<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8267" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8267?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-20T07:34:26+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18685">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/0e9b0e17948cb48c17722892da299e8d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0065d75668d0fb8df1ecb942336f4af8</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="26755">
                  <text>. I

...

ByThe·Bend

The Daily Sentinel
.

_

I

Hostess' messy - make th~t dirty - house makes gli~S~S lose their appetite
~

,. 1

Dear Ann Landers: I he lon g to a
canas ta group There arc 12 ladies m
our cluh. and we play cards two

afl crn oons. a week

alternati ng

homcs Wh n~ vcr is hosting always
scrv,·s a hght lunch. The problem 1s
wtth one nl our ntcmhcts. "Mmnae "

Sl1c "a lovel y person. hut a terri hie
lu 1u se k cc p~r

be bad enough . but the cats walk on
the kitchen counter where our food
1s laid out buffet style, and yet, we
arc st1ll supposed to'hclp ourselves.
Need I tell you. I have no appetite
when l am in that house I don't
want to offend our hostess, so l put a
small amount of food on my plate.
Mmme always notices and invari-

The wmnan t~ an anuna l lovet ,
and he r pets have free re1gn of her

home . The sun ~~~n..: ll where we play
l· ards s m e ll s ol unnc. and there 1 ~
:ullmal hair ever yw hcrc That would

ably says, "Oh, darling, do eat more
of lht s. You can d1et later m the
week 1" She then piles more food on
my plate.
Please. Ann . tell me how 10 han-

die this awkward situation. I am -BESIDE MYSELF IN OHIO .
DEAR OHIO: Does Mmnie
serve paper napkins'! If not, tissue
will do. Put the inedible food in the
napk1n or ttssue. tactlully e&lt;cuse
yourself briefly and flush it down
the you know what.
I have done this on occasion
myself when an over zea lous hostess
piles seconds and thirds on my plate,
and no one is any the w1ser.
Dear Ann Landers: Please
revisit the subject of overweight airIme passengers. It is of great concern to me. l do not understand your
sy mpathy for these people.
Ev1dently. some folk s m1s1akenly
belteve obes1ly ts an mcurablc handicap. l bcltevc foodaholics should be
treated with the same intolerance as
alcoholtcs.
Recently. on a cross country

!light, I sat next to a grossly overwe1ght woman who wheezed, panted and leaned on me throughout the
enltre tnp. Her huge left arm and
shoulder occupied nearly half the
space I had paid for.
Then, after consuming the in
flight meal, she took two candy bars
and a bag of cookies out of her purse
and finished them. I cannot remember a more miserable flight.
If obese passengers had to pay for
two seals. they m1ght think twice
before indulging their out of control
appetites. Please suggest it. --MARGARET IN ALTA LOMA, CALIF.
DEAR ALTA LOMA: Your lack
of compassion saddens me. People
who over mdulge in food (and
drink) arc troubled individuals who
have ge nu me psychological prob!ems. Most of them know 1t, and
struggle with it. The ne&lt;t time you

f=

sibility that you m1ght be an excessive spender.

Do you usc crcdu for uems that you previously paid for with cash'
Do you get a loan to pay off other debts0 Are you charging more each
month on your credit cards than what you pay on them? Do you only
pay Ihe nllnlllllllll ? Do you alternate which bills you pay each month&gt;
Do you usc chcL kmg ove1draft to meet your debts'? Is your checkin g acc ount contmuously overdrawn? Have you obtained cash
advances"" your cred1t cards Ia pay daily expenses? Have you been
known to post-date checks? Do you sometimes stan a new loan before
an old one " rcpa1d'1 Do you sometimes usc ybur savings to pay routin e hills''
· Do you worry a lot about money and your financial state&gt; Do you
spe nd the maxi mum amount allowed on your charge cards? Are you
constant ly late when paying b1lls? Are late penalties usually assessed
to your unpa1d h1lls' 1 Do you rece1ve overdue notices or are hounded
by bill co llectors? Do creditors threaten repossession or a law suit?
Is there negative mforrnat1on on your credit report? Have you been
dented crcd11 hecausc ol a bad credit report" Do you hide b1l!s and
crcdu statemem s from family members and friend s? Do you lie to
your spouse or panncr about spcndmg? Do you owe money to more
than seven lenders·&gt; Is more than 20 of your take home pay obligated
to creditors (nm coumi ng your mortgage payment)O Does the balance

Western movie legend Dale
Ey~ns released frtJrrJ hospital

TO PERFORM ON VALLEY GEM - The Barbershop Quartat
"Under Construction" will perform on Oct. 26 from 6 p.m to 10 p.m
aboard the Valley Gem Sternwheeler during the "Enchanted fall
Cruise."
"Under Construction" is composed of four area men who have
been singing and harmonizing together the last several months.
They are Gerald Gerald Kelly of Pomeroy who sings the lead; John
Anderson• and . his son, John H. Anderson, both of Pomeroy, baritone and tenor; and Dave Powers of Addison, bass.
All four men are members of the French City Chapter of the Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barbershop Quartet
Singing in America.
.
The Enchanted Fall Cruise is a join effort of the Ohio valley Visitors Center of Gallla County and the Mason County Tourism Office.
The three-hour cruise aboard the sternwheeler will Include food
catered by K &amp; L Catering, the Gran'de Chorale and the barbershop
quartet.
Tickets are $20 per person or $35 for couples anti can be purchased _a t the Ohio Valley Visitors Center and the Mason ·County
Tourism Office.

on your credit card statement mcrease instead of decrease?

According In Barbara O'Neill. a Certified Financ1al Planner. 1fyou
answered "yes" 10 len or more of these questions. you may be considered an "m cr-spcnder." If you agreed with five or more, you could
sn(ln lind your se lf rn fm ancial trouble .

What ccm you do In get out of debt or avo1d potential financial disash: r? Fn . . l dccrc.1sc yo ur expenses - stop charg ing! Be aware of the
liulc non - e ..:~;c nua l Hems that you buy that can eat away at your
in come Do ynu buy a can of pop and a candy bar during your coffee
hrc ak c\C rv d.l\ ·• Arc they necessary ·&gt; The $20 eacl1 month that you
could &lt;:1\C hv g1vmg up this hahn could be put towards the repayment
of your h1l ls
Can ytl ll rncrc.t:-.c your income? Is ove rtime, a bettcr-paymg job ur
pnss rhlllt y·~

The extra money can be used for debt

repayment. Mau y people reach thctr goal of reducmg lhctr debts by
dumg a lill ie" ' lwtb - they decrease thetr e.&lt;penses and they try to suppl ement thcrr

That shuljter up promptly. We
never. hew'd a·word from her about
my wife's mfertilily after that. -FAYETI'E,VILLE,;ARK.
DEAR ARK.: I am not fond of
mean spirited responses, but in your
case, I'll gi.ve you a pass. The old
battle-axe sounds drea&lt;lfu).
Feeling pressured to have sex?
How well informed ·are you? Write
for Ann Landers' booklet "Sex and
the Teenager." Send a s~lhddressed,
long, business size ~:,nvelope and a
check or money order-for $3.75 (this
includes postage and handling) to :
Teens, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
sc~iP,ture.
Canada, send $4.55.)
One day, l was fed up and decidTo find out more about Ann Lan-.
ed to quote scripture right back at ders and read her past colum~s. visit
her. I said, "The Bible also say~, The the Creators Syndicate web page at
sins: of the parents will be- visited ."· www.creators.com.
upon their children."

The annual gardener plant and plants from your gardens. Meigs
seed ' exchange will be held on County Master Gardeners will be on
Thudday at the Meigs 'Seh'ior Center hand to answer homeowner gardenfrom.,.! l to 12:30 p.m. and 4}0 to 6. ing questiOns and organize the
p.m.
exchange. Remember all plants and
A short presentation, "Winter seeds are free , even if you don 't
Care For Your Tender Perennials" have any plants to exchange lhefl'
wtll
made by Hai .Kneen, Meigs have been plent~ to share in past
Coun~~ Extension Age_nl, al (!te , years. ~o com~ a~ enjoy some time
begt~)ung of each exchange ..:tltose · w1th fellow gardeners.
attending are asked to hardy and ten~
This ev. ~nt is free and open to the
der perennials (like dahlias, cannas, public and is sponsored by the
co!ei,IS,,geraniums) to exchanae. .
Meigs Senior Citizen Center, Ohio
Ne,)fo' this year is the op))!lrtunitY · Si'ate University Extension, and the
to excpange collected seed from Me.igs County Master,Gardeners.

Arc you a compulstve spender'' Shopping can
be as addicti ve as gamblmg, alc ohol and tobacco In facl. SIX percent of Amencans feel out of
control when it comes to their shopping practi ces. Fo ll,lwing arc some qucsn o~s that.can help alert you to the pos-

second Joh ,r

cnrounter one of the above, I hope
you will remember this and try to be
aJ \ttJe more tolerant.
.
beat Ann Landen: I JUSt read
the letter from "At Rope's End in
Utah," whose mother was driving
her crazy with inappropriate commonls about her infertility. Let me
tell you how I handled my mother in
law, who was also mean spirited and
insensitive to our fertility problem.
,~or six years, my wife and I went
through a lot of agony, plus $30,000
and still no children.
· · ~y mother in law, who took
ev'*J opportunity to needle my wife
about this, was adept at quoting

Senior Center '· to host
p1ant and seed e'xchange

BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family and Consumer Sciences/Community Development

:1

lllL'P IH C

LO~A LINDA, Calif. (AP) It was lmppy trails back home for
Dale ~ans, who left a hospital
with a ·new pacemaker.
The ·· 86-year-old entertainer
and widow of cowboy. star. Roy
,Rogers . was released from Loma
Linda Uhiversity Medical Center
on Mo'nday, almost a week after
undergoing surgery to replace her
pacemaker.
Miss ,Evans was hospitalized
Oct. I I . 1 ~t Desert Valley Medical
Center ~fter suffering respiratory
problems. Tesls revealed she may
have suffered a mild heart attack
and she,, underwent surgery Oct.
12 at Lorna Ltnda.
She ~ad been listed in serious
condition for several days, but
was u~graded to fair condition

----Community Calendar---meetin gs and src~o: Jal events. The
calendar 1s not (ks rgned to pro-

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Board of Education, regular ses'sion, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. at the
elementary cafetorium.

mot e sales. or fund ra1sers of any
type . Item s at'c prtnlcd unly as
space permits and cannot be guaranteed 10 be prtnl ed a spec1ftc
number of da ys.

POMEROY - American Red
Cross bloodmobile, Meigs County
Senor C1t1zens Center, Wednesday,
l to 6 p.m.

profit groups w"h1n g to announce

TUESDAY
Ca tholt c
POMEROY
Women's Club , Tuesday, at the
Church. Mass. 7 p.m. preceding
mee ting.
POMEROY - Immunization
clinic, Tuesday. I to 7 p.m. Meigs
Cou nty Health Department in the
Mei·gs Multipurpose Ce nter. Every
child to be accompanied by an
adult and shot record to be taken .
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Cluh. 2 p.m. Wednesday,
Racine Brauch. Meigs County
Library. Leah Ord to review
"Charming B1lly.'.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Country
Historical Society, annual meeting , Sunday, at the Meigs County
Museum, Pomeroy. Dinner at 6
p.m.; program by Michael Struble
on Pomeroy building fronts to follow ; business meeting to con clude. Dinner reservations with
donation , 992-3810 by Friday.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Rocksprings
Better Health Club, Thursday, l
p.m. home of Barbara Fry.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Genealogical Society, annual
meeting, Sunday, Meig s County
Muse um , 144 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, 4 p.m.

POMEROY - Revival , Poplar
Ridge Free Will Baptist Church,
Thursday through Saturday, 7 p.m
Charles Swigger, evangelist. SpeCial singing each night.
FRIDAY
POMEROY Burlingham
Modern Woodmen to participate m
National Make a difference Day
by taking good winter clothing to
the hall , I p.m. Friday. Will be
delivered to Meigs Cooperative
Parish.

CLIFTON - Clifton Tabernacle homecoming, Sunday. Covered
dish dinner, special singing, Earthen Vessel s and Joe McCloud. No
evenmg servtces.
SYRACUSE - Revival Syracuse Nazarene Church, Oct. 24-27,
6 p.m. Sunday, 7 p.m. Monday and
Tuesday. Re v. Paul Womack,
speaker.

Ventura pledges to'talk only policy, get even with the media
ST. PAUL Minn . (AP) - Gov.
Jesse Ventura has pledged to make a
ch1ll y peace now with the media -

"I'm not going to offer my personal opintons on anythtn g," Ventura told Newsweek. "I've been

--------------------'!"'---..

and"10
war laterhere
Jowntpthedoroad
I wage
was elected
the. . . .
state's business and not my personal
war. So l wi ll hold off on my personal war, ·• Ventura smd. •·But when
I'm throu·gh 'vilh II11S JOb. l wil l

resume my perso nal war."
Vcnlura 's comm ent s appear in
the Oct. 25 issue of News week magawle. a few weeks after the publicati on of a controversial Playboy mter-

view in which he discussed sexual
assaull. reli gion and fat people, :
among others.

manipulated by the media for their
own ends. and I' m nol gmng to lei it
happen any more ."

If the 992 Exchange Is a Free Part of Your
Telephone Setvlce, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Gallipolis
Toll Freel

'

.·.

}

:.

'

949-1339

I

'

'

.

Holzer Clinic ••. Keeping the Promi&amp;e!

'

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Parking meters and pay ra1scs were among the topics discussed during
Monday night's meeting of Pome1oy Village Council.
Although the vtllagc has received some criticism over its continued use
of parking meters, Mayor Frank Vaughan shared several letters thc &lt;.villagc
has received urgmg continued use of the parking meters downtown.
The letters addressed concerns that downtown residents and employees
will abuse free parking, laking space away from customers.
The subject of parking meters occasionally surfaces in village meetings.
The subject has been considered lately as a move to counter anticipated competition to downtown.merchants from the Wai-Man store currently under construction in'Mason, W.Va'.
Council is considering polling downtown businesses in an effort to gauge
community and business attitudes about the meters.
Council appr.oved the first reading of an ordinance giving hourly raises
a 5 percent increase in salary and also approved the first reading of an ordinance givmg a 5 percent raise to salaried employees. The ordinances must
be approv1=d two more times before they are finalized. •
In other personnel matters, council approved the resignation of police dispatcher Carol Lemley.
Following recent paving work in the village , council members discussed
raising 23.catch basins which arc now below the lctel of the new pavement.
Council members authorized spending approximately $6,325 to remedy the
situation.
Council members also discussed water meter problems on Nyc Avenue

A rash of burglaries m western
Meigs County have area law enforce·
ment officers investigating similar
crimes tn Galli a and Vinton counties.
Two people are being held in jail
in Ross County on an earlier Meigs
County ,burglary, acc.ording to SherIff James M. Soulsby. Being held are
Timothy Williams, 26, and Charles
Ewing , 28, both of Wellston, who are .
currently facing burglary charges.
Soulsby said one of the two men
was captured on videotape by a hidden camera set up by the crime viclim. The victim had a video camera
set up in his house , Soulsby
explained.

LONG,TIME MEMBERS - Recognized for
membership of over 50 years in the Meigs
County Farm Bureau on Tuesday were, from
left, C.E- and Daisy Blakeslee, Howard and

Good Afternoon

Today's Sentinel
1 Se~tion • 10 Pages

Calendar
Clossitleds
C&amp;mics
Editorials
l,.ocal

10

6-8
9

Weatlier

Lotteries
DIW! .

Pick 3: 5-5-5; Pick 4: 3-8-6-9
Buckeye 5: 19·22·23-28·30

675-4340

~
.
: Dally 3: 3-1-0; Dally 4: 3-0-6-5
I

0 1999 Ohio Valley Publishing Co:

J

~ -~

----.:: ...

~-

Single Copy. 35 Cents

and other areas and approved all three readings of a revised ordinance autholl zing the clerk and mayor to borrow up to $82,000 from Farmers Bank &amp;
Savmgs Co. at 5.75 percent interest to pay for paving work .
During open discuss ion. Council President John Musser commended the
fire department for its assistance during the Big Bend Stcrnwhecl Festival
mcludin g cleanmg the parking lot and helptng out with the parade. He also
commended the ftre department for its work tn the rece nt fire at the John
and Beth Schneider residence.
In other business:
• Council considered the number of mcmhcrs that should be appointed to
a proposed cemetery board of trustees. No action followed.
• Discussed the dcmol1t1on of the old Sugar Run School buildmg.
• Met in executive session to discuss personnel matters and scheduled a
special meeting for Monday at 7 p.m. to further discuss personnel mailers.
• Set trick or treat for Thursday. Oct. 28 from 6-7 p.m.• with the fire siren
to mark the beginning and end .
· Clerkffreasurer Kathy Hysell presented the financial report for September reporting the following balances: general fund. $87 ,557.67; safety,
$6,07!.76; street, $19,869.07; slate highway, $5,135.54; fire, $71,609.35;
cemetery, $4,770.26; water, $76,538.53; sewer, $20,699.98; guarantee meter,
$20,451.38; utility, $!4.286.07; overt1me gran I, $2,390.6&gt;1; perpetual
care/cemetery, $7, 147.16; cemetery endowment, $38,446.59; pollee pension,
$8,047.60; building fund, $8,896.12; recreation, $1 ,280.05; permi ss i~e lax,
$ !6,875.06; law enforcement, $4,426.41; total, $414,499.22.
Also present were council members David Ballard, Geri Walton. George
Wright and Larry Wehrung, and Fire Chief Chris Shank.

Burglaries
investigated
by deputies

OVER 50 YEARS- The Meigs County·Farm
Bureau recognized lhasa long-time members
for over 50 years of membership at Tuesday
night's annual meeting. They are, front, from
lt~lt, Delbert Smith, Syl,vla Midkiff, Grace Holter,

• FREE Breast Examinatians
• Women's Health Infonnation
• Drawings For FREE MaJnmograms &amp;Bone Density Scans
• FREE Gif5 For Those In Attendance
• Light Refreshmen~ Will Be Served

~

Hometown Newspaper

Wllma·Parker, Raymond and Grace Furbee, Nel·
lie Parker;; Roy Holter, Leodell, Mary and Wilma
Davidson, and W.S. and Nellie Michael.

BUILDING DEMOLISHED- The Sugar Run School, located on
Lasley Street in Pomeroy, was demolished by Jeffers Excavat·
ing on Tuesday. The building, which several yeers ago was targeted for restoration, Is owned by the Village of Pomeroy.

Old school falls ·
to ~ wrecker's ball
cr di sso lved by the county comm iSBy BRIAN J. REED
SIO
ners due to funding cutbacks , and
Sentinel News Staff
no
further action on restoring the
The walls of the old Sugar Run
building
was taken Pnvate conlrt School m Pomeroy came tumbling
butlons
which
were contributed 10 the
down on Tuesday.
proj~ct
b
.y
interested
residents and
Workers from Jeffers Excavating
former
students
were
placed
tn a speof Pomeroy have been at work
cial
county
fund.
and
were
refunded
demolishing the building, the deed to
which was transferred from Meigs to donors when the restoration proJeCt
County to the Village of Pomeroy this was discontinued, according to County Aud1tor Nancy Parker Campbell.
past summer.
The two-story brick building,
That fund now contatn s only $36.
located on Lasley Street, has been in
The buildtng was constructed in
disrepair and was deemed a safety
hazard several years ago. The Meigs 1870, and was in continuous use as a
County Commissioners donated the school until it closed m 1962, when
land and the building to the village Pomeroy Elementary Schoo l was
earlier this summer. It had been pre- opened to students. Accordmg to
VIously donated to the now-defunct Powell, the school building housed
Meigs County Parks District board by grades 1-6, and at one time, housed
grades seven and eight, as well.
private owners.
As recently as 1995. efforts were
The building was made up of sevunderway to restore the building for en classrooms, including one room
use as a children's mu se um . but which was reserved for the instructhose efforts fmled. According to tion of German
Marv Powell. who served as dtrec tor
Minerva Pryor. Bernice Rmcha11 ,
of the Parks D1stri ct, a lack of support and Bob Roberts are among the
for the museum proJect prevented the well-known teac hers lo have taught
distnct' ~rd from scck1ng grant
in the building. and Emma Seitz.
funds.
served as the sixth grade teacher and
The Parks Distrtct Board was Iat- princ1pal fqr some 40 years

Souls by said officials are examining up to 12 burglaries m Me1gs
County alone with most of those in
the western pari of the county, we st
of U.S. 33 Vinton County and Gallia Coumy officials are also investigating stm1lar crimes.
He sa1d res1dents in that pan or the
county are going to have to work
together 10 help each other, explaining that it is impossib le for the sheriffs olf1ce to cover the entire western
end of the county.
"Usc deadbolts. If you leave,
leave a ltght on. leave an extra car m
the driveway. leave the TV or radio
on. Make it look like someone is at
home," Soulsby said.
These are daytime burglars, Soulsby said. They are looking for
firearms, TVs. VCRs, anything they
can sell for cash, he added.
"If you see someone strange in the
neighborhood, get a descnpt1on of
State Rep. John Carey, R-Wellston, has announced the release of $4 73,000
them or of t~e1r vehicle and call us,"
to
assist
the Community Action Program Commillee of Me1gs and Galli .1
he sa1d. "Any kmd of a lead will
Count1es,
Inc., to develop affordable housing.
help. "
The agency will construct 10 single-fainily homes for those households
While rashes of burglaries occur at or he low 65 percent of the area median income.
from time to time, they tend to have
"These new homes will help create a sound ltving environment fo1 the
one thing tn common. The thieves familtes who will be living in them," Carey said. "The opportunny for sal'c.
usually get caught due to information affordable housing can be the chance these families need to get ahead tn their
from the public, Soulsby said.
lives."

Housing funds released to CAA

Tuesday, ·october 19, 1999
Pleasant11dley Wellness Center
6:3.0 p.m. to 8 p.m.

'
"

-Page 4

Parking meter concerns aired
by letter to Po_
m eroy Council

Presented By Pleasant Valley Hospital Radiology Services
Radiologists &amp;Surgeons .Will Be Available To Answer Your Questions

.'

Braves capture.NL
pennant with win
over Mets

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 93

'

H6~
. '•"' _p_.ital

992·7834

Meigs County's

The BeSt Protection
Is Early Detection -

l'

'

SGIC- Tu esd Jy lh ru Fnda y

Pleasant
ValleY.

DIAL ·

.~

1cn n s
SOc o r less

Sports

•

All winter it em s exce pt

Sentinel

'

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

CLOTHING SALE
God's Clothing
Parrish
in Racine

'

.

Gore: he's still the -same, Page 2
Local volleyball results, Page 5
A misguided wife, Page 10

Today: P. Cloudy
High: 60; Low: 30s

and then released on Monday,
said . Zarina Baqai , a hosp ital
nursin2 suoervisor.
Miss Evans, . known as "The
Queen of the West." starred in 35
movi~s and @ 1950s television
s~ries with her husband. She also
co-wrote the couple's theme
song, "Happy Trails to You."
More recently , she has
au1hored a number of inspir ationiil books and is the host of a
Trinity Broadcast Network talk
show.
Her husband dted last year at
age 86.

T9 get
., a current weatherreport, cheek the

:

The Cnrmnun1 ty Ca lend ar is
publi shed a' a ft er scrv1cc to n on~

•

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

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

October 20, 1999

Page 10

Tuesday, October 19, 1999

r::::::-~-~~.._.._.._------------.,

· Wedne·s day .

v--·
··' --

Mildred Gaul, Barbara Mora, Mary Kay Yost and
Hannah Yost; back, lrom left, Howard Nolan,
Zlba Midkiff, Harry Holter, Jake Gaul, Don Mora,
George HoHer and Stevan Yost

Clinton continues p·ush
for hike in cigarette tax
WASHINGTON (AP)- As Clin- of the full 55-cent proposal.
"The president indicated he recton administration officials and congressional budget writers intensified ognized the Republicans might not go
efforts to resolve their budget fight, for all 55 cents of the tobacco tax, but
a White House spokesman said today certainly we still believe it is an
that President Clinton remains com- Important part of our health care
mined to seeking a cigarette tax agenda to reduce teen smoking, and
we 're going to sec what we can do as
increase.
Republican congressional leaders far as gelling what we can tHere,''
emerged from a White House budget Lockhart said.
meeting Thesday evening saying that
Clinton had agreed to abandon his
Twenty· days into fiscal 2000.
effort to pay for extra spending for White House bud get ch1ef Jack Lew
schools and other programs by rais- was expected on Capi tol Hi lltuday to
ing ta.es, including a proposed 55- begin sorting through differences
cent-a-paok increase in the federal ·, rangmg from foreign aid to hmng
cigarette ta~ .
, teachers and buying park lands.
But White House spokesman Joe
At an 80-minute White Hou se
Lockhart said today that Clinton had meetmg Tuesday evening, the two
only conceded that the GOP-con&gt;, sides agreed to try resolving their diftrolled Congress was not supportive ferences in a week .
\.I

publisher Chuck Govey, ·Wingett's slater and
brother-in-law, Ruth and George Strode, cousin
Diane Mills and aunt Emma Jean Hamilton listen. Wingett was roasted by Meigs County
Judge Rick Crow, Attorney Carson Crow, hie
brother-in-law and aunt.

HONORED BY STAFFERS - Bob Wingett,
former publisher of Ohio Valley Publishing, was
honored by employeas, family and friends durIng a surprise dinner and roast at the Point
Pleaaant Moose Tue,day evening. Pictured
above Is Wingett, glvlrig a brief apeech, as new

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

1:
-

\.

.'

'

-

�•

Commentary

' - -~ Pall•

'.'
"

2

· :weaneldaivi Octo~'r ~o.. 999

-T he Daily Sentinel In whatever mode, Gore will still be Gore
'£sta6(isliei in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
CHARLES W. GOVEY
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

DIANE HILL
Controller

n.. Sentinel w./com .. INt.,. to the «&lt;itor from ,.,.,. on al:it'Nd r•ng• ol top'-· Short lett.ra (300 worda or I•••J hava liM bHt chance ot being publlah«&lt;
1)'pN,.,..,. ,,. ptWrwr.d and all IMY .tPt edded ftcll MoUld Include • e/gnMure,
llfldNa, tnd daytime pttone numb« S,.clty 1 daft Jf tlt.,.'e •
to 1 , . .
Woue arllcl• ot ,,,., ,.II to Ltttwt to tht fldltor. 7Jte Sentinel, 111 Court St
I , Pomeroy, Ohio um, or, FAX to 74D-fi2 2157

,.,.,.,.,c.

A perspective on
the marketplace
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - When cnses pile day by day and the mood of 10vestors
turns sour, 11 may be good for your health and smart for your pocketbook to
get some perspect1 ve
Here IS some
• S10ce the bull market 10 stocks, wh1ch some say began 10 1982, sharp
market reversals have been happen10g faster and w1th greater downward force
than m the prev1ous two decades
The corrections have lasted much shorter than 10 the earher penod And
post-correctmn recovenes have remamed substantial
While the market has been more apt to take a d1ve, 1t has been decidedly less mclmed to rema10 submerged, mstead, 1t soon pops to the surface and
resumes Jts chrnb
• Econom1c expansmns have become longer, and recessions shorter, s10ce
World War II Stated differently, the U S economy has become less cydJcal, less penlous, more manageable
We have both assertiOns on good authonty F1rst, the stock market
The secunlles firm Donaldson, Lufkin &amp; Jenrette found the nonn for Dow
Jones 10dustnal average corrections was mne months for the enllre penod
1960- 1999. but only three months dunng 1983-1999
In partial explanauon, a report m Jts Portfoho Manager 's Weekly suggests
compames 10 today's techno-serv1ce economy are able to stab1hze earmngs
by adaptmg more qUJckly to changes 10 demand
It also expresses ta~th that the combmatton of excess capacity, mergers
and the Internet Will keep mHatJon low and pnce-earmngs ratwsh1gh
EconomiSt Dav1d Wyss of Standard &amp; Poor s DRI presents the case for
a more manageable economy
HJS co ntentiOn. wh1ch becomes graphically clear on charts he has assembled back to 1857. ts that the US economy has become mherentJy less cyclical
Excl ud1ng the current expansiOn, he says, the average length of a postwar U S expansiOn has been 49 9 months Before World War II, the aver,tgc cxpanswn lasted only 26 3 months
Even more ImpresSi ve, he says. has been the short duratiOn of recessions
"The economy has gotten even better at gettmg out of recessiOns than fallmg
1nto them
· ln support of thJS asscnwn, Wyss found that before the Great Depress Jon
ofthc 1930s. the average recessiOn lasted 20 5 months, but that smce World
Vl{ar II the longest has been JUSt 16 months
He offers two probable explanauons
· :F~r st , the economy has become less dependent on cyclical mdustnes such
a£ manufactunng, construction and mmmg that typ1cally go through the1r own
up.down cycles
: Secondly, the Federal Reserve has become more competent at managmg
th:e busmess cycle He contends 11 has been respons1bly v•g•lant m restrammg growth from exceedmg the economy's capac1ty
Okay, he concedes, "we have also had a lot ol luck m thiS expansiOn,"
dpecmlly m bemg the only major economy enJoymg strong growth Th1s,
h~ says, has meant less pressure on pnces
• He expresses confidence that the combmatJon of a techno-serv1ce econoiny. a w1se Fed and a httle bit of luck w1ll support us m the future as tn the
past
"We beheve that today 's expansiOn may not s1mply break the old record,"
he says, "but smash 11 as thoroughly as Mark McGw~re d1d Roger Mans'
horne run mark "

Letters to the editor
Just a way of saying thanks
. We have no way of knowmg who the R1te A1d shopper was who turned
ui bank books wh1ch we had dropped there Thursday afternoon, but we want
tO' say 'thank you " The person who turned the books mto the pharmactst
did not leave a name
It's a shame there are not more canng people hke that person
John and Barbara Bogard
Long Bottom

A decision not arrived at lightly
/""

Dear Edttor
• (tiS not d1fficult to understand why an old house, namely the Dutton prop~~y on South F1fth Street m Middleport, would need to be razed However
!lruly hope that someone thought long and hard before uprooung the beautiful, stately, very old holly tree m that 1rnmed1ate VJcJmty
Barbara Shular
Middleport

Today in history
8y The Associated Press

: TOday ts Wednesday, Oct. 20, the 293rd day of 1999 There are 72 days
lclft 1n the year
• Today's Highhght m History·
:: 011 Oct 20, 1973, m the so-called "Saturday N1ght Massacre," spec1al
Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox was dJsmJssed and Attorney General
~lliot L. Richardson and Deputy Attorney General W1lham B Ruckelshaus
'l'esigned.
~ : On this date:
(: .Jn 1803, the US. Senate rat1fied the Lou1s1ana Purchase
'· In 1892, the city of Chtcago dedicated the World's Columbtan Expos•'
1'Uon.
l . In 1903, ajomtcomm•ss•on ruled 1n favor of the Un1ted States m a bound'l9Y dispute between the DJStnct of Alaska and Canada
\ . In 1944. dunng World War II, Gen. Douglas MacAnhur stepped ashore
/ril Lcyte in the Ph1hppmes, 2 112 years after he'd sa1d, " I shall return"
! - In 1947, the House Un-Afttencan ActJVJtJes Committee opened heanngs
•mto alleged Commumst mfluence and mfiltrauon w1thm the Amencan mouon
:p1cture industry
; • In 1964, the 31st prestdent of the Un1ted States, Herbert Hoover, d1ed m
1New York at age 90
: : In 1967. seven men were convicted m Mend1an , MISs , of v1olatmg the
l~IVII rights of three murdered CIVIl nghts workers
1· In 1968, f1&gt;rmer first lady Jacquelme Kennedy was rnamed to Gre~k shlp•ping magnate Anstotle Onass1s

By JACK ANDERSON
and DOUGLAS COHN
ABOARD AIR FORCE TWOThe new AI Gore JS gmng to be the
old AI Gore Gone w1ll be the awkward portrayals of some consultant's
concept of a prestdent.al candidate
He IS breakmg out of the vJce-preSJ·
denllal cocoon that stifled and suffened h1m Though, when asked, he
sa1d he would not abohsh tbe pOSitiOn
that hJS predecessor, John Adams,
descnbed as "the most mslgnificant
office that ever the mvenllon of man
contnved or h1s 1magmauon con-

defeated ComprehenSive Nuclear
Test-Ban Treaty, an JSsue about wh1ch
both candtdates have strong v1ews
Gore expresses exasperatiOn at the
cheap-shot 30-second campatgn
commerc1als that see m to have dnven
pollt1cal diScourse m recent years
What he alludes to Js a throwback to
the Lmcoln-Douglas debates of 1858,
or m the absence of wdhng opponents, to the "G1ve 'em Hell" Harry
Truman whistle-stop tour of 1948.
If he ts serious and tf he follows
through, Campa1gn 2000 w1ll prove

Moments later one of the reporters
to be anythmg but wooden and
unchansrnallc It would be a most turned to one of the numerous Secret
Serv1ce agents and, pomtmg to the
welcome pubhc service
SECRE'f SERVICE OPINION "Amen" speaker, asked 1f he, too,
- Two reporters were standmg on was a Secret Serv1ce agent He was
The reporters were left to ponder
the tarmac near A1r Force Two, and
the
appropnateness of an agent's
one sa1d to the other
"Wouldn't 1t be mce for a change espousmg such v1ews about the peo1f a cand1date would s1mply stand up ple he JS pledged to protect, partJcu·
and say th•s JS what I beheve If you larly smce that theoretically mcludes
agree With me, vote for me, 1f you a wdhngness to take a proverbial bullet for the protectee
don't, don't"
When asked, the Secret Service
And a fellow standing nearby
turned to them and said, "Isn't lhat had no comment
'
the truth Amen "

ceived"

In an exclus1ve mterv1ew, V1ce
PreSident AI Gore good naturedly
ackno" ledged h1s wooden and
unchansmatJc reputatiOn, explatnmg
with the unflmchmg stare of a boxer
fac1n g h1s opponent before a fight,
that he was once agam h1s own man,
the sole captam of hiS campa1gn, and
he was commg out swmgmg- take
1t or leave Jt He clmms people are
takmg lt 'In the last two weeks I
have begun to connect w1th the
Alllcncan people "
The old Gore the lormJdable,
adroit debater ol hJS Senate days and
'Jce-prcs1dentml debates, IS back He
agreed that the wave of history shows
us that followmg a happy-go-lucky
pres1dency (not h1 s phrase), the pubhe often yearns for a pres1dent w1th
more grav1tas. and he mtends to proVIde Jt, lookmg the Amencan people
square m the eye and challengtng hJS
opponents to ·a debate a week "
And now he has the f1rst opportumty, because Sen John McCatn, RAnz , has h1msell la1d down the
gauntlet and proposed a face-to-face
debate with the v1ce pres1dent on the
menlS and defJCieOCJes Of the JUSt-

TIW'~ tmYJ

M£ANT BY AUTru 'ONE
~ ONt• BII.L.

Sunny, cool. conditions

for~~~~(l~~~r~~Jrsday
By The l'(aloi!llltlld"Pf'esa • · " ,, .
-'o/i.l~

~

l

o~..~-

•~

ver, no matter how speciOus, to
mdefmnely delay thCJr date wnh the

prosecutors
Thm hope ts that states hke Calexecutioner
lforma WJII eventually find 11 much
Death penalty lawyers ms1st that less llme-consummg and much more
the~r crusade IS about "Jusuce," but
economical to s•rnply sentence conthat's JUSt a subterfuge The~r real VICted murderers to "hfe" m pnson.
goal1s de facto abolltwn of the death
But a cold-blooded ch•ld-k1ller
~enalty.
hke W1lson does not deserve hfeThey want to go back to the days, even behmd bars. And espec1ally not
between 1967 and 1976, when there at taxpayer expense. For when a
was a natJonwJde moratonum on cap- cnmmal takes an mnocent hfe, he
nal pumshment, as the states awalt- should be prepared to pay wnh h1s
cd a Supreme Court ruhng on own hfe .
whether the death penalty was conUnfortunately, the prospects of a
killer actually bemg executed for hiS
sutuuonal.
In 1972, the h1gh court dec1ded cnmc are rather remote In fact, the
that the death penalty v1olated the number of people k1lled by hghtmng
E1ghth Amendment, wh1ch forb1ds this year will be greater than the num' cruel and unusual pumshment " ber of Death Row mmates who finalHowever, m 1976, the JUStices over- ly get wbat's commg to them.
Yet, one would never know thiS
turned the four-year-old dec1ston,
declanng that the death penalty was from death penalty foes They lament
that 550-some execullons have been
mdeed constJtuuonal
Death penalty lawyers have nev- camed out smce 1976, when the
er been able to reconcile themselves nat1onw1de momtonum on capital
with the Supreme Court's 1976 rul- pumshrnent ended.
mg So they've spent the past 23
years trymg to undermme 11
What those death penalty foes
Their cymcal strat~y ts to make neglect to menuon 1s that over the
each and every death penalty case same span, more than 480,000 Amermcludmg those of so-called "volun- Icans have been ktlled by v10lent
teers," ktllers hke Wtlson who actu- cnmmals What that means JS that,
ally request to have their death sen- over the past 23 years, a murderer has
tences earned out expedtllously- as had a less-than- I percent chance of
long and as costly as possible for state bemg executed for takmg a life

process

And even when a killer ts apprehended (nearly half of murders are
unsolved tn many b1g ctttes), even
when a killer ts convicted by a JUry,
even when a killer IS sentenced to
death, pumshment is anything but
swift and sure.
In fact, the avemge Death Row
mmate spends II years avmdmg the
gas chamber or lethal in.)CCtJon, as the
killer's lawyers file appeal after
appeal after appeal m both the state
and federal couns.
Well, 11 1s long past lime that th1s
mockery of JUStiCe, th1s perverse
mampulauon of the courts. be halted
The blood of 20,000 yearly murder
victims demands it.
Once a killer IS COnVIcted by JUry,
he should be entitled to no more than
three appeals - one before a state
ap(lllals court, another before a state's
highest court and a final , appeal
before a federal court
The enttre death penalty appeals
process should take no longer than 18
months (as opposed to II years), s1x
months per appeal And 1f a Death
Row mmate - hke the child-killer
Wilson - wants to ·forgo h1s three
appeals, the state ought to obhgc h1m.
Set an executton date The sooner the better.
(JoMph Perkin• Ia a columnlet
for The Sin Diego Union-Tribune.)

In search of the elusive middle gro"'nd
By WALTER R. MEARS
around them to get the budget done
AP Special Correspondent
But once It 1s, 11 wtll be no landWASHINGTON - When PreSJ- mark, JUSt another year's appropnadent Chnton la1d cla1m to "the VItal tmns. The maJor proposals Chnton
Amencan center," he urged hiS wanted approved aren't happenmg
Democrats and nval Republl'cans to thts year, and the GOP Congress w1ll
look past their pollt1cal dJVJsJOns and be even more reSJstant headmg mto
deal together w1th the nauon's needs the 2000 electtons for the White
He's sttll trymg, he says- but with House, the Senate, and fragtle GOP
fightmg words now, agamst what he control of the House, wh1ch they hold
called Republican extrem1sm and a by the narrowest margm m 44 years.
new tsolalloniSm
A f1ve-seat gam would put the
Chnton accuses congresstonal Democrats back in charge
Republicans of "reckless partisanChnton wanted act1on on the longship" that puts both econom1c term financmg of Soc1al Secunty for
progress and national secunty at the reurement boom years of the 21st
nsk
century He sought Med1care reform,
There's not much leftofChnton's and expansmn of that program to
appeal dunng hiS 1996 re-election cover prescnpt1on drugs He
campa1gn for Republicans and demands more money than RepubhDernocrats to work together on behalf cans want to spend on educat1on,
oftheAmencan center He sttll says, ch1 ld care and other programs
however, that "we have to put pohOn other Jssues, notably trade JmtJcs as1de and seek common ground" tJatJves, h1s problem JS wnh Democat thiS pmnt on the past-due federal rats wary of offendmg labor and hbbudget, snarled m disputes about eral allies "In our party, we have not
Republican spendmg cuts and Chn been able to resolve these conH1cts,"
ton vetoes to enforce hJS pnonues
Chnton acknowledged
That's the 1mmed1ate problem, the
There were m-pany contlJcts on
stopgap spendmg measure expmng other JSsues, too, among them welfare
on Thursday w1ll have to be renewed reform and pnor spendmg deals
to avOJd government shutdowns CJmton has been less mchned to
wh1le the Wh1te House and the moves offens1ve to hberal Democrats
Republican Congress try to come to m Congress SJnce they rallied to h1s
terms
•
defense agamst Impeachment m the
Chnton sa1d those are momentary Mon1ca Lewmsky scandal
d1fficult1es They also are annual
"We are trymg to work wnh
ones.
Republicans, mdependents and
"InactiOn IS not an opt1on," the Democrats to move th1s country forpreSident sa1d Monday. after he ward, " Clinton told the centnst
vetoed a fore•gn a1d appropnauon Democratic Leadershtp Counc1l on
because of GOP spendmg cuts, WJth Oct 14. "That1s the difference m the
the Wh1te House SJgnahng there are new DemocratiC Party
more vetoes commg The RepuB!r-v' But among Republicans, he smd,
cans can't dvernde them, so they wJII "we are st1ll confrontmg a level of
have to fmd- or bargam - a way extremism and part1sansh1p wh1ch JS
111

truly ch1lhng for the long-term mterests of Amenca."
Chnton srud h1s re-election m
1996 showed that "the v1tal Amencan center Js ahve and well "
"Put as1de the pohucs of divlston:• he urged m h1s vtctory sijeech
"Put country ahead of party."
He sa1d lhe new center would not
be "the lukewarm midpoint between
overheated liberalism and chtlly conservatism," but a way to put fresh
1deas into the mamstream of pohtics.
But two presidential scholars have
JUSt pubhshed a book calhng It "Dead
Center."
Histonan James MacGregor
Burns and co-author Georgta Sorenson wrne that Clinton, who had
wanted to transform pohucs, wound
up tmkenng wtth it.
"The president wanted all of the
~q~pearance of leadership, but none of
the antagonism," they write.
In theJr book, "the essence of
democracy Js not only'the consensus
that bmds us together but the political conHtct over the defimt1on of values that gtves voters real chmces."

The subtitle of the book, "ClintonGore Leadership and the Penis of
Moderation," pomts to the 2000
chapter, as the v1ce president, no less
an advocate of the "new and dynamIC center," ~ks to succeed the presIdent
Chnton, backmg Gore, rambled
through a htany of h1s own proposals when he was asked what be thmks
Amencans are looking form the next
president.
"And you know, I hope that they
w1ll want sorneo,o~ . who Will try as
hard as I have tried and maybe be
more successful, although I thmk
they'll have to make some changes in
Congress to do that, to create a genume, constructive b1part1san atmosphere," he saJd
He said tha~ only happens about
once a year.
But not this yc•. And probably
not next.
(Walter R. Melrt, VIce Jll'llldent
and c:olumnlat for The Aalbc:ltltld
Pren, hie reportld on W.ihlngton
and national polltlc:e for more thin
30. Ylll'l.)

"~ "

.:.,. .1
.. ~ '

Thought for today
'Morals is not preaching;" i~ i$· beauty ·
of a rare kind.'
" ': ·
Ernest Dimnet, French priest, lee- 1'turer and author (1~66-19&amp;4)

•

'

'

'· Jo Ann Bolinger

IW

A pretty {all day for Ohio on Thursday
For9castets say 11 'Wtll be sunny and cool, with h1ghs of 55-60
A h1gh pressure system buJ!dmg over the state will clear out the clouds,
the NatiOnal 'Weather Service satd.
Tomg'ht, the mereury Will plunge mto the 30s and frost IS posstble
statewJ~e. the NWS said
'

Weather forecast:
Tomght Clear and ch1lly Patchy fog near nvers late Scattered frost m
outlymg areas Lows 1rt the m1d 30s. L1ght wind
Thu~day Most)y sun11y H1~hs m the lower 60s
Thursday mght. Clear Lows m the lower 40s
Extended forec:ast:
Fnday Mostly cloudy wtth a chance of showers H1ghs 10 the lower 60s
Saturday Wmdy and colder wtth scattered ram showers Mornmg lows
m the upper 30s H•ghs m the lower 50s
Sunday Contmued brisk and cold Partly cloudy Mornmg lows m the
:m1d 30s H1ghs 45 to 50
J:'

: Manha Chapman, 89, of Dexter, d1ed Tuesday, October 19, 1999 at her
reSidence
'
• She ~as born November 12, 19o&lt;J m Salem Township, daughter of the
late Joseph and Emma Johnson"Romme She was a ret1red teacher of 41 years,
II rnernb,!r,of l.hl;, \\:'llke$v1lle Order of the Eastern Star No 207. Columbia
ptapel &lt;;;hrj~tiiyi'P)~~~. IJ1e F;{iendly Ne1ghbors Club, the Star Garden Club,
~nd attellded ~~; ~lm}ille;fresbytenan Church
She IS sur\l.t~ild by..&amp;slepsoo, Wendell Ch~anofWJ ikesvllle, two meces,
Dorothy Shearer of Columbus, and Patsy M'liitln:Of Dayton, two nephews,
Btll ROIW.II.~:o .llLDa¥ton,..and R'6nald Josepti';R'dinitre of Athens, and spectal
fnends, Ronme and Margte Rtfe of Dext~a}lli :M;itzy R1fe-Bush of St.
"harles, MISsouri
---' · '"'
' In add1t1on to her parents, she was preceded m death by her husband,
Lawrence Chapmart: tllio siSters, Edith Strong and Dons Randolph, and by
two brothers. John and W1lham Roitlwe
,'••
Servtces ' wJII be held Saturday, Oc\j2bet"'1;3, 1999 at 2 p m in ' the
WJikesv1lle Presbytenan Church, With the Rev Larry Lane offic1atmg. Burial Will be tn the Castor Cemetery Fnends may &lt;all Fnday, October 22, 1999
from 7-9 p m at the B1gony-Jordan Funeral Home m Albany, where Eastem Star semces Will be held at 8 p m by W1lkeSVJIIe OES Chapter No. 207

'"

app~als

The Daily Sentinel • Page ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

a Chapman,

Revise the death penalty
By JOSEPH PERKINS
Brandon Wtlson says he does not
deserve to hve He's nght
When a man follows a 9-year-old
boy mto a bathroom and sill~ h1s
throat, he ought to d1e for hts cnrne
Espec1ally when he confesses to "no
remorse whatsoever " for k1lhng the
child, when he brashly declares, "I
would do II agam m a second 1f I had
the chance "
A JUry 10 VJSta, Cahf, voted the
death penalty for W1lson last week
Alas, tl will be perhaps seven years
or more before the shaved-headed
child-killer recetves the pumshment
he so nchly deserves
That's because Cahfom1a goes out
of tts way not to execute murderers
- even when those murderers are,
hke WJ[son, qUJte ready to pay the
forfeit for their sms agamst soc1ety
Indeed, l1ke all but one of the 38
states that perm1t cap1tal puniSh
ment, Cahforma mandates automatIC appeals of death penalty convJctwns So the WIShes of convicted
murderers are mconsequenual ("Execute me · sa1d WJison. the cht ldk•ller) They are forced to appeal then
death sentences whether they want to
or not
So these k1llers wile away the
years on Death Row as their lawyers
use every conceivable legal maneu-

Wednesday, October 20, 1999

Memonal semces for JoAnn Bohnger w1ll be held Fnday at 10 am at
Sacred Heart Memonal Cemetery, Pomeroy
In heu of Howers. donattons may be made to the Me1gs County Humane
Soctety, PO Box 682, Pomeroy, Oh10 45769

William 'Wally' Bradford
Wilham Wallace "Wally" Bradford, 84, Coolv1lle, dted Tuesday, Oct 19,
1999 m St Joseph Hosp1tal, Parkersburg, W Va
'
Born on March 26, 1915 10 Pomeroy, he was the son of the late W1lllam
Bradford and Helen Powell Bradford
He was a graduate of M1ddleport H1gh School, for 27 years served on the
Me1gs County Fa1r Board, a member of the Shade R1ver Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
a 60-year member of Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal Arch Masons and the
Bosworth CouncJ146, Royal and Select Masons, a member of the Oh10 Valley Comrnandery 24, Kmghts Templar, a member of the 32nd degree Scottish R1te, and a member of Aladdin Temple Shnne
He was the oldest hvmg member of Ewmg Chapter SAR, Me1gs County, and was a member of Hemlock Grange 20,49 and the Hemlock Grove
Church of Chnst
Mr Bradford retired from Western Southern Ltfe Insurance, where he was
employed as an msurance agent.
He ts sumved by h1s w1fe of 61 years, Munel Whaley Bradford; a son
and daughter-m-law, W1lham Bruce and Carolyn Bradford of Pomeroy.
daughters and son-m-law, Carolyn and John Ketchka of Pomeroy, and Neda
Mllchell of Coolville, SIX grandchildren and SIX great grandchildren, a SISter and brother-m-law, Ehzabeth and Harold Lohse of Pomeroy, two brothers and ststers-m-law. Lawrence and Jean Bradford of Grove C1ty, and Alan
and Marguente Bradford of Stanton, Va , and many meces, nephews and
COUSinS

Serv1ces w1ll be held at II am Fnday m the FISher Funeral Home,
Pomeroy OffJcJatmg w1ll be the Rev Gene Zopp Bunal Will follow m the
Cherry R1dge Cemetery Fnends may call Thursday from 2-4 and 6-9 p m
at the funeral home
Masomc serv1ces w1ll be conducted at 8 30 p m Thursday

Martha Chapman

Martha Chapman, 89, Dexter, d1ed Tuesday, Oct 19, 1999 at her restdence
She was born Nov. 12. 1909" m' Salem Township, daughter of the late
Joseph and Emma Johnson Rom10e She was a retired teacher of 41 years,
a member of the WJ!kes vJIIe Order of Eastern Star 207, the Colurnb1a Chapel
Chrisllan Church, the Fnendly Ne1ghbors Club, the Star Garden Club, and
:aue.n!led the W1lkesVJIIe Presbytemm Church
' • She JS sumved by a stepson, Wendell Chapman of W1lkesvJ!Ie, and by
several me~es and nephews
She was also preceded m death by her husband, Lawrence Chapman, two
SISters, Ed1th Strong and Dons Randolph, and by two brothers, John and
Wtlliam Romme
Serv1ces wtll be 2 p m Saturday m the Wtlkesv1lle Presbytenan Church.
" w1th the Rev Larry Lane offic1atmg Bunal will be m the Castor Cemetery
ESC meeting set
,
Fnends may call at the B1gony-Jordan Funeral Horne, Albany, from 7-9 p m.
The records commiSSIOn of the Fnday, where Eastern Star serv1ces will be held at 8 p m by Wilkesville OES
Athens/Me1gs EducatiOnal Serv1ce Chapter 207
Center wtll meet on Thursday, I 45
p m at the office located at 507 Richland Ave , Athens A fin~nce committee meetmg w1ll follow at 2 p.m
No dmner planned
The Syracuse Volunteer F1re
Depanment wtll not have tts annual By JOHN McCARTHY
the agency names m Oh10 law The
ThanksgiVIng dmner for the pubhc Associated Preas Writer
Democrats had concerns that such
th1s year
COLUMBUS - A spec1al board maJor legJslatwn was movmg so
that would study the cost of health qu•ckly The House suspended Jts
Comtnisslbn meeting
msurance coverage the LegiSlature rules to speed up passage
The Records CommJsswn of the reqUires still would take too much
But Rep E J Thomas, a ColumAthens/Me1gs EducatiOnal Serv1ce power from the Legislature, Democ- bus Republican who cha~red the
Center w1ll meet on Nov 4 at I 40 rats who opposed the measure sa1d
committee, sa1d all the part1es had
p m , at the office at 507 R1chland
House Repubhcans on Tuesday ample ume to voJce then oppoSitJon,
Ave , Athens A fmance commlllee took some of the punch out of that and d1d not do so
meeung WJII follow at 2 p m
" We let Jt be known on Thursday
board and won passage of the bill that
that
we'd stay as long (m the comgot stalled last week
The House also passed and sent to mittee heanng) as we needed to," he
the Senate two b1lls that wdl merge smd "I feel that we followed through
two state agenc1es that oversee on our responstblltty "
MIDDLEPORT
Ohto's welfare and unemployment
7 IS p m, Jumor H1gh Football
The House also passed a btll that
programs mto a smgle department
FJeld, Shane Napper, treated at the
adJusts
dozens of sect1ons of Oh1o
begmnmg next July
scene;
law
deahng
w1th sentences for cnrnSponsonng Rep Dale Van Vyven
8 $0 p m., Darst Nursmg Home,
The
changes were recomlnals
amended the health coverage btll to
Pomeroy, Phylhs Vmmg, VMH
mended
by
the
Oh10 Cnmmal Senensure the Mandated Benefits
RACINE
tencmg
CommiSSIOn,
a panel of
Rev Jew Counctl does not make rec1•2.50 p.m , volunteer fire departjudges
and
law
enforcement
offictals
ommendations to the LegiSlature
ment and squad to Bald Knobs- That eased the concerns of some
The btll bnngs sentences more m
Silvers.vllle Road, loggmg accident,
Republicans who thought the bill hoe w1th the spmt of recent sentencTucker Wtlhams, St Joseph's Hospi- took away too much power from law- mg laws the LegiSlature has passed,
tal, Central Dispatch squad aSSISted.
sa1d Rep Ann Womer BenJamm,
makers
RUTLAND
cha1rwoman
of the House Cnmmal
Instead, the amendment allows the
..~:. 1110 p.m , Me1gs Mme 2••James
Justtce
Committee.
'ouncll, to consiSt of lawmakers and
1i!hrile~et, O'Bieness M~moi1111' HbsThe Senate, rneanwhtle, approved
representatives from the msurance
pllal
legiSiauon
mdustry and consumer groups, only
SYRACUSE
• Requmng the Board of Nursmg
to repon ns fmdmgs to the LcgJsla2 23 p m , Broadway Street, Mid- turc The amended b1ll passed 60-34 to estabhsh a ceruficatJon program
dleport, V10la Young, VMH ,
w1th four Democrats JOJnmg the for dialysiS techmc~ans
5 12 p rn , Seventh Street, Alba House maJonty The 34 votes agamst
• GIVIng the Oh10 Environmental
Yost, VMH
ProtectiOn
Agency more authonty to
the b1ll all came from Democrats
regulate
sludge
left over from mumc"There's nothmg to prevent the
tpal
sewage
treatment
plants
Legislature from mvestmg m a com•
Expandmg
the
defimt1on
of vetmlltee what the b1ll would hand off
Holzer Medical Center
eran
m
state
law
to the counc1l," sa1d Rep Betty SutDischarJes Oct. 19 - Abby
ton , an Akron-area Democrat who
Hammond.
voted agamstthe b1ll for the second
(Published with permission)

MiilgSw
aiJnoiiitcements
Highway meeting planned
The Me1g s County Route 33
H1ghway Comtruttee will have an
organmlttonal meeung Tharsday at 3
p.m at the Semor Ctttzens•Center
Anyone mterested 10 h•«hway development IS welcome fot ,input
Hymn sing set
A hymn smg will be held at the
Sttversvtlle Church Saturday at 7 30
p.m. w11h Lewis and Garrett, Portland The ~ub~1c •s· illyilelt.
' '
Dinner !et
A turkey/ham dmner will be
served at Southem,Htgh School Nov
7, II am. to 2 p m Take out will be
available Cost 1f $4 75 'for adults,
and $3 mfor stude~ts

State Democrats oppose
insurance coverage board

EM·S records nine calls
Umts of the Mmgs County Emergency Med1cal SeJ:vtee logged mne
calls for asststaJ\ce 'I:IIesday Umts
respondtng mcluded·
CENTIMb DISPAJCJH
10 16 am , Umon Avenue, Aoyd
Reynolds, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
II 36 ' am , State Route 681,
Charles Zetgler, Veterans Men10nal
Hospital; · ,
" •• " " _
7·28 "p m. Meigs Jumor H1gh
Football Fteld, Ray Ratchff and Clay
Stone, H~~r ~&lt;Jicw ~!'\P.L _

The Dctil)"'S~nti"ri~l
tUSJ'S ~13-ll'il) ,

Community Newspaper Holdln&amp;SJ Inc.
,

I

,

Pubhsheq every afJc~\K\'l~r Mon~a~ 1 thrQJ.!ih
F'nday, 111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohro, by the
Ohto Valltll}' Pubh&amp;htnl Company Sccond cla55
postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohro
Membtr; The AMocraled Press and the Ohro
Newspa~r Associahon
Postmaster: Send addrcM correctrons to The
Darly Semmel, ll \ Coun '5 t 1 romeroy, Ohro
4576~ ,. I
•
SUBSCRifTJON RATES
ly C•nier or Motor Rot~te
One Week..... • •••
• ..... .$2 00
One Momh. •. • • .
• • •: S8 70
One Year.
. ••••• •• •• ..$104 00
SINCI.E COPV PRICE
Dar)y... l.
, ••• •
35 Ce nl.~
Subscnbeb Ubi des~r•ng tOpay t~c coUrier may
remtt tn ldYimac dtrcct to The Oatly Sentmcl on
a lh~e ••x or 12 month ba:us Credtl w1ll be
gtven catner ca'Ch Week
No su~jltton by matl perm1tted 1n areas
where hoii\C """1e1 SCI'VICO IS a.-11lablc
Publisher re~erVes the nght to adJuSt rates dur·
mg the sUbScrtprioh #*nod Subscrtplton rate

By DAVID ESPO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - For Republican preSJdentJal cand1date John
McCam, the Se,nate's latest debate on
campa1gn finance legiSiah on may
turn out to be a somethmg of a m•xed
blessmg
McCam's Signature Jssue - a bill
to c urta~ I the role of money m campa•gns - Js dead for the founh
stra1ght year at the hands of a fll1
buster by fellow Senate Republicans
But the spokesman for the Anzona
senator's preSJdentml campa1gn
cla1ms the lour-day debate comclded
w1th a surge m mterest, judged, at
least, by hiS campa1gn Web s1te
"Our h1ts went from a tnck le basically
up to about 22,000 m one
day," smd Howard Opmsky,
McCa m's spokesman " Literall y
thousands and thous,mds of Amencans who arc no" acccss 1ng our Weh
slle learnmg about the 1mpact ol
soft money "
1
The JegJSiat•on 1ece1ves a fonnal
bunal today wllh a fmal Senate vote
to move on to other busmess The
doomed measure would h.- e banned
soft money - the unhm1ted campaign contnbut1ons that umons cor
porat,ons and 1nd1v1duals g1ve to
poht1cal part1es It also would have
curtaJied orgamzed labor 's ablllly to
use nonumon members' mandatory
dues money for poht1cal purposes
Opponents sa.d the soft money
ban amounted to an uliconstJtutJonal
mfnngement on the freedom of
speech " It 's a homble p1ece of legISlation, " sa1d Sen M1tch McConnell.
R-Ky "It deserves to be defeated and
the Senate d1d the country a favor "
McC)lm JS hardly the first to use
h1s Senate seat to advance a preSJdentml b1d -Republican Sens Ph1l
Gramm of Texas and Bob Dole of
Kansas both tned at varwus stages of
the 1996 campa1gn, for example
And as IS the custom, McCam
never referred exphc1tly to h1s politICal ambitions dunng occasiOnally
barbed debate But he drew a connection m comments to reporters
Tuesday JUSt off the Senate Hoor
''I'm at 21 (percent) m New
Hampshire and what am I campa•gmng on? I'm campa1gmng on
refonn " he sa1d, referrmg to recent
polhng m the nahon 's first pnmary
state that put h1m a diStant second
behmd front-runner George W Bush,
but ahead of other nvals
It fell to other senators to refer to
McCam 's use of the Jssue m h1s presJdentJal b1d
McConnell and others complamed
that McCam 's Web slle drew a lmk
between soft money donations and
corruphon Repeatedly, they demanded McCam prov1de ev1dence by nammg senators who had been corrupted

Hospital news

ume

Stock Report

A,n J;la Ppwar .......................33\
Akzo .: ....................................41'1,
Amerltech/SBC .................47,.
Ashland 011 .............................31
changes may be •mplement.d ~)' changmg the ,
AT&amp;T .....................................
durallon of the subicnptton
Bank One ..............................32'1.
',
MAILSUBSCRtPTION
Bob. Evana ............................15,.
,, lnaJ¥. ~~lp Coupty
Borg-Warner .........................38'1.
13 W.•k&gt;...
• S27 30
Champion ...............................5),
26 Weeks
• • ..... • •.SH.Sl
Charm Shps ............................s'!.
52 WooU ~ ,...._ •••••••l l -~•• .5105..56 ~,
City Holdlng .......................... 18),
Rates .Outside M~a• County
Federal Mogul ......................
lJ ""'"' .: ..: .. .. . .. .. $29 25
•.
26\\ll~ts •.'.: . : . ' .. .: .. SS668
Flretar .w..................................28
5~ ~, ..,...... """"'",_., • .$1()9J2 I I o-1
Gannett .................................70,,
Kmart .................................... to,,.
Kroger ..................................22).
Reader Services
Lands End .............................68'1.
Limited .................................42'·
Correction Polley
Oak Hill Flnl ............................17
Oor main con&lt;cm In on stories Is to be
OVB .......................................32'!.
accurate. Jr you know ef en error In 1
One Valley .........................~ ...&lt;35'!.
story, coli lhe ftwsroo~ 'It (74W~ 99;;
Peqptat~ .,::................. .,. .....~27).
1!!. ·wt' •. &lt;fti:\ .¥~ 'iirol'llllltlin
Premf:IIII •• J,, ............ .c,.......\\ 10t
;ud m1W • •w•l6tac 11'..-,..atedJI. """
Rockwell .:........................ soY•
News Departments ·• - -: )o.IJ0/Shell .......................... .,...58'1.1
1-~~e matnO.ollltitr Is' m'-z1!s."D~'P.H- ' .,••,. .....................................291.
rment exttn!loM art:
Shonay'a "................................ 1~
Wendy's.'... :.......................... 24-,.
G..cnl Manage&lt; ..
. . . .Ext. 1101
New~ ...1. ..1.., _ ......... ,, l.•,Ext...liOl
'Worthington ......................... 16'·
' .
'
~
"' · ' 1 • t ; 1 er Ext. 1106
. - ' ,..
' ..
.
Other seMc•tr ' • " ' 'Tile 'dally 'stoek reports are the
10:30 a.m. quote• provided
~dvertloinl- ........... ........... .Ext. 1104
by Advest of Gallipolis
iCt~Colatlon
.
.
ExL 1103
.Ciosotllcd Ad• ...................... .Ext. 1100

44,.

:n,.

....

~ ~II

-.1

The b1ll JS deSigned to g1ve lawmakers some 1dea of the cost of coverage they requ1re, such as hosp1tal
stays for b1rths and mastectomies,
before they pass a bJII. The msurance
mdustry wanted to give the comm•t·
tee the power to make nonbmdmg
recommendatwns, but opposJtJon to
that 1dea stalled the bill
Van Vyven, a suburban CmcmnatJ
Republican, worked out the compromise with Republicans who opposed
the b1lllast week Rep Lynn Olman,
R-Maumee, saJd the changes mean
lawmakers. and not outstde groups,
w1ll make the final deciSIOns on
health coverage 1ssues
"That 1s our nght That ts our
~ responsJbJhty," Olman sa1d
The House also passed the welfare
I merger bills, wh1ch would combme
: the Oh10 Department of Human Ser; v1ces wnh the Bureau of Employ' rnent Serv1ces mto the Oh10 Department of Job and Fam1ly Serv1ces
The b1lls, wh1ch were passed by a
, House-Senate commlltee studymg
' the merger, resulted from Gov Bob
, Taft's campa1gn promise to ehmmate
' waste and duphcatJOn of serv1ces m
' state government
1 F1fteen Democrats voted agamst
the b1ll that would accomplish the
merger. the other bill merely changes

year
In remarks on the Senate Hoor,
McCam vowed, "we w1ll persevere," and la1d blame for the setback
at the feet of both pohtlcal part1es
Of the two votes cast Tuesday, the
f~rst was on a broad set of campa1gn .
finance changes the House passed
last month and that McCrun and WJsconsm Democratic Sen Russell Fem- ,
gold had backed a year ago.
That vote was 52-48, e1ght short I
ol the 60 needed Votmg m favor,
were all 45 Democrats, as well as
McCam and Republicans John '
Chafee of Rhode Island Susan
Colhns and Olymp1a Snowe of
Mame, James Jeffords of Vermont.
Arlen Specter of Pennsy lvama and •
Fred Thompson of Tennessee
The second vote oame on a
slimmed down b11lthat McCam and
Femgold brought to the Hoor m ·
hopes of thwarttng the filibuster
On that 53-47 vote, Republican
Sens Sam Brownback of Kansas
Tun Hutchmson of Arkansas and
Wllllam Roth of Delaware JOmed
Colhns Jeffords, Snowe and Thomp- '
son to vote w1th McCam and all 45
Democrats Specter and Chafee SJded
w1th GOP opponents

MON 10/18 • THURS 10/21/99

lOX Offl&lt;l Will OPIH AT
6:30 PM FOIIYINING SHOWS

7:00,9:00

THE SIXTH SENSE (PG13)
710 DAILY

7:11, 9:45

IIIII,.'"

7:20, 9:45 ,

t"'"") bt!! IWoy Jaol lilnlloo( taH""', l h - :
AUSIII.,.,.
7:20, 9:45 '
Honk-

7:45, 10:00
1:45
715 DAILY

FOR CUSTOMER APPRECIATION,
PRESENT TICKET STUB AND
RECEIVE A FREE POPCORN,
(MON·THURS ONLY)

-

---

~--

--

-

-

-

--~--

_f?-~~~

The HALLOWEEN
"Cruise To Nowhere"
Wednesday, October 27th, 1999 6:30- 10:00 pm

.

Sponsored by the Meigs County Tourism Board, this "masquerade dane&lt; cruise aboard
the Valley Gem Sternwheeler-will feature food, "DJ" entertainment with WYVK playing
your favorite "Oldies" and pri:es for the best costumes! Costumes are optional.
Costume pri:es sponsored by:
$250.00 1st place $150.00 2nd place $50.00 3rd place

-

~

(!!)
~

SHADE RIVER
AGSERVtCE

For more information call:

(740) 992..2239
Tickets are $15.00 per pe1'8011, and available at the Chamber of Commerce Office
238 West Main Street, Pomeroy, The cruise is BYOB, you must be 21 to participate.
Special sponson:
HUP"

VILLAGE OF

LANDSCAPING

POMEROY

Costulllfl available Cor rent at the Rutland Deportment Store. Call Maureen Bui'DI at 742.-1100

....

�.

'

.'

:Sports

The .Daily .Sentinel

/

Wednesday, October 20, 1999

Mother Nature has last word in Circleville, Youngstown games:

Braves top Mets 10-.9 in 11
innings, claim NL pennant
By BEN WALKER
ATI..ANTA (AP)- So much suspense, so much back-and-forth
drama and still the whole incredoble
series - the entire ~eason, really came down to a full -count pitch.
"Oh, no!" Mets manager Bobby
Valentine shouted, slamming the
dugout railing when Kenny Rogers '
fastball sailed high and outside.
It was all over. Andruw Jones
walked to first base, Gerald Wilhams
trotted home with one out in the II th
inning and the Atlanta Braves beat
New York 10-9 Tuesday mght to win
the NL Championship Series 4-2.
The. Atlanta Braves, havi ng
derailed the Mets' grand plan for a
S)lbway Series, were headed to the
World Series for the fifth time this
decade.
Game I against the New York
Yankees will he Saturday noght at
Turner Foeld. It's a rematch of 1996,
when the Yankees won in stx games.
Five straight one-run games, with
an amazing finale . The Braves blowing a 5-0 lead. then the Mets losmg
one-run leads in the eighth and IOth
innings. A se llout crowd of 52.335.
including thousands of Mets fans.
roaring for 4'1, hours.
·
" It was an extremely stressful
week," said Braves reltever John
Rocker, who pitched in every game

Baseball
National League
Championship Series
Thesday's linale

4-2

Atlanta 10. New York 9 (II l: Allanta wms senes

World Series slate
Saturday's opener
Next week
S~tnlby,

Oct. 14

N Y Yankees at Atlanta, 8 OS p m
Tue5day, OcL 16

Atlanta at N Y Yankees, 8 20 p.m
Wednnday, Od. 27

Adanta at N.Y. Yankees, 8:20p.m
Thursct.y, Od. ll
Atlanta at N.Y. Yankees. 8.20 p.m.. 1f necessary
Soturday, Oct. .l4l
N.Y. Yankees at Atlanta. 8 05 p.m.. tf necessary
Sunday. Od. 31
N.Y. Yukl:cs at A11anla. 8:05 p m EST. if neces~

Hockey
NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
"-tl1ntk Division

JU, III lll.

Iam

New Jersey .
NY Ran&amp;m .
Piusburgh

... 4 I I 0
... 4 4 I 0

N.Y. lsiUiders .
Ptuladclphia

Toron1o

Onawa
Montreal .
8osu.m .
Buffalo

9
9
6
4
4

.2 I 2 0

. 2 .4 0 0
. I 5 I I

Northeast Dh·Jsion
I J 0 0
.... 4 l I 0
.. 3 l 0 0
.. 0 l
0
0 4 2 0

·'

!;if
19

liA

13
16

18
21

13

21 18
22 19

10 22
19
6 11
12
l 12

11
16
22
21
19

•
'

Southeast Dh•ISion
Flonda

4 I I 0
I 2 0
2) I 0
I ) l 0
I 4 I I

11 I J
16 II .
I 16 22
4 14 24
4 11 11

9
8

'

-·-

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division

1om

l&gt;etr&lt;llt .

Sl. loUIS .
Nashvi lle

Ch1cogo

lY L III &amp;

0
) u 0
1 I 0
110

4 I

4
2
0

I

Colorado
Edmonton
Cnlgary .

!;if

• 14
'I 151.1
20

liA

'

Northwe~ l Divi~iun

Vancouver

10
ll
11

2J

\0 25 2J
.1 1 2 0 8 11 16
1 l 1 I 1 15 16
I l 2 0
4 18 )4
4 2 I

I

SanJose

Patine Divldon
7 l 0 0

Phoentx.

4 I 2 0

An~im

4 4 0 I

Dallas .

4 ) I 0

Los Angelc5

4 2 I 0

despite heing involved in a car crash
Monday. "Games. hinging on one
pitch, night after night after night. "
After the Mets' 4-3, 15-mning
win Sunday at Shea Stadium, the
teams came back to play one of the
most thrilling postseason games
ever.
"We had chances to die and we
didn't," Braves manager Bobby Cox
saod. "There's more than one way to
win a ball game."
The Mets nearly became the first
team in postseason history 10 won
three games in a row after losing the
first three.
The Mets overcame a 5-0 deficit
in the first inning. getting a big home
run by Mike Piazza to make it 7-all
in the seventh. But they could not
hold on 10 the later 10n10gs.
"I told them they played like
champions," Valentine said " We
don't have a trophy, but they dtd
everything they had to."
The Mets 4ook a 9-8 lead on Todd
Pratt's sacnfice lly m the IOlh oft
Rocker at exactly the stroke of midmght The Braves tied it in the bottom of the mnmg on p10ch-hotter
Ozzie Guillen's single.
Then in the lith. Willoams led off
with a double and moved up on Wah
Weiss' sacrifice. Two intentional
walks loaded lhe bases for Jones. ,

25 11 70 2 - Brun sw~ek (8-0) 22 4875 . .~·Canton
McK1nley (6-2) 10 8875 4-Pick.eringlon (7.1)
20 8l15 5-N Can10n Hoover (7. 1) I9 6.'75 6- You
Boan.l111un (6·21 18 8480 7-LOG/\N (7· 11 18 0875
8-Sandusky ( 5·)) I] .l595 9-Mount Vernon {6-21
II 6750. 10-Stow-Munroe Falls (S-.\J II !i87S
Rtg1on 4 · 1-Cm St Xavter (7-0) 2HlQ27 2·
C1n El&lt;kr (1 I) 22 6800 3 Hulk.Y Ht s 'Miyne (8-0J
210250 4-Frurfield (6· 2) 185500 5-Mason (6-21
17.5625 6·Centen·1lle (8·0) 171875 7-Cln . Oak
Htlls(6·Z) 111750 8-Cm Moeller {4·4) 146895 9·
Ltbt:ny Twp Lakota East (5-l) I~ 9~75 \O.West
Cheuer Lakota West (6·21 13.8500

Division II

N Y Y11nkm a! Atlanta, 8OS p m

Reg1on 5 1-Madtson (8-0) 2.\ 2875 2-Cuya
Fnlb Walsh Jesu1t (7-1) 21 J640 3-Ravenna (7·1 )
I8 .'500 +Olmsted Falls (7· 11 144 125 5- Memor
Lake Catholic (6-1) 14 3655. 6-Ntles McKinley (6·2)
12.3 125 7- Rachficld Rtvere (5-H 12.2875 8·
Geneva (6-2) I I 2625 9.Parma Hts Holy Name (7.
I) 10.7500 10-Macedoma Nordomn (6-2) 10 1250
Regwn 6 !·Piqua (8·0) 22 6625 2-WaUsworth
(8 ·01 203175 ]-Avon Lak.e 0· 1) 174625 4·
Whitehouse Amhony Wayne (8·0) 171900 5Marys~ llle (8-0) 15 7000 6-Sylvama Southv1ew (7.
l) 151 250 7-Amllerst Steele (6·2) 14 8250 g.
Grafton M1dvtew (8-0) 14 0250. 9-New Carlisle
Tecumseh (6-2) 12 82.'i0 IO·Orezon Clay (5·3)

112.170

Regton 7 1-Dover (8-0) 22 2500 2-Col.
Brookhaven (8 0) 19 4000 J Col . Independence (8·
0) 18 8090. 4-Uniontown Lak.e (6-2) 17.9000 5-East
u . .erpoo! (6·2) r 5 7000 6-Col Btcchcroft (6-2)
106625 7-Col St Charles (5-J) 104375 S-Canlon
TI!cl:~n (4-4) r0 2625 9 - I..~WIS c~ me r Olentangy (5,, 9 362.5 fO.Co1 East (6·2) 8 280.5
Reg1on 8 I·Kings M1lls Kmgs (7 · 1) 19.2200 2·
Trenton Edgewood (8·0) 16 2090 ) ·Lebanon {7·1)
158870 4-Cin McN•cholas (6-2) D 8000 5·

32

18

10
9
9

19

14

22

18

18

\8

9 22

16

Overnme losses count as a loss and a regulauon

toe.

Thesday's scores
Anaheim 7. Washtngron I
Vancouver 6. Tampa Bay S-OT
San Jose 2. NY Rangers I
St. Loois 1, Calgary I

Tonight's games
Nuhvtlle at Buffalo, 7 p m
Carolina a Toromo. 7 ID p m.
Colorado ar Moweal. 1 .m p m
NY Rangers at Ph1ladclph1a. 7·30 p m
Vancouver at Ronda. 1 30 p.m
San Jose at Detroit. 7' 30 p m
Edmomon 11 Dallas, 8:30p.m
Botton 11 Los Angeles. JO·JO p.m.

nursday's games

Badin (6-2)

11 OOJO

&lt;-PORTSMOUTH (1-1)

I 5.2605 . 5-Cm Madttra (7 . 1) 14 9375 6-C1n

Division V

T&lt;am

I·You Mooney(ll )6· 1

1-WHEELERSBURG 191 8-0 .
J-Chagnnfalls (61 8-0 .
4-Cm Wyommg (I) 8-0
Germantown Valley View !2 ) 7-1
6·Sandusky Perkins(]) 8·0
?·Campbell Memorial ( I ) 8·0 .
8-0ak Harbor 8·0 ..
..
9-Bellvillc CleM Fork 7-1
IQ-UtiCil7· 1. .
Othcn rttc:lvlllK ll vr more pohlts: II ·
Bellaire 37. 12~ Akron Manchester (I) .\6 I )- Martms
Ferry (!I JO. 14-IRONTON 19 I 1-Mar,.n Elgon 24
16-Ham~ltol Badin 14 17-Cin M~de 1ra 12

Reg10n 17 !-Redford Cha ne] (8-U) 17 .n50 2·
Mass1llon ruslaw (7· 1) 17 0) 75. J·Ltsbon O,I\'IU
Anderson (S·O) l.'i ~ ]7:1 4-Cie. Valla Angela·St
Jostph (8·01 IJ 9435 5-N Ltm~ S Range 0· 11
Division Ill_
12 5750 6-New Madd!etown Springfield (7. 1)
I I 1750 7-BrookfiCid (5· 3) 9 9)75 8·Sull1van 1om
&amp;
1-Lima Bath (14) 8-0
Black Ra\·er (5· ~ ) 8 6500 9-0rwell Grand Valley (5·
... 181
2-Po!Jnd Semmary (6) 8-0
:tl ~ . 1'250 \().Warren Kennedy (4-4) 79000
.... .. .258
J-Bcllbrook (:i) 8-0
...... 240
Rtgaon 18· 1-Uberty Center (6· 1) 151808 2·
Gtbsonburg (8.01 14.4750 3-Columbus Grove {7-1 )
4-Copley (.~ 1 8-0
201
114
5-Col Watterson ( 2J 7· I
U .' J75 4-SmiJhvtlle (8-0) IJ 2250 5-Delphos
O·Sicubcnvlllc (2) 7· 1
Jefferson (7· 1J I 2 8000 6-Biuffton (7· 1) 12.01U 1.
. 16J
?- Bellevue (2) 7-0 ................ .. .... ..
rJ:i
Sherwood FaltVItW (6·2) r I 0625 8-Sycamore
8-0rrvillc ( I) 7·I
Mohawk (7· 1) 10 8500 9-Bioomdale Elmwood (6·
.. 11 8
Q.Mlllersburg W Hol mes 8.0
... 96
21 10.7625 IO.Crest bne (7-1) 10 1150
Re81on 19: I-CHESAPEAKE (8·0) 15 2700. 2· 10-JACKSON 1-1.
... .40
Amandl!·Ciearcn:ek
(1·1)
15 0520
J.
Othus ru::clvlng 11 or mon points: II ·
LUCASV ILLE VALLEY (8-0) 14 06 25 4· THORNVILLE SHERIDAN .~0 I 2· LOUl5\'lll e 26
I \.w,nard 17 14-Akron Hoban 16 15 (liel-Cin
Johnstown Northndge (8·0) 14 012l S·Woodsfield
Monroe Central· 0-1) 13 9540. 6-Barncsvlllc (g.Q) Purcell Mnnan. Eaton London 14
12 8375 . 7-Bolttmore L1beny Union (7- 1) 12 16 25
8-0A K HILL (6·2) 12 1040 9 (tlt:HlEVERLY
FORT FRYE (6-2). Malvern (7·1) I I 5500
Regaon 20 !·Milford Center Fairbanks &lt;8·0)
15 8125. 2-West Alexandna Twtn Valley South (8-0)
14 2550 3- Batavla (8·0) I 3 8330. 4-Wayncsvllle (10) 138195 5-SI Henry (6-1) B .0878 6-Versmlles
(6·2) 12.6375. 7- Rocklord Parkway (5·]) 11.8575
S.S1dncy Lehman 15-J) 100125 9-New Albany (8·
0)961 25 10-Cin DeerPark.(4-4)87250

T&lt;am

1-Cie VASJ (618-0.

.l·St Henry 0· 1..
4-LibenyCtr (I) 6-1
'i-Milford Ctr Fairb01nks ( I) 8-0
6·SmJthv11le ll) 8-0
1· N LunaS Range 7·1
8-Johnstown Nonhridge (I) 8-0 .

(shown actual size)

~rlday,

•
•
•

•

Resion 1: J-Solon (8·0&gt; 28.j t25 2·Shaktr, •

Heill&lt;s (8-0) 22 1710. J-Cie So. lgnalius 11-11
20.406:.5 4-Mnyfield (7. 1) 1782.m . S-Strongsv11le •
16-l)
IS.l\25. 6-Cie. Glen•ille (6-2) IJ.569l 1- •
Lakewood ($-J) 13.4375. 8-Mentor (4·4) r] .0000 9·
EucUd (l-J) 12.9170 10-Middlebu'g Hts Modp"k •
2
(l·J~!i~~ '2 1-Gm.. City (8-01 25 .1871 1- •

(

D11

October 22, 1999
In Dr. A. Jackson Balles' Office
224 East Main, P01111roy
9•00
Noon
•
•

•-•1
Free 1•100•634•5265 f ., an I...tn...
-.11 f e
lUI
I

Major
Earl Jones
1969-1971Army
VietNam

95
84

9-HEMLOCK MILLER 1-1

.63

10- lnd epe n~nce

( r) 8-0
. .. 54
Others rectiving 12 or more points: II ·
Pandora-G1Iboa 51 12-Cuyahoga Hts 30 I ).·~
Norwalk St Paul 27. 14-0regon Stntch 21 B· •
KirtlunU 12

r--------------------,1
Please Fill Out And Return With
Your Payment To:

I

VETERAN SALUTE

I

C/0 Dally Sentinel
111 Court St
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

I
I

In Honor Of (name and rank)

I

I
I
I

Photo of
Your Veteran

226
206
177
158

ConflicVWar

AD DEADLINE Wednesday, Ocf27, 19~9
Tributes must be prepaid .
Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11

I

••
••
••
•••
•

appo nftnenf.
The tests will ... alven by • Llce•sed Hearlna Aid
Spee1a IIIf
••

?J'=

Address:

----------~-------·I

-----------------------·
------------JI

Phone:

L---------~------•---~

Daily Sentinel

In Honor Of

Corporal
BobJohqson
1991·1~

..

Marines·

Desert Storm
Love, Your Famity

that is something I would be interested in, interested in talking to John
about," Hersbiser said. "We agreed
it's not fair to me to talk about it now.
We'll talk when this thing is over."
Meanwhile, Charhe Manuel ,
Cleveland's hitting instructor, is the
leading candidate to become the next
manager of the Indians, who fired
Mike Hargrove last week after the
club's playoff collapse.
"Charlie has to be," Cleveland
assistant general manager Mark
Shapiro said. "He's the guy who we
know the best. Someone is going to
have to come. in here and be pretty
impressive."
Manuel, a former minor league
manager who has been in the Indians
organization since 1993, is expected
to interview for the job later this
week.

Shapiro, though, said that doesn't
mean anyone should rush to any conclusions and said the club .is in no
hurry to fill the vacancy. Hart said
last week that the Indians might consider those w1th no managerial expenence.
"We're not going to put any time
frame on ot, " Shaptro said. " We ' ve
got two lists, one long one with 2025 names, the other has five or six."
New names have been poppmg up
on a daily basis as the club hegins its
search to replace Hargrove, fored last
Friday just days after the Indians
blew a 2-0 lead m the AL divtston
series against Boston.
On Tuesday, Hall of Farner
George Brett said he was contacted
last week by former Kansas City
Royals teammate Bud Black, now a
scout and roving prtdting instructor

for Cleveland, about the Indians; juh.
However, Shapiro said there have
been · no formal talks between the
Indians and Brett, currently a vice
president with Kansas City.
"We have not contacted George
Brett about the manager's job,"
Shapiro said. "Bud Black and
George are good friends, and Bud
has talked with him but that 's another issue. We have not. He 's not on
our short list. But that doesn't mean
we wouldn't he interested in talking
to him."
• Others thought to be on
Cleveland's lost include Atlanta hitting instructor Don Baylor, former
Cubs manager Jim Riggleman , New
York Yankees coaches Chris
Chambliss and Willie Randolph, and
Indians scout Ted Simmons.

Dolphins would also acquire
Cleveland's fifth-round pick in the
200!' draft. ·
"We are excited to have Karim
join us," said Dwight Clark,
Cleveland's director of football operations. "He is a good young back
and will be given the opportunity to
contribute."
Abdui-Jabbar, 25, started three of
Miami 's games thts season, rushing
for 95 yards and one touchdown in
28 attempts. He also had four receptiOns for 25 yards .
But he was benched in favor of
rookies Cecil Collins and J.J.
Johnson and was tnactive for
Miami's past two games.
"Karim has done a great job for
us in the past," Dolphins coach-~en­
eral manager Jimmy Johnson said.
"However, with the emergence of
our young running backs, playing
with the Browns will he a good situation for him."
Following a season -high 113-yard
performance agatnst the Jaguars,
Cleveland's
rushing
offense
improved its rankmg to 26th in the
league. But the Browns' inability to
run the ball consistently has allowed
defenses to play close to the line of
scrimmage and put more pressure on
rookie qttarterback Tim Couch.

Terry Kirby, primarily a thtrd- I, 116 yards 10 1996 as a rookie, was
down back throughout his career, has expected to be in Cleveland on this
hecn the Browns' featured back, with morning for a physical.
George Jones and recently acquired
Rashaan Salaam as backups. Salaam
In 1996, Nebraska and Penn
was expected to be released to make State joined Michigan, Notre
room for Abdui-Jabbar.
Dame, Texas and Alabama as the
Kirby has rushed for 300 yards on only maJor colleges to win 700
85 carries and one touchdown football games.
through six games.
Clark saod Browns prestdent
Carmen Policy personally. handled
the negotiations with Johnson, and
was able to finalize the trade before
Tuesday's deadline.
"He (Carmen) shook off the rust,
got on the phone directly with Jimmy
Johnson. and closed the deal for us,"
Clark said. " Adding Abdui-Jabbar to
our current running back group of
Terry Kirby, George Jones. Marc
Edwards and Tarek Saleh will
strengthen out running game this
season, and hopefully for seasons to

111 Court St
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Phone (740) 992·2155

a •••••••••••• a ••••• a • a • I

Time Is
Here
We have

everything
you needto
get your
home ready
for Fa/land
Winter
PICKENS

The Eastern Eagles defeated Waterford 15-13 and 15-10 to claim
their third straight Tri -Valley Conference Hocking Division
Championship. Overall, Eastern has a 14-7 overall mark and 13-3 league
record .
Eagle coach Don Jackson ~aid, "It was Senior Night and all five started. We started out having a bad night by gettmg down 10-0 hefore we
fin ally settled down and got our offense gmng and our defense played
re&lt;tl well . Our defense has been our strength this year because we aren't
consosten! wtth our spikes. "
"Everybody thought th1s would be a rebuildong year for us, but I
thought .different all along. We were lacking Varsity experience retumong but, the girls that moved up adapted really quick and it saved us from
losong some games early 10 the season. Everybody adJusted to each other
really well and that made our season real enjoyable and exciting to
watch."
Cinda Cltfford was 9/9 serving with an ace and seven points; Juli
Batley was 8/8 with an ace and six points; Mindy Guess was 6/tYwith an
ace ~nd four points; Becky Davis was 5/5 with four points, Sarah Frank
was 4/6 with three points; Kristen Chevalier was 5/5 with two points;
Danielle Spencer was 4/4 with two points and Amber Church had one.
In setting, Kristen Chevalier was 33/36 with six assists, Amber
Church was 4/6 with two assists, and Amber Baker was Ill . In spiking,
Danoelle Spencer was 9/10 with three kills and a block; Davis was 8/9
with three kills; Bailey 4/8 with a kill; Chevalier 4/6 with two kills and
a block; Whitney Karr 3/5 with three blocks; and Sarah Clifford was 3/3
woth two ktlls.
Eastern was the number one seed in the Division IV sectional tournament and will play the winner of Ironton St. Joseph and Waterford on
Saturday at 2 p.m. at Alexander. The winner would play the winner of
the Southern-South Gallia game, which is at 3 p.m.
.
The Freshman and feserve teams won also over Waterford. The
reserve team fini shed undefeated in league play for the seci)nd straight
year Jackson added, "Congratulations g1rls for a job very well done this
year. This is only our second year for a freshman squad, and they worked
hard all year long."

Tornadoes lose to Marauders, River Valley
Southern dropped a pair of volleyball games to River Valley and
Meigs in a non-league tri-match at Southern's Charles W. Hayman gymnasium Tuesday night. Southern dropped the opener 15-7 and 15-5 to
River Valley, then dropped the finale 15-5 and 15-9 to Meigs.
Against River Valley, Fallon Roush had three service points. Behind
her were Heather Dailey and Stacy Lyors with three each and Laraine
Lawson and Kim lhle with one each.
River Valley was led by Cara Butcher's 12 points, Jodie Stout's five
and. four-point efforts from Alison Terry's and Chelsea DeGarmo.
Agaihst the Marauders, Southern took a 2-0 lead on Meigs.on a pair
of Fallon Roush serves, but five straight from Tiffany Halthill gave
Meigs a 8-2 lead and Southern never seriously challenged.
Stacy Lyons had four, Roush three, Dailey four, Lawson two, and
Fryar two.
Halfhill led Meigs to victory with nine points, Mindy Chancey had
six, Brooke Williams six, Tawny Jones four, and Amy Hysell two.

·.•

come."

The Dolphins selected the 5-foot11 , 205-pound Abdtii-Jabbar 10 the
third round of the 1996 draft out of
UCLA. He is ranked second to Larry
Csonka (53) in Dolphins history with
33 career touchdowns, and his 3,063
yards rushing place him fifth on
Miami's career list.
Abdui-Jabbar, who rushed for

We will publis~
Your Little Pumpkin
in the paper Friday
October 29th
ONLY

$10 per picture prepaid

r----------------,
I give my permission to publish
the enclo1ed pre-paid picture(•)
and informationin The Dany
Sentinel ''for Litde Pumpkina"

....

:..

Child's Name------Son, Daughter, Grandchild
Parents'Name------Address - - - - - - - City ______________

Now You've Really Got Connections!

Deadline Monday, October 25th at 3 pm
Mall or bring fcmr~ ·

Peoples
Bankajt

· Phone: 773·5583

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

Eagles beat Waterford In two games,
win third straight Hocking Division title

standard web browser, you've got
,With Peoples
Online Connection,you can do a whole lot of banking
from wherever you are. To sign up, enroll at
. Even if you aren't an
existing Peoples Bank customer, visit the website for
a Peoples OnLine Connection tesi: drive! It's simple.
It's secure. For more information, talk to a Peoples Bank
personal banker or call l-800--3 74-612 3.

't .031outh 2nd, M••on, WY

II

Roethlisberger 36 through eight,.
games - which is believed to match'
the state record for, 10 games.
The 468 yards is considered the;
fifth best mark in Ohio prep historY.
and gave Roethlisberger 2,747 passing yards for the season, which
would put him sixth on the charts.
His No. I target, Mi~e Iriti,
snagged I0 passes for 116 yards and
four scores, setting school records
for catches (71) and touchdown
receptions ( 13) in a season.

Volleyball notes

If you've got a computer,
access to the internet and a

HARDWARE

I;

has lost 22 Midlarid Athletic
Conference games in a row: and
Lexington ended a seven-year, 30gattie Ohio Heartland Conference
losing skid by heating Ashland 13-6.
Finally, Ben Roethlisberger may
own almost every schoolboy passing
record 10 Ohio before he's done.
1-!e completed 32-of-43 passes for
468 yards and seven touchdowns in
Findlay's 49-32 win over Oregon
Clay last weekend.
The seven touchdown passes give

Put a picture of your little pumpkin
in the paper
This

· KARIM ABDUL.JABBAR

Your Name:----------~ ,I

• Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding conversation is invited to •
• have a FREE hearing test to see if this problem can be helped. Bmg this
• coupon with you lor your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.·
•

Crestwood's 37-0 win over
Rootstown; Adam Brokaw caught
five passes for 128 yards including a
56-yard touchdown and also threw a
22-yard touchdown pass to Rob
Thrush in Bellville Clear Fork's 4027 victory over Medina Buckeye;
Pete Lepley caught four passes for
II 0 yards and three touchdowns on
offense and intercepted ·two passes·
and recovered a fumble as Bellevue
beat Shelby; Ayersville's Rafael
Manriquez had a 67-yard punt retum .
84-yard kickoff return and runs of I0
and 68 yards for touchdowns against
Hicksville; Dave Holtzmullcr plays
quarterback on offense, but ruined
the night for the opposmg quarterback by returnmg interceptions for
touchdowns of 75 and 9R yards in
Eaton's 35-0 wm over Dayton
Northridge; and Randy Nelson
returned his school-record I Oth interception this season 78 yards for a
score- and added a 77-yard kickoff
return for another touchdown - in
Hemlock Miller 's 46-0 victory over
Racine Southern.
STREAKING
TEAMS .
Millersburg West Holmes is avcrnging 52 points a game : Mary sville·, 80 start is its best since the IY57 team
went unbeaten ; three-tome sta te
champion Cmcrnnati Pnnceton 1s 26, locking up its first lu~ mg season
since 1959; Vanlue has lost 48
straight
Blanchard
Vall ey
Conference games; North Baltimore

Bank
Fall Fix-Up on it!

Dates of Active Duty

Love, (name relationship to veteran)

292

•

yards and 19 touchdowns scored on
the season to go with eight touchdown passes - most to his brother
Mike - on halfback-option tosses;
Lisbon David Anderson's Andy
Adams had 277 yards and scored
four touchdo\Vns on 27 carries in a
33-14.win over Columbiana;
Columbus Grove's Opey Roeder
rushed for a school-record 274 yards
and scored four touchdowns in a 340 victory over Cridersville Perry;
Matt Boles rushed for 270 yards and
five touchdowns - both school
records- in Atwater Waterloo's 6317 win over Woodridge; Solon
stayed perfect with a 32-13 win over
previously unbeaten Mayfield ,
thanks to Mall McGill's 251 yards on
29 carries; Ravenna's Marcus
Sanders pushed his career yardage to
6,051 yards and this year's totals to
I ,630 yards on 165 carries with 22
touchdowns; and Lisbon Beaver has
had two backs rush for more than
100 yards on each of its last five
games.
HEROES: Zack Daley carried
five times - and scored on each in Dover 's 63-7 heating of Byesville
Meadowbrook ; Enc Krauss had two
touchdowns in regulation called back
because of penalties, but he caught
an eoght-yard touchdown pass from
Rob Flick i~ overtime to give Patrick
Henry a 22-14 win over Archbold;
Travis Mayle kicked field goals of
37, 50 and 53 yards in Mantua

acquire Abdui-Jabbar from Dolphins

.(AP) --:- The
el(pansion B'rowois gol their first win
on Tuesday, beating t~e trading deadline to get some help for their lousy
ru~ning game.
· Cleveland, ranked ·26th in the
NFL in rushing, acquired running
back Karim Abdui-Jabbar from the
M'iami Dolphins for a future draft
poCk .
·The Browns, who dropped to 0-6
with a loss at Jacksonville last
Stlnday, traded their sixth-round ,pick
in ·next year's draft for Abdui-Jabbar,
a ihree-year pro eligible to become a
free agent after the season.
If the Browns extend Jabbar's
contract before the last day of the
NFL's 1999 fi scal year - an undetennined date in
- the

(Shown actual size)

&amp;

~rowns
- CLEVEL~D

Branch of Service

Ad With Photo- $14.00

By TOM WITHERS
CLEVELAND (AP) Ore!
·Hershiser COJJitl f.&gt;e coming back to
tli'e Indians after all .
: Hershiser, who came to spring
training with Cleveland earlier this
year but didn't fit into the learns'
pitching plans, said Tuesday he has
talked with Indians general manager
John Hart about becoming the club's
next manager.
"We've had a couple of brief conversations," Hershiser said at Turner
Field in Atlanta before the New York
Mets played the Braves in Game 6 of
the NL championship series.
Hershiser pitched for the Indians
from 1995-97 and is well liked and
respected by Hart, who in the past
has saod he would love to have
Hershiscr back in Cleveland.
"I think when this part is over,

By TOM WITHERS

Love, Your Family

. 303

Wordiinaton Kilbournt (8-0) 24 1750 J-Upper

!I •

. . .130

In Honor Of

Division II

Bdawe• HEARING AID CENtER

1~6

349
282
228
. . 184
172
. 161
121
84 .

Donor Our
Heroes

Your Choice Of Two Styles, ..
Ad Only $7.00

&amp;

3·Piqua(l)8·0 ..
4-Cuy Falls Walsh l esutl (]) 7-1
5-Trenton Edgewood (2) 8-0
6 Marysv11le (I) 8·0

.. 215
.. 181
111

&amp;

!-Delphos St John's (34) 8-0
2-li ffin Cal\'t.'l't 8-0
\-Spnngfield Cath Cenl R0
4-Mogadore 7- 1
. . .. . .
'i-Toronto 7· 1
6-Ctn Country Day JI.Q ..
7- Bell:ute S1 Joh n 7. J
8 Beallsv11\e 7 I
..

On November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the
thousands of men and women who have proudly served their
country during times of crises and peace.
This Veterans Day, the DailySentinel will publish a very special
tribute honoring area veterans. You can join in our salute by
including the veteran in your life, living or deceased, who have
served or is currently serving in any branch of the U.S. Armed
Forces.

!·Grove Cny {26) 8·0 ..
J.n
2-Cm S1 Xavter (7) 7-0 ..
298
J-Mmtllon Wadnngton (I ) JI.O
2JR
.t-Centerv11le (I) 8-0
I ~9
5-0e St lgnat1 u5 7- 1.
17R
6·Brunswack 8·0
.. 166
7- Wonhmgton Ktlbourne 8-0
IU
8-Cm Eldtr 7-l
%
9-Solon 8-0
68
IO·Canton McKmlcy 6·2
66
Othcn receiving 12 or more points: IJ .
LOGAN 40 12-Shaker Hts 23 . IJ·N Camon
Hoover 18 14 (lle)-Huher H1 s Wayne You
Bon.rdman 17

2-Dom (!2) 8·0 ....... ........... .

.. 325

Division VI
T&lt;am

~"-

Division I

1-Col Brookhn.ve n ( i.l) 8-0.

lll.

I Bedford Chane\ (20) 8 0

Division VI

T&lt;am

9-Woodsfield Monroe C~nt 1· 1 .
.59
10-BarneSvlllt! (I) 8·0
44
Others reuhing 11 or mor~ points: II ·
Mass1llon Tuslaw 43 12·LJ sbon Anderson ( l) 41.
· ~.' ·G ib sonburg (I) J8 14·Anmndii·Clearc!eek (!) .
37 15-CHILLICO'fHE HUNTINGTON 26 16-New
Maddletown Spnnglield 22 17 (tle)-Malvern. W
Alex3 ndna Twm Valley S (I) 21 ]Q.Baltmtore
L1bcrty Union l O 20-Waynesvdle 18. 2 1·
CHESAPEA KE 16 22 (tiel-Columbu s Gro ~e. New
Albany I J 24 · A~pl e Creek W~ynedal e I 2

Division V

will lte alven In •las/Gallla Counties by

COLUMBUS. Ohio lAP) - Here ""' the fifth •

,,

Division IV

7- Madason (2) 8·0
. ....... 147
8-Le banon 1-1
100
9-Menlor lake Calh 6-2
47
I O·Col lndercndl!'ncc R·O
..40
Othen rt('tivlng IZ or mort points: I I·Ktngs
Mills Kmgs JJ 12 (tle)-Grafton MldVIC\Io ( I ),
Unmntnwn Lake 29 I+Whuehouse Anlhony Waynt'
21 15 (tte)-Cin ~kN1 c hn las . E Uverpool 15 ]7.
WaUsworth 14.

lndaan Hil l &lt;7· 11 14 7250 7- IRONTON (5·11
l46R ." 8-0n Fmney10wn (6·2 ) 10 l K7'i Q.
WAVERLY (5- \J g )875 10 IRONTON ROCK
HI LL (6·2 J 9.1125

1om

a cut that required 19 stitches - are
expected to fully recover.
The team's game against Rayen
was postponed because of the
injuries.
Elsewhere around Ohio playing
fields, in a 54-27'1oss to Greenville,
Clayton Northmont's Jon Clark
broke the school record by I00 yards
by completing 31 -of-45 passes for
353 yards and three touchdowns with
three
onterceptions;
Zack
Dauhenmire of London (8-0) completed 11-of-13 passes for 259 yards
and three scores - all to Brandon
Wheeler - and also ran for a touchdown in a 28-7 victory over Jonathan
Alder: Jeremy Leeds of Washongton
Court House hit 9-o f-il passes for
232 yards and five touchdowns in
handing London Madtson-Piaons its
32nd straight loss; and Jim Smith
caught 10 passes for 155 yards and
two scores as Madison stayed
unbeaten, 20-19, against Eastlake
North.
YARDS IN CHUNKS: Fairfield's
Earl Haynes carried 32 times for 330
yards and two touchdowns- giving
him i ,583 yards and 20 scores this
season - on a 27- R voctory over
Cinconnati Princeton; Bnan Smith
racked up 305 yards on 17 carries on
Chardon's
54-2 1 won
over
Painesville Riverside ; Da'e Mason
gained 287 yards and scored three
times in Gobsonburg 's 30-20 voctory
over Eastwood, giving htm I ,406

Hershiser seeks Indians manager's post

fREE HEARING TESTS

Football computer ratings

Adinalon (7·1119.61 ll.4-Fmdl•yt'l-11189265.118·4965 6-L•m• S&lt;n'"' 15 -' 1
Tot.
Whilme&lt;!l·ll
18.1000.
7·Thonuu. Wonh1ngaon
!7· I l 14. ~000 g.
Westervone Nonh !l-Jl 119875 9-Tol St franm ·
15-JI 1.19500 tO-Dublin Coffman 1"- 41
Resion J, 1-M"'"IIon Wnsh.,glon \8-01

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
Circleville High School's football
practice was cut short on Wednesday
as a violent storm . and a tornado
ripped through town about a mile
north of the high school.
As the communuy pitched in to
help with the cleanup, the Tigers did
their part. They spent about 90 minutes on game day helping move furniture and other items from the
offict&lt;s of the local domestic-violence shelter. Then the Tigers,
including sen1or Brandon Kint
whose house was one of those
destroyed by the tornado, beat rival
Logan Elm, 24-21.
Meanwhile, seven Youngstown
Chaney football players were injured
-one critocally - when high winds
collapsed a cinder-block equipment
shed at the school's practice factlity
on Wednesday.
Fernando DeChellis Jr , 15, a
sophomore, suffered a skull fracture
and underwent surgery at St.
Elizabeth Health Center.
Nine coaches and 45 players had
run to the shed about 6:15 p.m. when
high winds and lightning . hot their
practice field .
All of the players - one received

HUNTER SCORES - The
Atlanta Braves' Brian Hunter
(center) scores as teammate
Andruw Jones and New York
Mets catcher Mike Piazza look on
in Game 6 of the National League
Championship Series Tuesday
night in Atlanta, where the
Braves won 10-9 to win the pen·
nant. (AP)

•••••••••••••
COUPON

Ohio H.S. sports

DMsion I

'

Football poll

Colorado at Ottawa, 7:30p.m.
Edlnonton at St. U!uas, 8 p.m.
Anaheim 11 Oicaso. 8·30 p m.

weekly football computer ralings from the Ohm H1gh
School Athletic Association. Ratings are by div1s1on
aod ~Jioa whh record and average bi-level p01n1S
per aame (lop eiJhl teams in each regaon advanct 10
regional quanafinals':

•,

Regi on 2 1 !-Mogadore (7 . 1) 15 97.50 2St Paul (7-1) II 7625 3-Wu\dham (6·2)
CHILLICOTHE 15-l) !J.J710 6-Spnngboro 16-2) Norwalk.
105875 4-Toronto (1· 1) 10 5620 5· 1ndcpcndence
129250 7-Daytcin Carroll {5·3) 12 1500 S.Vandali a (8·0) 10 5250 6·KJTtland (6·2 ) \0 4.500 7-Cie
Buller (6 21 12 1375 9-Hanison (5 ·3) I I 6625 10· Cuya Hts (7· I J 9 )750. 8-Monroevallt (6-2) 9 1500
Cin Turpin (5· 3} I I 1875
9- Mc Donald (4·4) 8 2000 10-North Jackson
.lackson-M1lton (4-4) 6 0750
Division Ill
Reg1on 22. \-Tiffin Cah en (8·0) 15.9125 2·
Regmn 9 I·Orrv1lle (7·1) 19 0750. 2-Copley (8· Pandora·G1lboa 0·1) 12 4750 ]·Mana S1c1n Manon
0) 18 6500 ]-Akron Hoban (6·2) 16 9050 4-Perry Local (5-3) II 0610 4-Antwerp {7· 11 10.2750 s.
(6-21 14 5500 5-Hubbard (7·1) 14 4905 6-Mantua Oregon Slnt ch 17· 1) 98250 fl·A rhngton (6·2)
Crest...,ood (6-2l I I 9245 7-Gheslcrland W Geauga 7 4500 7- McComb (6-2 ) 7 l 250 8-Fremnlll S1
(6-2) I I 5115 8-Tw1nsburg Chamberlin (4.4 ) Joseph (4- .J ) 64 125 9-Wesl Umty H1lhop (&amp; 21
109935 9-Bay V11lage Bay &lt;S·3l 99625 10-Cic
5.9400 IO·fort R..-covc ry fJ·5) 5 5500
Orange (5·2) 9 8872
Regwn 2.\ l· BeJIJSVIIIC (7 . ]) I I 9.'i00 2·
Regmn 10· I·Col Buhop Watterson (7· 11 WILLOW WOOD SYMMES V/\LLEY (6·2)
12 29'Xl 2·Ltma Bath (8-0) 18462S. \-Bellevue (7· 95515 1-HEMLOCK MILLER 11- 11 9 1000 40) 152 197 4-Col DeSa les (5· '1 149875 &lt;; . Bell:ure St John 11-1) 89875 5 - N ~w:uk Ca1hohc
BellefonHune (6-2) B 8\ 75 6·Su nbu ry B1g W::alnul C5· 'J 8R750 6-Morral R1dgedalc { ~ · .1) 87750 1·
(6-2) 127000 7-WIIIMd (7- l) 12 41 25 R-N~po leon H ow;~rd Ea~ t Knox (6·2) 8 11 25 8-D.uwdlt: (5-\)
(5· .'1 12 2125 9-Shelby (5·'l I I 9.160 10· 1 .'750 9-New Matamoras l'ront1er (5 ·3 ) 7 3240 10·
Lew1slown lndmn Lake (6·2) 9 5M75
PORI'SMOUTHNOTRE DAME14-)11 4.188
Reg1on II · 1-Polatld Scm1nary IR-01 19 75M5 2·
Rcgum 24 1-Delphm St John 's (R-0) 16 1 2~0
M1llm burg \\1 Holmes IR-0) 18 OJ75 \.l.otmville 1-Cm Country Day {8-0) 13 7 I 25 .\-Spnngfield
{7 -1I 17 \875 4·Thornvllle Shendan O· ll IS 7250 Cmh Cen t {R ·O) 12 1000 4-Covmgton 17· 1)
5·S!eubenvllle (7. I) 15 29.\5 6-Lisbun 8t:J~c r (5·31 11 2-ll .'i 5-Do la Hardin Nonhcrn O· l l 107750 0.
lJ J!90 7- McCONNELSVILI.E MORGAN (6-2) Ctdam lle (6·1) S 6060 7·Ncw Hrcnltn (-1 ·-'J
12 9250 8-Belot l West Brnnch (5·3) \0 .~ 500 Q. 8 2620. 8- Mechanu:sburg (5·.' 1 8 0'00. 9·Ansol\1a
Canton Cenlra\ Cathohc (4-4) 100\M .rO.Raylantl (5 · ~~ 7.Q.\00 10-Mmster (4-4)
Buckeye Lon] (4-4) 9 8250
Region 12 I·Bcllbrook (8·0) 169750 2·
JACKSON (7-]) 167500 J·London (8·0) 166000
4·Cm Purcell Manan t6·ll 15 .l37S 5· Dayton
COLUMBUS. Oh10 (A PI - How a mtc panel
Chaminadc-Juhenne 16·2) I J 2885. 6-ASHVILLE
TEAYS VALLEY (7-1) I I .18 75 7-E.Iton (7.1) of spons wnten and broadcas1crs rates Ohao lu gh
11 .3750 8-GALLIPOLIS C-'LLIA ACADEMY ~ honl foolbnll teams 1n the suth of e1gh1 WI'Ckly
(6-2) 10.9480 9· Morrow Linle M1am1 (5·3 ) 1999 Associated Press poll -by OHSAA d1v1S10ns
w1th won·lost Jccord and total points (flrsl·place
10.4SOO 10-New Richmond (6·21 10 -' '7.'i
votes 1n par~ mhe ses)
' Regmu 13 1·Akmn Mam:ht:sler (7. I I 17 4875
2·Chagrm Falls (8·0) 1124 15 )-G arard (7·1)
17 0 115 4- N~wlon Falls (7.) J 14 J\25 5-Sandusky
Perk.ins (8-0) 13 9625 6-Atwatcr Wnlerloo (7. 1)
II 4000 7-Wickhffe (6·2l 10 8615 8- Akron St
Vincent ·St Mary (5· '&gt; 96040 9-Wdhngton 17· 1)
9 2625. lO·Lcavmsburg LaBrae (4·4J M6995
Reg1on 14 1-t•hnon Elgm (8·0) 184875 2·
Bell v 1ll~ Clear Fork (7. I) 16 487'i ~ - Wau stoo n (7 . I)
IS 1255 4-Tontogany Otsego (7. 1) 14 .H50. 5·
Coldwatcr(6-2) 141000 b-Kenton (5·J) 12 9]75 1·
Oak Harbor (8· 01 II 7000 8-Spana High land
Morrow (6·2) II 6750 9-Col Bishop Ready &lt;7-ll
9 9500 10-Piru.n Cny Jnnmhan Alder (4-4) 9 ]OOJ
Reg10n 15. I·Campbell Memortal(8·0) 163280
2-Nav;ure Fa1rless (6·2) 15 9.175 ]-Struthers (5·3)
14 2250 4-You Mooney (7-1) I] 0075 .SOoyleslown Chappewa (7· 1) II 9250 6-Bella1re (6·
21 II 9015 7-Lancaster Fa1rfi~ld Umon (6-2)
11 .4875 8-Mart111s Ferry (7- 1) 114500. 9·
Coshocton(6-2) II 3250 IO·Utlca(7· 1' II 0500.
Reg1on 16 l·Cin. Wyommg (8·0) 20.1875 1·
WHEElERSBURG (8-0) 19 0595 . 3- Hamillon

Scholastic
sidelight

'.,

"Everything you've done in the
past, they ' ll forget about and remember lhis," said Rogers, who pitched a
perfect game for Texas on 1994.
"That is just the way it is."
Said Jones: "I was just going out
there , takong pttches until he threw
me a stnke. He didn 't, and I took a
walk ."
Russ Springer wound up the winning pitcher. Braves catcher Eddie
Perez, a s1arter because Javy Lopez
was out for the season. was MVP of
the senes. Perez was 10-lor-20 wolh
five RBis.
"We never could give up. They
never gave up," Perez said.
This marks the first time Series
rivals have met in the regular season
- Atlanta went 2-1 at Yankee
Stadium in interleague play right
after the All-Star break.
"We've got another shot at
them." Braves third baseman
Chipper Jones said.

Division IV
14

The Daily Sen.inel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

\I

The Daily Sentinel

Amount Enclosed: $

111 Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

~·

Daytime Phone-----Signature
I
Relationship to Child
I

------1

L~~~!!!~~!.$_!~~!.11,;~---J ·,
t.

~

-~~-----------~·~ ..... ·

�'
P~S~!16 e The Dally Sentinel

Pomer~y • Middleport, Ohio

I

'W8clnesday, October 20, 1990

The Daily Sentinel• Page ,7

:i

Native American culture reviewed at recent DAR meeting J:i

Archie Rose, American History
teacher and Native American scholar, spoke on Native American life
and culture at a recent meeting of the
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
Daughters of the American Revolution.
"Imagine, if you can," Rose said,
"a vast wilderness of huge trees for
as far as you can see in any direc lion, and a great canopy of leaves
with a vast forest floor- both teaming with abundant wildlife and vegelation. This was the land of the
American Indian ."
Rose described Indians as honest.
peace loving, clean. hard working .
Their God Moneta - creator of
everything. made them the stewards
of creation, he said. and to the lndians nature was not to be owned but
cherished They only used what they
needed.
Rose pointed out that tribal governrnent was quite organized and
structured with tnbe, sept , clan, and
family. However, he said. vil lage life
was simple. Wigwams and huts were
arranged according to families and
status. In the center of the village
was a long hut, called the Council
House. This permanent building was
where all the government decisions
were made . Men were the principle
law makers but in many tribes
women had a say in the government
at Council meetings and if they di d
not directly affect the Council 's
decision they had way s to do so indireclly.
Through his Native American
research, Rose said he has learned
that, before the White Man disrupted
life for the Indians, most villages
were nerrnanent and most always

II
I

located near a major stream surrounded by orchards and fi elds.
Most Eastern '\Voodlands Indians
were farmers as well as hunters and
gatherers.
.
In the spnng, women, children,
and old ·meu would till the ftelds
with bone and wooden implements.
Rose said the Indians planted what
they called Three Sisters - corn,
beans and squash in the same field.
After the corn planting, there was a
Gree n Moon ceremony in which
they ask the God of Nature to nut· ture and protect the young corn from
drought, disease and animal s. After
the ceremony. the women would
take off their dresses and drag them
around the field chanting a song to
Moneta for protection of the young
crop. They believed that the sweat
from the deerskm dresses would
provide a scent on the ground tl1at·
would keep animals away until the
crop was big enough to survive.
During the day, children would play
near the fi elds to scare away the
birds.
An interestin g aspect of the lndi an culture . Rose said . was the ir
adoption of white captives into thetr
famili es. When an .Indian family lost
a child. especially ·due to the White
Ma~ . they would search fo r a
replacement from the White Man's
world.
When ihey found a captive that
was suitable they would begin
grooming that person for Indian life
and would treat him or her kindly.
They did not care that the captive
was white . And, Rose said, almost
every captive who had been indoc trinated significantly chose to stay
with the Indians.

lt was also noted by Rose that

Indians were tremendous athletes.
They ran everywhere they went.
· They usually traveled in pairs for
protection but also it was practical.
They could travel several miles in a
day but rivers and . streams were a

major obstacle. Upon arriving at a and cut a notch around the tree as ness meeting was conducted
river, canoes had to be made and high as he could reach, with a knife Regent Mary Rose. The meeting wa&amp;"'
nature as always provided a very or hatchet, then slide down the tree opened with the DAR ritual and tlf~
practical solution. The braves would ·cutting a slit in the .bark to about a singing of the National Anthem b~
find a slippery bark elm tree of about foot off the ground . At that point guest, AlisonRose.
:
2 or 3 feet around. One Brave would another notch was cut around the
The matkmg of graves ~eremonf.
·stand on the shoulders of the other tree at the bottom. The bark then was postponed due to tncle.m~n~
would slide off the tree. The ends weather and delay of receiVIng.
were folded together and tied togeth- markers. The grave ceremony fo~
er with grapevine. Then , two hicko- Mae Mora is being rescheduled ; tht(
ry sticks were cut two feet long to marking for Margaret Dunon and
push out the sides so the riders could Dorothy Fisher will take place nex1
gel in. They would sink these craft at spnng.
;
the other side of the river in a hidden
Refreshments were served by tho
pl ace so they could be used upon hostess commillee, Phyllis Skinner;
their return .
Mary K. Yost, Nancy Grueser, and
There are culture changers in Alice Struble.
every generation, Rose concluded.
Next meeting Nov. 12 at
The White Man with all his techno\- Grace Episcopal Church. Memb1~~
ogy and diseases was the Indians are asked to bring Chri stmas gifts·
culture ch.anger.
be sent to di sabled veterans.
I .::.:.::.::~t~h:;,
e .,:l:;,:
ec;,;;tu::;r:;,
e.~t:,::h:;,
e .,:b~u:;::si:;.
- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~

Candidate

labels are being collected by Baconc
College to be redeemed toward the
cost of a vari. It will take 1,950,000.
Members were aske&lt;;l to save the
labels for the College.
Linda Grimm had the program
reading G·al. S on fruits of the spirit,
love, joy, peace, and long suffering.
Readings included Mildred Hart, '
"This is My Church", Nondus Hendricks,
"Satisfaction" ; L inda
Grimm, ':Sufficient for Each Day 's

New sandwiches from
the chicken expert •
Savor juicy perfection with
our slow roasted Tender
Roas~ Sandwich. Enjoy the
legendary taste of our Original
Recipe® Sandwich. Or sample
our Honey BBQ Chicken
Sandwich with chunks of
chicken ·simmered in tangy
Honey BBQ sauce. They '·re all
freshly made, topped with
their own signature sauce and
serves on special split-top
. Pepperidge Farm buns.

:cROW'S ·FAMILY RESTURANT
'

992-5432

.

Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock

8" Grovelless leach
100' · 1000' Rolls 1" &amp; 3/4" 20D#Woter Line
Full line of Gos Pipe &amp; Regulators Water Storage Tonks

Need: Don't Worry, Be Happy ":
Naomi Stobart. "Rivers of Living
Waters"; Florence Adams , "A Missionary" and "What Salvation
Means to Me" ; Barbara Gheen.
"Making You My' Friend" and
"Remember When?" Hendricks had
the closing prayer.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess. The next meeting will be
work session where quilt blocks will
be cut.
·

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

•· Mon.· Fri •.9:00 to
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

Pomeroy

Public Nqtlce
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revllld Code, Sections
3501.11 (G), 5705..19,
5705.25
NOTICE Ia hereby
given that In pursuance
of a Raaolutlon of the
Board of Trueteea of the
Townahlp of Olive,
Reedsville, Ohio, paeead
on tho 5th day of August,
. 1999 there will be
aubmlttad to a vote of
the people of aald
aubdlvlalon at a General
Election to be held In the
Township of Olive, Ohio,
at the regular places of
voting therein, on the
2nd day of November,
1999, the question of
levying a tax, In axceaa
of the tan mill limitation
lor the benefit ol Oliva
Township lor the
purpose of Fire
Protection. Sold tax
bt!ng:• A renewal of tax
of 1.5 mills at a rate not
exceeding 1.5 milia lor
each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amount• to llltoan
($0.15) canta tor each
one hundred dollart of
valuation, for five (5)

years.

The Polls lor aald
Election will be open at
6:30 o'c.tock A.M. and
remain open until 7:30
o'clock P.M. oluld day.
By order ol the Board 01
Elactlona, of Meigs
County, Ohio.
Dated: September, 1999
John N. lhle, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, Director
(I 0) 15, 20, 22, 29 4TC
Public Notice
•Nottc:o ol Election on
Tax Levy In Excess of
the Ten Mill Limitation
Rovleed Co.de,•S.ctlona
3501.11(G), 5705.19,
5705.25
NOTICE le hereby
given that tn pursuance
'of a Re1olut1on of the
VIllage Council of the
VIllage ol Rutland,
Rutland, Ohio, paa11d
on the 13th dey of July,
1998 there will be
IUbmltted 10 a VOlt Of
the people Of 11ld
tubdlvltlon at a General
ELECTION to be held In
the VIllage of Rutland,
Ohio, at the regular

Phone (740) 593-6671

Senior Citizen
Discount

JONES' -

· 2270 Rt. 33

New Store Hours
For Deer Season
Mon-Sat

Rutland, Ohio

Truck seats. car seats. headliners.
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vinyl tops.
wheeler seats, motor.cy~le seats.
boat covers. carpets, etc.

8:30am· 8 pm
Sun 1 pm ·6 pm

Beginning Sept. 26th

Mon • Fri 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 Yl'$ experience

Give Life!

WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS

742-8888 "

Pomeroy

Co. Rd19

(jqr_e{{

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

Vinyl ,R.eplaeement Windows
R' lO l.lisulatel\ Glass
50 Year free glass replacement

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gullers
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing
Free Estimates

Exculsjyc Dealer

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

Quality ,Window
Systems ·
Visit our showroom

'

I

740-992-4119

800-291-5600

SHADE RIVER AG
, SERVICE
* Custom Grinding
* Fall Fertilizer
· • * Pet Foods

Sponsored By:
Pleasant Valley Hospnal
Auxiliary
&amp;
American Red Cross

places of voting therein,
on the 2nd day of
November, 1999, the
question of levying a tax,
In exceaa of the ten mill
limitation, lor the benefit
of Rutland VIllage lor the
purpose of Current
expenses.
Said tax being:' A
renewal of a tax of 2
mille at a rate not
exceeding 2.0 mille lor
each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounts to twenty
($0.20) cants lor each
one hundred dollara of
valuation, lor live (5)
years.
The Polls lor eald
Ehtc:tlon will open at 6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open untl 7:30 o'clock
P.M. olaald day.
By order of the Board
of Electlona, of Matge
County, Ohio.
John N. lhla, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, Director
Dated; SapL 13, 1999
. (10) 6, 13, 20,27 4TC
Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE
United Statu of
Amsrtca va. Brl1n Lee
Hunt, et at. Meigs County
Common Pleas Case No.
99-CV-()17. In pur1uanca
of an order laauad from
Commons Pleas Court,
within and tor the
County ol Melga, State of
Ohio, on hie 31at day of
Dec.1999 and to me
directed, I will otter lor
sate at Plubl\c Auction In
the Meigs County
Courthouaa, Second St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio at 10:30
A.M. of 1'1ld d1y, the
lollowlng Real Estate, towit: SITUATED IN THE
TOWN OF MEIGS,
TOWNSHIP
.0 F
LETARTE, STATE OF
OHIO,
TO·WIT:
SITUATED INLETARTE
TOWNSHIP, IN SECTION
16, TOWN 1, RANGE 12.
·BEGINNING AT THE
NORTHWEST CORNER
OF A,TRACT OF LAND
OWNED SY JULIA E.
BELL, AND ON THE
SOUTH SIDE OF THE
ROAD LEADING TO
EAST LETART; THENCE
FOLLOWING JULIA E
BELL'S. SOUTHWEST
CORNER ON ROAD
LEADING FROM LETART
TO APPLE GROVE;

THENCE FOLLOWING
SAID
R.O AD
NORTHWEST 86 FEET;
THENCE
IN
A
NORTHERLY DlRECTON
198 FEET TO SAID EAST
LETART ROAD; THENCE
EAST FOLLOWING SAID
EAST LETART ROAD, 58
FEET TO THE PLACE OF
BEGINNING,
CONTAINING 113 ACRE,
MORE OR LESS.
PERMANENT PARCEL
NO. 011-000065 Located
at 49430 St. rt, 33e,
Racine, OH 45771. Said
prparty hae bean
appralaed at $10000,00
and·cannot lett lor lt..
than two·thlrda of
apprelaement.
Thlt
appreltal Ia ba1ecl' upon
a visual Inspection of
that part of the pr1ml111
tO Which aCCtll Wal
readily available. The
apprahlers aeaumad no
reaponalblllty lor, and
give no weight to,
unknown legal matter1,
Including, but not limited
to concealed or latent
delecte, and/or the
prlaence ol harmful or
toxic
chemlcale,
pollutanta, or gaaea.
Terme ol Sale: Ten
Percent (10%) day of
sale, balance within 30
daya.
James M. Soulaby,
Shariff of Malga
County, Ohio
Stephen D. Mtt .. ,
Attorney,
18 Weat
Monument
Avenue,
Deyton, Ohio 411402
31' 10(20&gt; 1o!2n 1o13J
. 185-1120 (10)20,27,(11)3,
3TC
Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE
United Stat.. of
America va. Jolm E.
Foreman, Sr.. at al.
Melga County Common
Pleat CtH N. 99 CV 038.
In pursuance ol an
ordor luued from
Common Pte.. Court,
within 1nd for the
County of Metg1, Stfie of
Ohio, on hte 31tl day of
Dec, 1999, and to me
directed, I will, otter tor
aate at Publec Auction In
the Me,ge County
Courthou11, Second St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio at 11 :00
A.M . of said day, the
following Real Estate, towit :
SITUATED IN
CHESTER TOWNSHIP,
MEIGS COUNTY, STATE
OF OHIO: AND BEING IN

YOUR

10/13 1mo.

740·742·8015

877-353-7222 (loll free)

SECTION 12, TOWN 2
NORTH, RANGE 13
WEST OF THE OHIO
COMPANY'S PURCHASE
AND BEING DESCRIBED
AS FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING AT A POINT
IN THE CENTERUNE OF
COUt(rY ROAD 28,
(FLATWOODS ROAD),
SAID POINT BEING
SOUTH 42" 40' 00" EAST
71.7e FEET FROM THE
NORTHEAST CORNER
OF NORA EASON'S
21 ,05 ACRE PARCEL AS
DESCRIBED IN THE
MEIGS COUNTY DEED
RECORDS: VOLUME
288, PAGE 543; THENCE
SOUTH 42" 40' 00" EAST
100.00 FEET ALONG
THE CENTERLINE 01'
SAID COUNTY ROAD 20
TO A POINT; THENCE
SOUTH 46" 36' 29"
WEST 345.24 FEET TO
.AN IRD ROD, PASSI"fG
AN IRON ROD AT 50
FEET FOR REFERENCE,
THENCE NORTH 16" 55' '
27" WEST 179.76 FEET ~
TO AN IRON ROD· i
THENCE NORTH 85'' 21f''
44" EAST 180,45 FEET
TO THE POINT OF':
BEGINNING, PASSINcf;
AN IRON ROD AT 13&amp;;:
FEET FOR REFERENCI5:•
CONTAINING
I.Oq.~
ACRES, MORE OR'&gt;
LESS, EXCEPTING ALL:'
LEGAL EASEMENTS·•
AND RIGHTS OF WAY.-',
PERMANENT PARCEL-NO: 03.00541.Q0.4
~!
Located at 36381 ";
Flatwoodl
Rold /'
Pomeroy, Oti 45781'.;::
Said property hu bHn;;
appraised at $45000.00,.
and cannot sail tor laaa"l
than two-thlrda
appraisement.
thte·'
appral1al 11 baled upon:;;
a vlaual tnapectton ·of,;
that part of tho premtaea ·•
10 Which &amp;CCIII Wla•'&lt;
readily available; Th.;;;:

' Notice of Election on
Tax Levy In Excess ol
' the Tan Mill Limitation
I llevl"lf Code, Sections
3501.1t(G), 5705.19,
'- .
5705.25
' "NOTICE Is hereby
111ven that tn· pyrauance
Pf a Rnotutlon ot the
~oard
of ·County
Commlaatonerti ol the
CountY of Meigs, Meigs.
J)hlo, pasead on the 9th
day of August, 1999
~nare will be submitted
~o a vote of the people of
aald eubdlvltlon at a
General ELECTION to be
liltd In the County of
Yllelga, Ohio, pt the
?t~~uta r places of voting
tf\8ratn, on .the 2nd ~·y
bt November, 1999, the
q~aaUon oll~ng a tax,
In excaaa 6f IHe ten mill
limitation, lor the benellt
ol Meigs County lor the
purpose of Maintenance,
iulpttal construction, and
operation of Carleton

'&lt;

School and Meigs
Industries workshop lor
parsons with mental
retardation
and
developmental
dlaabllltlaa.
Said tax baing:• An
.additional fax ol1.5 mills
ai a rate not ex~eedlng
1.5 mills lor each one
dolhir ol valuation,
which amounts to llltean
($0.15) centt lor each
one hundred dollar&amp; of
valuation , lor 8
continuing period of
time.
·
The Polls lor said
Elecllon.wlll open at 6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open untl 7:30 o'clock
P.M. of aald day.
'
By order ol the Board
or Etectlona. ol Meigs
County, Ohio.
John N. lhle, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, Director
Dated: Sept. 13, 1999
(I 0) 6, 13, 20, 27 4TC

r,

CHECK THE·
WANT ADS FIRST!

•Room additions &amp; Remodeling
•New Garages
•Etect1tcat &amp; Plumbing
•Roollng &amp; Gutters
•VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
•Pallo &amp; Porch Decks
Fm Esnlllllts

V.C. YOUNG Ill
!

992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·7643

22 yr.. Local

(No Sunday Call!;i)

R. L. MASH
CARPENTRY
New Homes
Garages
Replacement'
Doors &amp; Windows
Wood &amp; Vinyl Siding
Custom Work
Kitchens &amp; Baths
Insured
24 Yrs. Experience

992-0437

DEPOYSAG

PARtS

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts

Dealers ,

Joe N. Sayre

Coolville, OH 46723

740·742·2138

74NI'J.a.3

FIREWOOD

New scants, loyowoys &amp; credit cards accepted
Regular Hours: Tue- Frl1 0·6
Saturday 10-4
R\ _124 Minersville, OH 740-992-4559

Middleport ~OOth

Anniversary ...

~::;:~~~~~~~~a~~~·.~::!

co 175th

Anniversary

give no weight to,;;j
unknown legal mattir1, :..
Including, but not limited ~
concealed or latent dale1
and/or the Prlllnca
harmful or toxic cheml~alt
pollutanta, or galla. 1i
of Sale: Ten Percant(1 o
day ot 1118, balance with
30daya
d
James M. Soutaby, Shar(jl
of Matga County, Ohio
,,.
Stephan D. Milas, Attorney?;
re Walt Monument Avtn ~•
Dayton, Ohio 45402
...,
3T 10(20)(27) 11 (3)
: .~

. Rutland 200th

Anniversary
${ 50 each

Rt 7 Piz2:a EJ&lt;press
18: 3ltern.$12.99
or Two · 1a~· ~:.items $19.99

' ·"' : We Deliver ·
''"" '' 992~9200

3/11/99 TFN

Dump Truck or
Plck·ur 1ft our yord
Recent \Jcurchased:
Graham's ood Products

Bob Ball
35215 Ball Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

1-740-892-6142
Leave a Message

¥81'1"1'111 IIIDD
For New Local

CREDIT PROBLEMS???
No Credit·· Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
'.· ' Repo • Dlvorded

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment. ..
Respect!

· v~u·re Treated with

Refe"al Seroice
Metga, Gallla &amp;
Surrounding areas

740·742,3119

'i

'

,,.........,a,.,,
Jlrdlns

Bulldooer &amp; Backhoe
Seroices
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Syatenu &amp;
Vtililie•

(7401992-3831

Wedem eye r's Auc.tl on Se rvice ,

Gallipolis, Ohio 740·379-2720.

90

NowRenti111

High &amp;Dry
Self-Storag

· M.T.S . Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446·2842.

Clean Late Model Car s Or
Trucks, Low Miles, I 995 Models
Or Newer ~ Smith Buick Pontiac,
1900 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis.
i

304-675-5965.

Wanted - multl ~ co l or e d sectional
sofa, must be clean &amp; in go od
condition , '740·742·2307 before

tOpm.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110 Help Wanted
$2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
Brbchuresl Satisfaction Guar·
anteedl Postage &amp; Supplies Pro·
vided! Rush Sell -Addressed

Envelops! GICO, DEPT
5, Box 1438, ANTIOCH. TN .

Stampe~

37011·1438. Start Immediately.

$20 -$40 /HOUR Easy

M e ~ i cal

Billing Full Training. Computer Ae·

qulred. Call 1-8S8·869-7905 Ex1.
700.
$100 WEEKLY Be Your Own
Boss ! Proce ss ing Government
Re funds . No EMperience Neces·

sary. t-800-854-8469 Ex1. 5046.

$SOO · WEEKLY --POTENTIAL
Comp lete Simple Governmenl
Forms At Home. No Expe rience
Nece ssary. CALL TOLL FREE •

(.800·966·3599 E&gt;t. 2601. $34.00

ANNOUNCEMENTS

ADVERTISING
SALES REPRESENTATIVE

Personals

For Well Established local Co.

Why wait? Start meeting Oh io
sing les tonlgl1t. Ca ll to ll free 1·
800· 766·2623, e~~:tenslon 6176.

30 Announcements
Coatumeal Costumes! Look
good this Halloween. 1920's ftappe rs and gangsters, pood le
skirts, Cou nt Dracula and morel
Rutland Department Store, Main
Street, Rutland, Ohio. Open Mon·
~ay· Saturday. 12:00-7:00 . Call
740·742·2100.

Diabetic Patien ts: Medicare Or
Private Insurance, You May Be
Enlilled To Re ceive Your Diabellc
Suppl i8s At No Cost To You . For

More lnlormation 1·e88-6776561.
9West Stimson, Athens
740·592-1842

Qual i ty clothing and household

Items. $1 .00' bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Satu rday

9:00-5:30.

SERVING TRI-COUN!Y AREA
"Must have good Communtcatlon

skills

• Must have goOd driving record
.&amp; Provide; own Transportati9n
•Must have ability to be a TEAM
player
Send Resume to;
Gallipolis DailyTribune,,
RE: Advertising Sales Rep
825 Third Avenue
·Gallipolis, OH 45631

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Cralls,
Toys, Je""elry, WOod, Sewi ng ,
Typing ... Great Pay! CALL 1·800·

795-0380 E&gt;l. ¥201(24 Hrs).

Attention State Te sted Nur sing
Assistants : Are You Looki ng For
Stable Hours In A Car ing Envi·
ronment ? Holzer Senior Care
Center Is Now Accepting App iJ .
cations Fo r All Shifts. We Will
Pay For Your EKperienee. ll You
Are Interested In Being A Part 01
Ou r Excellent Team, Please Ap·
ply At 380 Colonia l Drive, Bidwell,

OHEOE.
No Hunting or" Trespassln g on
Sam Anderson 's Property, For·
marly Russe ll McMillion Proper· ·
ly. In Hartford. WV.

40

Pomeroy, Ohio

Giveaway

Five kinens· to giveaway, call 740-

992·9937.

740-992-52!2

wormodllitlet traine~ . (304)45Q2218 .
60 Lost and Found ·

Found: Female Dog, Tan. Wear·
ing blue &amp; white Ilea coll ar,

ROOFING
NEW· REPAIR

Camp Conley Area. (304)6753656. leave mesaag&amp;.

Found: Grey and White Cat, 314

miles out Sandhill Rd. Call:
(304)675·6n9.
Lost on Texas R~.. tan &amp; white. Pll
Buii/BoMer. ears docked, kinked

tall, rowa.O, 740-985-9822.

·

Losty· red bone coon dog, Cline's
Fruit Farm, Chester/Tuppers
Plains area , raward ,.senllm·ental

FREE ESTIMAT,ES

949·2168 :

value. 740·667·3709. 740·9e5·
4481 . 740·985·4207.

4f2 TFN

I

I

AVON! All Area s! To Buy or Sell.

Shirley Spears, 304·675·1429.
Avon Products: Start your OW"n In·
Home Business . Work F l e~eib l e
Hours, Enjoy Unlimited Earnings.

(304)347-8838.

Bartender Wanted , 741l· 441 ·

To good Indoor home only. 4·11
2month male kitten . Has been

9/27199 1 mo. pd

Gutters
Downspouts .
Glitt,.r Cleaning
Painting

Wanted To Buy : Used Mobile
Homes. Call 740-446-0175, Or 1-

Refundable Fee.

33795 Hiland Rd.

Union Ave., Pomeroy, Oh
· 10x12 units
10x20 units

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antiqu,&amp; Jewelry, Gold
Flings, Pre·1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling , Etc. AcQuislllons Jewel ry

New To You Thrift Shoppe

Now Renting
A..J
MINI-STORAGE

992-a212

773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.

7 40-992·3954

005

Howard L. Writesel

Available,
Call "2-6396. or

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
fu ll time auc tioneer, complete
service. licensed
auclion
M66,0hio &amp; West Virginia 1 .304·

MODERN
SANITATION SERVICE

Free Estimates

FirewoOd Division

Ball Logging
and Firewood

740·446·4927 After 4 P.M. 740446·S519.

Limestone
Gravel
Top Soli

740·985·4180

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Conces-

Post 23, 108 Liberty Street, Ka·

STONE
HAULED

INTER IOR
Before 6 pm le~:~ve
message. After 6 pm

~e~lers .

nauga, Ohio. Auctionee r: Isaac
Auction Service. ll You Have
Items You Want Sold, Pleas e Call

'--.----..,.;;7122!fF:;;.;:.;.~N

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

Olllerent

Consignment Auction : Tnursday
Novembe r 4th, 6 P.M . AmVets

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

Linda's Painting

SAYRE
TRUCKING

1000 St. Rt, 7 Soulh

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

Special ll:ll:IIJt::::.
still available at
The Daily Sentinel ...

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates

17 .

sions . Auctioneer t1220 Fred
Sullivan.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

HOURS: 7am THRU 4pm
MONDAY·FRIDAY
7'amTONOON
SATURDAY

HILL'S
. SELF STORAGE

"

Christmas Open tlou.re

·· · Meigs

LUMP AND STOKER COAL
H.E.l.P. VOUCHERS
ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AYAIUILE

www.sunsethome.com

'lbe Country Candle Shop

ot:;

Bryan Reeves

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
•Replacement Windows
·Room Additions
I
•Roofing
'
COMMIROAliiiiiiSIDIIITIAl
FREE ESTIMATES

WV. Frl~ays , 600pm. October 22,

November 5 &amp; 19, December 3 &amp;

,,,t'""'

Sr. 124 Wellston, Ohio
740-384-6212

740-742-3411

YOUNG'S
' BISSELL BUILDERS,
CARPENTER SERVICE
INC.

Clip &amp; Save· Christmas auction s,
Community Buil ding, Hartford,

Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive top line.
Uc. # 00.50

BRAMHI COAL
'COMPANY

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

Public Notl.c e

· Public Notice

17693,wv 1338, 740-989·2623.

AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,

Sunset Rome Construction

Auction
and Flea Mar~et

Bill Moodl spaugh Auctione ering ·
complete auclion service. Buy
and sel l estates. Ohio Li cense

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

(740) 992·2753
or 992·1101

Free Estimates

80

'I',

• New H.omes •
Remodeling • Siding
• Roofs .
25 yrs experience

CONNECTION

Call 985·3831

. AG SERVICE"

1:OOpm Friday.

992-1717

CONSTRUCTION

CONCRETE

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

Advance. Deadline: 1:Oilpm the
day betore the ad It to run ,
Sunday &amp; Monday edltlon-

10\IU $-W
10\20$60

SMITH'S

740-992-2068

(740) 992·3470

~

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Situ Muot Be Potd In

Pomer~y,OH

Joseph Jacks

Rt. 33 6 miles North of Pomeroy

+ FREET-ShirtsToAII Donors
+ Door Prizes

Public Notice

Hauting•umestone•Gravel
Sand"Topsoit•Fill Dirt•Mulch
Bulldozer Services

Big Yard Sale: 10123199 &amp; 101241
99. Rain or Shiner Something lor
very onel 32 5 Gree n Terra ce
Court.

ST. RT. 7

Now's the.time for;
• Trimming • Leaf
removal• Planting
• Mulching
• Landscape Rock
• Retaining wall
construction
Jeremy L. Rousl)
740·949-1701

alter 5 Pill

1/2 Price!

11 .\ HT\\ ELL
STOB \(;E

ROUSH
LANDSCAPING

304·372-1 898

Barga ins Gal ore! Debbie Dr. In
Chap el Activity Building , (1. 7
mile s out Route 141 ) 10/2 1, 10/

Rutland, Ohio
American Legion
Post 467
Beech Grove Road
Gun Shoot
Slug 111d Shot
Matches
Every Sunday
1:00 P.M;

Shade, OH

Will hauloH old tunk
cars &amp; dean up far11s
AIHCasto

It to run. Sunday

edition · 2':00 p.m.
Friday. Mo"'l"y edition
· 10:!JI)s.m. S.tur&lt;ay.

22, 10/23, 10:00..j:OO, Everything

740·696·0027 business 740.992-7046 Home
Specializing in saws &amp; trimmers
· • Tune-ups • New filters • New plugs
. • Sharpen blade or chain $20
Mon &amp; Wed 10-5 Fri. 8-4
Toes &amp; Thur 1·5 Sat 10-2

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

.. Yard Sale
Gallipolis
· &amp; Vicinity
AU. Yar&lt; S.tn Muat
Be Plld In Advance.
DEAQLINE' 2:00 p.m.
the day bolore the ad

We deliver
ALMOST anything
Call for details
740·992-0038

DOUBLE D'S REPAIR SHOP

Gfl"cll"9

.........~ru.

The new estimate was basrd on
U.S. hqspital records from \980
through 1996. The researchers came
up with a range of about 85,000 to
144,000 cases a year.
The rese archers reported that
bronchi olitis hospit ali zed 44.754
infants in \980, compared with
121.41 8 by 1996. In 1980 the rate,
was 12 .9 per 1,000 infants, compared with 31.2 per \,000 in 1996.

accepting residential and commercial
refuse and demolition.
. $32.00 per ton, refuse, $25.00 per ton,
Demo. $20.00 minimum
Operated by Southern Ohio Disposal
We support all local haulersl
For more Information on
Meigs County Transfer Facility or
Southern Ohio Disposal Hauling,
visit our office at 34878 Rocksprings Rd.
or
Call992·9330 or 1·800·809-7721

r·

70

24 Hr. Taxi Qi('
Delivery
Service

Located at 34878 Rocksprings Rd. , Pomeroy

• sw'll'9

For

tter-~~~

MEIGS COUNTY TRANSFER FACILITY

· ·' Sales Representativ~ ·
Larry Schey
.

740·985·3813

. Paid For By The Candidate THANK YOU
Victor Young Ill 856 E. Main St. Pomeroy, ()hio

SPEAKER - Archie Rose talked about Native American life and
culture at a recent meeting of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolution. 1\llson Rose sang the Star
Spangled Banner.

Try all three

228 West Main

Tuppers Plains, OH

• jr\11'

November 2, 1999

ment that produces wheezing, virus at an earlier age, have more
coughing and difficulty breathing severe disease and be more likely to
CHICAGO (AP) - Hospitaliza- and up to half of pneumonia cases in be hospitalized. "
tions for the most common cause of young children, especially infants.
The researchers said another rearespiratory infection among children
People get RSV infections son for the ri se in hospitalizations
under 5 .have been climbing for two · repeatedly throughout life, but the • since 1980 may be that better tests
decades, and researchers say one first one they catch is usually the for the illness exist.
reason may be the rise of day care.
most serious, said the lead
The researchers offered no estiThe total number of chi ldren researcher, Dr. David K. Shay of the mate of deaths per year; Shay said
admitted to the hospital each year Centers for Disease Control and Pre- he is working on that. An estimate
as high as 144,()()0· - is also much ventton .
made in . 1985 put the number at
larger than previously thought, the
" The peak in hospitalizations 4,500, but Shay said that is too high.
researchers said.
The only previous estimate of
occurs at age 3 months," he satd.
. The study, published in Wednes- " So if you're a 3-month-old all by RSV hospitalization s among chit day 's Journal of the American Med- yourself, you may sail through your . dren under 5 came from the Institute
ical Association, looked at respirato- first winter season without picking it of Medicine, a government advi sory
ry syncytial virus, or RSV.
up. But if you' ve got two or three group, which put the number at
RSV causes up to three-quarters sibs at home and most of them are in more than 91 ,000 in 1985, the
of cases of bronchiolitis - an ail- day care, you may be exposed to the researchers sa id .

' '

, St. Rt. 7

NOW OPEN:

TREE SERVICE

Pomeroy Village COUNCIL

,

·,

i G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

Victor Young, III

Hospitalization for respiratory disease on rise among young children

'

mercy vlclnlly. call 740·992·9031
tolD.

--ELECT--

By BRENDA C. COLEMAN

AP Medical Writer

Found : ch lld.'.S eyeglasse s, Po·

8usf one C'fJromlse ...
9 "C7J.Ji/f" CZJoice your Opinions

Bertha Sayre Missionary Society donates to organizations
Donauons to ~he· Meigs ~ounty · which deaH with treating others as
Semor Citizens Center, Gods Net, you would hke to be treated.
the youth program of the CooperaMarjorie Grimm had pray er,
tive Parish, and a scholarship stu- reports were given by the officers,
dent were made when the BenhaM. and am offering was taken.
Sayre Missionary Society of Racine
Mary K. Yost talked about the
met recently at the home of Lillian school bags and he.alth kits to be
Hayman.
made for usc in the United States
.Barbara Gheen had devotions after disasters like floods , hurriusmg Proverbs 6 for her scripture canes , and the Oklahoma City
and a story from Ideals magazine bombing.
titled "Cover the Faults of a Friend"
She reponed that Campbell soup

60 Loatand

1428.

Computer Users Needed. Wor'

Own Hrs. $25K -$80K/ Yr. 1-900-

536·0486 X 77.77, www.tcwp.com

DENTf\llliLLER Up to $15 -$4!'
/Hr ,Dental Billing Sollware Coni·
pany Needs People To Process

Medical Cl~irl-ls From Home.
Training .Provided . Must Owb

Computer. 1-800·223-1t 49 Ed.
&lt;180.
.
DOCTORS NEED BilLERS. PT/
FT Medical Billing, No Exparf·
ence. Make Your IBM Complitbit
PC Eam SSS. WWW.'!19dlcrew~
800-697-7e70.
: ' . ' '!
Domino''" Pizza of Point Pial

I·

ant , Now Hiring Sale Dtlverl.
Flexible hours-Advancement oP.

porlunlllas. Apply In, perso~ .
(304)675-5858.
'.
.,
t, ,

�October 20, 1999

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

OhiO

Pome1oy •

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

ACROSS
1 Greek poet
7 Swimming
piiiCM

~0 Mlscellan191,1a

MERCHANDISE
$FREE

Van OTR Protesstonals Jo n A

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE

Company That Has Stayed Pro 1
able And Take Care Of Its Dr v
et'S For Over 50 Years.

GREE Q UICKLY Ba ch elo r s
Ma st e s Doc to rate By Co e
spondence Based Upon P o Ed
ucauon Ancl Short Study Course
For FREE Information Booklet

s 02 Safety

Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800-964 83t 6

Rock Solid Top 100 Na110nwtde

Up To $ 32 To Start

Bonus Complete Benefit Pkg
S1 000 Sign On Bonus And
Morel Must Have Cla ss A COL

ex Roberson 800-473-5581

Drivers 2 Week Pa d COL Tra n

Earn $250 week Aunnlng Taxi
plus Delivery Runs 4 Tax Dnv
ers needad 2 Taxicab Dispatch
... -1(740)-441 0247

Carpet and Upholatery
Cleaning
Our sale tow mo slur&amp; so I eK
tract on method deep cleans car
pet and upholstery No odor no
russ and mm mum drying r me

(1 2 h s 1 Call Clearly Clean lor
lree estlmale (304)675 4040
F re Wood Cut Spht Delivered
All Seasoned Oak othe Hard

Healthcare

SPEECH LANGUAGE
PATHOLOGIST
(Ripley WV)
PAN Or Part T me POSIIIOns
Available Current L censure And
1 Year Min mum Exper ence Ae
qo red P 1or Long Term Care Of
SNF Exp Preferred For More In
formation Please Contact Robb n
Coleman At 800 789 2880 Or
Fax Your Resume To 804 747

6804 EOE
ServlceMuter
llohoblllta11on

woods (740) 446 6566 By tho
Truck Load•
Georges Portable Sawmlll don 1
haul your logs to the mill JUSt call

call 140-992 6360
Keebler Company Is Now Ac
cepllng Applications For The Po
sti!On Of Weekend Merchandtser
In The Ga hpolts Area Please

Handyman seek ng work ava11

able now 74().949-1035

I~ Need small car

&amp; know area

wet can Oave 0(304)675 1531
lwe In nanny/house worker
needed loving matu e honest
caring non smoker Exper ence
and references requ red send re
sume In care ol Ttle Pt Pleasant
Register 200 Mam St Pt Pleas
antWV25550

LOSE WEIGHT GUARANTEED!
0
ALL NATURAL!
DR RECOMMENDED!
CALL 1-888-248-2779
OR VISIT www meU-awey net
MEDICAL BILLING Learn From
The Experts' Everyth ng You

Need Homo Study $1 999 3 Day

J1ms Drywall &amp; ConstructiOn
New Construct on &amp; Remodel/
Drywall S d ng Roots Addl
tons Pa nl ng etc (304)674
Kims Cleamng &amp; Inter or Pamt
ng Commewal Res dentlal
Reasonable Rates Fe e est
mates call304-674 4623
Exper enced Care For Elderly 0
Hand capped In Count y Home
Reasonable Rates 740 388
Waxtng Lite Detail &amp;Tar Removal
Cars $45 00 Trucks $50 00
Vans $50 00 Free Ptck up (740)

446 1056

Wtll Haul &amp; Clean Up (304)675
4538
Wdl take care ol elderly female n
my home exper anced $800
month 740 992 7526

21 0

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

Boss Get Your Llle Back Home
Based Business Manufacturer
Otrect Buy 30 Candy Machtnes

$9 995 Free V doo VENDSTAR
1 800 998 VENO

wor.ks Toll Free 800 540 6333

Ext 2312
Need

Lady

tor

HouseWork

(304)675-6132

A PHONE CARO R9UTE 2 9
Cents /Mm Aate Nail Co $500

$5 000 /Wk CASH Free Into 1
600 997 9668 24 Hrs

XT27

5023

AVAILABLE VENOINCI ROUTE
tO 20 Local ons S4K $10K

Now Formmg Nursing Assastant
Classes Holzer Semor Care Cen
ter Is Form ng A Class To Begtn
On Novembe 8th II You Are In
tarested In Caring For The Elder

$4 000 +IMo Income
All
CASH' 100% Finance Available

ly Please Apply AI 380 Colon al
Drrve Bidwell OH 0 CaM For Oetallo EOE

MLM No Selling Work From

hnp lfwww hbn com
5298

Access Code

OWN A COMPUTER?
PUT IT TO WORK I
125 $75/HR PTIFT
CALL 1-888-248-2770
OR VISIT www ge-ltlly net
Postal Jobs $48 323 00 Yr Now
Hiring No Experience Patd
Training Great Benefits Call 7

Days 800-429-3660 Ext J 365
POSTAL JOBS To $18 45 /Hr
WILOLIFE JOBS To $21 80 /Hr
Benetlls Appl cat on &amp; Exam
Info 7 Days 9 AM 9 PM
CALL 1.a.96&amp;oOM7 X0345
Responsible person to work wee
kend shift call 740 992 5039 bel
wen Bam 4pm Monday thru Fn

day
Retail Furntlure Sates Experience
In Furniture Carpet Or Drapery
Sales Preferred Apply At Topes
Furniture Co 151 Second Ave
nue Gallipolis No Phone Calls

SIHGEASI GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY AND EASY LISTEN
INGI Call 1 800 489 8164 For
Appointment To Come To Nash

ville Tennessee And Audition
For Major Record Producers And
Concert Promoters

Internet

WYNiwetnac
Take Back Your L tel Be Your
Own Bolli Earn An E~~:tra $500
S1 500 PT Or $2 000 45 000 FT
Per Month Call 1 800.~04 1269
Or VIsit pw llygbtttterllj com
Telephone Talkers Needed Cash
Patd Wookly No experience
necessary
Call
Dave
0(304)67!;.1531
Towboat Pilots/Trip Pilots need
ed 1 to 2 week periods for work

tn lht Pittsburgh/Upper Ohio
Coil (412)788-8851
WORK FROM HOME $800
$1&amp; SOO /Month For Free Booklet
Call 1 818 234 9897 www cash
911 C&lt;lf!l/hOrlle

140

Bualneas
Training

c.,..,

Cllllpollo
CQllege
(Cirltra ClOSe To Home)
Cell Today! 740.446-4367
1 800-214-0452
ROll 190-05-12748
(

14 Singles and Double Wide
Trade and Repose Price Negoh
abe but all homes wll be sold by
12131/99 Come earty lor Best Se

Guarantead

$500

800-511 2640

EARN $1 000 A DAY

I DO No&lt;

Homa PIT Free Info Pkg 1 800
83t 2385 24 Hrs Ext 63
EARN $90 000 YEARLY Repair
1ng NOT Aeplac ng long Cracks
ln Wlndsh elds Free V deo 1

800 826 8523

us /Canaaa
www glassmechan x com
MEDICAL BILLER Up to $15
$45 /Hr Med cal B Uing Software
Company Needs People To Pro
cess Medical Claims From Home
Training Provided Must Own

Computer 1 600 434 5518 Ext

667
MEDICAL BILLING Unlimited In
come Potent•al No Expenence
Necessary Free Informal on &amp;
CD ROM lnves ment $4 995
$8 995 Fmanclng Ava table Is
and Automated Med cal Serv1c
es Inc 800 322 1139 E:r:t 050
VodlnKY IN CT

START YOUR OWN VENDING
Bus ness For As Litle As $52/
Mo Up To 15 Mach ne Routes
Ava able Easy F nancing 1 800

220 2985 24 Hrs

220 Money to Loan
$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remamlng Payments
On Property Sold Mortgages
Annu11 es Settlements' lmme
dtate Quotes!
Nobody Beats
Our Prices Nallonal Contract
Buyers 800 490 0731 E~et 101
www nat10nalcontractbuyers com

CONSOLIOATE OEBT Reduced
Monthly Payments 20 50° o Save
Thousands Of Dollars In Interest

Non Profit TCC 800-758 3844
CREDIT CARD UP TO $3 000
Unsecured VISA /MC Bad Cred t

Or No Credit 1-800-256 8818 Ext
4000

CREDIT PROBLEMS Slop Here
We Can Help loans Ava !lab e

$3 000 And Up No Feo 1 877
863-9269 Ext 221
CREDIT REAPIRI AS SEEN ON
TV' Erase Bad Credit Legal y

Free Into 888 659-2560
GET YOUR CASH NOWI Oldest
Buyers 01 Structured Settlements
Annu ties And Government Farm
Payments Also Purchasing lot
terlea And Privati" Mortgages
Call Settlement Capital 1 eoo
959 0006 www settlementcap
tal com
Need A loan? Try Debt Conso

dal on $5 000 1200 000 Sad
Credt1 0 K Fee 1 800 770 0092
Ext 215

6

room house $300 month
deposit and utilities

12x65 mob te home I ke new

Pilot Program Renters Needed
304 736 7295

must sell call 740 992 5419 afler
5 OOpm or leave message

(304)675-63t9

Three bedroom all electric ranch
1home with attached garage

fenced back yard large lot at

Meadow Land Estates Pt Pleas
ant $600 month plus references
and deposl! 304 824 2480
Three bed oom house In Pomer

oy $350 month plus $350 depos
11 140 992 2979 afler 6pm

14K70 W th Expando Good Con

BANKRUPTCY $79+ Stops Gar
ntshments Divorce $99+ Stop
Foreclosure S350 Busmess Op
port unites + Tra n ngl F eshStart
1 888 419 9417 www reshstartu
sa com

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
Appl cataon W IServ• ce Reduce
CENTIVE OFFER II Call 1 800
328 8510 Ext 29

d 1K&gt;n $6 500 740 446-8172 740
256 6251
1971 12x65 Good Condlllon 2
Bedrooms $1 000 (740) 446
3040
1980 14Ft X 70Ft Remodeled In
stde Good Shape Must See To

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
$225/Mo Plus Deposit 8 Miles
Out 218 &amp; Teens Run Road 741).

446 6172 74().256 6251
14x60 2 Bedrooms washer/dry
Central Air Available Nove 1st

1998 16x80 Clayton Mob le

Ae1orence No Pets Deposit
$200 00 (740)25iJ 1044

Home 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Heat

RECEIVING PAYMENTS? In
vestor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller F nanced Mortgage
Real Estate Contract Insurance
Annuity H ghest Prices Free

Quotes Why Waif? Call R ch 1
600 888 6450

Professional
Serv1ces

230

Pump All Eloctr~ 740 446 9255
1999 Doublewlde Repo Never
L1ved In New Home Warranty 0
Down If Qual fled 740 446 3093
Oakwood Galtpolts Only1!
1999 Gl es Kentuckian Mobile

Home

14x70

Mount s Tree Serv ce The Tree
Professionals
Bucket Truck
Se v ce Tqp Tnm Removal
Stump Grmd ng Free Estimates
Fully Insured Works Camp B d

polls 740 446 2003 740 446
1409

1988 Redman Oanvtlle 14x70
Also Has Expando very Ntce

New Heat Pump $14 000 740
388 8335

TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Wm
t 868 582 3345

All Lot Models tor Sale Year m
Close Out At Try State If! Vo
lume Dealer No Payments for 90

304 736 7295

days! Como Ea ly lor Best Seloc
1oos 1 (888) 736 3332
Brand New 4 Bedrooms 2 Baths
10% Oownl $199 00 Month No
Payments for 90 days 5 to

choose trom 1(800) 251 5070
HUD Homes Approval By Phone
S ngles Or Doubles 740 446

REAL ESTATE

$26().$300 740 992 2167

Sh ngle Rool Heal Pump Gar
den Tub Only lived n 3mo

2 Mult section Repo 1 On lot
Other Is Not F nanc ng Ava !able

Thts newspaper w I not
knowmgly accept
advert sements for real estate
wh ch s an v olat on of the
law Our readers are he eby
nformed that all dwellings
advert sed •n th s newspaper
are avallab e on an equal
opportun y basts

Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
2 Bedrooms Very Ntce In Galli

we I OH Call And Save 1 BOO
838 9568 740 388 9648 Owner
R ck Mount

All real estate advert s ng n
th s newspaper IS subject to
the Federal Fa Hous.ng Act
of 1968 wh ch makes 1 11 egal
to advert se any preference
I m tal on or d scr mmat on
based on race co or reUg on
sex fam I at status or nat anal
or gm or any n ent on to
make any such prerere ce
hm at on or d scnm nat on

14x70 three bedroom trailer total
electric $300 month plus $150
deposit no pets 740-742 2714

VInyl Siding

$24 500 Firm (304)675 5758

Moving Oul Of Area Mus\ sell at
sacnl ce 98 S W Ltke New

(304)736 9102
MOVING OUT OF AREA Musl
Sell AI Sacraltce 1998 SW L ke
New 304 733 9102
New 3BR 2 Bath 14 Wdo $500
Down $21 0 per mo Free A r 1
600 691 6777
New 4BA 16 wtde $500 Down
$245 per rna Free Air 1 BOO

69t 6777

Fllrnlshed two bedroom a c no
pets Rive Pa k Pomeroy $300
per month $150 depos t 740

949 2093
Mobtle Home Nice Clean 2 Bed
rooms In Country (740) 256

2 3 Even 4 Bedroom Homes
Payments As low As $149 De
hvery And Set Up Inc uded Only
At Oakwood Homes Barbours

vtllo 304 736 3409
OCTOBER SPECIAL
All Homes On Sale $499 down
on S ngles &amp; $999 dpwn on
Ooubtes 1 600 948 5878

Apartments
for Rent

440

1 and 2 bedroom apartments rur
nished and unlurmshed security

deposl1 requlrad no pels 740
992 2218
1 Bedroom Unfurmshed Apart
ment Range Refr gerator Disposal Garage Provided Water
Sewage Garbage Patd Oepos t &amp;
References Aequued 136 First

Avenue Rear GallipoliS 740
446 2561
1 Bedroom Near Holzer s Economical Gas Heat Kttchen Ap
phances Furntahed $279/Mo +
Uthtes 740-446 2957
2bdrm apts total electric ap
pllances furmshed laundry room
lactht es close to school n town
AppUcat ons available at Vtllage
Green Apts *49 or call 740 992

3711 EOH
Apartment for rent In Pomeroy no

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Dnve
from $279 to $358 Wa k to shop

&amp; movies Call 740 446 2568
EQual Hous ng Opportun ty

Beech Street Mtddleporl two
bedroom furn shed apartment
ut llttes pajd deposit and efer
enc:es equ red 740 992 0165

310 Homes for Sale

Christy s Famtly Livmg apart
ments home &amp; tratler rentals

ory &amp;Setup 1 800691-6777

740 992 4514 apartments avatl

$0 DOWN' HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED
GOV T
FORE
CLOSURES! CALL NOW FOR
AEGISTRATIONI 1 800 434
2434 EXT 3205 (NO FEE)

Looking To Buy A New Home?
Don 1 Have land? We Do 1!1111tll

Sl1s On Storys Aun Road on Ro
ute 7

~740)

Information

7576 Aller Noon
080

367

$40 500 00

74().441-0132
A ZERO% DOWN LOAN I
No Down Pay,ment Requ red W th
Government Sponsored loan
Good Credit And Steady Income
Aequtred Call For More lnlorma
tlon And For Other F nancmg Op
t1ons Independence Mo r tgage
Servaces 1 800 845-0036

ARIZONA RARE BUY! P lshno 40
Ac e Ranches In Northwest Ari
zona From Only $495/Acrel Lush
Vegetation Mountam ewsl No
Ouahly ng Low Down Ask About
6 Mo Inspection Program! 1 800

v

711 2340
By owner $47 900

must sell

qu ckly make offer Th ee bed

330 Farms for Sale

First Avenue Gall ipolis 1 Bed

House 740 388-8504

340 Business and
Bulldlng8

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
2 44 Acres Homesite Green
Township Galll8 County
Qu et Close To Gallipolis
Restrtctoos 740 245 5776
24 Acres More or Less Some

Timber LOcated near Ri 2/RI 67

e

sect1on $27 500 Serious

Calls Only (304)895 3390

Of Galtpolts Smglewtdes Allowed

Rough Moslly Wooded Road AI
ready Cui In $27 000
:tO WOODED ACRES
Great For Hunhng Near Patnot

on SR 141 &amp; SR 233 $23 ooo an
New Roi'd But I That Conllnuas

949 3147

For Free Maps On These Anct
Other Properties In Southern

$87 200 Anthony Lana Co LTD
1 800 213 8365 www country
tymecom

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down! Gov t And Bank Repo s
Be ng Sold Now! Finane ng Avail

abe Call Now' 1 800 730 7772
Exl 8040

MEIGS COUNTY
Near Danville &amp; Rutland Olf SA

325 5 &amp; 10 Acres $9 500+ Call
Ohio

Ex1 8040
HOME FORECLOSURES NO
MONEY DOWNI NO CREDIT
NEEDEDI TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! 1 800 916
9191 Ext H5023

Atver Lot for Sate Gallipolis Fer
ry/84 lumber Area 1 Acre +

(304)675 2067 Leavo Message

Two story vtnyl slchng 2 3 bed
rooms bath large kitchen/dining
new gas furnace 9735 South

Second Mtddleport $34 000 call
1100-388 8194

Real Eatste
Wan tad

RENTALS

41 0 Houses for Rent
1 bedroom turntsned hOuse $300
per month trash &amp; water lnclud

ad small rep~lr jobs deducted
lrom your ron~ call 740-887-6944
Ohio Stroot

Modern t BR All u111111os paid
except electric Galllpollo Ferry
Area

$250

mo

+ deposit

(304)675-1371 or 675-3230
Haven one bedroom fur
nlshed apartment also has wash
ar and dryer deposit and refer

orcas reQurod 740 992 0165

GOOD

USEO APPLIANCES

Washers drvers relrigerators
range&amp; Skaggs Appliances 76

VIne Street Call 740 448 7398
I 888 818 0126
Mollohan Carpets Qually Carpal
At Affordable Prices 202 Clark

Warm

Seats PW PL Till Cruise V I
47 000 n;-.s (740) 44E 2573

1BA

House $200/month 2112 Madl
son Avenue 2BR House ~50/

month (304)576 2247
2 Bedrooms $325/Mo + Ulllllk!s
and Deposl1 NQ Pots! 740 446
4313

Mormng

Gas

Heater

85 000 BTU $400 00 (740) 379
9381
WAt;IMUP
92% Gas Furnaces Heat Pumps
Duct Systems Free Estimates If

You Don t c;,au Us Wo Both Lose/
740-446-630il t 800 291-())98
Waterttne Special 3/4 200 P51
$21 95 Par 100 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 109 All Brass Com
pression Fittings In Stock

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
JaCitSon Ohkl 1 800-537 9528

New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga

WHITE S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allison 588 Watson Road
Bldwal .Ohio 740.448-4336

Road 740 446 7444 740
386 0173

Much More Stop And See Us

74Q.44E-4792
R&amp;D s Used Furn lure Great Se
lect on Pnced To Sell I Come
And Browse • Corner Of Acute 7

Wolff Tanning Bed Sunquest Pro

26RST Like New $2 800 740
256-633t Mel 4 PM

550

&amp; Addison Plkt 740 367-0260

Solid Oak Bedroom Dresser 10
Drawers with 3 Piece Mirror EM
cellenf
Condition
$500

(304)6752617
Super

Single

Water

Bed

(304)675 7865

Building
Supplies

Block brick sewer pipes wind
ows lintels etc Claude Winters

Rio Grande OH Cell 740 245
5121

560

Pets for Sale

AKC German Shepherd Puppies
Washer $95

Gas Dryer $95

Electric Dryer $95 Electric Rango
$150 RolrlgeraiOr $150 Aofrlg
erator Like New $350 One Year
Warranty G E Washer And Dry
er Set $205 Each One Year
Warranty Skaggs Appl ances

76 Vine Street Gallipolis 740
446 7396 Or 1 888 818 0128

' ------~--~----520
Sporting
Goods

Nice efficiency apartment in Mid
dleport $200 month good toea

lion 74o-9921385 evenings
North Third Avenue M dc:tleport
One bedroom furnished or untur
ntshed apartment deposit and

740 245 9213
AKC Roglotered..Cockor Spaniol
puppies first shots and wormed

bull and bull &amp; while sil&lt;Jis $200
140 992 7371
AKC Registered Golden Retr ev

21 X20 TWO CAR GARAGE Full

BAD?

1997 Ford Expedlt on 37 00
Miles Mint Condition Take Ova
Paiii!)Onls, 740 367-0219 74b

SHE"S FINE II

BUT MAW SPRAINT
HER ANKLE

Door $2 993 00 Can Deliver 1
800-701 7912

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

ooo

$9100 740 742 2675 or 740 i42
7200

2000 Chovy Cal/81 or 3 000 mle{

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

erutse keyless entrY:}

$12 500 740-992 3085
85 Floro $500 OSO 304 458 I
2586

Wnterl Very NtCII $14 500 Nigtl

..........

1

1996 F 350 Ford 4WD power!

PB •

89 Honda CR 80 $700 00 Flrml
Fuel Tank $75 oo Wood Burning
Fire Place lnstert S350 (740)
446-3545 Leave M~sili'ge

Rod Delicious Apples $6
Bushel Apple. Buller $5 Quart
(304)576-2686

Brand New Large K1tchen Aid
M1xer Speed Control large S

Turn ps for sale u ptck 112 mile
east of Syracus8' SR 124 Virgil s

740

Stool Mixing Bowl &amp; All The AI

Sorry Patch 740.992 2378

83 Honda Shadow 750 saddiU
bags windshield anti two helmets '
1
$1200 OBO caH 740 992 7533

$200 080 74().441 0901

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

ChiCkens S4 00 Each Kerosene

Stove Wllh Chimney $75 OBO
74().256 233
COMPUTER BLOWOUT COM
PAO MICRON HP Llml1od Or Fair
Credit OKI Most Busmesses &amp;
Students APPROVED! Low

COMPUTERS

610 Farm Equipment
t Year old Naw Ideal Disk Mow
1ng Machine (740)256 1977

Monthly Payments Y2K Compll
ant Almost Everyone Approved

Call FIAOCOM Advanced Tech
notogtes 1 800 617 3476 Ext

330
F~rewood tor sale $25 a truck

load 740.949 OW5
Firewood tor Sale Full Size
Truckload $40 Call evenings or

$2399 traded In Jess than 300
hours $1495 Briggs '\'ertlcal

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa~red New

&amp; Rebuilt In Stoct~;

Call Aon Evans 1 800-537 9528

Largo Metal 7 drawer Desk S100
lor Home or Office (740) 446
2875 After 5 00 May Leave Mes

sagoI

Grand Champion Steer In 1999
Mason County Fatr 740-245
9315
1

~

'

HORSE SALE Selle Plaine Wos~
ern Exchao9'! Bolle Platno lA
Two Day Catalog &amp; Uncataloged
Safe October 30 &amp; 31 Horses
1 00 PM Saturday Noon Sunday
Expecting 500 Head Call For
Catalogs /Conslgnmento 319
444 2320 Fax 31~ 285&amp;
Registered Otlatler Horso
lng Just rlghl lo! Fall TraM Rldoo
or 4H Prolec11 $2 500 00 (740)
379 2932

Pleasant

W't:l

River Park Pomeroy (formerly
Brown a) $100 per month 7-40

985-3419
Throe Lote at Suncrast Cemetery
Call 1304)675 6587
WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY Will Finane• With "0" l)own1
PutC~hProbltmsNoProbltm
CaiToll ~rae 1 800-603-7537

f

meeaure

9 Make a choice

Pass

Pass
Dbl

Pass

10 Map ebbr
11 Veatlll
curved
planking
13 Abaorben1
object
18 Auto Mfllly
device
(2 wda)
19 'throaty
20 Summer
month
22 Curved
23 Honora
24 A gender
25 Mother27 Fixed
32 e.rt Gray e g
34 Dancer
Duncan
35 Dauba
39 Sneaky one
43 Trap
45 Turklah flag
47 Arizona city
48 Health reeort
49 -Lingua

One of 1he first bndge wnters to
use fi cltonal characters was Hubert
Ph1il1ps Thts deal from h1s Brush
Up Your Bndge (Dav1d McKay
Company 1939) caught my eye
What do you thmk of the btddmg?
How would four spades by North
fare? How should the play proceed m
three no trump?
I agree w1th Soulh s pass over one
heart smce I dtshke 4 3 3 3 d1stnb
ut1on and bemg opposlle a passed
partner Facmg a hve card maJor
West would nonnally ratse lo two
hearts but m England where four
card maJors rule one no trump ts
acceptable Soulh s JUmp to three no
trump was wtld Her partner had
passed twtce so he was btddmg all of
her potnts She should have passed
East s double was JUSI1hed only by
the result
Here four spades !atls after a club
lead else declarer sets up Souths
heart kmg for a club dtscard
West led the heart 1wo etghl ace
four Back came the hean 10 Jack
queen club two West cleared the
hearls Then when Easl won tnck
lour w1th the spade ace she cashed
three heartlncks lor two down plus

(airline)
50 Howwaa-

-know?"

52 !lpanlah hero
El-

53 eomp.aapL
54 Sun apeech

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty C pher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous peop e past and
present Each letter '" the ctpher stands for another

Todays clue M equals Y

F

KWZK

CVVA

IV B ZIT

CS I

PSGZD

EIVZKVDK

F 0

TSFGE

SUUSIKRGFKM
Tl

KWV

K S

TS

KWV

LSI V

DZAX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Law IS not a professton at all bu1 rather a busmess
servtce slalton and repatr shop " - Adlat E Stevenson

'::~:~;~' S©~~~-~ttfS"
Edited
CLAY I POLLAN
0 four

lteorrongo

Ionon

of the

E CT K 0 L
1

I 1 I I I

I

ANCKK

When you have done your
best the mom !old her college
bound teen "you should wa1t

r--P~H-:L--.::R-=E-:E:--,1 the resul! 1n

I I

_
.
I
L_.I'---....L--.1...--'-....&amp;--..J
~

e
A

V

15

Q
you

Complete tho chuckle Quoted
by f II ng 10 the m1ssmg words

develop f1om step No 3 below

PRINI NUMBERED lEITERS IN

THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO Gfl ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
A very philosophical fellow remarked that h1story was
the rear v1ew m1rror on the ROAD of LIFE

3933 or 1 800.2'73-9329

790

SERVICES
)

...

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
U"c9nd IIOJiq! UliUIJie guarontea.

1

trade tor 4 Wheel ol equal value

See by appointment on y 9011
eve 6 10~M (304)576 3156
1963 J2000 Ponuac 2 Doors
Naw Paint Clean Inside &amp; Out AI
New Parts &amp; Tires $1 300 OBO
740 25iJ 1288

AU types of masQnry work brtqtc
block stone concrete 20 ye11ra
experience free estimates 304

n3-9550
..-:-----:----:--.,....
Appll~nce Parts And Service ,1111
Name Brands Over 25 Years ~x
perlence All WorN Guatanteed
F;rench City Maytag 740 448
_rns_:_:_ _ ---;-.,..--- -;,C&amp;C Genel'al Homo Main
t
Sldlog
ballls
1 &gt; \~:::'~:,;n~~~l~n:'\•~~~ mort For
740 992

t 98ll Qjllas Clera 4 Cyl Autom
4 Doors Runs Good $750 oo
740'441 1083
1
1988 Chevy Sprint Now rlngo &amp;
bearings head rebuilt new
brakes &amp; frontllrea (304)895
3940
199d Goo Storm sports car 5 sp
llntld windows ex cond groat
milage 304 773-5182
'

oas

ASTRO·ORAPR

Ea

labllshod 1975 Gall 24 Hrs (740)
446 0870 1 800 287 0576 Rog
ers WaterprooH~

800-

Resldentla) or commercial wiring
aerVIci or repairs Master Ll
cenoeq ,leptrlcla~ Ridenour

Eleotrlcal WV000306 304 875
t716

GAM I

tcrombled word• be
low to form lour sitl\plt word1

&amp; R Auto Rt~ley WV (304)31~

Home
improvements

WOlD

~y

q

Seasoned llrewo9d $45 p1ck up
HEA~ voucher accepted 740

8 Biblical

_...,;_-::-;:=~-~

cal Parts Bennells Mobile Home

load $90 cord spill &amp; delivered

(abbr)
4 Andea country
5 Cada
6 Reduced
(2 wde)
7 Model ol
perfection

OCTOBER20I

I

740-245 5iJ77

2•

Shop the cfoSSI(ied seclron

To Over 1 000 Transmission\!

eve Joints

3 Turn the page

!If

Don 1get 11111g by htgh prom'

and Engines All Jypes Acc\et

New Replacement Gas Tanke

1 Draltegcy

2 Joyful cry

Cleave - Ardor Frock - Felme ROAD of LIFE

• .J
:

o

DOWN

21f

HE WANTS TO KNOW
WHV '(OV'RE WMRING
THAT STUPID LOOKING
RED RIDIN6 HOOD IN
THE COURTROOM

Budget priced Transmisslo.n)'

local references turnl&amp;hed

lies Fee Requ r&amp;d Ca I Nowl
772 7470 EXT. 7832

460 Space for Rent

1-lER GRANDMOTHER

-

A~sorles

810

71 0 Autos for Sale

Bank Financing Huge Inventory
Of lntertherm Miller &amp; Coleman
Furnaces Heat Pumpa And

Premium Firewood Oak &amp; Ash
$50 Load Full Size Pick Up Do
llllorod 740-992 4568

Pt

16ll Auto lf'erts &amp;

\

TRAN SPO RTATION

CARS S100 $50Q &amp;
IMPOUND Honda s
Chevys Jeeps Arid Sport

turo (740) 446 1004 (740)-446
4039 Ol'f time Out Sulavllle Pike

THE WOLF W~O ATE

1

For Sole or 'Trade 35 HP Johnso
Boat Motor $350 00 or trade to
15 to 20 Hr motor (304) 875
51~1.
'

740 !92-2322 740-698-3531

$28 00 A Month With Approved
Crodl1 Easy Over Tho Phone

Ntce used furmture and Ap
pllances Johnson s Used Furnl

WE'RE HERE TO SUE

work

1995 1911 Rinker Annlcersar
Edition Inquire at 2509 Llncoltt

ments Welcoma Hauling
able Athens Llvestqck Sales

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

HTG &amp; ClG 740 446 9418 Or 1
800'872 5967 Gallipolis OH

needs

57 Scent
58 Chlel

Special Fall Feed!r !fall Sale
Saturday October 23 1999 1
PM CaHio May Be
In AI
1er 4 PM on Frl~ayy:IAAIIit'Cdrtslgtn-

Lose Up To 30 tbs In 30 Days

ers Anchors Plumbing &amp; Eloclrl

Interior

s1oo oo (740J-44e-304o

25550

For $38 Ask About Free Sam

Furnaces Installed As Low As

good!

Avenue

Livestock

...,.

Grubbs Plano tuning &amp; rapalrs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Dr 740-44E 4525

·~

1919 Ba1a Open Bow 90 H6~
Mercury Out board Motor run

Club Calves AI Bred Raised The

441 1!544

Jli

hp Tecumseh vertical shalt list

1254 95 sale $135 All engines
new with 2 year warranty New
Echo Sno-blower 5 hp list price
$539 sa-. $375 two year warranty Racine Mower Clln c 740 9492084

630

Grandfather Ck&gt;ctl: Ridgeway 740

1

boots ttJI:Ira fenders Good condJ

750 i poats &amp; Motors
for Sale

For sale Primestar system also
like to buy older RCA Direct TV
system w 1th access card pay
cash call 740 949 3315 leave
~.

~

5 np engine ljst $2~0 50
sale $135 Br~go 6 5 hp horizontat shaH 11$1 $356 43 sa-. $265 5

k!ave message (304)882 3893

message

f

$1000.~-675-3569A11er8pm

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

North Mr Playbcucr pomled out
that Wesl dtd w ell not to lead the
he an queen Top of panner s su1t was
mcxpltcably de ngueur many years
ago However Wes1 s heart 1wo lead
and East s heart 10 return strongly
suggested that Wesl held the heart
queen And tf so the declarer Lady
Teeny Tearful could have made the
contract by wmntng tnck two whtch
would have blocked the sun She dn
ves out the spade ace and cru1ses
home So maybe 1hree no trump
wasn t such a bad btd after all'

1999 Honaa Elite Scooter Ggodl
Condlllon $1 500 (304)8~5
1347
87 Kaw ~00 dirt b ko helme

I NT
Pass

500

'I

Motorcycles

1994 Honda 300 4 Wheel Drive

Cub Cadet model 2135 new

to Dowo Low

-

Asking $2 900 OBO (304)773.:.j
5109
I

Monthly Fl'ayments FREE Printer

Or WobSlle 1 888 353-3575

while with gray Interior loadedj
$19 500 67 000 miles call740
992-6223 or 740.~9 2045 ""!_II'
ings

Cooper

56 Valuable fur

By Phillip Alder

1999 FORD EXPLORER $100
080 Seized And Soling Locally
FOO 1 800 409 7511 Ext 9865
Fee

stroke air lilt cruise PW

51 P11t1 topplnga
55 Arnoend

Instructive
characters

t997 Pontiac Sunftre two door
autoW!atle 36
miles sharp

Condttlon (740) 367 7480

Lease Plus Security Deposit Re

Pomor011 AI 124 600 ~ H cus
tomer parking, ole. carpet ceiling
fan modlm $350/monlh S150
depoSit 74().949-2093

WAS SHE HURT

19P5 Honal Acco/d LX 87 OOo!
miles $8 300 llo ('4P) 245-9239

54 000 aecurate milea Excellentf

1982 Corvette /collectors edition

For Lease

1

Pass
Pass
3NT
Pass

1969 ~ord A'r o Star Van

125 Yr Manufacturers Warrantee
Complete With 10 Overhead I

58 OOOmlles champaign and
burgandy 400 small block cross
lire lnjecllon very good condl
lion $12 500 OBO And will

490

eoJ

ale

48 Some
48 Popeye e.g

Vulnerable North South
Dealer North
South
West North East

1993 T Bird Davey Allison
lion 302 HO Brand New t4l
M los LoiS of Extras (304)67.~
3354

auto

Anawer to Prevlouo ,......,

.10875

1993 Plymouth Duster 6 cyllnde
C!lHC standard excelltn1 condl
tlqn looks grea1 beautiful Interior
nice wheels $3500 7~0 9-il
204! evenings

...

Pa&lt;IS Vinyl Sklrllng Khs $299 95

949 2093

If K J 4
t A K 5

,..
N..l.. Tl\1~ 1\N\:&gt;0001:&gt; LOOK':&gt; TOO I

Doors &amp; Windows Wa1er Heat

&amp; Deposit Required 740 446
1519

"' K 6 5

lWo 1985 Ford LTDs Both Runs
GoOd Both For $600 Or Will lie~
Seperato 740.441&gt;3746

Floors CA 1 112 Bath Fu ly Car
poled Adull Pool &amp; Baby Pool
PallO Start $350/Mo No Pats

Upstairs Furn shed 3 Rooms
Bath Clean No Pets! Reterei'!,Ctl

l

(740) 446 032i Day (740) 441
0114

i&gt;

South

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Maytag wringer washer $75 00
be ga love seat $25 00 1 set of
box springs &amp; matress $25 00 &amp;
other mise 304 675 5561

Twin Towers now accepting ap

1993 Ford Probe Red 5 spd
A c runs good 'l'Bken care _.of
$4 000 (304)1182 2529

AKC Registered Pomerantan
Pups Had First Shpta 4 Fe
9642

•QJ3

1992 Ford Tempo Auto /Ar Run(
Great S1 500 (740) 446 4782

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques
1124 East Main Street on SR 124
E Pomeroy 740 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner http lilts your busl
ness com/riverine/

Now Taking Appl cations 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apa tmenls
Includes Water

p11ca11ons lor 1 SA HUD aubsld
lzed apt for elderly and hand!
capped EOH (304)875-8879

I

96 Nazda Mlata LOaded Loat~r
"M" Edition 20 OOOmtles Stored I

mates 3 Males $300 740 386

• A2
lfAI0975
• 10 ?

Antiques

530

ptw. 740 441-1982

Tara TownhOllll Apartments
Very Spacious 2 Bed ooms 2

East

ors $150 each 5 Females Call
(740)245 5098 Leave Massage

2 Pre 1964• Mod 70 Winchester

teleroncas 740 992-0165

Sewage Trash $315/Mq 740
446-0008

lble now GM motor super condo

Your Credlll t 80().659 0359

C~apet

menl call 740 992 9191

qutred After 5 740 446 0101
Before 5 740-446-3451

We Buy Land 30 500 Acres
We Pay Cash 1 800 213 8365
Anlhfl!lY Lend Co

1520 112

Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jackson A110nue (304)675 7388

§enerator oi!/Pt. 120 volts 15
=.::.::;c:;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , amps $300 linemen s body bell
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment
&amp; safety belt like new $100 740
740-446-0390
949-2647

No Pets (304)675 1386

HIOO 213-8365
www countrytyme com

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down! Gov 1 And Bank Repo s
Bemg Sold Now! Fmanc ng Avail
able Call Now! 1 800 730 7772

For Sale Recond1t oned wash
ers dryers and refrigerators

&lt;unities

One Bedroom Apt In Upper Part
of Town Very mea and Private

Anthony Land Co ltd

360

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vutage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In M ddle

One bedroom furntshed apart

GALLIA COUNTY
23 ACRES
2m los 011 SA 7 &amp; SA 218 South

Into Wayne National Forest

Level With Unf nlshed Basement
On 1 Acres 01 Meadow Sur
rounded By Trees Barns &amp; Other
Outbu•ld ngs More Land Ava I
abe Located Near Thurman 011
SA 279 On Cente point Road

grators 90 Day Guarantee!
French Ctty Maytag 740 4•6

10 4 3

Uon priced to move $8500 74~
949 2021 after 4pm
_.

1992 Cad I ac Sedan Deville On
Owner and In E~ecelient Condttlon
Loaded with leather Powe

Turned Down Beforell ReestabliSh

992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor

W th 2 30 Liquor l cense 740
367-(1219 740 367 7272

In

room Apartment 740 446 1066
or Weekends 740.441-0952

port From $249 $373 Call 740.

rooms two baths big one car ga
rage Racme Central aH heat
pump all appl ances Including
washe &amp; dryer stay ca I 740

COUNTRY HOME
2 BA 1 1/2 Baths VInyl &amp; Br~k B

For Rent Apartment Downtown
upstairs 2 Bedroom N~el (740)

44E 0139

Bar Business Gall po lls Area

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Separate 3
Ca Garage 2 1/2 Acres 5
Minutes From Holzers $85 000

able furnished &amp;unfurnished

HlJ'ry Only 10 Lots Lolli 304 736
7295

26 Acres MIL W th 6 Stall Horse
Barn County Wale 3 Bedroom

Reconditioned

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY We Finance ·o· Downl Past
Credit Problems OKI! Even If

1achments Never Been usedl

Down $349 per mo Free Deltv

3 Bedroom House W/3 Acres
Land Few Fruit Trees 2 Bed
rooms Bath Upstairs 1 Bedroom
Front Room Om ng Room Ulll ty
Room K tchen Bath Oownstaus

Appl ance s

Washers Dryers Ranges Relrl

1991 Pont ac Trans Am convertr

27-0 Ca Very Clean Original
Guns $750 Each 740 379 2601

6574

pets 740.992 5858
NEW

Household
Goods

510

Beds Chests Couches Tables

Appreciate $tO 900 00 740 446
4680

Special 28x80 3 or 4BR $1000

1 800-38Q-26 15 24 Hrs

Nice
plus

lO 20 99

Merchandise

7795

(304)773 5040

14x70 Ventura Mobile Home 2
Bedroom 1 Bath Front Deck
I Ox8 Set up on a anted lol

Rep~y

Ext 1709

k!clkm 1 (888)-736

FREE MONEY! Its True Never

ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
$1 000 A Day No Selling Not
MLM Fo Free Info mal on Pack
age Call 1 BOO 7e6 8849 24 Hrs

Night sh1h 7pm-9am taking care
ot elderly t8 or older 7 40 992

OWN A COMPUTER PUT IT
TO WORK $850 $3 500 MO
PT /Ft FREE Data IS Log Onto

1 3 Bedroom Repos 4% Down
0 K Creel t For listings And Pay
ment Details Call eoo 319 3323

3583

lent Income Full Training Com
puter Required Call Toll Free

Computer AoQutred Call Modi

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

$11 000 740 992 5686

$50 000
Debt Consol dallon
Persona l Needs Bus ness 1

2 searooms 36 Chillicothe Ra
$325 00 Month Deposl11 No Petsl
(740)446 2419(740) 446-0720
Buy Homes From $199 30/Mo

Freet 800 724 6047(24 Hrs)

FINANCIAL

A Money Machtne Be Your Own

lent $S$' Processing Claims From
Home Fun Tratnlng Provided

(304 )576 2358

14x70 2 3 bedrooms one and
half bath new carpet and remo
dellng must be moved askmg

740 992 9314 74().367-0140

MEOICAL BILLING Earn Excel

MEOICAL BILLING Earn Excel

House for sale In Ashton •BR
2BA Kttchen /DinlngRoom llv
ng Room Ut I ty Aoom 3 Acres

FREE MONEY Its True Neve
Repay Guaranteed $500
$50 000 For Debt Consol dahon
Personal Needs Med cal B Us
Education &amp; Bus ness Call Toll

Will work for $4 an hour pa ntmg
cleanmg yard work leaf rak ng

able BETTER BUSINESS BU
REAU MEMBER PACIFIC MED
!CAL www pac flcmed cal com

800-54Q-6333 Ext 2301

APPROVAL

Bank Card No Credit Check No
Up Front Cash Security Depos1t
Requ red
Must Be 18+ And
Have 1\Jahd Checking Account
Pre Approva By Phone 1 800

0118

recommends that you do bust
ness w1th people you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma 1 until you have mve-stlgated
the offenng

Tratn ng $6 495 Ftnancmg Avail

GUARANTEED

Payments To 65% 11CASH IN

Call 304 743 9717 AM Leave
Message EOE
Light Delivery Cash paid week

Ta xes Wr te lmmedtately

W ndla Is 847 A SECOND AVE
SUITE •350 NEW YORK NEW
YORK 100t7

304 675 1957

4623 0 (304)674 0155

Help wanted must be able to operate pickup truck w lh attached
20 recycle Ira ler through village
streets &amp; alleys Dulles wit n
elude collecting and transporting
materials to Recycle Center and
scheduling workers Aeply to
Metgs County Recycling &amp; L fl
117 E Memorial Dnve (Jormer
county home) Pomeroy Oh o or

NOW$

689 t556

tng No Exp Needed No Money
No Crodtl? No Problem! Earn Up
To $32 000 /1st Yr W /Full Bene
fits P A. M Transport Call To I
Free 1 877 230 6002 www otr
drivers com

From
Weallhy Fam lies Unloadmg MU
I ons Of Do Ia s To Help Min mlze
ThP.

CASH

12 Gloaay fllbrlc
13 Aelan aklfl
14 Coaats
15 BeaU1IIul
16 Gums
17 Rower a tool
18 Eureka!
21 Jargon
23 Picnic a~ller
26 Debtora lettera
28 Therelore
29 Teeny
30 Fury
31 Mythical
creature
33 Like a beeal
36 Art deco name
37 Ninny
36 Diving bird
40 Fruit drlnka
41 Acquire

42 MoaquKo
genua
44 Mellp Mra
45 Palindromic
name

Thursday Oct 21 1999
Thts IS an excellent year lo butld
upon the foundau!ms you ve already
built You have all that 11 takes lo
mushroom your assets tnlo somelbmg
~UIIC large
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) No one
wtll have 10 pu h you mlo workmg
towards producltve objecuves today
:Your prtmary concern Will be to pro
••de for your,.lf and your fnmtly
Thai s all the mcenuve you need
~now )Vhere 10 look for romance and
you II fmd 11 The ASiro Graph
Matchmaker tnslandy reveals whtch
' s1gns are romanucally perfect for
you Mall $2 75 10 Matchmaker c/o
llus newspaper ~0 Box 1758 Mur
lay Htll Slallon New York NY
~ 10156
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) A
person you recc;ntly met wtlh whom
~ou had an mstanl rappon ts wollh
culltvatmg •plo a iOitd fncndsh1p
Today m1g~~ pfford you such an
- 11pponum1y to do so
SAOITI II IUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) Look for "uys today In expand

your worktng base There trc many
oppnrlumllcs to mcrcnsc ynur scr
v1ccs wh1ch could render you con
sadcr thlc rcmunerauon
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Inn 19)
You llthnve toduy on mmd related

acttvtt es that test vuur apt1tudc~ and
problem solvmg sk1lls Thts ts true
even to the soctal realm You m1gh1
bench! greatly
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Fcl&gt; 19) A
mnncy mnkmg propt s1t111n th 11 ts
hnk~d tu smnctlung: )OU the uJy
hqve gnmg lor ynu m ght present

tlsclf today You could bench! mute
nally tn several ways alllns llltt~
PISCES (Feb 20 March 201

Dent watt for others tn gel tn touch
wtth you hx.luy tf there ts somcthtng
nnponam you wont to tcc01nphsh
thai rcqutres ihctr tnput Take the lead
and they II follow
ARIES (March 21 Apnl 19) If
you don 1 auempt to make a change
today Simply for the sake or vanalton
somethmg lhnl ts presently runnmg
smoothly wtll conunue to do so
Keep your hands oiT wha11s workmg

TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20) T ''

1s an e~t.c;:ellent day to make that con
IBct w1th someone who can help fur
ther your a1ms be 1t busmess or per
sonnl People are mchned 10 listen
today and you have somelhmg to say
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) Don 1
let your compe111ors !&gt;luff you today
You re the one who II have the mosl

reserves and resourcefulness to draw
upon when m the heal ofbaule Stand
your ground
CANCER (June 21 July 22)
Somelhmg could occur or be exposed
10 you today that mtghl serve as a
grenltnsptralton lo you now and well
mlo the future You II find 11 vel')
helpful nnd enllghtenmg
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) A project
on whtch you ve worked hnrd and
long looks hke llts abou11o bear fnut
11 s qu11c posSible that you m1gh1 see
some of I he firs1 sprouls loday
VIRGO !Aug 23 Sept 221 Be
aucnuve to ull you cncounlcrtnday

even

those

w1th whom

) OU

have ht

tle respect Unsnllcned ad'lce could
sprmg

lrom an unsuspected source

and be of ~rc t1 help 10 you

c•

�.

.

T_h e Daily Sentinel·

By The Bend

.

Page 10
Wednesday, October 20, 1999·.

Hubby thinks wife's behav-ior toward daughter's boyfriend .is too friendly
·:when the

her onl y friend .
Being a rea list, I am certain that

time comes that l l'illlllll t manage on
my own. I wi ll li ve with you " Ann .

eventually I am go ing to have to
place my mother in some sort of

the thought uf us li ving together is
very upsettin g.. In fact. it' s 1n y worst
nigh tmare I love my nwt llcr dearly.

nMltcr. \Vh~:nt: vl: r I hrin g up the
j ~\.: 1. she w.: ts as if I'm trying to

s tun c~s

will she ever go in to a retire ~

mcnt horne. She

..... ·..(·.···

:

Dear Ann Landers: I am at my
wits' end over a situat ion that

very gnod health. In fact, there arc
days when I think she may outl1vc

involves my wife. my daughter and me .
In recent conversat ions, Mom has
my daughter's boy friend . About 18
months ago. the huy friend decided made it plain that under no circum to start his own business.
My wife. "Lynn.'' volunteered 10
help him se t up the bookkeeping
sy stem and nthcr aspcl:ls ol the start

up. Now, Lynn is working over 40
hours a week -· for free . She is more
commu ted to the business than he is.

We have di sc ussed !his issue at
length. and Lynn says she enjoys the
challenge and that I should. "stay out
of her husmc ss ... She also says the

cooki ng.

~o: lca ·1ing.

laundry. and so

on.

I dnn' t suspec t nny monkey busi-

sublock

her in a dun geon.

Please ask your readers who are
living in retirement centers to write

about their experiences. You have
taught me that there can be no better

teacher than someone who has been . has all the answers. Send a self
there. Perhaps your rcadets can help addressed, long, business size envemy mother see things differently. lqpe and a check or money order for
Thanks, Ann . -- T.M . IN ORLAN- $3.75 (this includes postage and
DO, FLA.
handling) to: Brides. c/o Ann LannEAR T.M.: Here 's your lener, ders, P.O. Box 11 562, Chicago, Ill.
and l'lllet you know of my readers' 606 11 -056 2. (In Canada, se nd
responses. How about it. fo lk s? $4.55)
Write on'
·
To find out more about Ann LanWhen plannin g a wedding, who ders and read her past columns, visit
pays for what? Who stands where? the Creators Syndicate web page at
"The Ann Landers Guide for Brides" www.creators.com .

PEPSI,
MT. DEW
PRODUCTS

P0 WELL'S
STORE HOURS

Monday thru
Sunday
8 AM·IO PM

79c

298 SECOND ST.
Accepts Credit Cards

24 pk cube $5.99

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU OCTOBER 23, 1999

AMOUR
VIENNA
SAUSAGE

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

ne ss hctwccn my wife and our

daughter's hoy frie nd. but this guy is
very charismatic. I can't ligure out if

facilit y. ·She refuses to di sc uss the

but I mu st take tim e away from her
every three days, or else. we end up
fi ghting.
I trv to visit or communic:.uc with
Mom ·on a dail ) hasis . hccuu ~c I am

·compan y wnuld fail without her. and
I h!:li~v ~.: it.

Mean whi le. I am working full
time at a stress ful , difficult job, and
have to take up the slack at home.
whith means doing all !he dishes.

~ ays.

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

lhi s is some weird. subconsc ious

attempt on Lynn's pan to relive her
youth vicari ously through her
daughter. or if she is trying to compete with her.
I have toyed with the idea of giving her a reasonable period of time
to extricate herself or I will leave.
After 30 years of marriage and two
wonderful. grown children, this
seems like a drastic move, but I've
had it. I would appreciate some
advice from you, Ann . -- NEED
DIRECTION IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR CALIF.: Let me get this
straight -- your daughter's boyfriend
is starting a new business. and your
wife is helping him to the tune of 40
hours' a week ?
Meanwhile . you are cooking,
doing dishes, laundry, and cleaning,
in addition to working at your stressful Job? You say you 've had it and
want to know if I have any advice?
Well. yes. I do.
Tell your wife you are resigning
as chief cook and dishwasher, and if
she wishes to continue to knock herself out for thi s young man, it's OK
with you, but not a! the expense of
her share of the home responsibilities. If she docsn't agree to cool it
with the self inflicted second job,
insist on joint counseling, and let the
counselor establish the appropriate
guidelines.
Dear Ann Landers: My m01her
has been a widow for several years
and is now in her late 70s. She lives
alone and has always been fiercely
independent. She appears to be in

Community
Calendar

5/$
FRESH PORK BONELESS RIB END $

Roast ....................~~:...
FRESH PORK BONELESS RIB EIID

29

1
$

Pork Chops ••••••••!!-••• ·

1

59

79
$179
London Broil Roast
. Bologna ••••••••••••.'!·•• 99
$ 89
For Stew •••••••••••• 1
S)t
SUPERIOR'S

12 oz.
.
HoI Dogs.......................

SUPERIOR'S SLICED

USDA CHOICE BONE~ESS BEE,F LB.

·C
C

.....

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEFLB.
usDA CHOICE BONELEss BonoM

9

Round Steak •••••• ~~

USDA CHOICE BONELESS TOP

nd Stea

WEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Board of Education. reg ular session ,
Wedne sday. 6:30 p.m. at the elementary cafctorium.

.

LITTLE DEBBIE
MULTI PA(K
SNACK CAKES

89c
(ASST VAR) 20 OZ.

NEW CROP

•

1b

Grapefruit ••~........

POMEROY - Revival. Poplar
Ridge Free Will Baptist Church,
Thursday through Saturday, 7 p.m
Charles Swigger, evangelist. Special
si nging each night.

BROUGHTON

POMEROY - Big Bend Girl
Scout Leaders meeting, Thursday.
Meigs High School, Roum 213, 7
p.m.

5

112 ganon

$ 29

2
2/$

3
·1

Orange Juice ••••••••
SHEDD'S SPREAD
$ 79
Margar.lne ••••••••••
N.EW Y~RK
$ 29

FRIDAY
POMEROY
Burlingham
Modern Woodmen to parti cipate in
National Make a difference Day by
taking good winter clothing to the
hall, I p.m. Friday. Will be delivered
to Meigs Cooperative Parish.

- Meigs County
Genealogical Society, annual meeting, Sunday, Me1gs County Museum , ·144 Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy, 4
p.m.

280Z.

2/$4

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Rocksprings Better Health Club. Thursday. I p.m.
home uf Barbara Fry.

P0~·1EROY

99

4

ORE
SANDWICH
COOKIES

POMEROY - American Red
Cross bl oodmobile. Meigs County
Senor Ci ti ze ns Center, Wednesday, I
to 6 p.m.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Country
Historical Society, annual meeting,
Sunday, at !he Meigs County Museum , Pomeroy. Dinner at 6 p.m.; program by Michael Struble on
Pomeroy building fronts to follow ;
business meeting 10 conclude. Dinner reservations with donation, 9923810 by Friday.

O'SAGE
RAGEDY RIPE
PEACHES

ALL VARIETIES IN STORE
EXCLUDING CADDY PACK

$ 99

lb

5

(Asstvar) 31bs

•

VAR)
. 9oz.

Dor1tos ••••••••••••••••
VAN
S
RK &amp; BEANS

,,4/$1

$ 69

1

'
2/$
..
•
9
P111a ••••••••••••••••••
FOLGERS
FLAVORITE
COFFEE
CANOLA OIL
TOMBSTONE FROZEN

ELY'S
VEGETABLES
{ASSTVAR)

. 0,99

LIMIT 8 PLEASE WI$ t 0 ADD PURCH.
ADD. PUGH 3/$1

4

LIMIT 2 PLEASE ADO. PURCH. $1.19
(

'

6

0~,4'M~~o'

ROAST, COLUMBIAL

'

STOKELY'S
TOMATO
JUICE
460Z.

BUSH'S BESt
CHILl HOT OR
LT. RED KIDNEY
BEANS
l-1_s_oz_·-.......;;;:...~

Win A
BANKROLL

This Week
Powell's Super
Value

$400
Free

.

"''~

. .. ....... ' ........:.

~

'' T '"

Thursday

Weather

Sports

October 21, 1999

Lqcal football previews, Page 4
Southern school events, Page 7
Why he hates weddings, Page 12

Today: Sunny
High: 60s; Low: 30s
Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 60; Low: 4~s

Rockies hire Buddy
Bell as new manager

-PageS

Strickland to keynote
local Democrat dinner
U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, DLucasville, will be the keynote speaker at Saturday's Kennedy Day Dinner,
hosted by the Meigs County Democratic Party.
The dinner will be held at !he
Meigs County Multipurpose Senior
Center in Pomeroy. A social hour will
begin at 5 p.m., with dinner to follow
at 6, according to Party Chairman
Sue Maison.
"We're always pleased 10 have
Congressman Strickland at our
events. and to have him as our
keynote speaker is especially exciting," Maison said.
"Ted has a way of relating important issues to how they affect the
average citizen. He really cares about
Meigs County, and I know that he
will really energize our party. Next
year is an importan1 year for the
Democrats, and for the county and.
country in general, and having Ted on
our ticket is always an honor."
Strickland, a psychologist and
former minister with the United
Methodi st Church; was first elected
tqCongress in 1992. ln 1994, uas
narrowly defeated by GallipoliS'til!'sinessman Frank Cremeans, and in
1996, became one of only two Democratic former members !o reclaim

1967, received his Master of Divinity. Professionally, he has served as a
minister, a psychologist, and a college professor. He was a director of
a Methodist children's home, an
assistant professor of psychology at
Shawnee Stale University, and a consulting psychologist at the Southern
Ohio Correctional Facility.
During the I03rd Congress, he
served on the House Education and
Labor Committee and the House
Small Business Committee. He was,
and is now, involved in reforming the
nation's health care system. Among
the many education laws he has
helped to author are the National Service Act and 'the Reauthorization of
the Elementary and Secondary Edu"
cation Act.

Rep. Strickland

He currently serves as a member
of the House Commerce Committee.
their seats.
Strickland has never lost an elecThe son of a steelworker, and one tion in Meigs County, and in 1998,
of nine children, he spent hi s child- carried the county with almost 60
hood active in chur'ch and school life. percent of the vote.
After graduating from Northwest
The county's elected Democrats
High School in Lucasville, he attend- have also been invited to attend the
ed Asbury College in Kentucky, dinner and to speak, Maison said.
Tickets to the annual event are
receiving a B.A. degree in history in
$10,
and can be purchased at the door
1963. He went on to attend the
Asbury·Theological Seminary, and in on Saturday night.

Filing deadline for candidates in
2000 primary earlier than usual
Those interested in running for derk of courts, reco((ler, prosecuting .. picked up petitions of nomination for
county-wide office i·n next year's gen- attorney, sherjff. engincer"and coro- the March primary, since that office
eral ele&lt;;tion should be aware that the ner: Two county commissioners will involves a .liQgerprinting process and
filing deadline - and the primary also be elected, as will the judge of other more specific requirements of
election - will be earlier than usu- the Court of Common Pleas and the eligibility. However, no candidates
have filed for any offices to be filled
County Court judge . .
al.
Candidates for all offices, with the next year.
Because it is a presidential elecJn.addition to local offices, voters
tion year, and because Ohio plays an exception of County Court judge.
will
elect a ·representative to Conimportant role in the Presiden!ial pri- must file petititions by Jan. 7 in order
gress,
slate representative, and the
mary process, the primary election to appear on the primary ballot,
U.S.
Senate.
will be held on March 7, rather than according to Rita Smith, director of
The filing deadline for issues for
the Meigs County Board of Elections.
in May, as it usually is.
the
primary is Dec. 23.
Smith said that several potential
Nex! year's general election will
include races for county treasurer, candidates for sheriff have already

Merger of OBES, Human Services
goes to Taft's desk for signature
By JOHN McCARTHY
Associated Press WrHer
COLUMBUS - A Democrat
who opposes the merger of the Ohio
Department of Human Services and
the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services &lt;;nvisions a state agency where
the emphasis is on training the hardto-employ for the workplace.
The merger,4pproved Wednesday
by the Senate and sent to Gov. Bob
Taft, will end up focusing on the
200,000people· expected to remain
on welfare next July, when .the merg. er goes into effect, and not do enough
for employed Ohioans who want better skills, said Sen. Linda Furney of
Toledo.
"We are creating a social service
system. We are not creating a workforce development system," Furney
said before the 23-10 vote that creates
the '()hio Depa(lment of Job and
Family Services.
The Senate vote followed two
hours of debate in which minority

Good Afternoon

Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections • 12 Pages

8
8-10
11
2
3

Calendar
C!asSilieds
· Comics
Editorials

Local

Sports
• •

4&amp;5

Lotteries

·wu.u

Pick 3: 5-0-0; Pick 4: 1-7-0-3
Super Lotto: 17-22-25-29-37-39
Klcker: 9-9-1-1·1-3

ll'.l'4.
DaUy 3: 3-B-6; Dally 4: 3-~-7-6
·

..

·s '

o.

Democrats complained about both
the merger and the process that created it.
Furney said the special HouseSenate committee thai oversaw hearings on the bill did not have enough
time to give it a thorough review. The
committee .received the bills and
sent them to the House floor within
two weeks.
" I hope this is not a process of the
future. It may be innovative, but if we
think !his serves democracy we are
mistaken," Furney said.
Sponsoring Sen. Robert Gardner
responded that the idea had been
studied for at least a decade, and
although i! may take time, the merger will save the state money. He
added that a streamlined agency will
help job seekers and welfare recipients when the st~te needs it most. .
"Clarifying roles and responsibilities makes sense now, but it will
becotne vital when the economy
slips," said Gardner, a Madison ·
Republican.
'
The merger, which will be completed by July, also was created to
respond to new federal welfare rules
that take effect at .the same time to
better deal with new limits on welfare
recipients.
In 9hio, most recipients are limited to three years of benefits in a
five-year period and must work at
least 20 hours a week to qualify.
Taft said the agency's creation is
just the beginning.

"It will take awhile to integrate
!he two departments, but long-term
there will be very significant savings," Taft said.
The Senate also agreed !o House
changes in a bill that adjusts dozens
of sections of Ohio law dealing with
sentences for criminals. The changes,
which now go to Taft, were recommended by the Ohio Criminal Sentencing Commission, a panel of
judges and law enforcement officials.
The Senate passed bills that would
transfer the duties under the Crime
Victims Reparations Law from the
Ohio Court of Claims to the attorney
general and allow parents to invest in
a college tuition savings account
that pays a higher yield than !he current fund, but at a greater risk.
Meanwhile, the House on
Wednesday approved legislation that
would include natural gas companies
among businesses subject to regulatory review when involved in a hos tile takeover bid for a competitor.
The House also passed bills:
• Requiring a mandatory prison
term of at least one year for assault
if the victim is a law enforcement
officer and is seriously injured.
• Creating new penalties for natural gas or public telecommunications ·companies that participate in
"slamming," or switching consumer.;
from one .company to another without theit permission .
• Permitting certified acupuncturists to practice acupunc!Ure in Ohio

local AHA treasurer; Cathy Erwin, Middleport
Church of Christ team captain; and Marie Snyder, Steve Lane, Linda Bates and Kathy Wilfong
from the Middleport Church of Christ.

Middleport church leads
in Heart Walk fund-raising
Final figures are in for the seventh
annual Meigs County Heart Walk
held Sept. 28 and sponsored by
Farmers Bank, Holzer Meigs Clinic,
Home National Bank, City National
Bank. Rose's Excavating, Tye
Brinager &amp; Sons, The Peoples Bank
and Elks Lodge 107.
A !o(!ll of I09 walkers on 36 teams
participated raising a grand total of
$12,426, making this the most successful walk surpassing last year's
to!al of $1 1,275.
Top honors went to the Middleport
Church of Christ with its 24-member
team ,· which raised a total of
$1 ,9 17 .50. Second place was the seven-member team of Trinity Church,
which collected $884, followed
closely by the third-place team of
Carleton School, which raised $863.
The Middleport Church of Christ will
receive the traveling plaque to keep
for a year and challenge teams for the
2000 event.
Top overall collector was Don
Erwin of the Middleport Church of
Christ, who rai sed $420. All walkers
will receive T-shirts , travel kits. cooler chairs, vests and all -weather jackets dependin g on the amounts col·
lec ted.

"We are thrill ed with the eve nt,"
cnmmen!ed Scott Dillon, spon sor
chairman of the event. "We owe a
tremendous thanks to all the volunteers. walker&lt; and donors who helped
make this event such a success. This
year was.espccially exciting with the
continuation of the red caps for all
survi.vors of heart disease. lt was nice
to visibly recognize some of the people these funds have helped. In addition, we !hank Kroger, who prepared
dinner for all ·the walkers."
The event was held in memory of
Bob Hoeflich, a long-time volunteer
of the American Heart Associati on.
Charlene Hoeflich was in attendance
to cut the ribbon to begin the walk.
Dillon explained that the committee is following up with some teams
that were unable to walk on event day
to make arrangements for picking up
their materials and ordering prizes.
People with questions or packets to
turn in can reach him at 992-216 1 or
turn in their packets to Joan Wolfe at
Peoples Bank in Pomeroy.
"We hope walkers will keep up the
·regular exercise routine and invite
everyone 10 join us next year," said
Dillon.
Teams participating included

American Electric Power, Andcr•· son's
Furniture ,
Carleton
School/Meigs Industries, Carmel Sutton Church, Court Stree t Grill,
Crow and Crow Law Ofllcc, Craw's
Steak House, The Daily Senti nel ,
Dottie Turner Realty, Pomeroy
Eag les Auxiliary 2171 . the Eason
family, Eastern High School. Epi scopal Church. Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co., Meigs High School
FCCLA. Health Recovery Services.
Hol&gt;.cr Meigs Clinic. Home National Bank, Kroger, Meigs County Bikers Assoc iati on. Meigs County
Health Department , Meigs High
Sc hool Key Club, Meigs Senior Citizens Center, Middleport Church of
Christ, OSU Cooperative Ex tension
Office, Peoples Bank, Pleasant Valley Hospital. Rose's Excavating.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church, St.
Paul's Lutheran Sunday School.
Southern High School Staff. Trinity
Church, United States Postal Service
of Pomeroy, Veterans Memori al Hospital, Wendy's, and the Wolfe famil y.
For more information about the
American Heart Association or for a
free brochure. "Walking For A
Healthy Heart," contact the AHA at
I-800-282-0291.

Candidates withdraw from races
Two candidates for local office have withdrawn their candidacies in next
month's general election.
..
.
According to Rita Smith, director of th~ Mergs County Bo~. of Elections, Janice Zwilling, the incumbent ca~d1date for Syracuse V1lla~e. clerk,
and Brian Bailey, a candidate for township·trustee tn Ohve Townshtp. have
withdrawn their names from their ra~es .
According to Smith. their names will appear on the ballots, but votes cast
in their favor will not be counted.
.
.
Sharon Cotterill is the only other .candidate for Syracuse V1llag~ cle_rk,
while Inez Bori~g and Randy Boston will appear as trustee candidates 10 Ohve
Township.

I

-

•~ '

TOP WALKERS- The Middleport Church of
Christ's team placed first In the Meigs County
American Heart Walk on Sept. 28 by raising
$1,917.50 for the annual event, which garnered
for a total of $12,426. From left are Joan Wolle,

--

~~-·~

MEMBERS HO~ORED- These members of
the Meigs County Farm Bureau werel)onored
for tflelr memberihlp et Tuuclly night's ennu·
al mHt!ng of the organization. They are, from

-· .. ··------·

. ..:...

left, Loli and Dick Sterretl, new Meigs county
members, Doris and Ban ,Ewlng, and Hannah,
Steven and Chuck Yost, all 25-year members.

.. .
I~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="431">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9867">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="26757">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="26756">
              <text>October 20, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3104">
      <name>bolinger</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1366">
      <name>bradford</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="240">
      <name>chapman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="129">
      <name>romine</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
