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Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'Ally McBeal,' 'Practice' producer raises Emmy bar with double win
By DAVID GERMAIN
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
verdict is in: "The Practice" ·and
··Ally McBeal."' two shows about
the counroom and bedroom antics
of lawyers. were judged television's
best series at the 51st annual Emmy
Awards.
·
.
The evening was a vinual lovefest for David -E. Kelley. who c(eated both series and writes many

episodes. In an unprecedented ending. Kelley closed the awards Sunday with bac_k-to-back acceptance
speeches, first for "The Practice ··

•

a~

best drama. then for "All y McBeal "
for,qcst comedy.
'
No producer had e\·er won both
comedy and drama Emmy~ the same

year.
Earlier in rhc evemng. Mi chael

Bada\ucco and Holland Taylor.
'· Practio..·e" regulars who won
awards for best support ing actor and
actres~ m a drama. sang ht~ prmse~.

while Kell ey reiUrned the ktnd
words to his casts and crew.
" If someone was going l9 ask me
the fa stest or hest way tn w1n an
Emmy. I'd say \\ rite !&gt;Cflpt and .get
Ca lista Flol.'khart to ~ay the \\Ords."

a

Kelley said of his "Al ly Mdlca\"
star.

Kelley ha~ a trm.:l record to back
up the asscnion : He was executive
producer of "L.A. Lav. .. and creator
of " P1 ckc.t Fences:· past wmne'rs of
the drama series Emmv.
·
Flockhart was nominatcct for best
actress in a comedy but lost to Helen
fjunt, who took home her fourth
"ratght award for :· Mad· About
You.".' which fi nishe'(i tts seve n-year
ru n last season. She matc hed a
rcmrd held by John Larroquette,

that show and so dtfferenl than the
storytelling we'd seen before."
Court."
"The Sopranos" earned 16 nom i· By 111e A"'" , 1 , , _
John Lithgow won best actor in a nations, the most of any contender,
Witmen at' Sunday ftiahl's Slst
comedy for "3rd Rock From the but walked away wtth ju&gt;t four
Pri
.•---..
Sun." Edie Falco won best actress in awards. In addition to Falco's, the An~ =~-r::i~'::•
•
a drama for "The Sopranos" and others were for best drama series
Dennts Franz won hts founh award writing and two in technical cate- AB~~ Series: "Ally McBeal,"
for best actor in a drama for " NYPD gories.
Fo
Blue."
Whe.n Kelley accepted the award
~iniseries: "Hontio Homblowhe even joked that
''I really don't know why I have for best comedv.
. r
er," A&amp;E.
.·
won this. As far as I can tell every he thoug ht hIS prcvtous pnze oor
Made-for-TV Movie: " A LessOn
actor in this town thinks what I do best 'drama might be handed to the B • "'" -, HBO
· ••~ v,;ng,
•, · '
on '3rd · Rock·- is completely dis-· HBO series instead.
Variety. Musie or Comedy $,!'&amp;'
graceful. " Ltthgow joked. ''I'm
"They said backstage. 'You ·got cial: "!998 Tony Aw~ ,'' CBS.
cmbarrass~d myscl[ ··
.
to go back out. you got lo go bad
Variety, Music or Comedy Series:
franz bOat former co-star Jimmy out."' Kelle y satd. "And I thought nL
Sh
• b ..... 'd •'The
ate
Ow Wil .,,.v, ...,;!lerSmi ts. whose character Bobby there · had been a mtst ake.
..
man,'' CBS.
Simone died in a tearful farewell Sopranos had won drama ·
Actor, Drama 'Series: Dennis
. when Smits departed the show after
Both Holland and Badalucco Franz, " NYPD Blue,'' ABC.
·
five seasons
gushed about Kelly in accepting
Actress, Drama Series: Eilie
The award ..:amc- as a surpn sc. their awards lor supporting actress Falco, "The Sopranos.'' HaO,
because he'd ~x.pec ted co-star Smits and actor.
Actor, Comedy Series:·John Lim·
to wm. sa id Franz. who plays the
"The words of David Kellc j arc gow. ''3rd Rock From ~ Sun,"
:m inspirati on to me:· said Badalu ~..-BC
·
~urly but lovable Uc tcctJvc AnU :B I . N
.
.
.
I
J
Sipowi ~l.
co. who pia\\ _awyer tmmy cr uti
ActresS. Comedy Seri~S!" aelep
Thanking
her
family in "The Practi ce... "Thank you. Hunt. "Mad A.boul You;'' ·N!Jb, '
watching ba,·k on Long Island . David. for Jimm) and for being such
Actor. Miniseries or,Mnvi.~~&lt;: SWI·
Falco flashed her jewelry so her rei- a nice guy.
ley Tucci, " Wtni:b&lt;ill," HBO: ; "
Jtivcs could "see all this Stul f. All
Tay lor. who plays a sex-obsc·sscd
Actress. Miniseries of --a Movie:
this gli ttery stuff," she said .
j udge on "The Practtce." thank ed ,. Helen MiiTiln , "lltc PusiQn Qf)\yn
"This is absol utely the most sur: Kelley ·' for gtving me the chariot to Rand ," Showtime.
..,
rea l experience I 1.:ould ever eve n rid~ up here on: A woman who puis
. Supportinll. Actor In a Cort\Cdy
have imagmed." said Falco. who a flag on the moon for women over Series: David Hyde Pierce,. "Frasi·
40. who can thin)( , who can work. er." NBC.
won for her role as a mob w1 fe ".I
· ·
don't eve n know whc.rc I am. and I w ho are successes, who can coo k·.
·
haven't eaten sm..:c SIX thi s morn~ and who can . :ook ~ ..
Series:
Kri
sten
Johnston
of'
''3rd
Rock
1ng
named bes t supAfter the show, Kelley said he From the S ..
had. thought HBO 's critic ally and porttng a tre · in a comedy and
popularly acc\a jmed mob series Davtd Hy
ierce won the supportmi ght walk away with the award for mg actor's honor for "Fras1ei.''
best drama.
·
Pierce and Je nna Elfman of
· ·· 1 really fe lt it was 'The Sopra- "DharnHi &amp; Greg" hosted the show
FOUR IN A ROW ·Actress Helen Hunt was honored with a fourth
nos' year.... Kelley said. '" Th ere aired by Fox. which came in at just
Emmy In as many years, for her work on 'Mad About You.''
seemed to be so much heat around under three hours.
who had won four years in a row as

Social Security Column
BY ~D PETERSON
Manager, Athens Social Security office
Question:· I' m 56 years old and will retire in two years. I' ve ·
earned about. the nat ional average inc_omc during all of my working
life and don't plan to work aft er ag e 5~. How will' yo u calculate my
Soc1al Securtty benefit at age 62 '!
·
Answer: We use your hi ghest 35 years of earnin gs to compute the
benefit you would recci,vc at full ret irement-age 65 -for people born .
in \937 or earh er. Years in which you have low earn in gs or no e arn -.
ings may be counted tj('bring the total years of earnings .up to 35.
Next, yo ur monthl y btneftt is reduced by- five-ninths of one percent
for each month you are retired before age 65 up to a maximum of 20
percent fo r people'who retire the month they reach 62 and were bOrn
in 1937 or earlier
Question: I'm th1nking about retiring next year. When is the best
lime to apply fo r Soc tal Sec urity benefits'!
"
Answer: lf you'' rc- thinking about reti rm g -ncxl y~ar, now' s the
t1mc lo contac t Social Security. We can review your ret iremen't plans
and help you determine how you can recei ve the most from Soc ial
Se(.; urity. In so~ he choice of retirement month could mean
additiOnal benefits tor-,.rlu and your family. Tt)e ~.:a mputat io n vari'es
based on your earnings for the year and the month in which you fil e.
For additiorial informati on or' to make an appointment to discuss
your [C tirc mcnt plans. call Social Secunty's toll ~ free number. 1 ~
. 800772 - 12 13. any husmcv·. day hc twccn 7 a.m. and 7 p. m
Question: I have ·rental prope rt y at the beach. Will the income
·
affe ct my Soc ial Sccunt) beriefi_ts · ~
. Answer: In vest ment ntcumc. 1ncl uJm g re ntal propCn y. will not
utlcct your carnmgs. If yo u're under age 70. Social Security co ns!dc.rS only your earnin gs from a job. ·Or your net profit 1f you're sel fcmpi{Jyed. in co mputing a benefit reduction .

New accounl!' available for direct deposit ·
Now you t:Un receive your Sonal Secufity or Supplemental Secu. rity Income (SSI) benefit by usi ng an Elec tronic Transfer Account
(ETA). As k how to sign up for thi s special account at your hank , savings and lmm or credil um on An ETA is a l ow~'cos t account des1gncd
to help you receive your Social Sec urity. SSI or other fede ral payments electronically.
An ETA is a s1rnple. safe way to receive yo ur benefit.
How docs an ETA work'' The maximum mon thly fee you may
have lo pay for an ETA is $3.00: You'll ge t a minimum of fo ur free
withdrawals every mon'th When you s1gn up, your bilnk.' saving s and
loan or credit union will tell you how to ge t your money. If you usc
an automated teller machine al ce rtain locati ons. there may be an
extra cost.

,

Emmy winners

best supponing actor for "Night

•

So far six of \he largest financial institutt ons have agreed 10 provide ETAs. They are.
Banco Popular de Puerto Rtco &amp; N.A. , Bank uf Amenca. Brttton·
&amp; Koontz First National Bank, Chase Manhauan Bank. Wasliington
State Bank. and Wells Fargo &amp; Company
The Department of the Treasury .is workmg with other financial ·
insututions that pl an to offer ETAs later this year.
The ETAI program is another way you can get your Social Security or SSI benefit. Of,course, you can still deposit y'our beneftl to an
account yo~ already have at your bank, &gt;avtn gs or loan or credit
uni on, or you ·can continue to receive your check in the mail. The
~ h oicc is yourS.
·

Bank deposit proves undoing for criminal

....

Monday, September 13, 1999

Tuesday
Wea th er

SajiCWflbei1C, 1111111

Cincinnati reels in the Marlins 7-4, Page 5
Dealing with jailed parents, Page 10
.Time Out for Tips, Page 10

Today: Partly Su,ny
111gh: 708; Low: 50s

-T:omorrow:
P, Sunny
tllgh: 708; Low: 508

•

a1
Meigs County's
Vo lu me

so. Numbe r

Sncllsville. Ga.,Jane and Tony Rufo ly.
Mr. and Mrs. Anhur Lowery of
and so n of Roam spent the weekend
here with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cannonsburg. Pa-. were recent guests
Robert Bait, who celebrated their of his brother and sister-in -law.
·George and 'Betty. Lowery over the
30th wedding anniversary.
·
Ray Alkire df Columbus spent weekend.
Mrs. Golda Han of McAnhur ce\·several days her.e with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. ·Bob Alkire recently.
ebrale4.J!er 80th binhday at the home
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jefferson vis- · of her d~hter, Mr. and M,rs. Allen
itcd Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mahr recent- Bishop. Attending the party were Mr.

.Commission~rs,
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newe Staff
'·
Plans by the Meigs County Commissioners to
, include. township paving projects in the county's Issue
Two funding applicalion met witlt some objections on
the part of County Engineer Robert Eason and members of his staff, when the commissioners mel in regular session on Monday afternoon.
Highway Superintendent Manning Roush said yesterday that township roads are in no condition al !his·
lime for a hot mix paving program, noting that roads
require years of preparation before they are ready for
the application of expensive paving.
The commissioners met last week with 38 township trustees to discuss possible projects lo include in
the application. Commissioner Janel Howard said last
month that the commissioners would like to include
1\)wnship projects in the application so ·thai townships, which are generally hard-pressed financially,
·_can receiye funding, and the county can 'receive more
eligibility points in tlie application process:

engineer discuss Issue Two proposal

In other business, Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer
Howard said that five townships were drawn from match for the trustees who apply for funds through
a hat: Bedford, Salisbury, Sulton. Orange and Chesler. the county's share of Community Development Block met with the commissioners to request the establishThose townships will have the first opportunity to Grant formula funds, but said that the commissioners ment of a line item in . hi s budget for extra help.
include paving projects in this year's application.
do not plan to provide the highway departmeQt with Spencer said that an extra employee will be retained
for a one-week period lo cover the ·auto title office
· Rous.h said thallhe process of preparing a road fbr any county funds for a local match. ·
"This will not take from the county, but will add to during a period of employee training .
hot mix is a preparation process takes years, lleginSpencer also requested approval of a 28-cent per
ning ·with a chip and seal program, as well as ditch what we are likely to get," Thornton said, while
work to divert water from the roadways once they're Eason recom-mended that the commissioners, if they mile mileage rate for employees attending the training
paved.
·
are interested in assisting · th~ townships, provide sessions. · Spencer said that the rate is equal .10 the
In fact, Roush said, some county roads are still financial assistance in chip and seal projects and other state mileage rate.
The commissioners approved the requ·est and pay·
being prepared for hoi mix, and have been in that preparation work which is not eligible under the Issue
ment from Spencer's budget.
process for a number of year$, including Apple Two program.
The commissioners approved a resolution request Eason said that his department works closely with
Grove/Dorcas Road.
ing
from Governor Bob Taft the designation of the
Roush said that the maintenance costs for ho.l mix the trustees, and othef political subdivisions, provid- ·
roads is higher· than for olher roads, and thai many ing in-kind assistance whenever possible, and Roush county as a poverty region, allowing the count y to
townships are not able to afford the cost of maintain- noted that he had spent some three months in the last join in a regional coalition applying for funds through
ing the roads once they are paved.
year working almost exclusively on township pro- the Workforce Investment Act.
· The commissioners also approved the payment of
Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton said he felt that jects·.
Last year, the county received $220,000 in Issue bills in the amount of $263,548.43.
the commissioners should make every attempt . to
Present, in addition to Howard and Thornton, was .
. assisl the trustees in any way possible, and said that Two fundifltl' which was .used for road and bridge
the commissioners plan to provide the required local · improvements on county roads and bridges.
Commissioner Mick Davenp6rt.

Middleport·establishes records commission

and Mrs. Francis Cartwright of
Zanesville: Gerald Lee Hart of
McArthur. Dale ..Hart of Kingston,
Vernon Jiart. Jr. and a friend, Erin of
Chillicothe. Mi. and Mrs. Kenton
Davis and son. Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Kenned y. Clinton, Courtney and
Kri stine. Carson Mtdkiff. Pomeroy;
Rebecca ·L. Hart of Columbus. and
Tim Bishop and a friend , Sue._

Hearl. ,.

offered at
J.U&gt;unu-y Expo this weekend Ill Meigs County Fairgrounds.
Monster truck rides will be given Saturday, 10-6 p.m. and Sunday, 1
p.m. sponsored by Norris-Nonhup Dodge, Home National Bani~, Baum
Lumber, Taz' M'IJ'athon, Superior Auto Body, Don Wood Polaris and
J.Towing.Taxider'mist Terry Brown Is organizing a wildlife display~~~~~~
ing of fish, bird and animal mounts. Viewers will have lbe.£lpportunity, t
on·a rec;~ple's Otoice award for the best wildlife mount A plaque will .t••...:... t
of(ered to the person displaying the best C!JIIection of at 1-t three mounts.
Area sportsmen .are invited to display Uteir oollections at Ute Expo
set-up starling Friday, 4-7 p.m. in the Grange Building oh ·the fairgrounds.
The mounts will be on display throughout the weekend until 5 p.m. Sunday
when the winning displays will be announced. ·
The Expo begins Saturday at 10 a.m. and oonlinues thro~gh Sunday at 5

.

·

Others attending were Rose Ann
Jenkins and Marie Houdashe\1.
. Garden Club electS new officers
New offi cers were elected when
the Winding Trail Garden Club mel
recently at the home nf Karen Werry
foll owi ng a picnic .

Regional Briefs

Elected were Gladys Cumin gs.
president : Mel va Tracy. vice president: VaLerie Nottingham. secretary
and publicity ; and Kay Frcdenck.

car

treasurer.
The group voted to im:reast.: dues

MARIETrA (AP)- Marieua police responding to a report of a hit·
and-run accident found a murder victim instead.
Shirley Nameth, 60, of Marietta, was found dead in her car Monday
night from bciing shot several times at c!ose range, police said.
Her estranged husband, John Finley -Nameth, 64, of Logan, W.Va., was
being sought for questioning.
·
·

to $10 a year and plans were di scussed fur a booth at EXPO thi's
weekend.
Cumings co nducted the mee ting
with members answenng roll call
with a report on ribbons won at the
Meigs County Fair. The c\uh prayer
was give n for devotions and Dchhie
Mohler read garden tips for the end
of summ er.
Ne.t meeting w.ill ·he held nn
Sept. 28 ut 8 p.m. at the home of
Adda\ou Lewis. Anyone inle n~s led in
becoming a member or getting -information about the club activities may
contact Valerie Nottingham ·at 9853383.
.
lmm11nization clinic to be .held in
Racine
The Ohio Uni versity College of
Osteopathic Medicine Childhood
Immunization Program (CHIP), a
mobil e health program, wi II wovtde
free immuntzations for all area chil dren from binh through 18 ye ars of
age on Friday, SepL24, from 3 to 5
p.m. at the Pizza Express at the old
Volunteer Fire Depanmcnt location
in Rac ine.
In additiOn to providmg the
required immuntzations. the Childhood I111munization Program , along
with the Ohio Department of Heath
1s offering the Hepatitis 8 vacc mc
free ot charge to all children through ·
age 18 . The Hepatitis B vacc ine is a
three shot series over a minimum of·
si• mont~s . A ch ild 's previous shot

By The Associated Press
CLEVELAND (AP) - Bank ofllcials became suspicious whe n a man
walked into a Firstar Bank bra nch ttl dcpost t $300.000 - and liSted htmself
as un ctnplo.yed.
Jes us T. Rod riguez. 34. arrived at the Strongsville branch on Aug . 18 and record~ arc to he brought when c orn~
asked lo depos it two groce ry hags rull of money. He showed a drive r's mg to g~t 1mmun17.ali ons.
license w1t h a San Diego addret;s, hut said he was li ving in Strnn g:-.'o' ill c. a
The clinics provldcd by the Ohio
Cleve land suburb.
Unive rsity College of Os teopathic
On a cUrrenc y tr~:m sac t ion tcpor1. whic h the IRS requires .for lransactiOnr-. 'Medicine Chi ldhood lmmu nil&lt;llion
of more \han $ 10.000, Rodriguez lis ted him sel f as unemployed .
Program 's comm un ity mobife health
"This should really be on 'A merica's Dumhcst Cn m1na ls ,. ;." Said hank untt (C HIP) AHEC and the Ohio
'manager Ji m. Nes bit. ·'Did' he (cally think we' re not go in g to ca ll anybody Dcpartmc'nt of H ca l~h in coopcnli !Dn
and say there's some thing suspicious abo ut thi s'''
with the . Meigs Cou nty· Health
When Rodrigue/ shoWed up last month to wit hdraw the money. police
Department.
fo ll owed hun holnc and arrested htm . Rodriguez sai d the money. including
$156.000 in ves tigators found 1n hi s apartme nt. was from the sale of22 kil o- HARRISONVILLE NEWS
grams of cocaine. poli ce s~id.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Gihson and
f-!c was indicted Tuesday on cl1argcs ol mone y la underin g:· and consp ira- sons of Cqlumhu~ spen t Ihe weekend
cy to d!strihu tc ,cocai nc. Rodriguez's attorney dec lined to commqnt
\'-'ilh Virginia G1hson.
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Johnston of

Boy, 2, crushed between two cars
WESTLAKE (AP) - A 2-year-&lt;tld boy was killed after a parked car
slipped into gear and pinned him against another vehicle, police said.
Blake Bolchick of Lakewood was between a car owned by his mother,
Dorothy Botchick, and a station wagon when the station wagon slipped into
gear and pinned him against his mother's car, crushing him.
Dorothy Botchick was sitting in the back seat of the sLiition wagon when
the .accident happened Monday in a parking lot outside a shoppinl' center in
this Oeveland suburb.
• The 'station wagon was owned by a friend of Dorothy Botchick, police

~'

••

••

1re

ear1n

Westlake police Capt. Guy Turner said it was unclear how th~ vehicle
slipped into gear and rolled toward the,other car. He said police did not know
if anyone was sitting in the driver's sear of the station wagon.
Police wen: still investigating the accident late Monday.
•

•

our
For Painless Job ~pportunities;.See The C~assifieds ·

The Daily Sentinel
Jr::!.

.

.

· Phone: 992-2155

\
/
I

By BRIAN J. REED
serving as a member of the community, and all
Santlnal Newe Stan
members of council, were appointed to the
A records commission, established to review, records commission and will be charged with
maintain and dispose of village records, was reviewing the records and determining which can
established when Middlepon Village Council met be destroyed.
in regular session on Monday evening.
·
lannerelli said that Ohio law allows for the
Mayor Sandy lannarelli discussed the need for ·destruction of most financial records two years
. the commission, saying that village financial ' after they have been audited by the ,state, while
records and other documents are piling up in vii- others must be maintained for six years, and still
\age hall offices and~ storage room .
others must be kept forever. .
Linda Broderick, clerk in the water depart·
Employees in each depanmenl will be charged
ment, showed i:ouncil members a bag filled with ' with the responsibility of reviewing -records for
deposit slips, water bill receipts and other docu- the commission; which will then determine what
ments from the mid-1980's -which have been · is to ·be done with them.
invaded aild destroyed by insects, and said that
In other business, council discussed the possit)lany records have been damaged by the passage bility of purchasing a new truck for village street
of time. ·
crews. Village superintendent Brent Manley, and
lannarelli, Oerk Bryan Swann, Don Stivers, street superintendent Kenny Madden were asked

'

investigate the COS!' of purchasing a one-ton
truck for use in pulling the village 's jeuer, which
is used to clean sewer lines, and the new leaf
sweeper, which was purchased last year.
The village now has six trucks in use, but Man·
ley and Madden, and members of council, all
agreed that several of the trucks we_re beyond safe
IO

use and were in ·need of replacement.

'

Council membe~ . Beth Stivers said thai she
thought the village should consider the use of a
four wheel-drive truck,' and council also agreed
thai any truck to be purchased should be capable
of pushing a snow blade.
The truck will likely be purchased from !he
'
village refuse fund.
Lawrence Powell, who has visited council on
Continued In 'Middleport Council' on

·BEF shareholders down motion to change directors• election
l;)ob Evans Farms Inc.'s manage·
menl is reporting positive financial
grow\~! to its stock owners, but some
again voiced their dissatisfaction by
asking fellow shareholders to change
t~e way members of the board of
directors are elected .
And again, a motion to declassify
the board and have an annual election of all board members went down
to defeat when shareholders gathered.
Monday in Rio Grande for their year!y meeting with the board and me
company's leadership.
A D;!Otion by shareholder
Lawrence A. "-:olf of Wyoming, Ohio,
was introduced into the voling. as it was at last
year's shareholders' session by another stock
owner.
· Citing the depressed value of BEF stock, along
with other moves, such as the companY's selling
, off its Mrs. Giles Country Kitchens· and Hickory
Specialties lines, Wolf argued !hat the declassifi·
, cation would force more accountability from the
board and management.
.
"The board of directors works for the stock·
holders. That's wbat declassification does," he
said.
The board, · which declared the motion was
"not in the best interests of the company," noted in
its proxy statement issued to shareholders that the
present method of electing ~hrec directors to

three-year ierms at each shareholder
meeting allows stock owners an
opportunity to voice thefr feelings
about the board and the direction the
company has laken.
Wolf requested additional tlme for
shareholders to vote at the meeting,
but as announced in the proxy information, the polling ended 20 minutes
into the session. .
President and Chief Operating
·Officer
Stewart · K.
Owens
announced later thai the motion was
defeated by 57 percent of the vote.
But Owens acknowledged !he
concerns aired by Wo.lf and other
shareholders over the stock value and BEF's
financial performance when he outlined future
plans.
"On the subj~ct of our s_tock, 1''1' sure no 011e
here would be surprised to hear me say that I
believe it's undervalued," hesaid. "On the other
hand, we don't believe there are any magic bullets for achieving a higher valuation on a sustain·
able basis.
"Though some have no! realized il yet, we
have positioned Bob Evans for faster lrendline
growth in earnings per share over the years
ahead," Ow'ens added.
Noting II consecutive quarters of financial
gains, Owens and Chief Financial Officer Donald
J. Radkoski told shareholders that the firm's con-

centration on quality, service, new products in
!he food and ·restaurant divisions and a slackrepurchase program launched in the past year are
yielding positive results and in lime will make
the slack and return on investment more attractive.
"We believe that if we continue to execute our
successful growth strategies. stay focused on our
core operations and their earnings performance,
and combine that with a disciplined, ongoing
program of stock repurchases, our stock price
will take care of itself over time." Owens said.
BEF reported success with -its grilling sausage
and bratwurst offerings and has other food products it will introduce in the coming year, he
explained. A NASCAR promotion has been successful, Owens added, and the company expand·
ed its new restaurant openings ·to 26 this year,
compared to 20 during \998.
,
With sales of $968.5 million in fiscal 1999 a 9.2 percent increa5e over th, previou~ year - .
and a 23.5 percent rise in operating income ($91.9 million), Owens felt BEF demonstrated
"an excellent financial performance" in the face
of competi~ion from other family-style restaurant
and food chains:
. During the meeting, shareholders re -elected
three board directors, all from Columbus Daniel A. Fronk, Oteryl L. Krueger-Horn and G.
Robert Lucas. Fronk has seived on the board .
since t981 .and Lucas since 1986. Krueger-Horn
was first elected in 1993.
·

Government to warn citizens of Y2K failures overseas

By TED BRIDIS
Anoclatad Press Writer
.
WASHINGTON (AP)- In what promises to
Ohio Air Force trainee dies after forced m~t1rch 1 be the best road map yet for identifying global
problems caused by ·the Year 2000 technology
SAN ANTONIO (AP)- An Air Force trainee from Ohio died two days
glitch, the Stale Department is readying country·
after he collapsed from heat exhaustion during a six-mile march thai he was
by•cpuntry warnings for Americans living or
repcin~dly forced to make.
traveling
in 194 nations.
,
Airman Basic Micah Schindler, 18, of Cincinnati, died at 5;50 p.m. Sunwill
include
The
unprecedented
warnings
day from complications resulting from heat stroke, police confirmed .. He was
in the fifth week of a six-week basic training program at Lackland Air Force details (rom countries where visiting Americans
could be affected by power outages, water short•
Base, according to an Air Force statement
ages and other potentially serious problems if
Air Force officials
the march was part o[ basic training. The Air Force
computers
are unable to. recognize the four-digit
the circumstances surrounding
dale
2000
qn Jan I. The report was being
Schindler's death.
today.
.
released
A noneommissioned officer told the
Britain
said
it
also planned to publish today a
San Antonio Express-News on Saturday that Schindler couldn't keep up country.·by-country advisory to warn British cit·
with other trainees at the Medina izens about nations most at risk from the Year
1 Seetion • 10 Pages
2000 technology problem.
Annex. The man, whom the newspa·
The U.S. reports were compiled by its
per did not identify, said a training
emb.Ssies
worldwide. Experts have long com·
instructor had been scolding the
plained
about
the difficulties collecting adequate
recruit to keep pace.
information from foreign governments about
Shooting of lion klcs owner pos5ible computer failures . ·
·
XENIA(AP) - AnAfrican lioness
" Most of the information we're getting is
escaped from an exotic-animal farm
self-reported," said Robert Benneu. R-Uiah,
and roamed the area for at least four
chairman of the Senate's ·Year 2000 Committee.
hours before a sheriff's deputy shot
"If it turns out these self-reported statements are
and killed it.
.accurate, the folks won't feel much in the way 'of
The lion's owner, Frank Newsome,
Y2K."
said law enforcement officials were
Lotteries
The warnings also were expected lo suggest
barbarians for killing his pel, and he
how and where failures overseas may a·ffect U.S.
OHIO
is threatening lo sue.
interests in the interconnected global econoniy._
Authorities said they had no other
Pick 3: 0-5-9; Pick 4: 9-6·1·2
where problems with the export of Venezuelan
choice. The lion escaped from the
Buckeye 5: 1-14-18-23-34
crude, for example, might affect the price of
farm in nonheaslem Gt;eene County
w.yA.
gasoline for motorists here.
on Saturday night. Newsome said he
Dally 3: 7-7·1 : Daily 4:8-7-7-9
"Disruptions in _this infrastructure and the
arrived home and found !hat the ani· -relationships among suppliers and customers
6 1999 Ohkt Valley Publishing Co.•
mal was missing from a barn.
will negatively affect individuals, fir~s, indus-

Today's

our· eeve?

Single Copy· 35 Cents

8oard plans to lncJude trusttts ovtc Egon's obltcitJon

prayer. "TI1e Purpose" wa.o;; given in

untson.and Mary Lisle had a reading,
"Engaged in Life."' Jean Stout gave
the .secretary 's report It was noted
that 12 stc k calls were made. A. fee
wtll offering was taken. The September binhday of Fred Wilson was
· noted. Hope Moore·. president. had
the de vo tions readm g "Hos til e

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

6B

Society Scrapbook
UMW program explores differ·
ences
"The Difference Between Spiritu- ·
a\ and Material Things'.' was the program topic at the recent meeting of
the Syracus'eiJ Asbury United
Methodi st Women ile\d at the
,
church.
Freda Wilson .prese nted the program using scripture from Rev. 21 ,
and Ruth Croucli gave the closing

-Page4

tries, governments and national and regional
economies around the world," !he agency's
inspector general, Jacquelyn Williams- Bridgers,
told a Senate commitlee earlier this year.
The State Depanmenl previously has criti·
cized Y2K efforts in Russia and former Eastern
bloc countries, citing a "relatively high probability of ... failures." It a\sp has predicted prob·
!ems wiJh power giids in India and Poland. rail-.
roads in China and telephones and water sup·
plies in Italy.
The task of publicly identifying countries
where systems might fail was clearly a sensitive
one for the agency, which called the warnings
"carefully compiled ... in an objective, noncomparative and non-alarmist way."
The Bureau of Consular Affairs said comments abo.ut Y2K efforts will be added to each
nation's updated consular information sheetavailable on the Stale Depanmenl's Internet site
-and said details will be updated periodically
as countries improve.
" Our first priority is to provide information
to U.S. citizens to try to meet their needs," State
Department spokesman Phil Reeker said.
The Year 2000 problem may · occur because
some computer programs, especially older ones,
might fail wh~n the date changes to 2000.
Because the programs were written to recognize
only the last two digits of a year. such programs
could read the digits "()()"liS 1900.

YEA -R

~...{lllliJ

CRUNCH

·Experts say .the world's worst Year 2000 .fail·
ures will occur overseas. They are predicting
with increasing confidence there will be ·no
national failures in the United States among key
industries.
"Otina is a worry, Japan is a worry, Russia is
a worry, hal y is a worry .... But many of these
countries now are moving more aggressively
and calc_hing up,'' said Sen. Christopher Dodd,
.D:Conn·., vice chairman of the Senate Year 2000
Commiuee.
The Gartner Group Inc .• an analyst firm in
Stamfotd, Conn., last ·month identifie d RuSsia as
.the highest risk for Y2K failure s, followed by
India and a cluster of countries t)lat included
Venezuela, Norway, Japan. Taiwan and Finland.
" Except for what might be a small handfu l of
countdes. things like air-tra ffic control, airlines
and airports are doin g pretty well,·· said Lou
Marcoccio, a research dj rector at Gart ner. " I
don't think we're going 10 end up with a long list
of countries that are. extremely dan gerqus."
Earlier this summer, Cargill Inc .• a worldw ide
grain shipper, told South Africa il plans.to a~o,id
trading in the country between mtd-December
and mid-January . because of inadequate Y2K
preparations.
·
The British list will initially cover SO coun tries 'with more to be ad~ed in the next .few
weeks, the gov.ernment sa id .
·
When complete, ·there will be information
about 125 countries.
Countries · named as potential problem si tes
were China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Russia. and
Pqrtugal.
.
The Foreign Office reserved tts strongest
warning for Ukraine, advising against all holi day and nonessential travel between the New
Year period and early January.

.

. I

"".

'

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Commentary

Death Notices

Tullday, ,..,..., .... M, 11109

.

The Daily Sentinel Bush, Gore clash on school ·vo~chers;

•

•

By Monon t(onctracke

'£st!Wfi.slid in 1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-002-2156 • Fu: 002-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
CHARLES W. GOVEY

Publisher

,•
'
•
.•

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GeM1111 Manqer

DIANE HILL
Controller

'

n. Sentinel ••~t:otnM l.rfWrt to tiN Nit« from , . . , . on •llnMII,.,. of tGploa Short ,.,.,_ (300 lt'OftM CK ltiN} Mw ,_ Net t:lwJt» ol l»&gt;nff pc M '*'-

•,

,__MIIIoH....,H-.

&amp;r:h-.. .,.,.,.,..,..,_
t

Typod _ _
lltldl ..., •nd d.eyftme ,..,. nutniMr. Specify • ••• If thfft'• • ,.,., .,._ to • ,...
vloru.- MflcO rw ,.,.,., lle/1 to. Utt«w to,. lldltor, "'-Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
,..,_OK Ohio 451'11; «,FAX ro 7fD.te2.2157.

:· Perception of justice ·
, system starts at bench
'

• ' Who's keepmg order on the system that keeps order for the rest of us? The

•'•, state's top judge says it should be the judges themselves.

Recent ethical lapses by several judges have hurt the profession's image,
Chief Jushce Thomas Moyer says
•
Moyer, iu his annual appraisal of the state of the judiCiary, sa1d improv: , lng public trust must begm at the bench
He cited a poll that found 44 percent of those surveyed believed that
,
;. courts were out of touch w1th the1r commumt1es, 78 percent thought that
' ~lected JUdges were mfluenced by then fund-raiSIJlg, 81 percent believed
that politics affected court ruhngs; and 80 percent thought that the wealthy
•• get better treatment 1n court than the rest of the population.
,
The telephone poll, conducted Jan 13-Feb 15 by the Indiana Public
i .Opmion Laboratory, surveyed 1,200 randomly selected adults, plus extra
• ,Jllllling to get an accurate samphng of minonty groups The margin of error
' was plus or mmus 2 percentage pomts.
·
Moyer said recent polls also have found some good news that the pubhc
holds local courts on the same h1gh regarc(that 11 holds U.S Supreme Court
justices and state governors.
,
However, Moyer stressed that judges must be on their best behavior or
,
: risk losmg the public's trust He noted that from 1990 through 1995, seven
• judges were either sanctiOned by the Ohio Supreme Court or resigned w1th
: ·dtsciplinary actiOn. Smce 1995, the number has grown to 12 Other Judges
•, nave argued their differences through the med1a, he sa1d.
"The first step to improving confidence and trust m the judicial system is
, bringing order to our own house," Moyer said.
A few recent cases have made news·
• In the Cleveland suburb of Garfield Heights, both mumcipal JUdges
'' claimed the role of chief JUdge, prolnptmg the t.;eg,slature th1s year to
change the law to establish a rotallng system
• The Supreme Court's diSCiplinary review board last month recom. mende~ a public repnmand for a Delaware County municipal Judge who
chased down a couple m his car, then called them into h1s court to lecture
them about their drivmg
• The Supreme Court 10 Apn I repnmanded a Greene Counly common
pleas judge for advocating a wning change for property 10 which he had a
fmanc1al mterest.
' • In June, the Supreme Court suspended a Cuyahoga County JUVentle
eourt Judge for cntiCism of other judges that the h1gh court considered m
·violation of proper conduct
,
Moyer told his fellow judges that their fundamental purpose is to pre. serve order m the socml struclure.

"Each unethical act or d1spute aned needlessly in pubhc tarnishes not
only the Judge or JUdges mvolved but the entne JUdiCial system," Moyer
srud. "Pubhc confidence can be damaged m a heartbeat, but the impact on
the system can be far-reachmg. "
However, the pubhc may barely notice - or care - that a small per•' centage of the hundreds of Judges in OhiO are misbehaving, or that the perceptiOn exists that wealthy people get better treatment, sa1d Lawrence Baum,
,a professor of pohltcal science at Oh10 State University.
, "Probably everyone would agree that wealth d&lt;Jes bnng Its advantages,"
.Silld Baum, who has studied the judiCiary for 26 years "My strong guess
would~ that pepple would recogmze that's not so unusual."

· ·L etter to the editor
Community band members sought
'

It is t1me for the B1g Bend Commumty Band to begm its fall season, and

1would like to InVIte all residents of Meigs, Mason, and Galha counlles who
play an mstrument to become members 'of our band The first rehearsal for
)bi~ season will be Monday, Sept 27, at 7 p m. m the Me1gs High School
blind room, We meet for an hour every Monday evemng, except for the first
Monday of each month The director 1s Meigs High band director Toney
Dmgess.
I know there are people out there who played on their h1gh school bands
and would hke to be able to play m a band agam. Here's that chance. Get out
those instruments and come to rehearsal on Sept. 27. Large mstruments and
P.,rcussiQn equipment are available at the school Don't worry about bemg
out of practice. Rehearsals are easy-going and fnendly and you'll get back
In shape before you know 11.
'
Commu1111y Band members are a very diverse group There are h1gh
$chool students anti several reined men and women, and on between, adults
9f every age from all around the area. We even have a couple of players from
Athens who make the tr1p down each week In the past few years, the Community Band has performed all around the area. We have gtven concerts on
the lawn at the junior high in Mtddleport, on Court Streetm Pomeroy, at the
fashion show m Pomeroy, and at the Meigs County Expo at the fairgrounds.
We'll be looking for our veteran members to be at rehearsal on Sept. 27,
and we'll be ready to welcome ne\v playeis
Jaenne Bowen
Syracuse

Today in History
By The Aseoclated Preas
Today 1s Tuesday, Sept 14, the 257th day of 1999. There are 108 days left
in the year.
Today 's Highlight 10 History
: On Sept 14, 1814, Francis Scott Key wrote "The Star-Spangled Banner"
~fler witnessing the Bnllsh bombardment of Fprt McHem:y m Maryland
· On th1s date:
,
In '1847, U.S. forces under Gen Wmfield Scott took control of Mexico
C1ty
In 1901, Prestdent McKinley dted 10 Buffalo, N.Y., of gunshot wounds
mflicted by an assassin Vice Pres1de,nt Theodore Roosevelt succeeded him
. In 1927, modem dance piOneer Isadora Duncan d1ed 10 NICe, France,
then a scarf q~came entangled m a wheel of her sports car. .
• In I 940, Congress passed the Selective Service Act, prov1dmg for the
nations' first peacetime draft
: In 1948, a groundbreakmg ceremony took place m New York at the site
of the United Nations' world headquarters.
' In 1959, the Soviet space probe Luna 2 became the first manmade object
to'reach the moon.
. In I 975, Pope Paul VI declared Mother Elizabeth Ann Bayley Seton the
tirst 1U S -born samt
: In 1982, Pnncess Grace of Monaco, formerly actress Grace Kelly, d1ed at
aae 52 of 10jurie:; from a car crash a day earlier.
In 1982, Lebanon's pres1dent-elect, Bash1r Gemay,el, was killed by a
bomb.

Quick, who said this "Each year the national
government spends S15 bilhon on our public
schools. I beheve we must change the way we
mvest that money, to support what works and to
stop supporting what does not work" ?
If you identified it a5 coming from Texas Gov.
George W Bush's (R) b1g educahon speech last
week m Los Angeles, you couldn 'I be blamed.
Bush d1d say-- and got front-page play for it.
that "in my admimstratiOn, federal money Will no
longer flow to failure Pubhc funds must be spent
on thmgs that work."
But the test quote above comes from President
Clinton's 1999 State of the Union
address ·- serving to show that,
rhetorically and substantively,
there's been a dramatic convergence

of Republicans and Democrats
around the Ideas of standards, testmg and accountability on educatiOn
Or, as Vice President AI Gore put
11m h1s first big educahon speech oh
May 16, "Every state and every
school district should be required to
identify f~iling schools and work 10
tum them around And if (they)
don't1mprove qu1ckly, they should
be shut down fairly and fast and
reopened under a new pnnc1pal."
Bush and Ointon noted that in
the last five years, the number of
states pubhshing annual report cards
on local schools has gone from zero
to 36, and the number of states offer·
mg charter school altemallves has
gone from eight to 35
Accordmg to a Department of
Education analysis of Bush's
speech, almost every standards and
accountability proposal in it already
IS either in federal law or part of
Clinton's agenda
One exceptiOn 1s the transfer of
ProJect Head Start from the Department of Health and Human Services ,
to the Department of Education, but legislatiOn
has already been passed to beef up its emphasis
on readmg rather than day care
Not to worry, though There are enough differ·
ences between front-runners Bush and Gore to
offer voters a decent choice on educallon pohcy.
The differences anse from classic ideological differences over "choice," money and federal
power
,.Bush's mam new proposal was to g1ve out
vouchers to the parents of children in chrome
"failing" schools that they could use to pay for
tutonng, transfer to another public school or
tUition in a pnvate school
'
Gore proposed only that "parents should have
more choice in their children's public schools,
especially those whose children are stuck in lowPilfforming schools "
Bush's adoption of the narrow voucher plan

pushed through in Flonda by h1s brother, Gov. Jeb
Bush (R), represents a s1gmficant departure from
past GOP "choice" proposals to encourage largescale transfers out of public schools ,
.
At the same time, however, Gores refusal to
allow any public funds to be used for transfers to
pnvate schools renects Democrats'lock-step loyally to teachers unions that trumps thelf concern
for thousands of children condemned to ignoranee and poverty.
Meantime, if Republicans show s1gns of developmg a compassionate conservative approach to
choice, Democrats still have the edge on willing·
ness to pay for educallOnal improvem~nts.

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ecoHoM;c
News ...

Robert Lucian Dempsey, 72, South Third Ave , Middleport, dted Sunday,
Sept. 12, 1999, at Holzer Medical Center m Galhpohs.
A construction worker, he was born May 27, 1927, 1n Verdunville, WVa .
son of the late Elhott Dempsey and Viola Withams Dempsey Likens He
attended the Mud Fork Free Will Baptist Church m Verdunville and was a
member of 1he Rutland Free Will Baphst Church He was an Army veteran
of both World War II and the Korean Conflict.
He is survived by h1s wife, Mary Bryant Oempsey of Middleport, a brolher, Albert Dempsey of New Bern. N C.; five half-brothers. Terry Likens of
Dunlow, W Va, Jerry Likens of S1mon, W Va., Orville Likens of Columbus,
George Likens of New York and Eugene Likens of C~hforma. a stephroth·
er, John Likens of Man, W.Va., several meces and nephews
He was preceded in death by his first w1fe, Dorothy Dalton Dempsey, a
brother. Dotsel Dempsey, a sister, Goldie Bentley, and by a half-brother,
Marvin Likens
Graveside services Will be ITeld Thursday, 11 am at Bryants Cemetery m
Harts, W.Va., under direcllon of Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland w1th Pastor Paul Taylor officiahng. No calhng hours will be observed

Noel Herrman, Middleport, died Monday, Sept. 13, 1999, at his residence. Arrangements are being completed by F1sher Funeral Home, Middleport .

O ~Mdf·~~· ~·

5u'lny Pt ClotJdr

Cloudy

Showln

T-storms

Rain

Fluniea

Snow

Ice

P'a rtly cloudy conditions
in Wednesday's forecast

Bush's speech contained not a hint that either
the federal government or the states should be
spending more to produce "world class" schools '
--even to help "faihng" schools improve.
Chnton and Gore, on the other hand, have
unleashed a torrent of new spending propo$aiS,
ranging from a $6 billion matching program 10
help states build or modermze 6,000 schools to
$600 million to keep schools open for after-ltours
tutonng and $1 4 biihon to reduce class size 10
early grades.
In additton, Gore is proposmg •• without say·
mg how much it will cost •• universal voluntary
pre-school, a Teachet Corps offering $10,000 in
college aid, reduced class size in all grades and
connecting every classroom and school library to
the Internet
N(\t only 1s none of this on Bush's agenda, but
Chnton and Gore are havmg a field day bashing

been expected Bush emphiiSi~es local and
parental control of school policy, but he's not for
dismanthng the Educallon Department or giving
money to states with no strings.
Gore and Chnton repeatedly emphasize
"requinng" states to do this and that. If a bail
school is reorganized, for instance, Gore wdutd
ensure that there is "full peer e-.aluation for every
teacher," presumably with a federal bureaucr~t
overseeing the process.
.,
The good news 1s that there could be a product1ve
educatJon debate m the commg election · and the
winner is likely to be a real "education president"
(Morton Kondracke Ia ex114;1J11v• editor ol
Roll Clll, the newapaper ol Capitol Hill.)
Copytlght1- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

' from Ohio
Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and natiOnal mterest
newspapers
The Columbus Dispatch, Sept. J
Five expenments m alternallve educatiOn are beginning m Columbus and
their successes, or even fill lures, could do much to improve the level of leammg in central Ohio.
These experiments are charter schools, nonreligious public schools that
operate independendy of the local district
In 1997, Ohio lawmakers authonzed such schools in an effort to open pubhe educallon to mnovat1ve approches and create competition
But the five charter schools will be under a micrOSCOJll' the moment they
open their doors. Opponents Yllll be wa1tmg to leap on every problem, b1g or
small, to argue that the expenment 1s a failure. Some of the charter schools may
flunk their test That will be a momentary setback for the students enrolled
there, but good for education m the long run
From such failures, educators and the public will learn what doesn't work,
which will help everyone focus m on what does
The fill lure of a charter school will not mean that the concept of charter
schools is a bust The charter-school program 1s a laboratory fm expenment,
and not every expenment y1elds des~rbble results.
And even 11 some charter schools do fail, they wtll be traveling a downhillpath already beaten smooth by far too many conventional schools.
Tile (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Aug. 31
,
It's been six years since wind-whipped flames incinerated some 80 Branch
Davidian men, women and children in their Texas compound. But the ashes of
what has entered the parlance as Simply "Waco" have refused to cool.
Now as survivors bnng wrongful-death suits agrunst the government for the
loss of their loved ones, fresh revelations about tactiCS and partiCipants lh that
conflagration bring calls from Democrats and Republicans al1ke for an independent investigation of what caused this singul¥ American tragedy

Good It is time and past time that the facts of Waco be s1 fled from the myth
The (Yoongstown) Vindicator, Aug. 31
After 77,000 orbits of Earth, visits by 100 astronauts and cos~onauls and
1,600 breakdowns, thw Russian space station Mn has been abadoned 10 spaq:
- a victim of advancmg technology, on one hand, and of R~1a's financial •
shde, on the other. What went up at the height of Sovtet space prominence will
fall to earth in th!: spring- along with any hOP\' that Russi!! can alford to be a
major player in future space science and exploration
Unless private investors can be found to keep Mir operational - an unlike·
ly outoome - a clean-up crew will be sent to the space station, lowenng Its
mbit until ground controllers can electroni&lt;;ally command 1t to b~rn up m the
atmosphere once the final crew has safely left the orbiter.
But space SCientists and engineers learned much from M1r - from the
effects of longterrn weightlessness to overcommg the challenges posed by sys·
terns failing m1les from earth, amenable only to on-board fixes
The Marion Star, Sept. 1
Chris Spielman was a warrior, 1( ever there was one.
He had absorbed plenty of hits like the one that left him on the ground and
motionless last week. This time, the 6-fQO~ 247-pound man of steel had suffered
10 to 15 seconds of paralysts after bemg bhnd-sided by a 293-pound. center '
Deep down, he knew his play10g career was about to end
"I've always played by a code," Spielman srud, as he told the world Mon:
day he was retinng from professional football. "I told (wtfe) Stephanie 1fl ever
got helped off the football field. that would be the end of my career Because I
would do anythmg to crawl off, cart wheel off, skip off. that's the firstt1me m
my NFL career that I was ever helped off the field "
'
"And it turned out to be true So I stand by my code "
We are glad Spielman could walk away from the game, but we will miss
h1m.
Thanks for the memOries

'

Feel like you're being watched?!
But it's for our own protection,
says Richard Clarke, the NSC's
counterterrorism czar. The United States is in danger of "an
electromc Pearl Harbor," he
warns

THe Justice Department is seek·
mg the power to secretly enter a
person•s home or office and disable the encryption system on
their personal computer, allowmg the government
to monitor e-mail, financial transactions and other
onhne transmiSSIOns, as well as download personal files
Justite officials say they need this new power
to counteract encryptiOn software that "is increasmgly used as a means to facilitate criminal activIty, such as drug trafficking, terrorism , white-collar cnme and the distributiOn of child pornography."
And in answer to the proles who seem to
remember the Fourth Amendment protecting
them from unreasonable searches and seizures,
Jusilce officials, assure that then proposal is
"consistent with constitutional principles."
The executive committee of the International
Association of Chiefs of Pohce unanimously
endorsed a resolullon calling on the federal government and state governments to enact laws
mandatmg collection of DNA samples from mdividuals when they are arrested, notwithstanding
the fact that the maJority of arrestees in this country are not convicted of crimes.
That mailers not to New York City Police

CommissiOner Howard Safir, who sponsored the
resolution. It's well and good to collect the DN/1
of convicted felons, he says, but the pohce can
solve more crimes by having a broader database
mcludmg not only the DNA of those who've actu1
ally been found gu1lty of a cnme, but also th~
DNA of those who might be innocent )oday, but
who just might commit a crime some time in the
future.
,
General Motors acknowledged that it has
installed "black boxes" m hundreds of thousand~
of its 1999 vehicles, unbeknownst to car buyers.
The boxes constantly mom tor a car's speed,throt·
tie position and engme rpm.
The secret boxes are "a great tool fQr learnm~
about the science of auto crashes," says Terry,
Rhadigan, GM 's manager ot safety wmmumcations. However, the drivers of such GM cars as
the Buick Century, the Cadillac Sevtlle, the
Chevrolet Corvette and the Pontiac Firebird
worry that the black boxes mstalled m their vehicles, without the1r knowledge and consent, could
conceivably be used agamst them by pollee and
insurance firms.
This is JUSt misplaced fear, said Rhadtgan.
"Allth1s is another way of finding the truth," ho
doublespeaks "Who could argue with trying tO
find out what the truth is, excepl for the people
who may be doing something wrong?"
Yes, we are fast approachmg the .p0mt m this
country when Big Brother, m all 1ts vanous manifestations, is watchmg everybody all the lime
Winston Smith would be (ight at home.

The Anocleted Prns
H1gh pressure building into Ohio will produce fan weather w1th nearnormal temperatures the rest of the week, forecasters sa1d.
A cold front pushed the remammg clouds out of the state overnight,
allowmg temperatures to drop mto the 40s some places.
Highs on Wednesday w1ll be 65-75 under m.ostly sunny skies, the
National Weather Service sa1d.
The tecord-h1gh temperature for thts date at the Columbus weather station was 98 degrees in 1939 wh1le the record low was 38 in 1975 Sunset
tomght will be at 7:42pm. and sunnse Wednesday at 7 12 am.
Weather forecast:
Tonight.. Mostly clear. Areas of fog after m1dmght Lows m the lower
and mid 50s. Light north wind.
Wednesday .Partly sunny. H1ghs m the m1d 70s
Wednesday mght...Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower and m1d 50s.
Extended forecast:
cloudy. H1gh near 70.
Lows 45 to 50 and
clear. Lows 45 to 50

Murder suspect fighting extradition
By UZSIDOTI

Alaoclated Preu Writer
COLUMBUS (AP) - A man
chuged with slashing the throats of
his w1fe and three relatives on the
Yerge of a d1vorce is resisting being
returned to Ohio following his arrest
at a New York Cny airpon as he tried
to leave the country.
Nawaz Ahmed, 44, of Columbus
was charged Monday With aggravat·
ed murder of h1s wtfe Dr. Lubama
Bhatti Ahmed, 39; her father Abdul
Majid Bhatti, of Canada; her Sisler
Ruh1e Ahmad and her mece Nas1ra
Ahmad, both of the Oakland, Calif.,
~ area.

A sheriff's deputy found the bodies Saturday in Mrs. Ahmed's St.
Clairsville house after a relahve
called concerned about the family's
whereabouts. St. Clairsville is about
110 miles east of Columbus, near the
West Virgmm lme.
The couple's diVorce, intllated by
Mrs. Ahmed m February, was to be
finalized on Monday in Belmont
County Common Pleas Coun.
New Yolk authorities have been
holding Ahmed, a naturalized U.S.
citizen ongmally from Paktstan,
smce customs agents detamed him at
Kennedy Airport on Sunday while he

The Daily Sentinel
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Pomeroy man cited in crash
, A47-year-old Pomeroy man was cited after a one-au crash on McGinnis Road m Scipio Township Monday around 11 45 p m
:
Donald E Coates, 47, Myers Road, was southbound on McGmms
•
Road and apparently miSsed the turn onto Woodyard Road. damagmg .a
yard and fence bclong•ng to Marvm Althouse, accordmg to a Me~S';
County Shenff's Office report
•
•
Damage to Coates' 1992 Ford Thunderbnd was reported as hght and
he was nol InJUred m the m1shap. He was Cited on charges on dnvn~
under the mflucnce and failure to control.

Two-vehicle accident reported

No lnJunes were n:rxJrted followmg a two~ve h1cl e accident on stale

Route 7 at Tuppers Pl ams Monday around 3 30 p.m
;
Accordmg to a Me1gs County Shenff's Office report. Jeff Metz, 38.
Belpre, slowed for a car tummg off the highway when h1s 1979 Foro
truck was struck from bchmd by a 1980 Chevrolet Malibu dnven by
M1chael Francis, 42, Racme
:
Damage to Metz" vehicle was reponed as light wh1le Francis' car sustamed heavy damage.
:

•

Noel Herrman

WVA

-----'---,-Editorial views----__;_

By Joseph Perkin•
I was recendy thumbing through a dog-eared
copy of George Orwell's, " 1984,"1eft over from
my high school English class. I was struck by one
parbcular passage, m which the novel's protago·
mst, Wmston Sm1th, descnbes the totahtar1an
state m wh1ch he hves
"There was, of course, no way of know10g
whether you were bemg watched at any g1ven
moment How often, or on what system, the
Thought Pohce plugged in on any mdividual Wire
was guesswork It was even conceivable that they
watched everybody all the t1lne."
It amazes that Orwell wrote these words 50
years ago For they could -easily describe the
" free" society in which we live today, where pnvacy, as we used to know 11, no longer exists
Where both the government, as well as the corporate sector, use "doublespeak" to JUStify their
brazen abrogatiOns of pnvacy nghts.
Consider these om mous examples:
The National Security Council has proposed
the creation of an extensive computer surveillance
system to momtor activities on both nonm11ftary
government computers and computers used by
such "crit1cal " mdustnes as banking, telecommunicatiOns and transportation .
The Federal lntruston Detection Network,
FIDNET for short. would be overseen by the FBI,
which ostensibly would be looking for Indications
of computer intrusion, tampering or other unlaw ful acts. Of course, the FBI would also have
access to electromc data on m1lhons of Americans
who are not hackers or cyber-lerronsts

Robert Lucian Dempsey

~n~1onal ~epublicans for proposmg to cwt
Otnton s education budget as part of the1r plan tP

cut taxes
,
Ch~ton charges .that current House budg~t
allocahons w~ll requ1re ne"!'IY a 20 percent cut Ill
~rrenl spendmg on educa11on on fiscal 2000 an~.
1f the GOP tax cut were to become law, a 50 percent cut over 10 years
.
•
Republicans dismiss this as ho~wash and P~d1ct that by yea. 'send, the GO_Pwiii ne~rly ".'"!&lt;=!'
Omton. on total school fundmg • while g1vmg
local distncts more leeway on how to spend 11. .
That's the fi~al key d!fference betw~n Bus!'
and Gore, although 11 1sn t as great as m1ght hav.e
·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

~----

.2

..

•

wa1ted for a Pak1stani Intemailonal
Airlines flight.
Ahmed took the couple's two
sons, ages 7 an&lt;l 4, to a friend's home
In Queens before gb10g to the rurport,
said Anthony Infante, Port Authority
commanding officer for Kennedy.
They were placed with the state's
ch1ld welfare agency, he sa1d
It Is unclear where the children
were dunng the slayings, Belmont
County Prosecutor Frank Pierce said
Ahmed was arraigned late Sunday
mght m Queens Cnmmal Court m
New York and refused to agree to
extradition, said Mary deBourbon,
spokeswoman for Queens d1stnct
attorney's office.
Pierce sa1d the next step would be
for Gov. Bob Taft to Sign a warrant
askmg New York to return Ahmed to
Ohio Pierce sa1d the extradiuon
could take from a few days to a few
months. Taft's off1ce sa1d Monday
thalli d1d not yet have any paperwork
on the case.
Ahmed had mistreated his wife
smce their arranged mamage m
1992, sa1d her d1vorce lawyer, Grace '
Hoffman.
Ahmed, who has a degree in com·
puter science from Northeastern Jllinms Umversny in Chicago, moved to
Columbus after h1s w1fe filed for
d1vorce~
orked for MCI WorldCom, h1ch efused to discuss h1s
emplo ment onday
' M
ed 's father, a naturahzf d
cit1z n of Canada, had been staying
With her for several weeks and her
sister was to have testified at Monday's divorce heanng.
Ahmed's divorce lawyer, Enc
Costme, , wouldn ' t comment on
whether he has been m contact w1th
Ahmed and sa1d he doesn 't know 1f
he will represent Ahmed m this case

Stocks ,
Am Ele Power .......................35'1.
Akzo ....................................... 45
Amerltech ..........................,.62),
Ashland 011 ...........................37),
AT&amp;T ..................................... 44).

Bank One ..............................37i.
Bob Evans .....,...................... 21 i.
Borg-Warner .........................46'·
Champion ...............................5:0
Charm Shps ............. ,............ 5";,
City Holding ..........................21 '•
Federal Mogul ....................... 28i.
Flrstar ................................... 24 '!.
Gannett ................................701.
Kmart .....:............................... 12;..
KrtK~er ................................... 23 i..
La~lla End ........................... 60''1..
Llmlted .................................39''!..
Oak Hill Flnl... ..................... 17''/,.
OVB ......................................3;!)'•
One Valley .............................35 •
Peoples ................................. 27i.
Prem Flnl ............................... 12i.
Rockwell ...........................54'·
AD/Shell ..............................62'i.
Sears .....................................33'Shoney's ............................... 2i.
Wendy's .................................. 27
Worthington .............:·····"·"" 14'•

-·-·Stock reports are the 10.30
a.m. quotes provided
by Advest of Gallipolis.

Mary Kathryn Rice
Mary Kathryn R1ce, 84, Gall1pohs, d1ed Monday. Sept. 13, 1999 m the
Arbors at Gallipolis.
,
Born Oct. 29, 1914 at Federal Creek, Lawrence County, daughter oft he late
Wilham Cecil and Mary Etta White, she was a homemaker, and a member of
the Crown C1ty Umted Methodist Church
She was also preceded m death by her husband, Cecil Wilham R1ce Sr,
whom she marned Aug. 3, 1939, a Sisler m mfancy, and a brother, Henry
White.'
Surviving are two sons, Cecil W. R1ce Jr. of Racme, and Damel R. R1ce of
Galhpohs; a daughter. Mary Lou King of Gallipolis, seven grandchildren and
seven great-grandchildren: and a Sister. Emily Louise Fulks of Scottown
Services will be 1 p m Thursday in the Crown C1ty Methodist Church,
with the Rev. Richard Graham offic1atmg. Burial will be in the Crown Cny
Cemetery. Fne~ds may call at the Wil(1s Funeral Home from 6-9 p m. Wednt:!&lt;·
day.
The body will he m state m the church one hour pnor to the services

Company finds no excessive radiation
MARION (AP)- Envnonmental
engineers hued by the R1ver Valley
School District to check the h1gh
school .11nd m1ddle school grounds for
radiation reported they found nothmg
unusual
The d1stnct decided to have Its own
survey done after allegahons surfaced
that earher testmg done for a study by

the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
was flawed.
Gerald R. Myers, vice president of
Metcalf &amp; Eddy of Oh1o, lold school
officials in a letter that the radiological
survey of school buildmgs, athletiC
fields, parkmg areas and open space
on the campus east of Manon found
no excessive levels of radmt1on.
/

. Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday admiSSions - R1chard
Haning, Pomeroy ; Clyde Hamer,
Mason, WVa
Monday discharges - none

Homecoming planned
The Z1on Church of Chnst, State Route 143, will celebrate its
homecoming Sunday. Guest speaker will be B11l Dummitt at the
10·30 am. worship servtce with a carry-m luncheon at 12·30 p "!
Jennifer Grover lhcks Wi ll present a 2 p m program w1tb special
smgmg Sunday school begms at 9·30 am The pubhc IS mv1ted to
attend.

Service set
SerYJces wtll be held Sunday at the Poplar Ridge Church located off State Route 554 w1th Lisa Jordan of Waverly featured at
6:30 p.m. Pastor IS the Rev. John Elswick

Support group meeting
O' Bleness Memonal Hosp1tal will hold a support group meeting for family and fnends of those afflicted w1th Alzheimer's disease and related d1soH!ers.
The meeting will take place on Monday, Sept. 27, 6:30 p.m in
the hosp1tal conference room B-10. Joan Lawson Stroh, LPCC and
David Stroth, D.O. will be guest speakers.
1 he top1c w1ll be "Takmg care of yourself as a caregwer" Fqr
more information, those interested may contact O'Bieness Hospital at 592-9337.

Fink reunion slated
Benefit dinner slated

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Sept. 13 - Delores
Day
(Published with permission)

Racme American Legion Post 602 wtll ·hold a ham and turkey
benef.ll dinner for 81!1 and Nethe Cross Sunday starting at 11 am
at the legion hall.
Cost $5 for dme-10 or carry-out

Middleport Council
numerous ocassmns, was on hand
agam last mght, to discuss a
dramage problem at h1s home near
Beech Street., Powell has complained that dramage from a storage
buli!lmg owned by Vaughan 's
Supermarket causes floodmg on h1s
property and the property of h1s
neighbors
Jean Cra1g of the Board. of Pubhc
Affairs said that she reviewed a
v1deo made by Powell, and sa1d that
management at the supermarket has
md1cated Willingness to repan the
problem.
However she sa1d, the Board of
Pubhc Affa;rs and bUIIdmg mspectors must determme how to divert
the water before proper dramage
pipe can be mstalled.
lannarelh said that the village has
receJved one apphcation for the
bUIIdmg mspector J)PSIIlon, but 'said
that 1he applicatiOn was from a Vonton County resident. Council agreed
that other applications should be
sohcited Meanwhile, council members Roger Manley and Bob Pooler
will contmue to do the bUIIdmg
mspecllon work until a replacement
IS found. Manley and Pooler are
domgthe work on a volunteer basis,
lannarelh sa1d.
Once hued, the village mspeclor
will be pmd from proceeds of build·
mg permits ISsued.
Bob Schmoll discussed problems
w1th repeated power outages 1n h1s
neighborhood on Pearl Slreet, and
asked that council mquue of lhe
power company how the problem
can be remedied
Craig discussed a numb er of

10VOICes, totalmg $8,369.04, for
ongomg work by Floyd Brown
Associates, the vtllage 's engmccring
fnm, on improvemenls to the vii·
!age's hft stations, as well as work on
prepanng loan documenls for sewerage Improvements.
The Board of Public Affairs had
met earlier ih the day wlih a representative of the fnm , wh1ch has
begun lo reVIew posSJhle Sites for
new water wells S1tes near Hobson
and m the downtown area are among •
the possible sites for new well fields
Craig sa1d that she had received a
number of telephon e calls about lhe
early closing'of the Muidleport Pool
At the last meelmg, council voled lo
close the pool on August 28, due to
poor weather and low attendance
lannareiii said at that lime that
the VIllage was runmng low on
chemicals, and council dec ided that
the expense of purchasmg chemical s
and paymg employees al the pool
for the week after school began and
pnor IO Labor Day would be costprohtbiiive on hghl of low allend.mce
Craig said that several people
holding season passes had com:
pla10ed of the clos10g, butlannarelh
smd that, on the day before the pool
was closed, on ly lwo swi mm ers had
been admitted
Council agreed that defmne dales
for openmg and clOsing lhe pool
would be established for nex t sum·
mer, and that a park and recreation

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
1

446•4524

EMS logs 6 ealls
Umts of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Semce recorded SIX
calls for assistance Monday. Umts
respondmg included.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1 \6-a.m , Bradbury Road, M1d
dleport, Tnsten Garnes, Veterans

Memonal Hospital,
3.12 a.m., Rockspnngs Rehab1h·
tat10n Center, Pomeroy, Richard
Haning, VMH.
POMEROY
7 43 p.m , Park Road , Susie
Abbott, treated at the scene, Cent ral
Dispatch squad asSISted
RUTLAND
I 28 p.m., volunteer fire depart·
ment and squad to Harnsonviiie,
motor-vehicle
accident,
Carl
Kennedy. Holzer Medical Center,
Joe Sayre, treated at the scene, Central Dispatch squad assisted;
10 D2 p.m , McCumber Road,
Beulah Colher, treated al l he scene
TUPPERS PLAINS
3·32 p m , VFD to slate Route 7.
m"jor-vchicle accident, no InJuncs
re(Xlrted

OLD ll0l 1l l' Wl $ 1

manager, to oversee the pool and
park operatiOns, would be hired for
next seaso n
Iannarell1 sa 1d that lhere were no
funds available lo hne a parks dnector for thts year, but sa1d that 11 1s
hoped that hmng one for next year
will help allevmte many of lhe prob!ems expenenced at the park and
pool th1s year.
Cra 1g sa 1d th at res1den1s have
also commenled on the poor cond 1lion Of v111age streets, and asked
why lhe $30,()(KJ collecled annually
for street repan from a permisSive
auto license tax and $47.000 collecied from I he auto lice nse and gasohne tax were not used for street
repairs
She also noted lhat an EPA deadhne for mspec11ng underground storage tanks had passed on December
22. !998. She sa1d thai the tanks do
no I have 10 be removed, but mu st be
mspecled. ve nted .md fenced ,
accordmg In EPA requirem en ts
lann.ITelh commended those who
volunleered to asSist th e elderly and
others on need of help durmg a
recent storm and electncal oulage
Myron Duffield noted that the
Feene)·Bennetl Posl of Amencan

Continued from page 1 .
made
Pat Custer reported that an aban·
don ed house on Vme S1reet needed
io be demolished, and Beth S11vers
noted that an abandoned house on
North Fourth Avenue was also 1n
need of attention, on that 11 was an
mcreasmg safely hazard
Coun~1l approved, With lannareiII breaking a lle, to adjust the ralo of
pay of a village pohce officer
retroactive to August II , due to a
d1screpency m the pay records.
Council members Rae Gwiazdowski. Steve Houchms and Roger
Manley voted agamst measure, saymg that they obJected 10 makmg th e
adJustment retroact1ve, wh1le

emer.gencu::s where evacuations are

7

!.&gt;84 Jfi.C( S :JN 'IKL

Our Memorials
are Easy to
appreciate. Now
they're also
easier to afford!

6:30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
2:30PM FOR ·s·l &amp; SUN MAIINIIS
THE SIXTH SENSE (PG13)
7 10 &amp; 9 10 FRI, SAT!. SON
MAnNEES SAT/SUN 3 10

DUDLEY DO·RIGHT (PG)
MAnNEES SAT SUN 3 00

HE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT (R
7 20 &amp; 9'20 FRI, SAT &amp; SUN

THE IRON GIANT (PG)
MATINEES SAT SUN 3 20 ONLY

THE 13TH WARRIOR (R)
710 &amp;910 FRI , SAT&amp;SUN
MATINEES AT SUN 3 10

CHILL FACTOR (A)
15 &amp; 9 15 FRI , SAT &amp; SUN

IJIIi.ll

(~) Ste~ lion•

Ellie Muiph1illll1&lt;1 Gl!ran

13tlt WARRIOR ~~ 1:00,3:30, 6:45, 9:00
IW-~)Anl&gt;lO Sin~"'

Omar Su' IJems Sl&gt;11o

DY lllf EYES ~·~ 1:15; 4:30,7:00, 9:45

~~~~h G•~t,Jmre T'¢eliom

SIXTH SENSE
(

t,.,,

J&lt;M Call\ S.. Yru~

1:30,4:00,6:45.1:15

Osni!nlT" CcJE!Ie lma Willro

RUNAWAY BRIDE (PG)
7 00 &amp; 9 20 FRI, SAT &amp; SUN
MATINEES SAT/SUN 3 20
STIGM.ATA (R)
7 15 &amp; 91S FRI, SAT &amp; SUN
MATINEES SAT SUN 3 15

THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR (R)
7 00 &amp;9 20fAI SAT &amp; SUN
MATINEES SAT/SUN 3 20

IIINAWAY BR11 t"t2:00, 4:15,7:30, 10:00

lllxr«tj) ~I• Acttill Rdlllll Gere HOd' EHioooo Jo&lt;n Cus.d

CIILL FACTOR

1•1

2:45, 5:00, 7:30, 9:55

(llvii&gt;IIS\fflUr&lt; Cuba I®~ J1 O.Yd PljiiiOI Pe121 FrM

BlAII WITCH PROJECl 1•1 7:15, 9:30
(IIMrt)'ieaner Dooah~ M
(IOO Wlla~ Mia L""m
Matirtees Sbollm Every•day
ALL
ALL TIMES ~

Pomeroy Office
992-2S88
McCoy Moore funeral Home
Gallipolis 446·08S2
Vinton 388·8603

Copyrlghl1- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

I
I

\

\;

l

I

m~ ­

bers Pooler, Bob Robmson and Beth
Stivers voted m favor of the mtasure, wuh lannarelh also voting '"
favor 10 break the lie
·
Council also voted lo approve the
f1rs1 read mg of an ordmance allowmg the VIllage strtet commiSSIOner
10 res1de ou1s1de of the village, w1)h
Manley and Gw1azdowsk1 votmg
agamstthe measure
The Mayor s Report of fines collected, on the amount of $872 65,
y,as approved

LegiOn has offered 1he1 r posl home
as an emergency sheller m future

FRI 9/10 · SUN 9/12199
BOX OFFia WILl OPEN AT

i

•

The second annual Fink family reumon will be held Saturday, _2
p.m. at Star Mill Park m Racme Bnng covered d1sh and table service For more 10format1on call247-2100

- ·

�~ports

The Daily Sentinel

•

Pllge4

·~wed.

·

j';hanu blocked a field goal and a
punt, setllng up 10 pomls. and rook,. runmng backs Rob Konrad and J J.
JOhnson each scored a touchdown as

the Dolphins ended Denver's ~4 ,game regular-season wmnmg streak
a1 home They also ra1sed question,
about the Broncos Will put up a serious btd fqr a th1rd stra•ght Super
Bowl victory.
Denver quarterback Bnan Gnese.
the second-yeat pro who made hiS
first NFL stan after bemg ele,·aled
over Bubby Bmler two weeks ago .
was Impressive. completing 24 of 40
passes for 270 yards and three touchdowns, all to Ed McCaffrey.
Gnese wasn "t Elway - no one
expected h1m to be - but !herem
was a prob lem for the Broncos.

Because Griese 's arm didn't pose the
threat lhat El\\a) 's d1d. Mmm1 was
able to pia) e1ght men close to the
l1n&lt; of ..:nmmage 10 shut down
Terrell Da\ls. "'ho fimshed "'uh 61
)ard ... nn 19 ..:ames
· It"s like when M1chael Jordan

left. - sa1d cornerback Terrell
Buckley. "hose 43-yard return w1th
a bloc ked field goal SCI up Mtam1 's
"Gnese. he can

first louchdu\\ n

play. But John Eh,·a) can nat out get
11 Jon~ ··
Gnesc d1d a eon ,·mnng Elway
tmuatwn o n the gamc·s first series

He comp leted four of siX passes - ·

'

and bolh mcomplet10ns were on balls
dropped by rece~vers - and h11
McCaffrey on a 61-yard touchdo-. n
pass less than four minutes mto 1he
game.
But the 'Dolphms. who lost 38-3
to Denver in last season's NFL play·
offs. scored the next 24 points.
Early m the second quarter.
Buckley bl ocked Jason Elam 's 44 yard field-goal attempt, retummg it
43 yards to the Denver 36 . Marin o
passed 28 yard s to 0 J McDuffi e.
and two plays later Karim Abdui Jabbar scored from the one.
Manno passed 40 yards to Tony
Martm. setting up a 12-yard touchdown throw 10 Konrad With 3.02 left
m the pennd
M1am1 then made u 17' 7 when
Greg Jeffnes part1ally blockc,d a
punt. g1vmg the Dolphms possesSion

at the Denver 43. Olindo Mare
kiCked a 37-yard field goal
After Manno's 25-yard pass to
Martin. Johnson &lt;cored from the one
early m the thlfd penod for a 24-7
lead
"I thought our guys d1d an excelicnt job of al'Comphshmg what we
set om to do ... M1an11 coach Jtmmy
Johnson sa.d. "That was to protect
the ball, protect Dan. g1ve h1m time
to throw. run 1hc fo01ball and be balanced offensively Defensively, our
goal was to' slo'&gt;' down the run. We
made some b1g plays in the ktckmg
game that gave us a spark...
Griese's 11-yard 10uchdown pass
to McCaffrey made 11 24-14. but a
subsequent Broncos threat early m
the founh quarter d1ed . Facmg
fourth -and-one from the M13mi 40,
Gnese was sacked by Z.Ch Thoma.&lt;.

N!!&gt;A York 6 Colorado 5
Mil&gt;Aaukec 4 S1 l otm "\

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this

one !&gt;.O sweet

1s

we let the leag ue kno" that we can
"m Without' a 101 of guys m the line up." Lofton smd " We had a lot of
htg guys out but guys fi lied m, kepi
us' going.

" The key now IS to gel everybody
healthy ..
The Red Sox. \\ho had won 10 of
12 remamcd 3' games behwd the
New York Yankees m 1he AL East
B&lt;&gt;s1on 's lead over Oakland m the
wtld-card race slipped to two games.
" Even tho u~h I need glasses to
read, I see the scores up on the
board." Boston manager J1my
W1lham s satd. " Oakland and New
York are good teams We JUSt ha"" to
keep playmg as hard as we can "
Lofton was 3-lor-4_ and R1ch1e
Sexson and Harold Bames each lut
three-run homers.
Cleveland could play Boston in
the playolfs for the th1rd lime m five
years
"We know they swmg the bats ,"
Boston first baseman M1ke Stanley
smd "They put up Nmtendo num-

:rt Huus10n I Rcvnulds

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Transactions

&lt;7

17

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77
77

20

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l.eague
MINNLSOl A I"\\1INS Pu r~h::rscd ~ontra~ l s of
or Mrdn· Cumrmn p ~ nd LHP J C Romero from
St lrl .lkl• 1&gt;l the I'CL Recallt·d lH Da\rJ Ortrt. ~nd
LHP M.1rk Rcdm 111
Natmnalltague
ARIZON ,\ D I AMONDBAC K~

N.mlCd Mrkc

Rru o J •r~·~tor of sco uung

I !) IU 1,5 p m

Football

Football

Nat1onal Football Lugu~
CHICAGO BEARS Rc-srgned K Jdf Jaeger
W:~ r ve d K Orran Gowms
CINCINNATI BENGALS Placed CR Charles
l·1\her on rllJUit'd rcsetve
Dt TROIT UONS s!1gnt'd DT Luther Elltss to a

NFL standings

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Nrw YORK Jl'TS Re-Mgrn:d DT Ernu: Logan
S1g11Cd WR Na d Benjtlmtrr to the pmcnce squild
l'l nc~d QH Vanny l es ta~erdc and Rl1 Leon }(')bnson
u11llliUH:d rcservt:
PHILAOELPHl&lt;\. EAGLES Pl.d 0T John
Wclbourn on IOJllrl!d rc"_"tve
s r~ AIT LE SEA HAWKS Stgned S Merton
H.tnk s
S I LO U IS RAMS Wam:·d FB Demck Hnrn ~
DT P.111l Gra~ rnum s and CB Clrfton Cwsby Srgned
DT N.r t Hobgood Ch nnck Rc s1gned FB-TB Chad
l.cv rr :md S Ron Cmpcrlter Rdea sed LB Byron
Jones frumthc prJ~ liL C !q uad

Hockey
Nattona l Unck"y I ~azur
BOSTON BRUINS Si!liiCtl D Hal Gil\
CA LG'\RY FLAMES Re assagned D Tyrone
Garner LW I re drr~ Oduya D Mak.:: Yelllnga 0 Mall
0 Dctt.: C Bren Ml lean l W Jody Shellv RW Jol].n
rrrpp D kif St.lpl es D Dcmck Walser D D.•rrell
'\cm•lk LW Brent Dodgtnghbrse RW Ron
l'clro\r cky md C ] l)t' i l r~lll~ 10 Sam1 John (Jf 1hc=

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NAS HVILII I'REIJAIORS Ro: assrgned F
f'~: rrton !-' Huhi:Jy Hu ~'idl F I ylc S!c~ nbcrgcn F
R yn:~ rrl i:J ier D J.Jynk! frlrp tlWI ~l und D 1\.eul S.luer
rn Mr[y,,nlkl' nfflrl•IHL
NI"W YORK lSI ANUI.RS Ass1gncd LW Sc~n
Uagec n y 10 K rr n '·' ~ C11 v uf Ihe IHL
l t\1\1 1'1\ !lAY UGH I'NING Re assai! ned G 7~1c
Brnl RW fwbll I hd 1 IJ !an Herber ~ D~ Kyk Ku'i
}) J\\1kk ll Jo:up 1lmt:n C I du..~rd Pt•fs hr n l \\/ Jeft

[m

Eastern D1usion

Dallas

cfl ntract

MIL

NATIONAL CONFF.RENC,E

l'na1~n.,

: Here arc the results of last week ~
e nd's races at Kanawha Valle-y
o'ragway near Soulhstde. W.Va
: All racers will be hsted by hometown and vehtcle,, where liSt ed
..
Friday's races
' Hot Street Division: Samm1e
Oiter, Charleston, W.Va ; Doug
JGoller, Chilhcothe, 1988 Mustang
' Junior Dragster Division:
Chrissy Mtller, M•ddlepon, Devan
Rader, Coolv.lle
Divisiop:
J1m
· : Modified
Saunders, Eleanor, W.Va., 1968
GTX. Mark Bruton , St Albans ,
W.Va., 1980 Monza
,
Pro Division: Larry Whtte,
Pmch, W Va .• 1979 Malibu, Robert
S(ewart. Mason, W.Va , 1968
Camara
· Pure Street Division: Mm c
F~;ench, M1ddleport, 1971 Capnce;
Cherry Strawlher, Winfield, W.Va,
1969 Nova
·Quick 8 Street Division:
Anthony S1mpkins, M•dk1l'f, W Va ..

Monda\. St"pt 20
IJ p m

Baseball

~hn.1l1 ~r

'0
11

S1cl kn~llr

I)

\ndrc1

Sl,lplnl'•l''

]) Ph il 1011

mJ R\\ '\1,., , \\ &lt;1 lk ~ r 1o1 l&gt;etro!l .:&gt;1 lilt
II II Rc . ~ ~ ~ l l!n~:d ( l rdt•r l·cdorot 10 W anJ~or l•f the
OHL Rl" a~stngl· d RW Shel don 1\ t'l"IC ro Bnmc or
1hc' OHI He-.m tgu\·d L\\ l&gt;rmnn Atnna~enk ov to
Sherbl(ltJkc ot 1hc Quebec M&lt;.~Jo r Jumtlr Ho~ J.. e)
l ~ng uc R clca~et! D 7.arlcy Znlnp ~ kt

Armando Benuez got three outs for
his 20th save m 25 chances.
Padres 3, Braves 0
AI San D1ego, Woody W1lham s
look a shutout mto the mnth mnmg
and also hit an RBI smgle as Atlanta
lost 1ts third Straight loss
Williams (9-12) left after walkmg
Keuh Lockhart and g~Vmg up a smgle to Gerald Withams to st:m the

Torre sa1d. refemng to Well s " He
was m co mmand all mght ..,
Elsewhere m the AL. 1t was
Oakland 8. Tampa Bay 3. Balt1morc
5. Scat!le ~ m 10 mmngs. Dctron 3.

Immaculate Recepuon
"I think that my demeanor IS such
that I'm not pushmg people mlo
thmgs, so I don't catch a lot of
remarks," he smd. ''I'm just a regular old guy"
Wuh h1s new JOb, he 1s too busy
for church mmiStry but sull finds
ways to get hiS players mvolved .
Spnngston wrote a letter in the
preseason to every player and parent
expressmg the emohonal and spmtu -

al part of football, includmg a chapel
serviCe every Fnday night
"I d1d not get one. response back
saymg, 'Coach. we don 't waniiO do
that,' ' he said.
Last Sunday, 40 players accompamed

Spnng~tnn

to Method1st ser-

V ICes

" I've been m thts too long
Nohody had lo explam anythmg to
me ," he said. "Anythmg we do, the
kids come on their own. It's all total
volunteerism If they don't want 10
be there , they are not compelled "
Tech 's preSident, Dr. Karen
LaRoe, sa~d she has see n no indtcation of sc hool-led prayer on the field,
Spnngston's religious background
was not a factor when he was h1red 1
she added.
Tech 's program pas gone downhill Since it was West V~rgmta
Conference co-champiOn m 1989
Last year, Tech averaged fewer

•
1re

•
ear1n
~

our
our

Brewers to play
in new stadium
in April, 2001
MILWAUKEE (AP) - A construction acctdenl will push back the

For Painless Job Opportunities-See The Classifieds

Milwaukee Brewr..!rs ' li rst game

111

the new M1ller Park to Apnl 200 I, a
year later than tts scheduled open1ng

day
The 13-membcl board oversec1ng
lhe stadiUm "s construcllon votr.:U
unanimously !o delay the proJect s
completion by a_fu,ll yea1 The h.JII -

The Daily Sentinel

park was on gm.1lly slntcd to m3kc lh
debut wuh the Brewers' ltl :o, t humc

Phone: 992-2155

game 1n Apnl 2000.

/

'

Anzona's- 87th victory also made
the D1amondbilcks the most successful second-year frarich1se The 1962 •
Los Angeles Angels won 86 games.
Omar Daal (1 5-8) pnched 7'1,_
mmngs for the wm, and Jason
Schmtdl I 12-1 0) took the loss.
Dodgers 12, Expos 4

Raul MondeSI went 4-for-5 and
Los Angeles got home runs
day
from Gary Sheffield, Todd Hundley
H1deo Nomo ( 12-7) got the wm and Devon Wh1te to beat Montreal
and Mark Thompson (0-2) took the
Todd Hollandswonh scored the
loss
go-ahead
run on a double steal and
Diamondbacks 5, Pirates 1
Chan
Ho
Park II 0-1 0) struggled to ·
Hanley Fnas hu hiS first home run
hiS
second
home VIctory of the sea; ·
of the season. and Erub1el Durazo hu
son,
allowmg
four runs and e1ght hit.! ,
a three -run shot 1nto the Bank One
m
stx
1nnmgs
Ballpark sw1mmmg p&lt;Jol for
An zona
Dan Smuh (4-9 )1qst hiS thlfdcon::
The VIC tory, Anzona's e1gh1h m semt1ve stan

for h1 s first hit of the season and
Dave Mlick1 won hiS e1ghth stra1ght
start to lead Detroit to viCtory at
Ch1cago.
F1 ck. who had not played smce
shoulder surgery m May. got h1s first
h1t m 12 at·bats smcc he was acttvated Sept 8 It wa. hiS fourth homer m
36 career aL-bals

(13-1 0) allo\\ed three hu s
seven-plus scoreless tnnmgs.
struck out five and walked three Ht s
Ml~ek1

10

w1nmng streak 1s DetrOit"s longest

smce Doyle Alexander won ctght '"
a row from Aug 20-Scpt. 23, 1987 .
Todd Jones puched the mnth for
hiS 25th save 1n 29 chances. allowmg
a two-run homer to Greg Norton.
John Snyder (9-12) lost hiS SIX th
stra1ght deciSIOn
Angels 6, Twins 5
At Mtnneapolts, Mo , Vaughn
homered '" hiS fourth straight game
and drove 10 three runs as Anahe1m

man. of real ch a racter. By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - Wh1le
Everybody respects thiS man ," satd
l::twyers
for owners and ump1res
Tec h athlellc dtret:tor M1kc Neese.
agam
pushed
back p1Ckmg an arbiwho ~e1 vcd on 1hc panel th.tt hired
trator
for
the1r
gnevance, baseball
Spnngston "He pracuccs what he
prepared
for
a
week
of b•g meetmgs
preaches One of the players told me
'"He s a

he was the lirst coach he \ ever had
that ne,cr cussed at h1m ··

Billy Champwn .•t tran&lt;lcr from
Sout h-Ccnu al Lo&gt; Angel es. smd

than 10 potnts a game whtle givmg
up 45
Spnngston not only had to put
together a new coachmg staff, he had
to look for a new team Three-fourths
of the 85 players from last year's OIl squad graduated or qu1t Only SIX
starters returned.
"Those types of thmgs never concerned me I was more concerned
wnh where I felt hke God was
puttmg me than worrymg about how
the program was," Springston s31d.
" Wmnmg and losing aren ' t relevant
to who you are as a person We 've
taken the attitude that we're gomg to ,

ho ~t

..

won for the fifth 11me m SIX games
Vaughn had three hitS to finish s;
for- II wuh three homers and e~ght
RBi s m the senes
'
M1ke Magnante (5-2) pitched f .,
~core le!&lt;&gt;s mnmgs of relief for the
"m Sh•getosh1 Hasegawa got the
fmal out for h1 s first save
• LaTroy Hawkms (9-13) allowed •
Sl:&lt; run s and 10 hus m S11 mmngs. ""
Rangers 8, Royals 4
•
Robeno Kelly smgled home tho.:
go-ahead run off Jose Sanuago (2-44 •
and Te:&lt;as st.:ored four unearned run!: :
1n the lOth mmng, geumg help from '
errors by thlfd baseman Joe Rand(
imd first baseman Mtke Sweeney ••
Ivan Rodnguez went 2-for-5 w11h
a two-run homer and three RBis fo( ·
the Rangers , who remamed S'ogames .
ahead of Oakland tn the AL West. : •
John Wetteland (4-4) p11ched lw(t :
scoreless mnuigs for the vtsttmg
Rangers.

work to wm, but wmmng tsn't the ferenl religiOns. As far as I know: :
there's no nay sayers on the team',' _
HIS players have embraced hi s
Linebacker Joe ,Wagner, who has' _
a cross tattooed on hiS upper arm;
style
"He wants 10 mold us as men, not says Spnngston breeds optimiSm
as athletes," offenSive tackle Scott
"He's posmve all the ume That
Cowley sa1d "There's not gomg to kmd' of comes back down on us,"
be too many of us at the DIVISIOn II Wagner sa1d "Bnngmg God to any
level that are gomg to go to the nex.l program. that 's the most powerful
leveL
weapon you can have."
" Rehg1on plays a b•g part in
And what tf the team goes
everybody's hfe So he bnngs that through another wmless season'l
mto the program, lthtnk that's going
"I don ' t see 11 happenmg, " '
to help 11 along He hasn't pressured Cowley saJd. 'So hopefully there '
anybody l don't even know what w1ll be no answer lO th at quesuon "
denommat10n he 1s. We all have d1f•
measure of the man ..

The

Amencan

Arbllrallon

AssoCiallon 's Philadelphia offtce has

g1ven the Sides a hsl of 15 arbitrators, mg the next 30-60 da:ys
On Wedhesdav. the focus shtfts to ;
and owners and ump1res w1ll tak e
The arbitrator Will deCide whether Cooperstown, N.Y, for two days
turns stnk1ng na mes unul one ow ne rs legally accepted the ·resigna- owners meeungs that w1ll be domtremams He becomes the arbitrator tions of 22 ump1reS earlier th1s naled by franchiSe sales
for th1s case
month. or whether to order owners to
Owners arc expected to approve
the sale of control of the Cmcmna11
Owners and umplfcS asked the reh1re the 22
AAA on Monday to find out how
' Owners will try to conv1 ncc the Reds lrom Marge Schou to
busy each of the 15 arbitrators IS dur- arbllrat&lt;&gt;r that he has no authonly to Cwcmnatl
busmessman
Carl
dcc1de the case. cla1m1rig decis10ns Lmdner They also m1ght approve
of league prestdents are final when 11 the proposed sa le of the Oakland
t:omes to l11nng and fnmg umps
.:O.t hleiiC s to a group headed by lorBaseball's meetmgs began tc!tla: mer team exec uuve Andy Dohch.
m New York, wuh ow ner&lt; and play Proposed salcl ol the Kansas City
ers
hold1ng
then
annunl
scss;on
on
Royals
and Mon treal Expos also are
hem g hrought up to code
mt
erna110nal
play
Sandy
Aldcr&gt;&lt;HI.
on
the
agenda.
hut thc1r status was
Oh10 Stale ongmally proposed
baseball's
executive
v1cc
pres1dcnt
ol
unclear
gomg
mto
the two-day sesthat the proJeCt be pa1d for hy a tickSIOn
..
operat1
ons.
satd
the
meeting
w1
1l
et surcharge and the sa le of sky
look
at
plans
for
the
2000
and
2004
Owners
also
will
be
bnefed
on the
hoxcs and dub seats Gc1gci s._ud the
Olyniptc
s
and
'
for
a
poss1blc
World
legal
ftghl
With
ump~res , whose stratrenovatwn.s w1ll still be covered by
egy of mass reSignations coilapsed.
tho&gt;e without dtppmg mlo ot her Cup
Wh1le profe ssional s are bc1ng and NL preSident Len Coleman's
funds ,
'We'll use the same sources,'' he allowed tn the OlympiC baseball 1ntent10n to res1gn
tournamem lor the l1rst lime . th e 30
Coleman concluded a proposed
s~ud "'It's still w1thm our borrowmg
maJOr
leag
ueteams
are
prov1dmg
restructunng
transfernng ump1res,
capaCity "
player
d1Sc1phne
and •chedulmg to
only
th
ose
players
who
are
not
on
40Asked 1f h1s ongtnal cost est tmalc
man
roste~S 1\ Worlo Cup would take Alderson would leave league preSIwas large enough to cover the new
charges. he sa1d, " We've been wtse . place dunng the offseason and dents merely figureheads .

ot•

'··

OSU stadium renovation will
cost $30M more, Geiger says

'That s the In st wnc a coad1 ha s
C\ er taken me to c hurc h
Spnngston sa1d he works Wlthm
the houndancs of the Consutullun.
COLUMBUS , Oh10 (AP) ' r Oh10
wh1ch proluh1ts sta te-sponsored rc.IJ - Swe athletics d~re,ctor Andy Ge1gcr
g10n
now bcl1cvcs the renovation and

expansiOn of Oh10 Stadium will cost
S
10 mllh on more than the ongmal
res~lts pnce
tag of$157 m1lhon
"Btds were htgher than eslmwl1988 Mustan g. Teddy Martm.
ed. " he said Monday "Because of
Charleston. W Va. 1993 Mu&gt;tang
the mtensny of the current economy
Saturday's rates
Junior Dragster Division: and construction chmale , the pnce
Jeremy Hamtlton , NJtr(J, W Va . has gone up There 1s a shortage of
Davey Matheny. Ravenswood , W.Va. labor and a shortage of suppl 1es and
Modified Division : Ntck Parkins, tillS IS a complex JOh. ·:
Getger satd that the costs ol strucSt. Albans, W Va, 1963 Nova; Jeff
Hesch!, Eleanor, W Va . 19K4 Monte tural updates and lowenng the f1eld
the 14 feet reqUired to 1mplement
Ca rlo
,
Pro Division: Joe Jones. them caused the overruns. The stad•Thl(rman , 1979 Maltbu, , Randy um, bu11t in 1922 at a cost of $1 3
mlihon, 1s bemg expanded from
Hughes, Oak H1ll , 1969 Camara
Pure Street Division: MoQch 89.000 scats 10 97,000 seats ond IS
Park1 ns, St Albans. WVa. 1998
Passport , Cherry Stawther, Wmfleld.
(Co~tmued from
W.Va., 1969 Nova
Trot Nixon's RBI smgle pulled
Boston to 3-1 m 1the th1rd, and
Cleveland blew 11 ?£en With a fiverun fourth that~iiicluded Sexson's
homer and RBI smgles by Lofton
and Davtd Justice
Ntxon led off Boston's four-run
'
SIXth With hts 12th
homer Troy '
O'Leary had a two-out RBI double
and Mtke S1anley follo)l'ed w11h a
two-run Single 10 make II 8-5
Yanick doubled home a run 1n the
mnlh off Shuey and NIXon hll an RBI

Indians ...

We've heen through thas hefore. ',
Construction ts expcL.:tcd to be

completed in two years for the opcnmg of the 200 I season Oh1o State IS
playmg m the stad1um dunng the
renova11on.s

Page 4)

2B Roberto Alomar unv etlcd a 1999
dms10n .champiOns ;,gn on the leftfield wall "It was an honor because
1f not for the elforts of everybody
else. I would never get a chance 10 do
11 ," Alomar satd ... Cleveland's
363rd consecu!tve se llout crowd
broUght the Indians ' season total to
3.037.657- the fourth stra1ght year
the team has surpassed three malhon
111 att endance.
NIXOn has reached
base sa fely 1n 30 of hiS last 32 games ·
.. !imar D1az got hiS I Oth st'olen base
the f1rst l nd~ans catcher to reach
., grounder
~
that
mark stnce Andy Allanson m
"We d1dn tlay down and let them
1986
Pat Rapp. who was schedwalk all over us ." Stanley smd We
uled
to
start
Tuesday lor Bos ton,
had the tymg run on deck 111 the
returned home to he with Iu s w1fc.
· mnth "
Notes: Cleve land 's enure team who 1s cxpect1ng a bahy Wlllr.1ms
FUN TRIP - Riding In Jeff went on to the field as rucwoz ks nam ed Ram on Mar11nu (0-1) to
Gordon's #24 car was a real thrill went oil hclore the game. All -S tar stan
for Jacob Sellers of Pomeroy
when he visited the Richard Fall catfish tourney set for September 25
Petty Driving School in North
The Bend Area CARE Fall bo,n Only one c.1tl1sh p-:1 .mglcr ~ql\
Carolina recently. Sellers accom·
panied his uncle, Jimmy Wolfe of C.HfiSh Tournament Will be held he \\Cii!11Cd
Flsl;m g h OlliS .lH.' ~ .1111 \(1 .1 r 111'
Middleport, to North Carolina, Sept 2S dl th e Mason , W Va . Levy
A $1 000 purse w1 ll he g1vcn wtth chc:: k-m and IC:g i, I!.Hi nn !rom
who won a trip to drive one of
the cars at an auctton. Jacob's ,m ny to the lop 14 anglers (based on 6-7 45 am Entry kc "~20 pc1 perride was high speed, 16S mph. I 00 l1shcnncn) The tourn ament con- son before Sept 22 .md $2:'i after
His goal now IS to meet Jeff Sists o l one -person team s wllh no Sept 22 F01 mor~ 1nlcmnat1on ca ll
Gordon.
lnm t on the number of fish erme n per J,t&gt;on Rou&gt;h at (30~) 77 ~ - 61 ~6

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nine
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reduced
Diamondbacks' magic number
ch nchmg the NL West tille to II

MLB c;&gt;wners, umpires reslate selection of arbitrator~~:

I;(VD posts weekend race

Ualla~

Am~tncan

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JacbOII IIIIh:
Pinsburgh

By JOHN RABY I
MONTGOMERY, WVa (AP) ~
On the bulletin board outSide the
Vfest V~rgtma Tech football office,
there are no rosters, complex football
plays or fiery slogans.
: Instead, there's a single sheet of
poper that asks "Got Jesus?"
: M1mster M1ke Spnngston was
hired as head football coach with
hopes of resurrecting a D1vision II
program that hasn't won a game m
t~o seasons and has JUSt SIX Vlclones
thts decade.
: Wnh the un1versny's blcssmg,
hfs also sharmg Chnsuanny w1th
his players.
: "·lthmk the Lord had a purpose m
s~ndmg me here ," Spnngston says
. The 42-year-old Tech alumnus
has been m the m1 mslry since he was
ll), HIS mam involvement is wnh the
Church of God , but he has preached
before Bapllsl and MethodiSt congregatiOns He's also mvolved 1n the
F~llowsh1p of Chnsuan A\hjctes
Sprmgston has bounced arou nd
high schools and small colleges as an
a~s1stant coach. H1s pre v10us Jobs
hive allowed h1m to serve as an assoc'\ate pastor lor up to two c hurches at
a._1me
: Football never dommated hts .serntons, and he ISO t te ased on the f1cld
ahoul Touchdown Jesus. throwmg
ttie Had Mary pass or ihe

(See INDIANS on Page 5)

~O"pm

P m ~ burgh
J ,&gt; hll ~Clll I~ ')•

2'1'

"

l

hu in two score less 1nmngs. and

n1nth. Tre\or Hoffm~n go4 three outs
for h1s 37th sa&gt;e in 40 chances.
San D1ego scored all three of Its
runs off Terry Mulholland (8-8)
B"'wrrs 4, Cardinals 3
Rook1e Ke vm Barker h1t a
uebreakmg t\l&lt;o-run homer '" the
fifth mnmg to lead M1lwaukee to
VICtory at St LouiS_
Mark McGw~re stra med his left
~om and left after 4 : mnmgs
McGw1re, second m the maJor
leagues w1th 55 homers, grounded
out m the first and walked m the
th1rd. St Louis S31d he was ·day-to-

Minister/football coach seeks to bring winning to WV Tech .·

11 Nc" rngland I p m
J .td.; ~Uil\' t llt!' &lt;II C ar o hn~ I r m
0.1kl.111d nl Mr nnl·sora l p m
1'1 11sh ur~h .11JJ .thltnt)rc I p 111
S 111 DIC)!U at CINCI:-.lNA II l p m
S~attlc .rl Chll.!gn I p m
l~nrp.1 Ht y 11 l'hrl adclp h1:t I pm
\\'a ~ llllli!IUn II New York Glmts l r m
Ncl'. Orl c.rn s ~~ S;w I mnusw -" 0~ p m
( I EVI I r}NI1 ar knn c~, L~ J I~ p m
Den\ ~r .11 K::rnsas ( tl} 4 I~ p m
Nl•v. ) ork Jt•ts .u Bull :~ l o R ::00 p m
UPI N St l t&gt;m.s

11 1,\ISI l t•uh!Ankldl) II

llorrd.11Dcrnpstcr b 71.11 San I r :~ nu 'i~o

lnd!annpoll s
M1.1m1
New En!itnd
Buffnlo
NY Jcu

American League
roundup

Week 2 slate

l !&gt;ntd f. l \ 11 (nh...-,,Jo 1Wn ~ hl .:' .:'1

x to p m

l'wu

runs and e1ght h1ls m 5 }. innmgs: :
1mprovmg to 6-0 agamst Bostolj' s1nce hi s only loss to the Red Sox on ;
Aug 13, 1992. Paul Shuey p1tched •
two mnmgs for his sixth save.
·•
··1 don't know why I have success
against them," said Nagy, 7-1 in his
career agamst Boston ... guess the
real reason 1s we always score more
runs than they do w~en I p1tch."
Sexson 's homer
off T1m
Wakefield (5-10) m a five-run fourth
was h1s 30th th1s season. Bames hit
h1s 25th m the eighth off Bryce
Flone
Lofton led off t~e first mnmg wuh
hts seventh homer. He has 16 leadoff
homers m hiS career. Including five
th1s year
"It was good to homer nght off,
so I d1dn'1 have to test the leg,"
Lofton sa1d. "Actually, I felt good
runnmg . We' II see tomorrow and the
next day"
Sexson hn a run-sconng, doubleplay grounder later m the mnmg, and
Lofton hit an RBI double m the sec"
ond.

l n,J II nap• l l l ~

M r l"auk~'i! I KMI 1J
Prrr ~ burgh

I 0 000

S.

Angeks 12. Montreal4.
MdS 6, Rotldes 5
A w1ld pnch by Dave Veres ( 3-8)
allowed M1ke P1ana to score from
third with the go-ahead run m the
mnth inning, and vis1tmg New York
won for the e1ghth ume 1n nme
games
Rtckey Henderson hit a two-run
homer for the Mets. who began the
day two games beh1nd first-place
Atlanta m the NL East New York
remamed 2': games ahead of
Cincinnati m the w1ld-card race.
Turk Wendell (4--4) allowed one

Wells ( 14- 10) struck out two and Oakl~nd acqUired h1m from Kansas
walked two. wh1le Tony BatiSta had C11y on July 31,
an RBI double and Vernon Wells a
Orioles 5, Mariners 4
ho me run uff Orlando Hernandez
Cal R1pken homered and dro'e 1n
( 16-8) Wells. who allowed JU S! Chad three run s. and B J Surhoff sct)red
By The Associated Press .
Ch1cagn ~. Anaheun 6. Mmncsota 5. Cums' &amp;Bl smgle in 1hc c1ghth the wtnnmg run m the lOth mnmg on
Dav1d Wells d1dn't make u any and lcxa&gt; ~- Kan sas C1ty 4 m IU reframed from mlcn•Jcws
a throwmg error by Jose Mesa (2-6)
easier for the slumpmg New York mmng s
,
"I m JUSI not m the mood lor talk- a&gt; Baltimore completed us fir st fourYankee-s.
·
For the thtrd tunc m four games. mg.'' Wells sa1d after the Blue Jay s' game sweep of VISiting Seattle
Wells puched a four-hiller aga1~st th e Yankees \\ ere held tn d nc run
moved wuhm 5', games of the Red
R1pken hll a 1\\tO- run homer 10 the
h1s former teammates as Toro nlO
'"\Vc ran mt o some good pllchmg So" m the w1ld card race ' 'I've gol sc~.:o nd mnmg and a sacnfice fly an
beat the Yankees 2- 1 Monday n1ght. perform ances." New York ·s Derek personal thmgs on my mmd ."
the Sixth He went 1-for-2 w1th two
handing them lhelf fourth stra~ght Jeter sa1d .. PedCC&gt; Martinez shut us
Athletics 8, Dnil Rays 3
walks and needs 18 htls 1n hiS fmal
loss
down (wuh a one-lutter) on Fnda y
Jason Gtamb• Randy Velarde and 18 games to reach 3,000 preer hits
Only Boston's II -7 loss to the mght and Boomer d1d II to us ton1ght. Olmedo Saenz homered as Oakland th l!&gt;i season
Cleveland lnd1ans prevenled the We've JU St got to forget ahout 11. "
won its fifth stra1ght
Balt1more has won seven stra•ght ,
Yankees from losmg any more of
Wells. acqUired m February m the
Mtguel Tepda had a two-run si n- matchmg its season h1gh The
their East DIVIsiOn lead to the Red Roger Clemens deal Wi::IS 0-3 w1th a gle dunng a five-run 1h1rd mnmg Onoles are 32-25 since the All-Star
Sox The Yankees remamed 3': 5 49 ERA .1ga1n&gt;l the Yankees 1h1s agamst Bobby Wut ( 7- 13) lor the break , but 68-76 overall
games ahe"'l of the Red Sox . commg ~cason before throw1ng: hi s stx.th A's. who hJ\e won 13 of 18 road
Rook1e B.J. Ryan ( 1-0) earned hiS
off a three-game sweep of New York. complete garru; tlu s season and 35th games
first maJor league wm by workmg I' •
"We're pressmg a httle bu. but of h1 s caree r
Kevm App1cr ( 15-12) allowed hitless 1nmngs. sinking out three.
let's not take any credn from
.. He shut them down , · Toronto three run s and seven hn~ 1n e1ght
Tigers 3, White Sox 2
Boomer, " Yankees manager Joe manager J1m Frego&gt;1 sa1d,
miungs, unprov.ng to 6-3 smce
Rob F1ck had a three-run homer

:' What makes

Sundal. Sept. 19
Aru un:r .11 Mwnu I p m
Grc~n B,ty ul Oclro11 I p m

7 0~ p m

~~

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41

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In

their pennant race. They aren ' t even
lo~tng any games
M1ke Hampton joined teammate
Jose L1ma'" the 20-wm club. and the
J\Stros set a club record hy wmning
their l_lth straight ~arne. 13-2 over
the Philadelphia Ph1lhes on Monday
mght.
Houston mamtamed a three-game
lead over the second-place Reds.
who beat Aor~d~ 7-4 at home for
thelf seventh strrught wm.
" You know that Houston IS going
to be there nght unul the end," sa1d
the Reds' Greg Vaughn_ who hll a
solo homer "All we can worry about
is the Cincmnati Red s. and every-

Monday's score

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Wednesday's games

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Gos1on (R l\1 ,uunez 6 6 1 at CLtVELAND
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Wednesday's ~ames
Nl 11 York IHcnlu sel [I 10 1 at Cn lurn .t.,

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DetrO!! ~ ChiL.lgo 2
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Nc&gt;A Orleans

CINClNNAI I 7 Flonda-'
Housru11 l ' Philadcl plua l

w
8&lt;

The Cincmnatt Reds and Houston
Astros aren't gtvtng any ground

Wtsttrn DiviSion

Monday's scores

r&gt;ausron

By JOSH DUBOW
AP Sports Writer

said_ "I am a good teammate. My
throat IS sllll scratchy from screammg so moch foc h1m I am really
proud of h1m. The way thts puching
staff has performed" amazing."
Pluladelph1a starter Joe Grahc (03) left after three mmngs wnh a bhstcr on his nghl mdex finger. He
allowed three runs- two earnedand two hits.
Vaughn's 38 home runs are the
most by a Reds player smce Geocge
Foster hit 40 in 1978. HIS 101 RBis
are the most for C.ncinnau since Eric
DaviS drove m 101 m 1989.
Steve Parrts (9-2) gave up four
runs and eight hits m six mnings,
helping Cmcmna\i win • its lOth
stra1ght over Ronda_ Danny Graves
p1tched the mnth for hiS 2Jrd save m
30 chances.
Jesus Sanchez (5-7) took the ' toss.
In other NL games. it was the
Mets 6. , Colorado 5. San D.ego 3.
Atlanta o- Milwaukee 4, St .LoUI S 3;
Anzona
Pittsburgh I; and Los

CLEVELAND (AP) - It d1dn 't
take Kenny Lofton long to show why
he's so cruc1al to the Cleveland
(nd1ans.
After missmg mne games wtth a
stramed hamstnng , Lofton homered
for the first ume Since June II and
drove m three runs 10 lead Cleveland
over the Boston Red Sox II -7
'
Monday mghL

Meigs JV warriors shut out Jackson 6-0

l'a~l~rn

The Dolphins promptly drove 50 •
yards for another score, Manno'•
four-yard pass to McDuffie.
With 3.56 left, Griese was sacked
by Rich Owens and fumbled, and
Jasbll Taylor ran four yards with the
loose ball for M1ami 's final score.
" I thmk tf everyone had played
hke Brian Gnese today, we would
have won the game, .. Denver coach
Mike Shanahan said. "I was pleased
w1th the way he handled himself
aga1nst an excellent defensiVe te.vn.
He showed a lot of poise and a lot of
composure
Griese said he was " d1sappomted
nght now, disilppmnted that we lost.
There are some things r could have
done The only thing I can take away
from thiS game is that I len everythmg I had on the field. I never felt I
was bew1ldered or confused."

thing el:.e "ill fall mlo place. I s1111
see us be1ng there ngh1 at the end."
Hampton (20-]) allo-.ed two run&gt;
and '" h1ts In se\·en mmngs w11h &gt;IX
stnkeouts He ha&gt; won llthwnsecuII'&lt; dec1s1ons since June 24.
''I'll trade the Cy You ng for the
World Senes MVP anyume,"
Hampton sa1d "From a personal
standpoint. that's great But today 1
JUSt focused I'" getting a win any
way we could We knew the Reds
had already I' On that \\as the only
thing that was Important "
Houston. wh1ch previOusly had
six 10-gamc wmmng streaks. sent ·
, the Ph1lhes Hllhelf lOth Slra1gh1loss,
thclf longest s k1d smce an ·11 -gamer
from June 24-July 4. 1997
The last ume tcammales won 20
m the same season was in 1993.
when Allanla's Greg Maddux (2010) and Tom Gla1 me (22-6) d1d 11
along wllh San FranciSco's John
Burkett (22-7) and Bill Swift (2 1-8)
''I'm so happy for h1m.' L1ma

Blue Jays top Yankees 2-1; A's, Orioles, Rangers ·also win

manager Mtke Hargr01·e sa1d.
·' When he gets on base and IS able to
be aggressive. u opens up so many
op11ons. Havmg hm1 healthy " a b1g
plus"
Cleveland, Which raised liS fifth
stra1gh1 AL Cenlral champt onsh1p
banner before the game. appears to
he genmg healthy at the ngh111me.
Lofton , thtrd baseman TraviS
Fryman, outfielder W1l Cordero and
starter Jaret Wnght all are back on
the roster.
IN PURSUIT of Denver quarterback Brian Griese game at Mile High Stadium, where the Dolphins
Still, havmg 16 players on the dis(right) is Miami defensive end Trace Armstrong won 38-21, (AP)
abled hst and losmg 850 man days to
(93) in the second quarter of Monday night's AFC
InJUry llu s season d1dn 't stop the
lnd1ans from chnchmg the AL
Central last week. No other team has bers . ·•
clinched us div1sion.
Char~6-9) allowed five
By,D.AVE HARRIS
Jeremy Roush gave Metgs good late 1n the contest Jackson held a f1rst
Senltnel Correspondent
field posthun m the second pcnod down at the Metgs 32 , but the
Tyson Lee's two yard run run wnh wuh a 22 yard punt return F1ve plays maroon and gold held
.
4A2 left m the first half was the only later Lee scored the games only
Lee led the Marauder ground
sc'o re of the mght as the Metgs jumor touchdown _
anack wnh 73 yards m 17 carnes.
varsuy football team defeated
The dnve was kept ahve when Jeremy Roush added 59 m 20 carries.
Jai:~ so n 6-0 Monday mght at Bob Kyle Hannan hooked up wllh Jusun Hannan was one of two in the alf for ·
Roberts F1 eld
.
G•lmore for a 21 yard gam and a first 21 yards. That completion was to
Both teams threatened '" the first down at the three on 1h1rd and 17.
Gilmore.
penod Jackson was tnSide the
Except for the first two plays of
David Sw1sher led Jackson With
Marauder 25-yard hne tw1ce, and the lourth penod, both teams h~d the 50 yards 1n nmc came s. Josh Carter
M,CJgs had a first and goal from the ball m Me1gs lerntory Me1gs held added 41 m 13 Michael Holdren
Iron men 's one But both 11mes the Jackson at the Marauder 14 m1dway completed four of 15m the alf for 60
defenses s11ffened and held.
mto the fourth pcnod, a~d then agam yards, all to Bryn Williams.

AL standings

streak .~:

National League
roundup

Tribe gets 11-7 win over BoSox:

··Kenny

'.

The Daily Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-Reds &amp; Astros win, keep same distance in Central title race

Tuesday, September 14,1991

Dolphins beat ·e roncos 38-21, end Denver's home win
By DAVE GOLDBERG
' DENVER (AP) - Wllh a boost
from Miarm 's spec1al teams. Dan
Marino· spoiled John Elway 's goingaway party.
Manno was coolly effictent
Monday mght, throwmg two touchdown passes as the Dolplnns prevailed 38-21 on the mght Elway was
mducted mto the Broncos Ring of
F~me and had his No 7 Jersey

Tuesday, September 14, 1999

(

214 Ea•l Main
Pomeroy

992-6687

�• 4

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

14, 1999

Tuesday, September

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

r.
Tuesday, September

Public Notice

pivil War women's group forms in Middleport
A lo ng-es!abhshed women s ltn'tage soctety called the Lad1es of the
Grand Army of the Repobhc, has
heen organozed on Moddlepott
It IS composed of w omen age 12
~nd o lder who have eother a direct
ancestor or a blood related brother
of a dorect ancestor who served on
the Umon anny. navy mfantry or
artollery dunng the C ovii War from
186 I to 18b3 The purpose of the
o rgamzatoon IS to honor the Covol
War ahcestors for lheor heroosm and
sacnfoce to sa&gt;'e the US from beong
d1voded The y do thos by mark.ong
gfaves of Un10n soldoers erectmg
and canng for C1vd War monu
ments presen mg CIVIl War banleficlds cducatong members and the
pubh c o_n the Co vii War, and keepm g

ah ve the celebrauon of Memonal
Oay

The Ladoes of the Grand Anny of
the Repubhc was formed 1n 18K5
and took u s name fro m the largest,
m os t successful Unoon vete ran s'
orgamzatoon- the Grand Anny of
the Republic (G AR ) They were
o flicoally recogm zed bv the G A R

as a SISler organazatJOn They arc a
Congressronally chanercd corpora
uon
The Ladoes o f the G A R op.:rate s tn local chapters l:allcd ur
des ' Moddlcpo n once had a urde
called the Cedar Creek Cm lc b ut u
h as l ong been d onnant The name

for the next l: Jrcle has not hecn dm

howe,~r

be an

woll

ondcpcndcnt

orgamt utum from the S U V
Any woman woshmg to JUin a' a
rece1ve ass1~~
co'l .n locatmg an eh~1

charter member w1ll

tan~.: e at no
hie- U nwn a n ~.;e~tor on wh1ch to JOin
Anyone "t th a C1' 11 War am.:~s t or
w ho lncd m Meigs County should
hnd n \Cf) ea'y tn JOifl There arc
0\Cr 1700 Union 'old ocrs c urrentl y

dcxumcnted "' bcone buned
Me1gs Cnunl) u~mc tcr~c~;.

on

l o get ~m .1pplu.: ttlun to JOin or

more mtorma110n rc-stdents may
contact E nun. A&gt;hky 14465 Crew
Road Po mcm) or call 992 7874

cle m L:ooperat10n w1th Brooks

Any woman "P•hmg to JLUn should
att..::nd thl' first orl!:~tnl zatl o n al mcdmg at 7 15 p m ;'" Tuesday Sept
2l at lhc .mnex of Horc Bapll ~t

Grant Camp N o 7 Son s o f U no on
Veteran s o f the CIVIl W ar The corcle

Church
po n

sen and will be d one b) those Jmn
m g as ch an er members
Plans are to operate the new ctr

570 Grano Street

Middle

Jeffers family holds reunion
D esce ndants of the l a te John
L Jeff ers and Vo o l a Rogg s Jeffers
gathered al the Mei gs Co unty
lkes Farm ncar Ches ter rece ntl y
for a rcunoon
Allcndong we r e Jo hn A and

R o berta Jeffer&gt; of Racon e Wen
d ell and T h elma Jefle" of
Po mer oy
D o r o thy Jeffers o l
Pom er oy
Des
Jo no
Kallc
N athan and R yan Jetf&lt;rs o f Mod
dlcport A lan Dcbboe and Cas"y

D-.. at!

and Amy
Young Vmu.: nt Ja~ on Ne 1glcr o f
Rac on c Pany Motler ,md D,mo c l

s

and

LeAnne

p

y r ac u'c
cggv Kan .m d M .I g
g oe C un11n1n&gt; and Ralph .Ind Edna
Nc1glcr l' l R.tLIIH:

::::~i;.~~~;;=::;===-r=~~~;:=;~;;::===-r===;::=,~:=;:~:;====-r===::=:::=:======-i

Public Notice

RESOLUTION 7 it
BE IT RESOLVED by
tho c
11 1 ho VI
ounc 0 1
llogo
of Pomeroy ott mombera
thereto concurring
That
tho
Clorlo/Trouuror ol tho
vtttogo of Pomeroy,
tronofor tho sum of
(Forty
S4D,OOD 00
Thousand dollars) from
tho Gtntrol Fund to the
Street Fund for the
ope rati on of current
eKpenH•
This reaolut l on Is
dHm 1 n emergency due
to lack or runda tor
current expenses
PASSED August t 6

ATTACHED HERETO AND
BV REFERENCE MADE A
PART HEREOF
and that ' Delendants.
Timothy D Jones and Mary
Uribe and Robe It Scott
Taylor, and if deceased au
heirs dev isees. legatees ,
executors
executrhces ,
admlmstrators,
admlnlstratrlxea
and
assignees and Jane Doe,
Spouse of Timothy 0
Jonas, II deceased, and If
1999
deceased
all
heirs ,
Kathy
Hysell ,
devisees
legatees ,
Clerk!Treas
executors, executrixes,
Frank A Vaughan
adm•mstratars,
Mayor
adm1n1stratrlxes
and
John
F
Musser
asSignees be required to
President
set up any Interest they may
(9) 7 14 2TC
have m said premises or be
lorever barred, that upon
Public Nollce
laiiure ot said Delendants to
_ _;__:;;:.::.;_;_:__:_;_:;_:_:..:__ _ , pay or t o cause to be paid
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
said judgment within three
Stephen 0 "''lles Attorney
d:.ys from Its rend1hon tha1
at Law 18 w Monument
an Orde• of Sale be issued
Avenue Dayton Ohio
to the Sheriff of Meigs
45402
County, Ohio , to appraise ,
Timothy
o
Jones , advertise In the Dally
supposedly deceased, Jane Sentinel and sell said real
Doe, Unknown Spouse of estate, that the premises be
Timothy o Jones, Robert sold free and clear ol all
Unknown
Spouse
of Robert
Scott Taylor
and Jane
Doe

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

scan Taylor and 11 Timothy
D Jones Is deceased, all

SHERIFF'S SALE, REAL
ESTATE, CASE NUMBER
99 Cv 007
CHASE MORTGAGE
' SERVICES , INC , A
Delaware Corporallon
fka CHASE MANHATTAN
MORTGAGE
CORPORATION, Plaintiff
-va- DENNY R RUNYON,
~CetOaUI,RDeTfeOnFdanctos MMON

token
to
bo
tho
southeast quortor of tho
northea•t quarter of the
northeast quarter of
Section 3,
Thence along the
aouth line of tho
northuat quarter of tho
northooat quortor, North
84"26'38" Wo s t
a
dlatanco of 391 91 loot to
8 Iron tplke lot (60
penny aplko) In tho
cantor of Pagovlllo Road
(Township Road No
142),
Thence leaving the
aouth line of tho
north eaat qulrttr of the
northooat quarter ond
1 I ong lh e center or
Pagovlllo Rood tho
foliowlng1hrHcourooo
1) North 42"37' 05"
Wolle dlolonco of 20 99
loot to a point,
2) North 48"33' 17"
West a dlatanco of 37 78

Jam as M. Soutoby,
Sheriff, Meigs county,
Ohlo
DENNIS REIMER co,
LP:A
By· Dennis Reimer
(Rog.I00311D9 , Adaln L
Groos (Reg 10055392),
Attorneys for Plaintiff
P.O . Box 968 , 9806
Ravenna Rd, TWinsburg
•
OH 44087
(330) 425-4 201
(9) 7 , 14, 21 3TC

tha right to use so much
of the surface as may be
necessary for the
purpoaeoalorasald
RESERVING FUTHER
the right to prospect ,
explore and drill lor
mine, excavate and
remove such other
minerals as may be
hereafter determined to
be under said real
estate, by deep mining
methods,
without
encumbrance to the
surface
Deed References
v o 1ume 198, Page 605
229
and Meigs
Volume
page
County Dead
979,
Records

heirs, devisees tegeleas,
executors
executrlxea
adminlst ra t ors
'
admln l stratrlxes
and
assignees of Timothy D.
Jones, whose addresses
are unknown, will hereby
take notice that on the
December 9, 1998, USDA
Rural Development, filed Its
Complaint In Foreclosure
and Marshaling of Liens In
the Common Pleas Court of
Meigs County, Ohio, bemg
Case No 9fi'CV-109 against
Timothy D Jones and Mary
Uribe and Robert Scott
Taylo• praying for 1udgment
1n the amount of $6 661 71
with Interest thereon
according to the terms of
the note rrom October 1,
1998 until paid and lor
foreclosure
of
said
Mortgage Deed on the
following described real

PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me
directed 1rom aald Court
In the above entltlad
ac It on, I will expose to
• solo at public suction on
th e I ron t ateps o I the
. Meigs County Court
HousoonFrldayOct 29,
o 999 at 10·00 AM of
said day, the following
described real ealllt
The aast half ol the
north half of the
northeast quar1or of
Section 3, Township 7,
Range
14,
Ohio
Company's purchase,
Scipio Township, Malgo
County, Ohio, containing
40 acres, more or less
Deod
Roforenco
Volume 136, Page 407,
Meigs County Doed
Records
SAVE AND EXCEPT
the following described
real estate
Being
974 acre,
situated In Section 4,
Township 7, Range 14,
Scipio Township, Meigs
County,
0 h 1o
Commencing at tho
south aut corner of
_Section 4 1 thence north 4
dog 42'10" east along
the line botwoan Scipio
and Bedford Townships,
1396 00 feet to the
northeast corner of 7
acre tract presently
ownad by Weber Wood,
thence along the north
line of oatd 7 acre tract
north 84 dog 4'50 wut
593 6 reet to a point In
the centerline of tho
public road, thence
along tho centerline of
said public road south
13 deg
45 50" aaat
388 60 feet to a spike,
thence south 25 deg
29 50" east !55 68 feat
to an Iron pin and the
true point of beginning
lor
the
following
described real oatato,
thence continuing along
the centerline ol the
public rood south 25
deg 29'50' eut 346 oo
feat to an Iron pin,
thence south 8 deg
37 50" aao1119 40 loot to
an Iron pin, thence
leaving the public road
north 48 dog 55' west
along the middle of the
creek, 339 27 feat to an
Iron
pin
on
the
southwest bank o1 the
creek, thence north 23
dog 10 40 • east along
tho middle of tha creak
225 69 fHt to the point
o1 beginning, containing
0 974 acres Being part
of
33-acre
tract
described In Volume125,
Page 475, Malgs County
0 e ed
A e cords
Su•veyed March 11,
1971
by Harold o
Whaley, License No
4986
Last prior conveyance
Volume 253, Page 997,
Meigs County Deed
Records
EXCEPTING
THEREFROM
THE
FOLLOWING
DESCRIBED
REAL
ESTATE BEING ~ 5022
ACRES , MORE OR
LESS
Being a part of a tract
of land that Is now or
.formerly In the nama of
George v. Mclain and
Claudia Shephard Mclain
as recorded In Daod
Volume 319, Pagea 89
and 70 of tho Melgo
County
Recorder's
Office, said tract being
, altuatad In tho Norlhoaol
Quarler ol the Northoaat
Quartar of Section 3, T-7N, R·14·W,
Scipio
Township, Meigs County,
State of Ohio and being
more
particularly
described aa follows.
, Bog 1n n 1n g
1 or
reference at what Is

o

foot to a point,
3) North 51"01 54"
Weatadlatancoof4938
feat to an Iron aplka set,
being tho principal place
of beginning of tho tract
herein described,
Thence continuing
along 1ho contor of
Pagovllle Road tho
followlnglourcouraea
1) North 55'26' 53"
Weal a distance of 51.13
feet to a point,
2) North 56'48'05"
Wool a distance of
122 89 IHtto 1 polnl,
3) North 58"22'26"
Weal a dlatonco of 73 62
feet to a point; and
4) North 47.28 21'
Weat a distance of 12 17
foottosnlrorltplkooot;
Thonco leaving the
center of Pagevllla Road
and with a tlno through
tho Grontor's property
tho following three
couraea
t) North 54. 11 '17"
Eaat, patting a 5/8" Iron
pin wttn o ploatlc
Identification cap ut at
50 feet, going a total
dlttanco of 485 88 lootto
a 518' Iron pin with 1
plastic ldonUflcatlon cap

1101,
2) South 35'48' 43"
East a dlotance of 245
loot to a 5/8" Iron pin
with
a
plaatlc
ldontlllcollon cop 111,
and
3) South 54"11'17"
Weal, paaalng 1 5/8" Iron
pin with a plastic
Identification cap set at
350 foot, going a total
dlotance of 400 loot to
the principal place of
beginning containing
2 5022 acroa mora or
less and being oubject to
the right of way of
P ago v lito
Road
(Township Road No 142)
and all other •••aments
of record
NOTE On October 12
1995 Pagovltie' Road
(Townohlp Road No 142)
became Landaker Road
(Townthlp Road 256), ao
found In Record Journal
20, Pogo 226 of tho
Comml••toner'l Journ11
of Melga County. All 518 •
Iron plna with plaatlc
ldantlflcotlon capo aet
are atampod "Seymour
and Aaaoclalu".
Tho bearlnga u11d In
the above daocrlbed
tract were baaed upon
south line of the
northeaot quarter of the
northooat quortor of
Section 3 bearing, North
84"26 38 ' Wool and are
lor the dotormlnotlon of
angles only The above
doacrlbed tract wu
aurvoyod by ,.George F
Seymour,
0 h 1o
Profe11lonal Surveyor
No. 6044, October 11 ,
1995.
Current Owners Name~
Danny R Runyon and
Julio M. Runyon
Property
Addroll.
37406 Vance Road,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Pormonon1 Porcol No.
17-00285.001
TERMS OF SALE .
Caah, Cannot bo oold lor
1111 thon 2/3rda of tho
approlood
value
$1,00000 down on day
of HI I, Cllh or cortlflod
chock, balance duo upon
con11rmatlon of sale

Public Notice
SHERIFFS SALE
REAL E STATE
CASE NUMBER 98CV112
HOMESIDE LENDING,
INC , PLAINTIFF, VS
DONALD
R
RICHMAOND, at al,
DEFENDANTS
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In pursuance of an
Order of Sal a to me
dlrsctedlromaaldCourl
In the above entitled
action, 1 will expooa 1o
oala at public auction at
the courthouse on 10-15,
1999 at 10 00 am of
said day, the following
doocrlbod real aatata
The
following
deocrtbad premlseo,
attuated In the Township
of Ru11and, County of
Melgo and State of Ohio,
The following real
a alate situate In the
Township of Rutland ,
County of Meigs, and
State of Ohio, and being
a pari of Fraction No 3,
Town No 61 and Range
No 14 of the Ohio
Company's Purchase
and
bounded
and
deocrlbed as follows
Beginning six rods
north of the northeast
corner or said Fraction
No 3; thence West forty
eight rods and llftoon
links, thence South
seventy nina rods and
fifty llnko: thence Eaat
llvo rods, thence South
forty eight rods and fifty
links to the cantor of the
public road; thence
aooterty along said road
to the east line of said
fraction; thence North
about one hundred and
twenty one rode to the
place of beginning ,
containing thirty live
acres, more or leas,
EXCEPT, however, from
the above described
premises, a right of way
through the aama ,
heretofore conveyed by
ono Luman Brine to one
JohnE Stansbury "
FURTHER EXCEPTING
all coat, oil, gas &amp; other
mtnorala now known to
be under the real esla!o,
or hereafter determined
to be under said real
allate, together with the
right to mine and remove
o al d
coal
by
undergroun.. mining
processes (atrtpmlnlng
not Included) and the
right and privilege ol
mining, removing and
transporting
underground and under
the ourfaca of the above
described premises coal
from othtfr lands now
owned or hereafter
acquired by tho said
Grantors , or their
succeaeore, hairs and
aoslgnno, the Grantees
hereby waiving lor
themselves,
their
O~CColloro ,
rights
above oetfonh together
with tho right to enter
upon the aurlaa ol aald
real estate to explore or
test drill for said coal ,
provided
that
the
Grantors heroin ahall not
do
u n nate a a a r y
damages In said teat
drilling.
RESERVING
FURTHER, the right to
enter
upoD
eald
pram lou. prospect ,
explore and drill for,
develop, produce, etore
and remove oil and gas,
or tither of thom, uaa all
machlnary, atructure
darrlcko, tanka, pipe
tinea,
equlpmant ,
flxturao, machinery, and
other appllancao and
things necessary or
convenient therefore and

,Prior
lnotrument
306
ro erencoa Volume
•
545
Page
Property address ·
36694 Potaroon Hollow
Road , Rutland, Ohio
4

sns

Dofondonto, Timothy D
Jontt .and Mory Uribe end
Roborl Scott Toylor oro tho
owners of
LEGAL DESCRIPTION

utata,

of

which

any of liens
the parties
herein
claims,
and Interest
of,

Public Notice

Public Notice

that tho procu do lrom tile
toto of oold prtmf"l bo
oppllod to tho Ptolntlff'l
ludgmont and for ouch
other rollol to which USDA
Rurol Dovolopmont II
entitled
Sold Dolondanto oro
directed to tho Comptolnt

.cco;t..t ,._ .,. ftoor11 tile ttme ol electiOn "

wherein notice undtr tht

olllc:o
(8) 31
(i) 14 2TC

ELECTION LEGAL
NOTICE
Tho Ohio Soli ond
Water Conservation
Commission will CIIUII
an
election
of
suporvlooro of 1ho Molga
$oil
and 1 water
Conservation District to
be held In accordance
with Chapter 1515 of tho
Ohio Rovlood Code at
Motgo High school on
Tuesday October 12,
1999 at 7•00 p m
Nominees are Chrla
Hamm , Thoma• Theiss,
and Chartea E Yost
Nominations will be
110

80

may 1M II CU .... from the
con•ervltlan dl1trlct

Stop In And See
Steve Rtffle

..

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho
Vlllogo
ol
Pomeroy did not monitor
for tho prooonco of
oynthotlc
orgonlc
ch.mlcoto (SOCo) In tho
public drln~lng wolor
oyotom during tile April·
Juno 11199 UIIMI period 11
roqulrod by tho Ohio
Environmentlll
Protoctton Agency
Upon bolng nottlled of
thlo vlotaUon by tile Ohio
Envlronmon1111 Potoctton
Agony, lho Wltor oupply
woo roqulntd to hive tile
dlnklng wotor onolyzod
for atrazlne, al•chlor.
slmazlne, rnetolachlor,
and motriliuzln
Tho
wotor auppllor Will toke
olopo to onauro thol
odoquolo monitoring and
reporting
will
ba
performed In tho futuro.
Contact porton: John
And orson
Phone number: (740)
992-3121
(9) 13, 14, 15 3TC

750

SOUTHEAST IMPORT CENTER
11

Volume Used Car

.9tlw~ 6een sweet

2Jut on 'Wttlnuiay

Seueet%6

(740) 593-6671

45701

1·800·311·3391
Free Estimates
Contractors Welcome
Albtuo), 0/uo
mo

71271"9 2

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
Remodeling
~Garogoo
&amp;Jtelrlclt &amp; Plumbing

oollng &amp; Gutlors

.

•Ho11est

.

25 yrs

LUMP AIID STOllER COIL
N.I.A.P. VOUCHERS
ACCEPTED
DILIYIIY IVIILIILI
MONDAY·FIIDAY
7amTONOON
SATURDAY

:

BAR-)

•

•

•

,.

Over

40

Before

Anytime-A~tywhere

HOWARD
CO.

MEDICAL BILLER
Up to $15-$45/hr
Process med&lt;cal claoms from home
Traonong provoded
MUST own computer

ers and even people woth credot doffocultoes Specoahzong 1n credot cards
collectoon accounts medocal bills and
unsecured loans Call1-800-8972200 ext 340 A 501 (c)(3)
Not-For-Profit Organozatoon
www cambrodgecred&lt;t org

WHOLESALE CLUB EARN
$25 000/YEAR WORKING FROM
HOME• NO SET UP FEEl
STRUGGLING WITH BILLS?
CONSOLIDATE INTO ONE LOW
PAYMENT"
Reduce or Waove Interest
Stop Late Fees
Stop Collector Calls Avood Bankruptcy
CONTINENTAL CREDIT
COUNSELING

I

PARALEGAL GRADED CURRICULUM
Approved home study Affordable Sncel
1890 F1!1=:E CATALOG (1·80()-8~~6-l
9228) or BLACKSTONE SCHOOL
LAW, PO Box 701449 Depanmant
Dallas, TX 75370-1449

In Memory

/11 Lm;wg Memory of
ft.,,,_Leroy lltett
u•lw ptused mvn y

992-9178

Free
Estimates
.

•••,..

Make s Tractor

&amp;

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case- IH Parts

Sadly mh• erl b y
Dflughter, Sor~-lr~-Lmv,
&amp; Cmndson . Slurley,
Phd &amp; Dott Wue

assell among crodotoiS Aperson gomg lhoough bankruptcy may retam cert01n
proper!): known as "mmpt' proper!): lor ho or her personal u" Th• moy

mdude ocor ohouse clothes and household goack You should doroct any
questoons roga;dmg bookruplcy Ia on aflorney before procl8dong
For rnformat1on regard1ng
Bankruptcy contact
William Safranek,

Attorney

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply
St At 7

Tuppers Pla1ns, OH

7 40-985-3813
Culverts

4" 48 • &lt;n stock

8" Grovelless Leach
100' 1000' Rolls 1" &amp; 3/4" 200#Water Une
Full hne of Gas Ptpe &amp; Regulalors Waler Sloroge Tanks
l~~ ...... A1

I I ll I I

I

Mon.- Fri. 9:00 to 4:30
-..

Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

740·992·7643

::· (7401 992-3838

(No Sunday Calls)

Club

.

AT6·30 PM
Main St,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80 00
per game

'.

"•
'I

fOU Ll SAVE MONH

~ IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

' AND THAT SNO BULLI

'

Bingo On

Thursdays

'•

m2. ext

We

Deliver

Lunestone, Gravel,
Sa,d, Fill D•rt,
Agncultural Lrme,
Mulch, Top Sorl

(Low

740-992-3470

Now Renting

High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hrland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-$232
8/24/99 1 mo pd

WV

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

FREE ESTIMATES
Cant 'WV003506

a~rl Delivery Service
We deliver ALMOST anythmg

$300 00 Coverall

Call for details

$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie # 00·50 IIMMn

740-992-0038

so ms co ml? adld- 158 800 322

3267 Ext 158 CMrry Blossoms

PO BOJI 190 /158 Kapaau Ha
wall 96755

Start Oat ng To n•ghl ' Have run
ptaymg the Oh10 Dallng Game 1
800 ROMANCE 91118nSIOn rl681
30

New To You Thnlt ShOppe
9 West St1mson Athens
740 592 1842
Quality cloth1ng and household
Items $1 00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru Saturday

Petra Fash•ons Des1gner Lmger
le Pnced Under $40 00 S zes 5
4 X Some Gowns 5X Book A
Show Or A Ghost Party And Ill
Tell You How You Can Earn
$140 00 In Me rc hand•se For
$7 00 can 740 245 9582

7 Month Old White l,.ong Ha ired
K1tten Female Has Had 1$1
ShOts ln clu t1mg Aab1es Fel 1ne
Leukem ia Very Loveable To
Good Home 740..245-9100

Adotable long ha1red kiHens 740
992 730 1

Free K1ttens To Good Home Call
Alter 5 PM 740-441....0391

Nine monlh old Shepherd mlx
~ray / bla ck loves k1ds one blue
eye one green 740 992 4228
To good home 5 male k1t1ens 4
black 1 black/gray (304)67 5
7122 Leave Message

60

Lost and Found

Found Black Lab Ml)( Around 6
8 Months Old Male Red Collar
740 379 2696
Found female full blooded Ierner
no Ia• I red co lar Sharon Hollow
740 843 5258

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
New Roofs • Repa1rs •
Coating • Gutters •
Siding • Drywall •
Painting • Plumbmg

Los t "lass•e" Colli e Female
Red 8 While 6 Months Old Call
1304)6'5 5796
Los t black male dog resembles
Lab Dexter area 740 742 1080
Lost Medi Um S•ze Male Brown &amp;
Wh•te Dog 112 Face While 112
Brown 740 446 7224
70

Free Estimates

Joseph Jacks
740-992·2068

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vlctntty
86 Paid In Advance
DEADLINE 2 00 p m
the day before the ad

KC
EXCAVATING
Backhoe

&amp;

Bulldozer

Servoces
Stte Preparatoon

11 to ron Sunday
edition 2 00 p m
Friday Monday edltlon
10 00 am Saturday
Huge Sale 17th &amp; 18th 578
ShOeSir ng R1dge DISheS Furn
ture Smal App ances Clocks
Comforters lamps &amp; Much More

Septtc Systems

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vtclnlty

Owner/Operator

1·740·985·3949

an eye

OPEN HOUSE
at:
MID-VALLEY
CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL

LLA Tutor Tra1nmg WorkshOP.
Mason County Ltbrary

Sept. 17 5·9 PM
Sept 18 9 AM-5 PM
Call 675-6076 to regtster

.,,

CREDIT PROBLEMS???

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment
You're Treated with Respect!

Calf Now for Instant Approval! I..

CALL MR. FORD
(740)_MH•••
1-800-272-1171

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Adv ance Deadline t OOpm the
day before the ad Is to run
Sunday &amp; Monday edition
t OOpm Frlday
Large I rs t th1s year Thurst1ay
Sept 16 Friday Sept 11 One
m1le lrom SA 124 on SA 325 Bed
dmg curta ns Home lntenor toys
c1o1h1ng m1sc Ram cancels

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

J &amp; llnsulation
&amp; Siding
• Vinyl S&lt;d&lt;ng
• Aoofong &amp; Seamless Gutter
• Replacement Window~
• Concrete
• Room Add•toons ·Garages
• Decks &amp; Boal Docks

James lleeseell
PH: (740)992·2772

110

RACO yard sale Star Mill Park
Aacme Sepl 16 t 7 9am 4pm
Old Silverware p1cn c baskets
toys curtams clolh•ng diShes
lamps Chnsunas decora11ons
exerc se equ1pmen1 m rro rs
!mens bl•nds chest of drawers
hO I ow core mter or doors 6 11
closet aoor kn• cl&lt; knacks m•sc
All proceeds for &amp;HS scholar
sh ps Donal•ons apprec1aled
Call 740 949 2031 740 949 2071
or 740 949 2656 Thanks tor your
su~Jport Spectal pr~ces second
bay

Wednesday Sept 15 a1 Roger
Roush res•dence m Aa cme OH
SA 1211 pasl Southern High
School lei! at Aa c1n e Lodge
8 OQam to;. OOpm

Help Wanted

$2 ODD WEEKLY I Ma1lmg 400

Brochures! Sat•slact •on Guar
an1eed! Postage &amp; Supplies Pro
vlded! Rush Self At1d ressed
Stamped Envelope' GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
3701 1 1438 Star11mmed1ately

11 o

Help Wanted :

Baby$1tter needtd for !'NO ctukiren
1n MlddltpOrlerea 740-992..0149

F1nance
BRANCH IIANAGEIIENT
TRAINEE

Amencan General Finance A
Leader In The F1nanc•al Serv1ce$
Industry W1rh Over S11 81lhon In
AsselS And More Than 1 300
Branches Na.IIOnwlde Has An lm
mediate Need For A. $ranctl
Manage menl Trainee In Ow
Jackson Otfa
lnd1VIt1Uals Will Par11C1p819 In An
lntens1ve On The Job Traimng
Program Oes1gned To Prepare
You For Branch Manager Re
sppnSib ll•t es The 18 Month
Modu lar Training Program In
SlfUCIS You In All Aspects 01
Managmg Credit Extens1on Ac
count Adtustment Busmess De
velopmenl And Personnel Staff
•ng
Applicants For ThiS Entry LevtJ
Opportun•ly Should Have Four
Years Post H1gh School Educa
11on Tra •nmg Or Work Exper i
ence {Sa le's Expenence Pre
lerred) Slrong Wntten And Ver
bal Communrcahon Skills And A
Va lid Dr 111er s L•cense Must Be
Open To Re location And Have
The Destre To Assume Managenal Re spons•blllty
Am~1can

General Fmance Offers
A Ct:ltnpellt•ve Benellts Package
lncludmg Med•cal Oen!a And A
401(k) Plan Fo r lmmed•ate Con
s1dera110n Please Send Your Re
sume To Amencan General
F1nance PO Boll 702 Jackson
OH 45640 0702 Please V1s1t Our
Web S1te At www agl1nance com
Equal Opportur\lly Employer
Flexible Sct\edule up to S3 ~ a
month proceu lng med ical
cla ims No experience necn·
aery PC required (800)945
7981

Housekeep ng And Care For Am
bulatory Genlteman 40 Hours Or
L ve In R•o Grande Area 740

' ·oAIVE THE BIG AIGGS111• •

lmme.dla te Opef1lngs For RN s
Full Ttme Or Pa rt T1me Med
Home Health 740-441 1779

• Reg 0 T A Tru ck Ortv1ng
Tralnmg No Exper Necessary!!
21 &amp; Over 1 887 213 1303 (Toll
Free)

»DRIVER P-LACEMENT &lt;«&lt;
EXPERIENCED OR NOT We Can
Put You Behmd The Wheel" Cal
Free 1 888 292 2002 &amp; 1 888
473-3584
ACCOUNTING CLERK We
Have A Full T1me Open ing In Our

Accountmg Department For An
Jnd1v1dua1 That Has A Strong
Computer Skills And An Ac
count ng Background Or Degree
In Accounllng Or Related F•eld
Exper ence In M crosolt Otf1ce
Wou d 8@ Very He lpful Success
lui Candidate Must Ha11e Good
c;ommumcat1on Sk lis And EnJoy
Workmg W1th People In A Team
At mosph ere BenefUs lnctude
Heallh Dental VISIOn t. Ule In
surance 401k And Vacation
We Are A long Established Gal
hpohs Area Busmess Fo r lnler
v1ew Conslderat•on Please Send
Your Resume W1th A Cover Let
ter Statmg Why You Are The
Pe rson For Th•s Posit on To Sox
DH 24 c/o GallipOliS Da1ly Trib
une 825 Third Avenue Gallipolis
OH 45631
ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crafts
Toys Jewelry Wood Sewing
Typ ng Great Pay! CALL 1 800
795 0380 Ext 1201 (24 Hrs)
ATIENTION
Have A Computer?

Put It To World
$25 $75/Hr PT/FT
1 888 890-348 1

www pc Income com
Alln LPNs AN s EMTs And Par
amed1csl Become An AN Or BSN
Graduate And Increase Your In
come WilhOu l Go1ng Back To
School! To Schedule Your Inter
vtew In Hun tmgton Call Angela
Copeland By Oct 7 1 800 737
2222

AVON I All Areas! To Buy or Sen
Sh1rley Spears 304 675 \112;9
Avon Products Start your own In
Home Busmess Work Flexible
Hours EnJOY Unllm ted Earn ngs
1 888 561 2866
CLERICAL $12 $16 /HR Full
Benel!ls No E~epe nenc e Neces
sary Call e A M a PM 1 800
637 5231 Ext 1300 Fee
Clencal PositiOn
Cand•da les must have M1crosoft
Word &amp; Lotus Kn owledge Data
Entry and ba sic olf1ce dut1es
Tt11s IS a lull t me pos han w1th
benefitS ava11abte Start 1ng pay
Is $6 an hour Please send re
sume or apply m person between
10 00 4 00 at General Re llls e
Serv1ce 97 Hubbard Avenu e
GallipOliS Oh•o 45631 No
phone calls please
Comput er Users Needed Work
Own Hrs $25K $80KI Yr t 800
536 0486 X 7777 www 1cwp com
DATA ENTRY Nat1onal Bllllng
Seeks A Fu I /Part T1me Medical
B•ller Salary At $46K Pe r Year
PC Requ1ret1 No Exper ence
Neeaea Will Tram Call 1 888
251 7475
Dommo s P zza of Po1nt Pleas
atlt Now H r ng Safe Ortver s
F e)[rble hOurs AdYancemenl op
portun ltles App ly In per_son
{304)675 sass
Orwers 2 Week Pa1d COL Tra m
1ng No E•p Needed No Money
Nor Cred1i? No Prot:llemt Earn Up
To $32 000 11 sl Yr W /Full Bene
lis P A M TranSport Call Toll
Free I 877 230 6002 www otr
Clrlvers com
EARN SSOK A Year Comp U
Med Seeks Full /Pan T1me Med 1
cat Processors PC Reqwed No
Exper~ence
Necessary W1ll
Tram Call t 800-458 4t35
Eectron1cs
GET A GOOO JOB

In ElectroniCS Computers Ma
ch1ne Repa r HS Grat1s Under 34
Aelocarlon Prov1ded Pa id Tram
1ng Wtth Full Benefits Call 1 800
533 1657
Even ing WB 1ress &amp; M1dn1gh1
Call (304)937 2456

Coo~

Expenenced roofing and s1dmg
person wanted call 740 378
6349
Experienced Sennce Tech B•cy
cl e &amp; Lawnmower Assembly
Great Pay &amp; Benefits
APPLY JOilAY.
STAR TOMORROW

Celll-800-852 2453

245-5203

L tile Caesars Is Look ng For
Mot•va ted lnd•vla uals For The
Following Pos11mns All Leve s Of
Management Delivery Onvers &amp;
In Store Personnel Pleese Apply
At The GallipoliS Utile Caesars
861 Second Avenue Gallipolis
Local Company no w ac cepting
applicat ions lor Full T1me Diilta
Enlry Clerk &amp; Full T•me Pa yroll
Clerk Reply c/o Pomt Pleasant
Reg ster M L 01 200 Mam
Street Po1nt Pleasant WV
25550
MEOICAL BIL,LING Earn Excel
1en1 Income Full Trammg Com
puler Required Ca ll Toll Free
800 540 6333 Ext 2301
Otttce seek1ng Med•cal Data entry
reps for Entry Level Pos1t1on FTI
PT E~ecellem Pay PC Reg Call 1
soo 298 8506
Models Needed Vanous Ass1gn
menls Contests Ect Send PhOto
Req uest App l GallOn OEtZ 1209
H1ll Ad North wPmb1 1t P1cker ng
ton OhiO 43147
MOTHERS &amp; OTHERS WORK
FROM HOME! Ma ll Order Par!

T1me &amp; Full T1me $650 53 6001
Mon th Fu ll Tra•nmg Prov 1d edl
For FREE Booklet Call 1 8B8 234
9897 www cash 91 1 comthOme
Need Babys ner In My Home To
Watch A 3 Year Old Need Refer
ences 740.441-0867
NOW HIRING
$170 00 PEA WEEK /PT
LOCAL RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS

• Day And Even1ng
Sh•fls Ava•lat:lle
No Experience Needed
We Tra1n
Students Welcome
Apply In Person At
17 Pme Stree1
Gall pols OH
Tuesday September 14th
Wednesday Seplember 15th
Thursday September 161h
3 QO PM T111 6 00 PM Only
Ask For Ms Hammond
NUCLEAR POWER
PLANT TR AINEES
High School Grads Ages 24 0 r
Under W lh One Year Of Algebra
Excellent Program Includes 2
Years For ma l Tram ng Salary
Benef11s Followed By Ass1gnment
To Nuclear Power Fac1 111y Aelo
calion E•penses Included Call 1
800 533 I657
OTR flatbed trac1or !railer drlv
era needed 1 ye&lt;:~r experience
good pay home most wee~end s
plus call 740 949 2203 01 7110
441 1334
Part hme recepllomstl billing ,_l er~
tor local phys1c an s ofl 1ce Expe ,
ence w•th compule r codmg and
med•ca b lllng prelerrea Send r!C'
sume to PO Box 458 Aa r&gt; ne OH
45711
Part T1me Help Needed For Loca l
Rel811 Store Send Resumes To
P 0 Box 141 GallipOliS OH
4563 1

POSTAL JOBS To $19 35 I H~
INC BENEFITS NO EXPER I
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
I NFO

CALL 1 600 8 3 3585

EXT ..1111210 9 AM
DAYS fds II"''C Fee

•

•

9 PM

REGISTER NUR SE
Jackson Genera l Hosp11a1 A1p
ley WV as ooenmgs for FT ~Ns
for CCU EO &amp; MED Surg Current
s1a1e 1cense requ~rert and prev1
ous relevanl exp.enence pre
!erred Reply lo JGH HA Qtrec
tor PO Box 107 R•pl ey WV
25:271 (304 )372 2731 Exl 313
or 314 EOE
Route Sales Pos•t1on Available
Please Call 740)446 9692
Secrelary war')tea eKpenence
needet1 1n general bookkeepmg
Ohio &amp; WV payroll ta~~.es send
resume lo PO Bo~ 278 Rutland
Oh 45775
Sherw n Wlllrams Co Now Ac
cep11ng Appl1ca110ns F01 PIT Po
SII!Ons AI The New GallipOliS
Store (Located Ne•l To Bob
E11ans ) App11Call0ns May Be
P1cked Up At The Store M F 8
Noon
SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN

COUNTRV Call Now Toll Free 1
800 339 4204 Or 1 800 469 8164
For Appolntmenl To Come To
Nashv•lle Te nnessee And Aud1
tiOn For Major Record Producers
Internet www wc1n ac

I

'

T

WEEKLY POTENTIAL
Complete Simple Government
Forms At Home No Exper ence
Necessary CALL TOLL FREE
1 800 966 3599 Ext 2601 $3~ 00
Refundable Fee

$800

K1ttens to good home senous
cans only 740 992 9937

RODNEY KEL.L.ER

us for assistance!

Giveaway

40

AU. Yard Sales Musr

8010

ad?

Announcements

To Good Home 3 puppies / !
ma le 3 females P11tBu U Ger
man Sheppard M•x [304 )675
4057

(304) 675·2457 Oflke
(304) 674·3311 Coli Pit.

tte-~~?~ 24 Hr. Taxi

Marnages Smce 1974 Free Color
Magaz.nel
www cherry b os

9 00-5 30

Elates)

We Do•••

we help you
icatctllng display

HfiOLIHG IHC.

Henderson,

Pomeroy Eagles

Personals

START DATING TONIGHr!
Have Fun Meellng Ehg1t:lle S n
gles In Your Area Ca 1 Fo r More
Information I 800 ROMANCE
Ext 9735

I

MYERS PAVING

FREE ESTIMATES

' Septrc Sy•lem• &amp;
..Uulat1es

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Worldw 1de 1 26 000 Happy Client

ADVANCED D IN-'.GE: S'I'STEMS !NC

COMMERCIAl arod RISIDINTIAl

cJaw(~eds

Meet Be au tiful Excl llnQ Women

(740) 592 5025 Athens

New Homes • Vonyl
S odong • New Garages
•Replacement Wondows
•Room Add&lt;ttons
•Roofong

fU(J(t y

Aug. 11 , 1948

c~n roheve odebtor of !manual oblogahons and arrange a faor d•lnbutoon of

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

6 30·8 30 PM

/nul Georgra llteU

By Appointment

You II be: floatmg on a cloud wtth
the buy3 you If f •Hi ., the

• Roofs

(740) 992·2753
or 992·1101

&amp; Thurs.
&amp;

BANKRUPRY ·

Dealer s.
1000 Sf. Rt. 7 South

8:30 • 5:00

10-5:00 Tues. Wed.

unols

005

25 yrs experience

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

top

Remodeling • Siding

WICKS

DEPOYSAG

Tuesday, September 14th

14, /967

pm

low or 0 down! Gov't and bank
repo's being sold NOWI
Financing Available. Call Nowt
1-800-730-

CASH LOANSI
• Bad Credot OK
, • Easy Qualofyong
•Fast Servoce
• ~..ow Paymen ts
• Confodentoal

!leullpr

6

740·985·4180

(740 742·8888

Grad1ng

message After

• New Homes·

St.

OPEN

leave

Hourly Rates

yrs experience

:tJulldozer &amp; Backhoe
~
Se"'aces
• tJouse &amp; Tiailer Sites
., Umd Cleanng &amp;
•

6 pm

115 Salam

CONSTRUCTION

Wanted RCA 0 1rect TV older
models w1th access card W•ll pay
cash Call 740 949 3315 leave
message

H eat Purnp .

Un 1ts RV Roof

SMITH'S

Clean Late Mode l Cars Or
Truck-s Low M11es 1995 MOdefs
Or Newer Sm1th BUick Pont1ac
1900 Eastern Avenue GaK1pohs

Central Aor , Won do~.

412 T FN

Rutland, Ohio

INTERIOR

740 887.0181

~ 'n briRa• r''

t'

me do it for you.

.

Aluminum

and let

Smith

992-2735
Serving

Free

of painting,

Portable

All

Gutter Cleaning

20 Yrs Exp • Ins Owner

Coo/viii•, OH 45723

Mon • Frl

~:EXCAVATING

IWIEIGiHTIII Two sensatoonal producls
the country
Amazing bn&gt;akth•no "'"
ehmonates snorong Woves
, chnocatly tested ~""I ""
I"TIRI"IFA:ST' Lose weoght and
Nalural , no caffeone no hur1ger.l
We ight stays off - $39 95
guarantee (630) 365-6061
PO Box 524, Elburn, il 01111 ol

MEIGS
37814 Peach Fork Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Downspouts

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All u s Sll
ver And Gota Co1ns ProolseUi
O•amonds Antrque Jewelry Go ld
Rmgs Pre 1930 U S Currency
Sterhng Etc ACqtJISIIIOM Jewelry
M T S Co1n SMp 151 Second
Avenue Galhpohs 740 446 2842

9B5-4473

Don

Gutters

UNIQUE
OLDIES

90

ESTIM~TES

949·2168

Painting

&amp; Compare

REFRIGERATION

FREE ESTIMATES

Take the pain out

Rutland, Ohto

•

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

• f\ei'C\o'4al

Wedemeyer s Auct•on Sennce
GallipOIS OhiO 740 379 2720

FREE

x 30'

Painting

linda's

:• Truck seats. ,.car seats. headliners,
:truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
'
boat covers, carpets, etc

uenu~.~~f~:~~~~;:~~:~i~:~~~:~~~
Save Programs
thousandsfor
whole
becoming
debt
"
lree
renters
homeown-

Stop

Hours
7:00 AM - S·OO PM

3/11/99 TFN

R1ck Pearson Auct1on Company
lull lime auctioneer compteta
auct1on
serv1ce
L1censed
166 OhiO &amp; We st V~rgrnla 30-4
773-5785 Or 304 773 5447

Remodeling

5' x 10'

to 10'

740·742·2138

·New Homes
·Complete

740-949-2217
Sizes

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
·Garages

45771

JONES'

81111'991 mo pel

&amp; DAuto Up olstery • Plus, Inc

I

10 X 10$40
10 X20 $60

877-353-7022 (loll free)

992·6215

• Sr 124 Wellston, Ohoo
74(}.384-6212
•

said

Sales
Suppllies,

&amp;Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

• 'TOP

Gas-A&amp;C-Mig

BRAMHI COAL
COMPANY
'

Cull 592-2497

"'DEBT CONSOLIDATION"'
ONE somple low monthly payment
Reduce/Ehmonate onterest

Ractne , Ohio

expenence

740-742·8015 '

22 yn Local

•Sale• e.rpenence
•Snlury Plru Botuu

800-900-8856

Hauling

HILL'S
SELF STORACE

TREE SERVICE

Free Est1mates

• J\ elll A.ppenratu•e

All types of portable gencralors

29670 Bashan Road

Sidewalks, Palios

Froo Esffn~~tu

HOI liSe 7om THRU 4pm

Ordar of Sale to me
directed from said Court
In tho above entitled
action, I will expose to
sate at public auction at
1he Counhouoe on Oct
15, 1999 at 10 30 am of
said day, the following
described real estate
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Sltualad In
the
Township o.f Salem ,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio.
Beginning 40t leal
South of a corner stone
one foot North of the
Northwest corner of Lot
No 20, as described In
1he plat of Longstreth&amp;
Addition to Martinsburg,
thence East 99 feet,
thence South 1DO feet
West 99 feet, thence
North 1oo foot to tho
place of beginning
Being all of Lots Nos 28
and 29 as described In
Longotretha Addition to
Martinsburg
Prior
Instrument
references Volume 19
Page 903
Property
Address
31435 Bowles Rd ,
Dexter, OH 45726
Appralaod at 55,000 00
1
Terms of sale Cash
James M
Soulsby,
ShariH, Meigs County
Sara M Petersmann
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss
120 E Fourth Street, 8th,
Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(5t3) 241 -3100
OH Sup Ct 10055402
(9)14,21,28 3T

TRUCKING

Qua/tty Dnveways,

Pomeroy, Ohio

• Hard Workmg
• Wrllmg to Work Long HorrN &amp; Takf! Direction

www YamahaGenerators com

SIORAGE
ST. RT. 7

CONCRETE
CONNEaiON

Welding Services

~nyl Siding &amp; Painting

::1/.C. YOUNG Ill

In pursuance of an

SAYRE

YOUR

pd

lo &amp; Porcn Doclls

SHERIFFS SALE, REAL
ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 98CV087
NDRWEST
BANK
MINNESOTA, NATIONAL
ASSOCIAT I 0 N,
AS
TRUSTEE, PLAINTIFF
VS PAUL J HATFIELD,
at al, DEFENDANTS
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

2623

HARIWEIL

992-1717

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS
s;.t;,., ' Sf#lif

&gt;

•Self Mommted
•Sale• One11ted

Phone

'

Limestone

Auction
and Flee Market

Bill Mood1spaugtt Au ct1oneenng
Complete Auct1oneermg Servic
U Cons•g nmtnl 1uc110n M ill
Street M!c:ld ltport Thursdays
01'11o Ucense H693 1-40 989

Howard L Writesel

Dealer Is looking for Sales Person:

Public Notice

p(IUed

East State Street

Athens, Ohio

0

U)/10

Larry Schey

r-

Help Wanted

A P P r als d
aI
$30,00000
Terms of Sale 10%
Cash day of sate and
balance by Confirmation
of Sale.
James M
Soulsby,
Sheriff Meigs County
Heather E Peters
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss
12
0 E Fourlh Street, 8th
Floor, Cincinnati , Ohio
45202
51 241 1
&lt; 3)
-3 00
OH Sup
Ct 110069144
4
(9) 1 , 21,28 3T

Sepr

Sales Repre se ntative

·Room lddltlons l

Athans County

The Dally Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Two ..,.,.,....,. oro to
bo oloctod
You may
voto ot tho annuol
moetlng or on on •
obtontoo bollol wlllcll

fair debt collection proctlco
act Is glv4m
So•d Dolondonts will take
not1ce that 1t be requ ired 10
answer said Complaint on
or before the 12th day of
October, 1999 or ludgmont
will
be
rendered
accordingly.
USDA Rural Development,
Plaintiff
Stephen D Miles Atlorney
(8) 10,17,24,31
(9) 7,14 6TC
Public Notice

14, 1999

�Tuesday, September 14, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, September 14, 1999

Ohio

OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

1 T _ . toya

ttMt

Wanted drywall carpenter t o
CO.IA drywall &amp; repa•rs n 8K
dh~nge fot' tnre~ months of I ee
reo&amp;.. Do requ•re deposit contact
Mil Milton aHOQ-992 9053
Warlhouse And Del very Person

AI1Pty In Person No Phone Ca s
Pleaset L•festyte Fu nuure 856
Thin! ,.,. Gallipolis
WilDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 IHA
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY
MAN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL 1 800 8 13
3585 EXT U211 8 AM 9 PM

71lA.YS Ids, nc Fee
WORK FROM HOME!
Earn 1500 S1500 PIT o $2000
$4000 FfT per month Ca ll 1
(888)$57 32!)6 or V s t Yoww al

waysthebest com
140

Business
Tralnmg

GoiHpolls Career College
(Careers Ctose To Home)
Cal TOday 740 446 4367
1 800 214 0452

Reg 190 05 1274B
150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE

GREE QUICKLY Bachelor s
Maslers Doc to ate By Core
spondence Based Upon Pro Ed

ucatlon And Sho t Study Course
For FREE Info mallon Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800 964 8316
180

Wanted To Do

Carpet And Vmy lnta at on Re
pair And Restretch 20 Yea s Ex
per ence F ee Est mates Ca t B II
Price 740.379 2164
E &amp; S lawn Service Des gn lm
plementaliOn
and $~ II C9
Ava table for Spr ng Clean up
fert 112 ng and planting Free est
mates Sat slact on guaran eed
Greg Mihoan 3041675-4628

Jenny Greene Ce 111 ed L nk
Ch1ld Care Prov der n New Ha
ve.n Area now has elfen ng
open ngs Unk or Self Pa y ac
cepted 1304)882 33 9
J ms Drywan••&amp; Construct on
New Conslruct on &amp; RemMe
Drywall S diflg Roofs Add
t1ons Pamllng etc (304 )674
4e23 ()( 1304)674.0155
Need en ld care? 1 halfe wo
openmgs '" my home Oh o &amp; WV
cert I ed Ca 740 992 3509 ask
for Me~ssa

MEDI CAl SILLER Up to $15
$45 /Hr Medical B II ng Sollware
Company Needs People To Pro
cess Med1cat C a ms From Home
Tra n ng P Olf dect Must Own
Computers 1 800 434 5518 Ext
667
MEqiCAL BIL~ING Un m ted In
come Po ten!lal No Expe ence
Necessary Free l nfor maUoh &amp;
CD ROM Investment $4 995
$8 995 F nanc ng Ava abe Is
and Automa ed Med ca l Serv c
es nc 800 322 11 39 Ext 050
Void n KV IN CT

START YOUR OWN VENDING
Bus ness Fo As L t le As $500!
ALL CAS H BUSINESS I 800
22Q-29B5 24 H s

anced References • Free Est
mates (304}895 3981

FINANCIAL
210

Business
Opportumty

$$ HOME INSPECTION $$ Billion
&amp; Growth Indus! y P otecte d Ter
rllo es Low Ove head Cash
Bus ness Tra n ng Prov ded l ow
Investment BOO 586 4046
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
rf'commends that you do bu s•
ness w lh people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall unt you halfe lnlfest gated
the offe ng

2 I Cents !Min PHONE CARD
Rle EASY $$ MONEY FEW
Hours Earn $500 $5 000 /Wk
CASH! FREE S les I BOO 997
9888 24 H s
2 9C /Min PHONE CARD Ate

EASY$$ MONEYI Few Hrs
Ea n $500 $5 OOQ /Wk
CASH FREE S tes
1 800 997 9888 24 H S
ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
$1 000 A Day No Selhng Not
MLM Compute An d Software
Oistr butor sh p For Free lnlorma
I on Pa ckage Ca ll 1 800 786
8849 24 Hrs XT 27
AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 20 Locat ons $4K $10K
$4 000 +IMo In come
All
CASH! t00°o- F nimce Ava table
1 800-380 2615 2~ Hrs
DENTAL BILL ER Up lo $20 $40
fHr Dental 811 ng Sollware Com
pany Needs People To P ocess
Medical Claims T a mng P ov d
ed Mus! Own Computer t 800
223- 1149 J;xt 460
EARN $500 $1 200 WK IN
VOUR BATHROBE &amp; SLIPPER S!
Great Inco me Opportunity W
Computers l ow lnlfes tm ant 1
B00-449 2969 CO&lt;Je 03

EAFJN $90 000 YEARLY Repa1r
ng NOT Rep ac ng Long Cracks
In Wmdsh e ds Fr ee V deo 1
800 826 8523 US
Canada
WWW glassmechanl~ com
EARN UP TO $5'0 AN HOUR
Send Us A One Page Form We
Do The Res' No o re ct Selling
Computer &amp; E Commerce Dlstr butorshlps F ee Info Pkg 1 abO
831 2385 24 Hr$ Ext 63
liOME EMPLOYMENT DIREC
TORY Hundreds 01 Leg llmate
Companies W•th Oeser pt on
Check /Money Order $30 00
Mac s Bus ness 0 ectory PO
Box 146-t Laurinburg NC 28352

Know about compute s? Want to
make money at home? Gel you
own online computer store!
business bylnle~ net

Th s newspaper will not
know ngly accept
advert sements tor real estate
wh ch s In v10lallon or the
aw Our readers are hereby
nformed that a I dwellings
advef11sed n this newspape
are ava table on an equal
opponun~~y bas1s

W n Our Beau lu Income Pro
due ng Bu d ng In Mane For
Fr ee Contest Rules Bu d ng
Pro spec tus V s t www un co n
contesl co m 0 Send SASE Un
co n Essay Contes P 0 Box
1403 Belhe Mane 04217 $200
Entry Fee Requ ed
220

Money to Loan

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Aema n ng Payments
On P ope y Sod Mo gages
Annu es Se ll emen ts lmme
d ale Quotes
Nobody Beats
Ou P ces Nat ona Con act
101
Buyers 800 490 0731 h
www nat onalcontractbuyers com
$$$ OVERDUE BILLS!! $$$ Con
so da e Qebls Same Day Appro
val NO APP LICATON FEES
BOO 863 9006 E~ l 936 www he p
pay b Is com

$FREE CASH NOW$ F om
we a thy Fam 1es Unloadirtg Mil
Ions 01 Do as To Help M n mize
The Taxes W te mmed ately
W ndfat s 84 7 A SECOND AVE
SU TE •350 NEW YOR K NEW
YORt&lt; 10017
GUARANT EED APPROVAL
Bank Card No Cred 1 Check No
Up Front Cash Secu ty Depos t
Requ ad Mu st Be 18 And
Have Va d Check ng Accoun t
Pre Approva l By Phone I 800
689- 556

f You H~a ts tn The Cou ntry
We ve Got The Farm House For
You W hout The Fa m L ots Of
County Cha n
Wh /6 P cll:et
Fence tnd(J(Jedf
67 Acre level lol 3 Bedrooms

2 112 Bal hs U! ty &amp; Pantry
Rased t&lt; !chen &amp; D n ng Roo m
K cMn Has Wh te New Cab ne s
Electr c Stove Fr g wa sher &amp;
D ye Incl uded 11 ~26 Front
Porch 0\le looking The Valley
11 x1 4 Back Porch 1376 Patrol
Road P Iced In Low $70s New
Wh te Ce I ng Fans L1ghts
Plumb ng &amp; Carpet Th ro ughout
(Ha dwood Floors Under Carpet )
F apace &amp; los 01 Soraget Cal
740 379 900Q Or 740 379 98B7
No land Contracts

SO DOWN HOME S NO CREDIT
NE EDED
GOV T
FORE
CLOSURES CALL NOW FOR
RE G STRATtON
800 434
2434 EXT 3205

RENTALS

1. Sdrm Su table fo
Or 2 Pe
sons 1 M1te North Of Add son

$200 00 Per Month $200 oo De
po st Tenant Pays Uli es 740
367 0156
1 Bedroom House In Mason
740 256 1489

1 Bedroom House No Pels 28
L nco n Ave S325 00 monlh
(740) 446 9342
3 Bedrooms $250 Mo $150 De
pos 27 Ann Stree t Pomeroy 3
Bed oom $250/Mo S150 Oepos
t 112 Condor Street Pome oy
740 388-8591 304 633 8937
3 Bedroom House n He'nde son
$300 pe mo Depos VReterences
AeQU ed (304)675 1976
4 Bedroom House In JaCkson Co
On Q d Route 35 Call After 7 30
Pm 740 286 8122

House Fot Rent 4 Bedroom Ga
rage Pt Pleasant (3 04 )675
6633 Aile 5PM

CASH pr LOAN Far fll Cap tal
W Purct ase 0 l oa n Aga nst
You Government Fa m Pay
mens (CA P PFC) Call Fa m
Ca p tal t 888 FARM ACT (327
6228)
CON SOL DATE DEBT Reduced
Month y Payments 20 50% Save
Thousands Of Do ars In Interest
Non P oil TCC BOQ 758 3844
CR EDIT COUNSILING
Deb!
Conso dat on Need He p Pay ng
Yo ur B I s? Make One S ng !e
lowe Monthly Payment Free
Quote No Obi ga on Cal 1 BOO
844 8293 Or E Ma u sCunlonl
nanc alsernces cor'n
CREDIT PROBLEMS Stop Here
We Can He p Loans Ava able
$3 000 And Up No Fee 1 877
663 9269 Ex 221

GET YOU R CASH NOW Oldest
Buyers Of Struc u ed Se tlements
Annu t1es And Go'llernment Farm
Pavments A so Purchas ng Lo t
teres And P \late Mor gages
Call Se ttlement Cap ta 1 800
959 0006 www set ementcap
ta com
Need a l oan? Home Aut o &amp;
Debt Canso! da on Good o Bad
C edt Ca ll o I ee 877 65 8
055 1
Need A Lo an? T y Debt Canso
dation $5 000 $.200 000 Bad
Gred I 0 K FP.B
800 770 0092
Ext 215
RE CE IV NG PAYMENTS ? In
\l&amp;sto r Pays CAS H NOW Fo
Your Se let F nanced Mo rtgage
Real Esta e Coni act lnsu ance
Annu ty H ghest P ces Free
Quotes Why Wa t? Ca R ch 1
800 888 6450
230

Professional
Services

Moun t s T ee Se vice •The T ee
Profess onal s Bucket Tuck
sen1 ce Top Tr m Ae mova
Stump G nd ng Free Es t mates
Ful y ln su ed Work s Camp 8 d
well OH Cal An d Save 1 800
838 9566 740 388 9648 Owne
Rick Moun1
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless we w n
1 88B 582 3345

REAL ESTATE
310 Homes for Sale

Buy Homes From $10 000
1 3 Bedroom Local Go\lernmen
&amp; Bank Fo ec osu es F nanc ng
PoSs ible Fa l sti ngs Ca 800
319 3323 Ell.t 1709
FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down! Oov t And Bank Repo s
Be ng Sold NOW Finane ng
A\laltable Ca Now 1 BOO 730
7772 E.11t 8040
HOME FORECLOS!JRFS NO
MONEY DOWNI Nd CREDIT
NEEDED TAKE OVE R VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! 1 800 9 6
9 19 1 EXT H5023

House and l ot for sa e 4 bed
rooms two baths located n Car
penter $1000 down WAC easy
lerms co ntact Dav1d 1 800 333
6910
Hous e loca ed n M nerslf lie four
bedroo m LA FR ulllty oom
bath basement w th bath a r wa
ter sollene newer roof bea~lw
VIew of the 1\/er 740 99.2 90 2 for
appo ntmenl
Three bed oom 1 &amp; 1/2 story ce
dar and stone home s one ch m
ney large w ndows two baths
basement cove ed deck arge
garage 18 112 acr~s prl\late
nea Pomeroy 740 992 6176

No Pets t Large Bedroom 175
SQ Fl $375/Mo $250 E&gt;epos1t
74G-441 9864 Cal Before 2 PM

COMPUTERS SO Down low
Monthty Payment&amp; V2K Comph
ant Almost Evervone Approved
Call FIROCOM Advanceel Tech
nolol/les 1 BOO-Ii17 3476

Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spac1ous 2 Bedroom&amp; 2
Floo s CA 1 U2 Bath Fully Car
peted Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pat o Sta t $350/Mo No Pet s
Lease Plus Secur ty Oepos t ReQu ed Aller 5 740 446 0101
Betor.e 5 74(}-446 3481

Couch &amp; Cha r In Good Condition
For Sale 740..446 7589
Parts I Suppty

Hugo '"""'tory

V nyl Sk rt"''l Kits 1299 95 5 Gal
lon Alum num Flbered Roof Paml
$25 21 5 Ga l While Roof Paint
$5117 69 Anchors $5 Doors &amp;
W ndo ws Gu &amp; Electric Wate
Heater s P umb ng &amp; Electrical
Parts lntertherm M11ter &amp; Cote
man A r Cond t oner&amp; &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennetts Mob e Home
Supply 740 446 9416 Ga hpolls

Two one bed oom ur'\lls a\la table
mmed1ately new 'I remodeled ..,
HUO apprO\I&amp;d !"10 pets $250 a
monlh plus secuuty depos I ca I
6 4 449-9469
Upsla rs Furn shed 3 Ro oms
Sa h c ean No Pets Relerences
&amp; Oepos 1 Requued 740 446
15 9

onoo

Va ey V ew Ap artments R o
Gra n~e Oh Now Accepting ap
p catio ns lor Immediate occu
pancy 1 &amp; 2 Bed oom Apts A r
Cona tton ng K tchen app ances
Fenced tn Playground Laundry
On S ght Management Water
Sewage and Ti ash Paid Full tune
Students m\JSt meet Oh1o Hous
ng F nance Agency Qua Ilea
tons San o Citizens Welcome
EHO For mo e Info mat on call
\740) 245 9170 Monday thru
Thursday 9 00 12 00 noon
460

420

7 lnloxlc8tll'ljl . 42 Study ol .,...... 44 Poor grltdo
13 O¥wslmPftn.d 4 5 - writing
au14 Drunk (sl)
46 NlcltnMM ol
15 l)ne.celled
41 - -

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1 ed New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 800-537 9526

large Chest Type Deep Freeze
Work ng Fine $100 DO 740 446

Space for Rent

Mob e Home lot at Santa s For
est on At 87 Water/Sewer pr
vate
eferences
eqUired
(304)675 4138

N ce used Appliances furn ture
freezers Bedroom Su tes 0
nettes Lots More• (740) 446
1004 [740)-4-ie-4039 any ome
Pop Cooler Double Door Shde
Chosl Type $300 (304)675
738B
PRIME STAR

"""

D recTV Summer Promotion CaM
now 1--888 265-2123

for Rent

READV TO LOSE THOSE UN
WANTED POUNDS? Long Onto
www pro\19nplan com/lose

Pomeroy SA 124 600 square ft
cus omer park ng carpel alf con
d tioned ce I ng tan modem $350
pe month $350 depos t 740

Three Bags L1ttle Boys Clotnlng
s zes 18 mo to 2 112 years $10
lor a I 1304)882 2518

949 2093

Used BathTub Good cond ton
W I accept rea son able offer
Call (304)675 2811

MERCHANDISE

320

1

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1 1999 F eetwood 14x72 2BR
2BA A r Skirt ng on Ren allot
2 t99 5 Skyl ne 1 4 ~70 3BR
2BA V nyl S d ng Sh ng es
Roof 6 walls

Furn shed two bedroom a r con
d t1oned no pets $150 deposit
$325/mo a so spaces lor rent
$90fmo $90 depos t R ver Park
Pomeroy {IO mer y Browns) 740
949 2093
Two tra1iers for ant 12x65 two
bedroom $2251 mo 10x55 th ee
bedrOom $2061 mo SA 7 sourh ot
Middleport 740 992 2524

3

1996 Redmond 16x7:0 3B R
2B A 6 walls N ce F nan c ng
Ava abe (304)675 6055
14 x65 Elec ~,:: two bed oom two
baths new a r cond one unde
p nn ng curta ns $8500 lea ve
message 740 949 2453
t4x70 two bedroom two fu 1 ba,ths
ca pet a cond one d call 740
992 7761 or 740 992 22 13
16~BO

1996 Clay on Loudon
A C 381=1 2Ba Take Ove Pay
ments Uke New (304)675-8165
1982 W ndso 2 Bdrms 2 Fu
Baths W th Add On 1 2 Acre of
La d
Ne ghbo ~: hood
Rd
$28 000 00 740 446 0785

993 Clayto n 16lBO Very N ce
Super Clean 3 Bedroo ms 2
Battis W lh B g Roun d Bathtub
Heat Pump Elect c $2 000
740 256 6382

440

Apartments
for Rent

and 2 bed oom apartments fur
n shed and untu rn shed security
depos•t requ ed no pets 740
992 2218
1 bed oom apartment n M ddle
po I all llt t es pa d $270 per
month $100 depos1t 740 992
7806
1 Bed oom AIC WID Hook Up
Near A bors Nursing Home No
Pets Quiet locat ons $279 Mo
'1- Ut IIIBS 740-44E 2957
2bd m apts Iota etectnc ap
p lances lurmshed taund y room
lac I t es close to schoo n own
Appl ca t ons ava lable at V11tage
Green Apts •&lt;l9 or call 740 992
37t1 EOH
2BR apt for rent S275 a month+
depos t Stove Refr gerato Fur
n shed New Haven A ea
(30~)773 5577 Leave Message
~BR

want A Home Don 1 Have Land?
We Oo Hu y On 'I 10 Los Lei!
80Q 383 6862

Apt m Mason ,Stove Ref g
efato Ut I es furn shed A C
Laundry ROO!'fl Cell ng Fans
Garbage D•sposa Very N1ce No
Pet s (304 )773 5352 (304)88.2
2827
4 Room Apt New y Decorated
$250 oo Month P us Deposit And
1 Years Le ase No Pets Ap
pHances Furn shed Cal 740 446
1 63
Apartment fo ent n Pomeroy no
pets 740 992 5858

B and New 80s 3 Bedrooms 2
Batt'ls Just $239fMonth Free
De ve y and Se t Up on y one at
th s P ce Hurry Oakwood Gal
PO S 740) 446 3093
8 and New Daub ew de 3 Bed
rooms 2 Ba hs only $340 mon h
Fee Delve y and Set Up L mted
bile won I last On y at Oak
wood Gal pols Oh (740) 446
3093

New 3BA 2 Bath 14 Wide $500
Down $210 pe mo F ee A 1
BOO 691 6777
New 4BR 16 w de S500 Down
$245 per mo Free Air 1 aoo
69 1 6777
Spec a 28~80 3 or 4BR $1000
Down $349 per mo Free De \1
ery &amp; Setup I 800 691 6777

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENT S AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 W es ~w ood Or ve
lrom $279 to $358 Walk o ShOp
&amp; moves Ca 740 446 2568
~qua Housing Opportun ty

Fv Lea se One Bed oom AC
Apt Corner Of Second And P ne
$250 Mo Pus IJI 1es Secur ty
And Ke~ Deposit Aelerences Re
qu ..ed No Pets 140 ~46-4425
Grac ous v ng and 2 bedroom
apartments at V \lag a Manor and
R ve s de Apa tmentS n M1dd e
po I From $249 $373 Ca 740
992 5064 Equal Hous ng Oppor
unles

360

Real Estate
Wanted

we Buy Land 30 500 Acres
We Pay Cash 1 BOO 213 8365
Anthony Land Co

For Sa e Aecondlt oned wash
ers dryers and eh ge a to s
Thompson s Appliance 3407
Jackson Avenue f30 4)6J5 7388
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers rei gerators
ranges Skaggs App ances 76
V ne Street Call 740 446 7398
1 886 618 o 28

l · ~Yb~u~~~~U~s~W~o~B~a~t~h~LC
a:••:l
800 291 0098

Kmg Size Waterbed bookcase
headboard Doub e pedesto 12
drawers A. 1 conditiOn waveless
matt ess w/bafl es (304)675
1595
QUICK CASH
A&amp; D s Used
Fu nlture Buying Partial Or
Whole Estate 740 367-D2BO
2 Drye s for sale 31 2 to 4 yrs
old [304)675 6693
520

Sporting
Goods

New Mathews MQ 1 bow w/ new
qu ver sights peep sight elbow
rest &amp; stabK zer 304-675-6348
530

Antiques

Buy or sell R•verlne Antiques
1124 E Ma.n Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 600 pm Sunday 100 to
6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner
540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

112 Carat Diamond So lit~ re Ring
VS 2 Car ly 14K Yellow Gold 6
P ong Tiffany Band .Appra1sed At
$2 000 Less Than One Year Old
$1 100 OBO 740 446 4548
1998 Fa rmont Commander Set
les 14X70 3BR n ce can leave
on tot Full size Couc h floral
Des gn Mauve&amp; Eggshell Has
not been used $400 Ant que
Wardrobe 1304)675-4153

N ce One Bedr&lt;lom Unfurn shed
Apa tment Ran ge &amp; Ael ge ator
P 0\1 ded Water &amp; Garbage Pa d
Depos 1 Requ red Ca I 740 446
4345 After 6 OOPm
Now Taking Appl catfons 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartmenrs Includes Wa!er
Se wage T ash $3 5/Mo 7-40
446-0Q08
Sma Furn shed Apartment 3
Rooms K Iehan Bedroom Llv
ngroom Ut t es pa 1d ell:cepl
elec tr c
$225 per month
1304)675 365

washer &amp; Dryer 41 sony Tv
Futon Bed Tables M1crowave
Curio Cabin'tt Some AntiQues
Hundre'ds Of Mise IIams 740
256-6753
Washer and dryer one year old
Sears JUngle gym
sw1ng set 55 gallon f sh tank 13
color TV two new recliners one
year old 740 992 9723
I ampolme

Water! ne Spec a 3f4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 AU Brass Com
pression F1t11ngs In Stock
RDN EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Oh o 1 800-537 9528
Wh te Kenmore Washer $90
White Kenmore Dryer $85 White
G E Washer $90 Almond Ken
more Dryer $90 30 Day Warranty
Call After 5 3D PM 740 446

9066
550

Building
Supplies

Block brick sewer pipes wind
ows I ntels etc Claude Winters
Rio Grand~ OH Call 740 245
5121
Steel Buildings New Must Sell!
40x60x14 Was $17 500 Now
$1 0 971
sox100x16
was
$27850 Now $19990 80xi35JCI6
Was $79 850 Now $42 990
100x175x20 Was $1 ~9 650 Now
$78850 1800406 5126
560

Pets for Sale

AKC Basseu Hound Pupp~es
Red &amp; Wh te T 1 Color 1st Shots
&amp; Worrnod $200 74D-256 1688
AKC black labrador Relriever
fema e OOB 7/ 16199 shots
wormed dewc aws amoved lam\
y &amp; hunt1ng dog! $250 740 992
2472
AKC Boxer Pupp es Tal s &amp; Dew
Claws Aemo\led 1st Shots &amp;
Wormed Both Parents On Prem
... $225 740 256-1686

29 Gallon F sh AcquariUm
Ac cesso ues No Stand
Leaks ~50 1304)n3-5051
29 PEOPLE NEEDED
TO LOSE WEIGHT
Dr recommended 100°o natural
Guaranteed 11 program In Eu
rope Rita at 1~ (888) 449 3759 or
\1 sit www members tr pod c9m1
NSFord

BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 lbs 30 DAY MONEY
BACK GUARANTEE! Natura Dr
Recommended 740 441 1982
Free Sanl)les

Co eel b es PICture Frame s
Meat Grinders Butter Mold
Washboards 0 Lamps Irons
C garette l ghte s Furn ture
Much Morel740 446 0639
Co ac to rs Item Yerman 35 MM
Plate Came a Wo td War II
l oyd E Esque' Phone 304 773
5479 Mason wv

2 44 Ac es Homes te Green
Townsh p Gall a County Seen c
au et C ose To Gall po s Some
Res r CIIQns 740 245 5776

23 ACRES
2M iesOff SR7&amp;SR 2 8 Souh
Of Gal po s S ng ew ~:~es A owed
Rough Mos tly Woodecl Road A
ready Cut n Land Contract
A\la table Only $27 000 1 800
213 8365

Household

Appl ances
Recondlt oned
Washers D vers Ranges Aefr
grators 90 Day Guarantee
French C ty Maytag 740 446
7795

5 Bedroom l ocal Repos &amp; Fore
c osu es Fee F nanc ng Poss
be For L st ng s
800 719 3001
Xt185

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH ?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY we Finance 0 Down! Past
Credit P oblems OK II Even If
Tuned Down Belorell Reestabl sh
Your Credl!l1 800-659 0359
WAAM UP
92l'!.. Gas Furnaces Heat Pumps
Duct
Free Estimates II

Goods

3 Bedrooms 1 1 2 Bath Ra nch
Stye Home Exce len ! Cond ton
On The Co ner Of K neon &amp; Teo
dora In Ga I po s Oh o 740 446
7928 EV€ nmgs
HOMES FROM $10 0001

o

COMPUTERS
accessor es .sofrware supples
De ~tered 10 your door at super
sto e priCes
compute s py;nter net

~......::=====---- ~

AKC Lab Puppies

Champ on
Blood me Proven Hunung Stoc.11;
Black Choco ale Coors Males &amp;
Females 740 643 2288
AKC Reg stared Pupp es

Po
me an ans $300 Poodle $250
Also Sh1h Tzu $250 (304)675
3361
CKC Reg1s1ered Cocker Span1e s
5 Months 2 Males $50 00 Each
1 Femae$10000 7402566162
Doberman puppies tails dOcked
first shots and wormed parents
on P emise s $100 each one
o ack and tan 1emale two ed
males 740 992 5551
Reg ste ed A r..e dale puppies
make great hunters farm dogs
loyal gentle pets Shots wormed
St50 740 992 7888
We are baby Pvssycats Come
&amp; Get Us
Ou names a e
Herahey Borden Sle tmg and
Major and we need good hOmes
Our Daddy got s ck and d1ed and
Mom says the e are people ou t
there who w II ave us we are 8
weeks old and ve ry sweet and
cuddly Cal! our Mom Rebecca
a1(304)675 4803
570

Musical
Instruments

Conn I ombo e w1th case $1 25
phOne 740 992 7447
For sate 24x 42 greenhouse
heate and fans cab net ste reo
record player 740 949 282.2
For Sale Pallo Door Replace
ment W ndows Whttf e d Pellet
Stove tnle rtor Doors Call after
5PM 1304)675-7652

Equipment

1996 Adam Hor81 gooseneck
Tra !tr Sl1nlload front dreu
rear tack rub!Mr mafs padded
wa IS
1304)87 5 6132/day &amp;

North

1989 For£1 F 150 112 Ton XlT
LWB 4 Spd 6 Cyl AIC PW
P B Pdl Bed L.ner 13 900 00
74o-.w&amp;-8315

«8-9808
620

Wanted to Buy

Want To Buy 1988 Dual Whee
Cab &amp; C118s~s 740-446 9370
630

Livestock

1 cnarotals Bull Call Weighing
Approx 350 Pounds Extra N ce
740M6-4053

1995 Chevy Tahoe 4x4 .. Doors
350 Automatic loacJea leather
Black &amp; Sliver Asking S 1 5 000
080740-256-1011

K mball conso le p ano very
oond t10n $500 740-949 2861

SSO

m e~

FrU1tS &amp;
Vegetables

Red Aa spberr es Now Aval lable
Tay ors Berry Patch Call In Eve
ngs 740 245 9047

East
• Q 10
¥10 9632

t

A2

•

10 8 2

• 8 5 4
• 9 7 6

South
• J 43
• K Q4
t

K Q 10 6

•AQ4

48 Rs·r-zt

cruture
16 Light brown
17 lle&lt;nstaln lor
ahort
18 Roman 3
21 Sttck-on 1tem

51 P 55 Atlanta pfayerl
56 Actor Borgnlne
57 Tenn11 pro
Mon 1ca -

23 LoHie devtl

58 Sibenan

26 Loo AA9tlet
tree1eas tract
alrpr28 Abominable
DOWN
Snowman
1 Cask (abbr)
29 By birth
30 Singer Cantrell 2 Game ol cards
3 Ear (comb
31 Subscription
form)
department 1
4 Lleut I booS
delight
33 Stir up support s Worl&lt; dough
6 Australian city
36Zolaherolne
7 Pied Piper s
37Pin,... City
(eyeglasses)

18 ,..ntucket

8 Black
9 October breW

19 :..rrrored

10 Add sound to a
!tim track
11 Ma Sumac
13 S.nse of taste

20 Become
electncally
ch8rged
22 Ktx or
C~IOI

23 To the InteriOr

Vulnerable Both
Dealer West

&amp; 4·WDs
South

lNT

West
2.
Pass

North

Dbl
Pass

24 Cruel peraort

25 Mammals
coot
V Hoods gun

East
Pass
Pass

opec1ahot

34 Guarantees .,,

35 Soma
.....surch

TRANSPORTATION
710

Autos for Sale

$500 CARS FROM $500111 Buy
Pol ce Impounds &amp; Repos Fee
CALL NOW For L Slings! 1 800
319-3323x2156

97 Camaro 37 000 miles au
1omat e daJk green tractiOn con
trot amlfm cassette 740 669

0904

I . ~~~~~~~FI~a:re~~::=·
II

1994 GMC 4X4 P Ck Up Truck
350 Engine Automatic Tilt
Cruise Power Windows Anel
Door Lock Au Conditioner
75 000 M tes $12 500 One OWn
er 74().388 8304

CARS $100 $500 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUNDS Honcta s Toyo ta s
Ch&amp;\IYS Jeeps And Sport Ut II
lies Call Now! 800 772 7470
EXT 7832

1998 Yamaha Blaster Like New
$2200 or Trade lor T~uck
(304)675 1105

1969 Chevy Bela•r 2 Doors 327
Motor 2 Speed Power Ghde
TransmiSSIOn Second Owner
87 000 Miles Must Sell! $3 200
OBO 740 379-26ee

1981 Honda CXSOO Custom Mo
torcvcle tie! Tires Battery
Plugs &amp; Brakes ~ 21 700
$800 Includes 2 Full Face Hel
mols Call 3Q4 773 5723 Ask For
Rusty

1983 Jag 4 door XJ6 lOOks rkles
and drives nice $2500 740.992
5551
1983 L nco n Towncar Good
Condil on Asktng $1 000 00 Neg
Call740-388 8019
1984 Cullass Supreme Runs
Good V 8 Needs Work $675
080 740.245-9828
1984 L ncoln Town Car S g Ser
les Fully loaded Excellent
Condition No Rust ga age kept
86000 $4 60d F rm I 304)77 3

740

00.245-9206
1991 Honda 250 X Fourwheeter
E11ce lant Condition $1 800 DO
OBO
740 367 0239
Aller
500PM

5944

1984 Volkswagen Jena 4 Speed
Has A/C Needs B akes &amp; Fuel
Pump
$400 OBO 740 446
0671

Wanted To Sell Spot On Wallmg
Ltsl For Ordered Harley DaviSon
At Baxters Paid $300 Sell For
$150 740-379-26ee

1985 Chevy looks and runs
great lot of new pans $900
1304)675-6693

750 Boats

1987 Chrys er LeBaron Automat
AJC PW POL Runs Excellent
Good CondHion S2 000 740 w;
8981

18 112 Ft 1995 Basi Hawk With
200 HP Mereurv Hydraulic Jack
Plate Galvanized Trailer 740
379 2835

1988 Mercury Topaz A 1 Wheel
Great In The Snow
$1 000 OQ 741l-245 9206

1978 Harris fl'ontoon Boat tn.Board Out Boa!d (304)882 3273

0 1\19

1989 Plymouth Honzon 5 Spee&lt;l
89 000 Orlg nat Miles Good Condit on S1400 ceo 740446
3869 Please leave Message &amp;
W I Return Call
1990 Chelfy Cava ter 4 Doors 4
Cyl nder Automatic 2nd Owner
Well Ma nta lned $1 700 740
379-9885

&amp;

760

1994 Grand Am GT 64 000 Actu
al Mlles Ali Power Excellent
Condnlon 74Q.-44&amp;.4SQ4
1994 Honda AccOrd lX AI Op
Ions 84 000 Miles Good Condi
lion $10 000 Or Take 01fer Pay
ments 740 379-2283
1994 Olds Cut ass Clara While
V 6 63 000 mtles txcellenl
CondH on
Garage
Kept
1304)675 2915
1995 BuiCk leSabre Bought New
1996 One Owner like New
39 000 Molos $12 500 740 446

0004
1995 Ford Mustang Black With
Grey Interior Spoiler Around E1
facts Headlight Covers Ve y
Sharp' Must Se 74G-24ft.9239

1996 Ml,lstang GT 5 speed k&gt;ad
ed 5000 miles like rtew garage
kept $17 500 740 992 2996

1998 Che\ly Cavalier Automatic
AMIFM Cassette Power Moon
Roof Green 8 500 Miles Askmg
S8 500 OBO 740 256-1 011
1998 Ponti ac Trans Am 350 V 8
LS 1 Corvelle Engine Automatic
T Tops Monsoon Stereo W tn
12 0 sc CO Changer In Trunk
Dar k Navy Metallic With G ey
Leather lnte or W 11 Take Pay Off
Or Reasonab e Offer 740 446
4548
FACTORY WHEELS
Alloy
Steel Ra ty Worlds Most Com
pete lnvento y Of OEM Wheels
NaHonw•de
1 800
Sh p
9WHEEL S SIOCk Wheels (And
Hub Caps) Only Buv Sell 1 800
994. 3357 www actc:erwheel com
l'DLICE IMPOUNDS FROM
$5001 Repo s AI Makes &amp; Mod
e s Pee Cal For l st ngs 1 800
7t9-3001 xAOIO

Rutland Car Sales
Clean newer used cars ~ooct
va r ety reasonable rates 740
7'12 331 t or 7~ 742 1400

720

Trucks for Sale

1968 Chevy t /2 Ton V 6 3
Speed 43 762 Miles AI Or glnal
One Owner l ke New Ins de And
Out Ask ng $6 250 740 379
2e01

~\tJ..lJGf\ 1 ~tN·:&lt;e£""
::toiO'N 00 1'\\E. ROOf.
ISSilLLF\

'(00 MD I fiEN) UP
191~~\100

fi!1:E.~'

LIK£WE.~10

BIG NATE

1997 17 Nitro bass boat 90hp
Mer1=ury o I Injected 4 blade tur
bo sta ness prop aerated live
wells utra butt seat 42 PLB
thrust Motor Guide lrotung motor
2 r,ew batlerles 2 wide angtet~
Ush I nders one owner garage
kept cover wh te with teat green
metal flake showroom conditeon
S8 400 740.742 3802

1990 Plymouth Acta m Automatic
AJC T II Cruise PW POL
$1 20Q 7 40 44£ 7029

1993 Grand AM 2 Doors v 6
AutQmat c Loaded $4 395 1992
Lumina 4 Coors V-6 Automatic
l-oaded $3 295 Cook Motors
740 446-0103

LOSER

r
:rot-\lGII.T, Wti.'&lt; ~'I

for Sale

1998 Sea doo GSX l milad red
and purple brand new condltton
t30 horsepower w1th trailer
$6395 080 740 ?42 3802

1993 Ford Taurus 1 Owner 3 8
liter englne 79 000 miles
$5 000 1304 )882 3376 Altar
5PM

THE

Motors

1990 Model lumina Chevy 4
Door 1304)895 3830

1991 Cad !lac Sevllle Loaded
$5 900 OBO 1304)675-5571

Let us conttnue lo look at lhe pos
Stbtltttes when one holds etther K x
oppostte J x x or K x x oppostte 1
x They were dt sc ussed by Alan
Htron tn the June tssue of Bndge
Magaztne
Agatn st three no trump West
leads the spade seven What now"
Htron says only that We st opens
lwo spades -.h1ch shows a stX card
sutt and some 6 I0 h1gh card pmnts
After that I cannot thtnk of a sane
se quence to reach three no trump by
South (The one g1ven ts tnsane ) If
North makes a takeout double South
mtghl pass for penalttes or c ue btd
three spades to show a strong hand
Altemauvely tl North passes, South
doubles In both cases game tn no
trump by North looks ltkely and
mak es tn comfort No te that hve d1a
mond s b) South succeeds too
unless Wesllead s a low spade at m ck
one' (South would prohablv mtScuoss
the sutt )
Ded at~.;r has seven top lm:ks
three heart s and tour clubs B) mak
tng 1hc normal plav of low lrom
the dumm) at lnck one South has
one sure !ipadc tn ck Here though It
leads to dcleat Easl w ns "tth the
queen then return s h1 s ren ammg
sp ode We st dears the sutt whtle sttll
holdtng I he doam ond ace as an entry
and declarer ne ed s a d1 amond trick
II Wesl h os eolhcr queen stxth of
spades and the d11tn( 1d ace or ace
quet:n stxth lhe c ontra~t has no
ch mce So tt ts n ght to call for dum
m; s spade ktn Q whtch bl ocks the
sun (II Easl has Q x o f spades and
the diamo nd ace
Wesl havmg
opened wtth onl y four pu nt s East
musl unblock Ihe queen under dum
my s kmg to defeat the contract )
SoUih dnve s r ul the dtamond ace and
ends wnh two overtm:ks

1983 Yamaha 200E Shaft Ortve 3
Wheeler Runs Great $700 00 &amp;

1993 250 Kawasaki Dirt B1ke E;w:
tTas1 740-446:-6964

Auto Parts

&amp;

Accessories

HEY
Nl~E

TIE'

•

LETTERING

53 Sixth oenoe '
Cabbr)
54 Fr holy

woman

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce ebr ty C pher cryptograms are c eated from quotat ons by famous people past and
present Each ener n the c pher stands for another

Todays clu• W equals C
B 0 G S

E

OKZORI

JSSX

GBS

KPPNI

WKEDGPX

GBPMLB

01

PMG

KSDG

GBS

E G

A 0 F N

'

WPFXSF)

PREVIOUS SOLUTION If ( was playtng lh rd base and my
th rd w1th the wtno ng run l d tnp her up - Leo Durocher

0

Reorronge letters of the
four scrombl•d words be
low to form four slptpla words

II I

C UT K E B

II

E N GA M

.~ I' 1 I ,I

-r.A_F'ftA"""'r-L
_Tr-11;,'
5

~

._....._.L......J.t-l.l.
. .....J,.

'
I never ask for adv1ce be
cause adv1ce IS like castor o!l

r ~.,R--:'O~X:-:-:E~V,.-:=T--1~ easy

1 I I' I I

to

gtve

but

to

O

2

PR IN T NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

I'.

I

I

SEPTEMBER 14 I

ITUESDAY

t999 Palam no Yearling Pop Up
Camper L ke New One Owner
Stove Fr dge Heat And AC
Steeps 6 8 Comtortabty $5 500
740.388 8304
1978 740

2~B37

SERVICES
Home
Improvements

n9s

C&amp;C General Home Main
tenence Painting v nyl siding
carpentry doors w ndows baths
mob te home repa1r and more For
esl mate ca ll Chat 740 992
6323
Livingston s Basement Water
Proofing all ba se ment repairs
don e I ee estimates lttetlme
guarantee 12y rs on JOb experl
ence (304)895 3887
840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Res dent at or co mmerc al wlr ng
new serVIce or epa~rs Master u
censed etectr clan A denour
Electr ca l WV00030ti 304 675
1786

I I

ANSWERS

1992 Coleman Pop up Camper
Sleeps 6 $2 000 or Trade
[304)675 1105

Apphance Parts AM Servtce All
Name Brands Ov,r 25 Years E11
per ence All Wo k Guaranteed
French C ty Maytag 740 -446

GAMI

Coliort Gome Knave P1cket PICK on THEM
Mother to her son go1ng off to college Choose your
fnends but don t PICK on THEM

&amp;

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee
Local references furnished Es
tat;lsheQ 1975 Cal 24 Hrs (740)
446 OB70 1 BOQ 287 0576 Rog
ers Waterproofing

WOlD

l~ltt~

SC~S

1987 Toga MotorHome 35 006
I
New Mlchetan Tires New
New battervtatlgnment
(304)682 2476

810

mother rounded

T:~~~~~' '0©\\&lt;lllA-lGt.~s~~
loy CLAY I POLLAN

FOR

Motor Homes

Midas Camper 21 F1

•

X E L B G

0 K K

zsJ J

L F 0 I I

G B S

AOZX

RA MBLE LETTERS I
D• UNscANSWER
"

New Rep acement Gas Tanks D
&amp; R Auto A pley WV 13041372&gt;
3933 or 1-800 273-9329
Campers

50-demer t&gt;
52 In the know v

e

SlOWL'( HIRE SOMEONE
TO DO M'(
601N6MAD

Four 225x75x15 ww t res $85.;
tour 225x75JC15 Gooel Year Rar.gler $25 Four 15x8 chromlt
spoke wheels $85 740 949
2693

1

48 Stomach
muacMta tor _
short
.. ...
49 Rapper Dr _,,

6
ComJ)Iete the ckucHe quoted
.
.
.
•
•
•
•
by fling n the mssng words
L.....JL....L..;....L-.L.-.I.....J you de~telop from step No 3 below

MAV HAVE TO

THINK

r:'J::
gently and

smoothly
43 Lady s
garment
45 JBD
47 :,VIo-S.xon-

l

PEANUTS

Budget Pr ced Transmission$
and Engines All Types Access
To Over 10 000 Transmtsslons
eve Jotnls 740-245-5617

790

39

By Phillip Alder

Motorcycles

1995 Harley Dav1dson Springer
Black w th too many extras to
list low m tes excellent shape
$17 000 1304)682 2737

IC

More from
the 5 cards

1991 Dakota LE 4x4 Tool Box

ASTRO·ORAPH

could take
anyl~tng

1ucsday Scpl 14 1999
There are slrong md1cauons that
somcthmg rath er grand could de ve l
op for you tn the year ahead through
me or more of your contacts whtch
would Improve your tmanctal post
uon

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) No
matter how d1fli cult 1t may be for you
to fcss up 10 a mrstake m front of
others today do so If you fad to
ac~.:ept respons1bll ty your •mage
could suffer Trymg to patch up a broken ro man ce" The Aslro Graph
Matchmaker ca n help you understand
"hat to do to make the rclatmnshJR
work Mao I $2 75 10 Malchmakcr c/o
th" newspaper PO Box 1758 Mur

ray Hill Statton New York NY
111156

LIBRA iScpl 23 Oct 23) Mator
al circumstances mt ght be ~ m Ked
bag today and t:ou ld swrng tn cnhcr
drrectlon If you want the results to be
profi table he practical because 1rre
spuns lb) illy produces red mk

SCORPIO (Oc t 24 Nu' 22) Sit
~ h oo rns

une x pc~,.; tl!d turns for the

worse 1oday so 11 s best not 10 take

for granted espectally •

where your se lf tntercsts arc con
cc rncd

SAG!1TARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) Because you alw ays want to
beheve m everyone you co uld calil
ly place your fauh tn an 1ncc mpctcnl
md1vrdual today Be C"-lrcmdy d1s
!.:c rnmg when 11 .,;on cs 1&lt; ~.;r t L:al

nsstgaments

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
Be careful not to allow a&lt;: ltv ucs wtth
lrrcn ds or other oUlsJdc mlcre sts to
bc'omc a~centuatcd ornd take prc..:c
dcncc over your w ork Get back on
track should you sec th1s m:l:umng
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Fch 191 B e
carclul ol y()ur J ctncUJl or because
your bchavmr couiJ he duscl)' M.:ru
tmtzed by other!i IOday An observer

m1ght be hoptng you II do somethmg
that could provtde fodder for gosSip
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
Belteve m what you puch today If
you are not completely sold on the
cause or product yourself drop II
before you rc blamed for masrepn::
sentauon

ARIES (March

21

Apnl

19)

Should you be asked to help another
resolve a problem today move vcr)
l!i ly Tius persons compltca
Irons may n"d tube handl1..-d one step
at a umc or a maJ or m1 shap could

caut

occur

TAURUS (Aprtl

20

May 201Not

evcryont; can be handled samll arly m
our assocrauons w th one another and
today s happenmg s could prove th s
porn! JndrvJdu ally sazc up eac h per
s()n and act accl nhngly

GEMINI

(May

21 June

20 )

Pro

v1dcd yo u d' n t get ' U to a bad start
and aii Gw your lasks or ass gnmcnts
10 overlap one another this can be a
very producti ve day fur you Be
methodical and orderl y

CANCER (I me 2 1 July 1 2) D n t
allow anyone 10 draw you nto an
uncomfortable development today
mtl att::d hy hrm or her or an assoc 1
ate Once unmcrscd you could be
hlamcd as th e nst gator
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) You II he
you f m~ h t :xlay

gr&lt;~d ~.:d only on "hat

nnd n 1 on wh II y u sl rt so he per
~lsknt am.l f llow through
n .J~
many pr JCd:'i a~ p ss tbk Y 11 dl rt
w il l I nc th ru~ h

-'

•

32Med

Opemng lead •

uat ms thai appear to be

l

99

• A 98765

Must Sea 1980 Chevy 1 Ton
Factory Rebllt 350 Engine Ne•
T.., $3000080740-256- 1722
Vans

u

West

• 8 7

Dodge Dakota Spon ••• A•r
Cond
3 9 v 6 Automatic
120 000 miles runs good new
!Ires and topper 15 000 OBO
1304)675 7133

730

09

• K 2
¥ A J 5
• J 9 7 3
• K J 53

1740)441 1015/ewmng

Grubbs P ano tun ng l&amp; r~pa rs
Problems' Need TuneCt? Ca I the
p~ano Dr 740 446-4525

0208

51

Farm

1982 Chovf S 10 $200 740-9492ae1

For Sale A a nbow Sweeper 1
Year Old Excellent Con chhon
$70Q OQ Caii74D-388 8019

Mobile Homes

$280 Mo $300 Deposit 1 2 M le
From Ho zer s 740 446 7321 AI
!Elf 6 P:M

610

Massty Ferguson 50 Gas With
loader John Deere 820 Diesel
574 International Attar 6:00 7... 0

Discou,. Mollie Home

Pomeroy th B!l bl;ld oom house
two bedroom apartment rele enc
es secu ty partly ru n shed 140
992 6886 alter 5pm

FREE MONEY II s T ue Never
Repay Guaranteed $500
$50 ooo For Debt Consolldat on
Personal Needs Med ca l B lis
Educat on &amp; Busmess Cal Toll
Fee BOO 724 6047 (24 Hrs)

CRED T PROBLEMS
STOP
HERE!! WE CAN HELP LOANS
AVAILABLE $3 000 AND UP
CALL TOLL FRE E I B77 663
9269 E~l 231
Will paint Houua (lntenor/Exte
nor) Bgmw +Tin Rgafa Expe

AI real estate actven s ng In
th s newspaper Is subje~ to
the Federal Fair HouSing At;
ol 1968 which makes It lega
to advert se any prate ence
lim tat on or dlscr mlnatK&gt;n
based on race color rehg1on
sex 1am I a status or nat10na
&lt;XIQ n or any nt~nt on to
make any such preference
I m tatton or d scnm nahan

WANTED MOBILE
HOME PARKS
80 S tes (Occup ed] Nat onal
Company Pays Cash Closes
Fast Toll F ee 688 653 2244
•13

40 ....,. courM
41 " ' " inltS

12

FARM SUPPLif ',
&amp; LIVESTOCK
WANTED
63 qeopte to lo&amp;e 30 tbs n 30
da,a &amp; earn $$$$$ while surf ng
net 1 888 229 5427 www fN
Iaiii\' neufeelgood

31 TYPe ol rug

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

- --- --·--'-

I

-------~

'

�By The Bend

r

The Daily Sentinel
Page 10
TUBiday, September 14, 1999

:Reader recalls painful"- and dangerous - experience of children visiting jailed parent
Ann Londers.
~tt7,

Dear Ana Landers: This os in

response to "Locked Down tn Mass-

not happy about it. but \\ere unsure
of how to say no. so: we let her go.

aChusetts." whose wife did not want
IQ bring their young ~on to VtSJt hiS
-'!IIddy in prison. I suppon the wtfe
.I 00 percent.

Two weeks lat&lt;r. we found a card
That "mce fnend of Daddy's" turned
out to be a ~onvicted felon who now

When tny wife and I were mar-

had our daughter\ name . phone

ned, her ex-husband was serving a
three year prison sentence. He was a
drug addict who dtd everything from
writmg bad checks to panicipaun g
in anned robbery - all to finance his
!tabit. '
My stepdaughter visned her
grandparents every other weekend
Once, they persuaded us to let her
vtsit her father in prison . We were

number and address.
When my wtfe "as offered a JOb

In

her nxnn from another mmatc .

m another state.

\\' C

JUmped at the

opportunny. That summe-r: howC:\ Cf.
1

my stepdaughter wa!-. agam \ is1tmg

her grandparents

W1thout our knov. le.dge.

the~

::~.llnwed
\ ' \SUS

her to h;ne unSUfk."r\ '"l"LI
with her father. who " 'a.s then

out of pnson She spent several

•
"ecks mo,ing from house to house and a daughter. "Elsie." Wilen my siad stone. only the stone is a zirbecause drug dealers were chasing mother In law died five years ago, COII - not a dillllOIId. I then called
him for money he owed. We ha'·e she stated in ber will !hal her dia- Ell~!: and told her 10 IWint the ring
not let her go back since.
mond engagement ring would go to pnillto. She refused. I bave called
Her father is now back in jail Trent when he became engap:d, and ber every day since, but she 53ys the
(drugs agam). and wtll not be eligi- that Elste would gel her beaulifltl ring now Mlongs to her.
ble for parol&lt; for 41 years.
· cocktail ring.
Meanwhile. Trent's fiancee had
My stepdaughter was devastated.
The following Christmas, Elsie
the ring appraised, and was
but my wife anJ I breathed a sigh of told me tn confidence that she truly informed that it is a falce. When she
relief. h was selfish and irresponsi- wanted the engagement ring instead confronted me, I confessed.
ble tQ mstst that h1s child vis1t h1m m of the cocktail ring.
Feeling guilty, I purchased a genShe gave me a sob story about uine cara1 diamond ring and gave it
pn son.
.
A man \\ho truly lo,es his chil- Trent being Grandma's favorite and . to Trenrs fiancee, along wilh a fancy
dren would not place them in such a how she was always le£1 out. I fell
bouquet of flowers. I have called
humtiiatmg position.-- NO TEARS for it, and let her Ullk me into giving repcatedly to tell her how sorry I am.
FOR THE JAILBIRD IN D.C.
her the engagement · ring, with tbe but she avoids me and has made 11
DEAR NO TEARS: Your leuer understanding that if Trent became clear she no longer trusts me.
\:o n,·e) ed the message far benCr engaged. she would give the ring
My husband says I am to blame
than an~ t h~n g: I might say. Thank back to him.
for this mess , and it ts killing me.
Six months ago, Trent mel a love- How can I malce it up to her? \00 .
· Dear Ann landers: I have been ly girl and proposed to ber. When SORRY IN ROCK HILL, GA.
marrred tu a wonderful man for 15 my ·
husband told me to get
DEAR SORRY: You dtd set;&gt;ous
\ClrS He hao;; l\\ 0 ch ildre n from a
Grandma's nng back, I panicked, damage 10 your credibiluy, dear, and
Pre' wu~ lll.liT~.lgc - a son. "Trent. " and bought a ring that has a similar it's going to be a long tinne before

,1\ ~...

.. ' •

"

+,t &gt;~

Almost all scwmg pattern mstru.ctmns

require the ac;ldition of mterfacing to a garment.

The interfacmg adds stabili ty, strength. ,
shape and crio;;pness to collars. cuffs, waist-

Teams and 1ndJVJdual walk ers

_will begtn collecting donations
from co-workers. friends , famtly
and businesses to help fight hean
disease, the number one cause of
death m Metgs County
Thts year's walk will
honor Bob Hoeflich, a ,long-ttme
member of the Meigs County

RECRUITMENT LEADERS - 'Diana Coates, Linda King, Scott Dillon, Joan Wolfe, Allee Wolfa
and Maxine Rose are some of the recruitment leade's for the American Heart Assoclatlon'l
Heart Walk, to be held September 28.

American Heart Assoc!3tJOn and a

survivor o( heart disease.

member, co-worker or personal
fnend With heart d1 sease to ho nor

or remember.
A team plaque wi ll be presented
to the team coll ectmg the most
~onations and tndividual prizes
Wlll

be awarded to indiVidual
to amounts col-

walkers accordmg

lected. Those pnzes wtll include tshtrts , travel bags, cooler chatrs,
vests. rain jackets, and luggage. ·

recruitment leaders, including
Scott Dtllon, Denver or Nora Rice,
Joan Wolfe, Maxine Rose, Diana
Coates, John Redovian, Peggy
Hawley, Darla · Hams, Carolyn
Ohlinger, ·Cindy Johnston, Linda
Kmg, or Linda Warner.

Those wishing to participate as

an mdiVIdual walker, team of
walkers or stmply to donate to the
cause are asked to contact Ahce

Wolfe at 949-2286, or any of the

Curtis family of Meigs County
holds reunion at Star Mill Park

TUESDAY
The Meigs
SYRACUSE
County Chamber of Co)ltmerce will
hold a free seminar "Competing
wuh Wai-Man" Tuesday, 6-9 p.m. at
Carleton School in Syracuse. Speakers wtll be Perry Varnadoe, Meigs ·
County Economic Development
Director; Debra McBride , Small

reunion were the descendants pf Sonona (Curtis) Osborn .

Those of descendants attendtng were Marj one Curt iS Brewer of
Reedsv ille. Charles and Elizabeth Curtis of Spnngboro. Albert and Manlyn
Pooler, MtamtSburg; Sylvta Curt1s of Reedsvtlle. Jenny Curtts Reynolds of
· \'arkersburg. WV: Chns and Paige Curtts of.Ttpp Cny : Don and Max me Batley of Jo)lnstow n:· Bill and Mary (Palmer) Powell of East· Lt verpoo l, Dora
(Swank) Crispm of Westervi lle; Ann Kerns of Wcsten·tllc; Kenneth and
,!Jetty (Ro"'') Duke of Alexandria. Sally Cunntngham of Newark , Wilham

Busrness Development Center; and

Swank of Hebron, Russell Cunnmgham of Newark: J.unes·Cu nmn gham of

Newark; Gail and Elame Roberts of John stown: Brian Bradford of Wooster:
Paul and Bobbi Bradford of Athens. Douglas. Carolyn and Matt Bt&gt;sell of
Tuppers Platns; Brcat, Alec, and Auslm . Ttm, and Lea Bi ssell. Ruby
{Swank) Sarbaugh of Newark; Jim and Btl lie Richey , Clarence Bradford of
:Racine; Harold and Phyllis DeWolfe ol Newark; Sandra (Curtos) MacDonl
:aid of Reedsville; Peggy Mullen of Reedsvi lle; Tom an&lt;\ Sheila (Newe ll )
•Thetss of Racme; Onofno and Lmda Mona go of Akron ; Syvta MacDonald
.of Reedsville: Don and Yvonne (Swank) Griffnil o( Newark: Vivtan
XPalmer) McCarre ll of Hpokstown, Pa, Rtchard "Bud" Palmer of East Ltv-.
erpool: Howard Johnson of Granville; Ruth Ana Mae (Johnson) Muska of
Columbus; Paul and Shelia Curris of Pomeroy , BrJcc, Annette, and Jake
Kurtz of Johnstown; Donald and Carole (DeWolf) Wallet ot Heath: Roger
and Elaine DeWolfe of Talbott, Tenn.; lnzy (Curtt S) Newell of Chester, June
Ashley of Racmc; Keith , Emma, Rachel , Whttney. and Emtly Ashley of
Rocksprings.
Several cousms of the Hoyt Cunts famtly attended. They were Gayle and
Edna Price of Ponland ; Roland and Doris Eastman of Coolvtlle: Cleo Smith
of Chester, Ron Eastman of Coolvtlle , linda Eastma n of Columbus , Theresa and Tracy Shaffer of Pomeroy. .
,
Friends of the famtly that attended were Brent Dennts of Rushvtlle and
,Paul Djtty of Mtddlepon.
.
Charles Curtis , president of the reunion , conducted the mee ting Pictures

of Hoyt and Mary Curtis and their family were displayed . Gayle Pr1ce
brought a large photograph of Hoyt Curtis' father, Jostah Curtts Jostah was
born in 1803 and &lt;:arne with his , parents to Meigs County m , 1811 The
December death of Ed llh (Mrs. Percy) Curtis,. of Akron was announced.
' . Keith Ashley, hostonan of the famtly, reported that he ts preparmg a pnnted history of the entire Curlls family of Meigs County. Thts wtll beg m wtth
Da,vid and Sally Cunts who brought thetr family to Met gs County tn 1811
Contacts will be made with all the famtly during the ne xt year to update
infonnation and obtatn coptes of family ph'llographs.
' Ashley ts trymg to find a picture of the Cunts schoo l house that was located somewhere near the Oh10 Department of Highways butldtng near
Chester. Also, it was announced that progress is bem g made on the ancestry

of Sally (Williams) Curtis, mother of Hoyt Curtis . The Williams family ce ntered around Long Bottom and Hocktngport
Charles .Curti s was re-elected president of the reunton Th e reunton wtll
be hosted by the Filura (C urios) Palmer descendants next year on the third
Sunday of August m the East Ltverpool ar&lt;*. ·

Rio Grande announces fall production auditions
For re ser vati ons, an yo ne Interes ted tn audition m g may call
Co nni e McNerlm , 245 -7364 or

to ll

fre ~ .

1-800-284-720 I . Ext

7364.

Ong~na l ly wrrlle n and promg Arts Center theater, Greg
Miller, Ph .D. an nounced.
duced tn 1998, "Ltttlc Tot em·"
The "Lt ttlc Totem :" cast IS 'wa s wnt tcn hy Greg Mill er and
large and includes charac ters of Kevin Lyl es, also a tin e arts proall ag,es from eight years old to fe ss ion at the Umvers it y of Rto
scmor citizens Performa nces are Grande Th1s year\ producti o n
planned for Nov. I 0 and II with 'wt ll be directed hy · Mtll cr and
an evenmg performance on~v Cratg Sm tth
·12at8p.m.
·

bands. buttons and buttonholes. It ts usually
hidden between the fabnc and the facing for
inner support. There are several dtfferent types of interfacing&lt; avatlable.
Here are their characteristics to help you choose the one best sutted for your
materia,!.
Woven interfacings come in a variety of weights and finishes . They are
used for woven fabrics, as well as stabilizing stretch knns. Thoy can be cut
on the bias to allow, the gannent to drape. Fashion fabrics can be used to
mterface sheers.
· Nonwoven ·interfacings offer 'ravel-free versaulity. They are flextble and
soft. The stable nonwoven interfacings have no grainlme. so they don ' t
stretch. 'I'hCy can be used in waistbands, collars and for craft projects. The
nonwovens that are stretchable won 't stretch lengthwtse, but wtll crosswtse.
They are used in knits and stretch-woven fabrics such as stretchable denim.
Bias nonwovens allow stretch m all dtrections, with the most stretch
being across the fabric. They are great for collars and cuffs that roll back and .
wrap around tbc neck or wrist, such as m ~ shawl collar
Knit interfacings usually come in fusible form . They are suited for woven
or knit fabrics and are capable of stretchmg in all dtrecttons, especially
crosswise. They can secure machme knined. handwoven or loosely woven
materials. They are generally used for reinforcing jacket elbows and pant
knees.
Weft insenion interfacing is made from a lrlcot knit with a crosswise yarn
that is wo;ven among kmt stitches, although 11 acts hke It rs woven It offers
the most stretch wben placed on the btas. h IS deSi gned for raw silk. suttlng

Community
Calendar .

The 92nd annual reumon olthe Hoyt and Mary Cathe rme (Foster) Curti s
was held on Sunday. August 15. at Star Mill Park in Racine The hosts of the

AuditiOns fur the fa ll produ ction of "Little Totem" at the Untverstty of Ri o Grande wtll be held
at 6:30 p .m on Sept. 27 111 the
John M. Berry Fine and Per.form -

www creators.com .

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

wnh team captains signed up 10
participate in the Amerjcan Heart
' Walk, scheduled fpr Tuesday, September 28. beginning at Kroger m
Pomeroy.
Corporate sponsors, to date .
include Parmers ,Bank and Savings
Co., Holzer Metgs Chme. Home
National Bank, Kroger, Rose's
Excavattng , The Peoples Banking
and Trust Co;, Ty Bnnager and
Sons, Ctty National Bank, and
BPOE Elks Lodge 107.

walk ro· list rhe name of a fam ily

the Creators Syndicate web page at

,t'

The Meigs County Amencan

pm to wear to recognize that person as survivor.
Also, every walker will receive
a 'back patch to wear dunng the

and read her past columns, visit

Time Out For Tips

Heart Assoc rat10n met recently.

or stroke walktng at th e event w1ll
receive a free red cap or survrvor

~ers

'

Heart Association plans Heart Walk

Each survivor of heart disease

you patch this one up - if ever.
If yoo continue to be contrite and
straight with Trent and his fiancee ,
they may eventually. believe you are
truly SOil')' and forgive you. I hope.
for the sake of family unny, it happens soon.
DrUgs are everywhere. lbey' re
easy to gel. easy to use and even easier to get hooked on.
If· you have questions about
drugs. you need Ann landers' booklet, "lbe Lowdown on DOpe .. Send
a self addressed. long. bustness stze
envelope and a check or money
order for S3 75 (thi s mcludes
postage and handling ) to: Lowdown.
c/o Ann Landers. P.O Box 11562.
Clitcago. Ill. 60('&gt;11-0562. (In Canada. send S-!.55.)
To find our more about Ann Lan-

a panel of bustness owners affected
by Wai-Mart . RSYP at 992-5005.

and sportswear fabrics.
Warp insertion interfacing has a lengthwrse yarn that 1s woven through~
out knit stitches . llts stable in both lengthwise and crosswise directions, but
stretches on the bias. It permits steady, but flextble shaping for dresses. jack- ·
ets and coats. It works well w11h microfibers
How do you know whi~h type of interfacmg you need? Check the pattern
envelope and mterfacrng chart. The bolt of fabnc w1ll g1vc manufacturer 's
1
recommendations to help you make a w1sc c hoiCe
•

According to Marge Wolford, OSU Extension Agent in Pickaway County, color, fabne qualities and how compattble the fabnc s are dunng launde ring should also be c.onsidered.

Council participating in mission food drive

Members were reminded of a
Sunshtne gifts for September
food drive in progress this month are to be g1ven to Tressie Henfor Grundy Mountain MissiOn dricks and Larry Baker. Commu'POMEROY
Catholic
when the Bradford Church of mon for October wtll be handled
Women's Club meeting Tuesday fol Christ Lydia Council mel recently by Madeline Painter and for
lowing mass at 7 p.m.
at the church .
No~ember, Brenda Bolin Becky
POMEROY _ Bedford TownA ladies retreat at the Ohio Amberger and Madeline Painter
Valley CJ!risuan Assembly ' was wtll be hostesses for the October
MICHAEL DAWN PROFFJn
shtp Trustees, regular meeting, announced for Sept. , 24 and 25, meeting . Toilet tissue and paper
BIRTH ANNOUNCED Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the townhall .
and . tt was noted that the fall products were deSignated as the
Mr. and Mrs. Ray R. Proffitt, Jr.
cleaning of the ·chufch has been
are announcing the birth of a
CHESTER - Chester Township set for Oct. 23 at 9 a.m . The Faith "pack the pantry" products for
November, while furniture poltsh
daughter, Michael Dawn, on July Trustees, regular monthly meeting,
Promise
revival
will
be
held
on
is
the month 's church supply
15 in Baltimore, Md. The infant Tuesday, 7 p.m., Chester Town Hall.
Nov.
5-7
at
7
p.m
with
George
request.
weighed six pounds, 14 ounces
,Pickens as the speaker.
and was 20 inches long.
.
POMEROY - Metgs County
Other events noted was the
Paula Pickens had the closmg
Paternal grandparents are Mr. Genealogical Society will meet
and Mrs. Ray R. Proffitt, Sr. of Tuesday, 5 p m at the Metgs Coun- annual church hayride to be held prayer. Hostes s Sherry Shamblin
Racine, and maternal grandpl!r· ty Museum, Butternut Avenue. Open on Oct. 9 at 5:45 p.m. with the provided refreshments for -Charents, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin meetmg for members and non-mem- locations to be announced later, lotte Hanning. Dtane Bing, Madeand a layeue shower to be held at l me Painter, Br e nda Bolin, Suz1e
Forester of Racine.
b.ers. Fo~ more tnfonnation, call
th~ church on Oct. 2 for Emily Will. Becky Amberger, Charlotte
Patty Cook at992-2447.
and Randy Bing.
VanMeter, Kathy , Mega n and
_ Open house
Plans for a Christmas dinner to Madtson Brook Dyer, Paula Pi ckCourt weighs whether at MIDDLEPORT
Mid- Valley Christian School, · be held _on Dec .. 6 ~~ the Golden ens, Sherry Smith, Ca rolyn
father's spanking is Tuesday, 6:30-8,30 p.m. All wei- Corral tn Galltpolts were dts- Nicholson 1 and Nancy Morn s.
cussed and tl was noted that a
come.
punishment or abu'se
bridal shower had been 'held for
Bing, bride-elect of Bill
Diane
MEIGS CO. KARATE
BOS'I'ON (AP) - Massachu- WEDNESDAY
Maxwell.
setts' h1ghest court IS wetghmg
CLUB
RACINE - Meigs County Fire
Carolyn
Nicholson,
president
,
whether a father's spanking of his l"ighters ' Association
meeting
Will Start Its Fall Quarter
young son i~ proper disciplme or Wednesday, 7:30 p.m . at the Racine gave prayer following prayer
for Beginners,
requests.
abuse.
Fire Station .
Starting Monday, Sept. 13
Officers' reports were given
The issue came before the
at 6:00PM
and Suzie Will gave devottons on
Supreme Judictal Court on appeal · THURSDAY
at Carleton School
RACINE _ Southern Local the topic of "Marriage." Scripiure
by attorneys for Donald Cobble, a
rm111ster from Woburn , who ha s Board of Education specml sess10n was taken from I John 3 and Phtl .
in Syracuse. ·
admllted usrng the e nd of a leathe r Thursday, 6 p.m. at ·southern High 1 and there were readtng s on
Class will be held
· hell to spank hi s full y clothed son, School to consider bids on the high "Thtngs Not to Say to Your
Mon. &amp; Wed.
Judah , (}nee or twice a mo nth.
school boiler proJect and construe- Spo~se", and "What is a GrandFor More Info . .
Earli er, a lower co urt' s1ded wnh lion project.
mother."
Call 992-6839
Mate Dcpartmenl o f Soc1 a l Services
ufftcia ls who !'tied abuse charges
POMEROY
Alcoholics
against Cobble 111 March 1997 after Anonymous open mcetmg Thursday
If the 992 J:xchange is a Free Part 9f Your
tl~e boy told a teacher about ht&lt; at 7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart
fathe r,s spankmg s.
Catholic Church.
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Under ques tt omng from the
Holzer Clinic in Gallip91is
seven-Judge panel Monday. State FRIDAY
A ss1stant Attorney General Juhan a
POMEROY -Meigs County
Toll Freel
__;..;;,_;,_....,
Rtce satd the agency !lied a report Arthritis Support Group, Friday, 10
on Cobble after determining hts a.m. to II :30 am. in the confere!lte
••
methods rmscd a '"substantm l n sk o f room of the Meigs County Senor
phystcal injury" to Judah, now 12.
C1t1zcns Center.
Cobble's attorney, Chester Dar""
·f . '
ling, said there is no ev tdence hi s

DIAL

992-7834

Wednesday

'

High: 70s; L,Ow: 50s

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 50s

Meigs County's

,,

.

t

·-- ~ .

_______

..:...

·-··.

~

-'---· ., ....

Sports
Chicago beats Cincinnati
4-2, snapping Reds' 7
gMI8 winning sb salt

· -Page4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 69

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Floyd bears down on Florida, heads for·North Carolina
HURR FLOYD.

" We hope and pray for the best," said North Carolina Gqv. Jim Hunt.
"But this looks real mean."
'
'
Associated Press Writer
'Nearly 2 million people were told to evacuate the Southeast seaboard as
COCOA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Monslrou:s Hurricane Floyd moved closFloyd's path remained uncertaiJt. Florida undertook what officials called its
er toward the Southeast, sending wind-whipped rains through Florida's
largest-ever peacetime evacuati on, with tens of thousands of motorists mak deserted streets and leaving coastal residents from Georgia to Virginia bracing an epic, halting journey north. Georgia and South-Carolina residents also
ing for a more severe thrashing.
.
·
streamed inland.
Early today. near hurricane force winds arrived at Cape Canaveral while
Danny Mills, a 34-year-old Kennedy Space Center worker, became stuck
lhe rest of Florida's eastern coast was met with tropical force winds and ,
m traffic, managing only 15 miles in 2 1/2 hours. He became so fru strated
gusts up to 73 mph, said Jack Beven, a forecaster at the National Hurricane
he simply turned around and returned lo_the Cape, where 102 other workers
Center in Miami.
·
had volunteered to stay behind.
Heavy rain fell from West Palm Beach to Cape Canaveral.
"You made a mile every five to 10 minutes," he said. " There were peoFloyd's eye was expected to continue to swirl over the Atlantic Ocean
ple going on the sides of the road . People were get~ng angry."
before making landfall on Thursday at Wilmington, N.C.
Walt Disney World closed early for the first time in its 28-year history,
"What we've been spared in Florida may just be transplanted to the Carand other resorts also were shuttered. The Navy sent ships to ride out.the
olina coast," said Jeremy Pennington. also a Hurricane Center forecaster.
storm at sea rarher than risk damage in port, and military aircraft were Oown
At5 a.m. EDT, the stonn 's center was localed about110 miles east-southinland to bases from Maine to Texas.
east of Cape Canaveral. Floyd was moving northwest near 14 m~h. and a
President Ointon issued pre-emptive disaster declarations for Florida and
tum to the nonh and increase in speed was expected later today.
.Georgia to enable recovery efforts Ia begin as quickly as possible He al so
A hurricane warning remained in effect from Fort Pierce, Fla.• at the midplanned to cut short his trip to New Zeal and.
way point of Florida's eastern coast, to the' North Carolina-Virginia border.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency set up a staging area in
WAmNG FOR FLOYD- Brian Grzach, 11, and his slater Karli, Atlanta, stockpiling food, ice, water, cots, sleeping bags, blankets, generaAhurricane watch continued from there to Chincoteague, Va.
Forecasters expected rainfall totals of 5 to 10 inches in areas along 11-months-old, watch the wavea caused by the coming of Hurri- tors, ponable toilets, flashlights and plastic sheeting so that they could be
cane Floyd pound the coastline in Lantana, Fla., Tuesday. Floyd I~ delivered to hard -hit areas tn a hurry,
Floyd's path.
,expectad
to come ashore on the eaat coeat today.
"A lot of that is falling over water, but there is some rainfall over north
Meanwhile, hundrecl s of airline flights in and out of Florida and Georgia
Florida and the Carolinas," Beven said.
gusts, the kind you'd see in a slrong thunderstorm."
were canceled, and Amtrak suspended train service mto and out of Miami,
Hours before daybreak, the streets of Daytona Beach were an abandoned,
Aflcr making landfall, forecaslers expect Floyd - a Category 4 storm scrambling the plans of vacationers and business travelers around the counrain-washed grid. In Bunnell, 25 miles north, Flager County officials report- with 140-mph winds - to follow the lnlerstate 95 corridor north to Wilm- try.
ed tides at 3 to 4 feel above norm al, and up to 1,400 customers were with- ington throughout the day.
,
·
'
In Garden City, west of Savannah. Ga., Michael Tarvin and his girlfriend,
out power.
·
With iiS hurricane force winds eKiending I 25 miles from the center and Robin Hill, took a break at a shopping center after silting in bumper-to"We' ve had a lot of squall lines coming through the last several hours," tropical storm force winds up to 290 miles outward, Floyd looked lo spare bumper, three-lanes-wide traffic.
said Jon Fillinger. a county emergency management chief. "We've gol few North Carolina cities from its fury. ·
" I'm going west, a5 far west as I can get," said Tarvin .

By MIKE SCHNEIDER

Junior Achievement topic of chamber luncheon
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
Teach kids how America works by· helping them learn about business.
That was the message delivered Tuesday
to the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce.
Guest speaker for th&lt;:_ event was Suzie
Ch1lds, senior vice president of Junior

Achievemenl of Central Oh10, who discussed
Ju~ior Achievement with the approximately
35 people who altended the monthly luncheon at Carleton School in Syracuse.
Junior Achievement's purpose is to educate and inspire young people to value free
enterprise, business, and economics ' to
improve the quality of their lives, she
explained.
Junior Achievement began in 1919 by
teaching kids how America works by having
them run a business. The program started
working with schools in the \970s and eventually moved into an elementary school pro. gram beginning in kindergarten.
"We want to help teach children rhe value
of a dollar," Childs said. Other lessons:
"profit is not a dirry word" and "work is what
brings in the money."
Childs was drumming support for implementing Junior Achtevement's fifth-grade
program. She said she received grant funding

to expand Junior Achievement in AppalachiHe pointed out that continuing design and
an Ohio, working locally last year with fifth · engineering work on the projecr has been
grade classes at Pomeroy Elementary School funded by the Transportation Review Adviand expanding this year.
sory Council.
The goal is to have fifth graders every"I want to give people the perception we
where experience the program which are winning this fight," Story said.
includes lessons in organization, human
Story also pointed out thai the Meigs
resources, production, advertising and annu- County Chamber of Commerce is a strong
al meetings, she said .
supporter of the highway project and repreThe program needs volunt~ers from the sents the interests of Meigs C9untians in the
busin~~s community to help fifth grade
controversy surrounding the highway which
teachers with the program which offers is op)l06ed by an Athens-based group.
hands-on education.
Tourism director Karin Johnson said
"Kids are going to have dreams. We are Meigs County has received a grant to examgoing to give !hem the tools to make those ine Pomeroy's tourism potential. Pomeroy
dreams dome true," she said.
was selected for the grant due to the recent
Chamber President Steve Story reported downtown revitalization project in the vil on the newly formed Athens-Darwin Citizens lage.
Advisory Committee which· was began by
In addition, sternwheeler cruises are
the Ohio Department of Transportation to being sel up for Oct: 25 :28, she said .
offer input on the proposed new portion of
The Big Bend Sternwheel Festival
U.S. 33 from Athens to Darwin.
Parade, sponsored by the chamber, will be
Story invited commissioners Mick Daven- held Oct. 9 at 1:30 p.m. in Pomeroy. People
port and Jeff Thornton, who attended Tues- wanting to enter the parade can get more
day's meeting, to attend the next Citizens information by calling the chamber office at
Advisory Committee slated for Monday, 4 992-5005.
Sue Maison gave an update on ,upcoming
p.m. at the Ohio University Inn in Athens.
1
" I would like to see a lot of people show chamber activilies including Casino Night on
up at thsse meetings," said Story, who is a Oct. 8 and a Business Afler Hours at Farmers
Bank on Oct. 5, 6-7:30 p.m.
member of the committee.

case involving
Rutland man
A preliminary hearing was held
Tuesday morning in the case of The
Stale of Ohio v. Kevin Clark Clark
is charged with attempted murder
in the stabbtng of Mtchael ThompJr., Rutland. .
The incident occured at !he
I~~r;:~;i~Gas Station in Bidwell at
I,
alely 1 am, Satu
31, \999 .
Th&lt;&gt;mrtson told the packed court
room that he had stopp«d at the gas
\station to 'kill time' before going to
· in Rodney . Thompson
Ino,tie&lt;:d a car driving by several
before stopping directl y
'""'';""him in the parking lor of the
Accord1ng to his testim ony,

JUNIOR ACHIEVEME_NT Suzie
Childl, senior vice pres1dent of Junior
Achievement of Central , Ohio, dis·
cuaaad the program Tuesday at the
monthly M~igs County Chamber of
Commerce Luncheon at Carleton
School In Syracuse.

Hocking College students evacuated ftom the Bahamas

-A rnan who was shot and paralyzed by police was
sentenced to more than four years in prison for corruption of a minor and
intimidation of a public official in 'performance of his duties.
Timothy J. Thomas, 48, who was accused of engijging in sexual conduct with a 14-year-old boy, pleaded guilty to the charges in July. r
Police shot Thomas, of Trotwood, in March after stopping hi s van to
question him in connection with hi s con!act with the boy
. ·
A police videotape showed Thomas holding a handgun as he was shot.
His attorneys said the gun was inoperable and not loaded.
Montgomery County Common Pleas Judge John Petzold sentenced
Thomas on Tuesday to three years on ·the corruption charge and months on
the inlimidation charge. Thomas had faced a maximum sentence of 6 1/2
years.
Assistant county Prosecutor Jeff PaiZer said the charge of intimidation
was intended to show that attempts at police-assisted suicide will be fully
prosecuted becavse of the danger to officers.
Thomas was shot at least nine times and was paralyzed below the waist.

Canton man disappears after test drive
CANTON (AP) - Authorities said they had no new information on, the
whereabouts of a man who never retumed after accompanying a couple as
they test drove a car he was selling.
'
Ryan James Stoffer, 21, of Canton,
has not been hear&lt;j from since Sunday
afternoon, when he accompanied a
;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;.._ _ _ _,man and a woman on a test drive of

Good Afternoon

no,aaiV s Sentinel
2 Seclions • 12 Pages

j~:~~====~~= '

f

\990 dark' blue Ford Probe.

Sloffer, who lives wilh his parenls
works as a machinis~ was selling
his grandmother's.house.
He car
and from
his mother
drove lo the house
5:30 p.m Sunday to meet
lijOme·one who called ro arrange lhe
Stark County Sheriff Tim Swanson
on Tuesday rhat Stoffer got in the
with the couple and drove
I "11ev,er to be seen or heard from again
that's why it's so suspicious. "

Lotteries
3: 5-2-6; Pick 4: 1-3-0-3
1Bucke;,e5: 2-3-13-22-35
3:0-7-7, Dally 4:8-7-6-7
C 1999 Ohto Vallt'}' l'uMt shmg Co .

I.

'f

Meigs volleyballers down Southern, Page .4
Ann on giving up .children, Page 8
Auto talks continue, ·Page 6

Today:Sunn"

Holzer Clinic ... Keeping the Promise!

c lie nt Inflicted abuse .

~15,111011

Weather

•

About 90 minutes prior to Stoffer's

ldisaf&gt;pcarancc, another man in Canwas robbed of $1,030 while giva test drive.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A group of 34 students
from Hocking College in Nelsonville who were taking
part in a field studies program in the Bahamas fled lO
South Florida as Hurricane Floyd bore down on lhe
islands.
The students, all studying ceo-tourism at the technical
college, spent Tuesday night at a high school in Naples
but hoped to find a hotel today where they could ride out
the storm.
"This is a really good lesson because you couldn't
plan for this kind of thing," Walter Ben Bohl told The
Columbus Dispatch by telephone from Naples on Tues-

group that handles it this well. They 're upbeat. They're
very positive," instructor Jan Scher of Intern · nal Field
Studies told the newspaper.
"I didn't expecl this to happen,"
freshman from Bowling Green.
"We're all in this together. The instructors and everybody have been cool, ·and they're taking good care of
us."
Drake, 19, said he's planning a career in rouri sm.
"I'm learning to be prepared for any situation that Mother Nature throws at me," he said.
Each of rhe students has had a chance to contact fam-

~

il~

Bohl is director of the International Field Studies in
Andros, the largest of the Bahamian islands, is about
the Columbus suburb of Bexley.
· 60 miles west of the capit'll, Nassau .
International Field Studies ru~s the field sration on the
The organization was hosting the Hocking students at
a field station on the Bahamian island of Andros for the ea_sl coast pf the island for a number of study-abroad p[O·
\0-week fall quarter.
grams for colleges and high sc hools, including several
"Now they all have the idea of what can happen in a central Ohio schools.
Hocking is the only school using the station this fall.
location like this, which is remote, and whal needs to be
done, " Bohl said. "That's what we were talking about:
Although Hocking has sent students there for a week
safely first. And that includes evacuatiqn."
or two at a time in years past, this is the firs! time the .colTheir Hocking College professor, Tim Murphy, and lege has offered a full , quarter-long program there in ceofive others from International Field Studies remained on tourism, which meshes travel with environmental studAndros Tuesday night. Bohl said !hey had sough) sanctu- ies.
ary in a concrele house.
"Once the storm passes. and if the damage permits,
The studetiiS are taking the storm as an adventure.
lhe entire crew plans to go back to Andros," said Russ
"Th'ey
a fascinating group. I've never seen a Tippett, dean of Hocking's school of natural resources.

are

help, and opened th e door
assisr him, Clark entered the car
stabbed Thompson in the neck.

and then exited the ve hicle.

Thompson made his w ~y to a
nearby hom e, where residents
called for an ambulance.
Judge Wt l~am Medley cited that
the C'v.1dence agamsl Clark was s uf-

ficient, and bound th e case to the
session of the Grand Jury.

for
missing Mason Countian

Is

NEW HAVEN, WNa. - A search

continuing into the disappearance
of a New Haven man who was report·

CINCINNATI (AP) - Ohio's superintendent of
public instruction has hired consultants to come up
with alternatives to the slate 's school-funding system,
althoul!h the state continues to defend the current sys-

expected to decide whether the General Assembly sueceeded in fixing the school -fundmg system .
Some legislative leaders fear lhat rhe latest panel of
experts will undermine the state 's defense of. the cur-

ed missing Tuesday, according to Sgt.
Gordon Oark of the Po11I1 Plea~anl
Detachment-West Virginia State
Police.
The family of Jerry Levi Reitmi re,
36, reponed his disappearance to

tern in court.

ren1 system.

911 , Who in tum co ntacted the state

Less than two years ago, state lawmakers overhauled the funding system under orders from the Ohio
Supreme Court. But state Superintendent Susan Tave
Zelman h:is said tl already may be hme to change the
way money is raised and distributed to sc~ools .
"A lot of people are telling me that was a missed
opportunity, " Zelman told The Ci ncinnat i Enquirer for
a story published today. " I want to take care of this. 1·
don't want school funding to become Ohio's Vietnam."
The State Board of Education has approved the hir-

"While the issue is pending before the court, I think
this is a waste of money," said Senare Minority Leader
Ben Espy, D-Columbus.
Contracts acquired by the Enquirer say the consultants are being paid $316,500 to outline potenrial
sources of funding for schools, determine the base cost
of a child's education and consider other factors such
as special education, transportation, gtfted programs
and adjustments for low-inco me students.
".Is the curient system outdated ? I don '1 know," said
Ze lman , who took office in March. " We don 't even

ing of five researchers from OevelaQd State Universi-

)mow how the current system is working ."

poltee.
Oark said articles of clothing and
Reitmire's waller were located along
the riverbank in Hart ford
· A diver from the Poin t Pleasant
Police Departmenr: and dragging
operations from the Poinl Pleasant,
Mason and Pomeroy fire departm ents
searched the river where the clothing
was found . The Mason County Office
of Emergency Services also assisted
in the search. Nothing was found.
Oark said.
According to Clar k. tHe state
police are currently investigating al l
possibilities including hts being in the
river or having left town. Ret tmire has
not been seen since Monday.

State looking at alternatives to school-funding plan
.

ty, lnd tana University and Pennsylvania State UniverJudge Lint on D Lewis Jr. of Perry County Common
"It appears we have different sus- . s tty to recommend other options. One of the experts is Pleas Court, who heard (he suit challeng ing the consti based on descnpti ons but it cercontacting legislators, teachers, administrators and , tutionality of Oh10 's schoo l fundmg system, ruled in
ltaiirilv is quite a comciden~e." city '- community leaders for advice.
February that the state fail ed to meet the Supreme
~ili ~:~sDetectilie Sgt . Dennis
The group is to present its plan early next year, Court's order to fix it. The state ha,s appealed his rulsaid.
around the same time lhe Oh io Supreme Court is mg.

l 1

l

•

1;;~~~g·~e~ believed tha t Clark

I•

I
I

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