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By The Bend

Tfe Daily Seniinel

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Ann Landers: I am writing

~·s let,er to alert parents (especially

Utose who have teenage daughters)

bt a danger we never knew existed

·~ntil our own daughter had a mental
ltreakdown. She took five different
aiel pills and laxatives - all legal,
!)ver the counter .drugs.
: Our daughter is now on the road
1o recovery, and the doctors tell us
(he is a very lucky girl. Had she con1!nued to use these pills and laxa.~.ves, they could have-killed her.
· ~ Wh1le most parents worry about
~ legal drugs, pills that are as easy to
~urchase as ~ ca ndy bar can do just

be thin . They don't realize they may
be risking their health, and possibly
their lives. Thank you for taking the
t1me to warn them.
.
Dear Ann Landers: "Lawrence
in Burbank" wrote to tell of his
annoyance with the laugh tracks on
as much harm. Please. Ann, tell your TV sitcoms, and asked about a
readers not to take diet pills unless device he could use to block them
they are prescribed by a doctor who out. He already has·one. It's the off
· will monitor them periodically.
button. I think all newer electronic
Let them know that taking more equipment refer to it simply as
pills will not help them lose weight "power." - RON IN SAN ANTOfaster, but will•only speed up their NIO, TEXAS
DEAR RON: If "Lawrence in (
metabolism temporarily - increasing
the ir appe tite and causing them to "Burbank" presses the power button,
as you suggest, he will sit there in
cal more.
We consider ourselves very lucky front of a turned off TV. This does
that our daughter was given a second not solve the problem. The next letter makes a bit more sense:
chance.- LONG ISLAND, N.Y
Dear Ann: Before you put your
DEAR LONG ISLAND: Too
many people. especially young money into the electronic device · I
women, will do almost anything to proposed by "La wrence in Burbank"
to block out the canned laughter on

TV sitcoms, let's finish designing it
J.)ear Ann Landers: Here is
on paper first, so it will do the rest of ·anoifler one for your "stupid crooks"
the job.
col~tion. It's an Associated Press
. Fake laughter can be annoying, stor}. I hope you enjoy it. -HAGERbut how abbut all the other sounds STOWN, MD.
added in the background for "realDEAR D.A.: I did, and I'm sure
ism"?
my readers will, too. Thanks for
I'm talking about crowd noises, sending it on.
traffic, rain, wind and crashing
For nearly 20 years, he feasted
waves. And if that doesn't blot out for free. fl!ow, the man the Dutch
the dialogue, the masters of realism have 'fdubbed "The Dinner Pirate"
c~n always plug in a full orchestra
will !live to make do with jailhouse
to erase the last of the audible con- grub f6r a while. A judge in ihe city
versalion .
of Leeuwarden ordered the felon
If you could come up with a dinerto serve a three monthjailterm
device that would tune out those after he confessed to ordering meals
effects , along with most of the fake and wine at restaurants around the
laughter, All the hearing impaired Netherlands and pleading poverty
would rise up and call you blessed. - when the bill came.
CD. IN BROOKINGS, ORE.
Police said the 54 year old former
DEAR BROOKINGS: Thanks tour bus driver with a taste for Chi- for your comments. I'm sure there nese a,o..~ , Indian cuisine began his
arc many out there who agree with caper tfl'!'the early 1980s, and now,
you. Count me among them.
has a P.\llice file 33 pages thick. He

was arrested after visiting the same
restaurant twice within two weeks.
Dear Readers: · Free gourmet
-food for 20 years? I'd say he was a
fairly_ astute operator, and the
authorities in Leeu,warden were a bit
slow on the uptake.'
An alcohol problem? how can
you help yourself or someone you
l~ve? "Alcoholism: How to Recogmze It, How to Deal With It, How to
Conquer it, will give you the
answers.
Send a self addressed. long, business size envelope and a check or
money order for $3.75 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Alcohol,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Ch1cago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In Canada, send $4.55.)
To find out more about Ann Landers and read her past columns, visit
_the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creators.com.

Cin:&amp;Y Johnston initiated into society
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meetings and special events. The
calendar is not designed to pro·mote sales or fund raisers of any .
type. Items are printed only as
space permits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a spec ific
number of days.
TUESDAY
POMEROY ~ Salisbury
Township Trustees, Tuesday, 6:30
p.m. at the township hall, Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy.
P.OMEROY - Eagles Auxiliary, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the hall.

Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday,
home of Phyllis Hackett_ Faye
POMEROY Meeting, Wallace to review books about
Me1gs County Courthouse, 7 p.m. man 's first landing on the moon .
to discuss extending open hours . Members to pay dues .
for the courthouse. Public officials, business owners and general THURSDAY
public invited.
MIDDLEPORT - Revival
beginning Thursday, 7 p.m. nightPOMEROY - Meigs County ly, through Oct. 14 at God 's TemCommissioners. regular meeting, ple of Praise, located on McGuire
6p.m.
Road near the junction of state
routes 7 and 124, near Middleport.
JOPPA - Olive Township Services will be held at 6 p.m.
Trustees, 6:30 p.m., township Sunday. Pastor Jerry Wayne Balgarage on Joppa Rd.
com invites all.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Work in Master Mason Degree.

RACINE - Racine Grange,
Thursday, 7 p.m. aJ the hall. .

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Low
CHESHIRE - Ladies for the
impact exercise classes will begin
POMEROY - Immunization Lord, interchurch picnic, Cheshire
at 6 p.m. Tuesday, at Ash Street ·clinic, Tuesday, I to 7 p.m. at the _ Park, Saturday, 2 p.m. Door
Baptist Church in Middleport.
Meigs Multipurpose Center.
prizes, music by Sid and Carol
Hayman, Deanna Stewart and the
ALFRED - Orange Township WEDNESDAY
Earthen Vessels. Take covered
Trustees, Tuesday, 7:30 home of
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Town- dish and dessert. All churches
Osie Follrod, clerk.
ship Trustees, Wednesday, 6:30 invited.
p.m Pageville Town Hall.
RUTLAND - Rutland Town POMEROY
Return
ship Trustees, 5 p.m. at Rutland
CHESTER - Chester Town- Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DaughFire Station_
ship Board of Trustees, 7 p.m. at ters of the American Revolution
town hall.
S~turday, at I p.m. at the Pomeroy
POMEROY- Bedford Town{.1brary. Grave markings will fol ship Trusiees, 7 p.m. Tuesday,
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport low the meeting.

David Cole Hoffman
BIRTH OF SON ANNOUNCED
• Mr. and Mrs. David Hoff11111n of
Middleport would llka to
announce the birth of their son
David Cole Hoffman.
Cole waa born at Holzer MedIcal Center at 8:22 p.m~ on
. August 20, 1999. He weighed
seven pounds, 14 ounces and
was 21 Inches long.
He was welcomed home by
his sisters Lien, Marlee, and
Gracie. His grandparanta are
Fred and Pauline Hoffman of
Middleport and Olsto'n "Nick"
and Ruth Wright of Mason,
W.Va.

. Cmdy John~ton was i~itiated
mto Alp.!Ja Omicron Chapter, Delta
Kappa Gamm~ at a meeting held
recently at Tnnny Church, Pomer&lt;IY·
Carol. Eberts, parliamentarian ,
~nd. chap!er officers conducted the
tnltlatory ~work for Johnston who
was esc.~j:ted by Sandra Walker.
Johnston J.as presented a red rose.
. Fern GJ~mm gave prayer precedtng the d1J!lier served by l~dies of the
_church Rlitles were used m the table
decoratwns and favors were candtes,
candles, a~ notebooks . Ebert~ Conducted the busmess meetmg '.n the
abse~ce of MarJorte Fetty, president.
Nelhe Parker, secretary, and Deborah Hammond,. treasurer, made
reports. The socJety voted to raise
money for W?rld Fellowship in
October by takmg donations on an
afghan.

Cards were signed for ill members, Fetty, Rosalie Story, Martha
Greenaw_ay, and Esther Maerker.
September birthdays were recognized.
The Trinity Bell Choir entertained the society with a sing-a-long
which inc lulled "He's Got the Whole
World in His Hands", "Shine on
Harvest Moon", "Take Me Out to
the Ball Game", and "When the
Saints Come Marching In."
.
Next meeting will be held at the
Holiday Inn, Gallipolis, Oct. 25.
Meigs County members attending were Emma Ashley, Twila
Childs, Pam Crow, Fern Grimm, Jo
Ann Hayes, Linda Sue Hysell,
Donna Jenkins, lee Lee, Nellie Parker, Gay Perrin, Carolyn Snowden,
Saundra Kay Tillis, Sandra Walker,
and Ann Webster.

Missionary group installs new officers
· NeJ:V officers were installed at the
September mect1~g of the ~a~rel
Chff Free Methodtst WMI m1sstonary group._
Installed by Brenda Haggy were
Cathy _Pulhns,_ president; Haggy,
first v1ce . preSident of programs;
Donna G1lmllre, global missions;
Jean :OVnght, outreach and Bible
study; Ma_rge Fetty, five by five;
Sharon Sm1th, correspondence; Jan1ce Haggy, secretary; Wanda Eblin,
treasurer.; Sue, Pulhns, chJidren's
youth, mtsSJons.
.
Reports were given by the offi. cers and 11 was noted that the coun-

try to be studied this year is South:
~frica. Theme for this year is
Opponunity Knocks." Scripture
was taken from John and prayer was
given by Cathy Pullins. The program was given by Betty Sayre
using the topic, "Exploring Ways to
Experience God" and Psalm 23.
Prayer requests were given and .
prayer was offered by Janet Swigger.
Refreshments were served by
Janice Haggy and Shirley Meadows
to 14 present. Hostess prizes were won by Wanda Eblin and Becky
Eblin

ET INVOLVED IN YOUR CHILD'S EDU'CATION
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CONFERE CE

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL AND EL

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THURSDAY OCTOBER 7th,; 1999
4:00 PM • 7:00 PM
"

October 6, 1999

Weather

Sports

tocal volleyball result~, . Page 6
Dealing with smokjng co-workers,. ·page 7
Don't expect much after 45, Page 3

Today: Sunny
High: 608; Low: 30•
Tomorrow: Sunny .
High: 7011!; Low: 40s

Major League
Baseball Playoffs·
-:-Page 4

•
Meigs
VolumP ~ o . NumbN BJ

Co~nty's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Oh10

S1nglc Copy- 35 Cc ntc

Highway committee agrees on consultant
"y JIM FREEMAN
S.e ntlnal News Staff
-, The Athens-Darwin Citizens Advisory
Committee agreed Monday afternoon on a
professional consultant to examine the proposed relocation of U.S. 33 in Meigs Counfy.
.
The committee, meeting at the Ohio University Inn in Athens, unanimously selected
.·
f MC
· k "' 1 &amp;.
the furn o
c orm1c , .ay or
Assoc.
1
f p· b h d Ph') d 1 ·
)IC. o
Jtts urg an
1 a e ph1• to examine the proposed project including work
d(lne so far by I he Ohio Department of
Transportation and alternate proposals suggested by a group opposed to the highway.
While it has no decision-making authority, the Athens-Darwin CAC was formed and
!.asked by QI}OT's Transportation and
Review Adfuory Council (TRAC) to cons!der the project and report back with a recommendation concerning the proposed high-

way. The T~AC also formed a subcommittee _ consulting firms.
L
/ h• h
d
to consider the proposed route.
"Any one could have done the job sue- OCa
19 way a VOCateS
The TRAC will ultimately decide wliether cessfully," said David L. Celona, ODOT
While a new group supporting the U.S.
or not to fund construction of the U.S. 33 chief of staff, who heads the CAC. Celona 33 project from Athens to Darwin gears up
project.
s~id it was his impression everyone was for its fir.;t meeting, representatives from
At the heart of the !)latter is the proposed happy with the choice.
other organizations supporting the project
relocation of U.S. 33 from Athens to DarThe firm will examine the environmental are being sought for member.;hip.
win. While the project apparently enjoys documents, ODOT's plans and the option
"We are ao;king for a representative from
wide support along the U.S. 33 corridor from presented by CASH and come up with a every organization, anyone that passed a
C
resolution supporting 'the highway, to
olumbus lo the Ohio River and beyond into report in about six months so the CAC can
appoint SQmeone to serve on our commitWest Virginia, it is opposed by the Athens- report back to the TRAC with its findings. tee," said Meigs County Route 33 Corridor
based Coalition Against Superfluous High"Now we get to the nuts and bolts," said Campaign Committee Chairman Bill
ways and the Buckeye Forest Council.
Celona. :'Everything we've done so far is Childs of Middlepon.
Edward Baum, OU professor of political warming up in the dugout."
•
Childs said numerous groups, including
science, moved lhat the CAC hire the firm
The firm is to report back to the CA:C at school districts, churches, civic organiza- .
while Steve Story, representing the South- its Oct. 18 meeting, which will be held at tions and othe..S have supported the project
east Ohio Regional Council/Route 33 Com- 3:30 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center in by passing resolutions of support. It is these
mittee, seconded the motion which was Pomeroy.
groups being sought for representation in
unanimously approved 'by the group.
"It's a very open, fair and solid process," the new highway advocacy committee, he
Before making their decision, group Celona said of the CAC. "CASH has been a said.
,
members met with represenlatives of four pari of the process. It's a good process."
Childs described the group a "non-parti-

Meigs county receives ooNR funds

The son of Mason County's 91 I ing the fire and had lo be transdirector, and two others, were ported to a local hospital. He was
charged with arson Tuesday in a treated and released that same
1997 six alarm fire ' that burned a night.
Blake, Yonker and Tuiley were
portion of Hogg and Zuspan Matearraigned before Mason County
rials Co. in Mason.
Charles "C.R." Blake, II, 2 I', Magistrate Johnny Reynolds TuesChristopher Yonker, 21, and Kevin day evening, where bond was set
A. Turley, 23, all of Mason, were at $13,000 each. Blake immediate-•
each charged with two felonies: ly posted property bond, while
second degree arson and WV Code Yonker arid Turley remained in jail
6I -3-7(A), which is causing an as of 8 a.m. today.
The fire took place August 14,
injury during an arson related
crime, according to West Virginia 1997 and caused an estimated
$250,000 damage.
State Fire Marshal Paul Ritchie.
Six fire departments, including
Second degree arson is the
burning of any ~tructure bu.t a Mason, New Haven, and Point
Pleasant in West Virginia, SyraCounty lln~neer Bob Eason for a reccharge came as a cuse, Middleport and Pomeroy in
5ectlo!M--ll-P. . . .. - .
Ohio_fireJi_ghter ()hio, .responded to the call with 75
J··.
·1999 membership dues of'"'f!palachi· l
· who .was. i_nj~fed dur- men. ,.

The Meigs County Commissioners accepted a check from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources for proceeds from timbering when they met on Tues·
day evening.
·
The wmmisliioners met yesterday instead of Monday due to public meeting
about extended courthouse hours, which wao; also held last night (see related
story).
Paul Whyte ofODNR presented the check in the amount of $29,060.87, representing the proceeds of timbering and otber activity in Shade River State Forest in Olive Township. Part of tbe proceeds will go to the Eastern Local School
District.
The commissioners alliQ reviewed a request from the Township Trustees in
Otester Township regarding lhe establishment on 870 feet of new roaCJway and
the abandonment of 870 feet on old
roadway on Otesler Township Rd.
298,
Road, due to a reloGood Afternoon cationSummerf~eld
of the road.
The request was referred to Meigs

Sentinel

k/
t t/
see ng represen a VeS
san with one purpose"thatbeing to improve
the Route 33 Corridor. He said U.S. 33 has
37 traffic tights from Lancaster to Athens
and 66 curves from Athens to Darwin.
Childs urged those wanting more information about the committee to call rum at
992-338l or992-2449.
Other member.; include Pomeroy Council President John Musser, Pomeroy Attorney Bernard v.&lt;Fultz, Meigs County Carnmissioner Mick Davenport, engineer Gene
Triplett and Chamber of Commerce officer
Sue Maison.
"We will meet in about two weeks," ·
Childs said.
. "We' re tired of being ridiculed and ptit
down," said Childs. "It's time for progress.
Our goal is to organize for industrial development every community along the 33 Corridor from central Ohio to (Interstate) 77."

Mason men charged with arson charges stemming 1997

~;~:'f~r ~ $250'p;;;;;rrt"fo, L· ji!'~~~:~~.":~~;

j.

The fire burn~ d one building of
a several structure facility owned
by Bill and Linda Zuspan , It
housed trusses, utility buildings
and building materials. Water was
pumped from the nearby Ohio
River to extinguish the blaze.
• Bill Zuspan said this morning
he is thankful the matter was pursued long enough to find out what
happened, but added those charged
remain innocent until proven
guilty.
Ritchie said the state fire marshal's office initiated an investigation at the time of the blaze, but
could not successfully complete it
until three weeks ago after the
Mason
Police
Department
received a lead.
1!-itchie. said the inv-estigation

has been a joint effort between hi~
office and the Mason police, with
some assistance frqm the Mason
fire department.
.
Further details of the investigation were not released .
Both . Blake and Turley are
members of the Mason Volunteer
Fire Department, and presently
serve as 911 dispatcheis.
Both were suspended from their
91 I positions with pay, according
to John Gerlach, county administrator.
Blake 's father, Chuck · Blake,
was fire chief at the time of the.
blaze and, serves as ·county 911
director, and director of the office
~f emergency services. Blake's
mother is a member of tJte Mason
council.
'

?.;:r;~~f=r:.s .~ Extended courthouse hours discussed in meeting
b115ines,s owners, elected officials and ed county officials control the operatmembers of the general public the ing hours of their offices.
The commissioners can open the
Santini! Nawa Statr
cost the county an additional $109,000 opportunity. to share opinions about
extended hour.; .for the courthouse, but courthouse, Commissioner Janet
If Mciigs County's courthouse were per year.
elected officials, other than the county Howard said last nigh~ but that does
to become Ohio's firsl to open on SatA public meeting was held at the
commissioner.;, and retail business not mean that officials will open their
urday mornings, it could help retai.l courthouse Tuesday evening to afford
owners were noticeably absent II offices.
Commissioner Mick Davenport
people, other than the commissioners,
said
thal_lhe commiSsioners had polled
attended,
including
John
Musser,
miW
all
counties
in the state on the issue of
George
Wright
and
Larry
Wehrung,
all
Pick 3: 3-2-3; Pick 4: 7--6-6--4
Saturday
hours,
and found that no
Pomeroy
Village
Councilmen,
and
Buckeye 5: 3--4-11-16-27
courthouse
in
the
state
opened on SatPomeroy
Mayor
Frank
Vaughan.
lY..YA.
·urday,
and
only
two
auto
title offices·
Two
weeks
ago,
Wright
met
with
DaUy 3: 9-4--4; DaUy 4: 2-5-9-3
in
the
state
offered
extended
hour.;.
the commissioners to discuss the
C 1999 Obio Volley Publisbiag Co.
Figures
presented
in
writing
to the
importance of Saturday morning courcommissioner.;
and
to
The
Daily
Senthouse hours, not only for the sake of
'
tine!
on
Tuesday
afternoon
project
that
public convenience, but also to help
the
cost
of
operating
the
courthouse
the retail dimate in Pomeroy.
Wright referred specifically last for three hour.; every Saturday would
night to the upcoming opening of Wai- exceed $1, 196 per week, $8,300 per
Mart in M~n. W.Va., and said that month, and $108,856, in employee
the loss of business in Pomeroy to ihe salaries alone.
Those figures were presented in a
new Super.;tore, and the loss of sales
written
analysis by Treasurer Howard
tax revenue, could seriously hurt businesses and the county coffers, respec- Frank, who said this morning that they
tively.
. were prepared by the Meigs County
"Circumstances have changed a Budget Commission (made up of himgreat deal in the last two or three self, Auditor Nancy Parker Campbell
months," Wright said. "Can the coun- and Prosecuting Attorney John
iy stand to lese another 10 to 15 per- Lentes) using the county's financial
records.
.
cent in sales taxes?"
Wright said lao;t night that the fig-The commissioners have said
Woody Stlnae, HCOnd fronrlefl, the new commercial loan ofll· repeatedly that they ,support extended Ure!i are misleading, because they figII the Farmera Bank, and l:huck Govay, right, naw publlahar hour.; for the courthouse, but noted ure salaries at "time and a half, but
- Th... three seniors are canthe Ohio Valley Publishing Co., vlaH with Stave Story, Malga last night that .evening hours during Frank this morning cited the Ohio ;
didates ~
quean II Eastern High School ori- Fri- County Chamber of Commerce praaldant, lett, ~ Paul RHCI, the week, rather than Saturday morn- Revised Code as it relates to compen- •
day nlgtit: Thty are,
l,.aah Sandara, daUilhter of Mike and" bank ~rHldent, during the Chamber's aftar-bualna...houra ing hours, would be more economical satory time and overtime payment for
Rhonda S.ndn,.'Tuppara Plaine, Chaaatla Hollon, daughter of IOC!Jtl ~ II the bank. The film, ".Raflactlona of Our Heritage", for the county's already-strapped genRick and Mickle Hollon,_Long Bottom; and Becky Davia, daugh- WM &amp;ho1!111, door prlzla ware awarded and rafraahments nrvad. eral fund, and also stressed that electContinued ~n page 3·
ter of Jim and Diane Davia, Raaclavllla.
Human Services.
In other business. the commissioners
approved appropriations awustments
in the amounts of $500 and $1,000 for
the veterans service otftce, $1;000 for
juvenile court, and $6,000 and $1,500
for the community o6rrections program, approved the certification and .
appropriation of $5,000 in the budget
of the sheriff, and approved payment
of bills in the amount of $188,544.43.
Present were Commissioners Mick
Davenport, Jeffrey Thornton and President Janet Howard, and Oerk l.ilona 1
Kloes.

Figures project snnusl costs exceeding $109,000
By BRIAN J. REED
·
businesses in Pomeroy, but could also

cqua

Fed holds off on interest rates

ENTARY SCHOOl

•••

Wednesday

Page 12
Tuesday, October 5, 19Q9

ixing diet pills-and laxatives to .loo·se·weight can be deadly combination

..

-.

By JEAtfNINE AVERSA
Aaaoclated Prall Writer
·
_
· · WASHINGTON (AP)- The Federal Reserve didn' t
raise interest rates -this time, but Fed·policy-makers left
li.ttlc doubt they .are &amp;roWing inCreasingly worried that
the sizzling.U.S. economy could generate inflation troubles down the road.
Some private econ,bmists said they expect not just
one but t.wo more rate jnc;rcases in coming months as
.the central bank _tries to slow economic growth to a
'safer speed. '
"I think that it is in the cards for a nte hike in
November, and there is a chance we will see another
rate hike _early next year as s~nt srowth continues,"
said David JQI)es, an.ec;9nomist.with Aubrey G. Lanston
·&amp;: Co. .
.
. .
: · Warning Tuesday that. it is remaining "especially
alert" to any inflation dangers .coming from the tight
labor market, the .Fed -~itChed its policy directive,
intended to signal future moves, .from neutral to, a tilt ·
toward higher rales.
.
.
"The arowth of demand has continued tci outpace
that of supply, liS evidence!~ ·by a decreasing pool of
available workm," the Fed said in illl statement.
With the nation 'a unemployment rate at a 29-year .
·low of 4.2 perc;ent, some companies are having a diffi-_

•.,.

•.

cult time finding qualified
workers to fill vacancies.
Those conditions are
leading some companies to
woo workers with higher
wages and benefits. While
that's good news for workers, it's worrisome to the
Fed because lhosc increased
costs could drive up prices
and spark ioDation.
Some economists believe
the nation's unemployment
rate in September, a figure
being released Friday, could
fall to 4. 1 percent.
_
"Unless there is an alifupt slowdown in labOr mirket
activity, the die appears to be cut for another nle
hib;'' said Allen Sinai, chief eCQnomist at Primark
Global Economies.
. . .
F~ policy-milkers next meet to review interest ra~
on Nov. 16. The Fed's statement raising·the prospect of
woriies over hlflation pressure and its decision to
switch its policy directive "re,enforces the probability
ofa third rate hike on Nov. 16," said First Union chief
econ0111ist David Orr. ·"We would put the odds ~t 60
·.~

hints at comin.g increase ~

percent."
But much depends on
what a slew of economic
data out betw~en now and
then including two
employment reports and
several inflation reports says about the nation's
economy and the prospects
for inflation, economists
said.
Many analysts said they
believed a November rate
increase,.£ollld be followed
by a foilfth rale boost early
next year, probably in January as the central bank continues moving 10 slow
arowth enough to ensure that tight labor markets don't
s~ .pushing wages and prices higher.
. "The Fed is clearly niore worried aboul inOation
than they were in Au gus~ "said Sung Won Sohn, chief
economist at Wells Fargo in Minneapolis. "The Fed
recognizes that there is more work to be done."
The Fed's warning sent stOck prices on a wild rollercoaster ride duri11g the final two hours of trading Tuesday, Jwinging from a gain of 106 points immediate!~

before the Fed announcement to a I 24-point loss. The :•
Dow then rebounded to finish the day down just 0.64 ;
point at I 0,400.59.
-;
Stocks had . posted a 128-point gain on Monday on. .~.
hopes that the Fed would not raise rates and would; ·-~
maintain iiS neutral policy directive.
;
0n June 30, the Fed, for the f.irst time in two years, ..
raised its target for the federal funds rate, the interest :
that banks' charge each other, by a quarter point. It fol .; :
lowed that action with another quarter'point increase orr · r
Aug. 24, pushing the funds_rate to 5.25 percent.
:.
Commercial banks matched those increases with ·:;
similar quarter-point increases in their prime lending -:::
· rate, the benchmark for millions of consumer and busi- ·"
ness loans. The prime rate now stands at:8.25 percent. -'~
After''the August increase, the Fed left its policy · ~
directive at neutral, saying it believed its two quarter- :
point rate hikes "should markedly diminish the risk of ; .
rising inflation going forward."
,P,
But while economic growth slowed in the second ~
quarter, many economists believe the economy grew at :.
a brisk annual rate of 4 percent or more in the just-rom, ~
pleted third quarter. Arid they said the economy is like- .~
ly to grow at a similar rate in the final three months of )1
the year, far above the 3 percent rate many on the Fed f.
~lieve is pruden!.
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Wednesday, October 6, 1999

;~·~comments
'Estllbllslillf in 1948
•

111

Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-11112-2158 • Fax: 11112·2157 '

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
CHARLES W. GOVEY
Publlaher
. DIANE HILL

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Controller

Generelllan~pr

-to.ol,...

~

nw Sentinel wMa4NiNC lelteta_Jo 1M .nltw t'tom ,....,.. on • t1toH ,.,.
1oe. poll "5 -1 IIIW ffw boot .,.,.,. of bMtg , . , - .

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- - Ot lollw. to: ua- to t1tt odlfol; Tho Senline~
""'*ort Oltlo *7'fl; CJ'i FAX fo 7~167.

tl1 Coutf St.,

;cresting equity rights for the middle class
:BY JOHN CUNNIFF

-,., Bualn- Analyat
·
: NEW YORK (AP) - As Sam Beard describes it, money is the ticket to
ihe JIRIIest sbow on earth, that show being the U.S. economy.
'\Let money make money for everyone," he says, sounding like a cross
.between a philanthropist and a day trader who had just hit the jackpot.
: His spiel cannot be interrupted. "Money is an economic tool," he stress. ~ and "we need to put this tool into the hands of all Americans" because
this, he announces, "is the age of equity."
: Beud is neither day trader nor philanthropist- he founded and heads a
:nonprofit organization, Economic Security 2000, and he is speaking about
tevamping Social Security.
. ..
: Few people do it more relentlessly, as Be~ has demonstrated m ~·s•~ to
:SO cities a year, in broadcasts over 2,000 radio and TV outlets, and m VISits
to II least 140 editorial boards.
·
.
: In a sense, it's an old story. Beard is an idea man who, mainly !!trough the
:not-for-profit National Development Council, which he founded, innuenced
'administrations as far back as Richard Nixon.
: Through the council, of which he is now chairman, Beard.and his ~taff
:SOUght economic opponunities in the slums, and by some esumates rmsed
$30 billion and created more than a million jobs.
: He delivers his ideas apolitically to both the right and the left, and to
~eaden of foundations and large corporations. He squeezes funds from both
;and convinces them to si\ on his board.
.
.
• He hu his-argument down pat. There are two p1llars of finanaal success,
:Weaes and savings, he says. Most Ameticans, as many as two-thirds, rely on
:WII'es alone, having no meaningful savings.
·.
· ·• However•one-third of all income in this country comes from savmgs and
existing wealth, which in tum create more income and wealth. Wage earners
.. Ire lugcly excluded from this income source.
.
· .~ Bad enough, says Beard, when so much wealth is being created through
slack investments made from savi.ngs and existing wealth. But, he says the
disparity between rich and poor is now widening.
·
"The bottom 50 percent of Americans own just 2 percent of the country's
. wealth," he continues, citing a 1995 Rand Institute study from which he also
aleans this nugget:
·
.
.
· "The financial wealth of the top 10 percent of households IS 4,653 limes
sreater than the financial wealth of the bottom 2Q percent," a gap, he sugpsts, thll is widened by investments.
That this should continue, he contends, is senseless and unnecessary,
since a worker earning just $20,000 a year already sets aside $2,480 for
Social Security.
.
The big divide widens rather than closes, however, because that $2,480
lsri't invested. Were it ,put into securities, he says, the $20,000 worker could
retire with more than $300,000.
"DemocratiZI: the earning power of equity," says Beard. Grow the mid·
. die class. Make its members stakeholders in prosperity. "Owning money has
become the new breakthrough economic tool."
Beard and his organization preach this gospel with a staff of six based in
Wuhinpon, and with volunteers in 88 cities in 41 states, zealously believing thefll fulfill their mission by 2000.
·
· . Econom~ Security 2000 proposes a new "Equity Rights Act': that would
set uidc and invest a minimum of $500 a year into individually owned savings ICCOUnts for all Americans. It would ~ expa~ded fro~ there.
.
, ltsaaenda also includes a broader savings pohcy for higher education,
home owncrahip and business ownership, all of which contribute to and
reflect participation in economic growth.
; The group's arguments, developed over the past five years, are .woven
' through with lesser themes built around what they view is. the inevitable
demile of the existing Social Security structure.

· This yar, the Racine \()lunteer Fi~e Depenment and other local fi~e departme?ts
Nalional Fi~e Prevention Week, October 3-9. Varioos adiv. ilia will be pblllled and fire equipment will be displayed, but I, aloog with every
Cllhcr volunteer fire fighter, I'm sure, would like to remind the people of our communities c:l one thing: fire prevention s1a11s at home! Make it a family activity. Praclil:c your cvacualion plan aikl please change your smoke alarm baueries. Remember, the COlli of one nine-volt battery could save years of memories, not to mention
die tifc of aomeone you love.
CunisD.JOMS
~II be prticipating in

Today In History

•

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.

White House Chief of Staff John ·Podesta
said the whole budget process was headed
toward chaos.
Clin~on said he didn't want a fight IIIith. t.he
Republicans, but he .does not sound conc1ha·
tory.
Signing a re~ol~tion to keep the government from runmng out of money because of
deadlines that passed Friday without appro·
priatio~s to keep thing~ going:,h~ ac~used the
Republicans of resortmg to gimmicks and
gamesmanship"· instead of passing a rcsponsi blc budget.
By responsible, of course, he means one
that fits his priorities. .
That is no more likely in this divi~ed government than it was for Reagan, m 1982, .
when his Republican administration had to
deal with a Democratic Congress, and he
made his remarks about Mickey Mouse and
Bonzo.
.
Actually, the system loo~s logical ~nd
orderly. B~t that's o_n pap~r, :w•thout factonng
in competmg spendmg pnont1es.
The process itself is the product of budget
reform 25 years ago, when Congress set up a
series of deadlines for action - and almost
immediately began missing them.
It begins with _a president'~ budget _in the
winter, a cong~ess1onal budget m the spr.m~, to
be follo~e~ by action on the .13 ~ppropnallons
bills to f1ll m ~he blanks, which IS supposed to
be done by m!d-September but never IS.
Then, m ume for the Oct. 1. budget new
year, there is supposed to be a fmAI measure

to p~y ~or it. 11
•
S1gnmg the exte~s1on Congres~ passed to
keep fede_ral agencies f~om run_mng o~t ~f .
funds until ~~t. 21, Clinton said he d1dn (
want to but II was the only ~ay to _prevenl
llnother government shutdown, a re~mder _of
the 1995 budget mess that resulted In partial
shutdowns.
.
.
That year, the Republicans,; newly m con- :
trol o_f 0'ngress, _let ••. happen mstead o~ com•
promiSing to avOid Clmton vetoes, figunng he
would get the bla~e.
.
Instead, they did.
.
They want no replay, but neither do they
want a budget deal like the one the,r made last
year, ~hich .still rankles conservatives for the
spendmg Cl.mton won.
.
.T~e pr~s1dent has vetoed one 2000 ap~rQ·
~nallon bill, and there arc veto threats agam~t
fiVe more because of GOP cuts he won l
accept.
.
.
.
. The latest IS agamst a plan by House Repub· .
h~a~ leaders_ to delay pa~ments !o. about _2&lt;! .
million low-mcom~ ~or~mg fam~hes: which
would push $8.7 b1lhon m spcndmg mto the,
next budget year.
•
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..
It wouldn't save any money, but 11 ":oul~..
make the 2000 numbers look better. Chnton.
said if they do it he, won't sign it.
.
Even!ually, .they 1_1 come I~ terms. And the
~ycle w•!l begm agam, next l!me to be .settled
m the midst of the 2~ elect~on campa1gn. .
Wa/trr R. M.ears, VICI pnsi41111 Gild collllll•
111st f~r Till ASiociate~ l'r~rs, ~sr1port1d 011 :
Was/amfiDII alld lltltlonal polities for mon .

·oo·n't expecr·m·uch·aner .45.

By Red Green
.
.
· 1 was reading an article in a men's magazme
titled "What to Expect From Your Body at 45."
According to the article ... not much. At that age,
most of your original equipment is either bald,
shot, slipping or locked up: This is not the time
to stan a tO-mile run and two hours of weightRDciM lifting.
That train left, and you weren't on it. You
were eating fries and gravy in the departure
lounge
: ·&amp;y The Alloclmd PI'MI
But ·don't panic.
.
Today is WC~~nesday, Oct, 6, the 279th day of 1999. There are 86 days
If you look for it, there's an upside to turnmg
left in the year.
. 45. You get to see the reno you did to your bathToday's Highlight in History:
room twice a night. You enjoy muttering under
On Oct. 6, 1927, the era of talking pictures arrived with the opening of your breath a lot more. You may_have put on
•1'J'he Jazz Singer," starring AI Jolson, a movie which featured both silent some weight, so you have a whole new body to
ind sound-synchronized scenes.
get used to.
Sometimes you see your shadow and have to
. On this date:
move something just to prove to yourself it's
: In 18114, the Naval War College was established in Newpon, R.I.
• In 1889, the Moulin Rouge in Paris filst opened its doors to the public. you.
No, you can't run five miles or do 50 push·
: In 1891, Olarles Stewart Parnell, the "Uncrowned King of Ireland,"
ups
... big deal. 1 can't go 12 rounds with George
died in ~ghton, England.
.
Foreman,
either, but you know what? It doesn't
; In 1939, in an address to the Reichstag, Adolf Hitler denied any inten·
come
up
that
often.
..
~on of war against France and Britain.
No, you and your body have gotten along j.ust
: In 1949, American-born Iva Toguri D' Aquino, convic(lld as Japanese fine for almost half a century by not expectmg
wartime broadcaster "Tokyo Rose," was sentenced in San.Francisco to 10 too much from each other. Don't wreck a good
yem in prison and lined $10,1100.
thing.
In 1949, President Truman signed the Mutual Defense Assistance Act,
THE RELUCTANT HOST
IOialing $1.3 billion in military aid to NATO countries.
My wife invited her sister and brother-in-law
In 1973, war erupted in the Middle East as Egypt and Syria attacked over for dinner last night. I didn't do well. While
Ianiei during the Yom Kippur holiday.
.
ever.yone was eating their supper, I read the bas)J! 1979, Pope John Paul II, on a week-long U.S. tour, became the. first .kctball scores from the newspaper out loud in
pontiff to visil the White House, wher~ he was rece1ved by President the bathroom. During dessert, I went down and
rewired the basement.
~ Cvtcr.
.
Then 1 went out to buy after-dinner mints and
; In 1981, Jlgyptian President Anwar Sadat was shot to death by extremdidn't
return till dawn. I was bad. Very bad. And
•. itts while reviewing a military parade.
·
now
1
have to find a way to make things right
· In 198J,.Cardinal Terence Cooke, the spiritual head of the Archdiocese
·with
the
woman 1 love. I've done the apology
of New York, died at age 62.
and flowers thing, b'ut she's still not talking very

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reponed that 32··YeiU"-old ~
Johnny 0. "Brian" Hawley, Pomeroy, was anested Tuesday
Pomeroy bar on a Meigs County Coun warrant alleging failure
on c_hargcs of driving under the influence, failure to we~r a seat
failure to control following a motor-vehicle crash qn June 27. .
He is also being held on an order to hold from the state proballon
cer on allegations he violated his parole from the Common Pleas Court.

By Jack Anderson and Dougias Cohn

Budget shenanigans: Call ·it comedy or call it ch~os

Week

....

Man arrested on warrant

campaign trips to nine states.
kept calling.
WASHINGTON -- ·Prof. Ernestine
On the hustings, she is referred to as the
Their
first
date
was
New
Year's
Eve,
Schlant, the wife of presidential candi,
pan·
of the couple, girlishly p~lling Rr••d. lev
1970.
Friends
say
that
the
unlikely
date ex-Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.J., who
onto
the dance floor · followmg a senous
attraction
between
them
(she
is
eight
has retained her name from a previous
address,
flashing her high-beam grin \Vith case.
years
his
senior)
is
that
she
didn't
care
marriage for professional reasons, is the
She
says
the extent of influence she has on
what
Bil.l
did
for
a
living.
focus of our ongoing series on. the
They were married in a secret 1974 her husband is what literature he reads while
woman ";'hO would be first lady and the
Palm Beach ceremony that all but ·one he is traveling. •
man who would be first gentleman.
'This is his time," she ~ays.
of
his teammates learned of through the
Since Rosalyn Carter sat in on CabiPerhaps, but recent history has repeatedly
newspapers.
net meetings, Nancy Reagan guarded
proven
thl\1 first lady agendas often have a way
The
couple
had
a
daughter,
()'heresa
presidential access and interceded in
personne.l changes, and Hillary Clinton was Anne, whom Bill brought to Washington when of becoming ~;~residential agendas.
The problem is that we as yet do not know
promoted as the "co-president" by her hus· he entered the Senate; Ernestine commuted to
the
'agenda of Ernestine Misslbeck Schlant
be
with
them
on
weekends.
Then,
in
1992,
band, the position of first lady has become tanBradley.
Ernestine
was
diagnosed
with
'breast
cancer.
tamount to a Cabinet appointment and more.
AN INTERESTING OBSERVATION
And so we are .. and ought to be .. interested Bradley has referred to her illness as the hard..
Ernestine's
potential counterpart, Laura
est
test
of
his
life.
in the people who would fill' this high, un ~lect­
Bush,
wife
of
the
prospective GOP candidate,
He
stayed
by
her
side
through
six
months
of
ed position.
G.W. Bush, is an exceptionally well-read cKErnestine Misslbeck grew up during World chemotherapy and was her "rock," she says.
Now, Ernestine is Bradley's rock, taking Iibrarian, who also recommends reading lis~
War II in the Bavarian city of Passau, just
leave for the first time from Montclair State for her husband.
down the road from a forced labor camp.
Not since Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy
Her father served in the German Air Force, · University to campaign with.liim, though she is
but he was not a member of the Nazi party, and · quick to stress that her appearance by her hus- informed French President Charles DeGaulle
her mother was threatened with prison for band's side is for support only. Finally becom· that she had read his book -- in French -- has .
ing "Mrs. Bradley," she.has jumped into cam- the nation witnessed such literary acumen at
objecting to a Hitler propaganda news reel .
At the tender age of 7, her school was con- paigning with vigor, making more than 30 such lofty levels.
verted into a hospital for German soldiers, and
she recalls bringing tea to the wounded.
Thereafter, the Misslbecks lived in postwar
poverty. The family did not have electricity,
and Ernestine remembers sitting with an atlas
in candlelight, plotting her course to America.
She came to the United States in 1957, working as a flight attendant for Pan Am.
Ernestine attended Emory University in
Atlanta, where she first learned of the
"tremendously upsetting real1ty" of the Holo·
caust; and in her recent book, "The Language
of Silence," she criticizes the German intellectual community for failing to come to terms
with it.
She received a Ph.D. before she turned 30,
and married and divorced an Atlanta doctor
witli whom she had a child, Stephanie.
' In 1969, Ernestine moved to a New York
apartment near Madison Square Garden -- the
same apartment building where Knicks basketball star "Dollar Bill" Bradley (so called for
his monetary tightness) resided.
It was a fact entirely lost on her, she admits,
until, while working as an assistant producer
for a New York film company, she was
assigned to line up the basketball star for an
interview. The interview was canceled, but Bill
.

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correepondent
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ronald Reagan.
once called it a Mickey Mouse system, and
said his chimpanzee co-star in "Bedtime for
Bonzo" made more sense than the way a divid·
ed government was setting its budget.
As the Republican Congress and the
Democratic White House argue into overtime,
as usual , on financing the government, the
maneuvering would fit a comed.y script.
•The idea of a t3,month year, for example,
and the designation of so predi~:table an
expense as the 2000 census as a $4.1 billion
emergency to avoid counting it against spend·
ing limits.
• The repetitive debate in which each pol it· ical· side accuses the other of doing what it
denies.
. • The Democrats' pleasure at watching the
Republican majority struggle.
• Or the Rep1Iblican resolution the House
approved declaring that it should not consider
spending any of the Social Security surplus
for anything else, and should keep trying to
reduce the n'ationaf debt.
It did not - could not- bind Congress to
do what the resolution said it should do.
Republicans accused the Democrats of trying to raid Social Security funds to cover
Stlfety
spending President Clinton wants.
.. De.Editor:
They countered, with a report from the
·: An IMI'IIF of three children a day (approximately I, 100 children under the age Congressional Budget Office to back them,
' Of lS) die cadi year in house fires.
that spending the ~epublicans fli,VOr would
Many of thc:sc llagedies could have been avoided witiJ working smoke alarms. cost about $18 billion in Social Security sur·
' lllincty pen:ent of these deaths in the U.S. oocur in homes without working smoke
l/lmJL Unfonunately, we have seen examples of this in our communjties in the

,.,m

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

WeclnM*v,
. Qoto~
. t, 1

The Daily·Sentinel 'Mrs. ·a·radley'
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much, and that's •!w~ys a bad sign.
So I offered to InVIte someone from my farnily over .and allow he~ be rude to. them. That
seems fa1r to me. She ptcks the relat1ve. The one
she hates the most.
So far, she h.asn:t res~nded. ~ don't l_rno':"
whether she's rejectmg the Idea-or JUSt findmg 11
hard to make a decision when there are so many
choices.
THE S~i\RIEST PAGE IN mE
NEWSPAPER
I nee~ to talk'? some of you older guys ~bout
the scanest page m the newspaper-- the obituaries. When you're young, you never read 'en;'.
And then one day you hear about somebody s
p~ent passing away, and you look it up on the
obituary page.
Then more and more people you know start
packing it in. At first, they're all older than you
-- doctors, principals, golf pros. But gradually
people lhe same age as you are in there, and
nowhere. in. the obituary does it .~ay, .:'.tak~n
before h1s lime," "called too .soon or m h1s
prime."
.
Next thing you know, it's the first page you
turn to .. ~canning do~n t_he colu~ns, sear~hing
for fam1har names. It s like looking at a hst of
who made ·the high scliool football team, except
in this case, you're glad you didn't make the cut.
Every time one of your contempora{ies passes
on, that's one less person you:can borrow tools
from.
So I think we should make a deal with each
other right now: l'm·gonna stan takillg care of
myself by eating healthy and staying fit, and I'll
be counting on you to hold up your end with
something other than a bar stool.
mE MOMENT OF TRUTH
· Well there you are, right up to your big·mouth
in it. No sooner did you stan putting the new g~
barbecu.e together than you got stuck. Tab A

won't fit into Slot B.
..
:
And she passes by and asks, What do the :
instructions s~y?" Now ~ou're s!uck.
.
Y~u ha~en t read .th~ mstruct!ons, hav~ you? :
They re still. sealed ms1de that little plastic bag .
you'r~ k~eehng on.
.
:
ThiS IS a huge tactical en~. You forgot to .
take the necessary steps to a~01d the embarrass- :
ment that _you are now cxpene~cing. .
.. :
Next lime you open anythma that requires ·
assembly, you must immediate-ly throw away the :
instruct~ons. But keep the box, so you· can refer
to lhe picture.
. .
.
Quote ?f the Day:, "I'm the nche~~ man In
the world, If you don t count money. -- Red
Green

IND.

Klan's free speech ..costing
cities and towns big money
W.VA.

C 1999AccuWealher, Inc.

~ i~
.tii!iii.l.. A'l'S\, ~ ~ •
~ ~ '~
·:~
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V

Sunny Pt Cl"'dy Cloody

Showers T-storms

Aumeo

Extended Courthouse
. Continued from page 1
county employees, and said that county officials can exercise only so much
flexibility when scheduling employees' hours. Overtime pay, he said,
must be calculated when considering
extended hours.
Other costs which would be
involved include an increase in the
counhouse electric bill, which averages $1,666 per month already, and
other utilities.
·
: According to Commissioner Mick
Davenport, "gening things up and runni!lg'' every day cau5!'S the greatest
expense, and while he said he has no
.- objection in principle to opening the
cOUrthouse on Saturday, he noted that
.it would be more economical to
e~tend hours on a weeknight, since the
. . lii'tts .would already be on and computers and other equipment would
' already be in operation.·
. Convenience to the public, howev-

The Daily Sentinel
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Community Newtptpcr Holdlnp, Inc.
Published every 1fternoon, Monday through
Fridly, 111 Court St., PO!fleroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio V.llel Publbhins COmpany. Second .....
postlp pau:l1t Pomeray, Ohto.
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Member: The Associ11ed Preu and the Ohio
Newspaper Associ1tion.
Poltmlller: Mnd addreu oorreclioM to TI.e
Daily S~ntLnel, 111 Court St., Pomeray, Ohio
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Reader Services
Correction Pc:t)IQY

11d Nko ,I~~

.

~ours

...

er, was the issue presented by most of
the members of the public attending
last night's meeting, and most of them,
Including Pom"roy Mayor Frank
-Vaughan, and Middleport businessman Denny Facemyer, both noted that
extending courthouse hours for an
hour or two during the week would
likely provide no added convenience
,for the average working pe!!'On, since
many plant employees and other day
workers work into the late afterooon
and early evening.
"Not everybody lives in a two mile
radius around Pomeroy,'' Facemyer
said. "You need to think abo~t the people who live around Albany, and Tuppers Plains, and Racine."
"We can vote out the clerk of
courts and the other offioe holl!ers if
we don't feel that they're servil)g the
public. This shouldn't even be an
issue," Facemyer said.
It was also noted by anotber member of the public that objections of
counhouse employees, who may not
wish to work on Saturdays or other
extended hours, should ~ot be considered when discussing extended hours
for the sake of public convenience.
"Those people are working for us,''
he said; "If they're not willing to work
when we need· them to be here, they
need to stay home. Someone else
would be happy to have their jobs."
Jackie Chan (Rush Hour) and
Suruno Hung (Marrial Law)
were apprentices at lhe Peking
Opera before the acting bug hit.

COPY PRICE

Oally.................... ;: .................. 35 Cents
S11b5cribcrs nol~ deairing: to pay the carrier may
remit in advance direct 10 'llle Daily ~ntiael on
a dtree, six or 12 month buia. Credit will be
'g1ven carrier Cach week.
No subKriphOI by ma11 permitted In areas

:

, .

tr,Warija!N. ,.

Ntrt• .Dtpartmirlt• ' · ,

Tile •iola """'ber Is 992-1155. Deport·

.iem exteuioa• a";

Geerat Mauaec.......................ElL 1101
~..., ............................................ExL 1102
or ElL 1106

Other Servlcaa

..;...Arab proverb •

W

By The Associated Press
· ·
There will be frost across northern Ohio tonight, forecasters said.
A high pressure system will keep clear, cool weather over the state with
temperatures in the 30s and low 40s. A frost advisory is in effect for many
counties in the northern half of the state.
.
Thursday will be sunny to panly sunny with temperatures warming into
the 60s and low 70s for much of the state.
The record high temperature for this date was 86 in 19~3. Th~ record
low was 30 in 1980.
Sunset tonight will be at 7:33. Sunrise Thursday will be at 7:05.
,
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Ciear. Lows from the upper 30s to the lower 40s. Ught and
variable wind.
Thursd.ay...Areas of dense fog early, otherwise sunny. Highs in the
lower 70s.
Thursday night. .. Ciear. Lows in the mid 40s.
Extended rorecast:
. Friday...Partly cloudy. A chance of showers during the night( Highs in
the lower and mid 70s.
Saturday...Showers and thunderstorms likely. Lows in the upper 40s
and highs i~ the upper 60s.
.
· Sunday... Mostly clear. lows in the mid 40s and highs near 70.

Oor 11111 &lt;Omra In all itOIICs Ia lo be
ICcUrate. Jfyoo bow of n · orrur Ia I
lloey, ""ll lite aews.- II (740) 99%ll 2)55. We will c...k yoer Jerora~atloa

"Every ambitious man
Is a captive, and every
covetous one, a pau·
per." .

R~n

..

Foggy morning will yield
to sunny skies Thursday

Rrd Gn111 ·is t/11 star of "Tile Red Gn111
Slww," a Ul1visio11 11ms s1111 in til• V ~· 011
I'BS alld ill CGMda 011 tiJ1 CBC Nnwori, arul
tiJ1 tJutlwrof "The Rlfl Gn111 Boolc" arul "R1d
Gr-.111 7Wks Cars: A Lov•·Story."
,,

Thought for Today:

Deer vehicle accidents reported

PA.

Adftrtlllo ....................... .........ExL U~
Ctmstadoa ............... :.....:.".........ExL 1103
Cliallled Ado .........o................... ExL 1100

Stocks.
Am Ele Power ........... :.............35
·Akzo .. ;................................... 43'1.
Amerltech.............................67~.
Ashland Oll ......... i ................34~

AT&amp;T ....................................45'/.,
Sank One ............................. 34'~•
Bcib Evans ...:........................ 19~
Borg-Warner ...:.....................41 ~
Cherm Shps............................ s~.
City Holdlng .......................... 19~
Federal Mogul... .................... 28'h
Flratar ...................................26~.
Gannstt/................................ 70~.
·Kmert .. ~ ................................. 11~.
Kroger ............: ......................21'7.
Landa End .............................416\
Limited .................................42'!.
Oak Hill Flnl ....................:....:n.\

By ANDREW WEI..SH-HUGGINS
spoken 18-year-old who calls himself
Alllloclatad Preas Writer
Imperial Wizard of the American
COLUMBUS (AP) - When the • Knights of the White Kamellia.
Ku Klux Klan came to the small northAs rallies increase and take their
west Ohio city of Defiance, the city financialtoll on communities, the ~te
prepared as for an invasion.
is poised to provide additional help.
More than-250 police officers from Attorney General Betty Montgomery
several area departments arrived to said that for tbe first time her office
keep the peace between at least 300 will make free metal detectors and
proteslers and 41 Klansmen. The hour· fences available for use during rallies.
long rally on March 20 by the AmeriHer office spent $8,~ on two
can Knights of the Ku Klux Klan was walk-through detectors, SIX handheld
uneventful, but came with a cost: detectors and several miles of chain$17,500 in overtime and other expens- link fencing.
es; including equipment such as fences.
Almay said the goal·is to "~ !he
Defiance, a city of 16,000, is not burden of the s~all towns.('&lt; ct~y hk.e
alone in spending lots bf money to Columbus, we II help w1th mtelhensure that a relatively small number of gence and we'll help that day get
1\lansmen can hold a rally.
things together, b~t when Y?u. go to
As Ohio approaches a record num- Urbana or places hke that, this IS devber of Ku Klux Klan rallies this year, astating."
the heavily guarded events have cost
The biggest cost to date has been in ·
taxpayers about $800,000 in security Cleveland, which said its Aug. ~1 'ral~y
and preparation expenses. .
cost ~ore than _$537,000, manlly m
It's money one police chief called a overtime for poliCe officers, street and
wasle of taxpayer dollars and an anti- water department employees and
Klan protester called a subsidy for a ter- other workers.
.
rorist organization.
,
By ~ntrast, the ~ay 1 rally m
U:gally, there's little precedent for Zanesville - populallon. 28,000 recovering the costs from the Klan. also by the Amencan Knights of the
And while S8llle people argue that if Ku Klux Kla~, cost \he city $7:~
anti-Klan protesters would just stay and the Muskmgu~ . County Shenff s
away the security would be unneces- Department an additional $25,000.
sary, officials say they have little c!Joice
"It is an unfortunate waste of taxbut tobias prepared as possible.
payers' money to have to do that, but
"If you don't have adequate protec· in order to. ~eep the city safe and offi·
tion, things get out of hand and you cers saf~, . 11 s some~htng y~u have. to
catch a lot of criticism for that. If you'~ do," said Zanesville Pollee Chief
adequately prepared, you catch a lot of Diane Quinn.
criticism from people who say i!'s
Mark Potok ~f the Southern Paveroverkill," said DefianCC County Shenff ty law Center m Montgomery, Ala.,
Dave Westrick.
said the number of Klansmen who
After years of refincmen~ \be state show up rarely matters since they are
now provides an "off the shelf" plan to always going to. draw large p~t~t
communities for dealing with rallies. croW&lt;ls, whether or not commumlles
The plan includes Bdvice on crowd ask people to stay away.
control, security and how best ·to sepa"'JYpically half a dozen Klansmen
rate protesters Klansmen and the will draw from a couple hundred to a
• Almay, superinten- thousand counter~ demonstrators, ..
llledia, said Ted
dent of the Bureau of Criminal ldenti- said Potok, who !181d Klansmen are
fication and Investigation.
experts at provoking their opponents.
In 1994 the state received reports "In town after town after town there's
of.32 eve;ts involving the Klan and been real violence from counterfour involving other white suprema- demonstrators. Pollee have been by
cist groups. There have been at least and large necessary."
·
.
20 Klan events so far this year.
Attempts to recover the cost of raJ.
Almay attributed the 1994 peak to lies from the Klan itself have met with
the outspoken and high profile activi- limit.ed success. .
.
.
ty of Vincent Pinette, a 27-year-old
!Il June 1992,_ma case •_nvolvmg a
regional coordinator for the Knights of while supremaCist group m Forsyth
the Ku Klux Klan. After Pinette, of County, Ga., the U.S. Supreme Court
Oeveland, was convicted in 1995 of ruled that communities that impose
beating an ex-girlfriend and. sent to permit fees for ~and rallies canprison, the rallies died down.
. not fo~ oontrovcmal groups to pay
Almay credits the resurgence this more Just because_ they might need
year in part to James Roesch, an out- more pollee protectiOn.

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emer~
gency Medical Service recorded
seven calls for assistance Tuesday.
Units responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1:19 p.m., Peacock Avenue,
Pomeroy, Sara McDowell, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
1:47 p.m., Hill Street, Rutland,
Marcia Dennison, VMH;
6:48 p.m., U.S. 33, Pomeroy,
Maile Buckingham, St. Joseph's
Hospital, Pomeroy squad assisted.
POMEROY
9:30 p.m., Landaker Road, Fred
Perry, Hok!er Medical Center, Central Dispatch squad assisted;
11:30 p.m., ·East Main Street,
Patly Laudermilt, treated at the

scene, Central Dispatch squad
assisted.
RACINE
4:30 p.m., Old Ponland Road,
Shirley Powell, treated at the scene.
SYRACUSE
7:20p.m., Mistletoe Lane, Becky
Matson, VMH.

The Meigs County Sheriff's Office reported two 'deer/vehicle accidents Thesday.
'
·
The first accident occurred around 7:05 a.m. on·state Route 124
Com Hollow Road in Rutland Township. Louis Bush, Eagle Ridge Road,
was westbound in his 1994 Chevrolet pickup and struck and killed a
that ran into the roadway. Damage to the front-left fender of his truck
listed as moderate.
The second accident occurred at 8:25p.m. on state Route 7 on Ma~1r :1
Hill near Eastern High School. Homer Wilson, Tuppers Plains, was sotnn- '.1
bound in a 1992 Buick and struck a doe deer that ran into the roadway.
Damage to the car was listed as light. The deer eventually got up and ran
away.

Deputies respond to fight
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Office responded Tuesday
evening to a disturbance at a residence on state Route 143 near Ball Run,
Road in Salisbury Township.
Tracy Owensby, 24, and Heather Tolin, 18, were cited to MC:Il!lli U&gt;un~l
ty Court on charges of disorderly conduct by fighting.

Tuppers Plains town meeting
Sternwheel serving

The Trinity Church of Pomeroy ·will serve lunches Thursday, Friday,
and Saturday as a part of the Stemwheel Festival from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
There will be sandwiches, chicken and noodles, potato salad, cole slaw,
baked beans, desserts and beverages. In conjunction with the lunches, a11.
ans and crafts and bake sale will be held at the church. •
.•

Revival set
Revival services will be held Oct. 11-16 at the Gospel Lighthouse·
Church in Point off Route 2 din Point Pleasant. Services will begin at 7"
p.m. and each evening there will be special singing. John Elswick will be,
the evangelist.

Bevetly Gray to speak

Beverly Gray will speak on the Underground Railroad in Vinton and·.
surrounding counties at the WilkCJ;villc Community Center, 2 to 4 p.m. onSunday, Oct. 24. Following the lecture there will be a question and answer
period. Refreshments will be served.

Auditor urges school board~
to pay attention to finances ··
' By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS
Auoclated Preu Writer
COLUMBUS (AP) -:- Some of
Ohio's largest school districts are
failing to maintain the kind of close
watch on their books needed in any
multimillion-dollar operation, state
Auditor Jim Petro said Tuesday.
"If there's any common recommendation that really needs to be
hammered home, it is that to be
good managers you have to be good
planners," Petr~ said.
Petro released a report summarizing ·the findings of his audits of
Ohio's 21 urban districts done over
the past 3 1/2 years.
Too often, his audits caught dis·
tricts by surprise, he said. He pointed to the September 1998 audit of
Columbus City Schools, which
found that the district hadn't planned
to meet $20 million in bus replacement costs, $555 million in building
repair and $12.7 million in Y2K
problem prevention.
"If you had a $600 million business you're going to be attentive on
a m~nthly basis to all of the elements of that business," Petro said.
"You're going to have audit committees, you're going to have oversight over your financial condition
... you're going to be able to change
gears when you have to, to make
sure you're able to conform to what
the needs are for the month," he
said. "And that's all part of the
ongoing oversight and planning
process that schools need to be more
engaged in."

A 1997 state law provided an
additional $113.6 million in statp
funding to the 21 urb~n districts .in
exchange f~r undergomg t~e audit~
and prepanng and followmg eff~·
ciency plans.
Petro said the audits incl~d~
more than 2,900 recommendations
that could save up to .S370 .mi~lion.
Schools could ach1eve s•gmfiCIII(
savings by re-examining benefit
plans and taking steps to reduce
abuse of sick and personal leave,
Petro said. Columb.us schoolteac..ers averaged 10.9 sick days a year,
for example, compared With 5.7 for
South-Western teachers.
.•.
Despite the recent fina~ci~l melt·
dOwns of such large d1stncts liS
Cleveland, Youngstown and Dayton;
there is good news for big u.rban districts in the r_epon, Petro sa1d. .
Akron aty Schools won h1gll
praise for planning, reduction of sick
leave and technology ~lans. . . ;.
Supermtendent Bnan Wilham$
attributed his district's financial
health to a number of factoit,
including the economy, the lack_ ~
serious turmoil over desegrega1101,1
in earlier decades, a strategic plan
adopt.ed two years ago and open a~d
ongomg commumcatmn WI\~
employee groups.
.
Carolyn Funk, Youngstown C~t~
Schools treasurer, said that the di~­
trict has reduced its debt from $4fi
million to $26 million and closed It
high school_ and two elementacy,
schools as It struggles to emerg~
from fiscal emergency status.
,.

,.

at the

"Riverfront Saloonn
(f.,_ Office Sank• &amp;Sae_plrl

Friday October 8, 1999
ncktts Now • Salt
$15.00 ticket ••titles ...,., to $5,000
11 Fua Moaey 11d tile C..ckw•..•

liON 10/4 • THURS 10{7/tl
101 OffiCI WIU OPIII AI
6:30PM 101 m.tO SHOWS

7:00 • 10:30-pm •tate Up• &amp; Callao
10:30 p111 • 11:30 p11 AICtlen

THE SIXTH SENSE (PQ13)
7:10DAILY

DRIVE ME CRAZY

Peoplei ................................. 26~
Pl'lll!l.Finl ..............................11'·

Dre11 Western
~
I.Y.O.L
.
Soft Drllli1 IH Kill AYIHIIIII

RDlShell ................................59~
SPrs ................................... ;33~.
slloney's ...............................1·~.
Wencl~'• ........: ....................,..25'4
.
. ..........................16'~
Worth
ngton

Spoasoretl ., Ill•
CHilJ
c•••ller of c•••.,,. .

· One Valley.............................34\
RoCrlwell ...........................52'A

.:,._

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided
· by Advest ot Galllpolla.

"

CASINO Nl

OVB .........................................34

_.

:

A Tuppers Plains town meeting will be held Thursday, 6 p.m. at the
grade school. All residents urged to attend.
•

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Wednntfat, October 6,1999

Astros sta_rt NL playoff action
with 6-1 ·victory over Braves·

.

~

Yankees open AL playoff action with 8-0.: ;win-over: Rang·s s ~.
. , RONALD BLUM
:. NEW YORK (AP) - Picking up
· '~~(here thefleft off last October. the
New York Yankees blanked Texas
xet again, with Orlando Hernandez
allowing two hits in eight innings
~d Bernie _Williams driving in six

runs as the World Scri~s champinns
beat the Rangers 8-0 Tuesday night
10 thetr ~L playoff opener.
Williams, showing why the
Yankees paid $M7.5 million to keep
him, had a two-run double off loser
Aaron Sclc 111 the llrth , a three-run

homer off Mike Vena fro in the sixth
and an RBI sing le off JeffFassero in
the e1ghth.
Texas has just one run in its last
42 innings in the playoffs, all against
New York, and · has lost seven
. strai ght postseason games sine~ beat-

ing the Yankees in tho Rangers' first
one, in 1996. .
.
After a day off, the senes resumes
at Yankee Stadium on Thursday, with
Andy Pcttittc ( 14-11) pitching for
New York against Rick Helling (13II ).

. Last year, then Ne,w York .came
off its record 114-48_regylar season
and flattened Texas m a nr.sl:!Q_und
sweep, holding the Rangers to one .
run 'and a .141 average.
This year, the Yankees ~ record
slipped a league-high 16 wins to 98-

64, creating doub,t.)"IJel)ter.lhey we~ ,
strong -~ nough_ to ~in their third
Senes title 1n four years,
.
But "El Duque" roped the
Rangers and improved to 3•0 with a.
0.41 ' ERA in postseason p_lay (one
(See .YANKii:~ on PageS)

(S- 1) 9.3000. 6-Newton Falls (S-1) 9'.2333. 7Wi ck.lilfc (5· 1) 8.1763. 8-LeaviiiSburg LaBrae (4-2)
8.0980. 9-Akron St Vinceni-St. Mary (4·21 7.:'\930.
10-Castalia Mnrgaretta.(4-2) 67000.
Region 14: !-Marion .Elgin (6-0) 11 .4000. 2·
Bellvi lle Clear Fork (5-l) 10.2166 . 3-To~o g(lll)
Otsego (5 ·1) 10.1500. 4-Wauseon (5-1) 9.6913. j .
Co ldwater (4-2) 8.2500. 6-0ak Harbor (6-0) 7.9333
7-Ke nton (J-.l) 668JJ 8-Sparta Highland Moc:row
(4-21 6 . ~ . 9- ~lain City Jonathan Alder {3-J)
6.08-'l 10-Col. Re~dy (~ - 1 ) 5.88Jl
Region 15: !-Struthers (5· 1) 12.J J66. ' 2·
Ca ntphell Mtmorial (6-0) 11 .07fil J- You. Mooney
(5- I) 9.4566 4-Navme Fairless (4-1) 9.3666. 5·
Zoarville Tu sc . Valley (5- I) 9. 1666 . 6· LANC.
FAIRFI~LD UNION (5· 1) 9.1000. 7- Bellnire (5· 1)
8.9616. '8-Coshocto n '(4-2) 8.2500. 9-Utica (5-1) ,
7.7000. 10-NEW LEXINGTON (4· 21 7 4500.
Region 16: 1-Cin. Wyoming (6-0) 143666. 2·
WHEElERSBURG (6·0) 12 1280. J-Ham Badit1
(5· 11 10.441J . 4·Cin Madt!tra (5· 1) IU.4BJ . 5-Ci n
Indi an Hill (~ · II 10 18H II-IRONTON (~· I )
10. 11 66. 7 - 1 1 0RTS~·1 0UT H (4 - 11 8.792J. 8-Cin
Finneytown (4-21 7.01 66 . 9-WAVERLY 14 ·2)
6 8~00 . HJ.IRONTON ROCK HIU. 14·21 6 . 5J~O .

MAT~MORAS FRONTIER (3-3) 3.7333.
Region 24 : 1-Delphos St. John's (6·0) 11 . 1000. .
2-Cin. Country Day (6·0) 8.9500. 3-Covington (6-0)

Sy PAUL NEWBERRY
Houston, which clinched its third
, A1LANTA (AP) - Daryle Ward, straight Central title on the fmal uuy
who started the season in Triple-A, is of the season, has never won in five
making a big impact in October for playoff series, including a 3-0 sweep
the Houston Astros.
by the Braves in 1997. The Asfros
Ward's leadoff homer against won't get swept this year, seizing the
Greg Maddux in the sixth inning sent home-field advanl · in the best-ofthe Astr-os on their way to a 6-1 vic- five series.
tgry Tuesaay over ihe Atlanla Braves
Of course, the home field was not
in Game .( of the NL division series. much of an advantage to the Braves,
The win provided hope that who led the majors with I 03 wins
Houston will end its history of play- but drew the smallest crowd in
off failures, and was a troubling start Atlanta's 44-game postseason histofor a team with its own postseason ry.
struggles. ·
The turnout of 39,119 was nearly
The Astros sealed the victory in 11 ,000 short of capacity at Turner
the ninth ·with four run s .against Field and easily eclipsed the previre,liever Mike Remlinger. Carl · ous low of 42,117 for Game I of the
(\verett had a s_acrifice fly before Ken 1998 NL championship series. In the
Caminiti ''haunted the Braves again right-field upper deck , only a few
with a three-run homer.
dozen people occupied seven secPlaying for San Diego, Caminiti tions of blue seats.
hit a IOth-inning homer against
Ward, the son of former major
Kerry Ligtenberg to win the first leaguer Gary Ward, was {ecalled
game of the 1998 NL championship from the minors for the second time
series. The .Padres went on to a 4-2 on July 20. He took over for the
victory over Atlanta.
slumping Derek Bell and doubled in
The East champion Braves, mak- the first three runs Sunday of a 9-4
ing their eighth straight postseason victory over Los Angeles, securing
appearance, lost only their second the division title.
division series game since the format
On Tuesday, he came through
was instituted in 1995. Before again, hitting the first pitch of the
Tuesday, they were 12- 1 overall, sixth into the right-field seats against
including I0 straight victories.
Maddux to break a 1- 1 tie .

Scoreboard
New

Baseball

Yor~

at An zona. 7·50 p m.. if necessary

!FOX)

ALplayotTs

Football

New York vs. Tex!).&lt;
1\usdav 's §(;o"
New Y01k 8, Texas 0:· Nrw York kads serit!'s 1·0

Ohio H.S. poll list

... .w

Bellaire 0) 6-0 ..
8-Campbcll Mcmonal (2) 6-0 ..
.. ....... Il l
9-Bcllvilte Clear Fork.~ - I .
.. 8l
10 (tte)-Uttca.S-1
....~ 1
Oak Harbor6-0 ..
.. .51
Others retriving 12 ur mort points: I 1S truthcr~ _
, 8. 12-Hamilton Badin .\2 !.'· Marion
Elxm .H. 14-IRONTON 27. 15-Akron Manchesttr
(!) 21-16-Martins Fe rry 19

Division V

Future games

Mc Kinley (5- I) _15 .1166 . 4· Brunswick (6-0)
IJ.8166. 5-N. Canlon Hoovc:r (5·1) 13.2666. 6Pickerington (~ · I) II 8666. 7-LOOAN (~-I) 9.6000.
8-Mt Vernon (5-1l 9.5666. 9-Cnnton GlenOak (:'1 · 1)
9J666 . 10-Stow-Munroe Fulls (4-2) 8.6166.
Reg10n 4: 1-Cin. Elder (6-0) 16.7 776. 2-Fnirfield
(5-ll 14 JOOO. -~-Centerv ill e (6·0) I 3.8500. 4· Hubcr
His. Wayne (6-0) 1.l 583J . 5-Ctn. St. Xavter (5·0)
12.8800 6-Cin. Sycamore (4-2 ) I 1.1000 7-Ci n. Oak
Hills (4 -2) 9 7666: 8 (tie)-liberty Twp . Lako ta East
(4·2)-Ma~o n (4·2 ) 9.6666 . 10-Cin. Winton Woods

COLUMBUS, Oiuo (APl - How a state panel
14-2) 9.2040
Thursday
of spom writers and broaJc~sten ratl!s Ohto h1gh fum
1-St Henry(19) 6-0 .
. ........... JJ6
TeJtas (Helling I J- Il l at Nr"' Ymk (Pel1llll.' I -'· school football teams in the th1rd of eight weekly
Division II
1-Bet.lford Chane! (9) 6·0 ...... ..... ............. ..'04
11). 8:17pm . &lt;r-GXl
IW1) As s&lt;JC I ~tt•d Press poll. by OHSAA di\'isions. · ·' ·Cie. VASJ (2) (&gt;-0 ...
. ..... 244
Reg1on 5: 1 · ~1adi so n (6-0 ) 14..1 166. 2-Cuyn.
Saturday
with won-lost record ~nd total potnts (first - pl~~·c
4-N. Lm1a S Rangt.-6-0 ..
IHR
Falls W:~hh Jesuit (5 - 1) 11 7 1KJ 3-Ravennn (5- 1)
New York. (Clemens l-'· 10! ;u Te:(as 1Lo:m.a 9- \'Otes in parcmheses l :
.~ - Libert y Or (2) 5-1 .
. ....... 114
I UJJJ. 4· Mentor lake Cat h. (S-1 ) 10.6000. S·
5), 7:40p.m. (N I.Kl
0-M:mi llon Tuslnw&amp;·O...
...%
Olmsted Fal ls (6·01 IOOSOO. 6-Green (4-2) 8.6166.
S und a~. (),·t. 10
Division I
7-Miiford Ctr. Fatrb:mks 1I 16-0 .
. .90
7-Pnnna Ht s Holy Name (6·0) 8.4166. 8-Macedonin
.. New York at Te"as. -l·QI;I I' m. t ESPN! l~r I 50 Itwn
S-Woodslic ld Monroe Ceutral6-0 .
. ......70
Nordonia (~ - I l 8 3660. 9-Painesville Riverside (4-2 )
p.m (FOX) . If m:"e~ sary
1-GrO\'( Ci ty t29) b-0 .
.ls-I
Cl-Applc Creek Wa yned:~te~ - 1
.. 55
7 .322J . I 0-Akron Buchtel (4·2) 7 .18.'.1.
Mondav. Oct II
1-Cm. St Xa\'ier tll 5-0
...... 17J
10-Smi lhl'lllc ( I I 6-0 ..
. ...46
Rc!i on 6: !-Piqua (6-0) 15.J8.U. 1-Wadsworlh
Texas at New York. 8:17 p m (FOX I. J1 11\Xe~.1. You. Bllmdmml 6-0
D2
Otht'rs Rn·hing U ur morr points: II (tie)- (6·0) 14.98J.l J· Marysvi lle (6-0) 11 .0000 . 44- Massi llon Washm ~ t o n l l 16-0 .................. 21.'
Metanmra E\'ergrl'Cn . Joh nstow n Northridge (2) W . Whitehouse Ant hony· Wayne (6·0 ) 10.6666. :"i·
5-Cm E ld er(.~) 6-0 .
. .......... 107
!., ·Gibsonburg
\5
t4.CH ILL ICOTHE Grafton Mid\•iew (6-0) 10 5000 6-Avon Lak e (5- 1I
Cleveland vs. Boston
fl-Can ton Mc Kinley -~ - 1
l fl7
II UNTI NGTON .l .l . ! ~ - LUCASVILL E VALI .EY 10.2666. ?-Amherst Steele (5-IJ 10.08Jl8-0reg on
Tonight
7-Centcn·illc t1J 6-0 .
14.l
Division V
•12 16-llaltimJ it:' L1ber'iv Union Jl
17-Bm:\\ia 23. Cl ;~ y 15· 11 10.0706. 9-Sylv;mia Southv~w (5· 1)
Dostor. (P Milrtmez 2.1·4J at Ckvdand f C(I Ion
I:! · Bnm ~ w1d 6-0
122
18-Lisbon Amk'rslln (I 1· 15 I Y-Anmnda-ClearcrCl' k IOQJJ .l !O·Stdney (4·2)8 .7J.U.
Rcg1or1 17: 1-Mass tllon Tuslaw (6·0 ) 12.7666. 2·
IS-5 1. 8 lip m. (FOX I
9-Cie St li! 11&lt;1!HJS :'\ - 1.
q4
1-' lO-W Akx;111dna Twm Valley S. 2.' 21Re~ion 7: !-Dover (6-01 15.6500 . 2-Co!.
Bedford Chancl t6-0l I0.910.l .~ (tiel-Li sbon Oav1d
Thursda'
10-Worthmgtnn Ktlbournl.' 6-0
.... 54
C I~ ESAPEAI&lt;E 21 ~2- Vcrs.aillcs 15. 2.1 - R ~X kfnrd
llrookhaven 16-0) l.l .JOOO . .1-Unionlow n Lalt! (5- 1) Anderson 16-0)-N. LimaS . R:mgl.' 16-{1) 10.1166. 5Rn~ t o n ISabt-1h~ l!l' Jl JO.fl·l :u Cil'n•bnti tNa~\'
Others rrcti\·ing 12 or more points: 11 -Solon l1arkway 12.
· 1.' .1666 4·Col l nckpcndcn~-7e (6-0) 12.201J . ~- E . Cic. Vi lla Angda-St. Jost!ph 16-0) 9.1t!SO. 6-0~wc ll
17- l ll. HI9p111 IESPN I
-4~ . 1::! -Shakcr Ht s ~0 IJ Hi d- To!. Whiuncr
Ll\'crpool (4-2) 8..'i 166. 6-Lewts Center Olenmngy Grand Vi!llcy (4·21 7. 1D.l 7-Sulli nn Blad Rivt!r
Satu.-don
LOGAN 16. 1:'\- N. Cant on Hoowr 14. 16-Hubet Ht s
(4-111.2166 7-Col. Beechuoft (4-1 ) 7.0166 8-Col. \ 4-2) 6 5166 H-New-Middletown Sprtng ficld (5- 11
IJivisinn VI
C'le\·ci:Hul tB urba 1.~ -!0 :l1 li o~l\l n 11\.k rr h·r &gt; Wa}nl' Mayt1dd I.!
Franklin Ht s (~ · 11668JJ 9-Col. East (J- 2)6 2.'i9l
f) 1666 Q.Wnnen Kennerly 0 -.~ 1 t1.0H.l
10-E.
fum
OL 4 17 p.1u I FOX I
10-Col Eastnloor A~:ad. (.l -.l) 6:0 166.
C:~nr.J n L' - ~1 ~ - 9~00
.
l -DclphusS1 John 's i~oi)6 - 0 .
. .l62
Sundav. Oel. Ill
Re gion 18: ~ I · GitJ s unbUi g 16-0) 10.4000 . 2Division II
'Rcg.ton 8. I-Ki11gs Milh Kings (5· 1 I 1.\.0666. 2·
!-'l orom u( IJ 6-0 .
. ........ JO I
Ckl·cland at n.,swn" r.09 p Ill I ESI'N I I ll 7 50
Trenton Edgewood (6-01 12.J7 10. J-Lcbanon (5- 1) L1bcrty Center 15- 1) 10 2.\4{). -'· Smitflvtlle (6-0)
l.Tiffir. Cal vl'rl ! 1) fl -O
281
Itwn
p.m IFO XI. ttlli.'CI.'ssar)
I· Col Rrllol.:ha1·en 114) 6-0
J11
1 0. ~000.
4-Harrt :\Oil &lt;5· 11 99500. 5-Ci n. 9.2166. 4-Metamoro l::\'erg recn t5- IJ 8.8756. 5oi-Springfield Cml1 Ce nl. 6-0
.227
Monda\', Ott. It
J\l cNi cholas (5- 1) 9.JOOO. 6-Day. Carroll 1-'·2) D elphos Jefferson (~ · I ) R.71tll 6-Col. Grove (5- 1)
l ·Dover tl 2) 6-0
.\00
~
Mogadou:
5-1
...............
.....................
14
~
Bos ton Jl ( ·rcl'cl:ind · 4 ()l} p rn i ESI'N ) nr S 17 J -Pi4ua I I) 6-0
9.0666 7-V:mdah"- But ler 1 ~ · 11 7.9166 . ~-Da v . 8 28JJ . ?-B luffton IS - I I 7.6500. 8-Crcstlinc (5· 11
...... 2."\6
6-Cin. Count ry D;1y 6-0 .
. . .. .... 114
p m. (FOX I. if nerl!ssary
.;olonel White (4-2) 7 . ~. 9·CHILLICOTHE(J.j ) 6.7RJ .l. . 9-Sycamorc Mohawk (5· 11 fl.73JJ . 10·
4-TrentonEdl!cwood t2J6-0 .................. 176
7- Bcllairl! St. John 5-1 .
. ... RJ
6.98.'3. 10-Sptingboro (4-2) 6 18ll
Sherwood Fnirview (4-2 16.5.lll
5-Cuy Falls Wal shJcsult Lll5-l
............ 171
!l-BeaiiS\'Ille 5- 1 .
. ..6J
Region 19: 1-Wondsfield Monroe Cent (6-01
6- Mer.tor Lah· Cath ~ - I
164
9-Newark Cath 4-2 .
..59
10.9690. 2-CHESAPEAKE (6-0) 10.5806. J (tiC}·
7- Uni onwwn LH kc 5· 1
.......... I.' J
Division Ill
10-McComb 6-0
....... 51
Ur1ion
(6-0)-Johnstown
M- Marysvt lle ( I 16-0 .
1.' 1
Others recti,·in&amp; ll or mort' points: 11. Rcg10n 9: 1-A kron Hoboo {5-1) 11.7666. 2- 8ahimorc libeny
Atlanta vs. Houston
Y-Lebanon 5· 1. ...................................... .'57
Pandnra-Gilhoa -'-' 12-HEMLOCK MILLER 28. IJ 0m·ille (5-1) 11.2166. J-Copley (6·0) 10.6500. 4- Northndge(6-0) 9.8000. 5-I.UCA.SVILLE VA I . U~ Y
:ruesdav's score
10-M:ldison 1 I I 6-0
.56
(tie )-lndependcnl'C ( 1)-CO\'i ngt on 26. 15 (tiel- Pcn y 15- 1) 10.0666. 5-Hubbord (5- 1) 10.0600. 6- (6-0) RM06 6-Amanda-Cie01rcreek (~ - I ) 8 5.\60. 7Houston 6. Atlanta !:. Houston leads Sl'nes 1-0
Others n:cciving 12 or mun points: 11-Cin
Norwalk St Piiul. Antwerp 2.' 17 (tk )·Cuyahngn Citcstcrland W. Geaugn (S· l) 8.0666. 7-Akron DEVERLY Fl'. FRYE (5· II 8.l .1J.1. 8-0AK .HI LL
MlNidmlas 5 1. 11-Mal'cdutua Non.lunia (I) ol I. IJ. Hi s.. Oregon Stritch 2 l . 19-Monroevtlle I K. 20 (lle)- Coventry {4-1 ) 6.7166 . 8- Medina Buckeye 0·3) (5· 1) 8 J.\0~ . 9-8arne5v ilk (6·0) 7.7666. 10·
Future games
Kmgs M1lls Kmgs ( 11 J6 14-Col Independence 15
Kinland. WILLOW WOOD SYMMES VAl . 16 22- 6.6/61 9-Cic. Omnge (4-1) 6.6760 IO.Fairvtew CROOKSV ILLEC5· 1J 7.7500.
Tonight
.
15-Grafton M1dv1ew (I)
21 16 (tlt')· T iffin D:mville 13
Re gton 20: !-Milford Ctr. Fairbanks {6 -0)
Jlark F:urv1cw {5-1) 6.5666.
Houslon (L1ma 11- 10) at At lanta [Millwood 18· C:&gt; lumbiar~ .
Whi t e h o u s~
Anth ony Way ne.
Rct;mn 10: 1-Col. Wauersun (~-I) 13.8500. 2· 10.9666. 2-Rockford Parkwny ( .~ · 1 ) IO.OJ3J . J.
7J, 4:09p.m. (ESPN)
Wadsworth IJ
Luna Hath (6-0) 12.78H J-Col. DeSales (5· 1) Waynesville t5·0l 9.1110. 4-Cin . Deer Park (4·2)
Frida\'
11 ..1.\B. 4-Shelby (5-1) 10.9JJl 5-0ttawa-Glandorf 9.0166. 5-St. Henry (5·0 ) 8.65JO. 6-W. Alexand--ra
At lahla (G iavine l.l-11 i at Houston &lt;Hampton ·
Division III
(5 -I) 94666. 6·Bellefontainr (4-1) 9.28-H. /- Twin Valley Soul h &lt;6-0l 8.428.1. ?-Versailles (4-21
COLUMBUS. Ohio (APl - Here are 1he third Bellevue (5·0) 8 7950. 8-Sunbury Big Walvut (5· 1) 8.1666 K-B:uavia (6·0) 7.051 J 9-New Albany (6-01
22-41. 4,09 p.m. iESPN)
fum
fU.
weekly foothall computer ratings from the Ohw High 8. 18JJ. 9-Willard {5- 0 8 IJJ3 10-NapoJeon (3-JJ 6.9000 . 10-Sid~tty lehrmm (4·2) 6..l8JJ .
Saturday
.
1-Lima Bath {I~) 6-0.
. .. .. ............. .308
Sch\)I.J I Atfllctll Association. Ratings are by diviswn 7 1666.
Atlanta at Houston. I :09 p.m:. 1f necrssary
2-Bellhrook (5) 6-0
...... 254
.
and region w1th record and a\'erage bt- lcvrl pmnts
Division VI
(ESl'N)
J-Poland Sc~mary (6 ) 6-0 .......................... 240
Reg1on I I: 1-Pol:md Semi nary (6-0) ll/666. 2per
game
Uop
e1ght
teams
i
n
each
region
advance
Jo
Sunda~. Ort. 10
4-Copley (2) 6-0 ...................... ...................... 197
Millersbur~ W Holmes (6-0) 12.7833 . J-Louisvillc:
Reg1on 21 :. !-Mogadore (5· 1) 10.7JJJ. 2regional quarterfinals)
Houston at Atlanta. 4:09 p.m. (ESPN) or 1:50
5-Col. Wanerson S-1... ............................ 100
(j-1) 11.4000. 4-Steubenvi llt (5·1) 9 .1166. 5· lndependence (6·0) 8.8000. 3-W indham (5· 1)
P m (FOX), if necessary
6-Steubenville (2) 5-I ..
... 159
THORNVILLE SHER IDAN 15-ll 8.2166. 6- 7.6000. 4-Toront!) (6-0) 6.91715·Norwalk St. Paul
Division I
?-Orrville (I) 5-J ...
.. ............. 144
M oC ONN~LSV I LLE MORGAN (5-I) 8.1166. 7(5- I) 6.4666. 6-Monroeville (5· 1) ti .HJJ. 7-Kinland
Arizona vs. New York
Region I : 1-Solon (6-0) 18.4666 1-Shoker Hts. VINCENT WARREN (4·2) 7.7166. 8-Beloit W. (4-2) 6.067l R-Cle. Cuya Hts. (~·I) 5.4666. 98-Bdlevue (2) 6-0...
.. .............. IJ7
Tuesday·s score
(5-0) I 5.7666. 3-Mnyfield (6-0) 14.0500. 4-Cie St. Branch (4·2) 7.1~ 00 . 9-Rnyland Buckeye local (J·J) lO\\ellville (4·2).4.6166 . 10-Dalton (4·2) 4.!i833.
9-Cin Purcell Marian 11) 5- 1..
. ....87
New York 8.Arizona4, New York leads senes I· 10-JACKSON (I) 6-0 ...................... ........... .7R
lgnatJus (5-1) 11 .9l9.l 5-Strongsvr lle (4-2) 9 5666. 6.8 166. 1.0-Canton Cent. Cnth. O-J) 6.6750.
Region 22: 1-liffin Cnlvert (6-0 ) 11.0831 20
Region 12: ! -Bellbrook (6-0) 11 .78H. 2- Maria Stein MariOn l ocal (4·2) 8.0883. 3-PandoraOthers ~crlving 12 or mort points: l l·Col. 6-Middleburg Hts. Midpark (4-2) 8.98.' -l 7-Eoclid
,DeSales (2) 41 12-Mi lkrsburg W. Holmes .10. IJ. (4-2) 8.5803. 8-Lakewood (4-2). 1\.4 166. 9-f.a stlakc JACKSON (6-0) IUJ3J ·' ·Umdon (6-0) 11.0 166 . Gilboa (S-1) 7.7500. 4-Anlwerp (6·0) 7.4000. 5·
4-Cin. Purcell Marian ~~-I) 10.9833. 5-ASHVIlLE McComb (6·0) 7 I 500. 6-0regon Stritch (5-1)
THORNVIU.E SHERIDAN 2l 14 (tie)· Louisville North (5·1) 8.2666. 10-Cie. South (4--2 ) 7.9280.
Future games
Region 2: !-Grove Clly (6·0) 17.6166. 2- TEAYS VALLEY 15- 11 8.9500. 6-Eaion (l-11 6)666 . ?-L1keside Danbury (4-2) 4,.93B. 8(I)-Perry 18. 16-A honHoban 15. 17-Shelby 12 .
Tonight
Wonhington Kilbourne (6-0) 16.7JJ3 3-Tol ~ 1 166. 7-GALLIPOLIS GALLIAACADEMV (S· Fremont St. Joseph 0-3) 4.68J3. 9-Arlington {4·2)
New York (Rogers 5· 1) 111 Arizona (Stottlc:myre
Whitmer (6-0) 13.2750. 4-Upper Arlington (5-1) I) 7.9890. 8-Dtty Chaminadc-Julienne (4·2) 7.4 166 . 4.6 166. 10-Ft . Recovt:r)' (J·.') 4.5000
6-J), 11 :09 p.m. (ESPNJ
Division IV
12.1666. 5-Dublin Coffman (4-2) 11.3500. 6-Fmdlay 9-New Rtchmond (j-1) 7.J8JJ. 10-Morrow link!
Regton 2.1: I- HEMLOCK MILLER (5·1)
Frida)'
(5- I) 11 .2666. 7-Westen·ille South (4-2) 11 .01m S- Miam1 (.1-.l ) 7.2000.
'7.0666. 2-WIU-QW WOOD SYMMES VALLEY
Arizona (Daal 16-9) at New York tReed 11 -5).
1-You . Mooney (9) 5- 1..
.. .... .. .... 275
Westerville Nnnh (4-1) 10 7666 9-Th omas
(5- I) 6.9&lt;XKl. 3-Hownrd Eau Knox (5-1) 6.8833 . 4.
'8 10 p.m. (NOC)
2- WHEElERSBURG (9) 6-0 .................... .258
Worthinglon -(5- 1) 10.6833 . 10-lima. Senior (3 ·.~)
Beallsville 15- 1) 6.6500. '5-Newark Cath. (4-2)
Division lV
sa,u.-day
·' ·Chagrin Falls (716-0 .................................... 246
7.8000.
6.5166. 6-Bellaire StJohn {5· 1) 6.0000. ?-Danville
Arizona at New York. 1:09pm , if necessary
4-Gennamown Valley View (2) 5-1..
. . 217
Region 13: !-Akron Manchester
Region 3: !-Massillon Washington (6-0) 2-Sandusky Perkins (6-0) 9.8$00.
t4-2) 5.2000. 8' Monal Ridgedale 0·.1) 5.1166. 9(ESPN2 or ESPN)
S-Cin. Wyoming (2) 6-0 ................................ 19_,
15JJll 2-You. Boardman (6·0) 15.1JB. 3-Canmn
Za ntsvllle R &amp;s~cfans (J-3) 4.2166. ·10-NEW
Sunday, Oct. 10
I (6-0)-Atwater Wmerloo (5-1)
6 (lie)-Sandusky Perkins (2) 6-0 .................... 147

ru.

ru.

'"Y

ru.

ru.

NL playoffs

Ohio H.S. computer ratings

rWn

ru.

8.428J. 4-Springfteld Ca1h. Cent (6-0l 8.4166. lMtchanicsburg (.S- 1) 7.2333 . 6-Dola Hardin
N,orthe~ (5· 11 1.1000. 7-New Brerneo (3-3} 5.6683.
8-Ada (4-2) S483J.9-TippCily Bethel (4-2) 4.9740..
10-CedarVIIIe 14· 214 .9061
•
•

I

•

,

\

Transactions
Baseball
American LeagiH!
OAKLAND ATHlETICS : Signed DH John Jah11 .
to. a two-year contract.

Basketball
. N11lonal Baskdball Assoelatidt\
MILWAUKEE BUCKS: Signed 0 Br;:mdon
Wlilmm s and F Ga len Young.

SEATI'LE SUPERSONICS' Signed F Riokie
Wi!lslow.

Football
National Football League
.BALTIMORE RAVENS : Cli.limcd K Joe.
Nl'dney frorn Arizona. Waived L.B Jeff Kopp.
DALLAS COWB0¥5: Placed OT Tony Hut son
o nt ~ inJured l'l'Strvl!

Hockey

The Braves managed only seven
hits against starter Shane Reynolds,
who went six innings, and three
relievers. Houston pitched around
MVP candidate Chipper !ones, walking him twice on four pitches.
The Astros went ahead in the second. Everett led off with a bunt single, Caminiti walked and Tony
Eusebio drove in the run with a line
drive up the middle.
But Maddux escaped a basesloaded, one-out jam by pitching out
on an atteJllpted squeeze bunt by
Shane Reynolds. Caminiti, breaking
from third, was tagged by Chipper
Jones just short of home.
The Astros loaded.the bases again
with one out in the fifth, but Caminiti
grounded into a 4-6-3 double play.
The Braves tied it in their half of
the inning, Gerald Williams dri;ving
home Jose Hernandez with a two-out
single to center. ·The Braves then
loaded the bases. but Ryan Klesko
struck out swinging on a 90 mph
fastball.
On the very next pitch, Ward
~omered imo the first row of the
right-field seats to open the sixth.
The Amos didn't leave for
Atlanta un1il late Monday night ,
HITS GRAND SLAM - The New York Mets' slam during the opener of the National League
waiting at the Houston airport for the Edgardo Alfonzo ·launches Bobby Chouinard's playoff series against the host Arizona ·
outcome of a wild-card playoff in pitch beyond the wall for a ninth-inning grand Diamondbacks, who lost 8-4. (AP)
Cincinnati. When the New York
Mets beat the Reds 5-0; ihe.chartercd
~
jet flew east.
Houston was a clear undendog
against the powerful Braves, having
lost six of seven m~eting during the
regular season.
Atlanta clinched its division with
in the game ·that earned the Mets the against New York 's Kenny Rogers.
a week to go, winning II of its last By BOB BAUM
PHOENIX (AP) - Maybe this is NL wi ld card, became the first play- The series shi fts to New York for
13 gaf!JeS. After a 12-game winning
streak in September, Houston lost the second coming of the Amazin · er to hit a grand slam in his postsea- Game 3 on &gt;friday.
John Olcrud became 1hc first leftson debut.
Mets.
nine of its last 15.
"Over the l.ast few years, Edgardo bander to hit a home run off Johnson
In one incredible week, New York
. Maddux was 19-9 during the regular season and had the same record has gone from the brink of elimina- Alfonzo has been a fabulous baseball since Jim Edmonds on Sept. 23, lifetime against the Astros with a tion, to a wild-card playoff victory, player who has kind of a star quali- 1997. Olerud's two-run shot put New
2.30 ERA. But he also surrendered a then an all-night flight to Phoenix, ty, " said Mets manager Bobby York up 3-0 in the third.
"I was trying to protect th e
career-high 258 hits, a trend that cop- where they beat Randy Johnson and Valentine, in a playoff game for the
plate,"
he said . "I was looking for 01 ·
the Arizonli_Diamondbacks 8-4 in the first time. "He's gaining confidence.
tinued in the division series.
fastball.
He threw a slider and I jusl
Maddux slipped to 9-9 lifetime in opener of their NL division series and with confidence you get perforreached
out
in froot and grabbed it." ,.
mances like you saw tonight. "
postsea.son play. He had heen 4-0 in Tuesday night.
Olerud
and
the Mets' other left Johnson,
who
left
the
game
with
" It's kind of a great feeling,"
the division series.
bander
in
the
lineup,
Robin Ventura.
the
bases
loaded
and
one
out
in
theHouston had I0 hits in seven Edgardo Alfonzo said, "because
each
had
two
hits
off
Johnson. who
ninth,
lost
his
sixth
straight
postseainnings against Maddux, but strand- we've been playing great these last
usually
dominates
lefties.
son
decision.
a
major
league
record.
couple of games."
ed eight runners.
"We got four hits left-handed, and
In a game that didn't start until He struck out ll and held on through
Notes: The Braves are the first
ihat's
determination," Valentine said.
an
exhausting
138
pitches
as
Arizona
NL 'team to claim 10 division ,titles. II :10 p.m. EDT, no one played
"That's
reaching down and wanting
rallied
from
a
4-1
deficit
to
tie
it
at4.
greater
than
Alfonzo,
who
homered
IN PURSUIT of the Houston Aatros' Ken Caminiti (left) during a Oakland has captured 10 division
it.
..
"It's
obviously
not
the
way
I
Johnson
in
the
first
inning,
then
off
flags
in
the
AL.
...
Ernie
Johnson,
third-Inning rundown Is Atlanta third bateman Chipper Jonea fol·
After falling behind 4-1, th e
lowing a pltchout during TUelday nlght'a National League plaroff who retired after nearly four decades won the g!IIJ!e with a grand slam off would've wrote the sc.ript," Johnson
Diamondbacks
rallied on a soltl
ltll'lea opener In Atlanta, where the vlaltlng Aatroa won 6-1 . (AP
as a Braves broadcaster, threw out reliever BObby Chouinard in the said. "Hopefully, I'll have another
homer
by
Erubiel
Durazo and :l'nd a
chance to pitch against those guys."
the ceremonial first pitch. ... The ninth.
The Diamondbacks send Todd
Alfonzo, who also homered
pitchers for Game 2: Atlanta's Kevin
Millwood (18-7) against Houston's against Cincinnati on Monday night Stottlemyre to the mound tonight
(See METS on Page 6)
Jose Lima (21-1 0) . .:. In the last three
division series, Braves pitchers had a
1.30 ERA ... The Braves scored. a
franchise-record 840 runs, eclipsing
the mark of 826 set the previous season. ... Houston's Larry Dierker is
only the fourth manager baseball
history to lead his team to first.pllae&lt;vfinishes in each of his first three seasons. The others: Detroil's Hughie
Jennings (1907-09), Ralph Houk of
the New York Yankees.

Alfonzo's grand slam pushes
Mets past Diamond-backs 8-4··

National Hotkf'y League
,
NHL: Suspended Anahcini D Ruflnn Salei for 10 ·,
games. Anaheim 0 Pascal Trepanier for fh'e g'nmes •
.md Anaheim F Jim M(Kenz.ie for four games tor l
acti ons in the Oc1. 1 game against Dallat.
' ~
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS: Signed F Ch.:.d ·,
Wngner to a one· year contract.
~
BUFFAJ,.O S~BRES : Assigned C Chns Tilyklr '1
to Rochester o(t~ t\Hl. Signed F Mimslav Satan to ,
a muhiyear contract
EDMONTON OilERS: Signed RW Mike Grier
to a one-year conlroct. Recalled D Brad Nonon from '
Hami lton of the AHL.
NASHVILlE PREDATORS: Assigned G Brian ,
Fi nlcy to Barrie of the OHL.
NEW JERSEY DEVIlS: Acquired 0 Ken
Suuon from Washington for f\:nure considerations.
NEW YORK RANGERS: Plat-ed LW Valeri
Kamensky on the seven-day injured Ji st. Recalled G
Milan Hnilicka from Hanrord of the AHl.
PITI'S8URGH PENGUINS: Assigned C-LW
Robert Dome to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton of the AHL.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING : ,Bought out the
contracts D Drew D:mni~tcr and LW Joe Cardarelli.
Announced that Cnrtlarelh subsequently si~ned with
Detroit or 1he IHL and wa5,Joaned to Flonda of 1he ,
ECHL.
•,
VANCOUVER CANUCKS: Re-s igned 0 · .
Adrian Aucomto a two-yeilr contract.

College

BOWDOIN: Named Sharon Bradty men's and.·~
women'ssquash coach.
·• \
BRYN MAWR : Named Jim Buckley womc:n's·
basketball (Oach .

INDIANA-PURDUE-INDIANAPOLIS' Named
Ju lie ~in~ women's softball coach .
•
JACKSONVILlE STATE: Named lefT Richards '
football coach.
'
VIRGINIA TECH: Si&amp;ned Jim Weaver, athletic director, to a (iV(':yettr contracl extension.
·
WINTHROP: SuspeBded Rich Posipanko, mcn·s
soccer coach, for one: game for pt111ing his team off..- ...
the field before the e~d of~ aame. . .
~ ·

''

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NICE JOB
- The New York Yankeea' Bernie Wllllema
(right) gets a' high live from third baae coach Willie Randolph aeconda after Williams' three-run homer In the a1xth Inning of the openIng game of Tueadey night's American Laagua playoff aerie&amp; open·
ar agalnat the visiting Texaa Rangers. Wlllllma had alx RBis In the
Yenkeea' 8-0 win. (AP)

Yankees .• ~

.·'

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1-:r ·

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••

• ~allipolis JJlailp tE{ibune ·~ The Daily Sentinel

(304) 675-1333

(740) 446-2342

"

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"'

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Bunting
Edition

Sports In brief

Place- fOUJI' eto.~cfifiedl1rlil( TaMrltlf ~ qafftjo!t~ Oaift T,;Ju.l(t-, PotirtPfeacf_tJ.I(t R~t~tyOa;t, cfe-l(ttire-fal(rl/t(Qiffpu.l( FREEtir Tk ~i-O~u.l(ft tfet(lcf·

~oint ~leat)ant l\egi~ter

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

,Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

I

•

•
~·.i·

.

·To Appear In The
THE DAILY. SENTINEL .
GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE,
&amp;POINT PLEASANT REGISTER.

On

Friday, October 22, 1999

{

(ContinuedfromPagc4)
/
,
run in 20 innings). Jeff Nelson fol- Strawberry's grounder to second,
towed with a hitless ninth.
which Mark McLemore bobbled
While Te~as has led the American slightly.
League in hitting for two straight
But Strawberry, who was diagyears, the Rangers haven't scored a nosed with cololi' cancer during last
single run in their.last22 postseason year's series against the Rangers Mid
innings.
. missed the entire postseason, hustled
Texas mounted its best threat m down the line and heat shortstop
the first inning,- loading the bases on Royce Clayton's throw to avoid a
a out-out double by Ivan Rodriguez ·double play. 1Greer then seemed to
and walks to Rusty Greer and Rafael los~ Ricky Ledee's c.urving liner in
Palmeiro. But Hernandez got out of the lights, and it sailed past him to
it by striking out Todd Zeile to end · the wall as Strawberry scored on
the inning.
what was ruled a double.
Sele shook Greer's hand in the
After that, Hernarid~z allowed
only a single by Rodriguez in the dugout after the inning, as if to say,
third .
"No problem," but the way the
It was reminiscent of his first Rangers hit in the playoffs, even one
playoff suirt when the Yankees were run is too much to overcome.
Williams doubled over the . head
trailing Cle~eland 2 ·games to I .in
last year's championship series. · of center fiel_der Tom Goodwm m the
Hernandez got into a two·o~t jam in fifth followmg one-out , sm~les by
the first, retire!\ Jim Thome on a fly- Derek Jeter and Paul 0 Ne11l. Sele
out to the· right-field warning track, left after walks to Ledee and Jeter m
then blanked t~e Indians through the sixth, and a run scored when ·
seven. innings.
O'Neill's grounder. to th11d skipped
Sele, who lost Game 3 to the into outfield off.Ze_'le. .
Yankees ((lSI year, fell behill.d in the
Sele. 11-3 m h1s fmal 16 starts,
second inning becaus~ 9f a bad allow~d f?ur. runs - three earned defensive play by Rusty Greer in left. and stx h1ts m five-plus mnmg_s. He
Tiho Manll\t1 '~ilfgl.ed leading off ~so Walked five, but two were mtenthe seconil;-ailll was erased on Darryl uonal.

\

Football
ROCHESTER, Minn. (AP) Doctors delayed knee replacement
surgery for Wisconsin football
coach Barry Alvarez after discovering an infection in his severely
arthritic right knee. Doctors at the
Mayo Clinic said the infection
would be treated and no date has
been set for the replacement
surgery.
Basketball
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va . .
(AP)- The NCAA revoked a bas. ketball scholarship from Virginia
for the 2000-0 I season because of
recruiting infractions.
·
The NCAA deemed the violations secondary, meaning they provided a limited recruiJing or competitive advantage because they
occurred after the prospecl had
·signed letters of intent to attend
Virginia.

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8 •the Dally Sentinel

October 6, 1999'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Henry, Delpho$.St. John·to meet in,battle of No. 1s Friday
PUET ·
(tilloc181ed Prell Writer
of the No. !-ranked teams in the Associated
high school .football poll will lose Friday. .
Henry, the ·top-ranked team in Division V. ·and
~~lphos St. John 's, which leads Division Vl,'!l)ay at St.
in a game between schools that have combined
state titles in thi~ decade.
St. John's is the two-time defending champion in
Kvi•:inn VI. St. Henry won crowns in Division VI in
and 1995 and Division -v in 1990 and 1992.
At least one of the two teams has been ranked in
of the 1990s going into the game. Last season,
was No. 1 and St. Henry No. 2 in Division VI
time, with St. John's winning. St. John 's fini shed
the poll in 1997, as did St. Henry in 1990, 1993,
and 1996.
·This is the tirst season the two teams have _been in dif)erent divisions. St. Henry has 136 boys. two more than
)lte Division VI maximum.
~ -~ • St. John's, which carries a 35-game winning streak.
~duding playoffs. hasn't gtvcn up a pointlhts season,
")while averag 1ng 45.8 on offen se.
i ~ •OVERTIME WOES Zanesvtlle's 43-40 defeat m
~~; .
. .

~ooper

by beating Ashland~ The Riders beat Mansfield Madison
48-14 as Justin Zwick passed for three tou~lu)owns.
OPPORTUNISTS: Columbus Independence is
unbeaten in pan because it can score in many ways. The
76ers have scored three touchdowns on interception
returns, two on fumble recoveries, two on kickoff
returns, two on punt returns-and once on a safety while
allowing 42 points.
SCORE AND SCORE AGAIN: Martins Ferry's Tony
Collette and Woodsfield Monroe Central's Jesse Nippert
each had five touchdowns last week. Collette led a 58-6
rout of Hannibal River with touchdown runs of 44, one,
· 15 and I 0 yards and a 56-yard punt return. Nippert
scored on runs of 20. six and 27 yards, plus a 57-yard
and a 15-yard reception.
UNFAMILIAR CIRCUMSTANCES: Newark
Catholic set a school record for points allowed as the
longtime small-school power lost 42-10 at
Wheelersburg.
PASSING PARADE: Canton GlenOak had a 299-0
aerial edge in beating Wooster 55-6 as Rocco Milano
threw five touchdown passes; Nathan Poole of Division
!'poll leader Grove City has thrown 15 touchdown passes and one interception this year. He passed for 232
yards and three touchdowns in a 21-7 victory over
Westerville South; Findlay 's Ben Roethlisberger ~et a
school record with 2,043 passing yards this year and was
19-foi-33 for 281 yards in a 45-6 victory over Sandusky.

triple overtime against Cincinnati Oak Hills was the second time the Blue Devils have lost in ex.tr3 periods this
year..
Oak Hills scored on a fourth-and-goal pass fr9m five
yards out at the end of regulation play and was nagged
for excessive celebration. but Craig Richmond booted a
35-yard ex.tra point. His 33-yard tield goal gave Oak
Hills the victory. Zanesville got the ball once more but
couldn't score on four tries after having first-and-goal at
the three.
SNAKEBITTEN: Washington Court House is 1-5,
losing the five games by a total of 20· points after taking
late leads each time. The Blue Lions' only victory was by
26-0 over Grecntield McClain.
TURNAROUNDS: Mount Vernon has won 12 of its
last 14 games after 0-10 and 2-8 seasons and is 5-1 this
year. The Yellow Jackets are on the verge of back-toback winning seasons for the tirsttime since 1963 and
1964; Johnstown Northridge is 6-0 for the first time and
ha~ limited opponents to 34 points. The Vikings ' 13-7
victory over Utica snapped the Redskins ' 18-game winning streak; West Chester Lakota West~ in its third year
as a school, stopped a 15-game Greater Miami
Conference losing streak and has beaten its last three
league opponents.
RIDERS ROLL: A'fter being an independent for II
years, defending state Division IV champion Orrville
can win its first Ohio Heartland Conference title Friday

·

Reader mad at smoking' co - workers who drive up insurance cost~
·

.~1$te

coach John Cooper says he
.-nuld never publicl y single out play'-~ for criticism. It 's another mauer.

~wever. in the team'S inner sanc-

:&amp;um.

~,. ' In

the aftermath of Saturday's 42;:t 7 beating at home again st
:Wisconsin, Cooper ·"called out "
'Junior linebacker Nail Diggs. senior
b&gt;rnerback Ahmed Plummer, senior
'Safety Gary Berry and senior tailback
'tfichael Wiley among others in a
~om meeting Sunday. ·
•. "He picked on Na' il, Michael and
khmed just because they· rc good
:fixllball players," quarterback Steve
llisari said. "They need to make
· ays. But I think it's more of a state. nt to the whole team: 'Hey, every'J!ody, step up your level of game and
Sllrt playing better."'
~' ·cooper apparently didn 't sugar~t his words. Diggs said the coach

t

.

.

"When you're having the kind of
season we're having. somebody
needs to step up and make some
plays," Coopfr said. "Na'il Diggs is
a good football player. He needs to
step up. Courtland Bullard, Ahmed
Plummer, Gary Berry, the defensive
line- I'm talking about the guys we
. know are good football players. They
all .need to step up and make something happen. Get in the huddle and
fire somebody up. Do something, for
goodness sakes. Don't just sit back
and keep taking it game after game
after game."
Diggs said the message got
through.
" It was along the lines of we've ·
got to make more plays, especially
when it's a fight to the end - or a
fight, period," Diggs said.
Diggs was credited with 14 tackles, a sack and a fumble recovery.

r;ssschuseus high school fires McMullen

1. _tar's

had five solo tackles. Wiley, however. lost fumbles at the goal line on a
potential touchdown dive and also on
the second-half kickoff. The latter
started the Buckeyes on their downward spiral.
Plummer said even the best players can't make every play.
· "If they don't throw the ball my
way, what can I do?" he said. "It's
hard to make plays if they don 't
come your way. I guess he's saying
the whole team needs to do a little

&lt; ,'CINCINNATI (AP) -

Coach
i'~uce Coslet says hi s Cincinnati
JC~gals players need to get back to
IVmg ~hat they do best tf the team ts
JP. get its first win of the year Sunday
~atnst the Cleveland Bro~ns. .
': Cos let satd he ts urgmg krcker
r,.oug Pelfrey to re_lax and not to get
f.llllght up m worrymg about hts spate

:it t

the past two weeks. And, the coach
said he hopes for a strong running
game from Corey Dillon. the back
who has been a 1,000-yard rusher
each of the past two seasons for the
Bengals.
''I' II tell you what I want from
Corey Dillon: ~0 great carries a
game. We've got to get it to him

'-•:; · ·e S. •• (Continued
from Page 5)
.
.
!»'o-run homer by Lms Gonz~lez to
~ke tt 4-all.
.
:· Johnson settled down to pttch
P hrtless mnmgs, but Ventura led
itf•the ntnth wtth a sm~le. Wtlh one
t, Rey Ordonez . smgled, and
son walked Melvm Mora to lo~d
. bases and bring on Chouinard.

!

~i: -:'lthinkljustgotalittletiredand

'!Aiked some people and got behind
ifl4 gave up some hits," Johnson
liii!. "I gave it alii had out there in
~ninth inning."
:., · Third baseman Matt Williams
' e a diving stop, his second of the
e, on Rickey Henderson 's
nder, and threw home to force
Ventura, putting Arizona an out
y from getting out of the jam.
But Alfonzo hit Chouinard's 3-1
~-h just inside the left-field foul
lc for the grand slam.
'I was a little jittery," Chouinard
. "It was my first time out there.
was
. a btg crowd and a playoff
e. I tried to do what I normally
throw a first-pitch strike. I was
raggressive. I was trying to throw
tik1 hard. I threw a 3-1 fastball right
ol&amp;wn the middle. I fell behind and f
lf!!id for it."
~1 : -Arizona manager Buck Showalter
~ he . felt it was right to leave
ijhns~n in the game, even though

i

lt.

t:'

.
the btg left-hander sard he was get-.
tmg close to runmng out of gas.
Showalter, who has never brou~ht
closer Matt Mantet tnlo a game wtth
runn~rs on base. s.atd he used
Chomnard because he d been one of
the best relievers thts season.
"I wish we could have figured out
a way to keep Alfonzo in the park,
then maybe we could have had some
fun in the ninth inning," Showalter
said.
Alfonzo said that with a 3-1
. count, he expected a fastball .
"I don 't think he wanted to walk
me," Alfonzo said.
After he hit it, the only question
was whether it was fair.
"I didn't know if it was a foul or
fair ball," Alfonzo said. "I stayed at
1
home plate. going. 'C' mon.
c' mon."'
Johnson, whose postseason
record fell to 2-6, allowed seven runs
on eight hits. Turk Wendell pnched
one inning ·and was the winner.
In the seventh, Johnson doubled
for his first postseason hit. But he
was doubled up _when took off running on Toity Womack's one-out fl y
ball to left.
"That 's essentially pretty much
the way the night went for me.''
Johnson said.

effecttve when we do," Coslet said.
"The team 's looking for leadership," said Dillon. who ex.pressed
frustration that he isn't being given
more chances to run the ball. "I try to
lead by e.ample. I'm doing all I
can."
Coslet, a veteran of the Bengals'
games against the old Cleveland
Browns, said that preparing for
Sunday's game in Cleveland against
the new, expansion Browns doesn't
have the same feeling to it
"If you go back through the history of the rivalry, it isn't that. It may be
someday," he said.
Coslet should know. He was a
tight end for Cincinnati in the 1970s
under coach Paul Brown, who started
and built the Bengals after Art
Modell, owner of the old Browns,
had fired him. Brown died in 1991

Local prep volleyball

Meigs defeated Belpre 15•6, 15-12 in Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division volleyball action Tuesday evening at Meigs High School.
Meigs is now 13-2 overall and 12-1 in the TVC, the Lady Marauders
will travel to Vinton County on Thursday.
Amy Hysell led the way with 14 points with 16 of 17. serving and
two kills, Shannbn Price added five points with six of seven serving
an1 four assists, Tawny Jones added four points with five of five servand passed the state's criminal
ing.
·
.
records check, his past was never
Other Meigs scorers included Mindy Chancey with three points in
questioned.
· four of four serving and two assists. Tiffany Halfhill added three points
Ferreira said McMullen was a
!lR tjv.ct.llf. Jix serviu, .tw.o.kills and three blocks. Brooke Williams
popular coath and .a goOd motiva'ior. ' added one point on three of four serving and three kills. Katie Jeffers
But that didn ' I excuse his ]ies, he
was two Jlf two serv~ng and had two kills. Margie !lratton added three
said.
kills. coach Rick Ash credited Marissa Whaley with a fine defensive.
"In our eyes there;s. something
game. ~Tgs played without Tang~ Lauderynilt who suffered a knee
wrong in that he misreple'serited himinjufy 'tlilg past weeiCend.
·
self when he ~s working with young
Meigs also won the reserve match. No other details were available.
men, trying to teach them honesty
and proper values," Ferreira said.
South Gal/fa varsity downs Eastern
"That's inappropriate."
McMullen said he is embarrassed
South Gallia defeated Eastern 15-4, 15-I 3 Tuesday night.
and sorry about his lies. He apoloKristen Chevalier led the Eagles with an 8-8 serving night with five
gized to the real Nick Eddy over the . points and two aces, while setting at a 15-23 clip.
phone, he said, and plans to apoloTanya Haner led South Gallia with IO'jlOints and two ~ces. Rachel
gize to Old Colony's players.
Waugh
had nine points and one ace. Robyn Harrison tallieJ seven
"I know it's going to change the
points and two aces. Valerie Delaney chipped in two points and Stacy
nature of the relationships I have
White and Ashley Cardwell added one point each.
with just about everybody I have 'in
Waugh was 16-of-2 1 hitting with four kills. Delaney went 6-for-6
this town;'' McMullen said. He said
with one kill. Harrison was 6-of-7 with one kill. White connected on ·5when the news broke, he had been
of-6 hitting chances with two kills . Cardwell was 6-for-6 with one kill.
working with a therapist to figure out · Tanya Haner went 6-for-6 and Holly Haner was 1-for-1.
how to come clean about the lie to
Waugh was 2-for-2 blocking while Tanya Haner went 1-for-1 blockthe community - and also his famiing.
ly.
Alison Rose was 7-8 serving with an ace and five points for the
"The truth is out and I've dealt
Eagles. Amber Church was 6-6 with three points and 9-16 setting.
with .it," he said: ''I'm going to go
Becky Davis was 5-5 with an ace and three points with a kill. Daniellc
forward and see what happens."
Spencer was 4-4 with an assist.
Eastern missed just oJte serve all evening long. Eastern is now I0-5
on the season and is playing without leading hitter Juli Bailey who is
injured.Baltimore Ravens.
But the Bengals, coming off their
fourth 3-13 season of the l~s. lack
the luxury to take anything for granted.
The Bengals have lost 14 of their
last 15 games under Coslet, including
the 38-10 loss at home Sunday
against the St. Louis Rams.
The Bengals and Browns share the
basement of the AFC's Central
Division at 0-4.
Brian DeMarco, an offensive lineman the Bengals signed as a free
agent after he had played four years
for the Jacksonville Jaguars, is looking forward to the game in Cleveland,
near his hometown of Lorain. He ·
recalled having bought 125 tickets for
family and friends one season when
he played for the Jaguars in
Cleveland.

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Friday, Octobe_r 8, 1999
In Dr. I. Jackson Balles' Office
224 East Main, Pomeroy
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,.

blew' it all within two years. The
only time he contacted his father
was when he needed financial help.
Five years ago, he phoned Ed and
asked if he. could move back home.
John now lives with his father,
and has turned what was once a .
lovely house into a pigsty. He is a
lazy, selfish slob who leaves dirty
dishes all over the place and dirty
clothes on the Ooor, and his father
has to clean up after him.
Ed was once energetic and loved'
to trav~L Now, he has lost interest in

everything. Just recently, he was so
stressed out, he had to be hospitalized for several day s.
Ann , please advise me. Should I
butt out? I just wantto see this wonderful man enjoy his .golden years.-NO NAME, NO STATE
DEAR N.N.N.S.: I do not recommend that you try to talk sense into
Ed about his son, because if you do,
you wi'll be the loser. Unfortunately.
Ed is so grateful to have his son back
in his life that he is willing to put up
with John's slovenly ways and stress

inducing behavior.
But please don 't abandon Ed. He
needs you now more than ever.
Offer him a refuge by asking him
over to your home for dinner, and
invite him to go dancing and sec a
mov ie now and then.
Give him the name of a . good
cleaning service so he doesn't have
to pick up after his slob of a son.
And let's hope John grows up soon
and decides .it ·s time he made a
decent life for himself.
Have trouble sleeping at night

and don't want to get involved in a ;
novel? "A Collection of My Favorite •
Gems of the Day" is the,perfect bed _
stand mate. Send a self addressed, ·_long, business size envelope Jllld a :
check or money.Qrder for $5.25 (this ~
includes ppstage and handling) lm .•
Collection, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. "
Box 11 562, Chicago, Ill. 60611 - ·.
0562 (in Canada, $6.25). To find out
. more about Ann Landers and read
her past columns, visit the Creators
Syndicate web page at www.cre•
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Miller's varsity volleyball team defeated Southern 15-10, 15-4 in
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night. ._
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three, Fallon Roush one, ·Stacy Lyons one, Laraine Lawson two, arid
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Miller won the reserve game 15-7 and 15-10. Rachel Chapman led
with ~even points, and Emily Stivers had six..

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Pleasant Valley Wei/ness c;enter
Thursday, October 28, 1999
Noon to 6 p.m.

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WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Marauders sweep Belpre

EJOC?.!!!t says.!~~.~~~...~!!~~.~..~~~~[~ !~. .~~~!~~

:t

"I didn 't feel it as a direct, per- ·
sonal thing with me and Coop," he
said. "I think the whole team looked
at it as a whole team thing. I think he
said a lot by pointing me and Mike
out to the whole team, especially the
young guys. Hopefully the young
guys saw what he was trying to say. ·
It wasn't something he blatantly said.
You have to kind ofread between the
lines and understand what he's saying and see how severe what he 's
talking about is."

call unravels coach's 20-year-old lie

, · ROCHESTER. Mass. (AP) - dent.
Noticing Notre Dame parapherna~tball players and coaches at Old
The real Nick Eddy, now an insur- . lia at the plant manager's office, he
tolony Regional High School ance executive in Modesto, Calif., decided to try to boost his chances of
~ways took for granted that their heard of McMullen's scam through a getting hired.
tii~istant football coach was Nick rumor that he had divorced his wife
"As a last minute tidbit, I threw in
llddy, an All-American hallback at and had a new family in that I went to Notre Dame," said
Notre Dame in the mid-1960s.
Massachusetts.
'
McMullen, whose highest degree
: Butthen the real Nick Eddy called
"I thought, 'My gosh, that's was actually from high school.
j!le man who was impersonating him. where this all came from,"' said
The lie worked, and McMullen
i!nd a ruse that began 20 years ago Eddy, who called and confirmed the kept up the facade until he moved to
tibddenly fell apart. William Nicholas story in a telephone conversation California in 1979 and temporarily
'-ddy-McMullen was forced to with McMullen.
dropped the act.
~s ign from the coaching staff, and
But Eddy, who played seven seaHe resumed it , however, when he
lie had to own up to living a lie.
sons with the Detroit Lions, said he returned to Massachusetts in 1989,
• "I didn't deny it. I didn 't embell- doesn't have any ill will towards and an old acquaintance introduced
f•h it," a weary McMullen said of his McMullen.
him to others as the football great.
&lt;!aims. By coincidence he shares two
"The only real harm, I think that
" It kind of ·snowballed,"
.l!f'the real Nick Eddy's names. "In has come out of it, is the impression McMullen said.
(,act. people were amazed at how that I was divorced," said Eddy, 55, In 1995, McMullen was hired at
!llodest ... how I didn 't talk about my who will soon celebrate his 34th Old Colony as one of several assist-s• and my exploits and what I'd wedding anniversary.
rant football coaches after a chance
done. etcetera."
·
In an interview Tuesday, meeting with head coach Kevin
;~~chool officials, tipped ,off by McMullen said his deception started Gonsalves. Gonsalves had been
l!ICIIly's call and a report by The about20 years ago. While broke and impressed by McMullen 's know!Sturrdard-Times of New Bedford, looking for a job, the Iowa native edge of the game - even without
~ they were surprised at why he interviewed at a New Bedford cloth- McMullen bringing up his fictitious
lttd.
ing plant
past.
:• ·"The fact is he didn 't need to
He said he had played football at
School officials said they first
~'ause he was successful just on hrs Notre Dame under his stepfather's learned of McMullen's claims when
t!"ility as a coach," satd David last name , Eddy. He added that he he sent in his resume. Because he
~rreira, Old Colony's superinten- had also used his middle name, Nick. used his own social sec urity number
.. ,..
~

·

P 0 WE ll 'S

more.-''

'

..

Dear Ann Landers: Some lane.
months I ago, I was diagnosed with
He never has held a full time job,
a disease that my doctor said would and ·has been in and out of rehab,for
be aggravated by cigarettes, even drug abuse.
tltough the disease itself was· not
When his mother died, John
caused by smoking. For me, this was received, a sizable inheritance, and
a nobrainer - _give up smoking.
· Several of my co-workers smoke,
but not at work, because it is not
allowed in our building.
One of these co-workers recently
had surgery to replace veins in his
legs. He was advised by his surgeon
to quit smoking, but · continues to
puff away.
STORE HOURS
. Another co-worker had a quadruMondar thru
ple bypass, but continues to s.moke a
Sundar
pack and a half a day. A third coworker developed a cancerous
IIM·IO PM
growth on his tongue, but continues
291 SECOND ST.
to smoke like a chimney.
Accepts Credit Cards
These people share my group
insurance policy, and frankly , I am
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
mad as hell. As my premiums go up.
PRICES GOOD THRU GOOIER 9, 1999
I am tempted to tell the bookkeeper
to attach my increases io the bills ot
the smokers.
It is not fair that we should all be
DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS
penalized by people too selfish to
get their own insurance, who instead
insist on raising our premiums by
~entinuing with . their destructive ·
behavior.
I know there is probably no solution other than for insurance companies to drop the policies of p~ople
who continue to smoke against medical advice, but I really needed to
· vent my anger _in a public way. -SMOKING MAD IN MINNESOTA
DEAR MAD' IN MINN.: You
came to the right place. I am pleased
to give you space in which to vent
your anger.
We now know that smoking is
more than just a filthy habit, it is an
addiction. I have only one close
friend who smokes, and she has the
decency to excuse herself when she ·
feels the need to light up. Need I say,
I appreciate it.
Dear Ann Landen: I am iti a
relationship with a wonderful, caring man I will call "Ed." We are both
widowed and senior citizens. Before
our spouses died, we were a foursome, and the two of us later found
strength and comfort in one another.
Lt.
My problem is with Ed's son,
"John," his only child. .John is 49
years old. He left home when he was
21. and started living life in the fast

Diggs said he took Cooper's
called the players "sorry " and ques- than just me , Gary, Na ' il, Mike younger players get some guidance Bullard, also a linebacker, had 10
~y RUSTY MILLER
Wiley or whoever" to tur~ things from the veterans.
tackles including a sack. Plummer words to heart.
1
~· 'C6LUMBUS, Ohio(AP) - Ohio tioned their ability.
around, Plummer said. " We played
with II on both sides of the ball . He
was speaking to the whole team ."
Cooper's lecture came as the 21stranked Buckeyes (3 -2, 0-1 Big Ten)
began preparations for thi s
Saturday 's game against No. 17
Purdue (4-1, 1-1).
The 12-year Ohio State coach
doesn't believe his players are dogging it.
"I haven't seen any complacency
on our football team, " he said . " If
there were, I'd fire some of those
guys and play somebody else. I don 't
see anybody that's not working hard
and not playing hard. When we grade
the films, we grade the effort. on
every play and I didn't sec anybody
loafing."
Cooper said he wasn 't blaming
particular players for the lopsided
loss, but it was essential that ·the

J

~----~~--:"------------------------------~y----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~---- :

GRINDING l'f OUT: Top rushing performances of
the week included Jamel Jpnes' 326 yards and three
touchdowns for Columbus· Eastnloor Academy against
Columbus Whetstone; KeniOn 's Aaron McPherson had
268 yards in 11 carries against Van Wen; Fairfield
downed West Chester Lakota East 28-7 with Earl
Haynes getting 231 yards and three scores; Geneva's.
Jason DeGroodt picked up 218 yards and scored -four·
time~ in a 53-21 decision over Conneaut; Mike Chester
of Sycamore Mohawk sul'passed the 200 mark for the·
third straight game, running for 213 .rards on 17 c~ies.
and sconng four touchdowns, mcludtilg one on an mter-:
ception return, against Hopewell-Loudon.
·
Kiev Knight helped give Ashtabula its first victory of
the season with 213 yards on 25 carries. against
Ashtabula Edgewood; Clifford Cox with 194 yards in 35
carries led Miller to its fifth straight victory, 33-14 over
Federal Hocking; Lisbon Beaver Local had two backs
surpass 100 yards for the third straight week, with Jamie
Olmstead gaining 123 yards and Jamin Pastore 100 in a
41 -0 decision over Weirton, W.Va.; Lima Shawnee's
' Maurice Shelby scored on 87- 86- and 11-yards and a
23-yard pass, but the Indians lost 35-28 to OttawaGlandorf, which got four touchdown passes from Tony
Ball; the Adams family put a fright into Sebring
McKinley as Andy Adams scored four times and brother·
Matt once in a 50-0 triumph for Lisbon Anderson.
·

'calls out" veterans in bid to boost faltering B-uckeyes
"You've got to take what's said in
stride and make the best of it. " Diggs
said. "You can't take anything and
make it neg ati ve. I don't think he
meant anything by saying we were
sorry or that w'e were not the type of
players he thought we were. He 's
doing his job as a coac h and getting
our heads screwed on right."
Wisconsin, which had lost its last
two games, countcrpunched from a
17-0 deficit to score 42 points in a
row including all 36 in the second
half. The last time an opponent
scored more consecutive points in
Ohio Stadium was 1946 , when
Michigan scored the first 58 points in
a 58-6 win.
Plummer said the blame afier
such a loss -or the glory after a big
win ~ shouldn't fall on a select few
players.
"It's detinitely going to take more

Wednesday, October 6, 1999

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..Bus·
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Wednesday, October 6, 1999

Wednesday, October

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1999 .' .

fimily
C. Wolf, D.O.

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

St. Rt. 7

Unlveralty
College of
O.teopethlc
Mtdlclne

.,
I•

Fall actmttes were announced at
the recent meetmg of the Rutland
Garden Club held at the home of
MarJone Rtce.
.Pauhne Atkms, reg10nal dtrector.
announced the regiOnal meetmg to
be held Oc~. 23 m Galhpohs The
regtonal board meetmg wtll be held
at .noon Saturday at Chester, and a
coC)nty meetong woll be held some
ume thts month at the Pomeroy
Library at whtch tome plans wtll be
cojjtpleted for the annual Chrtstmas
flower s[jow to be held at Carleton
School, Syracuse, the weekend
before Thanksgtvmg Atkms also
noted that Meigs County wtll be
host for the spnng regwnal meet10g
on..Apnl22.
:Devotions by Rice mcluded
"When There ts Love", and membets responded by n~mmg plants
from wh1ch they have saved seeds.
It was reported that Atkms was
guest speaker at the Cheshtre Gar·
den Club Sept. 9 on the "Hows and
Wftys of Garden Club", and also VISited The Plains Garden Club
4-H activllies from the fatr were
reported on The advtsors are
Pat)line Atkins and Sharon Jewell
and the Rutland Club, Donna Jenk·
inf and Cathy Lentes It was noted
thtit the club had an entry at the
Meigs County Expo. It conststed of
an anllque wagon decorated w1th
mums, sunflowers and wtld flowers
with a bird bath accessory.
Annual dues are payable at the
October meeting. The travehng
prize furnished by Rtce was won by
Ev• Robson. Ann Webster wtll furnish the October pnze
•
• ~summer Ends" was the program
;;lo(iic with Atkins usmg "EnJOY the
Clt!u'm of the Purple Cornflower" as
~IJer topic. She satd that whtle the
coneflower ts a nat1ve to the Eastern
half of the Umted States. large
'clumps of the purple coneflower are
·a ...common stght from summer to
aut»mn 8n sunny pratnes m many
)fates.
She satd it IS easy to spot the
Hower be, ause of us cone shaped
ce~ter and drooptng datsy-ltke
petals The plant ts also known as
llldian Root or Scurvy Root, and
was at one ume used to treat
snakebttes, scurvy, vtruses and other
ailments.
• · Atkins descnbed the coneflower
as a very versatile plant for use m
cottage gardens and perenmal beds
ll1s a good background plantmg for

stmtlar shaped flowers loke shasta
datstes, blackeyed Susans and sunflowers She satd the purple coneflowers ts a magnet for btrds, bees
butterfltes and Japanese beetles, that
11 requtres little care, and ts a plant
gardeners love
"What Was that Mystery Btrd '"
was gtven by MarJOrie Rtce who
told of seemg a new btrd on her
backyard She concluded by notmg
that the btrd she saw was a male rose
breasted grosbeak
Htnt for the month was on savmg
space whtle over-wontenng annual
donnant gerantums It was suggested that a smng be ued around the
bulbs and hung upstde m a cool
place where the temperature ts
above freezmg In the spnng the
plants can be cut back, planted, ferllllzed and water well for another
season putstde.
The October meetmg wtll be held
on Oct 26
·

B" Gravellass Leach
•
100' · 1000' Rolls 1" &amp;3/4" 200# Walar Line
Full line of Gos Pipe &amp; Regulators Water Storage Tonks

Now Reatlnc

High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage

State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

(740) 593-6671

Phone

Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232
9/27/99 1 mo

740o446-3388 Aft 5 P.M
er

JOlES'
TREE SERVICE
·lOP
• !='ert'o'~~a\
The Communlly Calendar os
pubh&gt;hcd as a free servtce to nonprofit groups \\tshong to announce
mee110gs and spectal events The
calendar os not destgncd to promote
sales ot fund raoscrs of any type
hems ate pnnted only as space pcomots and canno( be guaranteed to be
pnnted a spectf oc numbet of days
WEDNESDAY
Scopto TownPAGEVILLE
shtp Trustees, Wednesday. 6 30 p m
Pagevtlle Town Hall
CHESTER - Chester Townshtp
Board of Trustees , 7 p m at town
hall
MIDDLEPORT - Mtddleport
Ltterary Club, 2 p m Wednesday,
home of Phylhs Hackett. Faye Wal-

lace to revtcw books about man 's
hrst landong on the moon Members
to p.ty dues
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Revtval
begonnmg Thursday, 7 p m mghtly,
through Oct 14 at God's Temple of
Pratse . located on McGutre Ro,ul
ncar the JUnctiOn of state routes 7
and 124, near Mtddleport Servtces
wtll be held at 6 p m Sunday Pastor Jerry Wayne Balcom mvttes all.
POMEROY - PERI meetmg,
Thursday, I p m Semor Cottzens
Center Call for luncheon reservatiOns, 992-2161
RACINE - Racone Grange.
Thursday, 7 p m at the hall
MIDDLEPORT -

Evangeline

Chapter 172, Thursday, 7:30pm at
the Moildleport Masontc Temple

Part Shorpei, Part Blael&lt; Lab, 740·
245·5747

Wedemeyer s Auction Service,

60 Lost and Found

Gallipolis Ohio 740-379-2720

Found ear keys wllh romoto In·
eludes picture, call to 10, 740992 2235

POMEROY - Metgs Sotl and
Water ConservatiOn Dtstrict, specoal
meetmg, I0 a m Thursday, at the
Meogs SWCD Office for the purpose of dtscussmg the ECP workload
SATURDAY
CHESHIRE - Ladtes for the
Lord, onterchurch ptcnoc, Cheshtre
ParR, Saturday, 2 p m Door pnzes ,
mustc by S1d and Carol Hayman,
Deanna Stewart and the Earthen
Vessels Take covered dtsh and
dessert All churches invited.
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Metgs Chapter, Daughters of the
Amencan Revolution, Saturday, at
I p m. at the Pomerov Ltbrarv.

meetmg

Public Notice

TURNS ONE • Keaton Curtis
Huffman, son of Jason and
Sheri Huffman, celebrated his
first birthday on Sept. 11 with a
party carrying out the theme
"Baby Looney Tunes:'
Cake, ice cream, chips and
punch were served to by his parents to his maternal grandmother, Vickie Dress; his paternal
grandparents, Leonard and
Tanya Huffman, maternal greatgrandparents, Thomas and Judy
Fields; and other relatives, Eric
and April Dress. Zachary Dress,
Nancy Field, Kathy Sigman and
Paul Fields.
Also · attending were Steve
and Tara Swatzel, Shelly, Lanaya
and Melonie Swanson, and
other remembering Keaton but
unable to attend were his maternal grandfather, Bob Dress,
maternal great-grandparents.,
Robert and Estelle Dress, and
an aunt, Hledl Huffman,

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PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby
given lhet on Saturday,
October 9, 1999, at 10:00
a.m., a public sale will be
held at 211 Wast Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio,
The Farmer'• Bank and
Savings Company
parking lot, to aell for
caeh the following
coltaterel:
1987
PLYMOUTH
HORIZON
I P3BM18C2HD71 034
1991
PONTIAC
LEMANS
KL tTN5482MB304664
1998 KAWASAKI 300

ATV

JKALFBB1XVVB5~

The Farmere Bank and
Savings Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves
the right to bid at this
aale, and to withdraw the
above cOllateral prior to
sale. Further, The
Farmere Bank and
Savings Company
reaervea the right to
reject any or all blda
submitted.
Further, the above
collateral will be sold In
the condition 11 Ia tn,
with no expreaa or
Implied warranlleeglvan.
For
further
Information, contact
Shannon al992·5909.
11016,1, a 3TC
Public Notice
' Notice of Election on
Tax Levy In Exceae of
the Ten Mill UmHatlon
Revlnd Coda, Secllone
3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
5705.25
NOTICE Ia hereby
given that In purauance
of a Reaoluaon of the
Board of County
Commtealonare of the
County of Melga, Matga,
Ohio, peeeld on the 9th
day of Auguet, 1999
there will be eubmlned
to e vote of 1111 people of
11ld eubdlvlalon at a
General ELECTION to be
held In the County of
Malga, Ohio, at the
regular placee of voting
therein, on the 2nd dey
of November, 1999, the
quaatlon of levying atex,
In axcel8 of the ten mill
limitation, for the benefit
ol Malga County for the
purpo11 of Matntanance,
capital conetructlon, and
operation of Carleton

Public Notice •

BANKiliJPRY
can rshave a debtor ollinancial obllgallons ond arrange a lair dlsklbufiaa of
bankruptcy may retain 11rttin
properly, known as 'exempt' propsrly, fa1 his or he• pefiOIIIII use. lh may
include a car, a house, clolhes, and household goods You sloauld dired any
quesltons regarding bankruptcy Ia on anorlll'f bel01e proceadiny

~nsen among tradlla~ Apa~an galng lhraugh

LONG BOTTOM- Hymn song,
Fatth Full Gospel Church, Long
Bottom, Saturday, 7 p m Smgmg
wtll be Jtm Blatr and the
Gospelatres

For Information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

School and Melga
lnduetrlee workehop lor
paraona with mentel
retardation
and
davetopmentat
dlaabllltlea.
Said tax being:• An
addltloneltax of 1.5 milia
at a rate not exc11dlng
1.5 mille for NCh one
dollar of valuation,
which amounta to flfiHn
($0.15) centa for each
one hundred dotlare of
valuation, for a
continuing period of
lima.
The Poll• for aald
Election will open at 6:30
o'clock A.M. end remain
open unll 7:30 o'clock
P.M. Oflltd day,
By order of the Board
of Elactlone, of Melge
County, Ohio.
John N. lhla, Chairman
Rite D. Smith, Director
Dated: S•pt. 13, 1999
(10) 8, 13, 20,27 4TC
Public Notice
' Nolle• of Election on
Tal&lt; Levy In EXCIII of
the Tan Mill Umllltlon
Revlald Code, SKtlona
3501.11(G), 5705.19,
5705.25
NOTICE Ia hereby
given that In purauance
of a R11olutlon bf the
VIllage Council of the
VIllage of Ruttend,
Rutland, Ohio, p11eed
on the 13th dey or July,
1898 lh•re wilt be
aubmltted to a vote of
the people of aald
aubdlvlelon at a General
ELECTION to be held In
the Vlllege of Rutland,
Ohio, 11 the regul..placea of vollngthartln,
on the 2nd day of
November, 1888, the
quaatlon of levying atex,
In axc111 of lila ten mill
llmlltttton, for the benefit
of Rutland VIllage for the
purpoaa of Current
axpen111.
Said tax being:• A
renewal of a tax of 2
mllta 11 1 rate not
exceeding 2.0 milia for
81Ch one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounll to · twenty
($0.20) cent• for each
one hundred doUert of
valuetlon, lor flva (5)
yeara.
The Polla for eald
Election will open at 6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain

To offer story. suggestions, report latebreaking news and offer news tips

Public Notice

Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

the len-mill limitation, for
the purpo11 of maintaining
claaaroom faclltttaa lnclud·
ld In lha valuation per pupil
Ia greater than the
statewide median three
year everage ad)uatod valu·
aaon per pupil, one-half of
the procaede of the tax
ehall be uaed for euch
111111ntenance one one-hall
of euch proceed• ehatl be
petd to the State, elthe rate
of one-half mill for each one
dollar of valuation? The IIIX
levy ahatl be made until It
generatea an amount not to
exceed the amount of the ·
proJect coet eupplled by the
Stall, butln no ceae klnger
then twenly·lhree (23)
yeara.
The polls will be open
from 8:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.
on uld dale.
BY ORDER OF THE
BOARD OF ELECTIONS OF
THE COUNTY OF MEIGS,
OHIO
Rita D. Smtth, Dlrtctor or
Elections
(10) 6 lTC

Rutland, Ohio
Amerkan legion
Post 467
Beedl Grove Road
Gun Shoot
'Slug aiia Shot
Matches
Every Sunday

NOTICE OF ELECTION
Notlcele hereby given that
pureuanl to 1 reeolutlon
adopted by the Board of
Education of the Melge
Local School Dletrlct,
County of Melga, Ohio, on
tlll10 day of Auguat, 11198,
there will be eubmltted to
lite qualified electora of
uld echool dlatrlct at lite
election to be held em lite
2nd dey af November, t 1198,
at regular placea ol voting
therein, t.he qulltlon of
laeull'ltl bonda oluld board
of educetlon to PlY the
local ehare or echool conatructlcm under the Stall of
OhiO Cla11room FectiHIII
Aaalatance Progrem In the 1--'::C~L:-:E:A-:-:"N,....,.,H""'O,...,U..,.S=EPrlnctp•l
amount
of
$5,728,ooo, and of tevtng a
WITH TH. E
tex to pey the principal and
lntereat or uld bonde out·
C/UiSSVFIE!DSI
tide of the ten-mill conatrucllanal tax limitation
110 Help Wanted
Impaled by Section 2 of
Article
XII
of
the.
Conatructlon of the Stille of We need qnaHI!ed penoonel Ohio. Till maximum .num· lo liD poQtions, 011 1st, 2ud &amp; .
ben of v•ra during the 3nl Sldfts.
bonde will run le twentythm (23) yeare and the
LFAD MACHINISI'
Hllmatld ~verage eddltlonld2ud
el I8X rata, outaldl or the
ten-mill llmlllltlon, to pey MACHINIST ist, 2ud &amp; 3nl
till lnterlll thereon and to
CNCPrognunmerl
retire till aame, 11 certtned
by lite county eudHor, will
Operator 1st &amp; 2nd
be thm end torty·flve hun·
WkeEDM
drldlltl, (3.45) mllll per dol·
ler (SI .OO) ollie valuation,
Programmer/Ope 1st
' which emounta to thirty·
11G WEIJ)ER 1st
four and one·hllf cente
($0.345) for eiiCh one hunJANITOR3nl
dred dollara ($100.00) oltex
MUS!'
have experience 1o
vlluatton, commencing In
11199, IIIII due In calender apply. Pay rates IICL'OidJo&amp; lo
y•r2000.
Thera ahell be eubmlttld experience. Heallh &amp; ill m,
In conlunctlon therewith, •• paid vaaation &amp; holidays,
• alngle propolltlon, the
eddltlonel queatlon: Shill 40l(k) &amp; prollt ~Send
en edtlltlanat levy of texea lt!lwlle or apply Ia penon:
be m1dl for a period not to
excHCI twenty•lltret y•ra, Montgomery Madine &amp;
commencing In 11198, ftrat Fah, Inc. 21,)6 Watts Belvias
due In oaleitder yell' 2000,
to benefit till Melgl Local St., PO Box 247 Jaclwla, OR
School Dlatrtct outalde or 45640.EOF.
110

Help Wanted

1:00 P.M.

Anytime-Anywhere

Hourly Rates

992·9178

Pomeroy

tt~fi'~~
24 Hr. TaxiiJJII
Delivery
Service

·'

Hauling*Limestone*Gravel
Sand*Topsoti*Ftll Dirt*Mulch
Bulldozer Serv1ces

We deliver

ALMOST anything

(740) HZ·3470

IH.ARI'WELL
SIORAGE
ST. RT. 7
10 X 10$40
10 X 20$60

992-1717

YOUR

7 40·992.()()38

CONCRETE

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

740-742-8015
877-353-7222 (loll free)

MYDIPIVINI

HILl'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740.949-2217
Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

Henderson, WV

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progresalve top line.
Llc.li OCJ.50 •1111t/llll

1, Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW·IEPAII
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

,._
412hN

UNIQUE
OLDIES
115 Salem St.
Rutland, Ohio

OPEN
10·5:00 Tues. Wed.
&amp; Thurs.
&amp;
By Appointment

HOWARD
EXCAV~TING , CO.
,,...,....,.,.,

!le""M

Bulldozer &amp; Ba&lt;l&lt;hoe
Se"'ices
House &amp; Trailer S1tes
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
.
1
Septic SyJtetnl &amp;
Vtiliti.e•

(740)992-3138

FIREWOOD
Pump True~ er
Plo~·JIP. Jn our flld

Recendy purchased.
Graham's Wood P'roilucts
F11ewood Divosoon

Linda's P•lntlng
Take the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
messag~

After 6 pm

740·985·4180
Free Estimates

. SAYRE•
TRUCKING
Hauling

.....Ball

Limestone &amp;Gravel
Rissonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

1·740-992o6H2 .

740·742·2138

Ball ....,.g&amp;lng

aad ,frewood
3521:5•Ball Run Rd . . •
Pomeroy; Ohio
Leave a Message

3/11/99TFN

R. L. MASH
CARPENTRY

DOZER WORK
Rt\ -1 S0fl.7Ldt• rii-1{1
~~~

New Homes • Vinyl
Stdmg • New Garages
•Replacement Wondows
•Room Additions
1
•Roofing
COMMIROAl Gild RISIDfNIIAl
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7643

1

'-,

L ,o, , J.. \fil'i"/ 1' 1/ 1' 1'

(740) 388-9686
''

,••,.

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

992..0437

740187. . .1

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
985-447~
"" 7f22/TFN

Coo/v/He, OH 45723

STONE
HAULED
Limestone
Gravel
Top Soli

Referral Sen&gt;ice

Meigs, Gallla &amp;
Surrounding area•
740.742·3119

JACKS ROOFING
&amp;CONSTRUOION

Table, Thursday 1017th, 911 Cora
Mil Road

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

•Room addHions &amp; Remodelln~
•New Garages
•Eiactrlcal &amp; Plumbln~
•Rooflng &amp; GUUtll
•VInyl Siding &amp; Pelnllng
•Pello &amp; Porch Dtcks
FI'H Elllrrtllll

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Y"'· Local

MODERN
SANITATION SERVICE
740-992-3954

H.l.A.P. YOUCHIIS
ACCEPTED
DlliVIIY AVAilABlE

Ci!y

554,8AM

To5~M

Riverside onve. cneshlre, Ohio

Thursday, Friday 10/7, &amp; 10/8,
Toys, Books

'Ciolltes 9 4

Nice Chlldrens

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

HOUR5I 7am THRU 4pm
MONDAY·FRIDAY
7amTONOON
SATURDAY
Now rs rhetomo for g·r-r-r~f
buys rn the classl(leds

Cnildrens. Adult Clotnes, CoolS,
Tools. Air Compressors, Knives,
Hun~ng

Bow

Somethmg For Everyone, 9·? October 7th, October $th, No Early

No Embarra88ment ...
You're Treated with R11pectl

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Personals
DATING TONIGHT!

gles In Your Area Call For More
!nlormaolon 1·800·AOMANCE
EXI 9735
Start Dallng Tonlghll Have lun
playing the Ohoo Oaling Game. I·
800·ROMANCE, extensiOn 9681

Church Fellowship Hall, Dona·
lions Can Be Sent To Oak Grove
Church, RR 2 Box 6 Letart WV

Supplies AI No Cost To You For

Doni Miss It! Fall Craft Fair Sat·

urday,IOclober 16, 9AM 3PM

,,

,'

•"'
-

I

Send Resume to

Gallipolis Da1ly lllbune,
RE AdvertiSing 5ales Rap
.825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis OH 45631
ASSEMBLY AT HOME II Cralls,
Toys, Jewelry, Wood, Sewing

1\'plng Groat Payi CALL 1-800·
795-0380 Ext t201124 HIS)
ATTENTION:
Htvo AC"""""*"

Pulll To Work!
$25 ·$75/Hr PTIFT
1·888·890-3411

www pc·1ncome com

Avon Products Start your own In·
Home Business Work Flexible
Hours, Enjoy Unllm1ted Earnings
1304 )347·8838

I

For FREE Booi&lt;IOI Coli 1·888·234' ,
9897 www cash-91! COIIVhomo ' ••
' )
Need 7 Ladles To Sell/won, 740- .
446·3358

I

'

Need dependable person to work ' ~
weekends caring for the elderly, • '

call 740·992·5039 Mond.Y
lhrougn Friday I&gt;I!Waen 8am-4PIII ,~
:::on.::ly;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ '
Olilee Manager In PI Plaaaant ,
New Hope Christian CounH:IInb ' '
Center with experience In Medf. • '
cal Field Fax Rtsume tQ: ..

1304)526·9989, Ann llarlena, By
Oelober 7th

OWN ACOMPUTER. PUT IT Ttl ~ ,
WORK $850 ·$3.500 MO PT /Fl '
FREE Dolalls Log Onto hllp II •·
www hbn com Acceu Code 5298 ·
f:tart·Time Employment In tn~• ' \

surance Agency 3 days a wea~. •
Compular &amp; People Ski lie rt.· -

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIc~

All Yord Satta Mutt Be Pold In
Adv1nce. Deadline· 1·00pm the
day before the ad Ia to run,
Sunde)' &amp; Mondey edltlon1:OOpm F~dly.

6·7,

Garage sale· October 1 &amp; 8
Bam Spm Top of Chester Hill,
third house on the left Women s,
mans. maternity, bllby &amp; tO(idter
clothing Chrislmas decorations,
furniture &amp;mise
Large garage sale Friday 8th
9am ? Follow &amp;IQAS In Arbaugh
October 9th, 9am·4pm TUrn f1rst
ro~d left past radio station from

n1n. llfth nousa LoiS ot

1tems

Ad

Rodge Oelober 7th/8tn. Time 9·6.

7 miles long 16 'houses\._3

•
m111es Froth PI Pleasant Rt 2N
to Rt 87, Go 6 miles Follow

Signs
Hugo Garage 5ale, Rt 2, JCI 87,
Mill Croak Road ThUrs , fft Sal
9 Piece An11Qut Dining Room

100% Company Paid Heallh Benellis Medical Dental. Vision
PLUS 401 k ~Iter 90 Oayt IWith

lion And Paid Holldaya 95% No
Touch Freight Satellite Communi·
cat1on Credit Union Direct De·
posit Assigned Conventlonals,
Company Flald Uniforms Stock

Purchase Call 800·555-CWTS
cwo jobsOcon·wayeom conway
Truckload Sorvocos CWT IS An
EDE
CNA Classes Are Being Set Up,

For October 11th, Immediate
Openings Energetic, Enthuslas·

!lc, And Oedlcatod People want·
od. To Care For O~r Residents
Apply Arbors 01 Gallipolis, 170
Pinecrest Drive GalhpoUs, Ohio
Or Contact Judy Hart, LPN /In·

souclor 740 742 2370, EOE

Cllmputer Users Needed Work

Own Hrs $25K ·$80KI Yr 1-800·
536·0486 X 7777 www 1ewp com
DENTAL BILLER Up to $15 -$45

IHr Dental Billing Software Com·
pany Needs People To Process
Med1cal Cla1ms From Home
Training Provided Must Own

Computer 1-800·223·1149 Ext
460
DRIVERS · Cannon ExpreSS 99%

Personalized Dispatch • Home

Olien Holiday Nacatlon Pay 401 K!Medocal /Pres !Dttntai As-

Signed 99' T2000's • Rider Pro·
gram· 98% No ·Touch Freight
Call Butch At Summit Transport•

••

lmmedla ..• I

opening tor experienced phlebot·
omlst, lull or part time ReaponrM·

bllli1es would Include

collocllng• ~

specimen&amp; from nur&amp;lng home ,.
patients In South East Ohio Son&lt;f,
resume to Athans Medical La~. "
400 E Slale, Alhenl, Oh 45701

lorential Ollerad Apply AI' Scanlc••
Hills Nursing Ctnllr, 31 t Bucfi· ridge Road, Bidwell, Onio 740·
I ~.

446-7150

PoSial Jobs $48,323 00 Yr Nooi ·
Hiring ·N~ Experience ·Pal~
Tra:nlng ·Graal Bonallls. Call 7 ,,
Days 800-429·3660 EXI J-385
'
POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 /HR.
INC BENEFITS, NO EXPEAI·
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1-800·813-358t,, :
EXT 14210 8 AM ·9 PM. 1
OAYS Ids lne Foe

:.......:...:===----'..,,r
llotplrltory l'hlnpllt

lfochnlcton

' '

.

Full Time PoSition For CATT-t,; ART Will Consider New Graduar. •

Possessing Valid Ohio Ucanle-"
Or J)ermlt Must Be Knowledg•·
able In All Aspect Of Respiratory ,

nue GaiDpolls, No Phone CIIRI
Roclcspnngs Aohabllllatlon Clnla(

..

Is now accepting appllcaUons fqr ..
part t1me dietary aide position •1 '
Must be able to work all ahlftl' •
and WOOkands Apply tn parson to

1111 out applocaliOn or sand rosumli

~

to Rocksprings Rehabllltatldn. •'

FaSI growing bustnoas looking lor

Land owned or teased b~ Harris
Farms will no longer be open to

Moving Sale: Lots ol nice Items

eook, cashiers. and part time
cashiers Send ruume cfo The
Dfily Sentinel, PO Box 729-75,
Pomtroy, OH 45789

HAV,E DOCTORS, NEED BILL·
ERS FIT, PIT Madlcll Billing No
Experlanc• Necassary Earn Up •

To $40k+ Working At Home
Must Hove IBM Compellblo PC
Call 1-1100.897·7870. www.medl·
crew not

''•

Conler 36759 Roekoprlnga Rd,,
Pomeroy Oh 45769 EOE

----~----------~" '
SECRETARY for busy non-pr~t , ,.

agency Aminimum ol high school

diploma and two year experlene6 ,,I
Must possess good communica,. .J
han skills (written and ora\),
phone skills, and experience n
Microsoft Word and Exctt, ·~
Knowledg11 of databaae a pluA ,..
Send resume by October 18,~

1999 to FACTS. 45 Ollot StrHI,' r
Gaiii&gt;Olls, Ohio 45631 EOE,MIFIH
SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLE.lft, ~
COUNTRY, And EASY LtSTE!ilr ..~
INGI Call 1·800·469·8184 For,Appolhtment To Come To Naat'P-' •
ville Tennessee And AudlllefJ\1 ,
For Major Record Producers In·
ternet WNW wdn ac

I

•••'
.I'

-----------------n,,
Truck Orl\ler Needed W1th Cl111
0

B Or A With Hazmat And Tenll I
Endorsements For Home Heatlftar•)
011 Delivery WeeKends Oft, In·
suranca, And Paid nrne Off, Send fl "
Resume To CLA 481 c/o Gai~ l u
pohs Dally Tribuna, 825 Thirg, 1\
Avenue, Galii&gt;Oiis. OH 45631
'·

''

!C.

WANTED
•
63 people lo lose 30 lbs In 3b 1
days &amp; earn $$$$$ whlla su~lnf ' :
the net 1-888·229.a427 wwwevll.lllty nallfaeliJood
Wan1td Spllcero F,or Telepho..,,,1

.. ,

~~~~~~~~~ ~T':"'~::.E~:,~, J

lngs 4 30·11 00 PM 740·ol4t.:1
3184, Olflee Ooys· 8 00·4 00 74028S..I85, Mobile AM 8 30 ·5 30
740-441-7877
•'I J
------~----------. \
Wanted Wa1tre1s at LaCantlnl f
Apply at AoslaUflnl, 4-1 z Dally: ' .J(

110n 800-676oQ880 EOE
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 /H~ "
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR·• 1
Dr&lt;vors 2 Week Paid COL Train· DENS, SECURITY MAIN-. /'
lng No Exp Nssded No Money, "'TENANCE, PARK R~NGERS NO ,
No Cradi1? No Problem! Earn Up EXP NEEDED FOR APP. AND
To $32,000 !1st Yr W/Full Bene- EXAM !fiFO, CALL t·800•111"·"
lite PAM Transpqrt Call Toll 3515, EXJ: 14211,.a A.M. \.9 ,P.M,,,,
Free 1·877·230•8002 www otr• 7 OAYS '-· Inc. .....
drlllfiCOIII

Home lnterku

PHLEBOTOMIST-

" ,,

Retail Furniture sates Exptrieq,
In Furmtt,ue, Carpet Or Drapert, ..Sales Preferred, Apply AI Topesj r'
Furniture Co, 151 Second A\ll'o , ,

32e M• 15 Yr • Exp, 31c Mi /3
Florch sale· rain or shine lots of
Yr, 30C M1 II Yr, 29C Ml /6
d1lferent things. 1998 Honda 4
Mos, 28C Mi 12 ·6 Mos . Slud·
wheeler, 38545 Gold Ridge Rd , 2 onls
1 Mo Exp $350 Wk Pay
mllas oll881 WeSI Darwin, 71h· RaiseOoEvery
50,000 Miles Bonus·
8th sam·5 pm
ea. Alder Program Paid Vaca·
Saturday Oclobor 9, John Ltgnt· lions Ins Avail www cannonex·
press com Call For Details 1loot's first to left past Millie's
800·845·9390
watCh tor signs
DRIVERS IMMEDIATE OPEN·
Pt. Pleasant
INGS - REGIONAL IOTR Sl.lrt AI
&amp; VIcinity
29 CPM /AI Ml · Unloading Pay •
past Gunvi!IO

nue, At MA Auto OetaU

CLASS A COL DRIVERS Dedi·
cated, Reg1onal &amp; OTR Solos
$ 30 /MI Toams $ 34 /mi /Spill

Dr1ver No Touch Freight Start At

3 FamMy Yard Sale October 7th&amp;
8th Rt 87, First House on Right,

____..,..

255!50
:;::::::...._
'
ParHtma Workers Noodad, AU· '
ply In Person 220 Fourth Ave •.":

Therapy Including ABGs And •·
EKGs Compelillve Pay ConiiGI Ooclors Hospilai Nelsonville ' •
740-753-1931 EX1 8262
'

Suit Old pictures Linens, Dish·

'- •;._.

I,

1428

Bartender Wanted, 740·441 ·

ea. Pots, Pans, Lamps, Quilts,

'\ .

MOTHERS l OTHERS WORK'
FROM HOME I Mall-Order Pall '
Time &amp; Full Time $650 ·$3 8001

AVONI All Aroasl To Buy or Soil
Shirley Spears, 304-675-1429

Matching) Company Paid Vaca·

priced to soli Thuradoy/Frlday
IAM·2PM, lllturdly, tAM·I2PM.
publiC hunling
107 27111 S-1
Now To You Thrift Shoppe
Wed /Thurs , 6tn!71n 309 71h
9Wail Stimson. Athans
Street Pt PI , Plus size, Ladles
740-592·1842
Quellly elolhtng and hou&amp;thold Clothing Lois ol mise , 8 30-?
lle}nl S1 00 bag 1a1• every
Thuroday to~onday thru Saturday Yard Sola 118 Soulh Park Drive,
9AM 2PM, Wad ITlluiS.!Fri
91»5.30.

74().-992-2068

ptayor

ani/WV Hoi Oog/Baka Sale
Hourly Giveaways

2400 Jefferson Ave /Pt Pleas·

· Joseph "''cks

Complete Simple Government
Forms At Home No Experience

Thursday, &amp; Fnday, large vanety
Ona generalor, sweepers, play

Community Sate·Gunvllle &amp; Cain

D1abeflc Patients Medicare Or
Pnvate Insurance, You May Be
Entitled To Aece111e Your 01abetlc

6561

'Flee Estlmatu

Paid Vacattonll cau 1-800.721·

Company Paid Retirement Plan

Mlddlepo~

More Information 1·888·677·

C8ii&lt;Now for Instant oAppirOVIilll**

Your Schldule, Be Your Own
8011, And Work Out Of Your
Home, 1\nywhere. Gre1t P1yl

Sales! 15521\'n Rhos Road

Acldlllon, Tuppers Plains

25253

WORRYING!!!

Help Wanted
SSS Make US -85 /Hour, Sot

Runmage Sale Clay Townhouse,
State Acute 7 South, 6th, 7th, 8th

Five famuy yard sate, New Haven,
Cecil Duncan rasidence, October

30 Announcements
Building Fund lor Oak Grove UM

CRIDI,- PROBLEMS???

110

Farm Equipmanl, 8 30-? 8th, 9th,
845 Sowards Rodge Road Crown

BRAMHI COAL
COMPANY
Sr. 124 Wellston, Ohio
740·384-6212
liMP AID STOIII COAl

Co~

Month Full Training Provided!

Moving Sale Home Interior Tup
perware, Clothlls, Oishware Some

pen, tables 145 Lariat Drive. 9 ·?

Have Fun Meeting Eligible Sin·

New Roofs • Repaus
• Coatmg • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing

r

Morel Thursday Friday Satur·

some Furnllure, Beanie Babies.

Cont. IWV003506

005
STAAT

UIYII I I Ul IIIIID
For Neu Local

Hill, Furnllure, Pointing, Toys,
Boys, &amp; Girls Clolhing &amp; Mucn

Toya Furblo Full Size Ping Pong

FREE ESTIMATES

From Home Full Training

puler ReQuired Call t:!odlworl&lt;&amp; ·
Toll Free 1-800·540,6333 Ex! 1
2312
.

Positions Available For AN's I.
LPN'&amp; Exporlonct Pay l Snlll Oil• ·'

across from fairgrounds.

DEPOYSAG

MEOIC~L BILLING Earn Excett' '"
tent $ $ $ I Processing Claim• ~

Large Yard Sale Oak Hill 279
West, Over The Lake On Top Of

Tapes, Barbie Doll !Big) Clolhlng
All Sizes Boys Girls &amp; Womens,

(304) 675·2457 Office
(304) 674-3311 Cel Pit.

(No Sunday Calls)

New Homes
Garages
Rep)acement
Doors &amp; Windows
Wood &amp;Wtnyl Siding
Custom Work
Kitchens &amp; Baths
Iilsured
24 Yrs. J;:xperience

w

"VmO;:;:;Lr:wU~T~E~E~R~S~N~EE=D::::.:E=o..,....,:~~

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, Low Miles 1995 Models
Or Newer Sm1th Buick Pontiac,

f)

• '"

qulred Insurance Exptriencl'" ~ ~
J)referred Send Resumes in c/o
Paint .Pleasant Register, M L 03., 1
1
200 Main Street, PI PI W'f/ --

Movmg Sale Children&amp; VIdeo

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

,.

Necessary CALL TOLL FREE 1-800.966-3599 Ext 2tl01 $34 00
Aalunaabla Foe
"DANCERS"
Top Dollar ·1740)992·6387
9 Milos S W From Gallipolis, On
141, MISC Items, Friday OCIObeo
ADVERTIStNG
81h, Saturday Oclober 9th
~ALES REPRESENTATIVE
ALL Ylrd Billa Mull
For Well ESI~Ishe&lt;l Local Co
a. Pold In Advance
SERVING TAI·COUNTY AREA
DEADLINE: 2:00 p m.
lito clay bii&lt;Jro the od
"Must have good Communication
Ia to run. Sunclly
SkillS
&amp;dillon · 2:00 p.m.
' Must nave good drlvng rocord
F~day. Monclly adltlon
&amp; Provkle own Transpor1811on
·10:00 o.m. Soturday.
'Must have abliiiY IO be aTEAM

October 6th, 7th, 8th, Intersection
Of Stile Aoule 160 &amp; Slalo Route

.

.

3 Family, October 7th, 8th, 3374
S R 141, Toys, Chlldrens Video
Tapes, Kids Name Brand Clothes,
Home Interior, Beanie Babies,
Crafls. Christmas &amp; Halloween
Decorations, Tupperware

~

800-540 6333 Ext 2301

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

.!

~

Avenue, Gallipolis 740..446-2842

Gallipolis
$2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
Brochures! Satisfaction Guar&amp; VIcinity
anteeidl Postage &amp; Supplies Pro152 Gavin Street, Radney Village vided! Rush SeU·Addreued
II Baanlas. Furnll"ro. Gas Cook Stamped Envelops! G!CO DEPT
Stove Baby Furniture, Clothing, 5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
Etc Starts Thursday 7th, Thru 37011·1438 Slart Immediately
Saourday 9th · '
$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
3 Family Yard Sale Saturday Oc· BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN·
Iober 9th Toys, Bikes, Exercise MENT REFUNDS NO EXPEAI·
EQuopmont, Gas Grill Clolhing, ENCE NECESSARY 1-800·854·
Tools 1402 Jackson Pike, Beside 6469 EXI 5046
Vanco Floor Covering
$800 WEEKLY POTENTIAL

day, 9-?

We Do•••

.

. •

COAD, Seniors TeaChiilg and :::
Reaching Program (STARS) is ;:
recruiting volunteers over the age
of 55 to tutor at Pomeroy Elementary School. Volunteers
will receive a $2.50 per hour (nontaxable) stipend or tuition units,
plus mileage reimbursement.
Volunteers will be asked to inake a
commitment of 10-15 hours R6'
week. Contact Jeanne NaguCki,
Coordinator at 740-594-8499.

Aluminum

Call for details

40 742-8888

Public Notice

open untt 7:30 o'clock
P.M. of 11ld dey.
By order of lha Board
of Electlona, of Melge
County, Ohio.
John N. thla, Chairman
Rite D. Smith, Director
D81ed: Sept. 13, 1999
(10) 6, 13, 20, 27 4TC

Beginning Sept. 26th

Yard Sale

Local Truck Driver Nooded TQ
Heul Milk Must Have Class A
Wilh Tanker COL Experftnce ••
Needed 740.245-9557
, .•

MEDICAL BILLING Earn Exctl·•

9172

Gas~A&amp;C~Mig

A &amp; D Auto Up olstery • P us, Inc
Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats,
boat covers. carpets, etc.

70

Portable
Welding Services

8:30am ·8 pm
Sun 1 pm • 6 pm

Co. Rd 19

sage

BfiR·J

WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS

William Safranek, Attorney

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Metgs Chap·
ter 53, Disabled Amencan Veterans, ·
Monday, 6 30 p.m covered dtsh ·
dmner, 7 p rn meetmg

Public Notice

Lost Female Walker Coon Hound

Wllh An Orange Collar, Losl On

_

Local Cleaning Company Sotkl"ll- :1
Full Ttme Help carpel Cleaning, "'
Light Construction And Re~g~ .J
~g~:~,d ~~~(;;'t4~s · • ~

lent Income Full Training Com.·
puter Required Call Toll-Free

1900 Eastern Avenue, Galllpolo~

l

Gf ~uA~~=. 0.:.,:.": ~=~

Rings Pro-1930 US Currency

Lost! Black Short Lab Blue Collar
Wifh License Answers To "K K "

Georges Creek Road. Reward I

New Store
urs .
For Deer Season
Mon-Sat

Wanted to But

i '

r •t"'l:

Sterl1ng, Etc AcQuisii!Ons Jewelry
· MTS Com Stlop, 151 Second

Ad, Rutland Oh 45775 74Q.742·
2421

Call 740·446·0223 Leave Mes·

The Sentinel News Hotline

992-2156

Lost or stolen Sunday, Jack Rus
sell Temer, White w/several brown
spols an5wers to name Patch,
Reward T 0 Stewart Smith run

90

.,.,......,.......,.....,~.....,-~=
Absolute Top Dollar All US Stl·
ver And Gold Coins, Proolsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold

740·446·8060 Room •201

or 992·1101

Fr••

POMEROY
Modem Wood
men of Amenca, Camp 7230, famt ly dmner, 5 30 p.m Saturday at the
Burlingham Modern Woodmen
Hall Members to take covered dtsh,
camp to furntsh sandwtches, ctder
and donuts

245·9094

(740) 992·2753

20 Yrs Exp • Ins Owner

., ,.....,.

IMMfrMATEOpEMHQ

1

lull lime auctioneer, complala
auction
service
Licensed
166 Ohio &amp; WeSI Vlrgln&lt;a, 304
773-5785 Or 304-773-5447

Walker Coon Hound ,
Male, Lost In Thurman Area 740-

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

-

Male Poodle to g•veaway, gray,
neu1ered, 740 992 33Ei0

Found

CONSTRUCTION

HouHI&lt;ftptr· lor dl..- ~~
tieing auornay In Cotumbua~·~~
I~ some care duties, 'l)OIII, ~~
s lory, 614-267-!53M
It~

':~
Full·Time Management Poailloft . ..•
Wllh Local Retail Jewelry Slor( •:&lt;~
Aelall And Compuler Backgn~und •~~
Necessary Bontllls Avallabill;.!
A 1 A 1 11 Fi J try: ..-_

740·36H26ti

SMITH'S

Street, Middleport. Thursdays

Ohio License lf7693 740 989·

110 Help Wa~ ~ -.

Cats &amp; klnens 10 give away 740· 2i123
992·9937
Billy Goble Aucllonoor, 740·992·
Double oven gas range 740·992· 7!502
3090
Rick Pearson Auction Company,

Found Male Husky Intact, Collar
70 lb&amp; V1cln11y Cheshire Off 554,

If you've got a computer,

existing Peoples

750 East

Auction

16 while American geese. 740and Flea Mer'ket
949·23 17
Bill Moodllpaugh Auctioneering
2 Long Haired Kllltns, 1 Black &amp; Complalt Aucl!onaerlng Servlc·
While , 1 All While Booh BeaUIIIul. es Consignment aucllon· Mill

33795 Hiland Rd.

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

Bank
on it!
from wherever you

To pla(e an ad c.u11992-2156

· Sales Representative
' ''
·L
Larry Schey

Culverts: 4" • 48" on stock

Gardeners hear about fall activities

Giveaway

Steve Riffle

Tuppers Plains, OH

740-985·3813

Bat ho·uses are a good idea,
but c;ton't stick you hand in one

"

Stop In And See

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

Ohio

Question: My netghbor has a "bat house" 10 hts yard l th10k tits a bad
id~ to encourage bats to be around humans because of the nsk of rabtes He
laughs at my concern and says that they are bcncfictal because of the large
number of msects they eat What do you thmk'
,t\IISwer: Rab1es 1s a senous vuai tllness that attacks the central nervous
system of mfected humans and uhtmately results 10 death The vorus 1s
acquired by exposure to the sahva of onfected mammals. usually from a btte
It bas never been a particularly common ollness for humans, but 11 os relatively frequent tn anomals Because we humans come 10 contact wtth other
animals, mcludmg bats, the nsk of fabtes remaons real
The magnotude of the rabtes nsk, parucularly from bats , os a concern best
exeressed by the reahty ot numbers Sonce 1980 there have only been 36
reported cases of rabtes m humans on the Untied States Therefore , the real
risk of you or me actually gett10g rabtes wtlhm the next year IS consoderably
les~ than etther of our chances for hlltong the Super Lotto On the other hand.
of those 36 cases of rabtes that have been reported to the Centers for Dtscase
Control and Preventoon, 21 - or nearly 60 percent - were due to bats The
bat ongm of the dtsease has been confirmed , accordmg to the CDCP, by
~ither analysos of vtral DNA on autopsy of the vtcltms or a h1 s1ory of a bat
bile, or both
.Desptte the low occurrence ot human raboes, between 16,000 and 39,000
people reqUire "rabtes shots" each year after havtng been bmen by a potentia"y mfected ammal Bttes from a netghborhood dog, though unfortunately frequent, have low nsk ol raboes because of the requtred rabtes vacconatiobs of dogs m our country More frequent earners of thts deadly vuus are
wtld antmals, particularly raccoons, skunks, bats and groundhogs
The deadly consequences of raboes can be prevented by treatment Thts
COQststs of a senes of shots gtven after the bote but before any symptoms of
the d1sease appear - a procedure called post-exposure vaccmauon Once
symptoms begm, the d1sease cannot be treated and os unoformly fatal'
.Rab1es shots were once qutte pamful Fortunately, th1s has tmproved. but
they still aren't pleasant In addttoon, they are qUJte expenstve The necessary
senes costs between $1,000 and $2,000 1 Consequently, rabtes shots should
on{y be used when necessary
;Ab1te from a healthy appeanng and prevwusly 1mmumzed nctghborhood
dog has almost no nsk of rabtes and makes postexposure vaccmatton unnecessary. A bne from an obvtously stck dog, cat or ferret, or a bne from any
skijnk, raccoon, fox, bat or other w1ld camtvore ts another matter. Your doctor wtll want etther confirmation through laboratory tests on the anomal that
,tl was not rabid, or he or she wtll begm giVIng you the rabtes vaccone shots
promptly.
The current recommendatiOn for vaccmatton after exposure to bats ts a
btl, diffe~nl. Th1s tS probably because tt ts posstble to be bmen by a bat and
not realtze 11. Accordong to the CDCP, shots are recommended m the following situauons, unless the bat can be captured for study
- You awaken to find a bat m your room, or
;-~A bat ts discovered in the room of a chtld or of an adult w1th reduced
montal capactty - mcludmg from drugs or alcohol. Remember that stmply
seeing a bat can't g1ve you rabtes.
,Workers m rabtes research laboratones, vetennanans, anomal control
ofllcers and spelunkers are at h1gher nsk and should constder pre-exposure
raliies immumzations.
So back to your dtscusston w1th you netghbor The number of msects a
bat consumes over the course of a summer ts astoundmg Therefore, I thmk
that bat houses are a good 1dea, but I sure wouldn't put one by my bedroom
window, stmply because my screen someumes falls out
One m the yard, as your netghbor has, poses almost no nsk to you or your
fapnly
"FamUy Medicine" is a weekly column, To submit questions, write to
John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine,
Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio 45701.

The Dally Sentinel• _
Pa,ge I

~~~--------~----------~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~====~·
40
80
, ·~

~edicirze
John

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Work Port· Tlmt /Fuii·Tima. Dt•·~,
monslrallng Beauty PrOdUC\1 ,.
With An International Coametft

Compeny, Coli

Ao~.

J

140·ol4 l)lo.Y;

1HZ

' Iff

140

BuaiMU

.•. •

Trllnlng

,.,,,,

--~~--~--~--~ ;,,
.QIIIIpotta ca- CCIIIIgl
(Ciretr8 CloallD Homo)

'

C111Todayl7-.-, ;• &gt;~
1-I00-21o4'114!12,
' i .,

lllglt0*11?48. • ' ·' ·
' ,.; h

l

�•
'

page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

•

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

•

PHILLIP

ALDER

$$$ OVERDUE BILLS' I $$$ Con
val NO APPLICATION FEES I 1

Masters Doctorate By Corre

600 863 9006 Ext 936 www help
pay blls com

spondence Based Upon Prior Ed
ucatlon And Short Study Course

For FREE Information Book et

Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800 964-B316

180 Wanted To Do
Georges Portable Sawmt ll don t
haul your logs to the mtll JuSt ca I

304-675 1957
Handyman seeking work ava 11
able now 740 949-1035
ot
Honest Dependable Wee kly
House Cleamng Reasonable
Rates Free Est mates (304)675

2B92
Jlms Orywa I &amp; Constructton
New Constructton &amp; Aemoae 1
Drywall S•d•ng Roof s Add

lions Pa1nt1ng etc (304)674

4623 Of (304)674-0155

Reliable Lady W II Do House
clean ng Or Help You Wllh Your

Fall Houseclean ng Call 0 ana

740-245 5104
W U do babyslltmg m my nome 1
have references (304 )675-4637
Will Do Pa nt ng &amp; Odd Jobs

$4 00 A Hour 740 367.()140

l

sohdate Debts' Same Day Appro

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GREE QUICKLY Bacholo s

W II mow grass clean out old
buildings old houses etc All
l'telp s apprec1ated 740 949

0709
Will provide caregtv1ng lor elder
ly Male or Female Monday thru

Friday 9-5 (304)675 2617

W t1 take ca re or elderly 1n my
home

experienced

740 992

SFREE

CASH

NOW$

Fro m

Wealthy Fam lies Unload ng Mtl
hons Of Cottars To Help M mm1ze
The r Taxes Wr te Immediately
Wmd falls 847 A SECOND AVE

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GUARANTEED

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Pre App rova l By Phone 1 800

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Repay Guaranteed $500
$50 000 Debt Consohdatton Per
sonal Needs Bustness 1 800

511 2640
BANKRUPTCY $79+ Stops Gar
n•shments• 0 vorce $99-t Stop
Foreclosu re $350 Bus ness Op
portun t es + Tan ngt FreshStart
1 888 419 9417 www freshstarlu
sa com
CASH Or LOAN! Fa rm Cap11a1
Wtll Purchase Or Loan Agatnst
Your Governmen t Farm Pay
menls (C RPIPFC) Call Farm

Capila
622B)

sea FARM ACT (327

CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monlhly P'aymenl" 20 50"/o Save
Thousands 01 Do lcHS In Interest
Non Profit TCC 000 7"'J 3844

CREDIT PROBLEMS Stop Hero
We Can Help Loans Ava•lable
$3 000 And Up No Fee 1 877

663 9269 E&gt;1 221
CREDIT PROBLEMS
STOP
HEREII WE CAN HELP I LOANS
AVAILABLE $3 000 AND UP
CALL TOLL FAEE 1 B77 663
9269 E&gt;1 231
CREDIT REPAIR I AS SEEN ON
TVI Erase Bad Cred•t legally
Free Info 888-659-2560

7526

FREE TERM LIFE QUOTE lock

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

$20 $40 /HOUR Easy Medical
Billing Full Training Computer

Required Call 1 aaB 669 7905
Ext 700

$35 /Month ReSidential Long D1s
tan ce Plant Oe /MINUTE! $75 I

Month UNLIMITED CALL 24 17
Agents Wanted Huge MLM In
come Potential Toll Free 1 877

921 0713 (lv

Msg ) E Maol

olensworld Oaol com

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bust
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NOT to send money through the
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theofferng

2 I Centa PHONE CARD Ao
ute $750 $3 000 /Wk CASHI
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matlon to PO Box 976 Mason

wv 25260

ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
S1 000 A Day l&lt;o Sell ng Nol
MLM For Free Information Pack
ago Call 1 800 786 BB49 24 Hrs
XT27
AT HOME DATA ENTRY SOUT
STANDING INCOME$$1 Process
Medical !Dental Cia ms Computer
Requ!fed Wtli Train 1 800 289

4159Ex1 54

In LOW Rates Now! Excellent La
cal Serv1ce 1 877 TermOnly
www TermOnly com

GET OUT OF DEBTI REDUCE In
terest Rates! REDUCE Monthly
Payments 20 40% Call 800 700
6812 x 1001 For FREE Consults
tton www debtdebt com

GET YOUR CASH NOW' Oldest
Buyers Of Structured Sentemenls
Annu ttes And Government Farm
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Call Settlement Capttai 1 600
959 0006 www settlementcapi
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Need A loan? Try Debt Consoli
dat on $5 000 $200 000 Bad
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EK1 215

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No

v

Office
sit Necessary Up To
$500 Instantly Call Toll Free 1

B77 EAALYPAV 1Si ADVANCE
FREEILICICC70036
RECEIVING PAYMENTS? In
vestor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Financed Mortgage
Real Estate Contract Insurance
Annutty High est Pnces Free

Ouo1es Why Wal1? Call Rlcn 1
Boo 888-6450

230

Professional
Services

Mounts Tree Service •The Tree
Prolessiona s Bucket Truck
Serv1ce Top Trim Removal
Stump Grinding Free Estimates
Fully Insured Works Comp Bid
wen OH Call And Save 1 600

B3B 9568 740 38B 964B Owner
R1ck Mount

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE

10 20 Localions $4K SI OK
$4 000 -t/Mo Income
ALL
CASH! I 00% F1nance Available

1 666 582 3345

ing NOT Replacing Long Cracks
In Windsh ields Free V deo 1

/Canada

Send Us A One Page Form We
Oo Tne Rest No Direct Selling
Free Info Package 1 800 831
2385 24 Hrs Ext 63

FULLER BRUSH CO Is Looking
For People Who Wou ld Like To
Start Their Own Business Work

lng From Home NO INVEST
MENT Needed L1m tad Ttme Only
Call 800 882 7270 Ematl fuller

onOaol com
MEDICAL BILLE A Up io $15
$45 /Hr Medical B1llmg Software
Company Needs People To Pro
cess Medical Claims From Home
Training Provided Must Own
Computers 1 800 434 55 18 Ext

667

MEDICAL BILLING Unllm ted In
come Potential No Experience
Necessary Free Information &amp;

All real estate advert smg m
thts newspaper ts subJect to
the Federal Fatr Hous ng Act
of 1968 whrch makes it tllegal
to advert1se any preference
I m tat on or d scnmma110n
based on race color rei g on
sex tamH al status or nahonal
or g n or any Intent on to
make any such prefe ence
I mnauon or diSCriiTllnat on
Th1s newspaper w111 not
knowmgly accept
actvertiSBments for real estate
whtch s 1n v10lat on of the
taw Our readers are hereby
mformed that all dwelltngs
adven1se&lt;l In this newspaper
are ava !able on an equal
opportunity bas1s

CD ROM 1nves1men1 $4 995
$8 995 Financing Ava•lable Is
land Automated Med1cal Servlc

REAL ESTATE

OS Inc BOO 322 1139 Ext 050
Void In KY IN CT
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Make AI Leasl S5 000 /Week
Simple Easy And FREE Check
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Colt Glvea You A Complete

Package wun Montorlng And

Brick
Ranc h
3Be drooms
28aths 2 Car Garage 1 2Acre 1
Year Old PI Pleasant S125 000

(304)675 B959

Sctlult Fiesta 14X70 3 Bedrooms
1 Bath V1nyl S d ng Sh ngle Roof
2 x6 Walls Total Electric Free AJ
C Priced To Move French City
Homes Point Pleasant WV 304

675-1400
Schult New General on Sectional
28 x52 Featur ng Schul! Country
K tchen 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths
Sale Priced French City Homes
Poml Pleasant WV 304 675

1400
Schult New Generat on Sectional
28 x64 LA Pam ly Room Ftre
place 4 Bedrooms 2 Baths
Thermopana Windows &amp; Much
Morel Pnced To Move! French
City Homes Pont Pleasant WV

Used S ngle Wide Around $100

Per Monlh Call 1 Boo 948 567B

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

HOME FORECLOSURES NO
MONEY DOWNI NO CREDIT

Ou et Close To Gallipolis Some
Aestrlc1klns 74(}245 5776

2 44 Acres Homesite Green
Townsh p Galha County Scentc

NEEDED! TAKE OVER VERY

3

LOW PAYMENTS' 1 BOO 916
9191 E•l H5023

(304)8823383

Texas Road Ga lltpo Is City
Schools F1ve Rooms And Partial
Basement Owner Wtil Finance

W1h 10% Down 740-441 1108

+

Acres on State Route 143

8 2 acres Bashan Ad 14 acres
Morn1ng Star Rd owner lmanctng
avalab4e 7~0..992 5072

GALLIA COUNTV
23 ACRES
2 m11es Off SR 7 &amp; SA 216 South
Of Gall polls S nglowldes Allowed
Rough Most y Wooded Road AI
ready Cutin $27 000
20WOODED ACRES
Great For Hunting Near Patriot
Off SA 141 &amp; SA 233 $23000 On

:.:::.::..:;:...:..:..:.::::..:.;.:..:::..:...:..:.:::::._.1

Now Road Built Tna1 Continues

Three bedroom all electric rancn
home wtth attached garage
fenced back yard large lot at
Meadow Land Estates Pt Pleas
ant $600 month plus references
and depostt 304 824 2480

Into Wf!tne National Forest

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
91 Mansion mobile home 14x60
two bedroom one bath total alec
Inc stove relrlge ator central air
Ready ro move $12 500 740

949-Q016

MEIGS COUNTY
Near Danville &amp; Rutland Oft SA
325 5 &amp; 10 Acres $9 500-t Call
For Free Maps On These And
Other Properties In Soutnern
OhiO
Anthony Land Co Ltd

1 IIOQ-213-8365
www counlrylyme com

360

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy land 30 500 Acres

5 Bedrooms 2 112 Baths over
2 000 sq ft for less than $400
mo FREE delivery &amp; set I 800

14x70 W1th Expando Good Con

1972 Needs Small Repairs 7~0

388 9830
t962 14 &gt;60 Clay1on 2 Bed
rooms 2 Baths Condition Good
Asking $4 000 Contact After 6

PM 74D-446-1749
1987 Kawasaki t&lt;X80 New Jug
New P1ston Great Condbon Runs
Great 740 367 0308
1990 Danville 14x70 2 Bedrooms
2 Baths Exce lent Condttton 740

446 177B

1997 Flletwood Mdbl le Home
Partially Furnished Hea t Pump

Eleclnc 740-367.()565

2 Bedrooms Largo LA K11Chen
D nlng Area $400 00/mo Oepostt
Requ~r ed No Pels! (740) 245
5053 after 4 OOpm
2 Houses On Lovers Lane Over
lookmg Atver Each With 2 Bed
roms Small House $350/Mo. B g

House $450/Mo 740 446 1243
74D-446 1615
3 Bedroom House C~nlral Heat/
AH 2 Car Garage 2 1/2 Bath
Famt y Room $550 per month
plus Depostt One Year Lease

(304)675 7873

ooo

For Lease 2
Sq Ft Execu
t1ve Home Near Golf Course

A so 2 Bedroom Tra ier 7~0-~46
0890
Aacln~

three bedroom $400
month plus ut I lies $200 depos t
no pets re fer ences required

74(}949-2621

for Rent
14 '

70 Mobile Homo 2 br

$200 dep $350 rant no pets
nice In Gallipolis Ferry call lor

Down If Ouallllod 740 446 3093
Qakwood Gaii!)Ohs Onlyll

plus $150 doposol 740 742 2714

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

&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air

Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
cond t10ned $260 $300 sewer
water and trash Included 740

ute 7

Cash For Remaining Payments
On Property Sold! Mortgages!
Annuities! Settlements! lmme
diatt Quoteslll •Nobody Beats
Our Prices • National Contract

7576 Aller Noon
OBO

Information

{740) 367

$40 500 00

3 Bedrooms 1 1/2 Baths Brick
Ranch Laundry Room 2 Car Ga
rage Approx 1 Acre 740 446
1393. Or 740-448-6612

or WOOkOn&lt;IS 74D-44H!952

Area 740-38B 9162

2BR Trailer Central Air New
Heating System Quiet Neighbor
hood Washer/Dryer Hook Up No
Pets Second Trailer on left on
Roush Ferrell Drive of Camp
Conley Road $320 month plus

dlposn
3 BR Tratlar in Gaitipolis Ferry
All Elec 12x65 Private Lot

Llmlled Ollar 1999 Double Wide
3 Bedroom 2 Bath $1799 Down
$275 00 per month Delivered

an&lt;t sol up cao 1 800-948 5678 "'
Moving OUt Of AIM Mus1 sell at
sacrifice 98 S W Like New
(304)736-9102
MOVING OUT OF AREA Musl
Sell At Sacrafoce 1998 SW Like
Now 304 733 9102
New 3BA 2 Ba1h 14 Wodo $500
Down $21

$200 a month $150 doposl1 No
water

pori From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Hous ng Oppor
lunt1ies

qulred Aller 5 740 446 0101
Before 5 74(}446-3481
Two bedroom apartment for rent
co mpletely furnished washer/
dryer all uUIIttes paid Available
November 1st Please call 740

992 2292
Upstatrs Furnished 3 Rooms
Bath Clean No Pets! References
&amp; Deposit Required 740 446

o per mo

Free Air 1

800-691-6777

New 4BR 16 wde $500 Down

$245 per mo Free Air 1 BOO
891 6777

COMPUTERS

SO Down Low

Monthly Payments Y2K Compli
ant Almost Everyone Approved
Call FIROCOM A1vanced Tech

oologles t 8Q0.617 3476
Firewood for sa le $25

a truck

load 740 949 0605
FirewOOd For Sale 740 258 1922
Firewood for sale All Hardwoods
Full Size 314 Ton Truckload De

like 1o buy older RCA Dlrocl TV
:I.~ I ~

leave

message

OKIII AlmOSI Every BliJI}lOSS Ap
proved Low Monthly Payments

1 B88-671 4300
Grubbs Plano tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
Hawaiian Terlyaki Recipes $3
SA S E
Kamaaina
Foods
PMB522 4224 Wa1a1ae Avenue

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebull1 In Slack
Cell Ron Evans 1 800 537 952B

51 o

Household
Goods

For Sale Reconditioned wash
ers dryers and refugerators

Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jackson Avenue (304)B75-738B
GOOD USED

APPLIANCES

Washers dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76

VIne S1roei Call 740 446 7398
1 888 818 0128
Rocker Recliner

Mauve
Like
(304)675 2817

New

Ugh!

$150

Maple Table w/1 Leaf &amp; 4 Chairs

$125

Maple Orop Leaf w/4

Mollohan carpets Quality Carpet
At Affordable Prices 202 Clark

cnapel Road 740 446 7444 74D388 0173

Nice Unfurntshed 3 Bedroom
Apartment Point Pleasant 740

4460041 After5PM

New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga

Stop And See Us 740 446-4782

1 Bedroom Apartment In Galllpo

lis Water Paod $265/Mo Oopoill
Rtqu red No Pets 740 446-4043
After 6 PM

520

Sporting
Goods

Horton Hunter Supreme Cro11
bow Slxarrow Quiver Sling SWI
vels ThiCk Styrofoam Target

1 Bedroom 2 Blocks From Unl
verslly Rto $235/Mo Plus Dt
posit Avatlable October 12th

740-388 9994
1 Bedroom A/C W/D Hook Up
Near Arbors Nursing Home No
Pets Oulel locations S27g/Mo
+ Ultlittes 740-446-2957
2 br apt tn New Haven $275 a
mon Includes water trash refrig
erator&amp; atove 304 773 5577

leave message

Never Used In Woods New Co81
Over $300 Sole Price $200 740245 935~

530

Antlqu•

Buy or sell Rivarlne AntiQues
1124 E Main Street on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00

a m 1D 6:00 p m Sun&lt;tay 1 00 1D
6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Ru11
Moore owner

,,

pies 740 441-1982
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Furnaces Installed As Low As
$26 oo A Monlh W tn Approved
Credit Easy Over The Phone
Bank Financing Huge Inventory
01 lntertherm Mtller &amp; Coleman
Furnaces Heat Pumps And
Skor~ng

Ko1s $299 95

Doors &amp; Windows Water Heat
ers Anchors Plumbmg &amp; Electr1
cal Parts Bennetts Mobile Home

HTG &amp; CLG 740 446 9416 Or I
800-B72 5967 Gallipolis OH

Other Mise

7~0 ~46

0639

Fruita &amp;
Vegetables

A~

Tav.lors Berry Patch Call In Eve

ngs 74D-245 9047
Walnuts Bought At Troyars
Woodcraft Open Monday And
Thursday And Saturday Starling

9/25 Till 10/30199 9 Milos West
01 Gallipolis On 141

930

Mus1ang

Backnoe 740 446 04 70

630

•

YOU MIGHT GIT

SOMETHIN' TOMORRY

1993 D 150 Dodge Ram 4&gt;4 1
$6 000 74D-38B 9888
..

rlos C Plants (304)675-2B56

1996 Wlndstar 21 600 Moles Rel
$22 07~ Asking $18 ooo,.
740-446-6967Af1erHM
• "

(304)4511-1727

Gourds will Sale Whole Sale!

(740) 245-58B7
Premium Firewood Oak &amp; Ash

$50 load Full Slzo Pick Up De
livered 74(}992-4568
RCA Color Trac 2d00 console
TV 25' 740 992 6777
STEEL BUILDINGS CANCEL
LATIONS! MUST LIOUIOATEII
25X30 30X4B 45Xj0 55X160

Club Can Sale Salur&lt;Jay October
9 1999 t 2 00 PM t,.awrence

Six m nlalura horses for sale reg

lstered 74(}742-2050
Two registered quarter t'lot'ses tor
sale cal 740 698 3200

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Round bales of hay tor sale 740

TRANSPORTATION

71 0 Autos for Sale
$500 CARS FROM $500111 Buy
Pollee Impounds &amp; Repos Fee

CALL NOW For Llsllngsl 1 800
319 33231&lt;2156
87 Z 24 dual hood scope sun
roof 28 fuel injection automatk:

1996 Yamaha T•mberwoll A~
wheeler with 1996 tilt trailer new

muddors $2BOO 740 992 4163 1

after 5pm

,

'

1999 400 EX Exco11en1 Shapel•
$4 400 080 740-44B 1627
:

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
er 70 HP: Chrysler Motor Motor~

BIG NATE

ouldr)ve llrs1 $3~00 OBO 740
992 1506 days or 740 949 2644
evenings

1995 17

Hydr~

Sporl 90 hp

Johnson till tnm trolling motor &amp;
tra ter ready to go $7 800
19~7 18 Bass Tracker Pro Team
60 hp mariner w1lh trolhng motor
Mercury Dual Console built In
battery charger trailer $8 900
1998 24 Sweetwater pontoon 90
hp Johnson tandem axle witti

vys Jeeps And Sport Utilities
Fee Requtred Call Nowl 800 772

Cy

ln&lt;ter 3 Speed On Column 27 000
Original Miles $2 500 F rm 740
379 2926
1970 El Camino SS Clone 350
Rebuilt Motor 350 Turbo Trans
mission Came From Florida New

19B5 Mon1e Carlo $400 740
367.()331 74(}992-6976

199B 1a aoo Series Nitro 120 11p

cellen1 Condlllon $7 500 OBO
740 446-4619
1986 Olds Clara 4 Doors Auto
Air New Ttres Runs Good $850

Or BoS1 Offer 740-44110B3

760

rl~s

&amp;

Chooses
Type ol fly
Face part
A Chaplin
Army base
Greasy
Healthy
Gaelic
Perennial
candlda1e
Harold33 Large roden1s
38 Place
40 Chle1 artery
41 Remainder
42 Electrical unol
43 60 minutes
44 Western
defense org
46 Public
outburst
47 Division word
48 Naoty
50 Close relatove
52 Very warm
53 Del bread

Pass

Eaol
Pass
All pass

J

Senstble people e•erc1se regular
ly Keepmg f1t mcreases one s
chances of a l onger hfe
When you learn to play bndge tt
ts hke a lrammg program You mas
ter the d1fferent moves that work
most of the t1me However nothtng
ts a wmner every ttme You must be
llex1ble
In part1cular never stop countmg
whether you re the declarer or a
defender In thts deal how would you
expect the play to go m three no
trump? A ssume West leads the nor
mal heart Jack
Do you agree wtth North s one
diamond b1d? Obv1ously tits text
book However 11 wouldn't be stl
ly to start wtth two no trump True
the count1s low for that openmg but
the excellent stx card dtamond suttts
worth a couple of extra pomts
South won the ftrst tnck wtth the
heart queen Th1s was the correct play
because 11 left East wondenng tf h1s
partner had led from a SUit headed by
the K J 10
Declarer played a d1amond to
dummy s ktng wh1ch held and con
unued wtth the diamond queen Now
the spolhght was on East
If he had returned h1s partner s
sun "'man} would thoughtlessly do
declarer :vould have cla1med II
tncks three spades three hearts and
live dtamonds But East paused to
co unt d eclarer s tncks He cou ld see
at least mne two spades two hearls
and five d1amonds So the only hope
for the defense was to take four club
tncks now
East sw1tched to the club four
West won wtth the ace and relurned
a club to hts partner's kmg Another
club through South s I 0 8 mto West s
J 9 tenace defeated the contract

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C~ebrity

C pher cryptograms ere c ealed lrom quota! ons by lamous people past and p es0111
Each leller n tt1e c pher alartdslcr anolt1er Todays cue X equos P

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RD

Budget Priced Transmtaslons.

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DOS

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P G R
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MUODIWOR
ADO
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION "One of the slnkong dofferences belween a cal and a
he os that a cal has only none hves - Mark Twaon

won

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IG

SARVA T
J--,;~6~;.~7~"1~:::..:;..•1f"".,.l-f

e ~~;c:~:~~

(304)895-3394

To Over 10 000 Transmissions

.

s1c needs food cloth1ng and a
tax

- -

-

Complete the chuckle quoled

by f1ll1ng '" the mm•ng words
you develop from step No 3 below

lETTERS TO

IIIIIIII

SCRAIM.ETS ANSWERS

eve Joints 740 245 5677

Uproar. Exile- Apart - League· PEOPLE

0

&amp; A Au1o Ripley WV (304)372,
3933 or 1 800 273-9329

790

Don 1g&lt;t nung by hogh proctS'
Shop th&lt; clom(lr:d tectiOO

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

IWEDNESDAY

condition $1400 1979 Chovj
Camaro 740-985-3839
~

brakes $3 500 00 OBO (740; :
441 0584

Runs Good $2 000 OBO 740
245 9396

eoo

~-------------- :
SERVI CES

•t

8-1-0--Ho-m-e-- :
Improvement•

t

~
l
Unconditional lifetime guarantee
IIASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Local references furnished Es

1obllol!id 1975 cat1 24 Hra (740)
448 0870 1 eoo 287 0578 Rog
ora WaterptoOflng
'

1993 Mercury Sable 3 0 V 6 En
or 99 000 Miles $3 900 Phone
740-002 7167
1994 Cad !lac OeVtlle loaded ex
cellent condition call 740 992

750B ~fter 5pm

Block brick sewer p pes wind
ows lintels e1c Claude Winters

t994 Dodge Shadow 2 2 5
Speed Air $2 700 740 367 7253

Rio Grande OH Call 740 245
5121

1994 Pantlac Grand Am GT 4

All types of ma&amp;onry work brick
block stone concrete 20 yeara
experience free estimates 304

773-9550

Appllanca PaMa An~ Strvlct All
Nama Branda Over 25 Years Ex
parlance All Work Guaranteed

French City May1ag 740 446
77Q5

Doors 64 000 Actual Miles Full
Power SE&gt; 995 740-446-2957

1 Female Weimaraner Puppy

Had lholl &amp;Reg (304)675 3052

ll~l nglton a Baaemo~1 Wa1tr
1997 camaro 40 coo miles
od 74D-669-01104
1997 Pon11ac Bonneville 55 O&lt;fO
Miles Loaded Take Over Pay
ments ol $381 74q-367 7755

16 Silver Anniversary Corvette
Call (740) 446 9l51

Tzu Puppy 7weeks old 1st
ahota/wormed Vet Checked

8~ Cimarron good cond clean

(304)675-1275

875-4575

xtra tires&amp; rims $1 795 00 304-.

OCTOBER 61

1986 Yellowslon' Travel Camp (
or 31 Fully Loaded (304)B95 ~
SW.: or (304je75-1437
~

1992 Olsmoblle Achleva 2 Doors

1991 Plymouth laser Automatic
Transm ission Power Everything

"Laws are l1ke clothes ' the elder statesri'ihn lectured
"They should be made to fit the PEOPLE "

•

1990 Grand Am White 4 Doors
Auto AJC New Battery Brakes
Fresh Trans Runs Good $1 SOO

glne Cranberry With Gray Inter!

AKC Registered Fomalo Shih

I NT

North
I t
3 NT

Aluminum Cap kn Long Bed Ford
Ranger
Late 80 s Model

1985 Fleetwood Travel Trailer '
30ft nice shape new tires an~ •

OIAMONDS FOR LESSI THE IN
TERNETS BEST PAICESI NO
COMPUTER NEEDED LICENSE
INSURED BONDED CALL TOLL
FREE B77 726-3753

Shots Wormed Ready To Go!

Wesl

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

3940

(740) 446-4782

$175 74(}388-9325

21
22
23
24
25
27
28
29
31

•

1966 Shasta 17 c:ampttr good

www dlarnondsellers net WE SELL

AKC Registered Boslon Terrier

review

brakes $13 700 74D-992 6520

New Replacement Gas Tanks
1gas Bu1ck Grand National Ex

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

Puppy Female snow Oualltyl

Soulh

I,

and Engines All rypos Acceu

Paint 740 256-1071

74(}256-6203

5 Pupploe 2 Males 3 Females
~~mo Spl1z $75 Each Molher &amp;
Father On Premises No PaP&amp;tS
740-448 3281

~

f\O'N aNI\&amp;. 111.1\1 f)JOC( ill't
l !.0!£ ~fiNI!:, 1~TO 6N~
1\ PQIJI&gt;II&gt; I

I

$100 $500 &amp; UP POLICE IM
POUND Honda s Toyo1a s Cho

59 000 Moles $4 295 19B9 Pon11
ac 6 ooo $2 195 Cook Motors
740-448 01 03

Pets for Sale

~

___________________ ,

742 2005

&amp;lra(klr $6 700

Wa1erl lne Specla) 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1 200 PSI

Building
Supplies

"":,,.

CO player $2000 OBO call 740
992 9190

1991 Corsica 69 000 Milos
$2 B95 1990 Boreua G T $2 495

Work Horse Work Pony Antique
Farm Wagon Farm Machinery

..

74o.A48-3248

1979 Slarcraft 23 cuddy cabrJ
boa1 Inboard V 8 new cover
very good condition no tra ler no

\obu Don r Call Us We Bolh LoSBI
74(}446-6308 I 800-291-()096

Jackson Oh10 1 800-537 9528

s P.m

needs llnle work $650 (304)576-)
4016

OBO 740-441 1083

FIHinga In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

~

Good Condotlon Boll D
$900 Cell 740 446 4514 Or AU

~,~97~1~S~.-a~S1-ar~16~~~rih~a-u~l-w~n\~a--i~ &gt;

92'l'o Gas Furnaces Heat Pumps
Duct Systems Free Estimates II

pres~on

1985 Kawsaki Motorcycle

a

t 9BB Chevy Sprlnl Now

$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com

• :!"

1994 YZ 125 new transmi'Ssion
mostly new englna runs like
new bike includes helmet and 111
many extras $1495 OBO 740 ;.

green broke $750 74D-992 0357

bearings head rebulll ne.W
Drakoa &amp; Irani uros (304)895

WARMUP

Lowered Two Inches Lots ...
Chrome Excellent CondHIQrt•

5 year old Palom no mara gentle

bike $80 10 speed ladles blko

3045

Motorcycles

~tor

Truck ca mpe r $500 exercise
bike $50 18 speed 26 men s
24 • $40 gravity edge exerciser
$100 bathroom cabit'18t $25
childs vanity $10 call 740 742

Bau~~

3 Pogmy goa1S 5 wks old .t:U
Blllys $50 00 each (304)675
5906

1964 Ford Falcon 4 Doors 6

Ping Pon laDle Paid S200 00 will
Sale $60 oo Pumpkins and

t~lls

$11 000 740-446 0947

9 Gumbo
vegetable
11 Plumbing
problem
12 Suppresse s
13 Draft agcy
18 French mont h
20 Entnuslast oc

View
Not home
Despises
Cooler

By Phillip Alder

I

$500 Reward for arrast/Conv of
person(&amp;) who took Saddle from
my barn at Gallipolis Ferry Cha

19B1 Harley Davidson Low RIUo

5
6
7
8

3 Malayan
sailboat
4 New Haven tree

Don't rely entirely
upon training

,

740 3811-8358

power

crealure

35 Delays
36 SingerKing Cole

1

19B4 CJ7 Wllh Hard1op 32 Inch •
Mlckeys Wllh Ultra A ms $5 950 ;
080 74(}44 Hl68B
I

740

• K 6 4

Openmg lead •

Truck ~

1999 Expodlllon Eddie
loaded._ 12 000 miles Wnl!"
$34
flml (304)675-7725
"'

53 2
A 3

Vulnerable Both
Dealer North

Chevy Truck 1/2. Ton 4x4 Goo~
For Upcoming Winter $3 500

1 Appaloosa Gelding 3 Years
Old One 4 Year 010 Paint Mare
One 3 Year Old Appaloosa Geld
ng One 1/2 Quarter 1/2 Morgan
11 Year Old Mare ~ Arab ian
Geldings Orl8 3 Years Old One 7
Years Old In stallment Plan To
Good Home s With 25% Down

t

Aneww to Previoua Puzzte

• 7 5 4

I

2 Purebred Umousln Bulls F.m
Sa le One Red One Black

•

37 Type of
dancing
1 Manages
39 Vogue
6 Buckeye State 40 Guart1nlee1
10 TosMd
42 'How ewfull
12 Fake doctors
45 Fr holy woman
14 Carlllln
46 Edge
chemical
49 Huaky like a
compound
voice
15 Sayo
S1 Place of
16 School org
rellgloua
17 - - little
devotion
teapot"
54 Sheep meat
19 Important
55 Honda rival
limos
56 Horee color
20 Meala
57 Grand23 Hard resin
National Park
26 Monogram on
a croaa
DOWN
27 Be In debt
Potato30 Horus teet
32 More uncanny
(anack Item)
2 Electlrom
34 Crawling

• 10 8 5 2

1986 FO'Id Co~verslon Van Ask j
mg S2 000 740'379 2926
~

Livestock

•98642

eJt09B6
t I0 2
• A J 9 3
Soulh

• QJ 5
e KQ7

1

Sk d Loader

East

• I0 7

1997 Chevy Tahoe K 1500 47~ :
Milos Loaded $25 900 199' ,
Dodge W 250 Diesel 5 Spoed •
Loadod $32 500 740-245-0378
~

May Trade dn Later 4x4
Chevrolet 740 256-0434

$6 750 Or Trade It For Termite

West

1997 3~0 ~l 7 ~ Diesel Automat. ,
lc Cab &amp; cneuls 38 000 milts
A I Condi11on (740) 258-6056
\

1983 Cl'levy Blazer New Paint

610 Farm Equipment

7470 EXT 7832

560

:

------------------:
730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
;

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1ure (740) 446 1004 (740) 446
4039 any ttme Out Bulavilie P1ka

550

740-379-ml After 8 PM

740 387-0331 74(}992-6976

Ntce used furntture and Ap
pliances Johnson s Used Furnl

coun1SI1 800-462 79;!0 x 14

MERCHANDISE

580

896 8211

Immediate Oellver)ltl Huge Dis

(304)8B2 2436

{nen1 cal 74D-992 9191

Lose Up To 30 lbs In 30 Days
For $38 Ask About Free Sam

Valley View Apartments R1o
Grande Oh Now Accapling appllcallons for lmmed ate occu

lmmodla1oly 74Q-383-l!473

(304)695-3394

Auns Like New Tunneau Cover e
Class 3 Hitch Paint Graphics •

• Q7

UFTSDI~YS
~

53 000 MilOS Long Bod $9 99~ \
7402561142
I

------------------•
1995 s 10 4x4 v 8 4 3 look&amp; a:

tKQJ986

A RlSik!G 11Cf:

150~·~

1995 Dodge Ram Truck

TWo V K C Reg Female Treeing
Walker Pups Four Months Old

lnvalld Bed Rails Grocery Cart

WeedOater 740 446 1826

Uques

Wanted To Rent HUO Approved
3 Bectoom House Or Trailer Pre
ferably In Bidwell Porter &amp; River
Yalley Sc hool District Needed

$1501orf&amp;malos 3047735810

call eve 1(740) 533 91B6 or
(740) 643 1027

Largo Group Of Collectable /An

(740) 245 g170 Monday lhru
Thursday 9 oo 12:00 noon

SLT 4x4 360 Engine Automatic ~

15 Honolulu HI96B16

1519

Sewage and Trash Paid Full lime
Students must meet Oh o Hous
1ng Finance Agency Ouatlflca
t1o ns Senior Cillzens Welcome
EHO For more Information call

Reg1stered German Shepherd
puppies for sale $100 for males

Country Fair Grounds Stears &amp;
He11ers Born &amp; Raised In La
wrance Cou nty For Information

PaMs V nyl

350 V 8 Automatic Transmlst

slon PS PB CD Player Run&lt;
GOOd $1 100 740-446-1849
")

10 06 99

•AK3
e A4

Pick Up

Tires 4x4 Au1Dmalfc fJ/C $2 300'

Need Buyer To Make Oller For

On Slgh1 Management Wa ter

North
19BO

Asking $100 oo (740' 245 5616

740 446-6786

pano Dr 740 446-4525
Now Taking Applications 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments
Includes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740

740256

Manchester Terrier 2 years old
House Trained Very Smart Male
Loves Kids! Needs Good Home•

Brunswick Pool Table 14 Cue
Slicks Gold Crown BUllard Balls
Rack s For Cue St cks $650 Firm

Free PC Computer11 Call Now 11 &amp;
Learn How Internet Merchant
Accounts Custom Websites
New Busmess? Poor Credit?

Grac1ous living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments in Middle

$50 740446B172
6251

lent Shape (304)675-2844

$250/Mo Plus U11IIIIOS Securlly

cha rs $130 Round Oak Antique
Table $165 &amp; Olher old lurn

Apartments
for Rent

One bedroom furnished apart

HUO Homes Approval By Phone
Singles Or Doubl&amp;s 740 446

Bathtub Showerdoors Vanity
Vanity Top With Faucets Com
mode Commode Cabinet Excel

For Lease One Bedroom AC
Apt Corner Of Second And Pine

Lane

garbage (304)675-4088

Nitro WV (304)755

1019

syste m with access card pay

And Key Deposit References Re
qulred No Pets 7~().446 4425

Boston Terrier Pupa No Papers
Part Boston Terrier Part Terrier

R&amp;d Raspberries Now AvallaDitl

Antique dining room sat hutch
comer cabinet claw lagged table
&amp; 6 chairs $2000 11rm 740 742

cash ca ll 740 949

2 Bedrooms In Small Trailer Park
74(}446-11 04

Homes
5885

aoo 101 7912

For sale Prlmestar system also

Want A Home Don t Have Land?

HURRY HURRY HURRYI
OAKWOCO HOMES
BARBOURSVILLE WV
800-383-6862

21 &gt;20 TWO CAR GARAGE Full
/25 Yr Manufacturers warrantee
Comp lete With 10 Overhead I
Door $2 993 00 Can Deliver 1

First Avenue Gallipolis 1 Bed
room Apartment 740 446 1066

French City May1ag 740 448
7795

Ooublewldes Free Decor &amp; Furni
ture

1987 Dodge Caravan Good
Shape Good Tires King Wood
burner 740 258-1424

livered &amp; Slacked $45 (304)BB2
2555

2 Bedroom Mobile Home You
Pay Utilities &amp; Deposr. In Porter

W&amp; Do Hurry Only 10 LOIS loll
800-383-6862

long 45' tal l 27 wide $250
(304 )882 2436

446 0139

992 2167

3563

Sns On Slorys Run Road Off Ro-

Downtown Very n lc~t upstairs 2
Bedroom ali Electric Complete
Kitchen W/0 Non Smokmg! No
Pets! Reference &amp; Oepostt (740)

everytnlng upgraded cathedral
ce ling some furniture stays 2
decks w/ utility building many
extras e!Ccellent cond 304 675
4451 after 5 pm

440

Financed 1 800 800 8446 rural
~s C9l" Or I 307 32(}3337

ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; mov es Call 740 446 2568
Equal HoUsng Oppor1un1ty

Appliances
Recondlttoned
Washers Dryers Ranges Aefr
graters 90 Day Guarantee!

9B 14&gt;70 Clay1on 3 br 2 ba CA

Free Money/Cash Rebates that
can be used towards your down
payment only at OaMwood

160 ACRES /WYOMING Unim
proved land $28 995
$195
Down $269 49 MONTHLY OWner

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
6UDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

14x70 tral)er three bedrooms to
tal eiectnc no pets $300 month

(304)755-5885

740 36B

$3oo Deposit $350/Mo. 74D-448
2205 740 446 9565 Ask For

470 Wanted to Rent

420 Mobile Homes

SO DOWNI HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDEOI
GOV T
FORE
CLOSUAESI CALL NOW FOR
REGISTRATION! 1 BOO 434
2434 EXT 3205 (NO FEE)

M les To Gallipolis
6942

r oom Very Clean Stove Frlg
Washer Dryer Total Electric /AC
Non Smokers OnJy No Pets

Conditioning Kltchari appliances
Fenced 10 Playground Laundry

$750/Mo 74Q-44&amp;-2957

ms de pets You pay alec

1 95 Acres Seven Rooms Plus
Bath Two Garages Barn 1 o 5

Applications Now Accepted For

pancy I &amp; 2 Bedroom Ap1S Air

an appom1mont304 675 5421

1999 Ooublewlde Repo Never
L1ved In New Home Warranty 0

no

Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 112 Bath Fu"y car
peted Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pallo Start $J501Mo No Pets
Lease Plus Security Deposit Re

New 2 Bed oom House Near GDC

1991 1411x72ft 2 Bedrooms 2
Baths Shingle Roof Vinyl Sldmg
Excellent Condition $16 000 00

Apartment lor rent In Pomeroy
pets 740-992 5858

1 Completed Doll House w/ Lots
of furniture $350 DoiiHouse
ready to assemble will be 52

(304)675-4975

740 742 2852

doUon $6 500 740 446 B172 74Q256 6251

2BA Apt In Meson SloveiRotrlg
eJator/Uh llties furnished A C

Sma ll 1 BR Apt PI Pleasant
Area $195 month Evenmgs

RENTALS

12x55 mob ile home wtth room

message 740 992 5419

Green Apls 149 or call 740 992
3711 EOH

Ctll (304)675-2117

~ 5676

12x65 mob1le home remodeled
mduding furnace new paint extra
clean call after Spm or leave

2bdrm apts total eiectnc ap
pflances lurntshed laundry room
fac•lltl8s close to school m town
Applications ava fable at V llage

One Bedroom Apt Furnished 01
Not Ut1lltles ncluded 5 min
from ltore IChOOI I hOIPIIII

Anthony land Co

'

II 304-675 4302

446.()()()8

We Pay Cash 1 800 213 8365

' LOOKI

N ce Quiet 2 br k 1 appliances&amp;
AJC &amp; carpet Relerences/Depos

Vtrgtnl8.

Down• Gov t And Bank Repo s
Being Sold Now! F nancmg Avail
able Call Nowl I 800 730 7772
Ext 8040

tached 2 Car Garage Pool Lo
cated Between Bidwell &amp; Vinton
Askng $114 900 740 388 8074

7806

Small Bu1 Exira Special One Bod

319 3323 Ed 1709

(K ng) Healtng Stove lor sale
good cond 1 on Used approx
•m atety 2 w mers L c1 w 11 rase
up to c ook on $200 OBO

(304)576 2343

I bedroom apartment 1n M1ddle
port all utilities paid $270 per
month $100 deposit 740 992

Po1s (304)773 53521(304)8B2
2627

Spec1al 28x80 3 or ~BR $1000
Down $349 per mo Free Oeltv
e y &amp; Setup 1 800 691 67n

3120 Sq Fl 01 lovong Space AI

992 221B

Schult New Generation 16 x72 3
Bedrooms 2 Baths V nyl Siding
Shtngle Roo! 2 x6 Walls Garden
Tub Sky l ghts Total Electrtc
Free A/C Sa e Priced French
Clly Homes Pomt Pleasant wv

Buy Homes From $10 000
1 3 Bedroom local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures F nanctng
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ASTRO·ORAPB
Thunday, Oct 7 1999
You may not be too fond of a cou
pie of new people you meet on the
year ahead yet ctrcumstances could
throw you logether tn a way where
you II end up betng qutle lucky lor
one another
LIBRA (Sept 23.Qct 23) Treat
today as a fresh stan should you be
thrown together wtlh someone you
dishke II you allow grudges to per
stSI tl could distort your outlook on
whatever IS smng on Know where to
look for romance and you'll find ol
The Astro Glaph Matchmaker
onstantly revea s whtch stgns are
romanucally perfect for you Mod
$2 7S.to Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper P0 Box 1758, Munay Htll
Statton l'lel" York. NY IOU6
SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov 22)
Expendtlurcs could b'ecome a touchy
tssue tn an tnvolvement you have
wtth lnends today Be careful not to
ovem:actto a mtnor shp up or mts
calculation II won't be worth 11
SAOITIARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
2 0 If there " somedtons omportant

,,

you have to conSider take the lime to
wetgh and balance all the aspects

Declsaons made under pressure aren

t

likely to repre5Cnl your best Judi
mcnt
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
Berne out of sync with persons with
whom you have to deal could cause
you to become too self 5Crvmg and
make a difficult arrangement even
worse Oe1on step wnh others today
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
Whenever wetmposc our woll on olh
crs the resui1S generally tum out less
than desorable Tins could he the case
today tf you try to he too possess1ve
of someone you hke
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
Compamons may have cause to
throw up theer hands on diSmny tuday
of you step out of character and
behave tq a manner where nothmg
they do can please you
ARIES (Muoh 21-Apnl 19) U
you spend too much dme dtssecung
a JOb that has to be done today,
chances are you'll only gel pteces
accomplished tnstead of the a whole
task It's called paralysos from over
analys1s

TAURUS (Apni2D-May 20) Fnv
olous matters should not take prtoro
ty over acliVtloes of substance today
You could m1ss out on makmg the
most of an opportuntly that exosts lor
you atthls lime
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) Fnos
tratoons you harbor today could have

a negative

Influence

over all your

affatrs tf you let them govern you
cspcctally the way you deal woth oth
ers Get them out of your mond
CANCER (June 21 July 22) Ccr
taon onlormatoon you should be keep
tng to yourself could be passed onto
the wrong people today tf you allow
yourself to be too talkatove Mond
your woods
LEO (July 23·Aug 22) Although
tl ts quote noble to treat others 1n a
generous !ashton don t carry thmgs
to extremes today You could 1mpul
sovely gove aW4y some1hong you may
later wtsh you hodn I
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) You
must he both melhodtcal and patoenl
loday tf you hope to achoeve your
obJecltves If etther of 1hese two are
mossong you could end up wuh a
wasted day

(CC)

•

'

�I.

.•

'

ROBIN "'•'T"'"'

.,

.
~Writer
. BOSTON (AP) - There are no
()r wrong answers for this test.
studying requir·,d. Students
have to give their names.
The results, howeyer, could have
' vrim•• implications.
.
In all , I, I00 Holliston High
\:$4~hool students· are scheduled to
a depression survey Thursday,
a a grow ing number of
~*'hoc&gt;ls participatin~ in Nat ional
;t).,n._,.,;·, '"' Sc reening Day. Organi zthe surveys will lead to help
, the 5 percent" to &amp;percent of high
tf.:hool students estimated to be clin;it41lly depressed.
,,:.. : Between 500,000 and 800.000

clinical depression each year, said
Dr. Douglas Jacobs, who founded
the project.
Depression is a difficult diagno·
sis to make among teen-agers
because the sy mptoms - irritabilil)". .
low self-esteem and poor performance - "get confused with the
angst of being a teen-ager." he said.
And the screenings won't automatically pinpoint which students
may need help. Because the questionnaires are anonymous, the impetus falls on the student to sec k help.
"My concern is we 're going to
have an inventory come back saying
this kid is suicidal, this kid is going
off the chart on thi s and we' re not

~: A report noting the success of the
fall yard sale and apprec iation to the
~ommunit y was given when the
;Mucine Are a Community Organiza·~m met rece ntl y at the American
~g ion hall in Rac ine.
~~ · It was noted that proceeds from
the two annual sales, held in the
.•jpring and fall , applied to the SouthHigh School scholarship fund.
~c group presently presents four
'f.SOO scholarships to May graduates.
,.,;· Tonja Hunter gave the blessing
•l ltfure the 6:30 p.m. meal attended
fty ' l &amp;m~mbers and two guests.
''l'· "President Kathryn Hart opened
tillc business meeting. Both the sec\ietary's report by Lillian Weese, and
!,lie treasurer 's report by Ann Zirkle,
.!Were approved as read.
;; ' In other business, the group:
1
-;: .. Voted to repair the basketball
·tOun at Star Mill Park.
;}';. • Votelf to donate $300 toward
U.: installation of the Ooor in the
·f;'!,ross Mill/Racine Museum build·jig. The Ooor was recently in stalled
t) Amish carpenters.
i-; . • Voted to pay a third of the eleclfic bill at Star Mill Park for. use in
"_f;stivals and celebrations. .,.. • voted to spon sor the seventh
·.illlimal Holiday Home Decorating
l:ontest.
·; •· ·The meeting was adjourned with
. tlavid Zirkle leading the Pledge of

*"

.;

'
Pomeroy • Middleport,
Ohio

Wednesday, October 6, 1999

going to know who that kid is," said
Holliston school psychologist
Donna Moilanen.
Some 3,000 sites across the coun"
try are participating in this week's
scree ning, the ninth annual. While
hundreds of coll ege. campuses offer
the screenings, only a few high
schools take pan.
This year, nine hi gh schools,
including Hollisto~ . three middle
schools and three school dislricts are
participating in Californi a. Co lorado, Delaware, Illinois, Massachusetts, Ohio, Pennsy lvania, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Wisconsin
and Canada, accordin g to the
National Mental Illness Screening

Project, which administers the sur'vey.
·
Students 'answer 27 questions.·Do they feel hopeless? Have trouble
concentrating? Feel sad ? Contemplate suicide? - on a scale of zero

· ~'It means there's cause for con-

cern and we need to sit down and get
tl)at student some help,"· she said.
The average age of depression
o~et . has been dropping over the
years, and now hovers around 30,
10 2.
down from 40 several decades ago.
Students tall y up their points An estimated 17 million to 20 milthemselves after being told that lion Americans suffer from depresscores of 20 or higher may· indicate sioit each year.
depression.· The questionnaire ts
Holliston decided to partake in
accompanied by names and tele- the screenings after seeing the
phone numbers they can call for results of a state behavior survey
support.
taken by its students last year. NearA high number doesn't automati- ly one-quarter of the students said
cally equal depression, said Moila- they had . experienced suicidal
nen, who expects about 10 percent thoughts, and 12 percent said they
of students will score in that range. had tn ed to kill themselves.

EASTMAN'S

·. Thursday

Weather

Suicidel s the third leading cause
of death ,fnong 15· to 24-y~ar-old~
nationally.
· .
While societal stigma agamsl·
depression is easing among adults, it
remains taboo among teen-agers,
said Carol Glod, who studies teenage depression· at McLean Hospital
in Beh.nont and teaches the subject
at Northeastern University.
"Teen-agers and parents of teenagers are very, _concerned about
depression, but it's still a bad word, "
she said. "No kid wants to say
they ' re depre~sed and no parent
wants to say 'My child has an illness
that's psychiatric.":

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:: CHICAGO (AP) - An experital drug would give Ou sufferers
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archers reported today.
:;.:An inhaled powder that works
.inst both types was approved by ,.
• · Food and Drug Administrati on
lft·July.
.
l 'The pill, to be marketed as Tamiifll..helped reduce the duration and
~erity of Ou symptoms by about ·
lilf in &amp;0 un vaccinated adults who
~re voluntarily infected with the
~' 'viru s, researchers said in today's
Jil!ltnal of the American Medical
~sociati on .
·
·~:'the prescription drug also helped
pt;e\lent the nu in. unvacc in ated
~Jt s who took the drug before
IJ!Ilng exposed to lhc virus. said
· · · archers led by Dr. Frederick.
"yden of the Uni versity of Viriu. Only eight of 21 people who
lk the drug before exposure got
i ectcd (38 percent). compared
' height of 12 who did not take the
'g(67 percent).
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I

"Everyone has worked very hard ... everyone," he added. "The board ·
shows its apprecialion."
.
.Board member Ron Cammarata mirrored Collins' remarks, obse rvmg,
"This is one of the grealest days this district has ever seen.".
Students too are looking forward to using the new building. Commen(ed
. Adam Phill,i ps, ~ fifth -grader at Syracuse Elementary School, "I just ca_n't
wait until the school is done... 1 want to see whal it's going to look hke
, inside."
THE NEW BUILDING
The new two-story building will incorporate students trom th~ S_outh~ rn
Local School District's three elementary schools as well as the JUIIIOr h1gh
and kindergarten students.
·
c
·
The new building will feature accommodations that are practically nonexistent in the current schools: a cafeteria se parate from the gymnastum , a
library, health clinic, computer and music labs, 1!. technology center, Iif~ skill s_
lab an art room and others including rooms for physically and behaviorally
ha~dicapped students.
·
It has been a long road for the Southern Elementary School project which
was first propos~d before Nove mber, 1985, when the first of fi ve building
issues was defeated by district voters.
.
That year, and again· in .November, 1992, in March, 1996, and August,

INTRODUCING GUESTS - Southern Local Superintendent
James Lewrence Ia shown hare Introducing dignitaries and
guests at Wednesday's ground-breaking ceremony for the
future Southern Elementary School, He Ia shown with, from
left, Southern Local Board of Education Bob Collins, board
membere Ron Cammarata, Marty Morarlty, Dave Kucama and
, Doug Littler ·Stl!t• -Board of Education member Jennifer
Sheets, State Representative John Carey, Rev. Brian Harkness ·
from the Racine United Methodist Church and SHS Student
Council President Laraine Lewaon. Shown In ths background
Ia a color guard from Raclna American Legion Post 602.
1996, the building issue was defeated .
·.
The $9.8 million elementary school will replace three elementary schools,
the junior high ~hool and kindergarten.
·
The school is funded by state money matched locally by $4,042,000 from
a 23-year, 5.39 mill bond/levy issue.
·
.
.
.
Plans also call for building additions to Southern Hrgh School mcludmg a
new media center, science lab and other rooms.

Pomeroy woman makes 'wintry' figures a hot item

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
.
.
. one-woma~. show to ~n emplot
Sentinel News Staff
er of t~ree. Just keeP.mg them m
Meet "Flaky" "Deep Freeze"
stock IS a challenge, says Drenand the "Blizzard Family."
ner. "They .~ell as fast. as we
The unique soft sculpture eremake them. She mentiOned a
ations in primitive style are made
recent two:day show where she
by
Eloise
Drenner
of
Pomeroy.
took
50 pteces and sold every
CINCINNATI (AP)- Union woikers have rejected the latest offer from
They
are
.appealing
handmade
one
of
them before the first day
the Kroger Co. and have authorized a strike if they don't have a new contract
original
works
of
art
introduced
passed.
'
,
when the current one expires at midnight Saturday.
into
her
product
line
this
year.
.
This
weekend
she
will
be
Local 1099 of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union repre.
Mini-lights
enhance
111any
of
·
taking
as
many
sculptures
as
she
sents about 8,400 workers at 66 stores in southeastern Indiana, northern Kenthe sculptures making them parcan get made~ -probably more
tucky and the Cincinnati area.
.
.
ticuiarly
attractive
for
display
at
than 150 - to the Bob Ev~n s
Without saying how many members voted Wednesday, the umon satd the
a
hearth
or
entryway
on
cold
Festtval.
If sales are as bnsk
vote was 99 percent against Kroger 's latest offer.
winter ni~hts, or part of a holithere as they h~ve been at ot~er
"The workers have spoken loud and clea.r on how they feel about
day
arrangement.
But
while
they
shows,
she will be returnmg
Kroger's offer," said Lennie Wyatt, president ofLocal1099.
look like "winter things" their
home wtth an empty van.
· "This is not about negotiating with a mom and pop grocery store, or even
ularly
is
not
confined
to
any
. Her work has been well
pop
a laige chain that is on the ropes. This is the Kroger Co. The largc.st food
recerved at the annuql
RIO
season.
,
retailer in America. It is a company that is bigger, stronger and wealthier than
Grande festival, and .or the past
"People buy them all year
ever before. And it is the workers here who helped make it that way."
round," says Drenner, who is on·
two years - actually her only
Kroger officials were to be notified of the vote today, the .union said. a show circuit around the tri·
years ' of exhibit - she had
Kroger spokesman Gary Rhodes declined comment Wednesday.
state while headquartering her
&lt;
•
received first place awards for
The contract covers only employees in the Kroger's grocery &lt;and meat
business at Terri Haynes '
"DEEP FREEZE" A DARUNG _ Thla quality, design and display of her
sections. Drugstore and general merchandise division empl?yees are covered
"Always
and
Forever"
on
Main
original
sculpture ~reaied by the artist art form.
h
under another contract, union spokesman John M~rrone sa1d .
Street
in
Pomeroy.
on
a
wooden
ball
holds
a
tree
which
.
All
of
t
e sculptur;s are
The contract for another union local that reprel!l!nts about 2,300 workers
The
popularity
of
her
erelights
up.
The
colorful
fleaca
attire
of
fashtoned
over
~ooJ a~~~~~
at 50 Kroger stores in Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia a!Sc? expi~s ~his
~~:f::::~;~eo~:r ~~Jiy.
weekend. Members of Local 347 voted this week to authonze a stnke If a ations has iaken her art from a the figure enhances Ita appeal.
new contract is not reached by midnight Saturday.
·
"Flaky", a snowman, has a
stuffed body of dyed muslin to give
an antique look with rusty bells for
CllEVELAND (AP)- A man admitted that he endangered his 7-yearbuttons
down the front. He has a
old son by setting the boy's hand on fire to teach him not to play with fire.
cotton
carrot
nose, painted eyes and
Alien Gump, 48, of Cleveland,
mouth
and
arms
of twigs. His attire
could get up .to eight years in prison
consists
of
black
fleece
earmuffs and
after pleading guilty Wednesday to
matching
shoes,
and
he
wears a cola felony ·charge of child endangerorful
Oeece
scarf
around
his neck.
ing.
Equally
attractive
is "Deep
Today's
He will be sentenced Nov. 4 in
Freeze",
a
figure
holding
a ·Christ2 Sections • 12 Pages
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
mas
tree
with
lights
on
it.
About
36
Court.
·
inches
tall,
the
sculptures
are
nicely
_:C!dl!ai!Eenrndi!.lallr_ __:__ _.1..._
2_
Gump's wife, Tracy, pleaded
outfitted in black hats, shoes and
_!.C,IJIBSIHISII!lD!\!edwsL _ _ _..z9:!!&amp;~1&amp;..0. guilty to a misdemeanor childmittens with plaid coordinating
'll
· endangering charge that could get
Comics
fleece
jackets.
her six months in jail.
2
The "Blizzard Family" consists of
Edl!orlals
Police said . Gump d~used ihe
a man and woman and several chil3
Local
boy 's ·hand wh'h lighter Ouid and
dren.
Painted terry cloth is the ~ulp­
4&amp;6
Soorts
ignited it to show him how dangerturing material, and again the figures
l.,,!w~·~ea~t~he~r~===~J==- · ous playing with matches ~uld ~- .
have carrot noses and painted faces
But before Oump could extmgu•sh
and are dressed in colorful attire.
the flames, the terrified child'fled. ·
Every year Drenner adds new
'fhe boy suffered second-degree·
things
to her sculpture line and
WlW
burns and was treated three days
besides
"f laky", "Deep Freeze" and
PlckJ: 8-9-2; Plck4: 4-1 -7-4
later after an · anonymous tipster
the
"Blizzard·
Family", she has added
Super LOtto: 12-13-21-26-27-37
alerted police.
•
·
lighted
pumpkin
stacks.
Kicker: 9-4-5-2:0-8
eoft·tculpturea onto the
FINISHING
"I'LAKY" - 1'111- a
Robe!! L. Tobik, Gump's attorMoose,
bears
and rabbits have
lUA.
ney, said his client "was attempting entld EIOIII Drerl...r tumid till · lot wtttre they -.given flnllhlng been her mainstay in the five years
touohll before being loldi!Cf Into 1
DaUy 3: 7-2-9; Dally 4: 5-4-9-5
to discipline his son but chose.a ter- Afttlylend Fol _ , ptrklnglot on Vln. Hare lht ICicle twig erma to "Weaving Stitches" has been in busi-.
·C 1~ Ohio Valley Publishina Co.
P~'s
Melli
_.lnt01,W9fk•
ril&gt;ly inappropriate way to do it.
ness.
.lhop til """" ,lihe IIICMlCi ltllout the jlrllnlllvHtylt . . . -.

With contract expiring Saturday night,
union members authorize strike

USDA Choice

.~

Middleport • Pomeroy' Ohio

FIRST SHOVELFUL - Children turning the first shovelful of
earth for the new Southern Elementary School were, from left:
Tedra Sayre, Southern Kindergarten; Andrew Parsons, Portland
Elementary; Ryan Smith, Southern Junior High Schooi; ,Morg11n
Brown, Syracuse Elementary; Brooke Chadwell, Letart Falls Elementary. School board members shown standing In the rear are,
from left: Marty Morarlty, Doug Little, Ron Cammarata, Bob
Collins and Dave Kucama.
Lawrence gave a brief .history of the building project which,. since its
beginning in 1985, has suffered four defeats at the ballot box until May 5,
1998.
But even then, the project was delayed until Feb. 18 of this year when the
Ohio School Facilities Commission approved additional funding after the
state-allotted amount was found insufficient to build the school.
"It's been a long time coming, but here we are about to turn the first shovel of dirt," Lawrence said in his closing remarks, preceded by the Southern
Band's playing of tile Southern Fight Sopg.
.
.
He said work should start in about two weeks with completton slated for
March, 2001.
·
.
··
After the closing remarks, the assembly moved to the site of the new
building, \\!ith children collecting one purple or yellow (So~thern 's colors)
~· balloo,n . apiece,. ~Jong.~e way. 'f.he hundrw..Qt balloonswere .Iaterorel~,a~.d 1
· upon tlle shouting of "Go Soutllirn."
'·
• ·
Turning first earth on the project were: Tedra Sayre, Southern Kmder·iiK(:i(EiO ,
· ·
.,.... Stucltnti and community miirniSe·re garteri; Andrew f&gt;arsons, Portlari'tt Elementary; Ryan Smith, Southern Jumor
from throughout the Southern Local School District packed the High; Morgan Brown, Syracuse Elementary; Brooke Chadwell, Letart Falls
bleachers at Roger Lee Adams Memorial Field at Southern High El~mentary. The children wore while hard hats with little tornadoes (the
School for the ground-breaking ceremony marking the start of school district's symbol) depicted on the side and stood w~th the school board
members in front of a bulldozer provided by the A.nco Mmmg Company,
•. construction on the future Southern Elementary School. .
The youngsters were selected in drawings held at their respective schools.
er for the children.
High school students, although not participating in the actual ground-breakState Representative John Carey (R-Wellston) also directed h!s brief ~m- · ing, did attend both parts of the ceremony. ·
.
ments to the assembled children, telling them to be proud of therr new build"What stands out in my mind is that hard work and pemstence has defiing and that someday their children will attend school there.
nitely paid off today," commented Collins after the ceremonies.

LlmH 2 with $10.00 or more additional purchase.

Fresh

-Page4 .

Hometown Newspaper

·
·
·
·
By-JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff . . .
..
.
.
· .
In a ·tree_-lined field adJom_mg Southern High School m Racme, students
from five drfferent schools JOined toget~er Wednesday afternoon to formally
break ground on the futu re Southern Elcm~ntary School.
It was a nearly perfect autum_n day and 1f w.eather serves as any omen, the
endeavor should proceed beautifully as the ftve students donned hard hats
and used a five-handled shovel to turn the first shovelful of earth on the project.
·
'
The ground-breaking ceremony was mostly held at Roger Lee Adams
Memorial Field behind the high school with students and people from the
community jamming the bleachers there.
The Southern Band played the Star-spangled Banner assist~d by a color
guard from Racine American Legion Post 602. Board of Education Pres1d~nt
Bob Collins then introduced his fellow school board members after which
SHS Student Council President Laraine Lawson led the Pledge of Allegiance.
The Rev. Brian Harkness of the Racine United Methodist Church gave .
invocation paraphrasing Jesus Christ's words in Matthew 19:14, '.'Let the
tie children come to me."
"Today God has ealled us to a responsibility for our kids," he said, asking
God's blessing on the new building.
.
District Superintendent James Lawrence .introduced numerous guests and
dignitaries including project managers,.bUIIdmg designer~ and .represe~ta­
tives of Anco Mining Company of Belmont, the lowest bidder on the sttework portion of the project.
·
·
.
Jennifer Sheets of Pomeroy, a member of the State Board of Education,
spoke briefly on the value of education. "EduCation is the cornerstone of our
democracy," she said,-challenging the ~ommunity to continue to pull togeth-

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1
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ONE STOP CONVENIENCE

Cleveland rallies to :
defeat Boston 3-2 in : ·

Ground.broken on long-awaited Southern Elementary

--------..J·-··-·-·----,I

FOOD LAND

Sports

High school gridiron previews, Pa.ge 6
Tight spot for 'batty' neighbors, Page,8
NASCAR This Week, Page 5

Meigs·County's

p to and
•

Missionary group
£nstalls new officers

'• New officers were installed at the
~ptember meeting of the Laurel
C:liiT Free Methodist WMI mission~ group.
, Installed by Brenda Haggy were
~uthy Bullins. president: Haggy,
r~r,;t vice president of programs;
~nna Gilmore , global. missions;
fo;an Wright, outreach and Bible
iiNIJy ;' Marge Fetty. five by fiye;
!~Jr!lron Smith, correspondence; Jan~e Haggy, secretary: Wanda Eblin,
~surer ; Sue Pullins, children's
~th. missions.
;;_ .Reports were given by the offi ~J;S and it was noted that the coun,v;,. to be studied this year is South
~rrica . Theme for thi s year is
'lt&gt;pportunity Knoc ks." Scripture .
~~~s taken from John and prayer.was
ven by Cathy Pullins. The pro' am was given by Betty Sayre
ing the topic, "Exploring Ways to ·
!Xperience God" and Psalm 23.
;) -Prayer requests were given and
jti.yer was offered by Janet Swigter..
,; ·Refreshments were served by
»tice Haggy and Shirley Meadows
~ 14 present. Hostess prizes were
!"dn by Wanda Eblin and Becky
l'!blin.

October 7, 1999

•

Including

~llegiance .

/ .The next meeting will be held
Q.it. 26 at the American Legion
)ilall. Dinner will be pot luck.

.

•

. I

Volum e 50, Number 84

~Aco pleased
·Mtith yard sales

E

.. . ...... .

.

. ~~~eric a n teen-agers experi ence

!

.....

•

schools to give students depression surveys durirjg: national screening day ';

"I

'

t "l ·.'''l-1 ,

&lt;

12 • The Dally Sentinel

I·

·~·'4.~ • l•

Man admits setting fire to his son's hand

24 pack

Good Afternoon

.ca•e•S

Sentinel

EASTMAN'S .. local~ ()"'"erl

COMMUNITY·MINDE

Lott eries

Halloween
Pun~pldns

J\sst. sizes to
«:Lt;Ntse fro01 .'.

,.

. I
____ :.;:!!!:._

-

__• _ _f_·_ ,

'

.

,------B=1G:::;-;;B=~N.;-;;;:D~---l

STERNWHEEL FESTIVAL
SCHEDULE
THQRSDAY
6 p.m.-Opening Ceremo·
ny
8 p.m.-Silverthom Band - sponsored by Budweiser

FRIDAY
1 p.m.-Meigs High School
Band
7 p.m.-Big Bend Cloggers
7 p.m.-Chamber of Commeree Casino Night
8 p.m. -~raoke on stage
•• sponsored by Budweiser

SATURDAY
9:15 a.m.-Registration
for chili cookoiT and Iine-han·
dllng contests
11 a.m.-Kiddie Tractor
Pulls
11 a.m.-Chili cookoiT
begins
1 p.m.- Line-handling
contest •• sponsored by Ohio .
Lottery
1:30 p.m.-Parade
3:30 p.m.-Line-handling
awards
4 p.m.-Rubber Ducky
Derby ,
.
4:30 p.m.-Chill cookoiT
awards
5:30 p.m.-Captains Din- - .
ner
8 p.m.-OK Bayou Band
on stage .· · sponsored by Bud· ·
weiser
·
9:30 p.m.-.Fireworks ••
sponsored by Ohio Lottery
Entertainment will perfonn : :
on the bandstand In the
·
Pomeroy parking lot. Conces- :
s!onalres, eraRei's and other· :
vend on will be placed along the: : .
parking.lot, as will the Big Bend· · .
Stemwheel Festival sounnlr ' :
booth and the Bu.dwelser beer :
booth. Sterilwheel caplalos wUI : ·
host a bonfu-e on the levee each : · · ,
evealng, to which ,the public Is : : : : : ·
Invited. ·
.: : ; : ·

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