lent Income. Full Training. Computer ReQuired. Call Toll-Free

800-540-6333 Ext. 230 t.

lent S S S I Processing Claims
From Home. Full Training Provided. Computer ReQu ired . Call

Medlworks Toii·Free 1-800·54083:13 Ext 2312

Have Fun Meeting Eligible S1n·
gles In Your Area . Ca ll For More
lnlormatlon 1·800-ROMANCE,

740·742·2138

Recent y purchased:
Graham's Wood Products
Firewood Division

From ~ccredlted SChool 01 Nursrng And Have Valid Ohio AN Ll·

90

Personals
DATING TONIGHT!

Land owned or leased by Harris
Farms wi ll no longer be open to

Dump Truck or
. Plck·ur, In our yerd

utod Oualllled Candidate Will

Pro\llde Skilled Nursing Care Di·
rectly To Patients Of All Ages At
Res ldl nces. Must Be Graduate

MEDICAL BILLING. Eam Excel·

Joe N. Sayre

FIREWOOD

One Full-Time RN Position Open
At Wellston Office . Mon -Fri. , 8
A.M. · 4 P.M. On Call Duty Schod·

Oak H1ll, OH 45656 .

ANNOUNCEMENTS

D1abet1c Patients. Medicare Or
Private Insurance, You May Be
Entitled To Receive Your Diabetic
Supplies At No Cost To You. For
Mora Information 1·888-677·
6561.

3/11/99TFN

OAK H!I.L COMMUNITY
MEDICAL CENTEA

Wolkplaca.
Olploma. Paid Relocallon. Call l·
800-533-1657.
MEDICAL BILLING. Earn Excel-

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
7 40-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

HOL2EI! HOME CARE OF

FIAEFIOHTERSWANTED
mlck Roed, Qolllpollo, OH
Must Have Manual Dexterity. •5631·8517. Fax: 710.••1·8305.
Good Vision &amp; Ability To Uae An Equal Opportunity Employer

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

g West Stimson. Athans

PROBLEMS???

II

Bulldo:er &amp; Backhoe
Services
Hous e &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy•tenu &amp;

train. No cost or obligation. (Call
1-800·701-22731"Openings and
Training In Meigs COUnt(.

Wedemeyer's Auction Service,

lleJdlg

740-742-3411
'

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Bepo • Dlvorded

\'

1:00pm Frldly.

Need 1 Ladies To Sell Avon, 740..

446·:l358.

Ext 9735.

: r-

$500.00
LOANS BY PHONE
FAST AND SIMPLE
NO CBEQIT CHECKS!
$1200 Monthly Income, Active
Checking Account, Direct Deposited
Paycheck Required.
Caii 1-888·891·MONY

II

Free Estimates

877-353-7222 (toll free)

Public Notice

To Levy In Excell or
tt '' ·- . the Ten Mill Limitation
.~,.;~ RevlHd Code, Sections

.

New Construction &amp; Remodeling•• Kitchen Cabinets
Vinyl Siding· Roofs· Decks· Garages

740-742-8015

,,........,.,.22"''

JACKS ROOFING
1-&amp; CONSTRUCTION

Su111et Home Co111truetion

Sidewalks, Patios
Complete Garages:
masonary/wood ·
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yr.. Local

(740) 992·2753
or 992·1101

~

Quality Driveways,

992·6215

1:00 P.M.

CONCRETE

CONNECTION

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Matches
Every Sunday

•~ __ .

YOUR

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

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Howard L. Writesel

EXCAVATinG

t

-.

CONSTRUCTION

Sun 1 pm -6pm

Truck seats, car seats, headliners, ·
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vtnyl tops,
l'
'• Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc. ·
...
·,

•"'

Sundoy 6 Mondey odltlon·

Gallipolis. Oh~ 740·379-2720.

Regular Hours: Tue- Frt 1Q.6
Saturday 10-4
Rt 124 Minersville, OH 7 40-992·4559

SMITH'S

8:30am-a pm

Hourly Rates

A &amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

I

New Store Hours
For Deer Season
Mon-Sat

Portable
Welding Services

Delivery
Service

r ::

lion, which amounll to
aeven ($0.07) cents lor
each one hundred dollars
of valuation, for five (5)
yeare.
The Polls tor said Election
will be opan at 6:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open uniH
7:30 o'clock P.M. of said
day.
By order of the Board
Electlone of Molga County,
Ohio.
Dated Sept. 13, 1999
John N. lhle, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, Director
(10) 5, 12, 19, 26 4TC

PUBLIC NOTICE
Stepa are baing taken
at Meigs Memory
Gardena to Improve •
many facta of our overall
operation lor the
betterment of the
familiae we serve. One of
thoee steps 11 to validate
the Information In our
cemetery 11111 with all or
our property owners.
Malge Memory Garden•
managament 11ks If you
are an owner, please
contact our otllce at 741J.
892·7440 ao we can holp
you and your family.
For appolntmanlo please
call between Mon. • Fri. 9
alhlSat. 9am · 1 pm
Now pr..ontly owned by
the Loewen Group
International, Inc.
(10) 10, 12, 14, 17, 19, 21

BAR-J

tft-!4-fl'j ~

insurance from Auto-Owners

''

IAAEA TITLE RESEARCHER !

773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.

New scents, loyowoys &amp; credit cards accepted

Help

· Must have dependable tranaportat•on and good handwnling. Will

Or Newer, Smith Buick ~ontlac ,
1906 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis.

IQ. or 20-year level term life

..

MONDAY·FRIDAY
7amTONOON
SATURDAY

November 5th 10· 7 pm 6th 1 0·5 pm
Gift to 1st 25 customers (1 per family)
Door Prizes, wooden Angels, Snowmen

TREE SERVICE

no.-mer With low-ca;t
,.,.•• or a busmess ,.....-.

•• ROGAN

80

Christmas Open Mouse

JONES'

!.. , :

day.
By order of the Board
Elactlona of Meigs County,

Public Notice

'

Sr. 124 Wellston, Ohio
740-384-6212
LUMP AIID ROlli COAL

HOlliS: 7om THRU 4pm

Phone (7 40) 593-6671

Pomeroy,
Middleport
l VIcinity
All Yard 81111 Muat Be Pold In
Advance. Doadllno: 1:OOpm the
dey btfort the ·- 11 to ~un ,

The Country Candle Shop

..

Public Notice

Dated Sept. 13, 1999
John N. !hie, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, Director
(10) 5, 12, 19, 26 4TC

I

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

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

"'·

Public Notice

Ohio.

.....
•

110

BRAMHI COAL
COMPAN1
H.I.A.P, YOUCHIIS
ACCEPTID
DEliYIIY AYAILAII.E

f"

ou now have the opnon of protecting your family members

Joia our 20th Aaniversuy Celebration
October 16, 1999 to get your very owa
piece of Teddy Bear History.

· 2501 Jackson Ava, Pl. Plaa-.ant

Tuppers Plains, OH

740·985-3813

The Bear that Started it All!

1ay $20 purcbasc of Boyds products.

At. 7

Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock
8" Grovelless Leach

Celebrate 20 Years of
The Boyds Collection Ltd."'with...

To get a current weather
report, check the

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE
DIVISION MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
COURT MEIGS COURT,
OHIO
Accounts
and
vouchers or the
tollowlgn
named
fiduciary has been flied
In the . Probata Court,
Meigs County, Ohio lor
approval and settlement.
ESTATE NO. 30633 •
Firat and Fiscal Account
of Linda M. Forshee',
Guardian of the person
and estate ot Edith J.
O'Dtll, an Incompetent

St.

Landers' new booklet, "how to Mal e
Friends 'and Stop Being Lone!~. "
Send a self addressed. long, busm~s
size envelope and a check or mont y
order for $4.25 . (this indu* s
postage and handhng) to .. Fnen s,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O . Box 115 ,
Chic ago, Ill . 60611 -0562. (In 'taoo,da, se nd $5. 15) To find out ~qrc
about Ann Landers and read her p4st
columns, visit the Creators Syft~lcate web page at

S04-676-2303

Public Notice

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

BOYDS SPECIAL EVENT

AyaiJaJ,Je ONE DAY ONLY
1t the Aooivcmry Price of just $9.50 witb

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
'"" Sales Representative
liZ
Larry Schey

Protect the imggrtant
people-in your life.

"'II

Dr. Paul Barte presents music workshop at OU

PATIYSPAETH

fam1ly lite- just us, no visitors.
Please, Ann , print this leuer. Your
m;llions of readers who have been
fortunate enough to have missed
what we are gomg through now will
surely profit from it. - NAME
WITHHELD, NO CITY PLEASE
DEAR FRIEND: Thank you for
your excellent suggestions. Let 's
hope everyone will pay attention .
Lonesome? Take charge of your
hfe and turn it around. Write for Ann

Dally Sentinel e Page 7

» DRIVER PLACEMENT&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;

Need dependable person to work

EXPERIENCED OA NOT. We Can
Put You Be hind Tha Whaelll
Free 1-8S8·292-2002 &amp;
_47_3-_358
_ 4=== -=----I
ADVERTISING
,,
SALES REPRESENTATIVE

weekends caring lor the elderly.
call 740·992-5039 Monday
through Friday between 8am·4pm
Oriy.
......;.-:0::-:A-:K-:H:::-IL-:-L-::COM=M-:U-N-:ITY-MEDICAL CENTER

For Well Established Local Co.

One Full Time LPN Position
AvaUable On Long Term Care.
Varied Hours. Qualified Candidate
Must Be Graduate From Ac·

SERVING TAI·COUNT'I AREA
'Must have good Communlc:ation
skills
• Must have good driving record
&amp; PrO\'Ide own Transportation

credited School 01 Nursing And
Possess AValid Ohio License. 11

Interested, Pteasa Send Resume
To: Oak Hill Community Medical
Center, Attention: Brenda Me·

'Must have a~llty to be a TEAM
player
Send Resume to:

Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
RE· Adverlislng Sales Rep
825 Third Avonue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
ASSEMBLY AT HDMEII Cralls,

Toys, Jewelry, Wood, Sewing,

Typing ... Groat Pay! CALL 1·800795·0380 Ext. 1201 (24 Hrs).
AVONI All AreaS! To Buy or Sell
Shirley Spears. 304-675-1429.
Bartender Wanted, 740-441·
1426.
I

Kenzie, 350 Charlotte Avenue.
Oak HI!, OH 45656.
OWN ACOMPUTER, PUT IT TO
WORK. $850 ·$3,500 MO. PTJFI
FREE Details; Log Onto; hllp'//
www.hbn com Access Code 5298
OWN ACOMPUTER?
PUT 11'TO WOAKL
$25 •$75/HR. PTIFT
CALL 1-8811-248-IDO

OR VISIT: www.go-lthy.net
Part-Time Employme.nt In In·
aurance Agency 3 days a week.

Computer &amp; People Skills rs-

BOOKKEEPER WANTEO ·Min
01 2 Years On The Job Experl·

quired. Insurance Experience
Preferred. Send Reaumea in clo:
Point Pleasant Register, M.L. 03,

Payro ll /Job Costing lAP /AA ·
Ability To Handle MuKiple Tasks I

200 Main Street. Pt. Pl .. wv
25550.
Postal Jobs $48,323.00 Yr. Now

ence, Computer Friendly, Knowl·
edge Of Oulckbooks Software ,
Construction Knowledge A Plus

J

Hiring ·No Experience · Paid

NO PHONE CALLS ACCEPTED
/SEND RESUME TO: CHRIS·
TIAN'S CONST. 1403 EASTERN
AVE., GALLIPOliS, OH U&amp;31 .

Training -Great Benellts. Call 7

CNA Classes Are Being Set Up,
For October 11th, Immediate
Openings. EnergetiC, Enthustaa-

Salls Proierred, Apply At Tope's

llc. And Dedlcetod Pooplo Want·

ed, To ca.._ For Our Resld,ents .

Apply A1bors Of Gallipolis, 170
Pinecrest DriVe, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Or Contact Judy Hart. LPN lin·
Slructor 740-742-2370, EOE.
Compl.iter Usera Needed. Work

Own Hrs. $25K -$80KI Y1. 1-800·
536.(1&lt;418 X7n7. www.1cwp.com
DENTAL BILLER Up to $15 ·$45
IHr Dental Blllng Soltworo Com·
pony Noods People To Process
Med1cat Claims From Home.
Training Provided . Must Own

Compute&lt;. 1-800-223-1149 Ext.
460.

DriVer· Class BCOL w/ haz.: ox·
podlle lrelght, 72' ns l!ttpe1, no
DUI's or ltlonles, call 740-992·

S407

•

Days 800-429-3660 Ext. J·365
Retail Furniture Sales. Expenence
In Furniture, Carpet Or Drapery,
Furniture Co., 151 Second Ave·

nue, Qalllpolls, No Phone Calls.
SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY and EASY LISTEN·
INQI Call 1·800·469·8164 For
Appointment To Como To Nashvilla, Ttnntuee And · Audition

For Major Record Prooucara. In·

Wtrnet www.wclruc

State Ttatod CHHA's Needed
For Expanding Home Heafth Providor. Sterling Wags $7.25 Hr.
Call 740·44!-1877 For More In·
lonnallon.

Wanted : Spllc11s For Telephone
Conauuctlon CD. MuSL Bt Eligible
To Work FOI G.T.E. Home El&lt;tn·
lngs: •:30·11 :00 P.M. 740-4483184: Office Day$; 8;0Q.4:00 740.
2118-4185: Mobile: A.M.8:30 ·5:30
740-441-7177 .
l ir

I

�..

.

- . " ....
~

I

Page 8 • Tile Dally Sentinel

'.

Tuesday, October 12,1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, October 12, 1999 .

Pomeroy•

Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page

OOP

NEA Cro••word Puzzle
,

No Exper Needed We Will Train
Vo u In Sh lppmg/ Ae ce lvlng And

Forklifts Computer Knowledge
Helpful Excellent Salary Benehts
And Pr omotions H S Grads
Ages 17 30 Wtlllng To Relocate
AI Our Expense Call 1 800 533

1657
Warehouse Manager Needed
Must have typing sktlls and some

computer knowledge Some hea
Vtlf llhlng required m thts posllton
Salary dependent on eKperlence
Call for lntervtew Sparkle Supply
740 446-4109

WORK FROM HOME $800
$4 500 IMontn Call 1 888 234

www cash.gtt com/home

9897

Work Part· Ttme fFull-Ttme De
monstratmg Beauty Produ cts
With An lnte rnattonal Cos metic
Compa ny Call Ashley 740 441 -

1982

140

(Careers Close To Home)

180 Wanted To Do
A&amp;J s Cleaning Servtce restden
ltal and busmess Call before
7 OOpm 740 992 9913 or 740
992 2576

Cerpet ond Upholstery
Claonlng
Our sa le low mo1sture soil 811tracuon methOd aeep cleans car·
pe t and upholstery No odor no
fuss and m1mmum drymg t1 me
p 2 hrs ) Call Clearly Clean for
tree estunate (304)675 4040
Georges Portable Sawmill don t

haul your togs to the mlll tust ca n
304-675 1957
Handyman seeking work avail·

ablenow 740-949-1035
Hone st Dependable Weekly
House Cleaomg Re asonable
Rates Free Estimates (304)675

2892
J•ms Drywa ll &amp; Constr ucti on
New Co nstr uctiOn &amp; Re model/

Drywall S1d1ng Roofs Add1
t1 ons Pamung etc (304)6 74
4623 or (304)674 0155
K1ms Cleantng &amp; InteriOr Pamt
lng Commerc •at Res1 den11al
Reasonable Rates Free esll
mates call304 674 4623

Will provide caregiVmg for elder
ty Male or Female Monday thru

Friday 9-5 (304)675 2617
WMI take care or elderly female '"
$800

month 740 992 7526

FINANCIAL

This newspaper w111 not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real estate
whicll ts 1n v1ota110n of tl'le
taw Our readers are hereby
Informed tnat aa ctwelilngs
actvert1sed In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity bas1s

220 Money to Loan

310 Homes for Sala
FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Downl Gov't And Bank Repo s
Being Sold Now! Financing Avail
able Call Nowl 1·800-730 7772
Ext 8040

$$$ OVERDUE BILLSII ' $$$ Consolidate Debt s! Same Day Appro·
val NO APPLICATION FEES!' I ·
800 863 9006 Ext 938 www help
pay-bills com

HOME FORECLOSURES • NO
MONEY DOWN ! NO CREDIT
NEEDED! TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! 1 600 ·916
9191 Ext H5023

$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Weallhy Fam1 11es Unloading M1!·
lions Of Dollars To Help M1n1mJZ8
TheH Taxes Wnte Immediately
Wondlalls 847 A SECOND AVE
SUITE •350 NEW YORK NEW
'YORK 10017

HOMES FROM $t99 30 /Mo 1
3 BR Aepos /Foreclosures Fee
4'4 Down For l1stmgs/ Payment
Deta1ls 1 800-719-3001 x1185
Hou se and lot lor sale· 4 beCl
rooms two batt1s located m Car
penter $1000 down WA C easy
terms contact David 1 800·333
6910

"GUARANTEED APPROVAL"
Bank Card No Credit Check No
Up Front Cash Security Depos1t
Required 'Mu st Be 18 -t And
Have Va lid Checking Account•
Pre-Approva l By Phone 1 800·
689-1556

Texas Roa d Gall1polis C1ty
Schools Five Roo ms And Partial
Basement Owner W1il F1nance
With1 0"1o00wn7404411108

CASH Or LOAN I Farm Cap1tal
Will Purchase Or Loa n Agatnst
You r Government Farm Pay
ments (CRPI PFC) Call Farm
Capllal 1 886 FARM ACT (32762281

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
....LOOKt••••
5 Bedrooms 2 1/2 Baths over
2 ooo sQ 11 for less than $400
mo FREE dehvery &amp; set 1· 800
948 5676

CONSOLIDATE DEBT Redu ced
Monthly Payments 20 50% Sa\le
Thousands Of Dollars In Interest
Non-Profit TCC BOO 758·3844

14&gt;&lt;60 Fl Spacoous 2 l&gt;edroom 1
bath complete with carport and
storage bulld1ng Set up on rental
Loll (7401446 86 17 Leave Mes
sage!

CREDIT PROBELMS?
'Avo1d Bankruptcyl1 1
Stop CoRectlon Callslu
• Low Paymentstl !
Free Consumer Co un seling Call
Now 1 soo 788-6n7

14x70 !railer 3 br $3500 OBO
also to give away 12K65 trailer
304 576 2690

CREDIT PROBLEM S Stop Here
We Can Help Loa ns Available
$3 eoo And Up No Fee 1· 877·
663 9269 Ext 22t

14x70 With Expando Good Con
dotlon $6 500 740-446 8172 74().
256 6251

CREDIT REAPIRI AS SEENON
TVI Erase Bad Credit Legally
Free lnlo 888 659-2560

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the offenng
2 9 Cento /Min PHONE CARD
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MeCltcattoentat Claims Computer
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4159 EX1 54
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F1gures !90 Oaysll Not MLM!tt
600-743 8529

Cash For Rema ining Payme nts
On Property Sold! Mortgages!
Annllll1es! Se ttlements! lmma·
d1ate Olloteslll "Nobody Beats
Our Prices • National Contract
Buyers BOO 490 0731 Ext 101
www nahonalcontractbuyers com

Call To&lt;layl 740 446-4367
1 800 214 0452
Reg •90-05 1274B

210

All real estate advertising In
thiS newspaper IS subj9d to
the F~ral Fa1r Hous1ngAct
ol1968 which makes it Illegal
to adve rt1se ~any preference
llm1tat1on or d1scnm1nat10n
based on race color religion
sex familial status or nallanal
ongm or any 1ntent1on to
make any such preference
11m1ta110n or d1scnmmation •

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TCt2B566
&lt;

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expenenced

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Few Hrs = Great Income Pnced
To Sell Free Brochure 800 820
6782

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1tmd com 800 733-0223

Business
Training

my home

320 Mobile Home•
for Sale

Business
Opportunity

WAAEHOUSE~RCH~SE

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
ApplicatiOn W /Serv1ce Reduce
Payment s To 65% !!CASH IN
CENTIVE OFFER !' Call 1-800·
328B510EX129

Schult New Generation 16'x72 3
Bedrooms 2 Baths Vinyl Siding,
Shingle Rool 2'x6 Walls Garden
Tub Skylights, Tota l Ele ctric
Frea AIC Sale Pri ce d French
City Homes Point Plea sant WV
304 675 1400

Special 28xBO 3 or 4BR $1000
Down $349 per mo Free Oellv·
ery &amp;Setup 1 BOIH191 -6777
Used Single Wide Around Stoo
Per Month call 1 B00-948 5678

330 Farms for Sale
26 Acres MIL With 6 Stall Horse
Barn County Water 3 Bedroom
House 74() 38H504

340 Business and
Buildings
3 ooo Sq Ft Comm,rclal Build·
lng In Henderson lor rent lease
or sale Call Sonny Reynolds,
(304)675·4123

350 Lots &amp; Acrsage
2 44 Acres Homesite Green
Townsh1p Gali1a County Scenle
Quiet Close To Gallipolis Some
RestrictiOns 740·245 5776
3 35 Acres Corner of Foglesong
and Hanging Rock Road in Ma
son
$25 000 OBO
Call
(304)882·34601or882 2633

GALLIA COUNTY
23~AES

2 miles 01t SA 7 &amp; SA 216 South
01 Gall1pohs S1nQiew1des Allowed
Rough Mosliy Wooded Road AI ·
ready Cut In $27 OOJ
20 WOODED ~RES
Great For Hunung Near Patriot
Off SA 141 &amp; SA 233 $23 000 On
New Road BUilt Thai Contmlles
Into Wayne National Forest
MEIGS COUNTY
Near Danville &amp; Rutland 011 SFI
325 5 &amp; 10 Acres $9 500+ Call
Fe.' Free Maps On These And
Other Propert1es In Southern
OhiO
Anthony Land Co Lid
1·800-213-8385
www countrytyme com
Selling 1 Acre Ground Paxton
Road 74D-446 9494

360

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acres
Wo Pay Cash 1 800 213·8365
Antnony Ulnd Co

RENTALS

410 Hquses for Rent

1972 Needs Small Aepa1rs 740·
388-9830

2 Bdrms Older Home, Nice Loca·

1980 14Ft X 70Ft Aamodeled In·
side Good Shape Must See To
Appreciate $10 900 00 740 446·
4880

2 Bedrooms $325/tJio + Ut1htles
and Deposit No Pets! 740 446·
4313

1967 Kawasak&lt; KXBO New Jug
New P1ston Great ConcUIOn, Runs
Great 7o4() 367-&lt;!308

GET OUT OF DEBT• REDUCE In
terest Rates! REDUCE Monthly
Payments 20 40% Ca ll 800 700·
6812 K 1001 For FREE Consults
tion www debtdebt com
GET YOUR CASH NOW! Oldest
Buyers Of Struclllred Settlements,
Annwues And Government Farm
Payments Also Purchasmg Lot·
tenes And P r~v ate Mortgages
Call Selllament Capital 1 800·
959 0006 www aettlementcapl·
tal com

lion No Pets Cal1740-446 2300

2BR 1BA &amp; lull s1ze basement
Lots of land &amp; garden spa ce
t 400 sq ft ol living space
(304)576-9991 For renVsale

1990 Danville 14x70 2 Bedrooms
2 Baths, Excellent Condition 7&lt;40446·1778

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths 2 Car Ga
rage, 1 Acre Lot, R1ver Valley I
Addavllle School District 740·
3877708

1991 14ftx72fl 2 Bedrooms 2
Baths Shingle Aool VInyl Siding
Excellent ConditiOn $16 ooo oo
(740)446-81 13

Pomeroy 3 bedroom , $350 per
month depos1t re.quired call 740.
992 6445 aHer 6pm

1999 Ooublewlde Repo Never
L1ved tn New Home Warranty 0
Down II Qualified 740·446·3093
Oakwood Gallipolis On~'l

Need A Loan? Try Debt Consoli·
datoon $5 000 $200 000 Bad
Cred1t 0 K Fee 1 800.770 0092
Exl215

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

RE CEIVING PAYMENTS? In
ves tor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Financed Mortgage
Real Estate Contract Insurance
.Annu1ty H1ghest Prices Free
Quotas Wny Walt? Call Rich 1·
600-888 6450

230

Schull New GeneratiOn SecUonal
28 x64' LA, Family Room Fire·
place, 4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
Thermopane Window s &amp; Much
Mora! Priced To Move I French
City Homes Point Plea&amp;ant WV,
304 675-1400

Want A Home Don 1 Have Land?
We Do Hurry Only 10 Lots lett
800 383-6662
OoublewiCtes Free Decor &amp; Furnl
ture
HURRY, HURRY, HURFIYI
OAKWOOD HOMES
BARBOURSVILLE WV
BOO 383-6882

Proleaslonal
Services

DoubleWide Display Sale All
unlls must go Save thousands
Oakwood Homes N1tro WV
(304)755,5865

Mounts Tree Serv1ce "The Tree
Professional s• Bucket Tru ck
Service Top Tnm Removal
Stump Grinding Free Est1mates
Fully Insured Works Camp B;d·
well OH Call And Save HOO
836-9566 740 386 9648, Owner
Rick Mount

Free Money/Cash Rebates that
can be used towards your down
paymenl only at Oakwood
Homes Nitro WV (304)755·
5885

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We W1nl
1 886-582 3345

HUO Homes Approval By Phone
Singles Or Doubles 740 4o46·
3583

REAL ESTATE

Limited Oller 1999 Ooullla Wide
3 Bedroom 2 Bath, $1799 Down
$275 00 per month 0e11verect
and set up can 1 B00-948·5878

310 Homes for Sale

Lived In 7mo 1998/Fairmont
Commander on lot wlll'l 2 Decks
20 500 Possibly leave on rented
lovtow rent~304)875-4153

$0 OOWNI HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED I
GOV T
FORE
CLOSURES! CALL NOW FOR
REGISTRATION! 1•800-434
243o4 EXT 3205 (NO FEE)

May Sell on Land Contract Very
Nice 2 Bdrm A1r With Or Wilh·
out Furniture May Be Left On
Ronted Lot In Gaii!JOIIS 74().448·
1409

3 Bedrooms 1 112 Baths, Brlck
Flanch Laundry Room 2 Car Ga·
rage Approx 1 Acre, 740·446
1393 Or 740-446-6612

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Separate 3
Car Garage 2 112 Acres 5
Mmutes From Holzers $85 000,
740-441-&lt;)132

~3.:;B:..e.:;dr:..oo;.m=s.:;1-/1-/2...;.B_a_th-,-A-o-ne-h.~
Style Home Excellent Condition
On The Corner 01 Klneon &amp;Teodora Gallipolis Ohio, 1740 1·446
7928 Evenings
A ZEAO'!lo DOWN LO~NI
No Down Payment Required With
Government Sponsored Loan
GOOd Credit And Steady Income
Flequ1red Call For More lntorma·
t1on And Fo( Other Financing OpliOns Independence Mortgage
S.MCOS 1-600-845-0036

Moving Out ot Ane. Must sell at
sacrillca 98 S W Like New
(304)736-9102
MOVING OUT OF AREA o Must
Sell At Sacraflce, 1998 SW Like
New 304·733-9t02
Now 3BA 2 Bath 14 Wode $500
Down, $210 par mo Free ~lr 1·
600-691 6777
New 4BR 16 w1de $500 Down
$2o45 par mo Free Air, 1·800·
69 1-6m
New DoubleWida Repo neve r
lived in still under warranty
(304)755 7191

ARIZONA RARE BUY! Pnstone 40 Schult Fiesta 14x70 3 Bedrooms
Acre Ranches In Nor thwest Arl
1 Bath Vmyl Sidmg Shingle Roof,
zona From Only $495/,Acrel Lush 2 x6 Walls Total Electric Free AI
Vegeta tiO n Mountain Vlewsl No C Priced To Move Frenct1 City
Ouahtymg Low Down Ask About Homes Polnt Pleasant WV, 3046 Mo Inspection Program! 1·800 67 5 1400
711 2340
Schull New Generation SectiOnal
Buy Homes From $10 000
28 x52 Fea turmg Schull Country
1 3 Bedroom local Government Kitchen 3 Bedroo ms 2 Baths
&amp; Bank Foreclos ure s Fin anc ing Sale Priced French Clly Homes
Poss1ble For LHs tmgs Call 800· Pomt Ple asant WV 304 675
319 3323 E&lt;t 1709
1400

i'

Racine· three bedroom $400
month plus utilities $200 deposit
no pets, reference s required
74().949·2621
Three bedroom all electric ranch
home wtth attached garage,
lanced back yard large lot at
Meadow Land Estates Pt Pleas·
ant $600 month plus references
and depos11 304 624-2480

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
12Ft X 85Ft 2 Bdrms $280 00
Month Plus $300 00 Deposit
74Q-448-7321 Alter 6 OOPm
Between Athans and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bactroom mobile homes,
$280-$300 740-992·2167
2 br trailer $275 a mon + utll +
$275 security dep ref a must
4th St Mason 304-675·1911
For Sale or Rent 2BR Mobile
Home $250 per month Sewer/
water furnished No Pets
(304)87~

Furn1shed two bedroom, ale, no
pets RIVer Park, Pomeroy $300
per monltt $150 deposit 740
949-2093

440

Apartments
for Rant

t and 2 bedroom apartments fur
ntshed and unfurnished, security
deposit re(lulrecl no pats 740·
992 2216
1 Bdrm , Unfurnished, With Stove
&amp; Aalr\j $215 00 Per Month In·
eluding Water $100 00 Deposit,
No Pels 74cKot6·3617
1 Bedroom Unfurnished Apart ·
ment, Range Refrigerator, Disposal, Garage Provided Wate r,
Sewage Garbage Paid Deposit &amp;
References Required 136 First
Avenue Rear Gallipolis 7o40·
44&amp;.2581

APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
trom $279 to $3 ~8 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740·446·2568
Equal Houoong Oj)po&lt;tunlty
BE~UTIFUL

Brookside AJ)artments Now Ac·
capting AppUcatlona For One
Bedroom With WID Hook ·Up
Apartment 74().448-9811

Cn•lsty s Family Living aparl
ments home &amp; trailer renta ls
740 ~92 4514 apartments avail·
able furnished &amp; unturRI&amp;hed
Downtown-Very nice upstairs 2
Bedroom all Electric Complete
Kitchen WID Non Smoklngl No
Pe!sl Aeloronce &amp; Deposit (740)·
446-0139

Elllclency Aparlrnenl bMide Wal·
Mart $400 00 Utilrlles Paldl (74())
446-2~15

540 Mlecellaneoua
Merchandlae
1 Bedroom 2 Blocks From Un1
verslty Rio $235/Mo Plus Do ·
posit A'llallable October 12th
74().388 9946
1 Bedroom 2 Blocks From Uni
vers ily Ri o $235/Mo Plus 08 ·
posit Ava ilable October 12th,
74().388-9946
1 Bedroom 2 Blocks From Uni·
verslty Rio $235/Mo Plus Deposit Available October 12th~
74().388 9994

GrUbb's P1ano- tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Dr 740 446 452~

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Furnaces Installed As Low As
$26 00 A Month With Approved
Credit, Easy Over The Phone
Bank Financing Huge Inventory
Of lnterlherm Miller &amp; Coleman
Furnaces Heat Pumps And
Parts VInyl Skirting Kits $299 95
Doors &amp; Windows Water Heat
ers Anchors Plumbing &amp; Electrl
cal Pa rts Bennetts Mobile Home
HTG &amp; CLG 740 446 9416 Or 1
800·872·5967 Gallipolis OH

A... enlle Galllpohs, I Bed·
room Apartment 740-446·1086
or Weekends 7o4()-44Hl952
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments 1n Middle·
port From $249·$373 Call 740·
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor·
!unities

One bedroom lurnl st1ed apart·
men! call 740-992 9191

Two bedroom apartment lor rent,
complete!¥ furnished washer/
dryer all uhi!Ues paid Available
November 1st Please call 7o40
992·2292

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Rollnd bales ol hay lor sale 740·
896 8211
Wheat wJiots ot vetch seed In It
Excellent cover crop or wheat
nay $5 so par 1001b Also grain
dryer &amp; 2 row picker/sheller, 2
raN mounted corn piCker on 1600
D1esel Ohver Tractor: (304)372·
5023, alter 6PM

3584

Seasoned f1rewood $45 pick up
load, $90 cord , split &amp; ctellvered
HEAP voucher accepted 740
885 3419

Tara Townhouse Apartment&amp;,
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 112 Bath, Ful~ carpeted Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Pallo Start $350/Mo No Pets
Lease PillS Security Deposit Required, Allar 5 740·446 0101,
Before 5 740-448-3481

Two reg1stered quarter horus for
sate, call 740-898 3290

Pellet Stove like new (304)695
Premium Firewood Oak &amp; Ash
$50 Load, Full SIZe Pld&lt;·Up De
livered 74().992-4566

Small 1BA Apt PI Pleasant
Area $195 month Evenings
(304)675-4975

Speclat Fall Feeder ~II Sale
Saturday October 23 1999 1
PM Cattle May Be Brought In AI
tar 4 PM On Friday All Cons\jn·
menta Welcome Hauling Avail ·
able, Athens Livestock Sates
74() 592·2322 74D-B9flr3531

Nice used furniture and Ap
pllances Johnson s Used Furni
lure (7401·446·1004 (7401·446
4()39 any lime Out Bulavllle Pike

Modern lilA All ulllllles paid,
except electriC Gallipolis Ferry
Area S250 mo + deposit
1304)875-1371 "'67~ 3230

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom TownhO!JSe
Apartments Includes Water
Sewage Trash, $315/Mo, 740446-0008

Club Calves AI Bred Raised The
Grand Champion Steer In 1999
Mason County Fair 740 245·
9315

•

2bdrm apts total electric ap·
pllances furnished laundry room
lac1iltles close to school in town
Appllcalions available at VIllage
Green Apts t49 or call 740·992·
3711 EOH

F~rst

5 year old Palomino mare gentle
green broke $750 740-992-0357

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans, 1-~D0-537-9526
Lose Up To 30 lbs In 30 Days
For $38, Ask About Free Sam
pies 741J.441- t982

no

2 Charolals bulls breeding age
74() 742· 1903

Hawaiian Ter lyaki Reel~&amp; S3
SASE
Kama aina Foods
PMB522 4224 Walalae Avenue
15 Honolulu Hl96816

1 Bedroom Near Holzer's Eco·
nomicat Gas Heat Kitchen AP·
pllances Furnished $2791Mo , +
Ut11111es 7o40.44~2957

Apartment lor rant tn Pomeroy
pots 74()-992 5858

$500 Reward tor arrest1Conv ot
person (s ) whO took Saddle from
my barn at Gallipolis Ferry Cha
rles C Plants (3041675·2856

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale
$600 CARS FROM $50011t Buy
Pollee Impounds &amp; Repos Fee
CALL NOW For Lls!ongsl 1 800·
319-3323x215e

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Claim Demed? We Specialize In
Appeals And Hearings FREE
CONSULTATION Benefit Team
Services Inc Toii·Frae 1·688
838·4052

87 Z24, white ,
882 3264

$7~0

ca ll 304

CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUND Honda s Toyota s
Chevys Jeeps And Sport Utili·
ties Fee Required C.~ Now! BD0772 7470 EXT 7832

STEEL BUILDINGS 7 ONLY! 2 •
30x60 40x80 45x90 2 ·5 1x120
60x200 Free Dellverylf Must Liq
uidatell 1 80Q-21 1·9594 x-62

CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUNDS Honda 's Toyota s,
Cnevys Jeeps And Sporl Ullll·
ttes Fee Required Call Nowl 800.
772-7470 EXT 7832

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY Will Finance With ·o· Down!
Past Credit Problams No Problem
Call 'roll Free 1-800-603-7537

1970 Chevy Chevalla Aulomatlc
2 Doors HanUop New Palnl New
350 Stock Engine, !TransmiSSIOn,
$3 000 740-379-2566

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?7 We Finance •o•
Down! F»ast Credit Problems OK!!
Even ll"'rurned Down Belorell Re·
establish Your Credltll 1· 800·
659-0359

1970 El Camino SS Clone 350
Rebuilt Motor 350 Turbo Trans·
m1sSion Came From Florida New
Peont 74() 25e 1071

WARMUP
92% Gas Furnaces Heat Pumps
Duct Systems Free Estimates, II
You Don't Call US We Boffl Loss!
74()-446·8308 I·BOQ.291·009B

1983 Olds 2 Doors, cunass Su·
preme Brougham Black One
Owner Black, Fllll Power, AfT 5 0
Liter v 8 Motor Excellent Condi·
loon $2,200 740-446·3277

Wate rline Special 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass CO")·
River Park Pomeroy (formerly • presilon Fittings In Slodl
Browns) $100 per month 740
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
949-2093
Jackeon Ohio t ·800.537 9528

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

Upsta1rs Furn1shed 3 Rooms
Bath Clean No Pets! References
&amp; Deposit Aaqulrad, 740·446
1519

460 Space for Rent
2 trailer lots for rant S 75 00 each
across !rom New Haven grade
schooi304-B82 2219

490

For Lease

Pomeroy Rt 124 BOO sq H cuotomer parking ale carpet ceiling
tan modern, $350/month $150
depo s~ 740-94g.2093

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

10" Color TV Emerson , $100
Nintendo 64, 2 controller 5
games, $1 so (304)675-6195
Appliances
Aecondllloned
Washers Dryers Ranges, Rafrl·
grators 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740·446·
7795
For Sale Reconditioned wash·
ers, dryers and refrigerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jactoson Avenue (304)675-7388

OOOD USED ~PPLI~NCES
Washers dryers refngaratora
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 76
VIne S•eet, Call 740·446·7398
1·888 618-0128
Mollohan Carpets, Quellty Carpet
AI AllordaDte Prloll. 202 Ctartt
Chapel Road 740·446-7444 740388-0173
R&amp;D s Used Furniture Great So·
tectton Priced To Sell! •come
And Brows• • Corner 01 Route 7
&amp; Addison Pike, 74D-38Hl280

520

Sporting
Goods

Mountaineer Bow, Lef1hanct, Kell·
er Stght Overdraw/Quiver &amp; Ar·
rows Included $200 (304)875
8195

530

Antiques

Buy or Hit Riverine Antiques
1124 E Main Street, on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 600 pm , Sunday 100 to
6 oo p m 740·992 2528 Russ
Moore owner

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allison 588 Watson Road
Bld...,ll Ohio 140-446-4338

550

3940
1990 Grand Am White 4 Doors
Auto, AIC New Battery Brakes,
Fresh Trans Runs Good $1 500
OBO 74D-441-1083

Block, brick sewer pipes wind
ows lintels etc Claude Winters
Ala Grande OH Call 740 245
5121

560

1991 Dodge Shadow, 4 Cylinder,
5 Speed Good CondiUon, Asking
$2 000 Saroous Calls Only 740441--0616

Pets for Sale

5 Puppies 2 Males 3 Females
Eskimo Spitz $50 Eac~. Mother &amp;
Father On Premises No Papers
740-448·3261

1992 Pontiac Grand AM 4
Doors Cru1se A1r Stereo /Cass·
eto PL 1OOK New Body Style.
74D-245 9416

AKC German Shephard Puppies
74()·245·9213

1993 Dodge Shadow Loaded 3 0
V 6, $1 700 OBO 740 446 2247,
339-1)338

AKC Papers Golden Retriever
Puppies, $250 Each Females,
$200 Elldl Males 740-387-7706

1993 Grand Am 2 Doors $4 395
1992 Otqs Achleva 2 Doors, Low
Miles $3 995 1991 Cavalier 2
Doors $2 195 1989 Pontiac 6000
LE 4 Doors, $2 1~. Cook Motors
740-44H103

AKC Pomeranian&amp; Female 1
year old, $150 00 Male 1 year
$100 oo very swaetl (740)-256·
6182

1993 Plymouth Duster 6 cylinder
OHC, standard, excellent Condi
lion loolls great beautiful hitertor
noce whee ls $3500 740·949·
2045 evenings

AKC Reg Yellow Lab House·
trained, excellent w/chlidren
$100 (304)675 B195
AKC Registered Cocker Spaniel
puppies first shots and wormed
bull and bull &amp; while spots, $200
740-992-7371

1994 Plymouth Acclaim ee,ooo
Miles Auto Air Cruise Tilt Alu·
mtnum Wheels $3 600, 080 740256-6189

Black &amp; Chocolate LaD Puppies
$200 00 With Papers 1St Shots
And Wormed 740 368-8922 Or
74()·388·9396

1997 Camaro, 40 000 miles load
ed, 740-669-0004
1999 FORD EXPLORER $100 I
OBO. Seized And Selling Locally
Fee 1·B00·409 7511 Ext 9896
Fee

Loving Gill AKC TOY YORKIE
PUPPIES, Shots Wormed Ready
To Gol740-379-9081
Regis tered German Shepherd
puppies for sale, S100 ror males
S1501orlerneles 304-773-5810

87 Mustang sunrool blue &amp;
wli1te, runs good S1500 or trade
for good running truck 740·992·
9190

Two V K C Reg Female Treeing
Walker Pups Four Months Old
(304)895-3394

1g92
Plymouth
(304)675-4()14

Wanted! Male Stud Walsh Gorgl
Please Call 740·446·5252 Ext
3022 (Work) Or Aller 5 OOPm
740-4411155

570

45 KW Konlar Generator B Cylln·

Moonglow By Kimball Electrl&lt;: Or
gan, Good Condition, Price Nago
t - C&amp;II741J.4411-9477

$5500, 740-256·1506

1988 Chevy Sprint , New rings &amp;
bearings hettd rebulll new
brakes &amp; front tires (304 )895 ·

Building
Suppllea

540 Mlacellaneou•
Marchandlae
der Diesel 63 Hours On Unit

1986 Olds Ciera 4 Doors Aula
Air New Tires Runs GOOd, $850
Or Best Ollar 74()-441 -1 063

Musical
Instruments

Fruits &amp;
21 x20 TWO CAR GARAGE Full 580
/25 'Vr Manufacturers Warrantee
Vegetables
Complete With 10 Overhead 1
Door $2 993 00 Can Do liver t. Red Raspberries, Now Available
Taylors Barry Patcb Call In Eve·
800-701·791~
lnge 74().245-9047
Bassett Crlb·Solld Maple with
Manreas $12e. Two Charry Baa· Walnuts Bought At Troyer&amp;
sett Chest of Drawers $300 for Woodcral! Open Monday ~nd
Thursday And Saturday, Starting
both (304)675-3440elter4Piol
9125 Till 10130199, 9 Milos West
Britannia Oslto Groovy beanlo 01 GalllpoiiB On 141
baDioo all 3 '!ollday teddlos &amp;
ntony more l&gt;einle bablel &amp; DIAd·
FARM SUPPLIE S
dies call elte' S pm 304·6'5·
7223
&amp; LIVESTOCK
COMPUTERS • $0 Down Low
M~nthly Paymonl&amp; Y2K Compll·
ant Almost Everyone Approvttd
Call FIAOCOM Advanced Tech·
nologles 1-800·817-3478 Ex!

330

Free PC COfTIJUierll Call Nowlll &amp;
Learn How Internet Merchant
Accounts Custom Websitea
New Business? Poor Credll?
OKIII Almas! Evory BuslnHa Approved Low Monthly Payl!'ents
1·888-671-4300

Acclaim

Ohlq Valley Bank Will Oller For
Sale By Public Auction A 1990
Pontiac Grand Prix 1309970 At
10 00 A M On 10123/&amp;g At The
OVB Annex, 143 Third Ava Gal·
llpolos, OH Sold To Highest Bid·
der •As Is - Where Ia• Without
Expressed Or Implied Warranty
&amp; May'Be Sean By Callong The
Collection Oapl At 740-441 ·1036
OVB Reserves The Right To Ac·
capt /Relect Any &amp; All Bods &amp;
Withdraw Items From Sale Prior
To Sale Terms 01 Sale C~SH
OR CEIIllFlED CHECK
$100 $500 &amp; UP POLICE IMPOUND Honda a Toyola's, Cht·
vys Jeeps &amp; Sport Ullll11es Call
NowiSOQ-730-7772 EXT 6338

720 Trucks for Sale
1979 GMC 3/4 Ton $13,000 New
Patte Pr~e $1,100 Celi740'2W

1102, As!&lt;""' Jr

610 Farm Equipment
92 Ponderosa ca!lle trailer 114')
tor sale $1500 firm 740· 992
80~

l!'ltarnatlonal Dresser TOTE Doz.
er, 8-Way Blade 70% Under Car
, . $14 000 13041875-5403

I

Nort

• 5 3

• 9 6 43
• 8 5 z

Weal

Eaal

•QJI087

• 9
• Q 10 g 7

•J85
• Q7z

.. ,

l

•

BARNEY
WHAT YEAR WAS

South

2•
2NT

UH-- LET ME

WE MARRIED,
PAW?

l
&amp; EARNEST

INT~L.L.Ifi~NG~

~ l&gt;IPN'T

ttAVt
A HVMIEfl. 2
PefiGIL, SO ~
u~eP TviO

TESTINfi

I

Tu..,'l"l

t~uMre,

t•

••'

· '-

I'

J

1988 Yamaha Warrior New Tires,
Runs Good, Looks Good, $1 5001
1996 Kawasak o750 SS Jet
Low Hours With Trailer $2 8001,
14o-44H587

ONeS.
.,

•••

. THE BORN LOSER
fll&gt;W DO YOU UK£ ..,
:£.C..OKD~7

l

j'

W~T MIJf. YOU L.~t.o

P'"

TO e£ ~':)IN-olD IJi&gt;~
TO e£. f\Et-ro, ::&gt;l'f.N( (l);
TO ef A.~CI~Tf.D,
~1-\U\ UP I

""'

~FI'.R~

1969 Harley Davidson SoltaU
$12 500 080 74().992-2209
'

4:'

Yamaha Ti\n be rwolf
wheeler with 1998 tnt trailer, ne~
mudders $2800 740·992·41&amp;a.,
aller 5pm
•
1999 400 EX Excellent Sh'flfl
$44()0 OB0740-446·t627

I

%•

...;_j
-

3

1979 Starcrall 23 cuddy cabin
boat Inboard V 8, new cover, -,
very good condition no trailer, nq l
outdrlve llrst S3500 OBO 740·.
992-1508 days or 740 949·2644
evenings
}
~
t969 20' Skipper Crall Pontoon :
60 HP Mariner Low Hrs Bimini f
Top$3BOO 74()·256·1906
•; t

'I'OU CAAT Co•NINCE
I'EOPL E Of" SOME
THIN&amp; THEY DON T
WANT TO &amp;E
CONVINCED 0!;'

.

WELL,
TfiAT !&gt;
YOUR
OPINION

IT!&gt; NOT
oPINION,
ITS F"'T!
I CAN li&gt;O IT'
I C. AN!\

•I

1995 17 Hydra Sport 90 hp'
Johnson tilt trim, trolling motor &amp; :
trailer, ready to go $7 800
1991 ts Bass Tracker Pro Team; ~
60 hp mariner with trolling motOf • •
&amp; ttaler $6.700
199B 18' 800 Sarles Nitro 120 11p •
Mercury, Dual Console, built In
battery Cllarger Ualler $1 900
·{
t998 24' Sweetwater pontoon, 90
hp Johnson, tandem a lie with ~
DrakeS 51&lt;1700 740-992-6520
;

Auto Parts &amp;
Accesaorle•

·;
·~

Aluminum Cap for Long Bed Ford
Ranger
Late 80's Model
(304)895·3384

I

~ I CAN!
I SAY IT!
i "YOU
' CAN~!!

I M HAVING
A FLASH ·
!lACK TO
THE THREE
DAY!&gt; HE
SPENT
ON THE
5CHOOL

DEBATIN&amp;

J

760

TEI\M

PEANUTS

3 Mothlr ol
Collor and

32--cologne

PoilU I

33 Group of lrwl

4 Roman

34 Out o1 bed
35 Drive forward
36 Burclenoonte
311 Twangy
40 Twilled (one'o

8 Electrical .

highway
5 Foot part
II
8 Terminated
7 Frozen water 't
column
11

12 Sight organa
It Uncle (&amp;p.)
21 e.rore thlo
lima
22 Trimming
23 Architect

unit

Selze1

to Cr011

hando)

lnecrlpllon
Greek god

Saorlown

Weal
Pass
Pass

24 Pour

25 Stri181Mm
26RI-rn

Garmany

North

2.

Easl
Pass

3NT

All pass

26 "-La

Douce"
HBurata
30 Part ol the
aye

Q

31 Tracie lor
36 Big-,

Cal~ornl.l

41 Oln
42 Vwry, to PllrN •
43 Aatronaut
Solly-

44 Eagar

45 Pll!llu
47 PHIIc

Yeslerday, I mentioned that bndge
can be frustratmg when the nghl hne
of play ·- 1he one favored by the per·
cemages •• doesn' t work, whereas a
mathemattcally mfenor approach
wm s Somettmes, an expert w1il back
the apparently weaker horse because
of a hunch •• what ts known as table
presence But unless you have particularly rehable antennae, m the long
run you w11i do best to suck wnh the
numbers
In today 's d eal, how would you lry
lo tum etght tncks mto mnc?
• Agamst your three no trump, West
attacks With the spade queen You
duck thts first tnck, but wm West 's
spade-10 contmuauon wnh the ace,
notmg lhal East dtscards a club Next,
you lead the club kmg After wmmng
Wtlh lhe ace, East returns a pass1ve
club Where would you go from
tl;tere'
Two clubs. as regular readers
know. ts strong, artifiCial and forcmg
When followed by lwo no-lrump It
descnbes a bal an ced 23 or 24 pomt s
You have e tghtlncks, two m each
sutl You must hope lo generate a
thtrd dmmond lnck As you have only
one dummy entry, there are two posSible approaches use thai entry to
l ake lhe dtamond linesse, or crash oul
lhc ace, kmg and Jack ol dtamonds
The finesse 1s about a 50 50 play,
the Iauer oplto n work&lt; some 69 per
cenl ol the ttme So. playmg dtamonds from the top ts a much better
hne And wnh 1h1s layout. 11 works
per(ectly Yel 1f you ever face lhts
postlton and find that Easl slarted
wtth Q 10-K K of dtamonds, please
don 'l wnle m Such ts hfe atttmes,
espec tally at the bndge table

loot
4e Muolcal

medley
41 Comecll8na
50 High
carde

52 Dellrlorete
54 Pro - (for lhl
lima being)

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

...

~~Qc:::···
----~-putU ... .,_..
E8Ch
In lhl cipher
ltlnde lot anolher Todty'l c::U C aqulll

,a

YY

F y y

MYYJY

DMYNKYJK
TY

BYMJLX

s

IYK. '

ZCUY

SJ

FT L

YGYM

ESXYJK

KTY

KTSXU

"'ne

KT Y

FN J

ZLZDYM

WSGYZ

s' G y

YGYM

JXSZYM
doesn't d1scove• new lands wtlhoul

PREVIOUS SOLUTION
to lose eoght of the ahore for a very long lime • -

consent1ng

Andre Gttle

....

'::~:;~' S©\\Ji\1~\-~£trs·
Ultd .., QAT I POllAN_.;....._....,.._ _
WOlD

O Reorro"o•

of

ltHers

'

lovr Krumbl-.1 words

low to lorm lour llmplo woo•a•·l

I1 LVLOWH

I lz I I I

,I I

I

1~

.- I' I I
II

...
_W_O_R_N_C...._,,o;,·

s
~
_ • • .
L--L.....I-"--'---'"

My husband wa1ts until the
last m1nute lo do anything He
says thai the best timesaving
.-~R~o-=e~E~V:-:-:-M:--...,, Gev1ce 1s ••••••• •

1

7

1.

.

I HAVE TO DO AREPORT ON THE
NiLE RIVER .TELL ME ALL VOU
KNOW A80UT THE NILE RIVER ..

8

I I I

.

.

.

PRINT NUMnf~EO

18

_

LETTERS IN SQUARES

·6 ANSWER
UNSCRAMBlE ofOR

.

G)

I'

Complele lhe chuckle quoled
by Ml.ng •n the mlssmg word1

r I' 1 r I' I' I'

I
I I I II I III

S~JIAM.I.ETS

4

ANSWERS

Occult · Fleck · Round · Mishap · PICKLED
Sugar and v1negar are preservatives So I have to
decide 11 I want to _be rn a Jam or PICKLED

New Replacement Gas Tanks D
&amp; A Auto, Ripley, WV (304)372· •
3933 or 1-8()1).273-9329
"

;j

Campers&amp;

1 W-.Jing bird

2 uYel--?"

'--''--L--..L.--.L-...1---'. you develop lrono Slop No 3 below

Buctget Priced Transmissions
and Engines, All Types, Access
To Over tO 000 Transmissions,
eve Joints 740-245-5677

790

DOWN

magl1trate
23 Mlolau
27 Guy with a
compleX

By Phillip Alder

1981 Harlay Davidson Low
Lowered Two Inches Lots Oft
Chrome Excellenl Condlllon .,~I
$11 000 74() 446-0947 4

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

I

patient for an
operatiOn
51 Decor... with
o roiHd deolgn

The odds are
compelling

\

·J
Aide, ~

19~6

18 Drench
17 Fly high
18 Lilt-ending

money

~

l

s..

l.t

511 Arab, e.g.
57 Prepare o

37 Dtlbqnalr

~

Loaded. 99,873 Miles 740 446·1

1988 Sof1 Tall Custom Harley Oa,
vldson, 15 000 miles !Ike new,.
$12 700 740-898·5054

I

Tltomu-

A

==~~--7:-:~~~~·
1994 Oldsmobile Sllhouelle Van v

Motorcycle~

•A9763

Opemng lead. •

THINK II

1994 GMC 112 Ton 4X4 , A/C
Power Window &amp; Doors 350 Au; 1
=tic 75 000 Miles 740 388·..~

: 6 F-350 Ford 4WO power
stroke, air lilt cruise PW, PB,
white wilh gray Interior loaded
$19 500 87 000 miles call 740·
992 6223 or 740 949 2045 evtn
ngs

Repkle lo

•KQJ
Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

1987 Dodge Caravan, exceiltnJ. :}
condition, very rolla~lt, $2000.~
74Q-992·3888
..

740

• 10 8 5

So•lb
• AK84
• K6 Z
t A K J

1993 Chevy S- 10 Tehoe 4X.,
Red 49 300 miles 5 speed 4 ~ ,
engine Extra Nice (304)675; ,
4893
• •

47~Cedlr

Jlltlt
7 Become
elec:lnc:.lly

abbr.
20 Hl11lngaound
21 Roman

• A 4 3

Chevy Truck 112 Ton 4x4, Good
For Upcoming Winter $3 500.,
74().367.0331 740-992-e978
•

1993 GMC Cargo Van 350 en·.
gina new ovardrtva trans safety
cQ-ge good tires uses no oil
runs/drives
e•cellenl
183 OOOmlles $3500 OBO or
trade (304)773-5054

10 12 99

z

• 10 4

I

4ellb

1 CryotaHine

15 '"Certainly!'"

F·1

1991 Astra Van, AWO, $5 OOG ~
OBO, 1991 Plymouth Voyager: i
$3 000 080 740-992·2209
• ·r

42 ltrMICIIt'

C•14 Ac1or Lon -

77,000 actual miles, Ford
150xLT Llrllt, 302 luel !nlectlon :
,auto ,new american racing rima 1
new Urea, towing package,resaes 1
hitch new heavy Clutv drive' \
shaft power windows power
brakes air cond 304-882 2042

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDI

ACROSS

51 Actreu
Chill charged
A Style oltype
13 c.pe - leland, 55 Inventor

1996 Chevy 2 Wheel drive, Full \~
Size Exteodod Cab 4 3 V·B 5 ,
Speed Good Condition 72,000
Milas, Asking $12 000 00 74()·
446·1397
~-=~~~~~7:~~I
1997 350 XL 7 3 Diesel Automat· J
lc Cab &amp; Chassis 38,000 miles •
A·1 Cond~lon (74())-258-8058
' '

OCTOBER12I

=~M-o~t~o:-=r~H.;.om_es_~·. ,~
1968 Shasta 17' camper good'.!
condition, $1400, t979 Chevy I
Camoro, 740-9115-3839
;
1978 Star CraH Fold·Out ca-r
Sleeps 8, Stove, Refrigerator, Air
Conditioning $2000 (304)682·

3883.
1geg pa!aml~o Pop- Up Camper( ' •

Sleeps&amp; · B 740'388-8304

SERVICES
~--::-o---....J .

810

W~TERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime guarantee Local references furnished Es
tallllshed 1975 Call 24 Hra (7o4G)
44H870, 1·800·287 0578 Aog
.,.. Waltrprool!ng
Appliance Pans And Service All·
Nama Branda Over 25 Years Experience All Work Guaranteed 1
French City Maytag, 740·448
7795
C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence· Painting, vinyl aldlnQ
carpentry door&amp; windows baths '
moble home repair and more Fa&lt; •
fret eattmate call Chet, 740·992,,

1980 Jeep Grand Ct'terokee wa·
goner 116,000 Miles $3,20000
Call After 4 30Pm 74Q-446-9357

Livingston's Basement Watef
Proofing , ail batemant repatn,
done, lroo eallmates llletlmt.
guarantee 12yrs on job e~eperl·
once (304)896-3887
,•

~0

Electrical and
Refrigeration

\ '

Residential or commer,ctat wiring J

new llr\llca or repairs Master Ll·

'

--

Home
Improvements
"~
-----=IA~S~EM~~==T--~-

8323.

1998 Chevy 2 WD Full Size Exl
Cab 4 3 V-6 5 Spted, 72K Miles,
Great Condition , Asking $12,000,
740-446-1379

lnlernallonal TD-9B Doz., Power
Shllt And Winch Good Under
Carriage $13 eoo, 740-37g.9381

•
~
-72_0_1i-ru-c-:-k-s-:f-or-s=-a-:l-a--:::~
:::_~~~~~~~ ''

1988 Nissen Pick-Up Good War~
Truck 4 Cylinder, $400, 74D-2S41·
9109

1991 Ford Ranger, standard, 4
"'Cylinder, looks good runs excel·
lent chrome wheels 101 K,
$2500, 74() 848 2045 evonlngs

PHILLIP
ALDER

,j

canaecl electrician Rldanourt !
Eleclrlcal, WV000308, 304-875· 1
1788
-.

ASTRO·ORAPH
Wednesday, Oct 13, 1999
It behooves you on the year ahead
to expand your range or tnleresls, be
they soctal or business The more you
develop your knowledge, lhe greater
amounl or opportuntUe&lt; W111 open ror
you
LIBRA (Sepl 23-0cl 23) ThiS ts
• an excellent day lo louch bases wtlh
some eonlac:ts who can he helpful to
you Not only could valuable tnformatlon be acqutred, bultheor support
moahl be thrown on as well L1bra,
treat you110Jr lo a b1rtltday g1fl Send
the required refund fonn and ror your
Astro-Graph predic11ons for lhe year
ahead by mathng $2 and self·
addressed stamped envelope to AstroOraplt, c/o this newspaper, P.O Box
1758, Mumy H1il S1a110n, New
York, NY 101~ Be SUIC IO slale
your Zodiac stan
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)
Focua your efforts loday on 1ways lo
aeneralli ....ller 1ncomc, becau•e
you could stumble on several unoque
avenue• to •UJ1fllcmenl your present

earn... bate

SAGITTARIIIS (Nov 21- Dcc
21) It s 1111c ol those d.tys where the
roce woll go lo the swofl Be an early
sclf-Siarlcr and go-getter today with·
out wa11mg for others to sound the
gun
CAPRICORN IDee 22-Jan 19)
Sc,crnl lmanctal suuntrons wh1ch
may not have worked out well
you tn the rast could he lapped tod.ty
lnr "hatc,cr IlK:') 'rc worth Retrace
your steps and gnc lhtngs another try
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 191
Success won 'l be dented today tfyou
lh•nk and act hkc a wrnncr, espccml·
ly mvolvmg personal self·mlcreSis
Be hopeful and put your efforts 1n
lhol whtch IS tmportant lo you
PISCES (Feb 20-Man:h 20) Be
lenOCIOUS today and don 'l settle for
second be&lt;1 You are more than ctopa·
hie of major OChlCVemenls, espettol·
ly in developments thai affect your
career
ARIES (Man:h 21·Apnl 19) A
unique, l"'nerul tdea may occur lo
you toda) . t" how you can tmprove
upon a relattonsh1p you"d hkc lo
establish Go for II, 11 w1ll delinKely
be worth lryons
1

r, ..

TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) Get
tn slep Wllh lhose who have an tnHuence on your work or career, no mat·
1er how dtfferent lhetr gale may be
rrom yours Condtltons look promtS·
mg when you dance well logcther
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) " The
more. lhe memer" as rar as you re
concerned when 11 comes to domg
somethtng run wolh rnends loday
The larger lhe group, !he more comfortably you ' ll fit tn
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Trusted alltcs can be called upon,
' vcn al lhe lasl mmute today, when
y,ou should he tn need or back up to
achoeve an unpurtanl obje&lt;ttve Don"t
hesitate lo ask
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Acltve
conversattonal uchangcs could sur
ur some-hnghl and untquc tdeas ror
you t()dny, sn assoctate w1th those
who you know rrnm expenence slim·
ulale your thought rrocesses
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sepl 22) Two
pmJccls thol have gtven you fit&lt;
while lrytng lo hrtng lhem lo coom·
plel!on nughl &lt;uddenly have all lhe
pteces ralllogclher for yuuloday and
he ~onduded, once and rur oil

"

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_._,_._\~·._f·

1

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday

Tuesday, October 12,1999

TIME OUT FOR TIPS
BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family and Consumer Sciences/Community Development

October 13, 1999

Weather

Community Calendar

Today: Rainy ·
High: 70s; Low: '\Os

The Community Calendar is publish'ed as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar is not
designed tq promote sales or fund raisers of any type. Items are printed only
as space pennits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number of.
days.

Tomorrow: P. Sunny
High: 60s; Low: 40s

Braves beat Mets in NLCS opener, Page 4
Grandmother upset.with pre-teen, Page 8
Family Medicine, Page 12

POMEROY- Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern Star, Tuesday,
7:30p.m. Initiatory work to be performed. Members to wear chapter dresses.

Planet Hollywood announces closing of nine locations
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Planet
Hollywood has closed nine of its 32
U.S. mov ie-themed restaurants
ahead of a pl anned Chapter II bankruptcy filin g.
J he Orlando- based company
plans to file bankruptcy petitions
today in Delaware. and will soon
suhmit its reorganization plan, ihe
companx said in a news rele ase
Monday evening.
"Today is the first step in our
plan to position Planet Hollywood
for a return to long-term profitability and healthy growth," said Robert

POMEROY - Meigs County Health Department immunization clinic
Tuesday, 9 to II am. and I to 3 p.m. at the Meigs Multipurpose Center. Every
child must be accompanied by a parent/legal guardian . The immuni zation
record&gt;ij~ to be presented. For more information call 992-6626.
TO BEGIN SERVICES •
Revival services will begin
Wednesday and continue through Sunday at the Pomeroy Church
of the Nazarene.
Ishmael and Eileen Horsley will be special workers for the revival
which will be conducted 'nightly at 7 p.m. and on Sunday at 10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m. The Rev. Floyd Grimm, Jr., pastor, invites the public
to attend.

Tri-state artists to exhibit at Jackson Festival
Artists from tile tri -state of Ohi o, Kentucky, and West Virginia will be
heading to Jackson to exhibit their work at the 18th Annual Foothills Art
Festi val at Canter's Cave 4-H Camp thi s wee kend . The festival gets underway Friday and continues through Sunday.
Organized by Southern .Hills Arts Council in Jackson, with the sponsorship of local Ohio business...c.Sands Hill Coal Company, OSCO Industries,
Oak Hill Banks, National City Bank, and the Ohio Arts Council - this annual event features the work of more than 150 artists from the tri-state region.
In addition to the visual ans, live music will be performed and hands-on ans
activities will be available.
One special feature of the Festival is found in a special area set aside on
the mezzanine called "Experiencing Foothills" and is manned by teachers
and volunteers on Saturday from II a.m. to 2 p.m. and·again on Sunday from
noon to 2 p.m. This free .hands-on workshop will give everyone the opportunity to make a pin, prim, or watercolor card to take home.
Classical music lovers will enjoy the enchanting melodies played by classic guitarist Sean Ferguson Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m. The Brighton Trio consisting of Valorie Adams, flute; Kari Gunderson, violin; and Susan Walsh,
cello performs Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m.
The· Festival is open Friday and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 7 'p.m.; and
Sunday, from noon to 5 p.m. Canter's Cave is located five miles nonh of
Jackson off Rt. 35. Food concession, by the Canter's Cave staff, is available.
For more information, call the Council at 740-286-6355. admission and
parking are free.

WED~BsDAY

RACINE - Racine Board of Public Affairs meeting Wednesday, 10:30
a.m. at the municipal building.
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Athletic Boosters: 7 p.m. Wednesday. high
school. Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053. Thursday. Dinner at 6:30 p.m., meeting, 7:30p.m.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Alcoholics Anonymous, open meeting, 7 p.m. Thursday;
Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Thursday, home of Clarice Krautter. Vera Crow and Charlotte Elberfeld, hostesse·s.
ALFRED - Orange Township trustees, Special session, discuss fEMA
projects, Thursday, 7:30p.m., home of Osie Follrod.
POMEROY - Veterans Administration Medical Center of Chillicothe
health care enrollment Thursday, I0-noon and 1-2 p.m. at the Veterans Service
Office, 117 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. Proof of military service required. Call
992-2820 for an appointment.
REEDSVllLE - Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine
Childhood Immunization Program will provide free immunizations for all area
children, from birth through 18 years, Thursday, Il-l p.m. at Reed's Store in
Reedsville and at McDonald's in Pomeroy from 2: 30 to 4 p.m.

the latest in sports news from the'

Dat·ly Senti•nel

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R

I N G

u

s

L

I K E

A
)

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentlnei .Newa Staff
"We're the Rodney Dangerfield of state agencies. We
don 't get any respect"
That was Nancy Pedigo, public relations director for the
Ohio Depanment of Transportation's District 10 in Marietta, described the agency to the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce. Pedigo, of Racine, w115 a guest speaker at the
chamber's monthly luncheon held Tuesday at Carleton
School in Syracuse.
.
.~gq, 'Yho started working with ODCiT in 1992, said
shc.lm9WS the agency is- frequently tlte bNnt o~ jokes·. ·- · ··:·
"Wl\en you see workers slandtng or sitting, there's usually a !CjiSOrl why," she said. Generally !he workers are waiting for the next truckload of malerial .or doing paperwork
alongside the road. The workers are entiUed to two 15minute breaks each day.
"Everything we do can be seen by someone," she said,
adding that the workers "do an honest days work" and are
very experienced.
One of the agency's m05t important, and often thankless,
tasks .is the clearing of state roads during winter. "Imagine
· being in the ·eab of a dump truck during a blinding snowstorm. Imagine yourself in that situation," she said.
· Drivers are assigned routes to clear roads based on their
priority. U.S. 33, state Route 7, and state Route 124 to the
Ritchie Bridge are the top priority roads in Meigs County,
when those roads are cleared the workers move on to other
state roads. Trucks will also plow the way for emergency
personnel to get through to homes during winter stonns, she

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304-428-7102

Comics
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Lo tteries
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Pl~k 3:'5-8-6; Pi~J&lt; 4: 6-0-5-9

,Bucken 5: 12-16-23-29-31
•Offar enda October 31. 1999. S!.b}ect to approved credit on J~hn Deere Credit Revolving Plan, for noiHIOmmerclal use. A 1()'1(, ctown payment required. If the biiMCe Is oot paid In full by tht lnd of~ AI Cllh promotlonll period. lntefe.st will be IIMI HO fr tt1e rl&amp;l
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-...... ... .. . . . . ... -...-- .....

GOODYEAR FAMILY- Roscoe and Sandee Mills were named the Goodyear Family of the..¥•r
In recognition of their diversified farming operation on 1600 acres In Meigs County. Larry Vance,
chief, Division of Soli and Water Conservation District, right, made the presentation assisted by
Joe Bolin, supervisor, left.

said.
bow Bridge" on state Route 248 in
"Our ODOr workers from the
Chester; a Nov. 9 evening meeting
top to the bottom are highly trained
on the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge Proprofessionals," she said.
ject; and a Dee. 8 public hearing on
Jerry Wray, former OOOT directhe Ravenswood Connector. In
tor, was credited with changing the
addition, the Meigs OOOT garage
color of ODOT's trucks from yelwill hold a winter rehearsal on Oct.
low to white. "Good guys drive
18 starting at noon.
white trucks," Pedigo said. Plus;
Also speaking were Bill Buckwhite paint costs less than bright
ley, superintendent of Meigs Local
yellow and is easier to repaint.
~hools, and Steve Beha, director
"q'lie · Meigs· County's ··
of .. Carleton Schooi!Meigs·-lndusGarage, which ,is moving to a new
tries, who spoke on their agencies'
facility next year, plays an important
,
respective building issues.
role in the community. ODOT
· Buckley said Meigs Local is
recently donated its old computers
seeking approval of a 3.95-mill
to area schools, she pointed out.
bond/levy for construction of two
Pedigo
also
encourages
new elementary schools, a new
motorists to exercise caution while
middle school, and renovations to
driving through construction zones.
the high school.
Since 1911, 150 ODOT employees
Approximately 80 percent of
have been killed while working in
the $33 million issue will be paid
construction areas.
for by the Ohio School Facilities
She concluded by stalin~ " We
ODOT SPEAKER - Nancy Pedigo Commission, he said. In addition,
may not be perfect, but if you need from ODOT District -tO spoke about the district h115 resolved to roll back
us we'll be there."
the agency's mission during the Tues- its current permanent improvePedigo then infonned chamber day luncheon meeting of ~he Meigs ments levy by 3.95 mills, resulting
members of three upcoming meet- County Chamber of Commerce.
in no net inc~ease in property taxes,
ings of interest to area residents: an Oct. 21, 7 p.m. meeting he said. at the Chester Firehouse to discuss the repair of the "Rain"We feel this is an o'pportunity we cannot pass by,"

~·

D•lly 3: 8-9-7; Dally 4: 2-7-9-9

.

0 I'Hli'Ohkl V1lky P'llbli11hlna ( :u.

included in the site package is the
. installation of some utilities and
gravel access roads and staging
areas for further construction.
The acceptance of the Anco Mining Company bid was recommended
by the district's construction management company, The Quandel
Group, and by Marr. Knapp and
Crawfis Associates, the district's
architectural firm.
The board also discussed the
boiler replacement project at the
high school. It was noted that the old
boilers have been removed with the
new boilers expected to arrive later
this month.
In financial matters, the board
approved a resolution declaring the
Southern Local School District in a
state of fiscal emergency. The resolution will aUow the district borrow
money from the state at no interest.
The board also agreed to allow
members of the Southern High
School FFA to attend the National
FFA Convention in Louisville, Ky.,
during the-week of Oct. 25.
· Present were Superintendent
James Lawrence, Treasurer Dennie
Hill, board President Bob Collins
and board members Marty Morarity,
Doug Little, David Kucsma and ~ton
-Cammarata.

The Meigs County Fair Bureau will hold its
annual meeting on October 19. The dinner meeting will begin at 7:09 p.m. at the Meigs County
Senior Center in Pomeroy.
According · to Farm Bureau President Rex
Shenefield, John C. "Jack" Fisher, executive vice
president for the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation, a
200,000-plus member organization, will be the
special guest speaker, and Sheila Arnold, the wellknown local gospel singer and songwriter, will
provide entenainment.
Fisher holds a bachelor's degree and master's
degree in Agriculture from The Ohio State University, and a-master's degree in counseling from
Ball State University in Muncie, Ind.
He has extensive experience in both government and agri-business, serving as a deputy director of the Ohio Department of Agriculture, and as
an assistant to the director. Since being named
executive vice president of the Ohio Farm Bureau
in 1996, Fisher has also been named to serve on
the Board of Public Expenditure Council, the
Board of the Ohio State University Alumni Association, and as a member of the Vice President's
Advisory Council for The Ohio State University

College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental
Sciences.
Arnold, a two-time winner of the "Female
Vocalist of the Year" ,title in the Country Gospel
Music association, is currently working on her
fourth recording at TBN's Trinity City in Hendersonville, Tenn., at H.I.S. Studios. From that project, two of her songs have been released to I ,000
radio stations. In August, she was also nominated
for "Female PerSonality" in · the Country Gospel
Music Guild Association.
At Tuesday's meeting, election of trustees and
delegates will be held along with voting on resolutions for the state platform. Stale' trustees will
also give reports.
All members, family and friends of the Farm
Bureau are invited to attend. Tickets are $5 for
adults and $3.50 for children. Tickets may be purchased from any board member or from the Farm
Bureau office, located at 382 East Second Street,
Pomeroy.
Reservations may be made by calling the Farm
Bureau at 992-2403.

Homecoming activities set

This week 's homecoming activities at Meigs High School will
get underway Thursday night with a parade beginning at Rutland and ending with a bonfire and pep rally at the football
field.
Toney Dingess is in charge of the parade and entries are to
made with him at 992-7141 . Lineup will be at the Rutland Fire
Department at 6 p.m. with the parade to leave there at 6:30 and
go
.to Depot Street where it will disband, and then reassembly
Firefighter finds Infant son
at
6:45
at the Family Doll~r in Middleport and proceed to
dead at accident scene
Fruth's Pharmacy. From there the _participants will go to the
ALEXANDRIA (AP)- A vol- Farmer 's Bank in Pomeroy, reassemble and move to the footunteer firefighter who was on the
ball field.
first emergency vehiCle to reacH the
Friday homecoming activities will begin with a parade Qf the
scene of a fatal traffic accident dis, queen candidates at 7 p.m. Crowning ceremonies will follow.
covered the victim was his infant The can.d.idates are Bethany Boyles, daughter of Vickie McKinson.
ney and Chris McKin~ey of Middleport; Charla Burge, daughVic Buzard found his son, . ter of C~arlie and Penny Burge of Middleport; Heather Ferrell,
Qllton, 1, dead in achild safety seat daughter ofT. J. and Vicki Ferrell of Rutland ; Tiffany Halfhill,
in. the rear passenger seat of a l:ar.. daughter of Lawrence and Sandra Halfhill of Rutland;
driven by his fiancee, Cindy C. Lee, ' Stephanie Kopec, daughter of Tony and Dawn Kopec of Midalong Ohio 37 in Licking County on dleport; and Brooke Williams, daughter of Barbara Williams of
Sunday.
·
.
· Middleport and Richard Williams of Pomeroy.
Ms. Lee, of Alexandria, was
CANDIDATES- Candidates for 18911 Meigs hometaken to Grant Mellical Center in coming que•n are from the left, front, Heather Ferrell,
Columbus, were she remains in seri- Charla Burge, Stephanie Kopec and Bethany Boyles,
and back, Brooke Wlll,ams and Tiffany Halfhill.
·
ous condition.

,..'

l
~· -~-

... .

~

.... .. .

Buckley said, noting that the district has one year in which
to pass the issue.
The Meigs County Boand of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities is seeking approval of a countywide 1.5-mill continuing levy for the purpooes of maintenance, capital construction, and operation of Carleton
School and Meigs Industri es.
The capital construction project would include two phases of construction added to the existing facility in Syracuse.
The first phase would add 4,200 square feet to the Adult Services Program while the second phase would add 4,200
square feet to the school program including two classroom
learning centers, a facility cafeteria and kitchen renovations.
Before touring the Carleton SchooVMeigs Industries
facility, the chamber members endorsed passage of both
issues on the Nov. 2 ballot.
In other business, Karin Johnson updated members on
the upcoming cruises on the Valley Gem ·slated for later this
month, including an Oc.t. 27 masquerade dance cruise. She
and David Kucsma, teacher at Meigs High School, also
announced plans for the new Meigs County Visitor's Guide.
Economic Development director Perry Varnadoe
encouraged members to attend the Monday, 3:30p.m. meet·
ing of the Athens-Meigs Citizens Advisory Committee at.
the Meigs County Senior Citizens· Center. The CAC is
tasked with studying the proposed U.S. 33 from Athens to
Darwin.
, The next Business After Hours will be held Nov. 2, 67:30 p.m. at Ohio Valley Bulk Foods in. Pomeroy, it was :
noted.

Fa·rm Bureau annual meeting set

• I

· Bidwell, OH

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Chamber speaker: ODOT the 'Rodney Dangerfield of state agencies'

Good Afternoon

www.deere.com

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
lure for emergency 115sistance to liveSentinel. NIY(S Staff
stock producers. He reminded those
Conservation and reclamation proattending that they have only until the
grams and new funding sources to
end of the month to make application
carry them out were discussed by
for assistance.
Samuel Speck, director of the Ohio
The speaker was introduced by .Joe
Department of Natural Resources,
Bolin who noted that Speck was in
when he spoke last night at the Meigs
Ohio's General Assembly for 13 years
Soil and Water Conservation District's
as a state representative and was the
annual meeting.
primary author of Ohio's Strip Mine
Progress being made with weUand
Reclamation Act.
restoration, non-point :source pollution,
Marco Jeffers w115 master of cerereclamation, watershed management
monies for the banquet held in the
and ·water quality were' noted by the
Meigs High School cafeteria. Guests
speaker who credited partnerships with
were introduced by John Rice and canother agencies, as the most efficient
didates for the board of supervisors
way to protect resources.
were presented by Constance White.
"Managing resources takes pulling
Chris Hamm and Tom Theiss were
. together-to make it work," said Speck,
- Samuel Speck, elected to the Board of Supervisors by
who commended local leadership with director of the Ohio Department a ballot vote during the meeting.
making real contributions to advancing of Natural Resources, was . In special recognitions, Roscoe and
the protection of natural resources.
speaker at the annual meeting of San dee Mills were named the
The director talked about the $5 the Meigs Soli and Water Con- Goodyear Family Of the Year and premillion set aside by the Legislature to eervatlon DlatrlctTueaday night sented a metal placard by Larry Vance,
go to counties with substantial flooding problems.
c;hief of the Division of Soil and Water Conservation Dis" Meigs County will be one of the eligible places for tricts.
that money and could get a significant amount to address
The couple, who owns and operates a diversified farmflooding problems," said Speck.
ing operation on 1600 acres in Meigs County, have turned
He talked about the drought and said that farmers will
benefit from the $4 million sel115ide by the Ohio L.egislaContinued In "Meigs Meeting• on page 3

2 Secllons • 12 Pages .

N

.Hometown Newspaper

State ·ODNR director speaks at Meigs meeting

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Athens, OH

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Construction on the Southern
Elementary School should get
underway soon following the Southern Local Board of ~u cation 's
acceptance of a construction bid for
site work on the project.
The board, meeting in special
session Monday, accepted the lowest
bid of $244,125 which was submit·
ted by Anco Mining Company Inc.
of Belmont. The board also
approved construction of a construction roadway loop for an additional
$14,243.75.
Also submitting bids on the project last month were Roses' Excavating of Racine, $265,750 plus
.$16,000 for gravel road construction, and T. L. Smith of West Virginia, $298,629 plus $19,000 for
gravel road construction.
The initial site work includes the
removal of topsoil and the installation of more than 10,000 cubic yards
of fill dirt to raise the entire site
~pproximately four feet. Also

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Meigs County's
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RACINE- CHOICE Home Education meeting Tuesday, 1-3 p.m. at Star
Mill Park. In case of rain, the meeting will be held at the Pomeroy Library. For
more infonnation, call Tammy Jones at 992-6743.

..

0

I

•I

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

98 JO~N DEERE TRACTORS ON THE
97 JOHN DEERE TRACTORS ON THE
96 _ JoH_~ P.~- ~~~- TRAcro~t~ QN TH_E·FLQ()R.

N

-PageS

ATHENS - Athens Parkinson's Disease suppon group, 2 p.m. Tuesday,
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, basement conference room.

Earl, chairman and chief executive
officer.
POMEROY - Meigs County Republican Pany annual bean dinner Thurs· The restaurants closed Monday
day, 6 p.m. at tl)e Meigs Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy. All welcome.
were in Chicago, Costa Mesa, Calif.;
FRIDAY
Fon Lauderdale, Fla.; Gurnee, Ill.;
Houston ; Indianapolis; Maui,
MIDDLEPORT - Ash Street Baptist Church Women's Conference, FriHawaii; Miami and Phoenix.
day and Satut"d3y, 7 p.m. Speakers, Debbie Cundiff on Friday, and Betty JohnThere may still be a couple of
son on Saturday. Door prizes will be awarded; refreshments will be served foladditional closings or franchise conlowing Saturda}l.;service.
versions. the company said. The ~"Get
·SATIJRDAY
company 's restructuring plan also
POMEROY - Meigs County Retired Teachers, Trinity Church, Saturday
calls for upgrading several of its
movie-themed restaurants and
at noon. Senior citizens represe~tative to speak on Wellness in the Millennimenus, Earl said.
'--....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,::_ _ _ _ _ _ _..;__ _ _ _ __...!~ · . urn.

99 JOHN

Hall of Famer Wilt
Chamberlain dead at
age63

•

TIJESDAY

Each year as children go back to school, it
seems that the problem of head lice arises. If
your child gets head lice, it is nmhing to be ashamed of, but it should
be treated immediately. Head lice can infect anyone, no matter how
clean the hair.
How do you know if your child has head lice? You may receive a
note from school or you may notice your child scratching his head a lot.
On a closer look you may see tiny whitish-gray insects that are wingless. fl at and about 1/8-inch long and wide. They may be hard to spot
because they travel so fast, but they do not jump or fly.
The eggs, known as nits, are much easier to see, even though they
are about the si7.e of a pinhead. They are oval-shaped with a sil very or
yell owish-brown color. The head lice tend to be in the hair. behind the
ears. at the crown of the head and the nape of the neck.
What can you do to treat head lice' There are several over-the
counter and prcscn ption medications available. Effective treatment can
be accomplished overni ght if you make sure you follow the instructions
precise ly. Don't usc more than di rected. because a severe rash may
develop. The nits may partial ly be removed by using a fine -tooth comb
supplied in some treatment kits. However, the only sure way of complete removal is by pulling throu gh each hair strand from the scalp to
the ti p be tween your fingers. Contact your doctor, pharmacist or the
Meigs County Health De partment at 740-992-6626 for further information. Family members and close friends should also be treated to
preve nt further spread of the lice.
The child 's clothing, bcd linens. hats and caps that have been worn
within the 48 hours be fore treatment will need to be washed in very hot
water or dried on hi gh heat in the dryer for at leas t 20 minutes. Dry
clean garments that should not be washed. Toys. such as stuffed animals that can't be washed. should be sealed in plastic bags for 14 days
to allow tim e for the lice to die. Carpets, upholstery and mattresses
should be thoroughl y vacuumed. Combs and brushes need to be
washed in hot. soapy water or boiled for ten minutes. (Some plastic
items may be damaged if care is not' taken.) Don't waste money on
insecticides for they do not work to rid the house of the head lice.
What can be done to prevent head lice? Talk to your child about
the danger of sharing combs, brushes, hats and headphones. Don't
allow your child to share hi s locker, coat hook or bed with class mates.
If your child follows these simple preventive measures, her chances of
becomin g infected with head lice shouldbe greatly reduced.

Sports

..

'~

r.

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